It's Winter Break! Bwog will be moving in slow motion.

FashionHop: Swagger Like Us

The celebration of Latino Heritage Month continues with reflections on last night's "Swagger Like Us," Latino Month's Cultural Showcase and Fashion Show.

Last night Bwog arrived early, but as sartorially inclined soirees are wont to do, the "Swagger Like Us" Latino Heritage Month Showcase and Fashion Show started fashionably late, about forty-five minutes late. After the initial ecstatic rush of the complementary flan and Red Bull wore off, the audience -- a mix of predominantly Latino students, friends and family -- had tired of dancing and singing along to Kayne remixes and turned to texting.

But when the lights in the Roone Arledge Auditorium finally dimmed, the audience warmly greeted the event's emcees, Cindy SugaRusH and Yamaneika, a Nuyorican comedian and a black, self-described culturally adopted Nuyorican comedian, and only groaned slightly at their exhortation to buy raffle tickets. The grand prize was a Metrocard. (Insert gallows humor about the economy here.)

The emcees routine at best involved physical humor and sass and at worst resorted to volume and recurrent shout-outs to different Latino nationalities. But despite their occasionally uninspired antics, the pair had definite chemistry and got the crowd excited for the evening's events, which were designed to take the audience on a tour through time exploring Latin roots and confronting the new identities Latino Americans have embraced in New York City.

In actuality, the event program only itemized seventeen performances, which spotlighted all things Latino from music, dance and spoken word to stand-up comedy and fashion shows. Although Latino and non-Latino students from both Barnard and Columbia performed the majority of the acts, other acts featured members from the greater New York Latino community. But without a doubt the audience's favorite acts included the numerous dance perfomances and three student-produced fashion shows featuring the designs of Triple 5 Soul, ZooYork and Penguin among others.

The first performance of the night spotlighted Vanity David, BC' 10, dancing a traditional Bulerias Flamencas dance, which differs from plain old flamenco because it has a faster, more dramatic beat allowing for greater improvisation. The old-world Iberian lore associated with David's dance made for a historically appropriate introduction to the evening, but was not at all indicative of the ensuing performances, which by in large focused on the contemporary manifestations of Latino culture in New York City.

The first act culminated with a performance given by Ballet Hispanico's Student Ensemble, whom Cindy SugaRusH and Yamaneika informed the audience have performed at numerous august venues including the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington DC and the Macy's Day Parade among others. But it was Yamaneika's reference to Ballet Hispanico's annual perfomance at the Puerto Rican Day Parade that won the audience over. The ensuing performance featured a company of well-trained ballerina/os dancing to salsa-inspired classical music. As the dance developed, the choreography transitioned away from its inital focus on classical ballet to a more abstracted fusion of salsa, tango and jazz.

The second act opened with the first segment of the "Swagger Like Us" fashion show and featured looks from Triple 5 Soul. Strutting down a makeshift catwalk, student models sported skinny jeans, high-heels and bold silk-screen shirts. The second act which included two more runway shows and fabulous dance performances given by Bronx break-dance royalty, Rockefella and her entourage, a trio of tween badasses from the Hostos Lincoln Academy Step Team and Columbia's own ONYX dance team.

Rockefella encapsulated the atmosphere of the evening and the spirit charging through the audience last night when she gave a pre-performance shout-out to "All yous kick-ass Latinos here at Columbia getting degrees, representing Nuyorican intelligence and making all of us Latinos unidos proud."

-- MEQ


Posted by Rick Ross Da Boss : #1 · reply · track
October 25, 2008 at 1:29 PM (from campus)
I must admit, though, some of these girls were banging! Well for Columbia standards...
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01/10/2009


Apply now and keep everyone updated on the artistic pulse of the Columbia campus! Postcrypt Art Gallery is looking for a dedicated webmaster to maintain the official Postcrypt site, www.postcrypt.info. Please e-mail jenny@postcrypt.info with your name, year and school, experience, and statement of interest.

The application deadline is January 10, 2009.


