This is where thoughts become things.

Hi, I'm Daniela. Welcome to my personal lair on the Internet. This is where I write about storytelling, activism, technology and pop culture. Sometimes I post videos. I update my lair when the mood strikes me. Follow me on Twitter for daily updates (@dcap).

Archive for : June, 2009

Thank You, Michael Jackson

Since the announcement of Michael Jackson’s death, the media has been scrambling to find a way to encapsulate, document and wrap up a life that, to many, means so much more than what simple words could ever express.

At MTV (which wouldn’t be what it is today without him) this past week, people had to put their feelings aside to do what they were assigned. Write scripts. Pull tape. Create photo galleries. True feelings surfaced over the subsequent days via text messages, tweets, emails and Facebook status updates. People were hurting.

And inside, I felt like someone had punched me in the stomach. It was (and remains) intense grief made more unbearable when considering what his family must be going through.

Where did Michael go? How could he be gone? For a moment, I forgot that inevitably everyone dies. All I felt was pain.

We only knew him as an artist, as a friend we could call upon by simply popping in a cassette or a CD. Playing a video on YouTube. A talisman, a promise of happiness – if only for a while. A generous philanthropist who, through word and deed, reminded us all that “if you want to make the world a better place, take a look at yourself and make a change.” He was a role model to me – someone who pursued his dreams with passion and dedication.

But he was still just a man, loved by his children and his family. I cannot fathom what they are feeling right now.

I had intended to write this post as a way to finally accept that he is gone. But right now, I still can’t. So I’m not going to try. I selected this particular video for the post because when I was young, I had a series of pet mice and rats. No one could understand why. They kept dying from various diseases, seemingly interchangeable. I don’t think even I yet fully understand my interest in them. But MJ loved small animals too – so much so that he agreed to sing a song about them. It was about finding love in an unlikely place, recognizing beauty in a living creature, one often overlooked. As I grew up, I had pet spiders and other unusual pets. Of course, my pet history never topped Michael’s 🙂

He wasn’t ahead of the class – he was the teacher of his own school. His memory lives on in countless artists who draw inspiration from him – who, like me, watched him growing up and felt inspired to create.

His music was an integral, unforgettable part of my childhood. As an adult, after moving to NYC, I often found solace in his words and voice. He was a “familiar friend” that I could take with me, wherever I went. I took that for granted – I would go months without listening to him, then suddenly feel compelled to days of “just Michael songs.” I think that on some level Michael understood this about his relationship to his fans – people loved more than just his music. They loved his relationship to their lives, what he reminded them of – Joy, happiness, freedom, strength, escape, possibility.

The good news is that all those things are still available to people, in this life – if they choose to accept it. Michael wanted people to feel joy and happiness in their everyday lives. Those are the moments we remember the most.

Eventually I will be able to celebrate Michael’s life and accept what is.

Brain Leaks: She Chose This Dark Place

I’ve been working on this short story for a while. I am attempting to encapsulate a moment in my life that led me on a particular path.

One evening, five years ago, I witnessed something that I could never forget.

I go back to this story from time to time, so I’ve decided to share it with anyone who’s dropped by. All comments welcome.

outsider art

One foot in front of the other takes her from day to night, facing the wind, fists shoved in the pockets of her ratty wool coat as she exhales fish guts and moldy fruit.

New York is behind her, across the bridge, a smoky sky thatched with dark windows and diagonal hallways, strangers who pressed against her with eerie familiarity, cold fingers lingering as they graze her sides. The buds nestled near her eardrums pump a menacing drone that makes them scatter, parted the sea of unfamiliar faces when she reached the Williamsburg bridge, a golden stain over the horizon. She walked into the sun and did not look back.

She chose this dark place, soundless against the cacophony of voices and clanging of glasses, forcing her thin body through the crowd to the front of the stage. A circle of light pools in front of her and she almost reaches to touch it, imagining it feels like the skin of a warm peach. She doesn’t. A neglected ball of hunger festers in her belly. The ground is sticky beneath her, littered with the remains of ancient fliers. She reaches down to touch them instead, a crop of still crisp angles prickling her fingertips as she rips off a laminated chunk. She holds it up to the light and sees a watery smudge in the shape of a man. She drops it.

