From Star

...now browsing by category

 

2010 Cornell University Big Idea Competition 1st place winner – Cashlert

Thursday, August 26th, 2010

This past April, a business plan I had developed with my two classmates Jeff Chen and Nelson Yan won 1st place in the 2010 Cornell University Big Idea Competition.

It was a pretty amazing experience, especially considering the fact that we didn’t even make it to the top 12 finalists. A week before the presentation, I was contacted by the event coordinator, Will Brassel, who said that one of the finalist teams had dropped out and would we still be interested in presenting. I said “Of course” and then didn’t sleep for about a week.

The business plan was developed in David BenDaniel’s NBA 3000: Entrepreneurship and Private Equity class at the Johnson School at Cornell University in fall 2009. The judges for that semester – Jason Hogg and Steve Gal – were extremely helpful with their feedback, advice, and time.

I’d like to give a major shout-out to Romi Kher, AEM Entrepreneurship professor Deborah Streeter, and my NBA 3000 TA Courtney Wilkinson for helping me with my pitch. The three of them emphasized what I will have stamped in my brain forever – keep things simple. And try not to talk so fast.

The judges had to sit through twelve presentations and each pitch was only allowed three minutes. Make sure they actually understand what your idea is about. Forget the fancy powerpoint graphics and big words. What is the story you’re telling?

Even though there were about 250 people in the audience (15 of them judges), I had practiced so much I was pretty much on autodrive during the presentation. The sea of faces blended together and I forgot about being nervous. Never thought my year would end on such a bang!

A Defense of Eat, Pray, Love (Or Why Everyone Needs to Quit their Belly-Achin’)

Tuesday, August 24th, 2010
Elizabeth Gilbert, author of "Eat, Pray, Love"

Elizabeth Gilbert, author of "Eat, Pray, Love"

I finally got the chance to see Eat, Pray, Love over the weekend and would like to defend the movie, the book, the author (Elizabeth Gilbert) and even the actress playing the author (Julia Roberts).

First off, I read the book several months ago before watching the movie and didn’t think Gilbert’s attitude in the book was self-centered or hedonistic at all. Let’s be clear about one thing – Gilbert financed the trip herself. She received a major book advance for the premise of Eat, Pray, Love and traveled around the world with that money.

Why did someone like Gilbert receive all that money? Because she had proved in the past that she was actually a good writer. She was a good writer who was not only capable of stringing together a coherent sentence but also received critical acclaim and awards for her short stories, long stories, and books.

Gilbert did not travel around the world on trust fund money from her WASPy parents or wealthy husband. Gilbert wasn’t some rich, white woman who suddenly decided to go to Italy, India, and Bali on a whim because she was rich and white. Nearly every review I’ve read about the movie criticizes Gilbert for being a “rich, white American” who didn’t have a care in the world and was able to do what she did because she was rich and white. Did I mention how rich and white she is?

No, the book advance was money Gilbert had earned on her own and she was entitled to do whatever the hell she wanted with it.

Second, the man she ended up meeting in Bali – Felipe – looked NOTHING like actor Javier Bardem. Columbia Pictures took some pretty extreme measures in casting Bardem to portray a man who, in real life, was 17 years older than Gilbert and did not look like a spring chicken or a sexy Brazilian man. I bet you nearly everyone would have shut up about how unfair it was that Gilbert met the love of her life in Bali if they knew what he looked like in reality.

Elizabeth and Felipe on their wedding day

Elizabeth and Felipe on their wedding day

Third, I get the feeling that most people are unconsciously more annoyed with actress Julia Roberts than the (real-life) character of Elizabeth Gilbert herself. When I say Julia Roberts, you immediately think of romantic comedies. As a female, you become irritated because her romantic comedies make you feel bad about your own life (and that lazy boyfriend/husband of yours). As a male, you become irritated because every time your girlfriend/wife watches a Julia Roberts movie, she gets in a bad mood afterward over why you don’t act like the men wooing Ms. Roberts.  I swear, it’s almost like watching Pavlov’s dogs when I mention Julia Roberts.

Julia Roberts as Elizabeth Gilbert in "Eat, Pray, Love"

Julia Roberts as Elizabeth Gilbert in "Eat, Pray, Love"

The instant you heard Roberts’ name attached to Eat, Pray, Love you thought, “Oh GOD, another romantic comedy that will make me feel nauseous and bad about my own love life.” You then went into the film with that mentality without even considering the fact that the themes in Gilbert’s memoir were maybe more significant than what is usually presented in a Julia Roberts movie.

