hangon
Spinning Palm Baguazhang
Spinning Palms Baguazhang, the style
formally invented by none other than Robert
A. Alderson in his early years. Taught to
only the family its was made to be devastating
and nearly horrible to endure. This genious
style is used to quickly finish off opponents
of any size shape or width, and was once
pronounced to be utterly unstoppable. Some
teachers of Baguazhang(Pakuachang) may have
said that it was a re-formating of the entire
system.
Deriving form its 2 internal counterparts:
Xingyiquan and Taijiquan Spinning Palm Bagua may
have been more devastating than both placed in a
single group. Terrible to endure the Alderson form
strikes meridians which can cause terrible ulcerous
burning to a mere muscular paralization. When used
properly the effecta can be life altering. Avoiding
someone that uses this style is in a person best
interest unless they are really looking for a challenge.
However, avoiding the practitioners is fairly easy
.Since there are only 3 that have ever been given the
book to use it. Two now unfortunately. The master who
originally created this style has since died, and left
it two his two heirs. They arent known very well , but
finding them could be a problem, for no one knows where
to find them. Both have been sent to different places in
the country.
• Brian D. Alderson
• Cameron J. Alderson
As of now not much is known at all about the style.
The one way to find out is to track down the two and ask
them I suppose. However, this is a difficult feet.
Explained in links above.
By: Johnathan Berek
Seeker of the Rare Martial Arts
Spinning Palm Baguazhang
Spinning Palms Baguazhang, the style
formally invented by none other than Robert
A. Alderson in his early years. Taught to
only the family its was made to be devastating
and nearly horrible to endure. This genious
style is used to quickly finish off opponents
of any size shape or width, and was once
pronounced to be utterly unstoppable. Some
teachers of Baguazhang(Pakuachang) may have
said that it was a re-formating of the entire
system.
Deriving form its 2 internal counterparts:
Xingyiquan and Taijiquan Spinning Palm Bagua may
have been more devastating than both placed in a
single group. Terrible to endure the Alderson form
strikes meridians which can cause terrible ulcerous
burning to a mere muscular paralization. When used
properly the effecta can be life altering. Avoiding
someone that uses this style is in a person best
interest unless they are really looking for a challenge.
However, avoiding the practitioners is fairly easy
.Since there are only 3 that have ever been given the
book to use it. Two now unfortunately. The master who
originally created this style has since died, and left
it two his two heirs. They arent known very well , but
finding them could be a problem, for no one knows where
to find them. Both have been sent to different places in
the country.
• Brian D. Alderson
• Cameron J. Alderson
As of now not much is known at all about the style.
The one way to find out is to track down the two and ask
them I suppose. However, this is a difficult feet.
Explained in links above.
By: Johnathan Berek
Seeker of the Rare Martial Arts
Considering all teams from the four major professional sports leagues in the United States and Canada (baseball, football, basketball, and ice hockey) this article is comprised of two lists, each ranking teams from top to bottom. The first list is all present teams with at least one championship in their histories (as of February 2008), coupled with the number of championships they’ve earned. The second list is present teams with no championships at any time in their history, preceded by the number of years they’ve existed in their current location (as of February 2008).
The reigning professional sports team in terms of total championships in its municipality is the New York Yankees, at the top of the first list with 26 titles. At the bottom of the second list is the San Francisco Giants. No other team can compare to the futility when it comes to championship drought. The consideration here: Which team has gone the longest in their current location without having a single title to its name at any time in its history? A team like the Chicago Cubs last won a title in 1908, but at least they can raise a championship banner that says “Chicago Cubs.” The Giants did have championships when the team was in New York, but that was in New York, not San Francisco.
