Sunday, May 31, 2020

An Abundant Life - Creative Forces

Last week I wrote about Love & Plenty, a new project that I'm developing to help with the current crisis and beyond as we rebuild our communities into the future. As I mentioned, it is at heart a project to help bring sustainable commerce and community back to our neighborhoods, by focusing on helping restaurants to get funding to provide meals for people in need and to rehire the staff that many have had to let go as a result of being shut down for only takeout and delivery. There are many pieces of this puzzle that are being put into place very carefully to insure that this project is not only helpful but sustainable, and one aspect I mentioned about it that is an important part is that I am also combining Artists, Designers and small businesses into the project, to help promote them and their work and products with a portion of sales being donated to help fund the restaurants to make meals for people in need. A part of that has to involve a larger online presence because of restrictions for public gatherings during this time, and the project needs to incorporate ways that Artists, Designers and small business owners can be introduced to new audiences and meet new people who could be potential customers or clients or who might want to help promote them in some way. This is not a project about asking people for donations of their work or time, though there are some people who have offered to do that as part of their contribution. This is a project about economic development and building sustainable community partnerships, and insuring that people who have worked all of their lives towards a goal have a venue where they can be featured and honored for their skill, hard work and talents.

During this time I have been consulting with professionals from different industries because there are aspects of this project that need input from people with a variety of specific skill sets and knowledge in order for it to be not only successful but sustainable. One person who I always talk to about projects that I am working on is the Artist, Designer, Photographer and Producer Eugene Galles. I have known him for many years and we have worked on many projects together and I have also consulted with him for his professional input on projects that I have been working on that he was not an active part of. He has a wide wealth of knowledge and insight and I rely on his valuable counsel. For many years he lived in New York City, and now he is living in Montecito, California. I have written about him in this blog a few times, as a collaborative Artist on some of my projects in the past; as an Artist, Designer, and Photographer; as an Interior Designer and specialist in midcentury furnishings and lifestyle; and as an inspiration, a mentor and someone I am honored to call a friend.

A few weeks ago he called to ask me if there were any Artists who I knew who would be interested in giving Artist talks via Zoom for the group of people in an Artists' Collective that he belongs to in California. There were several who I could think of who I thought would be interested because I had already been approaching some of the people I know about the Love & Plenty project, and they had told me that they would be open to participating in Artist talks via Zoom calls and other online promotional venues. The idea for that had come from conversations I had early on with him, and also with the Producer Pamela Lubell, and with the Web Designer and Filmmaker Eric Sanchez and his wife the Artist Dana Gambale who I mentioned last week had created the logo for Love & Plenty. Eric had also already offered to help with editing any videos that were created via Zoom, and when I asked him if he would be willing to work with me and Eugene to edit what we were creating, he agreed and suggested that we do a trial run with just the two of us to see what we came up with. I will include that here, and it is also available on YouTube on the Channel for Love & Plenty - Creative Forces that has been created for this part of the project. Eugene interviewed me about the Love & Plenty project, and not only does it give a good concise background about the project and the different parts of it, it shows another skill of Eugene's which I had not seen before now which is his great talent at being a host of a talk show, something that he had done a number of years ago professionally but that I had not had the pleasure to experience because it had been before we met.

Creative Forces is the name of this new video podcast, and we have already interviewed two Artists and have more waiting in the wings. As with everything about this project, I am taking time to make sure that it is working well and everyone is able to be shown in the best light. I have learned over the years that though I might want to rush ahead, there is a treasure to be found in taking things slowly and allowing them to develop in the best way. So for now, here is the video of the interview between Eugene and me about Love & Plenty. There will be more to come of the many Artists, Designers and small business owners involved in this project as well as some surprise guests from time to time. Stay Tuned!

Creative Forces
Episode One
Eugene Galles, Producer
Interview With Jannie Wolff
Founder, Good News Foundation








Blessings,

Jannie Susan

  

Sunday, May 24, 2020

An Abundant Life - Love And Plenty

I usually don't write much about myself or the projects I work on, unless they have to do with someone else. Even then, the spotlight leans more in the other direction and I tend to lean out of it whenever possible. I love to be behind the camera, and though I am an actress I prefer to leave my acting life for character roles. But from time to time I find myself in front of the camera and I am comfortable there, so if I need to be there to help promote someone or something else I'll gladly do it.

