Showing posts with label shine. Show all posts
Showing posts with label shine. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 25, 2013

Writing Real Human Characters from the News: NYC Subway Cleaner Nabs Mugger, Wins Hearts By Elise Solé, Shine Staff | Healthy Living – Tue, Sep 24, 2013

http://shine.yahoo.com/healthy-living/nyc-subway-cleaner-nabs-mugger--wins-hearts-203423847.html


Felicia Williams (Photo: MTA)

 It’s one thing to witness and report a crime — it’s another to intervene, risking your own life in the process. 

More on Yahoo Shine: Meet the Kidney Donor Who Saved a Stranger's Life

New York City subway station cleaner Felicia Williams recently helped cops catch a man who allegedly snatched a woman’s wallet inside the 18th Street subway station and fled. As a result, she's now been nominated for the Hometown Heroes in Transit Awards.

More on Yahoo: Woman Tracks Down Lifeguard Who Saved Her Nearly 50 Years Ago

On March 18, Williams, a 45-year-old mother of two, was working with six interns on a project at the 18th Street station on the No. 1 line when she heard bloodcurdling screams she says she’ll never forget.

“These were screams of a terrified woman,” Williams told Yahoo Shine. “They were coming from the other side of the platform, so I couldn’t see what was going on until I walked to the end and several workers ran toward me, yelling that a woman was being robbed.” 

From across the platform, Williams saw a young man who appeared to be in his 20s, wearing a windbreaker and a baseball cap, and pulling a 30-something woman backward down the subway stairs by the strap of her handbag, before breaking off and fleeing the station. “I didn’t think, I just reacted,” says Williams.

Yelling at the ticket booth clerk to sound the emergency alarm that notified the station agent and the police and fire departments, Williams raced up the subway stairs hoping to intercept the man. “When I reached the street, I saw the guy surface at the station across the street, but I had to wait until the lights changed to chase him.” Fortunately, Williams was able to catch up to the man, and slowly trailed behind him. And she was stunned by what she saw. 

 
As he calmly walked along 17th Street, the man removed his cap and windbreaker to reveal a crisp, clean suit underneath, and then threw the clothes into a nearby trashcan. “He looked like a businessman," says Williams. 

Luckily, a van carrying school safety officers happened to drive past, and Williams began waving her arms frantically in the air. The van stopped and several officers jumped out and chased the man, catching and apprehending him.

The suspect was identified as Robert McLeod, a 20-year-old man from Bayonne, N.J. According to the Daily News, he was charged with robbery and assault.

Back at the station, Williams comforted the woman. “She was hysterical and had a hurt leg,” she says. Later, she learned that the woman’s leg had been broken in the attack.

As for her hero status, Williams is taking it in stride. “I was just doing my job, and anyone who would have heard this woman’s screams would have helped, too,” she says. “People need to watch their surroundings in the subway, whether they’re walking [through the station] or waiting for the train. This incident has definitely made me more aware."

It's made her a new friend, too. “We exchanged phone numbers and she invited me to dinner," says Williams. "I know we'll stay in touch forever." 


Organized by the New York Daily News, the Metropolitan Transportation Authority, and TWU Local 100 (New York’s largest public transit union), the annual Hometown Heroes in Transit Awards are given to bus and subway workers, toll booth clerks, and train operators who go the extra mile to keep travelers safe. 

"Candidates typically share three qualities," Pete Donohue, transit reporter and columnist at the New York Daily News, told Yahoo Shine in an email. "They're proud of their work, they care about others, and they're tough when it matters. They're New Yorkers you can count on. 

 Last year, one winner rescued a man in a wheelchair who had tumbled onto the tracks, another is a bus driver who learned greetings in many languages so he could address his diverse ridership. Williams wouldn't allow a vicious criminal to get away ... she followed the guy at some risk to her own safety."   

The deadline for nominations is Nov. 15. The winners will be featured in a special section of the New York Daily News and honored at a ceremony Jan. 29.

More on Yahoo Shine:
How Did This California Girl Become a Real Warrior Princess?
Young Daughters Save Mother's Life During Hike in Oregon
9-Year-Old Hero Saves Diabetic Mother

Sunday, December 30, 2012

Those shoes you can't / don't want to walk a mile in. Reminding us to see the unexpected and to position characters in not always in perfect comfort.

