Tuesday, November 30, 2010

Published in F-Stop Magazine!

My first black and white film photography published online!!!

Four of my photographs from my photo essay in Chinatown are featured in the new issue of F-stop Magazine, Issue #44. The theme for entries was "Community"....scroll through the photographs down to the third row from the bottom to find mine. There are some great entries from other contributors on the page to browse as well.

Click HERE for the link!


You can also find my name under the contributors tab. This freelance thing is paying off....well, not paying THAT much, but I'm on my way.....

Monday, November 29, 2010

The best chocolate chip cookie recipe OF ALL TIME

They really do look as good as in this picture
Since I made a batch of these last night, I thought I'd share the not-so-secret recipe with everyone. These chocolate chip cookies are super easy to make...and always turn out practically perfect. Always dense and chewy--never crispy or greasy--the way a cookie should be.  

I discovered the recipe in college when my roommate Jessica brought the book
How to Boil Water to our apartment one weekend. I laughed at the title, because we were both always cooking and baking; anyone who came over to our place expected something yummy set out on the table or inside the refrigerator. But if not for a late-night cookie craving, I may have never stumbled upon this recipe. In fact, I think it was the only one I ever used from the book. 

You can find the recipe on The Food Network or follow it below by clicking "Read More." I'm sure Santa will appreciate these on Christmas Eve!

Teen pregnancy on the rise...is media to blame?

Tough Consequences

A one-night-stand at band camp leaves
Amy pregnant
In recent years, the trends of teen mothers depicted on popular American television programs and films have exploded into a cultural phenomenon. According to a January 2010 study by the Guttmacher Institute, teen pregnancy rates have increased for the first time since the early 1990s.

Nearly half (46%) of all 15–19-year-olds in the United States have had sex at least once, and ten percent of all U.S. births are to teens. Movies like
Juno, or television shows like “16 and Pregnant” and “The Secret Life of the American Teenager” have become household staples, a viable explanation for these heightened statistics.

What happened to ethics? When media formats portray teen pregnancy, especially with a misconstrued reality, the indirect harm to young adults in our society becomes apparent.

A study featured in Pediatrics called “Sexy Media Matter: Exposure to Sexual Content in Music, Movies, Television, and Magazines Predicts Black and White Adolescents' Sexual Behavior,” found that earlier exposure to sexual content in the media could predict a teen’s sexual behavior in the following year.

Sunday, November 28, 2010

When Christmas comes too early

As I was driving yesterday, I flipped through the radio stations to find some music. To my dismay, all of them on my presets were playing Christmas tunes, except one. So I called up that station.

"I just wanted to thank you for not playing Christmas music yet," I told the DJ. "I'm just not ready. It's still November!"

Courtesy of www.evga.com
She laughed, reassuring me they wouldn't be playing any…yet. 

I have nothing against jolly holiday music or the holiday itself. In fact, I’ll proudly admit I know each line of the “12 Days of Christmas” song and I jump at the opportunity to string lights around the tree.

But why does the world seem to be forcing me to start Christmas so early?

Even before Halloween, Christmas decorations were up in stores like Target and CVS. Who needs to prepare in October? The day after Halloween, store fronts at the mall magically transformed into displays covered in shimmering tinsel and over-sized ornaments. Apparently, All Saint’s Day is Santa’s cue to arrive.

Those who put up their trees at Thanksgiving might frown at me. They would argue that moving Christmas further back gives us a chance to extend the merriment and celebrate the holiday season longer.

A friend even teased me, "what are you--a Scrooge? Hating on Christmas..."

But does lengthening the celebration time really make it more special?

Besides, the true 12 Days of Christmas are meant to start the day of Dec. 25. and continue to the Epiphany on Jan. 6. I bet not many people know this—or even care—because the day after Christmas, everyone takes down their trees now. By Christmas Eve, stores have already cleared out their holiday items and put them on sale. Television commercials start advertising diamonds and chocolate for Valentines Day. 

Must we rush everything? Walking through a shopping center I want to whisper, “breathe, little holiday shoppers, breathe...”

Thursday, November 25, 2010

Published on the Matador Network!

My story, How Travel Reshaped My Notion of Strangers, is now up on the Brave New Traveler section. 
Read below, or click on the title to view the website!


