Pre-Emmy Party Offers Celebs Fun, Relaxation & Goodies Galore!

Pre-Emmy Party Offers Celebs Fun, Relaxation & Goodies Galore!

Everyone gets to see the excitement and glamour of the Emmys and some of the after-parties on TV.  However, the fun starts WAYbefore that!  In the week before all the big Hollywood Award Ceremonies, many of the nominees and other celebrities start partying hearty – at various events where they are invited to sample all kinds of products and services.

One such happening affair was the three-day long MAIN EVENT Emmy Red Carpet Lounge, hosted by Founder/Producer Debbie Durkin. Debbie sure knows how to throw a party!

Held at the Friar’s Club in Beverly Hills, the MAIN EVENT Loungewas filled with nominees, celebrities, and sponsors — mingling, snacking, and moving from table-to-table to the beat of live music. Patron and Mojito Island had the cocktails flowing at the bar while celebrities like Deidre Hall and Kate Flannery played Air Guitar in the main lounge.

Bella Spa was always busy with their 30-minute teeth whitening and paraffin hand wraps utilized by Rex Lee, Shar Jackson, andSally Pressman. Celebrities ranging from William Shatner to Rex Lee indulged in Selia Hansen’s unforgettable massages.  TIGIstyled and primped stars, including Dyan Cannon, Rex Lee, andTanya Tucker with fabulous hair.

The Main Event Lounge was also the launching ground for Patrons “Celebrity Concierge Program” with Entourage’s Kevin Dillon being the first celebrity to get Patron delivered to his home.

Jerry O’Connell, William Shatner, Barbara Eden, Dyan Canon, Carl Lewis, and others donated time and pet portraits for the SPCA LA that will later be auctioned off to raise money.

Guests left with bags full of goodies, including a $500 dollar gift certificate from
Lamborghini, skin care products from Extra Virgin, stylish t-shirts from TaBu clothing, vintage jewelry from Lara Noel Hill Designs, chocolates from John Kelly of Beverly Hills, organic food products from Dr. Melina, styling products from TIGI, and much more!

Former model Lizanne Falsetto’s all natural high protein thinkThin bars and other think products were a huge hit with the fit and fabulous Hollywood crowd.  Her thinkThin Pink bars benefit the Susan G. Komen Foundation for the Cure Foundation in October for Breast Cancer Awareness Month.  Her thinkThin and thinkThinpink bars are sugar-free and the thinkGreen bars are a salad bar on the go – both available at Whole Foods.

Another product showing that “healthy” is the way celebs want to be was “her” – the healthy-energy-revitalizer drink, which featured recipe cards for making martinis and other special drinks with champagne, rum, vodka, tequila, Cointreau… and even beer!  And of course, there’s her Au Naturale, too!

If there was any “dirt” on celebrities – it could be shaken off by theShaklee “GetClean” products, which were added to their swag bags.  It’s the non-toxic way to get rid of whatever slimes and grimes.

Hmmm, and speaking of slime – next time I’ll have to give those celebs a copy of my book, NEVER KISS A FROG: A Girl’s Guide to Creatures from the Dating Swamp!

The Main Event Lounge was a festive but casual atmosphere, mixing Hollywood beauty with brand integration.  It was such a success that Durkin Entertainment is already prepping for a lounge at the famous Sundance Film Festival in Park City, Utah.

See you there!
Marilyn

Marilyn Anderson
Never Kiss a Frog
www.neverkissafrog.com

Concert for a Cause: Michael McKean, Harry Shearer, & Christopher Guest

Concert for a Cause: Michael McKean, Harry Shearer, & Christopher Guest

What a night!  September 27 was an evening of fantastic music and lots of laughs when Michael McKean, Harry Shearer, and Christopher Guest took the stage at The Avalon in Hollywood.

The trio, best known as Spinal Tap from the movie of the same name, and as The Folksmen in “A Mighty Wind,” headlined thisConcert for a Cause to raise funds for the International Myeloma Foundation (IMF).

Michael McKean first became involved with the IMF when a friend and colleague, Lee Grayson, was battling multiple myeloma.  Since then, he has supported the IMF in Lee’s honor.

The audience was packed with fans of all ages – and they weren’t disappointed.  McKean, Guest, & Shearer played all the favorite Spinal Tap and Folksmen songs and many others.

Special guest performers included McKean’s wife, actress Annette O’Toole, and their daughter, Nell Geisslinger.  Harry Shearer’s wife, Judith Owen, a critically acclaimed folk-jazz-rock singer and pianist, also performed.   Musical legend Van Dyke Parks was featured as well.

It was an incredible one-of-a-kind evening for a worthy cause.

Be sure to SAVE THE DATE for the next extraordinary event hosted by the International Myeloma Foundation.

The IMF’s Annual Gala Celebrating Peter Boyle is Saturday, November 10, 2007, at the Wilshire Ebell Theatre & Club.

It’s an evening with comedy and music, featuring Ray Romano and the “Everybody Loves Raymond” cast, including Patricia Heaton, Doris Roberts, and Fred Willard.

