Wednesday, June 29, 2011

Cheese and Two Crackers


So my brother and I were watching this Vitamin Water commercial where an Asian male teenager came home to his two white parents.


Alex: He's Asian.

Me: He's adopted.

Alex: How do you konw?

Me: Two white people can't give birth to an Asian... =_=


And stupid comment...


Alex: How do you know?

Friday, June 3, 2011

myTube: Blank Slate


After posting up the Fame Menu on my YouTube Channel, I will have 105 YouTube Videos and 495 Subscribers since 8th grade. I am contemplating to start fresh after I graduate with a second channel for all my future videos. Sound like a smart idea?

Thursday, June 2, 2011

How Are You, Tubaman?


I usually visit my friend Gilbert, a bando, in Ms. Axelson's class before I head to my first period. But since he wasn't here during first today, I decided to talk to my other friend Sami, who tried to compensate for his absense.


Me: Gilbert's not here today D;


Sami: I can pretend to be him today.


Me: Okay :D


Sami: -sits in seat-


Me: So, Gilbert, how are you? (Expecting an "alright").


Sami: -high squeaky voice- TUBA TUBA TUBA!


LOLOLOL


Tuesday, May 24, 2011

Prom 2011: Rendezvous a Paris


I wasn't able to get a decent picture for prom due to mishaps (except three from Ms. Springer, Senor Yarnton, and my cousin William; none of which I have on me), so I drew one ♥

Me: ♥
Ben: -fist pump-

When Life Gives You Lemons...


My friend Gilbert has been complaining a lot lately (he's somewhat a pessimist). He was complaining about he didn't want to go to a banquet because he probably wouldn't get an award. And he comes back getting an award but puts it down as something out of pity and not good enough as the other awards.

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Me: Gilbert, when life gives you lemons, make lemonade. But when life gives you lemons, you make orange juice! What's wrong with you?!

Gilbert: Lol. You know what, I'm gonna go home now and make some orange juice out of lemons!

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Glad to cheer u up, pal ;P

Like a Chinese Man Always Said...


My friend Andy (his real name is Alex, but I like to call him Andy) has been bugging me for awhile about the female singles in our prom group and today he asked me this.


Andy: Do you think that I could possibily hook up with someone as a temporary date for prom lol? :)


Me: Maybe [insert name here] ;)


Andy: Lol


Me: Want me to ask for you?


Andy: No, I'll ask them.

Andy: Like a Chinese man once said. Be a Man


Me: LOL


Thursday, February 3, 2011

Most Recently Self-Made Videos: Feb 2011

More Relief, But Not All Relief (for seniors)

Haven't written an article in FOREVER. This is an editorial I wrote. Hope it isn't too crappy... Final Published Article: http://www.baronbanner.com/2011/02/02/more-relief-but-not-all-relief-for-seniors/

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First semester has finally passed and for seniors here at Fountain Valley High School, it means one thing: relief.

My first semester of my senior year was like a slap in the face; sudden, and, of course, stressful.

Senior year is supposed to be the year to kick back and relax. That’s what everybody says. Sure, the year may be relaxing for those who stick with the average class schedule and limit themselves to three to five classes, ensuring their leave after fourth period for an off-campus lunch and a decent amount of time for themselves for the rest of the day. But for the rest of us, it’s nothing like that.

My fall semester involved applying colleges and frantically attempting to balance my classes and keep my grades up, which was harder than I expected. I applied to only private schools—University of Southern California (USC), New York University (NYU), Chapman University, and California Institute of the Arts—with an exception to CalState, Long Beach, intending to major in film production. And since my junior year was almost a complete bore with a minimized schedule I should have given myself this year instead, I decided to add in a few more classes I should have taken the previous; a foreign language class and a science class. I remember during the second semester of my junior year, I harassed my senior role models consistently. What classes should I take? Is this class to stressful? Too hard? A given? How much time does this activity take? I wanted the perfect schedule that would be appealing on my college resumes, and, at the same time, wasn’t too overwhelming or too dull. But I also wanted a zero period and a 7th, theater. So I set my schedule officially and I was satisfied with the following for the rest of the summer:

0 – Baron Banner
1 – Algebra 2B; TrigonometryA
2 – Physics
3 – AP English 4
4 – AP Government; (regular) Economics
5 – Baron Broadcast News

However, procrastination and lack of time-management tortured me. To my underclassmen out there, there is one simple rule you must follow—start your essays in the summer. Every year, seniors are told that advice by their respected alumni friends, yet most end up working on their essays last minute or too late into the school year. And the fact that no one prepares you for the college application process, unless you’re a lucky younger child of the family, puts a lot more pressure on you, the applicant, and your family, than truly needed.

In “brief”, this is my college application experience: I turned in all my online applications, whether for Common App or a different online host, all on the day of the deadline. I turned almost all of my film portfolios the day of or late (at least post-marked). I sent in the wrong portfolio for one of my colleges (I sent in a portfolio for screenwriting versus film production) and had to make another one and send it in after the scholarship deadline; however, it was sent on the day of the regular deadline. But luckily the essays for the incorrect major proved beneficial for other college applications and scholarships. I failed to talk to Ms. Michaela Wakeman regularly and turn in the teacher reports for her letter of recommendations for me—and have up to this day, become too intimidated and ashamed of myself to approach her again. I also ended up asking my teachers for my letters of recommendation on the last week before my first college application was due (Chapman) for early decision.