Nov. 24 2010 
Tori Masucci learns about going to the world in search for answers, instead of just letting the world come to her.
I AM SITTING on a ferry in New Zealand, moving from the North Island to the South Island. Across from me, an old man who resembles the Gorton’s Fisherman is eating a cold potato with his bare hand. He catches me studying him and offers a bearded smile. I shyly return it, then look back to my book.
Another interaction with a stranger.
As a child growing up in the suburbs outside LA, I was told to avoid strangers. I was supposed to be wary of their presence in empty parks and resist their tempting offers of puppies and candy on the streets. As I got older I learned how to treat strangers based on what I wanted at the time. How to smile at a waiter to get free refills or score notes from the girl in front of me for a lecture I missed last week. Selfish, really.
Now, though, I am in a new country. I must go to the world for answers and friendship.
The more I travel, the more I challenge this selfishness. In an unfamiliar country, strangers offer a glimmer of kindness and hope. I take in their voices, faces, and smells as a newborn would — curious, skeptical, and, oftentimes, in comfort. Outside of my bubble at home, it’s the strangers who teach me about life. They humble me and teach me about compassion.
As a laid-back and often quiet California girl, up to now I have done just fine in life by observing, listening, and letting the world come to me. Now, though, I am in a new country. I must go to the world for answers and friendship.
Through traveling, I’ve discovered how chatty I can be and how much I question. The feeling of freedom I get from boarding a 13-hour flight for the first time releases my inhibitions and the former fences I’ve built between strangers and myself. Suddenly, this “stranger-hood code” I have followed all my life — distancing and distrusting outsiders — disappears into the atmosphere over the Pacific Ocean. I emerge from my comfort zone and greet the unknown.
*****
New Zealand
Photo: author
Outside on the ferry deck, I stand among other travelers, photographing the snowy mountains on the horizon and the rough coastline, with its green hills that I playfully imagine were sculpted by God’s hands from large mounds of clay. This landscape itself is a stranger to me, with its own stories to tell.
It’s foggy and cold on that winter afternoon in June, and as the ferry moves through the drowned river valley of Queen Charlotte Sound, tiny islands emerge from the mist into my view, then disappear again as we pass by. They remind me of everyone I encounter as I travel, appearing in my life and reshaping my notion of strangers. They do this in ways I often underestimate until they’ve left me.

Wednesday, November 24, 2010

On fears and phobias

We commonly use “arachnophobia” to label someone’s fear of spiders, or describe our avid hand-sanitizing friends as “germaphobes.” But less commonly-known phobias are even quirkier—like “pteronophobia” – the fear of being tickled by feather, or “arachibutyrophobia,” which coins the fear of peanut butter sticking to the roof of the mouth. Try saying that with a mouthful of peanut butter.

The fear of small spaces or feeling trapped
is commonly called "claustrophobia"
No matter the scare, fears are fascinating concepts and everyone has them. However, fears and phobias are not the same. A phobia can develop when a human’s fear becomes attached to his or her emotions, often causing extreme physical reactions, like sweating, crying, or panic attacks.

According to Guy Baglow, a phobia specialist and founder of the UK’s leading phobia clinic, “approximately 10 percent of people have a phobia. It's a very human thing.”

“This is the basis of a phobia: a fear response attached to something that was present in the original trauma,” he says. “It can get stuck to literally anything - animal, mineral or vegetable. It may not even be glued to the thing that caused the trauma.” In other words, someone who was bitten by a snake inside a small cave, may develop “claustrophobia” instead of the fear of snakes, or “ophidiophobia.”

After claustrophobia, the second most common phobia for both men and women is the fear of social situations, labeled “social phobia.” Like many phobias, this can develop during childhood and is often reinforced through culture and one’s environment.

Phobias shouldn’t be taken lightly. Calling someone a “scaredy cat” and a “phobic” are two completely different accusations, though we often use the terms loosely. If you want to avoid stacking on the pounds this holiday season like most Americans, that doesn’t mean you are “obesophobic.” Even if you may admit to dreading other family members like your parents-in-law, that doesn’t make you “soceraphobic.”

Cluck. Cluck. Even a phobia of
chickens could inhibit one's life.
Phobias can be restricting. Don’t order Chinese take-out if you have “consecotaleophobia” – the phobia of chopsticks. Avoid the county fair if you have “alektorophobia,” or fear of chickens. And life will get extremely difficult if you develop “cathisophobia” – the phobia of sitting.

So, can we evade phobias like these as we go about our lives?

Fear not! The answer is yes. It all comes down to how we handle stress and our emotions. At a basic level, if you take care of the frightful feelings behind the actual “thing” that causes you anxiety, phobias are less likely to take over your life. At their worse, they can be handled by physiological therapy and healed through various treatments that attempt to detach the traumatic memory from its emotional object or situation.

Perhaps the healthiest phobia to have is “phobophobia” – the fear of phobias.


For a complete list of phobias, visit The Phobia List.

Note: Tori is not a doctor; she simply came across a giant list of phobias and thought it would be fun to write about. She has slight “selachophobia,” ever since watching Jaws, but has never felt any “graphophobia,” which might keep her from maintaining this blog. 

Photos by Tori Masucci

Monday, November 22, 2010

Look Down

Bill Cosby once said, "Every closed eye is not sleeping, and every open eye is not seeing." To truly see the world around us, we must look beyond the familiar and expected. Sometime last year, I began aiming my camera towards the ground. So often as a photographer, I tend to look up at the world, the sky, the horizon. Yet the subjects below are also worth capturing. The ground we walk on and the shoes--or lack of--we wear as we journey through life reveals curiosities spelled out in cobblestone, mud, concrete and sand. Each step tells a story. It's all about perspective...

Celebrities & raindrops
Grauman's Chinese Theatre, Hollywood, CA
A look at pattern
Darioush Winery, Napa, CA
A dancing mouse
Disneyland, Anaheim, CA
Tip of the tide
Treasure Island Beach, Laguna Beach, CA
Picking blackberries
Grass Valley, CA