And they were more significant. I personally admire Elizabeth Gilbert (the author) for ending a marriage that she knew wasn’t working. Rather than live her life in misery, knowing that her growing unhappiness would eventually not only be a detriment to her mental and physical health but her husband’s as well, Gilbert chose to do a very difficult thing. How many people do you know would “stick it out” and hope that things get better when they already know deep down that it won’t and that it would only be a matter of time before things progressed from bad to worse?

Despite how indulgent that year abroad may have seemed, Gilbert was doing it because she did feel like she needed to get away and “discover” who she was. (And, let’s not forget, she had her own money to do so). I liked the fact that she stated upfront – “Since I was 15, I’ve been with a guy. I really need to be by myself for a while and get my shit together.”

A side note about the movie and Julia Roberts – both really weren’t that bad. Roberts may like to play it safe, but she does a good job in her roles. The movie never got over the top and made me want to hurl on the person sitting in front of me. I think Ryan Murphy did a fine job with this project.

The next time someone complains about Eat, Pray, Love, ask them for a legit reason as to why they didn’t like the movie and then tell them to go read her book.

Trailer for Eat, Pray, Love:

A Slight “Fifth” Life Crisis – The Realization that I’m Not Getting Any Younger

Sunday, August 22nd, 2010
"Time passes in moments. Moments which rushing past, define the path of a life just as surely as they lead towards its end." -Dana Scully in "all things"

"Time passes in moments. Moments which rushing past, define the path of a life just as surely as they lead towards its end." -Dana Scully in "all things"

I think I may be having a slight “fifth” life crisis. I’m 22 years old, three months out of college, and the thought that I have 80+ years left on this giant blue/green marble we call Planet Earth seems almost incomprehensible. I didn’t become who I am today until around two years ago (it took me 20 years to grow up – I was a really slow beginner), so I tend to think of my life really starting my junior year of college.

As I mentioned in a previous blog entry about life in Florida after graduation, I really love my job and my co-workers. However, the realization that I’m not in school anymore, that there isn’t a set path for me to follow, is a little frightening. In college, you tend to have an idea of what to work toward every year:

Get good grades + participate in extracurricular activities + do well in your summer internship + (probably most important) schmooze with the right people = Get a job after graduation that will make you lots of money and/or happy.

I guess you could say there is a path I could follow post-college given my background. The next ten years of my life seem almost planned out – I’d spend 3-4 years at my current job, go to business school, work for another company at a higher position with a higher salary, and get married.

The fact that there is a template I’m supposed to follow makes me not want to follow it. I don’t even think that’s the path I want to take. (But given how naïve I probably am now about what I want, it’s best to regard whatever I say next with a huge pound of salt. In fact, I’ll probably look back at what I wrote a year from now and laugh my ass off).

My goals (at this point in time anyway) include starting my own payments company and becoming a billionaire so that I can start my own movie studio and bankroll/produce huge event spectacle films – ones with budgets of $50 million plus. I want to make movies that people are excited to see, not ones I have to beg people to watch. I’d also like to marry Conan O’Brien but that might be a bit of a stretch. Check back with me in 20 years and see how I’m doing.

Just last week, I decided to start on a small scale with that goal and bankroll short films with budgets of $1000-$5000. Any dollar not going toward my rent, food, or 401K is going toward my “movie-making” fund. I decided to stop talking about “building my dream movie studio” and actually do it. The stories that would be brought to the screen are ones I’ve created.

One that my friend Stephen Guilbert and I are currently working on is about a college girl on the verge of graduation who has an emotional affair with an older married friend (not autobiographical, I swear). I see it being shot Before Sunrise/Before Sunset style.   The second one I’m writing now is more of a TV pilot-style 21 minute screenplay about two people getting used to life after college. Given what a big fan I am of sexual tension, this screenplay is positively drenched in it. It’ll be like Scully and Mulder for the young adult set. The dialogue veers on Gilmore Girls territory, and the acting infringes upon Arrested Development.

I never thought three months ago that I’d be spending almost all my time outside of work writing creative stories. Once I got into the work force, I started to notice a lot of things about life and people that I unwittingly began putting down on paper. After a while, I realized that I could create stories and funny dialogue out of my observations and began to write.