Those shoes you can't / don't want to walk a mile in. Reminding us to see the unexpected and to position characters in not always in perfect comfort.

http://shine.yahoo.com/the-thread-how-to/scariest-shoes-time-173900092.html

The Scariest Shoes of All Time


Yahoo! editors have selected this article as a favorite of 2012. It first ran on Yahoo! Shine in October 2012, and quickly garnered over 15,000 comments and became one of the 20 most-read articles from the Yahoo! Front Page this year. Readers were shocked and horrified by these treacherous backwards heels, calling them “Edward Scissorfeet” or likening them to Natalie Portman’s broken legs in “Black Swan.” Others appreciated the designer’s thought process, agreeing that lengths women will go to for vanity is, in fact, quite scary.
 
Scary Beautiful shoes by Leanie van der Vyver. Photo by Lyall Coburn 

We've come across many ugly shoes in our day, but a pair dubbed "Scary Beautiful" is definitely the most treacherous footwear we've ever seen. The massive heels appear backwards on the foot, so the wearers feet point straight down the back, as if in ballet shoes, with their shin leaning against the front "heel" end of the design to balance. The shoes are a collaboration between artist Leanie van der Vyver and Dutch shoe designer René van den Berg, and serve as a commentary on today's impossible standards of beauty.

The ugliest shoes of all time

Van der Vyver is South African, and recently graduated from the Gerrit Rietveld Academie in Amsterdam. We spotted "Scary Beautiful" on her website, cargocollective.com, and reached out to her for the inside scoop.

Imelda Marcos' prized shoe collection is ruined

"After working in fashion for seven years, and therefore being well aware of the manipulation images in fashion suffer for a perfect result, I still compare myself to them and other current beauty ideals," Van der Vyver told Yahoo! Shine exclusively. "My frustration with my own inability to overcome these feelings of inadequacy was what brought 'Scary Beautiful' into fruition. The shoes formed part of my graduation project that was a result of my thesis. The conclusion of my thesis investigation was that people are not satisfied with what they look like, and that perfection, according to the beauty and fashion standards, has reached a climax. Humans are playing God by physically and metaphorically perfecting themselves. Beauty is currently at an all time climax, allowing this project to explore what lies beyond perfection. Scary Beautiful challenges current beauty ideals by inflicting an unexpected new beauty standard."

A model wearing the Scary Beautiful shoes. Photo by Lyall CoburnUnsurprisingly, Van der Vyver's "Scary Beautiful" shoes were nominated for a design prize at Gerrit Rietveld Academie. Jury members Barbara Visser, visual artist and Xander Karskens, and curator of De Hallen had this to say about the shoes:

"The object created by Leanie expands the concept of a shoe into multiple new meanings. The beautifully made leather object is accompanied by a video registration of a girl wearing it. One observes the design forcing the wearer to develop a new way of walking, leaning forward while refining a painfully fragile balance. The jury applauds the way aesthetics, ergonomics and prosthesis merge into an awkward choreography. The craftsmanship and strong conceptual way of designing also show in another work, a ceramic tea set in which reference is made to a building in South Africa. Leanie succeeds in translating political consciousness into form and is considered by the jury to be a meaningful future designer."

Alexander McQueen's spring 2010 Armadillo heels. Photo by Antonio de Moraes Barros Filho/Getty Images We find the clip shocking but also oddly moving. The shoes are obviously not practical, but as art they're intriguing. We can't help but be reminded of Lady Gaga trying to steady herself in the now-famous Alexander McQueen "Armadillo" heels in her "Bad Romance" music video. Major models like Abbey Lee Kershaw, Natasha Poly, and Sasha Pivovarova reportedly refused to wear the 12-inch McQueen heels out of fear, and were cut from the designer's spring 2010 fashion show. In comparison, the "Scary Beautiful" shoes make the "Armadillo" heels look like sneakers, but we had a feeling the always-outdoing-herself Lady Gaga would give them a spin one day. Sure enough, Van der Vyver confirmed our suspicions.

"Yes, on request I did actually send them to Studio Formichetti for a Lady Gaga music video, but I could not get confirmation whether she actually used them," Van der Vyver told us. "I did not charge for her to possibly use them. I would love to sell them to a gallery."

We're holding out for the "Scary Beautiful" shoes to appear in an upcoming Lady Gaga music video, but until then Van der Vyver is back home in Cape Town starting her own studio where she'll continue investigating fashion and beauty. We're anticipating her next creation.

Check out a video below of a model walking verrry slowly in the "Scary Beautiful" shoes.



Scary Beautiful (Leanie van der Vyver) from Lyall Coburn on Vimeo.
Scary Beautiful (Leanie van der Vyver) from Lyall Coburn on Vimeo.