Showing posts with label work. Show all posts
Showing posts with label work. Show all posts

Friday, May 11, 2012

Fika.

So, as we speak (blog?) I am immersed in the most INSANE job ever.  Producing L'Oreal video's for a big deal thing in France.  It's confusing, it's unlike any job I've taken, and it's pretty brain-consuming.  But at the same time, I think it's really important to step away, even for 3 and a half minutes to have a moment of happiness. 

That's why the hubs and I grabbed coffee (literally grabbed and ran) at Fika today! 



oopsie

FYI- Fika has really tasty coffee.  No flavors, just a-mazingly smooth coffee/espresso love for your taste-buds. Check them out here: http://www.fikanyc.com/

Happy Friday!
xoxo
L

Monday, April 30, 2012

Being Sick.

Yesterday was great.  Jeff and I went golfing with friends (I've never been) and food shopping for BBQ essentials before barbequing back at our house.  It was the relaxing Sunday that I needed before starting at a new job on Monday morning.  Technically, since I'm freelance, I'm always starting new jobs...but this one was different.  More advertise-y than television-y.  More scary. (Scarier?)

-Anyway-

Whilst sitting out on our deck, I basked in the sun and enjoyed our company before speaking these fated words:

"I never get sick."

It was true. I really don't ever get sick.  Even when I worked in an office everyday, I didn't catch the bugs floating around or even acquire the occasional runny nose.  It has probably been 4 years since the last time I was actually under the weather.  How lucky.

An hour after our friends left, Jeff started to complain that he felt too full.  We had eaten A LOT so this wasn't at all weird.  Then, around 10pm he called it a night.  We turned off Mad Men, peeled ourselves off the couch, and walked toward the kitchen to shut down shop.  Well, before I could even look behind me, Jeff veered off into the bathroom and started to vomit.  Loudly (Ew, boy vomit!).

He must've had too much of...something. Obviously.

Two hours after falling asleep, I was woken up with a pain in my stomach.  Then in my throat.  I was nauseous, my stomach felt full and acid-y, my body ached and I couldn't get to the bathroom quick enough to revisit our bbq extravaganza. I was sick...with a stomach bug.

This is the first time in my life that I've had to call out of a job BEFORE my first day.  Talk about a nightmare for someone with anxiety.  What if they think I'm faking it?!  Will I ever be okay again?  I kept having flashbacks to calling out of school "sick" and nobody believing me (because I was lying).  Guilt, anxiety and a stomach bug.  That's me. 

Being sick sucks.  But I think the real moral of the story is: never say never.

Damn.

On the plus side, this picture of Remy from last summer makes me happy.  So at least there's that.

Monday, March 26, 2012

A good gig.

When I lived in the East Village, I had a short stint as a very happy, very drunk happy hour reviewer.  It was a pretty awesome gig, I can't lie.  I went to happy hour and then I wrote about it.  Lucky me!  Here's an old article from April 2009 that I wrote about Kate's Joint 3 years before the news of their sad upcoming closure:

http://www.examiner.com/happy-hour-in-new-york/your-joint-kate-s-joint

It's terribly written, but goes to show something very important:  Anyone can be a writer!  Even happy hour enthusiasts who choose to write directly after being bar-side.

Fun times.

ALSO, here are some fun pics from our all-day, all-out, Kate's camp-out:
Slow dancing....to an extremely un-slow song.

A cause my best friends will happily support:)
The Mike's sharing a moment
Getting dark out!
Metallica face
Mike's fiancee is an old sorority sista
Free (massive) "shots" from our awesome bartender!
Doesn't this look like fun?  Make sure to go check it out before April 11th!

Sunday, March 4, 2012

Steampunk! V-day!

So, as I previously wrote....I was cruisin for a USB drive for Valentines day.   Well, I got one!  It FINALLY got here yesterday, by way of Etsy.

 I love it!!!

Friday, February 24, 2012

Time Travel & Making it

Last week, I had the pleasure of working for Lifetime Television.  Day to day, the job was much like any other.  I screened a new upcoming show, wrote script ideas for fun ways to promote said show and worked with an editor to get everything to air on time.  Same old, same old. However, this particular job was different than ANY other in one very specific way: All week, I was forced to work in a time warp.  

The back story:

My first job out of college was working for A&E Television's tape library (it's exactly how it sounds and yes, my title was "librarian") in NYC.  Back then, I didn't really understand the corporate world very well.  I just thought that a foot in the door meant big things, no matter how small the opening.  I am deliriously driven by nature and getting my first job in my field was no different.  I did the math and figured that within 2 weeks of working at A&E, every higher-up would know me and love me.  We'd all wave "hello" through glass conference room windows or commiserate, sharing Advil, while battling early morning hangovers from the previous nights' work happy hour. I had it all planned out.  Until about 3 hours into my first day when reality punched me in the throat and I learned something.

Working people are busy...too busy to care if the new librarian "makes it".

The first days were rough.  I was immersed in a world where running to the mail room 27 times before lunch, scheduling tapes to be picked up, and diving into "the racks" for some randomly misplaced, but VERY MUCH NEEDED tape, was considered normal.  It was a bit of a let down to know how unglamorous my life in the television industry was, but I showed up with a positive attitude anyway. Hey, why not? Each morning, as I got ready to climb the train stairs for my 2 hour commute to New York City, I'd tell myself that the day ahead of me would be the day some random producer or CEO would declare, "Laura, you are exactly the person we're looking to mold into some crazy sought after, high up, creative position!"

It didn't happen.