Present teams with at least one championship in their histories (as of February 2008), coupled with the number of championships they’ve earned
26
New York Yankees (last one 2000)
22
Montreal Canadians (1993)
16
Boston Celtics (1986)
11
Toronto Maple Leafs (1967)
10
Detroit Red Wings (2002)
St. Louis Cardinals (2006)
9
Green Bay Packers (1996)
Los Angeles Lakers (2000)
7
Boston Red Sox (2007)
Chicago Bears (1985)
6
Chicago Bulls (1998)
New York Giants (2007)
5
Boston Bruins (1972)
Cincinnati Reds (1990)
Dallas Cowboys (1995)
Los Angeles Dodgers (1988)
Pittsburgh Pirates (1979)
Pittsburgh Steelers (2005)
San Francisco 49ers (1994)
Washington Redskins (1991)
4
Cleveland Browns (1964)
Detroit Lions (1957)
Detroit Tigers (1984)
New York Islanders (1983)
New York Rangers (1994)
Oakland Athletics (1989)
San Antonio Spurs (2007)
3
Baltimore Orioles (1983)
Chicago Blackhawks (1961)
Chicago White Sox (2005)
Detroit Pistons (2004)
Edmonton Oilers (1990)
New England Patriots (2004)
New Jersey Devils (2003)
Philadelphia Eagles (1960)
2
Buffalo Bills (1965)
Chicago Cubs (1908)
Cleveland Indians (1948)
Colorado Avalanche (1996)
Denver Broncos (1998)
Florida Marlins (2003)
Houston Rockets (1995)
Miami Dolphins (1973)
Minnesota Twins (1991)
New York Knicks (1973)
New York Mets (1986)
Oakland Raiders (1980)
Philadelphia 76ers (1983)
Philadelphia Flyers (1975)
Pittsburgh Penguins (1992)
Toronto Blue Jays (1993)
1
Anaheim Ducks (2006)
Arizona Diamondbacks (2001)
Atlanta Braves (1995)
Baltimore Ravens (2000)
Calgary Flames (1989)
Carolina Hurricanes (2006)
Dallas Stars (1999)
Golden State Warriors (1975)
Indianapolis Colts (2006)
Kansas City Chiefs (1969)
Kansas City Royals (1985)
Los Angeles Angels (2002)
Miami Heat (2006)
Milwaukee Bucks (1971)
New York Jets (1968)
Ottawa Senators (1927)
Philadelphia Phillies (1980)
Portland Trail Blazers (1977)
San Diego Chargers (1963)
Seattle SuperSonics (1979)
St. Louis Rams (1999)
Tampa Bay Buccaneers (2002)
Tampa Bay Lightning (2004)
Washington Wizards (1978)
Present teams with no championships at any time in their history, preceded by the number of years they’ve existed in their current location (as of February 2008)
3 Charlotte Bobcats
3 Washington Nationals
5 New Orleans Hornets
6 Houston Texans
6 Memphis Grizzlies
7 Columbus Blue Jackets
7 Minnesota Wild
8 Atlanta Thrashers
9 Nashville Predators
10 Phoenix Coyotes
10 Tampa Bay Devil Rays
11 Tennessee Titans
13 Jacksonville Jaguars
13 Carolina Panthers
13 Florida Panthers
13 Toronto Raptors
15 Colorado Rockies
16 San Jose Sharks
18 Orlando Magic
18 Minnesota Timberwolves
20 Arizona Cardinals
23 Sacramento Kings
23 Los Angeles Clippers
27 Dallas Mavericks
28 Utah Jazz
30 Seattle Seahawks
31 Denver Nuggets
31 Indiana Pacers
31 New Jersey Nets
31 Seattle Mariners
33 Washington Capitals
36 Texas Rangers
37 Buffalo Sabres
37 Cleveland Cavaliers
37 Vancouver Canucks
39 Atlanta Hawks
39 Milwaukee Brewers
39 Phoenix Suns
39 San Diego Padres
40 Cincinnati Bengals
40 St. Louis Blues
40 Los Angeles Kings
41 New Orleans Saints
43 Atlanta Falcons
46 Houston Astros
48 Minnesota Vikings
50 San Francisco Giants
Notes:
• Every present team in major league baseball, the National Football League, the National Basketball Association, and the National Hockey League is on this list. This list is presently applicable February 2008.
• For major league baseball, the titles are counted from 1903.
• For the NFL, titles are counted from 1933, when actual title games began being played. Super Bowl champions are counted as NFL champions from 1966.
• For the NBA, titles are counted from 1947.
• For the NHL, titles are counted from 1927, when the NHL took over the Stanley Cup. Each of these standard measurements of season play are the most widely considered.
• The San Diego Chargers and Buffalo Bills titles are from the AFL, years 1960 to 1965. The 1968 and 1969 NFL titles were won by the Baltimore Colts and Minnesota Vikings, respectively, but the Super Bowls in those years were won by the AFL’s New York Jets and Kansas City Chiefs. It is those titles that are counted here. If AFL titles are not counted, the Bills would be at 48 years without an NFL/Super Bowl title, and the Chargers would be at 47 if only those years since being in San Diego are considered (it spent its first year in 1960 in Los Angeles).