Because of my background in youth and family development and teaching nutrition and health in the inner city for many years, I knew immediately when shutdowns began to happen that there would be problems beyond illness for people who lost jobs, and that those who were in shelters and going to food pantries and soup kitchens would be hit very hard. When the restaurant shutdown happened in Hoboken, near where I live, I spoke with a friend who has two restaurants there, Chef Anthony Pino, and he had immediately thought the same thing. His restaurants were open for pick up and delivery and he wanted to help the community and make meals for people in need, but he needed the funding to do it, and so I started reaching out to different people to see what might be possible.

When September 11th happened I was living in downtown Manhattan, and because of the work that I have done for many years in public relations and marketing and collaborative events planning with Artists, Designers and small business owners, I started the Downtown Revitalization Project to bring business and a feeling of community back to that area. This current crisis is not only on a larger worldwide scale but also presents the challenge of not being able to bring people physically together. However, with technology we do have the ability to have online events along with the opportunity for a much larger reach, and I’m connecting Artists and Designers and small business owners locally, nationally and internationally into the project and planning an online venue where they can be highlighted, with a portion of proceeds from sales of their work and products to be donated to restaurants for meals. I’m also planning online venues for performing Artists and Musicians such as shows and live-streams that could also be fundraisers.

As I began to reach out to people, I was amazed by the variety of responses. Some people had already begun their own projects or fundraisers, some people responded immediately that they would be happy to help in any way possible. Some people took a while longer to respond, and I realized that many people were in shock because things happened so quickly. By reaching out to others and continuing to update them on my progress and on the things other people were doing I found that people became encouraged to start doing things themselves. It’s been a challenge to keep going because everything is so overwhelming and uncertain, but I have very strong faith, and the beautiful kindness and connection I have been able to find with others through online methods, though physically distant, has been very powerful.

I want to make sure that this project develops in a professional way that is sustainable,  because the future at this point for so many people and businesses is uncertain. By all reasonable estimates, life as we have known it may be profoundly changed for a long while. I have been taking it step by step as I want this project have the ability to help people in the short term and to grow and build into a larger community development project that will help rebuild communities and lives for the long term. In a way I’ve been discovering that the most important thing is the way that connections are being maintained, and that by reaching out to people with an idea of how to support others and help make the world a better place, people are beginning to be inspired to do their own projects and we’re supporting and encouraging each other to find ways to connect and create and share inspiration through social media and other online platforms. I recently did a play with the theater company I have belonged to since I first moved to New York right out of college. All the rehearsals and the performance were done on Zoom. It’s a strange thing for me as an Actor and Playwright to think about not doing this in person, but it worked and we were connecting and creating, and it's given me insight into more ways that I can use this technology to help and inspire others.

My company, the Good News Foundation, does what I do best, connect people and businesses to resources and to each other to raise funds and awareness about community issues and to network and grow community connections. My tag line is Connecting People and Communities, and the foundation of all of the work that I do is based in holistic wellness on the individual and community level. There are times that I feel as if things are going too slowly with this current project because I see how much need there is that is growing exponentially. 36 million people unemployed as of this past week with numbers still growing, children and families going hungry while farmers and ranchers have to throw away unused and unmarketable food and restaurants remain closed because they can't afford to open with only takeout and delivery options or they are too worried about health concerns for themselves, their staff and their families and patrons. But then I'll hear about someone who I shared a resource with who is now feeding their community through a newly developed church meal program, or an Artist who has started to create again because they wanted to do something and didn't realize how important their creativity was until we spoke about it. Chef Anthony Pino in Hoboken started a GoFundMe page, and within the first few days of posting about it he had already delivered 75 healthy and high quality hot meals to the Shelter. I felt so happy when I heard that! Sometimes all people need is someone there to encourage them to do what they have in their heart. As my own project grows, more people keep getting inspired, and they and other people inspire me to keep going too.

An Artist friend, Dana Gambale, created a logo for my project which I’ll share here. The inspiration was the story of Jesus multiplying five loaves and two fish to feed five thousand men plus women and children, with leftovers to spare, and the Old Testament story of the prophet Elisha who helps a poor widow multiply her oil, which is the only thing she has left in her house and she only has a small jar of. Elisha tells her to collect all the empty jars she can get from her neighbors and then to start pouring from her small jar. Only after every jar is filled does the oil run out, giving her enough to share and to sell so that she can not only survive, but because of the preciousness of oil in those days, she can have a comfortable life free from want. After Dana and I brainstormed by text along with some input by Chef Anthony Pino who suggested the ideas of a banquet and abundance, the name “Love and Plenty” came to me. Dana sent me sketches, and as the loaves of bread took shape I started to think about Chef Paul Gerard who has shared recipes with me for a nutrition and health pilot program I designed for a group of parents, children and mentors on Manhattan's Lower East Side. I asked Dana if she could make the bread on the logo look the way he serves it at Antique Bar & Bakery, the restaurant where I met him and where he is Executive Chef and Partner, and I sent her some photographs from the restaurant's Instagram page. And then I asked her to add a dish that looks like one of his, and that’s how this logo came to be.