There will be a dinner, show, and champagne reception with proceeds to benefit the Peter Boyle Memorial Fund at the IMF.

International Myeloma Foundation

www.myeloma.org

Marilyn Anderson
www.neverkissafrog.com

Tatty Devine – The British Duo of Fashion Accessory Design

Tatty Devine – The British Duo of Fashion Accessory Design

Tatty Devine was created in 1999. It is a unique and quirky accessory line. Rosie Wolfenden and Harriet Vine are the brains behind the successful jewelry designs. The company is based in Great Britain, and the two designers have no formal training as jewelers. Harriet and Rose met at Chelsea School of Art back in 1996. They had planned to become artists, but Harriet found some leather samples on the way home from the pub one night. She proceeded to make some leather cuffs. She and Rosie sold them at Portabello and Spitalfields markets—and Tatty Devine was born.

Harvey Nichols bought their accessories, then Browns, Focus, and Vogue Magazine took notice. Tatty Devine premiered their first official collection at London Fashion Week Spring, 2001. They have since shown their collection at Paris Fashion Week, and showcased in Berlin and New York, as well as having over 100 retail outlets worldwide.

I interviewed the British pair on their recent jaunt to LA and was thrilled to be given my own private showing of Tatty Devine’s collection.

“We express ourselves in everything we make. When we were in college, we did paintings—it’s all about the idea, and we were incubated in this conceptual cocoon. When we left college, we just hung out together, and all of our ideas and esthetics were really similar—we just started makingstuff.” —Harriet Vine and Rosie Wolfenden—

Harriet – It was just a series of fabulous events that just snowballed. You know, Rose was working at a vintage shop, and a woman from Vogue came in, and was just like, “Oh my gosh, I love that thing that you’re wearing. I really need it for my Millennium shot.” Then Rose had the audacity to say, “I made it myself. It’s from my company.” You know, so that was on Friday, and on Monday, we took to her … our …. It hadn’t existed on Friday!

Rosie – We made our collection on that weekend to take to Vogue. So we were just messing around having a really fun summer after college, visiting all the markets.

Harriet – We had no real desire to be fashion designers. We just wanted to be artists, to get studios, public views, and hang out with other artists. I guess if I had been a fashion student, I would have been really shy; but because I just didn’t really care, I admitted I made it myself.

Oh yeah, because you don’t have a reason to be afraid because you don’t really know what you’re doing anyway (laughs).

Harriet walked by a furniture store one night. They had thrown out all their leather sample booklets of every color, texture, and print—14 bins worth. Harriet dragged them all home; they were perfect size twenty centimeters by twenty centimeters, which is the size of your wrist. We had ostrich skin and purple; we had snakeskin and blue; zebra skin and pink. Harriet just cut them up into wristbands.

Harriet – It was just before the whole eighties thing.

Rosie – So we took it to a market store, and everyone [loved them]. They sold for 5 and 10 pounds each.

They were just flying off the racks.

At first actually, people asked, “What is this? What do you do with it?” We told them theywere wristbands. It took a little while, but within a month there were three other stands selling the same thing, but they could only afford to buy white leather.

See that is a good thing. When someone is copying you, that is the highest possible compliment. That is when you say, “O.K., I am doing something right.” Tell me about your designs.

We’re kind of fascinated with history and fossils and dinosaurs. Apart from that, we really like the way the dinosaur necklace is made up of about 70 pieces. And each one is a bone from the dinosaur. They’re individually drilled, and we put our beads on individually. Sometimes we have to get them special order. Whenever I wear this [necklace], everyone is [in awe]. In London, people save up so they can buy it because they love it so much. We must have sold about 600 of these now.

It’s called the dinosaur necklace?

Yeah. That’s my favorite. Everything we care to make is in limited edition quantities. Welaser everything that gets mass made. We couldn’t make thousands of anything.

Do you have letters of authenticity with your jewelry?

Well, that’s a really good idea because they do that in Singapore and Japan.

I’m sure they’ve got collector’s value. Down the line it could be worth something.

In Britain we don’t have to do it because everyone knows. Until recently they’d come to our shop and they’d watch the jewelry getting made. But I think letters of authenticity would be a very nice touch.

What are the materials you used to make these?

[In addition to other things], we used acrylic because it gives us the freedom to be very literal in our designs. We use [a variety of] wood, leather, solid silver, and Swarzsky Crystals. Then we create the drawings in the computer, which later goes into a [special] machine, which cuts out our drawings. It’s really nice. It’s like cookie cutters.

But it’s taken awhile to come up with such a smooth process, right? A lot of trial and error?

At first it was leather cuffs and then we moved on to hand cut leather shapes, and then we’d sew crystals on things. It’s like writing a Christmas list.

You’re actually setting a trend. And you guys really know how to market yourself. Do you think that has something to do with your success?

Up until a year ago, we were answering the phones. We were writing the press releases, trying to organize everything. My God, we nearly went mad. We’re finding liberation and now we’ve got 10 employees.

Tell me your highest high as jewelry designers.

When we got into Fashion Week, it was big. Every day something new comes along. I like that initial time of going to Vogue Magazine. That was quite amazing. It seems so crazy. We were like just two Indie kids—we were only 21..

