smart is the new sexy

Hermione Granger from Harry Potter may be known for her book smarts, but Parisian-born actress Emma Watson also is a wizard when it comes to her studies. Watson is probably best known for playing the overachieving best friend of Harry and Ron from the hit movies based on J.K. Rowling’s Harry Potter series.

After her family transplanted back to England, Watson was actually discovered at a school assembly when she was just 9 years old. She was chosen to audition for the coveted role of Hermione as a casting team visited select English schools. She eventually won the role and is currently filming Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows. Watson also appeared in the BBC production of Ballet Shoes and was the voice of Princess Pea in the animated film, The Tale of Despereaux. The talents of this young actress however extend far beyond Hogwarts and the silver screen.

A very serious student, Watson aced her A-levels last year — England’s high school finishing exams — in English Literature, History of Art and Geography. She’s in the process of narrowing down which university to attend and there have been reports she has already been accepted to such impressive institutions as Yale and Cambridge. Once she decides if she wants to attend school in the U.S. or the U.K., the almost 19-year old (her birthday is April 15) will take a break from acting to pursue a college degree.

Watson’s life doesn’t just revolve around acting and academics. This avid athlete is an accomplished skier, field hockey player and scuba diver. She also sings, dances and has quite the keen fashion sense. The well-rounded young lady makes a point to give back to others and even asked her fans, in lieu of sending Christmas gifts last year to donate to UNICEF. She supports the Millennium Promise Alliance, working to end extreme poverty by 2025 and donated Harry Potter items to be auctioned off to benefit Wild Trout Trust, a British wildlife conservation charity.

With her laserlike focus on expanding her intellectual horizons over basking in the glitz of Hollywood, Watson truly personifies the i am that girl mantra, “Smart is the new sexy.”

, , , , , , , , , , , , , , Hide

Giving Up? No, I’m not giving up on my dream. My dream already came true. I moved out to California at 18, and I became a successful model to some degree (a degree I’m internally satisfied with, which is all that matters). I have explored the boundaries of the industry with music, modeling, and acting. I know what it takes to make it to the next level, and I won’t be happy if I pursue it any further. I came out here to find myself and, in the midst of all my mistakes and successes, I found what makes me happy. It’s not necessarily what I thought it would be, and it’s not as glamorous as I imagined or what everyone expected of me. We grow, we change, and I have grown into a woman, maybe faster than others, and slower than some. At my own pace, I’ve realized what is important, what will stick with you and make you whole, and what takes away from your spirit and depletes your soul.

My life is unfolding before my eyes, and I’m enjoying every day of it.  Every day is an adventure, with new challenges, and new opportunities. I’m doing all I can to take hold of my future, but every time I think I have a grip on it, it slips away and changes direction. I definitely don’t have it all figured out yet. I’m learning more about myself daily. I don’t know where I will end up, but one thing is certain, I will never look back. I won’t say “What if?” because I did it! I’ve been there, I’ve done exactly what I wanted to do, what I’ve always dreamed, and I don’t regret one second of it.

I want to be more than a model. I don’t want to look up at 28 years old, a washed up bikini model with no work and no back up plan. I want to be successful, I want to make my parents PROUD and, one day, I want to be able to take care of them. I know all they want for me is to be happy, but every day of this journey I am happy, because I value what is truly important now, instead of valuing what will be gone in a matter of time. Knowledge is power, and looks fade with time. I want to be confident and secure, in more than just my looks and ability to model well.

So now, I’m starting from square one again. I’m getting a real career, acquiring real career skills, and learning how to invest my money in assets instead of getting caught up in the materialistic world, and overextending myself into debt.  If I could do it all over again, I wouldn’t change a thing. I have learned so much from my mistakes, and I thank God for the beautiful place I am at right now in my life, and for the beautiful people I am blessed to share my life with.  Peace, Love, and Happiness…. TRUE Happiness.

Want to submit as an iatg reader? Visit the Contribute link on the right.

photo by kenny corbin

, , , , , , , , , Hide

When I was ten, my biggest fear was falling off my bike in front of my crush.  For Cat, a ten-year-old Thai girl, her biggest fear is being sold into prostitution.  Child sex trafficking is a hidden evil exploiting 2 million children worldwide, and Rachel Sparks and Rachel Goble of The SOLD Project are dedicated to eradicating it.

The SOLD Project is a grassroots movement that seeks to expose the truth behind child sex trafficking by telling the victim’s stories and inspiring individuals to make a change.  Originally conceived as a documentary, The SOLD Project has expanded into a nonprofit organization that educates and provides avenues for people to get involved.  I recently sat down with the two Rachels to learn more about Thailand’s red light districts.

IATG: When did you learn about child sex trafficking?  What made you get involved?

RG: When I was pursuing my Masters, one of my first classes was a “Children at Risk” course, and human trafficking was one of the topics.  I spent a lot of time researching the issue, and I found that it was not only something that broke my heart, but there was a part of me that said, “I can’t not act on this; I can’t not do something.”

RS: My pastor in New York did a sermon on the different injustices in the world, and child sex trafficking was the one that stopped me in my tracks.  The more I started researching, the more I felt that this was it – this is my calling, this is my purpose, to do something with children who are stuck in sex trafficking.

