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90s “It Girl” and “Wild Child” Amanda De Cadanet made a name for herself by being sentenced to juvenile detention, hosting a talk show at age 15, marrying a pop star before she was old enough to order a drink, and the youngest photographer ever to shoot a Vogue cover. She is the host of the podcast, “The Conversation with Amanda De Cadanet,” and the founder of Girlgaze, a networking platform dedicated to helping women and non-binary individuals. Amanda is a totally open book, and she discusses letting her curiosity be her guide, being raised by her race-car-driving father, becoming an influencer before there was even such a term, and stepping outside of her social-media algorithm. The only way “Group Text” happens is with YOUR support and support from our amazing sponsors! I LOVE these gummies! No joke! Head to Viiahemp.com and use the code GROUPTEXT to receive 15% off + one free sample of their award-winning gummies. (21+). Thanks for supporting Group Text Delicious Factor Meals are my go to for healthy meals at home! Go to FactorMeals.com/GroupText50 to get 50% off! Factor sponsors my podcast so if you support them, you're supporting Group Text This episode is sponsored by LolaVie, an award winning haircare line founded by the fabulous Jennifer Aniston! Go to LolaVie.com and use the promo code GROUPTEXT and checkout for 15% off your ENTIRE order! That's L O L A V I E dot com with the promo code GROUPTEXT. This is another Hurrdat Media Production. Hurrdat Media is a podcast network and digital media production company based in Omaha, NE. Find more podcasts on the Hurrdat Media Network by going to HurrdatMedia.com or Hurrdat Media YouTube channel! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Photographer and host Amanda de Cadenet has made a career of passing the figurative and literal mic to women, letting them share their stories and shape their own images. Now, it's her turn: The founder of The Conversation and GirlGaze talks about why women's stories are often minimized, our culture's endless obsession with youth, and the taboo topics we should be talking about more openly. Podcast cover art photo: Yu Tsai. Episode recap with links to Amanda's projects: fatmascara.com/blog/amanda-de-cadenetProducts mentioned in this episode: shopmy.us/collections/549106Sponsor links & discount codes: fatmascara.com/sponsorsPrivate Facebook Group: Fat Mascara Raising a WandTikTok & Instagram: @fatmascara, @jenn_edit, @jessicamatlinSubmit a "Raise A Wand" product recommendation: email info@fatmascara.com or text us or leave a voicemail at 646-481-8182 Become a member at https://plus.acast.com/s/fatmascara. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
My guest today has lived a lot of lives in her 50 years. If you were knocking around in 1990, Amanda de Cadenet burst into your world when she became presenter on the seminal late night TV show, The Word, at 18 and appeared most days on the front of the British tabloids.Like many young women trapped in the public gaze, she has spent the rest of her life wresting back control.Since then she has achieved international success as a photographer (she was the youngest woman ever to shoot a Vogue cover), created and hosted The Conversation podcast series in which she's interviewed the likes of Kamala Harris, Hillary Clinton and Jane Fonda… And founded GirlGaze, which saw her named one of the Most creative people in business by Fast Company.But what does 50 look like when you've been in the public eye since the age of 16?Amanda joined me from her home in LA to talk about the lifelong project of reclaiming her own narrative, surviving on-stage perimenopause moments, going back to basics after losing her dad, Not having a five year plan for the first time in her life And why The new love of her life is a camper van.We started by talking about the impact of being constantly shamed by the British press in her teens…* You can buy all the books mentioned in this podcast at The Shift bookshop on Bookshop.org, including the book that inspired this podcast, The Shift: how I lost and found myself after 40 - and you can too, by me.* If you enjoyed this episode and you fancy buying me a coffee, pop over to my page on buymeacoffee.com• And if you'd like to support the work that goes into making this podcast and get a weekly newsletter plus loads more content including exclusive transcripts of the podcast, why not join The Shift community, come and have a look around at www.theshiftwithsambaker.substack.com• The Shift (on life after 40) with Sam Baker is created and hosted by Sam Baker and edited by Juliette Nicholls @ Pineapple Audio Production. If you enjoyed this podcast, please rate/review/follow as it really does help other people find us. And let me know what you think on twitter @sambaker or instagram @theothersambaker. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