I just have to say one thing about creative writing – it’s REALLY HARD. Lines and dialogue will often fly into of my head at random times during the day (the best ones often leap into my brain right as I’m about to fall asleep – I guess that’s when I’m most meditative), and I usually collect those thoughts instantly so I don’t forget later. Sometimes, I can’t think of anything novel or interesting (ironically enough, this usually happens when I sit down with the intent of writing) and I just want to cry because the writer’s block is so maddeningly intense.

It’s usually at those points when I wonder how the hell Mitch Hurwitz was able to write his Arrested Development scripts, how he was able to create such a great flow between his dialogue (Hurwitz is the king of wordplay), characters, and situations, how he was able to make everything make sense. I’ve come to the conclusion that he must be some kind of genius.

Although I usually spend my free time writing, I’ve begun to notice the exact number of weeks that have been passing me by, and wondering what I have to show for it. I sometimes get restless and stir-crazy on the weekends, wondering if my writing or what I do outside of work is going to produce anything of value, if I’ll have anything to show for myself a year from now. This feeling of uneasiness is hard to get rid of. No wonder so many writers drink or, in Elizabeth Gilbert’s words, are “alcoholic manic-depressives.”

I’ve begun to notice the minutes ticking away on my life. I read a lot of movie reviews and one of the things people write if they hated the film is, “That’s two hours of my life I’m never getting back.” Given what I’ve noticed about how most people spend their life, that’s the least of their concerns. They should be more concerned about not wasting their life on the trivial matters we burden ourselves with everyday.

People at work will often mention something relating to time that highlight the gravitas of it. Someone will mention that her 22-year-marriage anniversary is coming up and I’ll suddenly realize that’s how long I’ve been alive. I mentioned one day that I was born in ’88, that I was a child of the ‘90s, and one of my older co-workers looked at me in shock, “Holy COW!”

I think that I’m lucky to have some semblance of an idea of what it is I’d like to accomplish in my life. I may not know how exactly I’ll get there (in my mind, I see a dusty, never-ending road, something out of a Jack Kerouac novel) but I know I’m not getting any younger. Time may be a very abstract concept but it can sneak up and whack me in the head with a frying pan without warning. I really, REALLY hope I’m utilizing my time well so it doesn’t.

An hourglass

"Remembering that I'll be dead soon is the most important tool I've ever encountered to help me make the big choices in life. Because almost everything — all external expectations, all pride, all fear of embarrassment or failure - these things just fall away in the face of death, leaving only what is truly important. Remembering that you are going to die is the best way I know to avoid the trap of thinking you have something to lose. You are already naked. There is no reason not to follow your heart." - Steve Jobs

Best Friends Forever – A Sentimental Entry from a (Charmingly) Sarcastic Writer

Saturday, August 14th, 2010

At a diner in DC

At Tryst in DC: We're not normally this hunched-over - just squeezing in to take this pic

My best friend, Losmeiya Huang, graduated from Stanford University with a degree in Human Biology in June 2010. She spent the summer working at a faith-based program called Bay Area Urban Projects (BayUP) in Oakland, CA. One of its intentions was for the participants to experience how low-income families live and the challenges they face. Losmeiya lived on a $15 per person per week budget, and was only allowed 1 hour on the phone/internet each week. Losmeiya finished the BayUP program several days ago and will write a blog entry detailing her experience later this week.

Because of of the whole “1 hour on the phone/internet each week” rule, we didn’t have any form of communication with one another for two months straight, the longest I’ve gone without speaking with her. I would send Losmeiya an email each week talking about what was going on in my post-grad life. It felt strange not to get a response. I felt like one of those people in a far-away land who would write letters home to my family for years on end but would never get a response back for one reason or the other. It was like shouting into the darkness, never knowing if anyone could hear me.

Surprisingly enough, I got through those two months just fine. Losmeiya’s the closest thing to family I have so imagine not talking to your parents for two months straight. Why is she so important to me?

Below is a (hysterically funny) letter I wrote for her on her 22nd birthday and a (hilarious yet heartfelt) story I wrote about the two of us last year.

MARCH 5, 2010 BIRTHDAY LETTER

Losmeiya, just in case you forgot, today was your 22nd birthday. What’s my gift to you? Nothing, except this note. It took me an hour to write and because I’m a Very Important Person, an hour of my time is worth $300. So that basically means I got you a $300 gift. You’re welcome.

You know what a 22nd birthday means? You’re just about done with college. That’s pretty crazy, considering the fact that it feels like yesterday when you told me you were going to Stanford. And when I told you I decided on Cornell in Ithaca, you said, “Where the hell is that?”

