Tuesday, June 26, 2007

Vote for Shalini Kantayya's film Doctor In-Law Tonight 6801

Tonight Shalini stepped up...venturing into comedy again...


This time...

Lots of great reviews from all the judges and lots of giggles and belly laughs as my family sat around the TV watching On the Lot!

Doctor In-Law was the name of her film!

If you laughed at Doctor In-Law and you want to support Shalini

VOTE!!!!

Text 6801

or

Phone 888-435-6801

or

Vote at thelot.com

to sign up for updates on Shalini visit ourvoicesinmedia.com

Tuesday, June 19, 2007

Swati Argade Showcases Her New Line of Dresses on Shalini Kantayya

The picture above is NYC/Bombay designer Swati Argade. Many of the amazing dresses that Shalini Kantayya wears On the Lot are from this brilliant designer. The picture below is OUR Shalini in one of Swati's dresses...this photo is highlighted on Swati's site...click here to view more designs!


CSR Wire--The Newswire of Corporate Social Responsiblity Writes About Shalini Kantayya

Shalini Kantayya is getting press attention from a variety of places...

Check out the article on CSRwire.com that ran today!!!



There will also be an article in India New England Newspaper

later this month highlighting Shalini Kantayya's work in films...

I will keep you posted on that release!

Monday, June 18, 2007

Shalini's Contestant Profile from On The Lot on Fox TV



Contestant Profile: Shalini Kantayya

Location: Brooklyn, NY

Hometown: Hartford, CT

Occupation: Freelance Director

Age: 30

Why am I here?
I am here to tell fantastic stories that move and inspire people across the world... stories of who we are and who we can become.



A quick tour of my life

As a first generation Indian American, I grew up straddling traditions, languages, and cultures. My mother raised us as a single-parent, and I learned quickly about hard work, determination, and tenacity. When I was nineteen, I visited a Buddhist monastery in South India, and knew there were experiences that I could not describe in words. I fell madly in love with visual images and began to see the world in a new way. After college, a year later, I quit my job, charged a video camera, and took off across the Caribbean and West Africa to make a documentary. For years, I slaved at every post-production house in New York City and would do ANYTHING to learn my craft. In ten years of living between the NYC indie film industry and Bollywood, I have filmed a Bengal tiger in the wild, interviewed His Holiness, the 14th Dalai Lama, and made hip hop videos in the depths of Brooklyn. There is nowhere I wouldn't go, no mountain I wouldn't climb, in pursuit of a compelling story.


Describe yourself in one sentence...

I am a tech-head, a tree-hugger, a humanist.

Your theme song?

Mos Def's "Umi Says" from the album Black on Both Sides. It starts, "Umi says shine your light on the world, shine your light for the world can see..."

First movie you ever saw?

Seeing the film, GANDI, was the first memory I have of going to the cinema with my entire family. I was 7 and I fell asleep during the intermission of the three hour epic, but I have never forgotten the opening scene...

Favorite line from a movie?

"May the force be with you."

What made you want to be a filmmaker?

Why does anyone fall in love? Isn't it always a little irrational? My love for filmmaking was just that - impulsive, passionate, all-encompassing and without reason. But my love for visual storytelling also became integrated with my love for human rights. I always considered myself a humanist & was always inspired by stories of ordinary people who overcome seemingly insurmountable hardships. These are the stories I like to tell... Filmmaking is not just my profession. It's my calling.

When you make a film what do you want the audience to leave with?

I want audiences to FEEL something, even if it's uncomfortable. I think this always brings us closer to our own humanity.


When I'm behind the camera...

I feel the most at home. There is nothing I love more than a camera in my hands and wind in my hair.

What do you think it will be like working with other Directors?


It is an honor to be in a pool with some of the most talented emerging directors in the world. I am really excited - I think it's gonna be like boot camp. And I LOVE boot camp.

Movie that best encapsulates who you are?


Whalerider - a young woman whose destiny is to be king.

While On The Lot you have a week to make a film every week. What's the biggest challenge?


Breathing deeply & staying centered amidst crazy production schedules and high tension

When you get the power, how will you use it?

I think all of us already have the power. It's just that my moment has come to share powerful stories with the world, and I will use this to inspire and move people...

What's more important talent or ego?