I want to thank Real Dads Network 12th Annual Daddy Daughter Dance in Harlem sponsoring (https://www.eventbrite.com/e/daddy-daughter-dance-tickets-763759213367?aff=oddtdtcreator) my conversation with Award Winning Director/Producer, Photographer, World Traveler, & Amazing Human Being B. Monét. B. Monét is a distinguished writer and director who obtained her B.A. in English from Spelman College and an MFA in Film and Television with a concentration in writing and directing from New York University. She is a native of Maryland and her films are known for their thought-provoking questions about identity, society, race, and culture. Her commitment to showcasing underrepresented people in film, media, and television is evident in her works. She's received several awards, including the runner-up position in the First Time Female Filmmakers Contest with Women and Hollywood, the 2017 Horizon Award through Cassian Elwes, Christine Vachon, and Lynette Howell-Taylor at the Sundance Film Festival, and the Adrienne Shelly Foundation grant. She also participated in Film Independent's residency program Project Involve as a directing fellow. B. Monét is one of the winners of the #NewView Film Competition with Glamour and Girlgaze, which celebrates the voices of female filmmakers, and one of the filmmakers in the Tisch Other Showcase, which focuses on diverse artists whose voices are underrepresented in the television industry. Notably, B. Monét directed the award-winning short film Q.U.E.E.N., which premiered on Magic Johnson's channel ASPiRE and has been screened at over a dozen festivals, including Cannes Short Film Corner. She also directed a branded short film entitled “She's Revolutionary” on the #MeToo founder Tarana Burke for Levi's and Girlgaze, and has worked with several high-profile personalities such as Reese Witherspoon, Janet Jackson, Rosario Dawson, Chika, Rapsody, and Shangela for brands such as Crate and Barrel, Estee Lauder, Uber, OkayAfrica, OkayPlayer, and Hyundai. B. Monét's feature film script Q.U.E.E.N. won the 2018 Best Graduate Feature Screenplay, and she is the recipient of the Will & Jada Smith Family Foundation grant at Fusion Film Festival, a finalist in the Women in Film Mini Upfronts Program, and a Sundance Women's Financing Intensive Project Fellow. In July 2019, she was selected as one of the filmmakers in the New York Stage and Film Filmmakers' Workshop at Vassar College for Q.U.E.E.N. She was also selected as one of the participants in the Artist Academy with the New York Film Festival and Lincoln Center. B. Monét's most recent accomplishment is being chosen as one of the winners for the Queen Collective in partnership with Queen Latifah, Tribeca, and P&G. Her short film Ballet After Dark is exclusively streaming on BET. Additionally, she is currently reimagining a short film version of A Star Is Born with Warner Brothers for their 100th Anniversary. Website: http://www.b-monet.com/ Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/pub/brittany-"b-monét"-fennell/57/3b8/4b Vimeo: https://vimeo.com/235093002 IMDb: http://www.imdb.com/name/nm5952247/ Bureau of Creative Works: http://kck.st/1Lw3sa9 Like us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/QUEENSHORTFILM Follow us on Twitter:https://twitter.com/QUEENSHORTFILM DAD IS NOT A NOUN https://linktr.ee/dadisnotanoun?fbclid=PAAaZj8KzygTJZhruBvG4tykEdTG28lCVidiolp2NDwmlwFyo0sjXq5iFbRAA DINAN intro produced by Amerigo Gazaway Follow him on IG https://instagram.com/amerigo.gazaway?utm_medium=copy_link Check out his website https://linkin.bio/amerigo-gazaway DINAN intro lyrics by Skyzoo Follow him on IG https://instagram.com/skyzoothewriter?utm_medium=copy_link Support his new project "All Brilliant Things" https://smarturl.it/BrilliantThings DINAN Logo by Demar Douglas Follow him on IG:https://instagram.com/demardouglas?utm_medium=copy_link https://demardouglas.com/ J1 Studios background design IG: https://instagram.com/officialj1studios?igshid=M