I had though of Chef Paul Gerard and his food for this logo because there is another part of this project that is very important to me. The reason I had asked him to share recipes with me for the nutrition and wellness workshops I am designing is because I have a very specific vision of the kind of food that I believe everyone should have. On June 17, 2006 I walked into a soup kitchen for the first time. It was in the basement of a church I had just started attending in Manhattan's East Village, and they needed help from volunteers. I hadn't wanted to go. In those days I was newly born again and didn't have the heart I do now. But the first Sunday when I visited the church the week before, the Pastor had announced from the pulpit that they needed more people to volunteer to help. I heard the voice of God saying, "You need to go," and I argued back and forth silently for a while as I sat there listening to the other announcements. But finally, and firmly, God had the last word by saying, "You were almost homeless but for my grace. You're going." And it was true, I knew that only too well. The year before I had lost everything in a business partnership that went very wrong very quickly, and in the process though I found the treasure of God in my life, I had lost everything else including my home. By a hair's breadth I managed to find a place to live, but life at its best was precarious for a long time.

And so I begrudgingly went to help out in the soup kitchen, and on that first day when I walked in and saw the dingy, dirty walls and peeling filthy linoleum, when I smelled and saw the pan of oily white rice with a very few hot dogs cut up and stirred into it that had been made by a woman who, though she wanted to be serving in some capacity was feeling very overwhelmed and very unhappy to be there serving it, I heard the voice of God saying, "Only the best for my children," and that has been my word ever since. God opened doors then that were miraculous, and I helped that soup kitchen and many others over the years to provide healthy and delicious food and a safe environment for people to eat in. The people in that soup kitchen and many of the others where I have worked were the hard core homeless of Manhattan, people who lived on the streets and arrived in all kinds of condition. But to God they are precious, and over the years He has given me the passionate belief that it is not enough to just feed people in need with whatever food is leftover after everyone else has been served. Everyone deserves to have healthy, delicious, fresh food, and when we meet people wherever they are and invite them to the banquet we have been given, that's when lives can be healed and made whole and changed.


Love & Plenty
A Project Of The Good News Foundation
Connecting People And Communities
And Feeding Those In Need
With The Highest Possible Quality Food
Supporting The Arts & Creativity
And Inspiring New Life
Artwork By Dana Gambale

Love Created
Love Delivered
Love Shared
Love Multiplied






Blessings,

Jannie Susan



Sunday, May 17, 2020

An Abundant Life - Top Of The Morning

I was planning to write about City Of Saints Coffee Roasters when I first met them in September of 2018. At the time they had opened a pop up cafe at Antique Bar & Bakery in Hoboken, and I was so impressed with the quality of their coffee that I offered to write a blog post. They have another location in Hoboken on 14th Street, and they also have a location in Manhattan and one out in Bushwick, Brooklyn. I had wanted to visit the Brooklyn cafe because that is also a roastery, and so I thought I would wait until I was able to find some time for a visit there before writing the post. But at the time my schedule was very busy, and then one thing led to another and then it was cold and unpleasant winter weather, and the pop up shop at Antique Bar & Bakery ended, and the blog post I had started in my blog stayed in draft form. I didn't want to take it out entirely because I kept thinking that at some point I'd find the time to go out to the Brooklyn cafe, but somehow there never seemed to be any time that seemed the right time and now we find ourselves in the now of very little travel and many shops closed.

In this current time, I'm still writing my blog, though at times it seems odd because though I can do posts remotely, I usually like whenever possible to travel and visit and talk and take photographs, but the other day I did a play on Zoom, something that I never thought I'd ever have the slightest interest in doing, and though it was a challenge, at this point who knows when things will ever get back to the way we used to do them, so I'm forging ahead wherever and whenever I can to keep at least plugging along in creative endeavors and trying to encourage other people that we can and we will make it through this to a better and brighter day.