Are you crazy? TALENT

Watch Shalini Kantayya Explain What Filmmaking Means to Her


I have had the pleasure of interviewing Shalini Kantayya for my radio show Lipstick Leadership about the issues she writes about and the story of why she became a filmmaker. I could write a novel on this topic...she describes her "calling" to film making so eloquently. But I thought it would be fun for you to see and hear for yourself.






Tuesday June 25th will begin another round of films to vote on...
TUNE IN on Fox on JUNE 25 and VOTE FOR SHALINI!!!
We will post voting instructions that night during the broadcast!

Vidur Kapur is the Comic in Shalini Kantayya's Short Film "Laughing Out Loud"


For those of you that missed it...

Shalini Kantayya's short film

Laughing Out Loud: A Comic Journey -- On the Lot

that got such rave reviews featured her good friend and comedian Vidur Kapur.


Here is how you can see Shalini's work and some of Vidur Kapur's story.

View Laughing Out Loud Here

Don't forget to tune in Tuesday's on FOX and KEEP VOTING FOR SHALINI!!!

Wednesday, June 13, 2007

Shalini Makes the Cut-Top Twelve...Here I come!

I was like a proud Mama watching Shalini make the cut last night on Fox's On The Lot! Her film from last week, "Laughing Out Loud", received the most cheers from the other 10 contestants, voting it the favorite out of the group of five contenders! Her short film, about an Indian comic coming to grips with his homosexuality, was in Bay's words, "a very succinct story that give me a chill". He raved, "You have the most visual style of anyone here tonight."

This puts Shalini in the top twelve spot after the next few rounds of cuts!
You go girl! Look-out Hollywood!

Keep watching though...It's because of all of you voting that keeps her there!

Tuesday, June 12, 2007

What's the bravest thing you've ever done?

We all have a past, it's can be good or not so great...but it is our past nevertheless.


I asked Shalini what was the bravest thing she has done personally.


"I met my estranged father after 25 years in South India.

He left my family when I was two years old and I haven't had any contact with him since. When I was 25, I showed up at his door all by myself with a video camera with me. It was the scariest thing I have ever done. I could still hear the sound of my hand on the door because it was shaking so badly. It was a very intense experience. This was not about trying to have this wonderful relationship with my father, but rather about my own sense of completion. I filmed the entire thing, and he asked, "Why are you filming this?", and I told him it was just out of habit...but really, I couldn't have done it without the camera, because the camera is something that makes me feel powerful."

Monday, June 11, 2007

Mom's Wisdom at Work

While writing my new book, From the Kitchen to the Corner Office: Mom's Recipes for Success REVEALED, I've become curious about what other women have gleaned from their mothers and mother figures.

As Shalini's mentor, I decided to ask her what she has learned from her own mother and how she uses that knowledge in her work...

"My mom showed me that her commitment to us would remain strong in good times and bad. She was a single parent who worked three jobs to put food on the table and put herself through school. She never complained. She was a self-made women who rebuilt her life from nothing after my father left. I watched her work around the clock, sleeping only three to four hours a night. This gave me a boundless well of strength because whenever I feel like complaining or I feel tired, I think of her and how driven she was to feed her children. I figure if she can work that hard for us, I can work that hard and harder trying to chase my dream."

It's mothers like Shalini's that make all of us feel that there's nothing we can't do and that life's opportunities are limitless.

Shalini says, "My mom always said that women were like a velvet glove on an iron fist. You don't have to speak loud; you don't have to be rude, but inside, you just have to be solid. Don't let people walk all over you."

With the powerful messages of her films and her commitment to spreading those messages to the world, it's clear that Shalini has learned from her mother well.

We all have women in our lives that have influenced us. Share your best "Mom's wisdom" stories today at MichelleYDrake.com!

Tuesday, June 5, 2007

How To Vote for Shalini Tonight 6805






What a great job our Shalini did with her film tonight on On The Lot



Laughing Out Loud:A Comic Journey


We have 2 hours to show our support of this amazing director's work!

The contestents voted her film best of the night and guest judge Michael Bay felt that Shalini's film had the most visual style of the night and "gave him chills"

To Vote for Shalini:

Call 888.435.6805

or

Text 6805

or

Vote Online at thelot.com

Let's keep Our Voices represented in Media by voting for Shalini

Click if you are interested in purchasing Shalini's film A Drop of Life