Our conversation with Amanda de Cadenet is deeply nourishing and a swim upstream against the status quo. Amanda and Drew touch on many different topics in this rich, hour-long conversation. As you'll discover, Amanda's work touches many areas of life and so many lives. After becoming sober from alcohol and drugs at twenty, ten years later, Amanda did the Hoffman Process. Today, ten years later again, Amanda says her Process work has been an integral part of her recovery journey. It can be hard to put tangible results to recovery work, yet Amanda's Hoffman work has helped give her the tangibility she was looking for. Amanda's work at the Process allowed her to own that she has beautiful, big feelings. As she shares, big feelings are often frowned upon by the culture. But in the Process, we learn that our feelings are an absolutely vital part of living our humanity. As the host of many conversations over decades, Amanda creates a safe space where challenging the status quo is possible. Listeners can feel their own feelings in response. These conversations are ripple-like in nature making them conversations that are changing our world. Amanda says she learned to really talk to people when she was in Juvie (the English Juvenile Justice system) at fifteen. This survival skill turned into a great asset as she started her first job as the host of "The Word." She would become famous for interviewing the biggest names in music at an incredibly young age. We hope you enjoy this compelling, dynamic, love-filled conversation with Amanda de Cadenet. More about Amanda de Cadenet: Amanda de Cadenet is a multifaceted talent, celebrated global media personality, and was named one of Fast Company's “Most Creative People in Business.” de Cadenet became a household name at age 15 as host of “The Word,” the UK's hit late-night music show, interviewing the biggest names in music. She is the creator, host, and executive producer of “The Conversation,” an interview series best known for interviewing bold women with boldface names, such as Vice President Kamala Harris, Lady Gaga, Hillary Clinton, Gwyneth Paltrow, and Tarana Burke, and the 3x best-selling author of “It's Messy: On Boys, Boobs and Bad Ass Women,” “Girlgaze - How Girls See the World,” and “Rare Birds.” de Cadenet is also a founding member of the new Victoria's Secret VS Collective, and proudly sits as an ambassador alongside Naomi Osaka, Stella McCartney, Priyanka Chopra Jonas, Megan Rapinoe, Hailey Beiber, Bella Hadid, and others. She hosted Victoria's Secret's first-ever podcast, “Voices” (June 2022), where she connected with trailblazing women around the world to celebrate the multifaceted nature of the female experience. Following that, de Cadenet launched two additional podcasts exclusive to iHeart Radio, “The Conversation: About The Men” and a new season of “The Conversation” (Fall 2022.) de Cadenet is also the Founder of Girlgaze, a media and jobs platform that connects a network of female-identifying and non-binary creatives with companies who want to hire diverse creative teams. She is also involved in a number of efforts to protect women's rights. She frequently collaborates with the #MeTooMvmt around initiatives focused on ending sexual violence toward women. de Cadenet lives in Los Angeles with her husband, Nick, and her three children. Find out more about Amanda de Cadenet here. Her online community is called The Conversation Community. You can also find Amanda on Instagram, Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, and LinkedIn. As mentioned in this episode: 'Juvie' is the slang word for a Juvenile Detention Center. Find out more about both the British and American juvenile justice systems. Quad Check and Tools Amanda mentions Q1, which = The Hoffman Process Q2 = Hoffman's Q2 Intensive: Beyond Mom and Dad When Amanda says 'OG,' she's referring to our old retreat site, White Sulphur Springs, which burned in the Glass Fire of 2020. Recovery