So I found myself this past week thinking that this was as good a time as any to write about City Of Saints, and though I never did make it out to their Bushwick Cafe, I do still have the lovely memories of their time at Antique Bar & Bakery, and my first delighted impressions of the quality of their coffee then. As a company, they have a mission to be not only sustainable but also to be good neighbors and colleagues and to be community minded, and in a way that's what my blog and my work is about too. As people who know me know, I only write about people and companies and products I truly believe in, and I also try as much as possible to support the people I write about in whatever way I can and to invest my time and efforts in developing relationships that can last and help build community.

My first impression of City Of Saints was of course tinted through the rosy colored glasses that accompany anything that Chef Paul Gerard, a Partner and the Executive Chef of Antique Bar & Bakery does. I know that he allows only the highest quality ingredients and products to be a part of his restaurant, and so I knew that the coffee would be excellent. But something else happened when I tasted it - I was reminded of coffee that I hadn't had in years and that I'd been searching for. When I lived in Manhattan, I used to buy my coffee at a store named Jefferson Market on 6th Avenue between 9th and 10th Streets in the West Village. I loved that coffee so much that I broke it down into how much it cost per day by figuring out the number of pots of espresso I could make out of it because I wanted to justify the added expense in my very tight budget at the time. I usually had their espresso or their French roast, but I also would buy different kinds from time to time to add a little variety to my morning. Jefferson Market closed about ten years ago, and I've been looking for coffee even remotely as good ever since, and when I tasted City of Saints coffee that first day at Antique Bar & Bakery, it reminded me of one of the Kenyan coffees that I had gotten all those years ago. It turns out that it was a similar roast, and that got me thinking back to the first time I had ever started buying my own coffee, when I was at school in Pittsburgh for two years when I first went to college. There was a little shop there in an area called Shadyside which is also the real life home of Mr. Rogers. During those two years I bought all my coffee there and a beautiful ceramic coffee maker with matching cups too, and a friend of mine always insists that it's my cups that make my coffee so good. I think they do, but I also know that it's the coffee that goes into them, and even in a paper to go cup City Of Saints tastes like a hands down winner to me. Their cups are lovely too, a beautiful blue, and if you're lucky enough to stop by in person, they'll make a little artwork to grace your heavenly brew.


City Of Saints
1320 Bloomfield Street
Hoboken, New Jersey
https://www.cityofsaintscoffee.com/

And In 2018 At A Pop Up Cafe
At Antique Bar & Bakery
122 Willow Avenue
Hoboken, New Jersey


Chef Paul Gerard
Executive Chef And Partner
Of Antique Bar & Bakery
Discussing Pastry Selections
With The Restaurant Pastry Chef
And The Staff Of City Of Saints


 

 
Photographs Courtesy Of Ricardo Vallejo
  
 


 












Blessings,

Jannie Susan

Sunday, May 10, 2020

An Abundant Life - Bravery

The first time I saw the inspirational t-shirts that Elizabeth Sites creates under the label declan I was in Bryant Park after brunch during the winter holiday season, taking a stroll around the shops with a friend who was in town who wanted to look at the different artisanal products on display. That particular market is always an excellent one, and as my friend and I turned a corner I saw someone I knew in the crowd and said hello. It was James Hammond, and it turned out that his girlfriend, the lovely Producer Pamela Lubell, who is also a friend, was helping her friend Elizabeth Sites with her booth, and so he took me over to see Pamela and that is the first time I saw the inspirational t-shirts Elizabeth Sites is creating.

That day Pamela told me a bit about Elizabeth and about Declan, Elizabeth's son who the label is named after, and she also told me about the t-shirts themselves and how Elizabeth created the brand because she wanted to bring a sense of love and joy and positive energy into the world and to be able to make a positive impact. There is something so beautiful about the t-shirts and hoodies she's creating, and something that is so powerfully positive. They are all hand crafted and made locally, and whenever possible she is hiring people to do the sewing who can benefit the most from having the income the work provides.

I had been planning on writing about Elizabeth last winter, but time was rushing by and I hadn't found a chance to do it yet. And then one day recently I received a gift package in the mail from Pamela, and there was a declan t-shirt in it. The shirt said "Be Brave", something that along with the fact that it arrived so unexpectedly made me cry. This time we are living in right now is not an easy one, and though I am really fine in every way, I'm not always feeling so brave. But after I had my little cry, I tried on my t-shirt and suddenly I was smiling, and I took my first selfie ever because I wanted to show Pamela and Elizabeth how much I loved wearing the tee.