What did your parents think about all this?

Rosie – My mum asked me what was I going to do when I finish college. [My parents] were a bit scared, because my parents were both self-employed and Harriet’s parents were always doing projects. Both of our parents are entrepreneurs. It never occurred to me to have a desk job. Not that I’d come into any money or anything, but I always thought I’d find my way.

Have you ever had any disappointments?

Not really. The biggest downer we had was when we participated in the Designers and Agents Show—it’s a trade show. We did it and it was great. And then we applied to do it again and we weren‘t accepted, which is annoying because we wanted to come over here. It wasn’t quite right. Because there’s nothing else quite like it. It’s really hard.

What advice would you give an aspiring entrepreneur?

You have to have a belief in yourself and have some interesting stuff. It’s not good enough just wanting to make jewelry. You’ve got to be interesting and have a lot of cool stuff, and have original ideas. Because it’s so dull seeing something that’s copied. Seeing something original really does just make my heart skip a beat. It’s lovely. And I think that’s what’s really important with our designs—they were just so fresh. You’ve really got to have faith in yourself, have no fear, and be prepared not to have any money for a while. We started with absolutely nothing. We started at zero, and months later we [earned] 200 pounds. And then we bought some more leather and then we sold it … and then we had 400 pounds. We never had a proper job, so we didn’t know what money was.

You didn’t know what to charge?

You really must be prepared for the fact that it takes a long time before you can really have a life. You just make jewelry all the time. You have to be prepared to work really hard; but to enjoy working really hard, have passion. And just like having initiative, I guess.

You guys are hard wired for business. I think it’s just in you. You’re artists, but you’re hardwired to be entrepreneurs, leaders.

I think entrepreneurship is a really creative thing. There’s business and then there’s being an entrepreneur. Entrepreneurship is the creative side of business. Because business really is creative. You can manipulate and point it to any direction you want.

To learn more about Tatty Devine and their collections, visitwww.tattydevine.com.

Interviewed by Kaylene Peoples

Merrell McGuinness Handbags – Making the Functional Handbag Fashionable

Merrell McGuinness Handbags – Making the Functional Handbag Fashionable

“I was working in a 9-5, and the only bags they had to carry were in black. They were so unattractive. All the beautiful designer bags that I loved were either too short, not wide enough, or didn’t have enough pockets.”
—Merrell McGuinness—

Handbag designer Merrell McGuinness received her inspiration in fashion from her mother’s (Marilyn Hubbard) vintage collection. Ever since Merrell was a child, she insisited on expressing her own personal style. At age 3, she wore fur-trimmed beige leather boots to preschoolnot at all uncharasteristic of the years that followed. Both women’s (Merrell and her mother) creative backgrounds and love of all things beautiful was the impetus of Merrell’s intuitive designs. Once she started designing her handbags, word spread quickly by word of mouth, and orders flooded in. Merrell, while holding down a full-time job, and maintaining a growing business, realized the need for a functional bag that still expressed a personal style. She succeeded in creating a leather handbag system that had style, comfort, and functionality, clearly meeting the needs of a busy woman’s lifestyle. Since its inception, Merrell Handbags have been featured in Lucky Magazine, Atlanta Peach, Splendora, Daily Candy, AOL: Style List, Chip Chick, Fashion Newspaper, WWD, and more…

Your focus was to make handbags more functional for women?

I was working in corporate America, and I never really had a way to channel it. With designing handbags, I never really had a background in it, but felt like I studied them from a consumer standpoint. I was working in a 9-5, so to say, and the only bags they had to carry were in black. They were so unattractive, and so the idea came … all the beautiful designer bags that I love were either too short, not wide enough, or not enough pockets, so I did a lot of things [that had not been done before.]

What were some of those things?

Our signature layered piping in the front. That was inspired when I was outside in the country with the symmetry and the lines in the country. Two layers of piping is not ground breaking, but the way it is laid out is kind of unique. Some of the pockets on the front, we even had to take the pockets off some of the bags because it was too mystical to the pockets and it wasn’t feeling right. Our “Sarah Clutch“… that’s definitely unique. The “Margaret” bag has a very functional wallet inside the bag.

How long have you been designing bags?

It’s been a three-year research process trying to figure out how I wanted to make them, and last spring was our first season.

How has it been going since you’ve been selling your bags?

It’s gone so well. People respond to it and say, “It’s a great idea! I love the detail.”

I think you really accomplished what it is you set out to do. Because I just opened the box and I thought the bag was beautiful…like the choice of leather, the coloring … there’s a lot of texture, and the look of it.

Thank you, for spring we went with a very neutral color pallet, and for fall we went with a much darker color pallet. We have 44 stores that are listed online, and one that’s in California (La Jolla). People can definitely buy it online.

What direction do you see your bags going in for this [fall] season?

We have the “Raquel” and the “Eloise” design, and they are inspired by vintage bags from the 60s. But they also have the 40s feel to them. I was just keeping it a clean line, simple, but interesting shape.

Sounds like you had a pretty good job before. Was it a struggle for you to quit your job?