Finland's female prime minister scandalized critics by getting caught on video, wait for it, dancing with friends. One of Canada's most esteemed anchors was fired, after an executive expressed disappointment in her decision to stop coloring her grey hair. But Gen Z isn't having it. Instead of conforming to project the perfect life, they're going the other way: bragging to their online audiences about their failures, oddities and dramas. Today we're talking about public image. How expectations for women have and haven't changed. How younger generations are going their own way.Joining us: Amanda de Cadenet, founder of Girlgaze and Executive Producer and Host of The Conversation - a groundbreaking, multi-platform interview series. Wynter Mitchell a digital strategist, writer, and co-creator and host of the Waiting to X-Hale podcast. And Jessica Goldstein a contributing writer to The Washington Post Magazine and Arts & Style.You can find links to their work below. Sign up for the News Not Noise Newsletter at our website and follow us for daily news on Instagram. Links below.This conversation was recorded live on the Clubhouse app. You can join our chats on Thursdays in the News Not Noise Club.News Not Noise Club on the Clubhouse App➤https://bit.ly/3akcZe8Amanda de Cadenet ➤Twitter: twitter.com/amandadecadenet➤Instagram: instagram.com/amandadecadenetWynter Mitchell➤Twitter: twitter.com/wyntermitchell➤Podcast: https://apple.co/3vl2RJzJessica Goldstein➤Twitter: twitter.com/jessicagoldsYou can follow Jessica Yellin here:➤Instagram: instagram.com/jessicayellin➤Twitter: twitter.com/jessicayellin➤Facebook: facebook.com/newsnotnoise➤YouTube: youtube.com/newsnotnoise➤Website: NewsNotNoise.com➤Newsletter: newsnotnoise.bulletin.comSupport this work:➤patreon.com/NewsNotNoiseJessica Yellin is the founder of News Not Noise, a channel dedicated to giving you news with real experts and providing facts, not panic attacks. Jessica is a veteran of network news, traveling the globe, covering conflict and crisis. A former Chief White House Correspondent for CNN, she reported from around the world and won awards. Now, Yellin uses her voice to break down the news, calmly and clearly for you -- free of punditry, provocation, and yelling.
B. Monét is a writer/director who graduated from Spelman College with a B.A. in English. She hails from Silver Spring, Maryland and holds an MFA from New York University in Film and Television with a concentration in writing and directing. In her films, she poses questions about identity, society, race, and culture. It is vital to her that under-represented people are shown in film, media, and television. Her award-winning short film Q.U.E.E.N. has screened at over a dozen festivals including Cannes Short Film Corner and premiered on Magic Johnson's channel ASPiRE. Additionally, B. Monét was a runner-up in the First Time Female Filmmakers Contest with Women and Hollywood. She was also named the 2017 Horizon Award Winner through Cassian Elwes, Christine Vachon and Lynette Howell - Taylor at the Sundance Film Festival. As well as a recipient of the Adrienne Shelly Foundation grant and a directing fellow for Film Independent's residency program Project Involve. Additionally, she is one of the winners for the #NewView Film Competition with Glamour and Girlgaze which champions the voices of female filmmakers. She is also one of the filmmakers in the Tisch Other Showcase that focuses on diverse artists whose voices are underrepresented in the television industry. Last year, she directed a branded short film entitled She's Revolutionary on the #MeToo founder Tarana Burke for Levi's and Girlgaze. She's been fortunate to work with Reese Witherspoon, Janet Jackson, Rosario Dawson, Chika, Rapsody and Shangela for brands like Crate and Barrel, Estee Lauder, Uber, OkayAfrica, OkayPlayer, and Hyundai. B. Monét won the 2018 Best Graduate Feature Screenplay for her feature film Q.U.E.E.N. She is a recipient of the Will & Jada Smith Family Foundation grant at Fusion Film Festival, a finalist in the Women in Film Mini Upfronts Program and a Sundance Women's Financing Intensive Project Fellow for her first feature film Q.U.E.E.N. She was selected as one of the filmmakers in the New York Stage and Film Filmmakers' Workshop at Vassar College for her Q.U.E.E.N in July 2019. Additionally, B. Monét was selected as one of the participants in the Artist Academy with the New York Film Festival and Lincoln Center. Most recently, she was selected as one of the winners for the Queen Collective in partnership with Queen Latifah, Tribeca and P&G. Her short film Ballet After Dark is exclusively streaming on BET. - Thank you so much for listening to the show! Please remember to SUBSCRIBE, RATE, + REVIEW