Declan the brand was started by Elizabeth and named after her son Declan who after a traumatic birth was diagnosed with multiple severe disabilities. But in her descriptions of Declan, it is the beauty of Declan's life and the wonder and joy of her experience of life with Declan that are put into focus. She describes in "Our Story" on the website that "His love of life, regardless of his special condition, is a constant reminder that there is a colorful thread that weaves us all together. The need to love and to be loved." The mission of the brand "is to recognize and embrace the unique strengths of those with disabilities. By supporting and encouraging not only them, but their caregivers, we give them an opportunity to not only to be relevant and contribute, but to make an impact in the world." In addition to designing and creating these beautifully inspiring and encouraging wearable messages, Elizabeth is developing a friendship box that will include other artisanal gifts by other makers whose products she admires and believes in the quality and messages of. Within the box will also be a special message from Declan with a palm print of his hand and the encouragement to touch and hold his hand when we need to feel the reassurance a friend can give. Declan also gives support to Charities including Autism Society, Special Olympics, and Guide Dogs For The Blind. In a very powerful way, the very message of the brand gives a voice to Declan himself, asking the question and helping us find the answer to "How will you create and define your time on earth?"

Elizabeth and I had a conversation this past week, and it was a lovely one. There are times when you meet people at times in your life when you need to know that you're on the right track, and somehow that was what happened. I don't know where I'm going sometimes these days, but wherever that is somehow in our conversation I felt less alone. A burden shared is a burden halved as the saying goes, and when we find a way to connect with each other we can find our way to keep going. In a way I think that's what bravery is after all, when we feel less alone and we can keep moving forward in spite of the doubts and fears and uncertainty. When we can keep moving through we find we can make it and that the journey is a better one with a friend.

declan
https://declan.la/

Photographs Courtesy Of Elizabeth Sites


















A First Selfie At Home
Inspired By A Gift Of Friendship

In Bryant Park
At The Holiday Market





Blessings,

Jannie Susan

Sunday, May 3, 2020

An Abundant Life - The Place To Be

The first time I walked by the Hyatt Regency in Jersey City I wanted to go in and see if there was a restaurant where I could sit and view the water. I remember thinking very clearly that there must be one that had gorgeous views, and I also know the quality of the Hyatt brand because of my traveling in different places over the years, and it's been my experience that any time a Hyatt has a restaurant, not only is the food excellent but the experience is a lovely one. And so I made a note that one day I'd go back to see what I could find out, and then I met the Mixologist Stephanie O'Neill whose cocktails are as beautiful and accomplished as she is, and when I began to write a blog about her I found out that she worked at that Hyatt.

The Hyatt Regency Jersey City is in Exchange Place, in one of the most beautiful spots imaginable, and it's also very conveniently located not only to the rest of that waterfront area but also to downtown Jersey City and all the local transportation hubs leading to other areas including Manhattan. It's a hop, skip and a jump for someone like me who likes to walk by the water, and when I went to visit Stephanie O'Neill and first saw Vu I had to take photographs because the view is stunning. The cocktails she is creating are of course phenomenal, and the other bartenders who work there are making excellently delicious drinks of all kinds as well. And if you're interested in having a snack at the bar, there is an excellent menu too. The lounge and restaurant menus originate from the kitchen of imaginative and talented Chefs, and the restaurant is truly opulent in that wonderfully comfortable way that feels like a place where you'd want to go not just for special occasions, but any time you want to take some time to enjoy some time with business colleagues, friends or family.

And of course there's the view which brings something special to every moment. Throughout the day it is lovely, with the sunlight on the water changing into sunsets, nightlights shining from both sides of the Hudson River, and views of all of the major attractions on the east and west sides of the waterfront stretching down past the Statue of Liberty all the way to the Verrazano Bridge, and a front seat to admire the majesty of One World Trade Center. Even on cloudy days it's a lovely vista, with the water taking on a steely depth of color and refracting light. And to be able to sit there and enjoy the delicious creations of the Chefs and Mixologists, surrounded by this kind of beauty within the comfort of a beautifully designed room, is the utmost in luxury. A visit to Vu is one that is worth taking often, to take in the sights and the tastes and to just be.



Vu
At The Hyatt Regency Jersey City
https://www.hyatt.com/jersey-city-on-the-hudson/dining


Lovely Refreshing Cocktails


A Delightful Menu



Views For Days



Marvelous Mixology

With Every Detail In Place


Changing Light


Lovely Touches


A Special Place For Christmas Eve










Blessings,

Jannie Susan