- Kristin Kreuk y Peter Mooney , "Burden Of Truth" S2 promo interviews on "etalk CTV" & "CP24 Breakfast" (07-12-18):
Podéis encontrar los videos de las entrevistas: AQUÍ
Fotos de Kristin Kreuk
Moderadores: Shelby, Lore, porre, Super_House, ZeTa, Trasgo
Re: Fotos de Kristin Kreuk
- Reunión durante la premiere de la S2 de "Burden Of Truth" (09-01-18):
(@mscharley:1 What a fantastic night. We’re so proud. Looking forward to the 2nd Season of Burden of Truth. Can’t wait for next Wednesday. Giddy up! #burdenoftruth
@mscharley1: Do we have your attention? Definitely. Bring on Burden of Truth Season 2! #burdenoftruth
@mscharley1: Watching Burden of Truth Season 2 premiere with 2 of the stars. Joanna you need to let people in. Relationships matter. #burden of Truth)
(@mscharley:1 What a fantastic night. We’re so proud. Looking forward to the 2nd Season of Burden of Truth. Can’t wait for next Wednesday. Giddy up! #burdenoftruth
@mscharley1: Do we have your attention? Definitely. Bring on Burden of Truth Season 2! #burdenoftruth
@mscharley1: Watching Burden of Truth Season 2 premiere with 2 of the stars. Joanna you need to let people in. Relationships matter. #burden of Truth)
¡¡¡¡AY, OMÁ QUÉ CALORES!!!! ¡Gracias por tu regalo, Nitta!
Re: Fotos de Kristin Kreuk
- Nuevas candids de Kristin en Toronto (13-29 enero 2019):
(@mskristinlkreuk: December's book. "The Library Book" by Susan Orlean. (FYI: I'm sharing the books I receive each month from my gifted book subscription. And I am behind. Still. I have yet to read November.) In 1986, there was a massive fire at the Los Angeles Public Library that destroyed hundreds of thousands of books. "The Library Book" uses the mystery of the blaze to tell the story of the characters who populated the library, the history of downtown Los Angeles as seen from the library's vantage point, and, perhaps most importantly, the place a library serves in the system of a community. UNESCO's Public Library Manifesto states, "The library is a prerequisite to let citizens make use of their right to information and freedom of speech. Free access to information is necessary in a democratic society, for open debate and creation of public opinion." But Orlean also elucidates the value of the library for support and community building, from practical educational programs to helping the homeless and impoverished. She says that the "boundary between society and the library is porous; nothing good is kept out of the library, and nothing bad." "In a library, you share a smaller and more intimate space. The communal nature of a library is the very essence of the library, in the shared desks and shared books and shared restrooms." Hope all your Sundays have been fed with a few minutes of books
@mskristinlkreuk: We finally made me an office. Just took three years. A lady needs a place to do schoolwork. (And nap)(mostly nap))
(@mskristinlkreuk: December's book. "The Library Book" by Susan Orlean. (FYI: I'm sharing the books I receive each month from my gifted book subscription. And I am behind. Still. I have yet to read November.) In 1986, there was a massive fire at the Los Angeles Public Library that destroyed hundreds of thousands of books. "The Library Book" uses the mystery of the blaze to tell the story of the characters who populated the library, the history of downtown Los Angeles as seen from the library's vantage point, and, perhaps most importantly, the place a library serves in the system of a community. UNESCO's Public Library Manifesto states, "The library is a prerequisite to let citizens make use of their right to information and freedom of speech. Free access to information is necessary in a democratic society, for open debate and creation of public opinion." But Orlean also elucidates the value of the library for support and community building, from practical educational programs to helping the homeless and impoverished. She says that the "boundary between society and the library is porous; nothing good is kept out of the library, and nothing bad." "In a library, you share a smaller and more intimate space. The communal nature of a library is the very essence of the library, in the shared desks and shared books and shared restrooms." Hope all your Sundays have been fed with a few minutes of books
@mskristinlkreuk: We finally made me an office. Just took three years. A lady needs a place to do schoolwork. (And nap)(mostly nap))
¡¡¡¡AY, OMÁ QUÉ CALORES!!!! ¡Gracias por tu regalo, Nitta!
Re: Fotos de Kristin Kreuk
- #AllAccessMB 2019 "Burden Of Truth" Panel courtesy of On Screen Manitoba in Winnipeg (15-01-19):
Podéis encontrar el video del panel: AQUÍ
Podéis encontrar el video del panel: AQUÍ
¡¡¡¡AY, OMÁ QUÉ CALORES!!!! ¡Gracias por tu regalo, Nitta!
Re: Fotos de Kristin Kreuk
- Nuevas candids de Kristin en Toronto (08-12 febrero 2019):
(@mskristinlkreuk: My January book(s)! "84, Charing Cross Road" by Helene Hanff AND "Talk" by Linda Rosenkrantz. These books are both expressions of how we communicate, the former through letters and the latter through conversations. Hanff documents her 20-year correspondence with a used-book seller in London. The letters start as a fairly formal exercise in book procurement, with Hanff being the more informal and hilarious voice from New York, and the booksellers being business-like and stereotypically polite. But as the years pass a true caring develops between these people who never meet and live an ocean apart. I loved this book. I loved the space between, the moments withheld, the efforts to connect in more and more intimate ways, and the tragedy of the ending of correspondence. In contrast, "Talk" is a transcription of three friend's conversations from a summer in the Hamptons in the 1960s. Nothing here is withheld. Nothing. The popularity of analysis is evident in their conversations as they incessantly dissect each other and themselves--which reminded me of my twenties(so happy that is over). In the end, I found these people to be insufferable but was captivated by the specificity of the time and somewhat embarrassed by how willing they all were to share themselves in this way. I realize that I would also be deeply insufferable (and boring) were all my conversations transcribed into a book. Maybe that would be true of all of us...
Background: I was given a present where I receive a book a month curated for me by my local bookstore. I document these books here)
(@mskristinlkreuk: My January book(s)! "84, Charing Cross Road" by Helene Hanff AND "Talk" by Linda Rosenkrantz. These books are both expressions of how we communicate, the former through letters and the latter through conversations. Hanff documents her 20-year correspondence with a used-book seller in London. The letters start as a fairly formal exercise in book procurement, with Hanff being the more informal and hilarious voice from New York, and the booksellers being business-like and stereotypically polite. But as the years pass a true caring develops between these people who never meet and live an ocean apart. I loved this book. I loved the space between, the moments withheld, the efforts to connect in more and more intimate ways, and the tragedy of the ending of correspondence. In contrast, "Talk" is a transcription of three friend's conversations from a summer in the Hamptons in the 1960s. Nothing here is withheld. Nothing. The popularity of analysis is evident in their conversations as they incessantly dissect each other and themselves--which reminded me of my twenties(so happy that is over). In the end, I found these people to be insufferable but was captivated by the specificity of the time and somewhat embarrassed by how willing they all were to share themselves in this way. I realize that I would also be deeply insufferable (and boring) were all my conversations transcribed into a book. Maybe that would be true of all of us...
Background: I was given a present where I receive a book a month curated for me by my local bookstore. I document these books here)
¡¡¡¡AY, OMÁ QUÉ CALORES!!!! ¡Gracias por tu regalo, Nitta!
Re: Fotos de Kristin Kreuk
- Kristin Kreuk, "CakeWalk Media" Photoshoot for Vancouver's Cherry Blossom Festival Jewelry (07-02-19):
(@mskristinlkreuk: I posed for these pretty photos with @cakewalkmedia to model these jewels for Vancouver's Cherry Blossom Festival Jewelry designed by the truly fabulous @marie.khouri)
(@mskristinlkreuk: I posed for these pretty photos with @cakewalkmedia to model these jewels for Vancouver's Cherry Blossom Festival Jewelry designed by the truly fabulous @marie.khouri)
¡¡¡¡AY, OMÁ QUÉ CALORES!!!! ¡Gracias por tu regalo, Nitta!
Re: Fotos de Kristin Kreuk
- Nuevas candids de Kristin en Toronto (06-26 Marzo 2019):
(@mskristinlkreuk: At long last--my February book. I have a paper to finish today, but I procrastinated and completed this. "Black Swans" by Eve Babitz. These are a series of short autobiographical fiction stories about the shock of reaching adulthood in LA. Los Angeles and I have never found a groove. I love the purple of the jacaranda and the sushi and the sun. I love the way the haze makes everything look extra beautiful and a little pink. But the city itself always felt both more relaxed and more ambitious than I knew/know how to be. Babitz is of LA and the city is perhaps her greatest love and is the star of her writing. Thematically, "Black Swans" is about getting older, particularly in a city that rejects anything that ages. .
.
An excerpt: "That strange mixture that's always been a major part of Hollywood--self-enchantment mingled with the ever-present fear of total disaster (earthquakes, fires, random murders)--lies beneath the physical reality of Hollywood, which sometimes looks too good to be true...The idea of middle age--never mind old age, God forbid one hundred years!--is the violent opposite of everything Hollywood is based upon, which, as anyone can see, is and has always been beauty ... beauty without a whisper of fading, sagging, or wrinkling, although real girls do age, of course, no matter how self-enchanted they are. And age is a disaster."
.
Background: I get a book each month curated for me, and I write about them here:) I am perpetually behind)
Podéis encontrar un video candid: AQUÍ
(@mskristinlkreuk: At long last--my February book. I have a paper to finish today, but I procrastinated and completed this. "Black Swans" by Eve Babitz. These are a series of short autobiographical fiction stories about the shock of reaching adulthood in LA. Los Angeles and I have never found a groove. I love the purple of the jacaranda and the sushi and the sun. I love the way the haze makes everything look extra beautiful and a little pink. But the city itself always felt both more relaxed and more ambitious than I knew/know how to be. Babitz is of LA and the city is perhaps her greatest love and is the star of her writing. Thematically, "Black Swans" is about getting older, particularly in a city that rejects anything that ages. .
.
An excerpt: "That strange mixture that's always been a major part of Hollywood--self-enchantment mingled with the ever-present fear of total disaster (earthquakes, fires, random murders)--lies beneath the physical reality of Hollywood, which sometimes looks too good to be true...The idea of middle age--never mind old age, God forbid one hundred years!--is the violent opposite of everything Hollywood is based upon, which, as anyone can see, is and has always been beauty ... beauty without a whisper of fading, sagging, or wrinkling, although real girls do age, of course, no matter how self-enchanted they are. And age is a disaster."
.
Background: I get a book each month curated for me, and I write about them here:) I am perpetually behind)
Podéis encontrar un video candid: AQUÍ
¡¡¡¡AY, OMÁ QUÉ CALORES!!!! ¡Gracias por tu regalo, Nitta!