the show- I would really appreciate it. It helps other screenwriters who are interested in this story to find the show a little easier. If you are interested in becoming a guest, sponsoring the show, or have any other inquiries, please send an email to hi@thebeatsheet.co! Need to read more scripts? Join my club- we read scripts together every week! My profile name is @aquilliam and the club is called Beat Sheet Pod. You can listen to every episode of The Beat Sheet on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Soundcloud, and Stitcher! You can click here to subscribe to the podcast everywhere via this RSS feed! The official hashtag for the podcast is #beatsheetpod
For the first episode of Start Somewhere Series 2, we are graced with the (virtual) presence of the incredible entrepreneur, journalist, author, photographer and activist, my dear friend Amanda de Cadenet.Having been skyrocketed into a successful TV career at a young age, Amanda has always been fascinated by other people, which eventually led her to break away from her life in the public eye and move behind the camera, capturing other people’s stories as a photographer. Being a photographer and storyteller in a male-dominated industry made her determined to advocate for a more balanced representation in the media, so she started The Conversation, shedding light on important topics that women often silently face, and Girlgaze, a global online community that aims to close the gender gap by providing paid jobs for a network of female-identifying and non-binary creatives. In this episode, we discuss Amanda’s life work, her ups and downs and how she built a successful career even after being written off at school by her teachers. Ask: Explore what makes you and your heart happy and once you’ve identified what that one thing is, ask yourself how you can build a sustainable career out of it and in some way help others. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
For the first episode of Start Somewhere Series 2, we are graced with the (virtual) presence of the incredible entrepreneur, journalist, author, photographer and activist, my dear friend Amanda de Cadenet.Having been skyrocketed into a successful TV career at a young age, Amanda has always been fascinated by other people, which eventually led her to break away from her life in the public eye and move behind the camera, capturing other people’s stories as a photographer. Being a photographer and storyteller in a male-dominated industry made her determined to advocate for a more balanced representation in the media, so she started The Conversation, shedding light on important topics that women often silently face, and Girlgaze, a global online community that aims to close the gender gap by providing paid jobs for a network of female-identifying and non-binary creatives. In this episode, we discuss Amanda’s life work, her ups and downs and how she built a successful career even after being written off at school by her teachers. Ask: Explore what makes you and your heart happy and once you’ve identified what that one thing is, ask yourself how you can build a sustainable career out of it and in some way help others. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
In this episode with Mashael Al Saie, we talk about art, creativity and the relentless pursuit of making it big in this field. Mashael immerses us in her journey as a photographer, filmmaker and creative director to bridge the gaps between modern art, and representation of women through films and cultural depiction. She talks about flipping the narrative and aims to blend the worlds of reality and fantasy, personal and generational, in order to conjure a dialectic representation for women in the Middle East. Episode is out now!Mashael Al Saie is a photographer and video artist based between Bahrain and New York. Through the process of representation and storytelling. Al Saie holds a BA in Urban Studies from UC Berkeley and is currently pursuing an MA in Photography, Video, and Media Arts from the Gallatin School of Individualized Study at New York University. She is currently developing a photo series connecting local folklore with the imagery of women in the region. Notable features in publications include Vogue Arabia & Vogue Italia, AlJazeera Plus, Emirates Woman, MinaaZine, Harper's Bazaar Arabia, Mille Magazine, Nasi Magazine, GirlGaze.