Let’s just say my college application experience wasn’t pretty…

Worst of all, I didn’t realize how much work I would have in Baron Banner and Baron Broadcast News as a senior versus as an underclassman, whether I had high positions already or not. That promoted lack of time-management and dedication to a lot of negativities; punctuality for deadlines was a big demerit, which I am ashamed of.

Luckily, now that the stress of keeping my grades up and college applications are now over, I can breathe once more. I can’t get relax completely like the rest of my senior class, some of who have started dropping their classes or transferring out to an easier course (AP to regular). And as tempting as that might seem, (utter relaxation for the last semester of my senior year), I have to resist. I did make some adjustments, however.

I switched from AP Government into regular Economics as planned and transferred to a different, but easier-to-understand physics teacher, which should prove more beneficial to me for my second semester report card.

All there’s left to truly worry about is scholarship applications and anticipation for those college acceptance or rejection letters pouring in slowly through April. Chapman should be my first to hear from, as I heard they recently started sending out their letters. Luckily for one of my friends already in Baron Broadcast News, he got accepted; which created a more intense anxiety for me every time I rummage through the mail or encounter him at school.

My goal for this semester is punctuality, motivation, and responsibility in keeping up my grades, keeping up with financial aid deadlines, extra curricular deadlines, and building up my artistic resume with film, design, and writing, especially with film festivals coming up.

Overall the pattern that was and I predict will be my senior year as a whole is as follows: fall to winter, a climatic stress pattern; winter to spring, cooling down; spring to summer, freedom.

I can’t cool down too much just yet. But one thing is true: more relief.

Friday, January 21, 2011

Most Recently Self-Made Videos: Jan 2011







Jigsaw Puzzle Pieces

I am like an optometrist. I produce a film or a video is like creating a pair of eye glasses. I provide the lenses and let my audience sit back, try them on and see the world the way I see it. Details of who I am, what I do, and how I live are carefully embedded into each tiny layer of the lenses. Individually, film or video I have worked on may stand on its own, but together they create a jigsaw puzzle of a bigger picture, one that can only be interpreted as one idea, one concept, one thing, one person—me. It is known that a picture may have a thousand words; however, with motion picture, an infinite deeper meaning is a possibility that cannot be overlooked.

My Title and My Pages


There are always cases of situations that are “easier said than done”. As a high school student, it is my most commonly met situation. Someone always seems to have a vision or dream: “I want to…”, “This would be cool if…”, “I will…” Many promises and reassurances are made, and often times broken, that a natural reaction toward these redundancies is, “I’ll believe it when I see it.” On the other hand, high school definitely produces a great deal of competition to pursue one’s future career.

Rarely will you ever see me sitting to take a break and “just relax” for more than a minute. Perhaps I would spend some free-time with my friends here and there, but, in my work environment, “nothing to do” was not in my vocabulary. I was almost always up and about asking my peers about what they filmed, assigning them a project, confirming information, checking out cameras, organizing special events, or, for a majority of the time, gluing my butt to a comfortable chair in front of an LCD screen, editing a video segment or the front page design of the school newspaper. When I have a prophetic moment in my mind, I fully project it onto a paper or screen for all to see. I could stay stationary hour after hour, despite my lower body feeling numb and stiff, to make sure every little aesthetic detail was precise and perfect. Although there are times when my own battery does die, I am not ready to give any breathing room for doubt. I want to serve as a role model—editor-in-chief, executive producer, and/or club president—like my respected seniors before me. To one day have someone respond back to me, “I’ll believe it when I see it,” would be a sin. A fire grew in my eyes and a crescent moon in my smile as I urge myself to succeed and pull people into my shoes and behind my glasses.

Film production has become a “projector of my life”, incorporating all the aspects of art, visual or performing, that I enjoyed. Surprisingly, I never heard one whisper of objection from my parents. I remember from elementary school, I told myself “when I grow up, I want to be a doctor.” Yet by my sophomore year of high school, I was exposed to a number of activities—marching band, martial arts, journalism, graphics design, film, theatre, visual arts, and more—that cleared my mind to want a great deal more. “I want to be the first female Vietnamese American to be awarded an Oscar for Best Director.” My parents and I knew that I was bound down by an equivocated, yet potential, path for a life better than the daily economic struggle we dwell in today. They pushed me along to keep up with my grades and to stay on top of deadlines. As the years passed by, they gradually expressed an increase support and appreciation for my creative talent. I am truly grateful to feel an aura of warmth around me and to have my parents behind me. Else, it would have been an impossibility for me to be standing here today.