They parade in front of her, one after the other, with booming voices she scarcely remembers as they exit with a flourish of pumped fists, scattering discs that rain into the crowd. She catches a few, slips them in her purse she now regrets bringing, a painful nuisance that digs in her side with each frantic wave crushing her inward, forcing her forward. Why does she carry so much with her? The air becoming thicker with smoke, stinging tears rush to her eyes, the stage swims.

Somewhere, people who never feel alone are dining together, they are laughing and smiling, she sees this very clearly in her mind and feels something rising in her throat. She turns to leave.

Mic check, one two, one two. A clear, female voice echos above her.

Now she’s dripping with sweat as hungry eyes blink and light the darkness of the room like stars, her own glued to the phoenix in the shape of a woman.

a burnt sky scorched the earth flesh
at the same time the murderous text arose like a phoenix with the glow of death

The light is beginning to seep through the crack bricks heralding daybreak, but no one leaves. She’s drenched in her own sweat, baptized in a steady stream of words that don’t make any promises but swear to continue, never stopping, even when the mic is dead and a raspy whisper is all that remains.

She steps out into the sunlight, clutching the phoenix’s gift that for a moment was pressed in both their hands. It’s not even real gold – painted tin in the shape of a door knocker but she clutches her prize on the bus all the way back to her tiny room in a Washington Heights tenement.

On My Radar: Amazing Millennials & The LAMP

When 10-year-old Jonathan E. McCoy wrote and delivered this speech “A New Petition” at Empowerment Temple in Baltimore, he had no idea the controversy it would spawn.

Though there have been numerous contrary posts, Jonathan remains unscathed by the venom and maintains that the N-word should be deleted from our vocabulary “as a people, nation and the world.”

Jonathan started a petition in February 2009 at http://www.petitionspot.com. You may pledge your support by doing an alpha search at petitionspot.com of the letter “D” for ‘deleting the “n” word’. – via @jazzzyone

I’ve noticed a disturbing trend since 2005: Big Media’s onslaught of published articles and videos on the web bemoaning the sad state of Gen Y. Our generation and the younger set are being portrayed by the media as coddled, gadget-dependent spoiled brats who are not prepared for life beyond their usual routine of texting, videogames and lethargic marathons in front of the TV. This is bullshit.

True, there are some kids out there who need their parents to cut the apron strings, but there are even MORE young people out there TRANSFORMING THE WORLD.

Millennials are empowered in unprecedented ways. They are using technology and inspiration from previous leaders and activists to create amazing change in their lives.

Their efforts are tangibly affecting those around them and manifesting across the globe. It’s so inspiring that I can barely contain myself!

Obviously, young people can only be self-motivated to a certain degree. They need resources and support — ideally from their parents, but in the cases where that just isn’t a reality, we need to pull together as a nation (and planet) to make resources available.

I am volunteering with The LAMP (Learning About Multimedia Project) this summer, an organization (and for the first time, a summer camp!) that addresses the lack of basic media literacy education in New York City schools and communities.

The Lamp offers offers free workshops and public events designed to help young people, parents and teachers make sense of the media barrage they encounter in their daily lives.

Here are some resources to track inspiring millennial stories.
Feel free to post other links in the comments:

YPulse Research – Youth marketing to teens, tweens & Generation Y (Gen Y). They also provide daily news & commentary. @Ypulse is on Twitter.

myBLOC – A social networking website for young activists of color.

DonorsChoose.org – A non-profit created by a former NYC public school teacher, Charles Best, to connect teachers needs with people who could help fund them. Check out some of the projects that the classrooms are taking on. Inspiring!

Ghetto Film School – GFS is an award-winning youth media organization (Mayor’s Award for Arts and Culture, Rush Philanthropic Arts for Life Award, and The Union Square Award). Their students and their work have been featured on IFC TV, E!, BBC’s Talking Movies, ABC News Now, CNN News, The NY Times, The Huffington Post and several film magazines.