01/24/2009

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The Columbia East Asia Review is currently accepting submissions for its 2009 edition. Research papers from all disciplines and majors are welcome. For more information and submission details, please visit us at www.eastasiareview.org

or e-mail us at info@eastasiareview.org. The deadline for submissions is January 24, 2009.
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01/24/2009

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Publish that senior thesis! In its 20th year of publication, the Journal of Politics & Society is inviting submissions for its 2009 edition, which will be distributed in Barnes & Noble and Borders. Please email essays to helvidius@columbia.edu or visit http://www.helvedius.org
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01/26/2009

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Include your name, year, and majors and specializations;

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02/01/2009

Contact email: periwynkle@gmail.com


Do you like to read and write about books, attend literary events/exhibitions, and frequent cafés and bookstores for readings by authors and poets? If you answered yes to any part of the above question, you should write for Spectator Books! My name is Yin Yin Lu, and I am the new Spectator A&E Books Editor. There are many benefits and inimitable opportunities for Books writers besides being able to see your name in print: interviewing all sorts of published writers, from debut novelists to Nobel Peace Prize winners, attending events at the NYPL, Symphony Space, book festivals, and museums for free, and getting free review copies of books before they are released! Last semester, for instance, I interviewed Lytton Smith and Karen Russell, both published graduates of the Columbia MFA program, attended a talk with critics James Wood and Daniel Mendelsohn at the NYPL, and heard Malcolm Gladwell speak at the New Yorker Festival.

Besides being exposed to these exciting opportunities, another reason you should write for Spectator Books is that it is not a long-term commitment - you can contribute as often or as little as you like. You can start your own column, write a recurring feature, or submit an article once every few weeks (or once the entire semester). Moreover, articles are flexible in terms of length and style, depending on whether they are features, reviews, or pieces for the Eye (Spectator's weekly arts and features magazine). Or you can post reviews of any length or style anytime you want on Spectacle, A&E's new and amazing blog.

There really are no obligations to being a Spec Books writer besides actually writing the articles that you want to. I will be sending e-mails with pitches and other information every week, and holding biweekly meetings at the Spec office, but those are not mandatory and are just an opportunity for me to assign pitches and meet my writers.

Completely enticed? Mildly interested? Still uncertain and would like more information? Whatever the case, e-mail me at periwynkle@gmail.com.


02/09/2009

Contact email: cufilmproductions@columbia.edu

Columbia Undergraduate Film Productions is launching our inaugural Production Season to write and produce original short films for our Film Festival!

CUFP Production Season will consist of intensive Screenwriters' Workshops and Directors' Workshops to offer you full creative and logistic support from your peers as you make your films on campus! We are looking for talented writers and directors who are passionate about film to create fresh, interesting material for our film festival.

Ideal candidates will be enthusiastic about film, dedicated to the workshop process, and excited to work on short films in a CUFP workshop setting. Workshops will be late Sunday afternoons and some Monday evenings.

The DEADLINE for Writers' Applications is Friday January 23.
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All Applicants: Send an e-mail with your name, e-mail, phone number, and school and class information to CUFPproductionseason@gmail.com. Please write a short personal statement (why are you interested in CUFP Production Season? How will you benefit from the workshop process?). Make sure to include all relevant experience with film and writing and/or directing.

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02/15/2009

Contact email: rhapsody@columbia.edu


Rhapsody in Blue, Columbia's urban affairs journal, having successfully, if belatedly gotten its first semester magazines in hand, is going to try again.

We're back to North America this semester. We need pitches from you. We want thoughtful, interesting, fun pieces that say something about cities. What are you interested in writing about? The first step is to send us a pitch--a paragraph about what you want to talk about, how will you do it? Pitches are due February 15. You'll hear from us if it's a go and drafts due a month later.

Old issues are on our website if you'd like to see more. Great opportunity to publish ideas from class, etc.

Send an email by us with any questions. Our FIRST MEETING for anyone interested in learning more about writing, editing, web or layout will be Wed, JAN 28, at 7:30, Broadway Piano Lounge. Also stay tuned for the study abroad blog, which should be going somewhere this semester. Let us know if you're interested in that as well.


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