I am doing handbags full time, and it wasn’t a hard decision. I have a habit of biting off more than I can chew. Once we really got into full swing, I realized that I never really liked being in a cubicle. It was really challenging, but great. My husband asked me when [my designs]were going to make a profit. It’s been very interesting. I’ve taken a lot of risks, but I have also seen a lot rewards.

Where do you see Merrell Bags in five years?

Well, I see Neiman … the whole 9 yards … expanding through wholesale channels.

To learn more about Merrell Handbags, visit the website:www.merrellbags.com.

Interviewed by Kaylene Peoples

Tattoos, Fashion, and Rock ‘n’ Roll

Talking Chic
Tattoos, Fashion, and Rock ‘n’ Roll

The skin is the largest organ of the body.  So for me, accessorizing certain areas of my skin with colorful ink seems to be an obvious part of expressing myself.  But what about the social stigmas attached to the tattooed subculture of men and women?  Or, the most commonly asked question, “What will happen when you’re older?”  Everyone is entitled to his or her own opinion regarding body modification, be it tattoos, piercings, or even plastic surgery.  However, I am proud to know that a solar system of stars stretches from my right hip to below my navel, where my name “Elana” sits in Old English.  I also love having a yin-yang also sitting on my lower back, reminding me that the highs and lows of life combine to create a beautiful existence.

I prefer to place my tattoos in discreet places, regions where I can show them off when the time calls for it.  Wearing a bikini by the pool or at the beach makes me feel oh so sexy.  Lounging around in low-waist sweats and a midriff tank with my boyfriend makes me feel comfy and cute.  But that’s me.

As for those out there who have adorned their skin with tons of pop art, personal portraits, pin-up ladies, and names of their loved ones for all the world to see, I praise your bravery.  In my eyes, the tattoos that have been permanently imprinted on a person’s body are merely an extension of that person’s style, the season, a time, or a reason.  Just as a pair of vintage kitten heels passed from a grandmother to her granddaughter stands for a memorable era, a tattoo depicting this very time period might also carry the same meaning.  A granddaughter can show her love for her grandmother by either keeping the shoes forever or tattooing a specific memoir on her skin forever.

Although I may not choose to display my body art to the public on every occasion—you’ll notice my leopard heels before you catch any glimpse of my tattoos—I can’t help but feel in awe of people who take tattooing to a whole new level.

Such as Kat Von D!

This 25-year-old tattoo artist grew up in the Inland Empire of Southern California, starred on the reality television show “Miami Ink” on TLC as the shop’s only female employee, and eventually scored her own show and shop “LA Ink.”  Although, I am more impressed with her entrepreneurial spirit, rock ‘n’roll vibe, and her insane platform heels than simply her massive number of tattoos, I enjoy seeing a soft-hearted gal committed to her clients and staying passionate about the art of tattooing.  With stars lining alongside her temple and, if you look quickly enough, tattoos underneath her chin, the most common thought might be:  Why would she do that to herself ?

I say, “Why not?”

Elana Pruitt (www.talkingchic.com)

Trapped Inside the Story Leslie Cohen

Trapped Inside the Story
Leslie Cohen

Trapped Inside the Story is so good I predict a bestseller! Written by Leslie Cohen, it is the historical biography of Holocaust survivor Naomi Kalsky, born Sonya Hebenstreit.

The biography opens with Sonya Hebenstreit, seven years old, Jewish, living in Poland during the Russian occupation in 1941. Her family, along with the rest of the people of Lvov, Poland, have struggled throughout the 1930s because of the Great Depression. Before the Depression, Sonya’s father, Israel, had owned his own bakery, but now he works for someone else. Then comes the Nazi invasion, and the Russian Communists leave, inviting any of the people to emigrate to Russia. Sonya’s family, unable to afford the cost of relocating, is soon at the mercy of the Nazis, who have now taken over.

Sonya’s story is told in the genre of the fairy tale—and they lived happily ever after, generally—because of the heroine’s love of fairy tales. As a child, she reveled in the stories of the Ukrainian housekeeper, Zoshka; and the heroes of those stories became her friends. Then, she learned to read herself and read all of the fairy tales she could get her hands on.

Sonya is the oldest of three children. She has a younger sister, Rosa, and a baby brother, Emmanuel. First, her father disappears. He was taken by the Germans and made to work. He manages to escape, but when he returns home, he is fatally ill. Next, her mother disappears, having gone to “volunteer” her services now that her husband is too ill. She never returns. Sonya, the oldest, is left now to take care of her father, her younger sister, and her baby brother. Finding food for everyone and milk for the baby becomes the hardest thing for Sonya.

Soon her father dies, and twelve-year-old Sonya, unable to escape her fate, continues to feed and take care of the family she has left. Emmanuel becomes ill, and in spite of herself, she has to leave him in what passes for a clinic in hopes he recovers. She never sees him again. Finally, Rosa disappears in a roundup while Sonya is away searching for food.