Amanda DeCadenet made a career of communicating a strong women's point of view in many media for decades. Her current project GirlGaze champions other women's voices to be heard. Writer Troy Johnson has hosted several shows on Food Network and approaches food in a way that celebrates people's stories, rather than criticizing their dishes. {Amanda : 0:00 : Troy : 26:00}
Hey Girl Gazers, welcome to the season finale of Resilience Required! In today's episode, I walk you through my top takeaways from each episode. Enjoy xx Connect with me on Instagram!@GirlGazePod; @TaylerBradford Support my small business sponsor!Use code GIRLGAZE when you schedule a coaching call with @LivSchreiber // LivSchreiber.net
This week's episode of Let's Care: The 180º of Impact Podcast features writer, director, filmmaker B. Monét. Scroll to see her bio and learn more about her story or, better yet... listen to this episode! For more on Let's Care, parent company of 180º of Impact and the social change docuseries for underrepresented changemakers 20s & Change, visit www.lets.care or email us at hello@lets.care. My name is Matt Scott (connect with me on LinkedIn) and I'm your host. Thanks for listening! For more, visit www.lets.care. Your host, Matt Scott: Twitter: @MattScottGW Instagram: @MattScottGW LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/MattScottGW *** Brittany “B.Monét” Fennell is a writer/director who graduated from Spelman College with a B.A. in English. She hails from Silver Spring, Maryland and holds an MFA from New York University in Film and Television with a concentration in writing and directing. In her films, she poses questions about identity, society, race, and culture. It is vital to her that under-represented people are shown in film, media, and television. Her award-winning short film Q.U.E.E.N. has screened at over a dozen of festivals including Cannes Short Film Corner and premiered on Magic Johnson's channel ASPiRE. Additionally, she was a runner-up in the First Time Female Filmmakers Contest with Women and Hollywood. She was also named the 2017 Horizon Award Winner through Cassian Elwes, Christine Vachon and Lynette Howell – Taylor at the Sundance Film Festival. As well as a recipient of the Adrienne Shelly Foundation grant and a directing fellow for Film Independent's residency program Project Involve. Additionally, she is one of the winners for the #NewView Film Competition with Glamour and Girlgaze which champions the voices of female filmmakers. She is also one of the filmmakers in the Tisch Other Showcase that focuses on diverse artists whose voices are underrepresented in the television industry. She directed a branded short film entitled She's Revolutionary on the #MeToo founder Tarana Burke for Levi's and Girlgaze. B.Monét won the 2018 Best Graduate Feature Screenplay for her feature film Q.U.E.E.N. She is a recipient of the Will & Jada Smith Family Foundation grant at Fusion Film Festival as well as a finalist in the Women in Film Mini Upfronts Program and a Sundance Women's Financing Intensive Project Fellow for her first feature film Q.U.E.E.N. Most recently, she was selected as one of the winners for the Queen Collective in partnership with Queen Latifah, Tribeca and P&G. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/letsyoucare/message
Step 1: Take a step back to re-evaluate your career (7:00). Step 2: Become a networking queen (8:40). Step 3: Work on your personal branding: Wipe the dust off of your resume, update your cover letter, create a visual aesthetic on your Instagram, make a website, design a business card & build your work wardrobe (16:00). Step 4: Work on a passion project (33:40). Step 5: Do a deep dive into your skillset (36:00). Connect with me on Instagram!@GirlGazePod; @TaylerBradford Support my small business sponsor! Use code GIRLGAZE when you schedule a coaching call with my girl @LivSchreiber // LivSchreiber.net. Contact Sarah Bernadette for all things business card related at SarahBernadette.com // SarahBernadetteDesign@gmail.com.
Get ready for a quarantine brunch with me and a panel of refreshingly relatable and inspirationally insightful Girl Gazers as we chat all things fashion, career building and adulting. This week, I am so excited to introduce you to three of the most creative, fashionable people you probably already follow on Instagram. Today, we’re spilling our secrets to staying inspired, because let’s be real, we have all hit creative blocks during quarantine. As you begin to prepare your avocado toast, meet @Margot.Lee, a lifestyle vlogger who recently graduated from the S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications at Syracuse University. Margot has 437k subscribers on Youtube and 195k followers on Instagram. Next up, we have Caroline Vazzana (@CVazzana). Whether this fashionista is sitting front row at fashion week or on her couch in the Q, you will always catch her in an outfit that is extra AF. She not only has 224k Instagram followers, but in 2018, Caroline also published a book called "Making It In Manhattan" ... NBD. Our third guest today is the self portrait queen, @PaigeArminta. She possesses a creative vision and recognizable photo editing aesthetic that has helped her page grow to 200k Instagram followers. Catch up with the girls, find out where they are quarantining, and unpack how they're actually doing during these unprecedented times (8:20). We do a deep dive into how quarantine has affected their content creation processes (13:30) and discuss ways to keep your screen time at bay (20:10). Each panelist spills their special secrets to staying inspired (24:40). Since starting her Youtube channel seven years ago, Margot has developed a strong sense of comfort and confidence when talking in front of the camera (32:20). Afterward, Paige reveals the reason she's shocked she hasn't made it onto the @InfluencersInTheWild Instagram page yet. Caroline tells us all about traveling to NYC, Milan and Paris for fashion month (37:20); Margot gives us an inside look at her Germany trip with Sephora collection (42:00); and Paige reflects on one of her favorite brand trips with the Ritz Carlton (45:20). Get ready for a Girl Gaze Game (49:35)! We blaze through rapid fire questions like "What's your go-to quarantine outfit?" & "Who is your favorite designer?" We close this candid conversation with a silver lining that has come out of all this as well as a Gaze Goal of the Week. Connect with us on Instagram!@GirlGazePod; @TaylerBradford;@Margot.Lee;@CVazzana; @MakingManhattanOfficial;@PaigeArminta Support my small business sponsor! Use code GIRLGAZE when you schedule a coaching call with my girl @LivSchreiber // LivSchreiber.net
With over 1 billion searches a year informing how over 300,000 content creators populate its stock library, Getty is often the first touchpoint of many that lead to the visuals you see in the media. Today on #ATSL, we chat with VP of Sales Marketing and Brand Communications Paige McCrensky about what Getty is doing to break biases around how we define beauty—including her work with Dove and Girlgaze on the #ShowUs campaign!