• The Oakland Raiders moved to Los Angeles in 1982 and then back to Oakland in 1995. The team’s Los Angeles title in 1983 is not counted in that team’s total.
• The Washington Bullets title in 1978 is counted even though they are now called the Wizards. Other minor team name changes are likewise not considered for ineligibility in present-team championship totals, such as the change of the Anaheim Mighty Ducks to just Ducks or the name-shifting of the California-to-Anaheim-to-Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim.
• Minor location changes within a municipality are also not considered for ineligibility. Several teams have changed regular game venues over their history but have remained in the same general area. An example is the once San Francisco Warriors, now Golden State Warriors who play in Oakland. This team still represents the San Francisco-Oakland metropolitan area.
• The Ottawa Senators won their title in 1927, and shortly thereafter left the league for over sixty years. They returned in 1992.
• The Cleveland Browns became the Baltimore Ravens in 1996, but the Cleveland Browns assembled a new team of players and returned in 1999. These two Browns entities are considered one in the same for these purposes.
• This is all through the sports year 2007, with the Super Bowl played February 3rd of 2008 (won by the New York Giants) the last championship of record here.
• The number used for the second list is years, representing years-in-the-league, in that metropolitan area. This is noted presuming that during season-ending strikes (such as 1994 for baseball and 2004-2005 for hockey) there would have otherwise been a season played.
• This list is compiled simply for those who wish to see which teams have won and how many times, which ones have not and for how long, and to do so in comparison to other teams in their league and in the other major professional sports team leagues. It is a mere reference article for a distinctive purpose, and in no way is it intended to discriminate against any other sport or sports league. These four leagues are generally considered to be the longest established and most well-known for professional team athletics in the United States and Canada.
References:
NFL Football: http://www.nfl.com/history
Major League Baseball: http://mlb.mlb.com/mlb/history/index.jsp
NBA Basketball: http://www.nba.com/history/
NHL Ice Hockey: http://www.nhl.com/history/index.html
The reigning professional sports team in terms of total championships in its municipality is the New York Yankees, at the top of the first list with 26 titles. At the bottom of the second list is the San Francisco Giants. No other team can compare to the futility when it comes to championship drought. The consideration here: Which team has gone the longest in their current location without having a single title to its name at any time in its history? A team like the Chicago Cubs last won a title in 1908, but at least they can raise a championship banner that says “Chicago Cubs.” The Giants did have championships when the team was in New York, but that was in New York, not San Francisco.
Present teams with at least one championship in their histories (as of February 2008), coupled with the number of championships they’ve earned
26
New York Yankees (last one 2000)
22
Montreal Canadians (1993)
16
Boston Celtics (1986)
11
Toronto Maple Leafs (1967)
10
Detroit Red Wings (2002)
St. Louis Cardinals (2006)
9
Green Bay Packers (1996)
Los Angeles Lakers (2000)
7
Boston Red Sox (2007)
Chicago Bears (1985)
6
Chicago Bulls (1998)
New York Giants (2007)
5
Boston Bruins (1972)
Cincinnati Reds (1990)
Dallas Cowboys (1995)
Los Angeles Dodgers (1988)
Pittsburgh Pirates (1979)
Pittsburgh Steelers (2005)
San Francisco 49ers (1994)
Washington Redskins (1991)
4
Cleveland Browns (1964)
Detroit Lions (1957)
Detroit Tigers (1984)
New York Islanders (1983)
New York Rangers (1994)
Oakland Athletics (1989)
San Antonio Spurs (2007)
3
Baltimore Orioles (1983)
Chicago Blackhawks (1961)
Chicago White Sox (2005)
Detroit Pistons (2004)
Edmonton Oilers (1990)
New England Patriots (2004)
New Jersey Devils (2003)
Philadelphia Eagles (1960)
2
Buffalo Bills (1965)
Chicago Cubs (1908)
Cleveland Indians (1948)
Colorado Avalanche (1996)
Denver Broncos (1998)
Florida Marlins (2003)
Houston Rockets (1995)
Miami Dolphins (1973)
Minnesota Twins (1991)
New York Knicks (1973)
New York Mets (1986)
Oakland Raiders (1980)
Philadelphia 76ers (1983)
Philadelphia Flyers (1975)
Pittsburgh Penguins (1992)
Toronto Blue Jays (1993)
1
Anaheim Ducks (2006)
Arizona Diamondbacks (2001)
Atlanta Braves (1995)
Baltimore Ravens (2000)
Calgary Flames (1989)
Carolina Hurricanes (2006)
Dallas Stars (1999)
Golden State Warriors (1975)
Indianapolis Colts (2006)
Kansas City Chiefs (1969)
Kansas City Royals (1985)
Los Angeles Angels (2002)
Miami Heat (2006)
Milwaukee Bucks (1971)
New York Jets (1968)
Ottawa Senators (1927)
Philadelphia Phillies (1980)
Portland Trail Blazers (1977)
San Diego Chargers (1963)
Seattle SuperSonics (1979)
St. Louis Rams (1999)
Tampa Bay Buccaneers (2002)
Tampa Bay Lightning (2004)
Washington Wizards (1978)
Present teams with no championships at any time in their history, preceded by the number of years they’ve existed in their current location (as of February 2008)
3 Charlotte Bobcats
3 Washington Nationals
5 New Orleans Hornets
6 Houston Texans
6 Memphis Grizzlies
7 Columbus Blue Jackets
7 Minnesota Wild
8 Atlanta Thrashers
9 Nashville Predators
10 Phoenix Coyotes
10 Tampa Bay Devil Rays
11 Tennessee Titans
13 Jacksonville Jaguars
13 Carolina Panthers
13 Florida Panthers
13 Toronto Raptors
15 Colorado Rockies
16 San Jose Sharks
18 Orlando Magic
18 Minnesota Timberwolves
20 Arizona Cardinals
23 Sacramento Kings
23 Los Angeles Clippers
27 Dallas Mavericks
28 Utah Jazz
30 Seattle Seahawks
31 Denver Nuggets
31 Indiana Pacers
31 New Jersey Nets
31 Seattle Mariners
33 Washington Capitals
36 Texas Rangers
37 Buffalo Sabres
37 Cleveland Cavaliers
37 Vancouver Canucks
39 Atlanta Hawks
39 Milwaukee Brewers
39 Phoenix Suns
39 San Diego Padres
40 Cincinnati Bengals
40 St. Louis Blues
40 Los Angeles Kings
41 New Orleans Saints
43 Atlanta Falcons
46 Houston Astros
48 Minnesota Vikings
50 San Francisco Giants
Notes:
• Every present team in major league baseball, the National Football League, the National Basketball Association, and the National Hockey League is on this list. This list is presently applicable February 2008.
• For major league baseball, the titles are counted from 1903.
• For the NFL, titles are counted from 1933, when actual title games began being played. Super Bowl champions are counted as NFL champions from 1966.
• For the NBA, titles are counted from 1947.
• For the NHL, titles are counted from 1927, when the NHL took over the Stanley Cup. Each of these standard measurements of season play are the most widely considered.
• The San Diego Chargers and Buffalo Bills titles are from the AFL, years 1960 to 1965. The 1968 and 1969 NFL titles were won by the Baltimore Colts and Minnesota Vikings, respectively, but the Super Bowls in those years were won by the AFL’s New York Jets and Kansas City Chiefs. It is those titles that are counted here. If AFL titles are not counted, the Bills would be at 48 years without an NFL/Super Bowl title, and the Chargers would be at 47 if only those years since being in San Diego are considered (it spent its first year in 1960 in Los Angeles).
• The Oakland Raiders moved to Los Angeles in 1982 and then back to Oakland in 1995. The team’s Los Angeles title in 1983 is not counted in that team’s total.
• The Washington Bullets title in 1978 is counted even though they are now called the Wizards. Other minor team name changes are likewise not considered for ineligibility in present-team championship totals, such as the change of the Anaheim Mighty Ducks to just Ducks or the name-shifting of the California-to-Anaheim-to-Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim.
• Minor location changes within a municipality are also not considered for ineligibility. Several teams have changed regular game venues over their history but have remained in the same general area. An example is the once San Francisco Warriors, now Golden State Warriors who play in Oakland. This team still represents the San Francisco-Oakland metropolitan area.
• The Ottawa Senators won their title in 1927, and shortly thereafter left the league for over sixty years. They returned in 1992.
• The Cleveland Browns became the Baltimore Ravens in 1996, but the Cleveland Browns assembled a new team of players and returned in 1999. These two Browns entities are considered one in the same for these purposes.
• This is all through the sports year 2007, with the Super Bowl played February 3rd of 2008 (won by the New York Giants) the last championship of record here.
• The number used for the second list is years, representing years-in-the-league, in that metropolitan area. This is noted presuming that during season-ending strikes (such as 1994 for baseball and 2004-2005 for hockey) there would have otherwise been a season played.
• This list is compiled simply for those who wish to see which teams have won and how many times, which ones have not and for how long, and to do so in comparison to other teams in their league and in the other major professional sports team leagues. It is a mere reference article for a distinctive purpose, and in no way is it intended to discriminate against any other sport or sports league. These four leagues are generally considered to be the longest established and most well-known for professional team athletics in the United States and Canada.
References:
NFL Football: http://www.nfl.com/history
Major League Baseball: http://mlb.mlb.com/mlb/history/index.jsp
NBA Basketball: http://www.nba.com/history/
NHL Ice Hockey: http://www.nhl.com/history/index.html
Christopher Wangro (born January 17, 1958) is a producer and impresario.
Early life
Chris Wangro was born in New York City to a family of artists and illustrators. Early on, he became obsessed with the history of magic, circus and vaudeville. While working as a young magician, Wangro met noted Ringling Brothers' clown Freddy Yockers, who gave him his first formal teaching in circus and clowning. Wangro started performing as a clown and magician, eventually landing Off-Broadway as a sword swallower. Wangro graduated from Bard College with a special interdisciplinary arts degree and a grant from the New York State Council of the Arts to launch a traveling one-ring show, The Janus Circus- “an eclectic modern circus of mayhem, mirth and mystery.” He served as Director & Ringmaster for Janus, touring the circus for several years in North America and Europe.
Career
Wangro's ability to create innovative public spectacle was recognized by the New York City Department of Parks and Recreation; in 1988 he was recruited to produce free public events in that city’s parks. In 1990, he became the City-Wide Director of Special Events, and is credited with reinstating “Mega-Events” to Central Park where he oversaw the three largest public events in that Park's history: “Earth Day '90,” “Paul Simon's Concert in the Park, August 15, 1991” and “Pavarotti's Concert In The Park,” among hundreds of other events each year.
In 1994, Wangro resigned his position at Parks to begin his own firm, Zaragunda Inc. Working under the banner of Zaragunda, he has operated as an independent producer across an uncommonly broad range of disciplines, spanning the fields of music, entertainment, marketing, arts & politics. The impressive number and vast scale of the projects he took on, and his infectious energetic approach to producing, gained him a reputation as a true New York City impresario. Ever the juggler, Wangro spent several years running Zaragunda while acting as Executive Producer and "Vice President of Fun and Profit" for The John Schreiber Group, a national events marketing firm responsible for hundreds of events, touring programs and annual festivals.
In 2001, Wangro formed a new company with a unique model combining the skills of a diverse group of production professionals- The Usual Suspects.
Social Justice
After years of producing for the commercial and public sector, Wangro began dedicating his time to the creation of public spectacle and events for social causes. In 2003, he teamed up with award winning theatrical designer Tal Yarden, to create NY, America: a hybrid not-for-profit organization that unites the arts world with the community of social justice organizations. NY, America's first effort, coincided with the 2004 Republican National Convention in New York City. With over 200 events in six days, "The Imagine Festival" was the largest political arts festival to ever take place in the United States and has served as a model for arts and political organizations throughout the country. Wangro received an Obie Award for Imagine and went on to create events for many more social justice organizations including UNAIDS, the United Federation of Teachers and Care for the Homeless.
Current
Wangro continues his work with Zaragunda, The Usual Suspects and NY, America while acting as a consultant and advisor to a number of marketing firms, arts and social justice organizations. Wangro is based in New York City, and Woodstock, New York.
Early life
Chris Wangro was born in New York City to a family of artists and illustrators. Early on, he became obsessed with the history of magic, circus and vaudeville. While working as a young magician, Wangro met noted Ringling Brothers' clown Freddy Yockers, who gave him his first formal teaching in circus and clowning. Wangro started performing as a clown and magician, eventually landing Off-Broadway as a sword swallower. Wangro graduated from Bard College with a special interdisciplinary arts degree and a grant from the New York State Council of the Arts to launch a traveling one-ring show, The Janus Circus- “an eclectic modern circus of mayhem, mirth and mystery.” He served as Director & Ringmaster for Janus, touring the circus for several years in North America and Europe.
Career
Wangro's ability to create innovative public spectacle was recognized by the New York City Department of Parks and Recreation; in 1988 he was recruited to produce free public events in that city’s parks. In 1990, he became the City-Wide Director of Special Events, and is credited with reinstating “Mega-Events” to Central Park where he oversaw the three largest public events in that Park's history: “Earth Day '90,” “Paul Simon's Concert in the Park, August 15, 1991” and “Pavarotti's Concert In The Park,” among hundreds of other events each year.
In 1994, Wangro resigned his position at Parks to begin his own firm, Zaragunda Inc. Working under the banner of Zaragunda, he has operated as an independent producer across an uncommonly broad range of disciplines, spanning the fields of music, entertainment, marketing, arts & politics. The impressive number and vast scale of the projects he took on, and his infectious energetic approach to producing, gained him a reputation as a true New York City impresario. Ever the juggler, Wangro spent several years running Zaragunda while acting as Executive Producer and "Vice President of Fun and Profit" for The John Schreiber Group, a national events marketing firm responsible for hundreds of events, touring programs and annual festivals.
In 2001, Wangro formed a new company with a unique model combining the skills of a diverse group of production professionals- The Usual Suspects.
Social Justice
After years of producing for the commercial and public sector, Wangro began dedicating his time to the creation of public spectacle and events for social causes. In 2003, he teamed up with award winning theatrical designer Tal Yarden, to create NY, America: a hybrid not-for-profit organization that unites the arts world with the community of social justice organizations. NY, America's first effort, coincided with the 2004 Republican National Convention in New York City. With over 200 events in six days, "The Imagine Festival" was the largest political arts festival to ever take place in the United States and has served as a model for arts and political organizations throughout the country. Wangro received an Obie Award for Imagine and went on to create events for many more social justice organizations including UNAIDS, the United Federation of Teachers and Care for the Homeless.
Current
Wangro continues his work with Zaragunda, The Usual Suspects and NY, America while acting as a consultant and advisor to a number of marketing firms, arts and social justice organizations. Wangro is based in New York City, and Woodstock, New York.
Pin Young (born July 20) is an American actress and music teacher currently residing in Orange County, CA. Born in Taipei, Taiwan, she and her family moved in September 1986 to Irvine, CA where she grew up before attending Northwestern University in Evanston, IL, where she graduated with a Bachelor of Music in Instrumental and General Music Education with department honors. She began her acting career playing the lead role in the short film, The Concert, in 2003. Young began taking acting classes with Billy Cowart at WCI Studios and booked the part on her first audition, "Ben's Not Here." Her best-known role to date is as the lead character Hally in the popular web series, /shutdown, produced by Kill9 Studios and shot in San Diego, CA.
Filmography
*Misconception (2007) .... Amy (post-production)
*Perched! (2007) .... Alice Gomm (Audience Choice Award, "Best of" San Diego 48 Hour Film Project)
*Project Oasis 7 (2007) .... Maryam (post-production)
*Final Round (2007) .... Elaine "Lainy" Owens (post-production)
*Necessary Measures (2006) .... Red Fawn
*Foreboding (2006).... Carolyn
*Ben's Not Here (2006).... Pocahontas
*The Concert (2003).... Maria
Internet
*./shutdown (2007) .... Hally (series lead)
Television
*Del Mar TV Idol (2007) .... Judge
*Teen Choice Awards (1999) .... Opening Act Performer
Theatre
*Once Upon A Mattress .... Pit Orchestra
*Guys and Dolls .... Ensemble
*Oklahoma! .... Fiddler, Ensemble
*A Funny Thing Happened On The Way To The Forum .... Citizens 1-3
*The Towel Lady (2006) .... The Towel Lady
Filmography
*Misconception (2007) .... Amy (post-production)
*Perched! (2007) .... Alice Gomm (Audience Choice Award, "Best of" San Diego 48 Hour Film Project)
*Project Oasis 7 (2007) .... Maryam (post-production)
*Final Round (2007) .... Elaine "Lainy" Owens (post-production)
*Necessary Measures (2006) .... Red Fawn
*Foreboding (2006).... Carolyn
*Ben's Not Here (2006).... Pocahontas
*The Concert (2003).... Maria
Internet
*./shutdown (2007) .... Hally (series lead)
Television
*Del Mar TV Idol (2007) .... Judge
*Teen Choice Awards (1999) .... Opening Act Performer
Theatre
*Once Upon A Mattress .... Pit Orchestra
*Guys and Dolls .... Ensemble
*Oklahoma! .... Fiddler, Ensemble
*A Funny Thing Happened On The Way To The Forum .... Citizens 1-3
*The Towel Lady (2006) .... The Towel Lady