Due to her ingenuity, her fairy tale friends, and the non-Jews who help her in spite of the repercussions if discovered, she manages to evade capture by the Germans; and to survive, as she must, she does whatever survival dictates. Dealing on the Black Market and stealing from apartments that have been abandoned by families taken in roundups are the worst until she has to pretend she’s a Gentile, abandoning her faith. Her fairy tale friends, however, assure her she must do what she must to survive. And always, the hope of seeing her mother, her sister Rosa, and her brother Emmanuel again keeps her going.

She likens the occupation of the Germans to a fairy tale, inside which she is trapped, unable to escape, a fairy tale in which the bad guys win; and again the reader witnesses the atrocities the Jews suffer at the hands of the Nazis and at the hands of some of the non-Jews, mostly because they fear the punishment if discovered befriending or otherwise being kind to Jews. Yet, just as in other stories of the Holocaust, there are those who risk their lives to help the Jews, and this, too, adds to the pathos of the biography.

Not since The Diary of Anne Frank or Elie Wiesel’s Night have I been so touched by the memories of the Holocaust. An orphan now, the thing she feared most, having seen in her fairy tales and in school how orphans were treated, Sonya cries: “I’m an orphan—like some of the heroes in fairy tales I’m like a character in a story. It’s as if I’m trapped inside a horror story––a story so strange, so far-fetched, and so nightmarish that it can only be a fairy tale” (114).

Originally, there were 100,000 Jews in Lvov. Along came the Russian occupation. Then, on June 22, 1941, with the news of the German invasion, about 10,000 Jews left Lvov with the Russian army. On June 29, the German army entered Lvov. In July German soldiers and Ukrainian nationalists began to murder Jews on the streets, and by August 3, 4,000 Jews had been murdered. At the end of the war, there were only 600 Jews left, Sonya, fourteen or fifteen years old now, one of them, the only member of her family left.

Book Reviewed by Lee L. Peoples

Published by Level 4 Press, Inc.
13518 Jamul Drive
Jamul, CA 91935
www.level4press.com
ISBN: 978-1-933769-16-5

Middlesex – Jeffrey Eugenides

Middlesex
Jeffrey Eugenides

Wow! What a book! Jeffrey Eugenides, in telling the story of Calliope/Cal Stephanides, has written a Greek epic, much on the order of Homer’s The Iliad. Calliope in Greek Mythology was the muse of epic poetry. Webster defines an “epic” as a long narrative poem in elevated style recounting the deeds of a legendary or historical hero. Only with the help of the muse could the author pull off this manipulation of point of view from first person, with Calliope, the heroine, and later, Cal, the hero, as narrator, to third person omniscient: “I was born twice: first, as a baby girl, on a remarkably smogless Detroit day in January of 1960; and then as a teenage boy, in an emergency room near Petoskey, Michigan, in August of 1974.” And it is “at the age of forty-one,” Cal says, “I feel another birth coming on” (3):

“Sing now, O Muse, of the recessive mutation on my fifth chromosome! Sing how it bloomed two and a half centuries ago on the slopes of Mount Olympus, while the goats bleated and the olives dropped. Sing how Providence, in the guise of a massacre, sent the gene flying again; how it blew like a seed across the sea to America, where it drifted through our industrial rains until it fell to earth in the fertile soil of my mother’s own Midwestern womb” (3-4).

In Greek mythology, it was believed that it was the muse Calliope, who, as one of the nine beautiful daughters of Zeus and Mnemosyne (memory), enables the epic poet to relate things legendary or historical that only the muse could know. And it is for this reason, Calliope/Cal is able to reach all the way back to her/his immigrant grandparents as possibly the origin of, or rather an explanation for, their “hermaphroditism.” (Today, the politically correct term is “intersex.”) … thus, Calliope’s/Cal’s knowledge of her/his Greek immigrant grandparents. And it was the muse, also, who enabled her/him to narrate as a fetus and before that, as an egg lying in wait to be fertilized.

If credence is to be given to superstition, her/his condition as a hermaphrodite begins with her/his grandparents Desdemona and Eleutherios (“Lefty”) Stephanides. In the war with the Turks in the early Twentieth Century, their homeland is destroyed, and their parents are killed. Desdemona and Eleutherios (“Lefty”) migrate to America and settle in Detroit. But … on the voyage over, they, brother and sister, unnaturally in love with each other, marry; and for quite some time, keep their secret. Years later, their son marries his cousin…. Their first child, a son, is born. Then, Calliope, their second child is born, and it is not until years later that an aberration in her anatomy is detected. It is at this time that surgery is recommended to remove the male parts of her anatomy, but she refuses. Thus, she begins a journey of self discovery in which she ends up as Cal.

Hermaphroditism—the correct term is intersex— is a subject until recently, almost never talked about; and until Jeffrey Eugenides’ novel was chosen by Oprah as her book club selection this summer, very few knew anything about this subject. And true to its epic genre, Calliope and Cal are true heroes in their acceptance of their differences and their triumphs over the obstacles they face in their unique situation. Until “Oprah,” I had never accorded any truth to the myth: Hermaphroditus: in Greek Mythology, the son of Hermes and Aphrodite, who became united in body with the nymph Salmacis. So not only was it an eye opener to learn there are intersex people living quite normal, happy lives, but it was also an enjoyable, suspenseful read. I will admit to some difficulty at the beginning in accepting the omniscient first person narrator, but when I realized Eugenides was writing in the Homeric epic style, using the ubiquitous, omniscient muse, my problem was solved.

Reviewed by Lee L. Peoples

ISBN-13:978-0-312-42773-3
ISBN-10:0-312-42773-5

Reviewed by Lee L. Peoples

Raechel Cunningham – Aesthetician / spa owner – NY

The Beauty Agenda
Aesthetician and Spa Owner, Raechel Cunningham of New York Laser

Raechel Cunningham is a licensed aesthetician and the director at New York Laser & Aesthetics, located in the center of Manhattan.  Raechel is a highly motivated aesthetician with extensive knowledge in the Skin Care industry. She is a graduate of Florida College of Natural Health, where she received an A.S. in Natural Health and obtained courses in both Aesthetics and Massage Therapy.  Raechel has extensive experience in various Laser Treatments such as IPL, Laser Hair Removal, Laser Vascular Treatments, and Photo Facials.  Raechel’s non-laser experience includes facial treatments, microdermabrasions, enzyme and acid peels, pre-/post-operative skin care, hair removal, camouflage make-up, anatomy and physiology, and nutrition of the skin.

“New York Laser & Aesthetics is a skin spa. We provide skin care solutions to our clients that serve to aid in the promotion and preservation of a healthy, beautiful skin appearance by using well-researched skin care products and treatments.  Since not all skin care treatments work the same on people, we offer our clients an assortment of the most up-to-date skincare practices for the best possible results. “

—Raechel Cunningham—

Tell me about your spa.

We’re right off 5th Avenue, next to the Plaza.   And when you walk into the spa, you’re greeted like you’re in a home/waiting room with a nice couch, flat screen TV, and music playing.  We wanted to create a very comforting environment.  We sell skin care products here with our organic skin care products called Imminent.  I like to combine laser treatment with organic skincare.

What kind of laser treatments do you provide?

Laser hair removal (FDA approved machine); we also do photo facials for sun damage, hyper pigmentation due to hormones or the sun; we do skin tightening, and one of my fortes is laser vascular therapy.

What does laser skin tightening entail?

You come in and show us the areas that are bothering you.  I come up with these things called vector points.  The laser’s going to focus on tightening.   The laser puts out an infrared heat source, which heats up collagen on the dermal layer.  Collagen is lying on the surface under your skin in little coils.  This treatment creates those coils to tighten up, and it almost kills them; but you’re not having any burns on the surface of your skin.  You have nothing that looks like you had anything that was done.  In 3-4 weeks when the dead collagen cells reach the surface, they come off; and your body senses that you have a wound, so it starts promoting new collagen at a very quick rate.  After the second treatment, you really start to see results and a fifty percent improvement.  So someone who’s not ready for plastic surgery, if you have a lot of fatty tissues under the skin like somebody’s neck or jaw line, skin tightening isn’t going to work as well as it would with somebody with hanging or crappy skin.  When somebody also has spider veins, the laser also targets the spider veins, like legs, red vessels on their face, nose, cheeks….

Do you know what causes spider veins?

It’s basically a lot of pressure on the legs.  And the veins that are responsible for moving the blood along have so much pressure that they start forming all these little veins that help search for new channels so they can handle the pressure more effectively.  Sometimes we treat the veins, and they might come back in other areas.  Somebody would probably need to see a doctor if that happened.

The treatments last for how long?

With the vein treatments, if they go away and your body doesn’t produce more veins, it can be permanent; or they may come back in the same area.  It just depends on once we close those little channels, your veins still have those pressures, so it may form new ones.  People get great results here.   People we did a year ago still don’t have new veins.  It can last for quite a few years.  The same thing with all the hyper pigmentation, all the treatments I do here take a few treatments; but once they’re gone, the only way they’ll come back is if you’re doing things to cause them to return.

Laser hair removal, is it a better method than electrolysis?

It is a better method, but whether you’re doing electrolysis or whether you’re doing laser hair removal, there are three phases of hair growth.   These are things as a consumer you wouldn’t know.  It’s very easy to misunderstand or get talked into buying something.  So what I’m trying to do is explain that there’s the one phase of hair growth.  It’s called antegin and that’s when the actual hair is attached to the pila.  That’s what develops the hair.  So when you do electrology or laser or anything that delivers heat into the pore, it has to conduct to the follicle so that it damages it, [keeping it] from making any new hair.  You’re only in this phase for a short period of time. You can be receiving the treatment, your hair may fall out, but   you’re still going to have hair grow in.  So that’s why with laser hair removal, we try to promote it in packages of six.  That’ll give me enough time to get all the hairs that are in that “right” phase.  With laser you can do a larger surface area in quicker amounts of time and you’re not risking inserting a needle and probing into a hair follicle, putting too much heat in that follicle and creating a dark spot—I see it happen a lot.  I also went to school for electrology so I am very familiar with how that works, and I definitely think laser hair removal is a better way to go.