Entrepreneur, journalist, author, photographer, and activist, Amanda de Cadenet, is known as one of the most influential creatives in the industry. From TV host to noteable photographer to CEO, find out how Amanda de Cadenet evolved through various careers ultimately leading her to create the platform, Girlgaze, on this episode of Second Life.
It started with a hashtag. Amande de Cadenet, photographer, author, and TV host, was spending time with her sister, a director and photographer in her own right, when an ACLU study on the lack of diversity among directors was published in the NYT Magazine, with de Cadenet's sister an interviewee in the cover story. “It's about damn time,” she said to her sister, launching a conversation that would re-route de Cadenet's path forward.
In our 10th episode I had the pleasure to interview with Xemiyulu or Xemi for short (Pronounced like "Shemi") from Washington, DC. Xemi describes herself as a Nawat Two-Spirit Trans Womxn, Author, Playwright, and actor. She is the Artistic Director of Nelwat Ishkamewe, Director of Art & Culture of Trans-Latinx DMV, and has. received much recognition. A Lambda Literary Award Nominee and Awarded 2019 “40 Under 40: Queer Women of Washington” by the DC Mayors Office Capital Pride 2019’s Engendered Spirit Award. Xemi has also been Featured as part of Dove, Getty Images, and Girlgaze’s international beauty campaign, Project #ShowUs. In this episode we dive deep into life as a native trans womxn and Xemi shares with us a writing from her book "My Womxn Card is anti-Native, & other Two-Spirit Truths" which is available for sale on Amazon!! After reading this book I had to get her on the podcast! Find her on Patreon: XemiDaTwoSpirit. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/owl-rare1/support
Stock photos are often the butt of jokes for being unrealistic, generic, overused and, now, perpetuating stereotypes. A new campaign from Getty Images, Dove Beauty and GirlGaze is working to change that. Together, they've launched #ShowUs , the largest stock photo collection created by women. Their goal? To subvert beauty stereotypes.
We sat down with Amanda de Cadenet, the founder and the CEO of the Girlgaze Project. Amanda, who is a talented fashion and portrait photographer in her own right, chatted with us about how young creatives can get their foot in the door to the fashion industry, the importance of accurately representing women in media, and what's next for her thriving community.
Amanda De Cadenet is a photographer, actress and talk show host (and a huge inspiration to me). We talk about the incentive behind Amanda’s popular interview series TheConversation (theconversation.tv) - she’s interviewed amazing women - from Gwyneth Paltrow to Sarah Silverman to Hillary Clinton. She has recently launched the #GirlGaze project looking for the next generation female photographers. The project is backed by Amanda, the editor of Teen Vogue, Sam Taylor Johnson and so many other cool women. Through the hashtag #GirlGaze work will be selected to appear in Teen Vogue as well as the GirlGaze zine and an exhibition showing the work. We discuss sexism, online porn, how to build a career in photography and how to support young girls online. Also how to juggle a busy life and accepting that nothing is ever perfect. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.