But obviously I don’t have a clean and perfect slate. There was a period of time when my superego ambition overpowered me to strive to be “king of the hill”—all for the titles, less on the substance. Doing anything to embellish one’s college application was brainwashed into many students through the intense high school competition. Unfortunately, I became one of the many who became sucked into the peer pressure. Editor-in-chief, executive producer, president. Those three words ran through my mind continuously. It wasn’t until my film and journalism advisor, Mr. Ziebarth, reminded me of the journey yet again—“I don’t care what you want to be called, as long as what you do applies to your title.” It was the most common sense one could agree to. Yet it hit me on the back of my head, as if an inspirational quote, and got me keeping on my feet. I was now able to take a step back and view the bigger picture.

With all the years of experience and knowledge I have, I not only want to learn and apply it to life around me, but to teach and to help improve others as well. I want others to be able to stand up for them and climb up their own mountain to success as well. And it makes me have an uplifting feeling on the inside whenever I do teach people and they understand. With that I have confirmed with myself that one day, I want to become a significant leader of the world, promoting Asian cultural awareness in the United States mainstream, feminism, and visual and performing arts, and entertaining the world as the first Vietnamese-American, or female Vietnamese-American to be awarded an Oscar for “Best Director”. And I want to be judged by my book as a whole.

Self-Expression is Power

With the touch of my pen to the paper, I have the power of a sword. With the touch of my finger to this keyboard, I have the power of a hammer. With the press of the "publish" button, I have the power of a gargantuan microphone, projecting over the millions of digital bytes spread across the World Wide Web. My life is an open book and I made it an open book. But when I finally make this possible, there is always someone or something waiting with a blowtorch to burn it to ashes.

When I was in eighth grade while at the peak of my uncontrollable mood swings and hormones, I kept a journal. Never did I show this journal to anyone, including my best friends. As everything became less carefree, I slowly hid myself in my corner. I was not adjusted to expressing my problems. As much as I wished to express my feelings, the most it would sprout out would convey as vague and confusing status messages on my old MySpace profile page that only I would be able to decipher.

Yet, the journal was like my second beating heart, a separate superego entity. I always kept it among my possession at all times and became addicted to writing my thoughts into it. Every single day, every single minute, every single passage that I wrote in my obsessive mood drove me to my insanity. It was my Tom Riddle’s diary.

Why are you doing this? Why doesn't he like me back? Why are you thinking about this? Why am I thinking too much? What’s wrong with you? Did I do something wrong? Oh, you’re just over-reacting. I hate my life. You’re such an idiot I don’t deserve to live. I’m so fat. Slowly, my head began to fill up continuously with one thought and emotion after another. I felt like I was going to explode.

It was not until my best friend, Vivian, finally opened me up and she became someone to express my every single complaint, every single rant, every sob-story, and even a few happy ones. But I was not talking to a wall this time. She spoke. She guided me. And I felt sane again. Since the longest time, I had a smile across my face. I felt happy.

To rid of the journal that used to be my source of life, my source of relief, I engraved the phrase “cursed journal” with a permanent marker page after page until it was down to its last layer of skin. I then handed the bloody taboo off to Vivian for burning or disposal, and I never saw it again.

Since, I have avoided capping the bottle and began to express my thoughts through words again through my online blog with my journalism peers. The only difference between my blog and simple fancy-covered spiral notebook was that it was thrown out there for all my peers to read freely, and advise and comfort me in times of good or bad. And I felt a connection when I discover others have fallen into the same hole I was in. I burned down my dark corner and felt I could run to the top of a hill and burst out my voice to the sun.

But he just had to bring the rain on my world.

His name was David. He was not a close friend in any way, but he decided to start up a casual conversation over FaceBook chat one day during sophomore year. However, a conversation about our school system and about how “gay” he thought our AP European History class quickly rampaged into a catapulting game of insults and critical judgment. It was as if he had a microscope to my brain as he began to probe my mind, judging me with my emotions and statuses.

Pathetic. Immature. Insecure. No new friends or clubs or activities. Always marching band. What accomplishments and benefits will newspaper give or has given you? You act young…I act young? Exactly. You act young all the time.

Each piece of evidence he pulled up to support his statements was as if he was keeping tab on me from time to time, like a stalker. I could sense that he could see my face flushing red with anger. Though I kept my silence and I could hear him laughing clearly through the other side of the screen from his computer.

You want attention. You demand attention. You show insecurity with my friends. You never ask people out.

He might have brought the rain on my party, but I had lightning and thunder to strike him down. I was not going to let another devil’s advocate similar to a familiar superego of mine to return and beat me to the ground. I had a will to fight back against myself, against him, a free will to express myself however I want, when I want.

I felt strong. There is more people than just you in this world for me to deal with. I felt confident. Do I care that I’m broadcasting myself out to the world? Let the whole world know. Why should you make an impact or matter at all to me?

Cursed journal. Cursed journal. Cursed journal. Cursed journal. Cursed journal.

And there was silence, as I closed my eyes, spread my arms around as I looked up to the sky and smiled. “Sweet silence” was the only thing I heard as those words slipped across my lips.

At times, as I express my every thought and feeling, my life story, onto a sheet of paper, a digital document, as my previous respected editor-in-chief Victoria once said to me, “though it may seem that your voice is being silenced, there is always the written word.

And that may be the loudest of all.”

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Essay in response to previous blog posts: