Pale Kid Raps Fast

Written by the one and only Horace Leung.

“Oh, hai

I’m that guy

Built so fly in a silk bow tie

Don’t know why I’m built so fly

But I am no lie”

–         George Watsky

What can be a better combination than a FREE dinner and a show by Stockton Entertainment Team? With over fifteen million hits on his video, “Pale Kid Raps Fast”, George Watsky has and performing his poems to colleges all around the United States. Lucky for us, we were able to see him from beyond the videos that he makes. George Watsky is a poet and rapper and his inspiration comes from the frustrations of modern life and politics.

Even though the food was spectacular and could have been the event, having George Watsky recite his poems was just a nice bonus. Of course, he recited “Letter to My 16-Year-Old Self” and sang “Pale Kid Raps Fast,” however, he also recited original poems that have not been posted on YouTube. He brought to light the issues of global warming, heat, and the ambiguity of religion. His poems were insightful, impressive, and straight-out funny.

All in all, it was very interesting to see George Watsky and hear him give his perspective on various issues. He is a talent that should not be ignored. Nonetheless, this event appeals to everyone. If you are a fan of George Watsky to liking free catered dinners when you are running out of meal swipes due to the fact you’ve been over eating at the Campus Center, then these are opportunities here at Stockton for YOU. However, if this event will never happen again, I suggest you watch his videos on Youtube to see what everyone is talking about.

 

Cleaning the Beach

I headed toward a classroom in the Arts and Sciences building where Water Watch, a club organized by Stockton students, was meeting for the first time this semester. I was not sure what kind of students to expect or what exactly the members of the club had in mind in terms of activities and goals. The club turned out to be an organization with the primary goals of learning about the environment and doing what we can to improve its health and continued sustainability. I found the interests of this club to be intriguing as I understand the value of our natural environment as well as the consequences it has faced due to the actions of humans in their quest toward industrialization and progress. All of the members were so nice and with the shared interests between us I knew that I would fit in wonderfully.

Immediately upon gaining interest in Water Watch, an announcement was made about an upcoming beach cleanup. This event was to take place only three days after the meeting and I signed up promptly for the September 28th, 2012 beach sweep in Ocean City. Everybody was so kind and inviting in terms of coordinating meeting places, compromising on a time frame, and assisting with transportation from Stockton to the beach location and back.

The students headed toward the designated location where the beach cleanup would be taking place. Everybody was handed gloves for protection and garbage bags for collecting the discarded trash that would be found along the beach surfaces. We then divided into groups and began our mission to locate and properly discard as much garbage as possible. It was absolutely amazing the quantity of human-generated debris that could be found along the beach surfaces, especially beneath the boardwalk. It was also quite riveting to observe the sorts of things people left behind; these included anything from empty bottles to cigarette buds to food packaging remains to broken toys to used diapers. I was in great disbelief at the quantity of garbage that was spotted within just the short period of an hour and of the specific content of the trash items.

As the specified time frame for the beach sweep was coming to an end, all of the groups collected together at the original point where we broke off originally. Each group had easily filled their entire garbage bag. Some people had even discovered some fascinating items such as a horseshoe crab molt. We all then proceeded to walk out onto the jetty toward the water to bask for a moment in the natural beauty of the ocean, take a group picture, and head back to campus.

This experience was fun, productive, and educational. We were able to contribute positively to the condition of the beach; however, it was deeply obvious that we had made barely a dent in the prevalent issue of beach contamination. People need to be more cognizant of their actions and the resulting implications. More people need to apply themselves towards reducing the already-existent contamination of the environment and continue this process to the point of changing one’s habits in order to help reduce future contribution to the destruction of nature and instead assist in its preservation. I am very excited for future beach cleanups as well as other activities that I will have the opportunity in which to participate through Water Watch in an effort to learn more about the environment and improve its condition for ourselves and future generations.

 

Blog Post Two – The Four Bitchin’ Babes

“You know the movie American Graffiti, and the part where Terry says to Debbie, that gorgeous blond honey, “What a babe…what a bitchin’ babe,” well that’s us, that’s how we chose our name.” On October 16, 2011, I saw the show, “The Four Bitchin’ Babes.” This particular act they were presenting was called “Diva Nation.” The performance was fantastic from the very beginning. A man came onto the stage, introduced the ladies, and then cut a big ribbon to initiate the start of the show. The four women started with a very funny song all about the items people frequently lose, such as, one’s glasses, the television remote, the money to pay the pizza man, and a purse. This song was a perfect introduction as to what the whole show would be about. The women sang songs about real life events, but made them hilariously entertaining by “letting their inner diva come out.” Their show was definitely aimed towards older women, so some parts I did not understand or find as funny as the other members in the audience did. Nonetheless, “The Four Bitchin’ Babes” was an awesome show performed by some very awe-inspiring babes.

Each of the four babes, Christine Lavin, Patty Larkin, Megan McDonough, and Sally Fingerett, put on a unique performance. One of the babes introduced the other and her accomplishments, then that lady spoke and sang a song she wrote. Their songs were personal, yet everyone could emphasize with them. The ladies had such a great view on life and a wonderful spirit about them. For example, one of the songs the audience and I found extremely amusing was one called, “The Boob Fairy.” They each went back and forth singing their own songs until the end of the show, when they said, “Thanks for coming; it would have been different if you hadn’t.” The last song they sang together, which summoned up what “The Four Bitchin’ Babes” and their shows were all about, “happiness, love, laughter, singing, and women.” (The show also inspired me to check out their website for more information about the babes at – http://www.fourbitchinbabes.com/).

SET: Dinner and a Show

            On Tuesday, September 18, 2012, around 7:50pm, my roommate and I were headed to the cafeteria in the Campus Center for a bit of a late dinner. While we were walking, two students came up to us and asked if we liked free food. Being broke college freshmen, we both eagerly responded with a resounding, “yes!”. The two students then informed us about Dinner and a Show.  This program was being presented by SET, which is short for Stockton Entertainment Team. They told us that the event was being held in the Campus Center Event Room and that there would be food and music, both of which were being provided to Stockton students free of charge. My roommate and I went just to see what it was about, and we ended up having a great time.

            Upon entering the Event Room we were greeted by the smiling faces of many members of SET. They directed us toward to the two buffet style tables that were filled with food. We grabbed plates and filled them with chicken parmesan, pasta, and salad. The food tasted great, and we even got to go up for seconds.  We sat at a table with some other people that we didn’t know prior to attending the event, but we introduced ourselves and had made some new friends by the end of the night.    

            While we were eating, we were introduced to the night’s musical guest named Matt Wade. He was a singer and accompanied himself on the piano. There was a small stage set up in the front of the event room where he preformed and was equipped with a keyboard and a microphone. He sang some original songs that were very catchy and well written, and he also sang some familiar songs that got almost everyone singing along. I’m a singer and I love music, so I found being able to attend this event to hear music and even get to sing a little to be so much fun. While the students in the room were enjoying the music, members of SET came around and took pictures of all the tables. These pictures made their way onto the SET facebook page, making us all a little famous. Also, even though we were all so full from all of the food we had consumed, many of us found room for some of the cake that was provided.

            I found this event completely on accident, and was just lucky enough to have wandered into the Campus Center at the perfect time that Tuesday night. I was able to have some great food, be entertained by a talented musician, and meet some new people, all at no expense to me. SET did a great job with the event and everything ran very smoothly. I am very happy that I was able to attend the program and become aware of SET, because now I will be sure to take advantage of more of the awesome things that they make available to students, such as Dinner and a Show, or one of my new favorites, the cupcake bar!

REGISTRATION ADVICE

To all my fellow honors kids out there who have not yet registered for classes. Here’s some advice. Get all the CRN numbers for the classes you want. When you first click on register, a banner comes on and you have to have the CRN numbers ready if you don’t want to waste time looking through the catalog again. Let me warn you…IT WILL BE STRESSFUL. I was personally freaking out! Like my hands were shaking…and I agree that’s a little overdoing it but I cant help it when I’m stressed…so have your stuff ready to go.
I cant repeat this enough, and I’m sure you’ve all heard it a bazillion times: but make back up schedules and have those ready to go too. Make sure you visit the website and see how the seats are filling up the morning of the your registration day at least so you have the most updated information and keep looking until your time to register comes. Make sure you get that secret website from Widjaja just in case the network crashes. It’s even a good idea to register in the honors center so that you have some honors kids there helping you out. Don’t use the wireless connection, its more likely to crash…have a wire connecting your computer to the internet.
Make sure there are no holds on your account and that you have all the POIs (Permission of Instructor) if you need them. Talk to the professor you want to take the class with to get the POI, send them an email AND visit them….it gets you brownie points and its more professional.
Make sure you have access to a computer at least one hour before you have to register just in case there is a problem in the system again and you can register early. It would totally suck if you lost your chance to get in early when everyone else is doing it so be prepared. And that’s all that I can think of…except for one thing: DON’T FORGET TO BREATHE.
Luv ya all! 🙂
<3 Kimia

Letters Home

The show was nothing like what I thought it would be. I figured it would be letters from one soldier in the three stages of his military career but instead there was 15 or so soldiers just recalling the letters from their career. There was one mother also talking about the letters she wrote and about her sons who were in the war.
I loved the beginning of it. All the performers run on to the stage and just say random things. Everyone is left confused until after a few of them step into the spot light and recall the letter. Then you realize, the random things they were saying was just the beginning of the letter. The soldiers were all very different and so it was a great way to get to see different perspectives on the military life and the challenges they had to face. The one solider that I was rooting for the entire time was a father. His wife and had just given birth to their daughter and he could not wait to see her. He had been deployed only days after his daughter was born and in his letter he kept talking about how much he missed her and how proud of her she was and how much he couldn’t wait to see her again. He felt sorry that he had to miss out on even part of her childhood and was telling her how he knew she’d grow up to be a wonderful person. Out of all the other letters, I feel like his was the most touching to me. Then for his last letter, he was saying happy birthday to his daughter on her first birthday. It had been a year since he had seen her and was expressing how he could not wait to see her soon. Then a slide came on that said he died only two days after his daughter’s first birthday. The part really hit me hard and I felt extremely upset. I feel like it was a good play because even though I’ve never had anyone close to me be in the military and I have been lucky enough to have my father in my life through every stage of my childhood, the play still managed to move me. It let me relate to someone I had nothing in common with and feel upset about losing him, even though I had only gotten to know his character for about an hour and half.
The letters were actually from real soldiers and in the end they showed the pictures of the true soldiers. Most of them died but few survived the war and are busy doing other things today. I wish more honors kids had came because it was actually really good and I enjoyed it.

Tap Dogs: Tap Dancing Exposed

Amazing, fascinating, electrifying, energetic, upbeat, stunning, surprising and  unbelievable are just a few words to describe the performance of Tap Dogs, a dance group that put on a marvelous show at Stockton on September 22nd. A group of about eight talented men graced the Performing Arts Center’s stage with their impeccable tap dancing ability. I was in awe of their talents from the moment the show began to the end of their third encore.  The talent of each and every one of the men was out of this world, and the stunts they pulled were insane, yet utterly incredible.

The beginning of the show consisted of each dancer allowing the audience to become familiar with their unique talent. The dancers would then unite as one and perform a group dance. These group dances were phenomenal to say the least. If I closed my eyes, it sounded as if there was one person dancing on the stage, when in reality there were eight. They were so uniform and in sync with one another that it blew the audience members away. The men were upbeat and made the whole experience really enjoyable.