In your professional opinion, is the laser hair removal actually permanent?

It is permanent, but if I did it to you and you were in that phase of antegin, which is the growth phase, your hair’s going to fall out and not grow for a month; and then it’s going to start to grow.  So it is permanent, but you have to have the right amount of treatments.

How long have you been doing this?

I’ve been doing this for over eleven years.  1996, I started doing manicures and pedicures.   I was working in a spa where they gave facials, and I was interested, so I went to school to learn that.  And I had been a licensed aesthetician for almost eight years.  I am originally from Florida.  I’ve been working for a dermatologist most of my career, so I have a lot of experience in corrective skin care.  I moved to NY about a year and a half ago.  I worked for a large laser company chain.  I decided to quit and work for a plastic surgeon who was really adamant about being partners with me and opening up a spa.  So I pretty much did, and here I am.  I have a partner who owns the place, and I pretty much run it and have a small share of the business myself.  I was very lucky.  It’s not like a regular spa. I wanted to run it like a doctor’s office, so far as the treatments that I offer, but still very relaxing, like you’re at somebody’s home.  I have two rooms:  a laser room where I do all the treatments (looks like a doctor’s office), clean and sterile; the other room is where I do all my facials.  It’s very personable here.

What are your prices?

Titan Skin Tightening, full face $1,100;Laser Spider Vein Treatment, 30 minutes $400; Laser Hair Removal, Brazilian, $340 per treatment;Cranberry Pomegranate Treatment, $250.

Of all the skin care treatments that claim to do what the laser treatments do, you chose the laser.   Why is this the better way to do it?

I chose laser because of all the treatments that I do, the laser is more aggressive (hair removal).  It’s kind of a tool of the future.  There’s no other tool that lets you do hair removal in a timely manner.  I feel like laser is going to be very popular in the future, more so than it is now.  As long as you have an FDA approved machine, and you’re trained on it, I think it’s safe as long as the user is licensed and educated in the laser.

Have you ever had a client where there was nothing corrective you could do?

On my level, I have had clients on an aesthetic and cosmetic level where I couldn’t help them.  I refer them to a plastic surgeon on staff. I have a dermatologist I refer to.

So in other words, you’re a skin care specialist, not a magician.  Any tips you’d like to give to your average female on taking care of her skin?

I reference to laser.  If anybody’s contemplating doing laser, they should really do their homework and make sure that where they go is licensed, the people are licensed, and that they have an FDA approved laser to prevent burns or things that could happen that they don’t want to happen. And maintaining at home with a good skin care line that’s good for their skin.

What about acne?   Is there a laser that can help that?

There are certain treatments that are called LED lights.  They come in different colors.  The blue LED light helps to kill the bacteria that’s responsible for causing acne.  It’s a temporary treatment.  How I handle acne here would be a series of chemical peels and then a laser treatment called laser genesis.  It helps kill the bacteria as well.

Can any age do this?

I usually start treating kids from 12-13.  I do a mild chemical peel or laser treatment.  Hair removal, I like to do it starting from age 16 and up.  Do your homework, make sure whoever you go to is really licensed and knowledgeable.  I’ve seen a lot of burns and bad things happen to people, and I don’t want that to be something people think about when they think of laser.

You said earlier that you see laser as the treatment of the future.  Not that you’re a psychic, but in five years where do you think laser might be?

The technology will be much more advanced.  Currently, the FDA regulates how deep the wave lengths go into the skin.   I think in the future, maybe the lasers will be able to penetrate a little bit more.   I also think that they will be regulated a lot more.   Some states are not regulated, and anybody can do them.   I think it will be something that will be taken more seriously, but I definitely think the effects of laser will keep improving.

To learn more about New York Laser, visit www.nylaskin.com for before and after shots.  If you’re in the New York area, make an appointment with Raechel Cunningham, Director of Operations:

New York Laser & Aesthetics
21 W. 58th Street #1C/D
New York, NY 10019
212-753-SKIN
www.nylaskin.com

Interviewed by Kaylene Peoples

September

Insights
September

September has always marked the beginning of a new year for me, not only because my birthday falls on the last day of the month, but also because it marks the end of summer and the beginning of the school year.  Having raised three children into adulthood, I’ve been conditioned by long practice to be sensitive to the changes in the rhythms and routine that this time of year sparks.

I hope that this is a new beginning, not only for me, but for the world.  Will there ever be an end to war and warmongering?  Will we ever as civilized beings face that we’ve wrecked and depleted our resources and are continuing to do so?  What of the world Karma?  What debt are we incurring against the future generations?  How can we continue to deface our world and put the least of us in the way of famine, disease, and treacherous warfare (as if warfare could be anything else but treacherous)?   How is it that my comfort is at the expense of another’s welfare?

I’m a small splinter in the machine.  How do I stop the machine? How do I make my voice heard and declare that I want no more part in a country that goes around killing, killing, and killing with total disregard to the sanctity of life?  I want to make a change.  I want to change the world.  Mahatma Ghandi once stated, “Be the change you want to see in the world.”