IATG: How did The SOLD Project begin?

RS: As an educated woman, I had every reason to know about this issue, but I didn’t.  So, if I didn’t know about this issue, I’m sure there are a lot of people my age who don’t.  My dad is in the film industry, so I grew up with the mentality that to create awareness, you make a documentary.  I called him up in September 2006, got some advice and contacts, and started filming.

RG: I came on board after filming already began to man the nonprofit.  In the film, we look at three main reasons that children are sexually exploited in Thailand.  The first is poverty – what do the impoverished villages look like and why are girls trafficked into cities to work?  The second is street kids – kids who are vulnerable because they don’t have a home structure.  And, the third is undocumented children, most of whom are Burmese.  In regards to these, we want to create a structure where audiences can respond in a tangible way.  We just launched our scholarship program, which is our response to the poor villages.  It’s a dollar a day to sponsor a kid, and it puts them through school for a year.  For street kids and undocumented children, we have partner organizations in Thailand that we help.

IATG: For the documentary, you traveled to Thailand to capture the victims’ stories.  Why Thailand?

RS: There are three types of countries – source countries, transit countries, and destination countries.  Source countries are where these kids are coming from, transit countries are where the kids travel through, and destination countries are where they end up.  Thailand is all three.  Sex tourism is also the third greatest form of income there.  Alongside, Thailand is one of the most beautiful countries in the world, and you would never expect this evil to lie underneath.  I wanted to see the faces behind the statistics and tell these kids’ stories.

IATG: In order to get your stories directly from the victims, you had to enter the brothels.  Do you have any stories that especially touched you?

RG: Oftentimes, there is a strange man who comes to the Burmese villages and offers a factory job in Bangkok to the girls, and these girls are ecstatic because they have no money and they want to support their family.  But what happens is they end up in brothels across the border without any rights because they don’t have citizenship.  This is a classic trafficking story.  One of the days we were filming, we went into the brothels to interview the girls and it was just story after story of these girls being deceived.  They feel that they have no option but to stay since they can’t go to Thailand to work without citizenship and they can’t go back to Burma because they won’t have any money for their families.  Halfway through the interviews, these girls would burst into tears, and Rachel and I would hold their hands and tell them, “We’re sisters, we love you, and we’re going to do everything we can to get you out.”

RS: In the red light districts, we would buy girls out for the evening and just talk to them about life.  They were all sending money back home to their villages and all kinds of cultural stuff play into why they felt like they had to keep working, so I wanted to go to the villages and see what that life was like.  There, I met Cat, a young girl who had all signs pointing to the fact that she was at risk for being trafficked – her father is dead, her mom is scraping by, and all the money she makes goes to Cat’s education.  Her mom is a former sex worker who knows that Cat would be safe if she just gets through middle school.  And so for me, Cat became “that one” – if you’re helping one person, then it’s all worth it.

IATG: After seeing what you’ve seen, how do you emerge with the hope to fight?

RG: I had to allow myself to simplify. I knew that if I could prevent one kid from being forced into this, that’s enough. So the question is, “How do you help the one?” The fact is that there is this evil, and I work in a world where we’re not going to get rid of it.  But we can be humanitarians, and we can help.

RS: I knew that going to Thailand would be a struggle, physically and emotionally.  I was in a foreign country where everything familiar was stripped from me – I had barely any communication with friends and family, I was getting sick over the food and water, and I had to get used to the culture.  But when you’re serving and loving people in a place when you’re the most vulnerable, things start coming out of you that you never knew existed.  You’re being pushed to the limit but you’re loving people and seeing how you’re changing their lives forever.  I just have to do my small part and hopefully that will inspire other people to do theirs.

IATG: How does IATG’s message of redefining female beauty and that “smart is the new sexy” tie into this?

RS: The women who are victims have no ounce of hope left.  Prostitution strips you of your humanity and treats you as a commodity.  Even the girls who have a chance to get out go back because they have to learn that they are worth more than what they earn with their bodies.

RG: Sex is supposed to be beautiful and sexy is supposed to be beautiful.  It’s such a fine line between what makes it beautiful and what perverts it.  The message is about respecting sex and cherishing it.  Particularly with this issue, the good men in the world need to stand up and fight for the purity and innocence of women because women can fight for women, but it’s so much more powerful when men fight for women.

IATG: How can IATG readers get involved?

RG:  Educate yourself and talk about the issue.  I don’t feel like it’s an issue that one type of individual can do.  It’s not all lawyers and it’s not all psychologists.  It’s average people who are giving of their time and resources and who are using what they are passionate about to do something.  We need to realize how powerful our voice is in this world as young women.

RS: Our generation is at a place where we’re either in college or just out of college, trying to figure out what we want to do with our life.  We have the time and skill set to go out and serve.  Because of globalization and technology, our generation is one of the first to really grasp how our daily lives affect everything around us.  I’ve met tons of organizations started by people in their 20s and 30s all focusing on wanting to leave the world a better place.  There are some amazing things that are happening right now and to be a blurb in the midst of this movement is amazing.  Everyone just needs to hold on tight.

Learn more about The Sold Project at www.thesoldproject.com

, , , , , , , , , , , , Hide

Famous People Music Albums MTV Wallpapers News portal


Theme Development by Kokorosweet