I must say that I was in shock and horror for the second half of the performance. The men started performing crazy stunts that could have easily injured them. One man tapped upside down on a metal board overheard while his fellow dancers held him in that position by only rope. It was thrilling to watch and kept the performance suspenseful and most definitely unique. The dancers also jumped on and off of ladders tapping intensely and in rhythm, which was pure genus. It was amazing to watch, for the choreography was simply breathtaking. There was also a dance routine to the sounds of firearms which was frightening but exhilarating all at the same time. The things they could do with their feet were at times truly awe inspiring. Tap dances were performed on a variety of unusual surfaces throughout the entire show including water, metal and steel. The metal and steel created unique and majestic sounds and spiced up the performance.

Water was indeed the most creative surface though. In fact, my favorite part of the whole show was when the dancers all arrived on stage wearing rain boots. I became very confused due to the fact that it is practically impossible to get any other sound out of a rain boot other than a squeak, let alone an impressive tap. I was wrong. They all sat down on a bench with a large container of water in front of them and began stepping in and out of the water simultaneously, creating an interesting yet appealing sound. It was one of the coolest moments of the show. This whole scene was choreographed and the stage became soaked with water. It was extremely creative and quickly became my favorite scene.

Once they changed out of the boots and back into their beloved tap shoes, they danced around and tapped in the water still left on the stage, splashing the rows of people in the front. It was extremely amusing and the guys were nothing short of entertaining and hilarious. They received four standing ovations from the audience and myself and performed three encores that were absolutely fantastic and adequately portrayed the amount of talent this spectacular dance troupe contained.

I am so glad I was able to go see this amazing show. I tried to describe what I saw to the best of my abilities so those of you who could not attend can get a sense of the magnificent talent gracing the stage. If they happen to come to Stockton again in the future I suggest to everyone that they buy a ticket right away. Tap Dogs is a must see show and a truly spectacular performance that simply cannot be missed.

Four Bitchin’ Babes

I am 18 years old, but enjoyed that show. Maybe it was filled with jokes directed towards older women, (and no I did not understand some of them), but that didn’t stop me from laughing anyway. I’m sure I’ll understand in due time. What did enjoy was that these four ladies were just full of charm. You couldn’t help but to love them and the music they played was happy and cheerful. It made me smile even though I was having a really bad day. They sing about real life things. About teenagers, and chocolate and personal problems, but they have a good sense of humor about it.
That’s the way we should be I think. I think life is too short for us to take it seriously and the four bitchin’ babes just confirmed it for me. The stuff they sing about, is stuff that every woman has to deal with. Sometimes it can get frustrating not being as young as they used to but, it is what it is. That’s when you have to start laughing at life and enjoying it more instead of feeling upset over things and getting all angry and having wrinkles show up on your face.
This is the type of show I would take my mother and grandmother to see. It’s a great thing for women, I wouldn’t suggest to men, but if you want to go, I do recall seeing a few male heads from my seat all the way in the back. They also sell their books and CDs. I have to admit I was very tempted to buy a book. It has a page in it, dedicated to gum. You know how sometimes you want to throw out your gum, but you cant find anything to wrap around it? Well they had pre-cut pieces of paper that you could rip right out of the book dedicated to helping you throw out your gum when you need to. Because it is at times like these when the four bitchin’ babes can be there for you. This is the charming and awesome sense of humor that ran through the entire show. And I have to say, I actually enjoyed myself.