I have to be the change I seek, so I started making a change.  I stopped eating meat.  I like animals, and even though I like the taste of meat, I don’t like causing suffering to my fellow creatures.  I walk more.  The more I walk the less gas I use.  I’ve taken yoga.  The more I practice yoga, the more I can walk, and the less gas I use.  I’ve taken to meditating, chanting, and doing everything I can to be at peace with my family and others I exist with.  It’s not enough, but I have distanced myself from the machine.

I believe that if I learn to make peace instead of war, that like the 100th monkey, my habits will rub off on others.  What is the story of the 100th monkey?  That one monkey on one distant island that learns how to wash his food in some way causes another monkey on a distant far away island to wash his food, no way influenced by the first island.

It really happened in 1952, on the island of Koshima (http://www.dead.net/forum/ what-would-be-answer?page=2).  Scientists provided monkeys with sweet potatoes that had been dropped in the sand. The monkeys liked the taste of the sweet potatoes, but not the dirt.

One day an adolescent female named Imo discovered that by washing the potatoes in a nearby stream, she could rid herself of the sand.  She taught her mother to wash the sweet potatoes.  She also taught her playmates, who then taught their mothers this new method.

Gradually, other monkeys on the island learned to wash their sweet potatoes, and all the young monkeys learned to wash sweet potatoes to make them more edible. But for the adults, only those who imitated their children learned how to do this.  Other adults kept eating the dirty sweet potatoes.

Then one day, 99 monkeys began washing their sweet potatoes.  Later that morning, the hundredth monkey learned to wash potatoes.  By that evening almost everyone in the tribe had begun washing sweet potatoes before eating them.  The hundredth monkey created a momentum that produced an ideological breakthrough!

Written by Lisa Trimarchi

TV Land, Beverly Johnson, Wilhelmina Models, Inc., and Time Warner Cable L.A. Present a New Kind of Modeling Competition – Twenty Somethings Need Not Apply!

TV Land and Wilhelmina Models Present a New Kind of Modeling Competition – Twenty Somethings Need Not Apply!

I guess it’s true what they say: 40 is the new 20. 50 is the new 30 and 60 is the new forty? So why not create a modeling competition for women over 35. After all, we are all getting younger anyway! Beverly Johnson, TV Land, Wilhelmina Models, Inc., and Time Warner Cable Los Angeles promise to deliver the next great supermodel in the new series “She’s Got the Look” set to premiere Spring 2008. The show is being executive produced by Emmy Award Winner Allison Grodner (“Big Brother“, “Blowout“). The winner of the reality series competition will receive a lucrative modeling contract with Wilhelmina Models, Inc.

“This will be an exciting journey across the USA. We are looking for women who embody what every model should, regardless of age, and that is the utmost beauty and confidence.”
—Sean Patterson, President of Wilhelmina—

Agenda Magazine interviewed casting director Andrew Strauser. He gave us his insight on this new kind of modeling competition.

There must be a new market for 30-something models. I know about More Magazine, which caters to 40 and over. What exactly is the market?

There is a growing commercial and print market out there for these women, and we hope that our show will draw attention to it.

Will your model search be anything like America’s Next Top Model,
and are you seeking professionals or amateurs?

ANTM is a fantastic show. While our show is also a modeling competition, in the youth-obsessed society we live in, the fact that we are celebrating women 35 andolder makes this show truly groundbreaking. And yes, we’re open to former professionals or first-timers. If there’s a woman out there who’s interested in auditioning, we’re interested in meeting her!

What is the impetus for the model search? Is it also plus size models, too, or just regular size?

YES! We’re looking for confident, beautiful and sophisticated women of all sizes!

Are there already advertising/marketing contracts set in place for the winners?

Our winner will receive a multi-year contract with the world-famous Wilhelmina Modeling Agency. There is also the potential for a major magazine spread. However, the details of that are still being worked out.

Why do you feel that there is a need for this kind of competition?

In general, there aren’t that many opportunities for woman 35 and over to break into the fashion and television industries. So, with this show we get to break down both those barriers. I’m thrilled to be a part of it. On my casting trips, I’m met with such excitement and enthusiasm from the women all across the country. They all say, “It’s about time!”

How do you think that these types of contests will affect the modeling industry?

It’s hard to say, but I’m hoping that we’ll be able to turn some heads and change some minds. People want to see a reflection of themselves in print and on television, and I hope that our show will help break down some walls in the industry for models 35 and over.

What type of responses have you already received?

We’ve had a great response thus far. We’ve already received thousands of applications from all over the country. Anyone who is interested can log on to www.tvland.com and fill out an application.

What do you foresee as the future of the competition? Will there be
more contests?

You never know how the viewing audience will respond and what’s going to be a hit. But, I truly hope this show resonates with our audience. There are a lot of people who are working tirelessly to ensure that we put together a highly entertaining and positive television series that will showcase exceptional women from around the country in their quest to make a dream come true.

Does Wilhelmina currently have a department in their agency for middle-aged models?

Yes, they call it their Sophisticated Division, and it does quite well for them!

Do you think that once the show airs, modeling agencies will start accepting 35 and older models?

I hope so!

Interviewed by Kaylene Peoples