After 4 weeks, I started to lose hope.  Why didn't anybody care about me?  Why were the producers who I thought were so cool always in such a rush to snatch their tapes from my paws and run away without a word?  I had been commuting 4 hours every day to this job that was supposed to spur me into an awesomesauce life, but nobody cared.  Something was missing.  On my way home one night, as the train made it's 22nd stop, it hit me that I needed to spend time in New York without my crappy job holding me down.  4 hour commute, be gone.

I scraped together every penny possible, scoured craigslist for a crappy studio sublet in my price range and set up a viewing for the very next day.  My parents were skeptical (with reason), but I was determined. One week later, I moved in to my new (and completely haunted) sublet.   Having no cable, no internet, no roommates, microwave, or dishwasher did not matter.  Nor did my newly emptied bank account. Four hours of free time every day would be the way that I FINALLY MADE MY MARK!  I wanted to have a presence in New York, with or without my stinky good-for-nothing new corporate job.

But, an odd thing happened.  

After moving into my sublet, I stopped leaving work when my shift ended.  I showed up early and stayed hours later than I needed to.  I didn't care if it was a Monday or a Friday.  I was there...all. the. time. No, my job duties didn't change and some nights were so unbearably thankless that I wanted to shoot myself, yet I stayed.  Later and later. I wanted to make my mark on Manhattan, but I was barely even making time to see it.  

On weekends, friends would visit and we'd go out on the town each Friday and Saturday night.  Then, they'd leave and I'd wander the city streets, wracking my brain to determine what I could possibly be doing wrong.  I was lonely and alone.  When I jokingly told a story about eating a sleeve of low-fat oreos by myself in Central Park and my friend hugged me instead of laughing, I knew I was failing. I wasn't making it inside or outside of work.  

I totally sucked.  

Then, one night while I was working late at A&E, a producer I'd become friendly with asked if I wanted to sit in one of his sessions.  It was a quick moment, maybe 30 minutes at best, but suddenly I felt as if the day was worthwhile.  I had something positive to write in my diary.  The next afternoon, I grabbed lunch with a couple Production Assistants I was growing close with and mentioned the night before.  They didn't seem too excited by my excitement, but they listened nontheless.  

After that week, sitting in on sessions and kicking it with my coworkers became my way of life.  Every day I focused more on what I wanted to do in the future and focused less on the uninspired crappy position I was being paid to do.  (Dress for the job you want, not the job you have - that kinda thing) Every person who I thought ignored me in the beginning started coming around more and more often.  Most mornings, I'd find notes on my desk or a bag of juicy pear Jelly Belly beans plopped on my keyboard.  Had I made some friends in this hell hole?


Yes. Yes, I had.

Eleven months from my start date, I received a call.  A Creative Director from MTV was looking for a PA and wanted me to come in and interview.  She'd gotten my name from my friend (one of the production assistants) at A&E.  I interviewed, got the job and started 1 week (I know, I know...not polite) later.  I couldn't believe that I was finally on my way.  And my crappy job, with the crappy people got me there.  

They were wonderful.

Over the next 6 years, lots happened.  I worked with companies for far longer than I worked at A&E and I made it to a good place in my career.  It feels good.  But no matter where I've worked, I never again felt the same warmness for any place like I did when things turned right with A&E.  Something happened to me there in those 11 months.  I learned how to be alone, independent, scared and how to push through on my own.  I learned how to cope and grow.  My friends from A&E weren't easy to come by in the beginning, but some were lifelong (the production assistant who got me the MTV interview was in my wedding!).

That's why it was fully weird to show up back at the A&E building (who now owns Lifetime) 6 years later as a producer one week ago.  It was even weirder to find out that my current job would be on the same floor as my first one.  And the WEIRDEST to learn that I still knew nearly every face on the floor.  What.a.trip.  

All week, I struggled to live in the present.  I was married, not working at the library.  I wasn't 23, ravenous for happy hour plans, or terrified to go home to my haunted apartment.  But, in my mind...I was all of those things.  Even, if just for random fleeting moments as I walked down the hall to the bathroom.   The whole week was equal parts surreal and magical.  It was unexpected and yet, so unbelievably fun to experience.


Time travel. I have to say, I really recommend it.

Tuesday, February 7, 2012

Whyyyy?!

I am beyond tired today.  It's like...impossible...to just...be. 

I have the day off (thank you, freelance world), so I guess that's a positive even though I'm not sure it really is.  Working is inspirational, unlike today.  I really wish I had the energy to edit my book, send out a query letter, or even find a kickass dinner recipe for tonight.  Alas, I do not.  Why must days like this exist?  My brain is processing thoughts slower than sludge slipping through a pin hole and it isn't cool.

Oh fun.  I just received an email asking me to work on a new Lifetime show next week.   I guess I can feel somewhat accomplished now, even though it's kinda sad that RECEIVING an email is my big whoop for the day.  Well, that and going to Whole Foods with my sis and neph.  That counts for something, right?

Okay, this has to stop.  I'm forcing myself to do 29 jumping jacks followed by an hour writing in Diary Girl.  Ready, set...GET MOTIVATED!

Monday, November 28, 2011

Holiday wear - building lobby edition.

 Nothing is better than working in NYC during the holidays.   And I mean, nothing.  Ever. (So there!) 

Usually the city is plain CRAZY to maneuver through on the way to work.  There is an infinite amount of obstacles just waiting to take you down, but somehow when the buildings are all gussied up in their Christmas-y finest, getting body checked, trampled, and yelled at (by the one inevitably crazy lady standing between you and the lobby door) seems totally worth it.  And it is!  Because a) I have to be there anyway and b) these things make us more well rounded.  Right?  Body check, anyone?