Mutter Museum

The Mutter Museum Trip was a lot of fun and filled with excitement regardless of the horrible weather. Forget about it being cold, but it was snowing…in October!!! The museum itself was smaller than I expected it to be but there was a lot of interesting stuff. I think some of my favorites included the skeleton of the giant. It was so crazy to think that a man was actually that tall. Can you imagine standing next to him? I wonder what the world must have looked like to him. To him, we were all a bunch of kids, and kids were infants and infants were just pebbles. The twins joined at different spots was very interesting as well. There were lots of drawers of stuff that people had swallowed. Objects like pins, bones, jewelry, or buttons that had been recovered after a person had swallowed it. People are amazing! There were lots of skulls. I think the best part was that they had written the ethnicity of the skull on a card next to it, so then we could all look for an ethnicity similar to ours and be able to compare our head to the skull on display. I didn’t find an Iranian one, but it was cool nonetheless.
They Mutter Museum also had Day of the Dead festivities going on. We had the chance to decorate our own skull cookie and make flowers. After all that, there was a gift shop. It was small but they had a section for stuffed animals that represented different diseases. I have to say that was awesome. I would so want to buy every single one and just have a display in my house showing off the different diseases. It would be such a fun way to learn about them. I really wanted to buy one but they didn’t seem worth the money. Instead I bought two pins. One for me and one for my brother. I always buy something to bring back with me as a memory and I figured the pin would be nice. It has a “U” on it representing the “ooo” sound in “Mutter.” Overall, I feel like the trip was very interesting and a great learning experience and getting to explore Philadelphia a little bit, even if it was in the worst weather possible, was definitely an incredible way to top it all off.

Stockton’s 9th Annual Day of Service

On Saturday, September 8th Stockton held their 9th annual Day of Service where students came together and were distributed on and off campus to volunteer. Being a freshman in the Honor’s Service Learning program I was told about this event at orientation in June. Professor Rosner and the older honor’s students continued to speak highly of this event throughout our bonding sessions. Although they talked about it, they never truly explained what it was all about. They simply told us newcomers to sign up early and attend the event. When I returned home from orientation I did as they directed and signed up as soon as possible.

I received an e-mail a few days before September 8th notifying me that I was assigned to participate in gardening at the Noyes Museum. I am not a gardener what-so-ever so this sounded like it would be a fun and interesting new experience. I was not really sure what to expect, but as the day was approaching I became more and more excited.

It was finally September 8th. I arrived at the Campus Center and signed in at the table. I proceeded to fill out a questionnaire in order to claim my FREE t-shirt (I learned the minute I arrived here that college students really enjoy free merchandise and most of
all, free food.) I walked into the room containing all the volunteers and was pleasantly surprised to see all the students sitting around the dozens of tables set up. I instantly became very proud of my college and the students that attend it. It is not every day you see so many students in one place eager and excited to help others and the community.

Once everyone was seated and eager to start the day, President Dr. Herman J. Saatkamp was introduced and spoke about how proud he is of everyone’s involvement and how truly wonderful Stockton students are. He also announced that this Day of Service was the biggest Stockton has yet to have. Proceeding President Saatkamp, Daniel Tomé, the coordinator of Service-Learning, directed everyone to the locations they were assigned to volunteer at.

Nine other people and myself pulled up to the Noyes Museum as it continued to downpour. Unfortunately, the rain did not allow us to garden, so we were all directed to perform odd jobs around the museum. Most of the other students dusted, mopped the different exhibit’s floors, and disinfected the children’s area. I was assigned cleaning and organizing storage space in the basement. It was actually a lot more exciting than it sounds. A new friend I made on the way to the location helped me create a very nice and clean environment in the basement of the museum. We then had to haul large pieces of art up to the main area of the museum for the new exhibit that was to go up the next day. Eventually everyone else joined us. It was really nice to see the amount of team work occurring between people that had just met about three hours prior to being there.

It seemed as though none of us wanted the day to end. It was such a fun and amazing experience being able to lend a helping hand to the community. The man in charge during our time at the museum was so appreciative of all the work everyone did. I was extremely proud of what we accomplished and I learned a lot about the history of the museum and how it came to be. I am so glad I listened to the honor’s students at orientation and participated in the Day of Service. I would suggest that all incoming freshman take part in this day, honor’s students or not, to get to know this lovely community we now reside in.