About a million things have changed since then. You decided to be a doctor, then decided you weren’t going to be a doctor, and then decided to be a doctor again. (My head is starting to spin). You decided you were an East Coast person after your stint in DC and said that you were going to die, JUST DIE if you had to stay in California. You began jetting off to places like Sierra Leone to help save lives. You dropped out of school for three months and joined a biker gang where you rode around stealing young children’s lunch money.

Oh wait, that last one was me.

What else has college done? It’s helped you to develop into the most mature and genuine person I know. You have much better judgment and sense than anyone I know at our age. I feel that’s why our relationship is so strong – we’re completely honest with each other and there are no facades. You make me laugh, I make you laugh even harder, and we talk about everything together. Knowing that you’re just a phone call away is the most comforting feeling in the world. Even though I only physically see you about 4-5 times a year, you might as well be living next door.

I know you have some post-grad anxieties right now (who doesn’t) but you shouldn’t be worried. I’ve looked into my crystal ball and see amazing things in your future. You’ll become a world famous doctor. Jeffrey Sachs and Nicholas Kristof will come to you for advice. You’ll develop your own foundation that puts the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation to shame. And you’ll win the Nobel Peace Prize. All before the age of 30.

You have a lot of work to do, amiga. Get busy – you’re going to change the world.

Your best friend since first grade (don’t any of you bitches forget it!),
Star

P.S. Just kidding about your gift. I’ll be getting you that TomTom GPS with a Snoop Dog voiceskin (you know, the one you’ve been unabashedly bothering me about) when we figure out whether or not you’ll be using your car post-grad. Ya DIGGG??

1999 at Knott's Berry Farm in CA

1999 at Knott's Berry Farm in CA

2009 at the Smithsonian zoo in DC

2009 at the Smithsonian zoo in DC

2089 at a nursing home somewhere

2089 at a nursing home somewhere

FEBRUARY 20, 2009 SPIRITCLIPS STORY

This is the story of friendship and a very lucky girl. And this story is dedicated to my best friend, Losmeiya.

Remember how we met in first grade? I remember being so impressed by you.  You were always well dressed with lovely shoulder-length hair while I often came to school in mismatched clothes with my severely outdated upside-down bowl haircut.

You were so smart: I asked you once what a noun was in class one afternoon and you said very primly that it was a place, person, or thing. I remember being blown away and thought you were some kind of genius.

We became friends then and I’m not sure what compelled us to remain friends back when we were so young, especially when you moved away. Fate must have gotten involved somehow because I remember us always staying in touch.

Remember, starting around fifth grade when we’d meet up every weekend? I’d walk halfway from my home in Temple City, you’d walk halfway from your home in San Gabriel, we’d meet up, walk together to SuperDuper Video Store, borrow a DVD movie, split lunch at Dennys in that K-Mart plaza, walk back to your house to watch the movie, and then just hang out?

Remember how easily entertained we were? We’d hang out in your garage that was filled with scooters and that large backseat your dad took out from his van. You’d tell me jokes that you heard on the old television show “Whose Line Is It Anyway” and I’d always laugh hysterically. We’d play the “Clue” board game and I’d get mad when you won. We used to watch Britney Spears videos because we were both obsessed with her. We’d play make-believe games in your backyard which was always highly entertaining. How did we not get bored of this weekly routine?

Remember also how before we’d spend the entire day together, I’d call you when I woke up and we’d talk for an hour about god-knows-what and then literally meet up an hour later in person? How did we not get bored with one another?

Remember how during one Halloween, when we were out trick-or-treating, someone pointed to us and said, “Oh look, twins!”

Remember how easy-going and trusting our parents were? They were dropping us off at places like theme parks since we were 11 years old and never warned us about not talking to strangers, just “Don’t go on any scary rides!”

Remember how your mom was such a great cook and I used to eat dinner at your house more often than I did at my own? And when I told your mom she should open her own restaurant you said I was crazy and that if she did, I’d be the only customer?

Remember how you used to say the most ridiculous things?

“Star, someone died in the house I’m living in. That’s why we were able to get it for so cheap. In fact, he … WAS SHOT IN THIS VERY ROOM!”

“My name is very important. My dad spent months and months coming up with it. ‘Los’ is from the fact that we live in Los Angeles. ‘Mei’ means beauty in Chinese. And I’m not sure where he got the ‘ya’ from.”

I said some pretty ridiculous things as well.

“I was mean to you yesterday because my eyes turned green and a monster took over my body.”

“When I become the next Britney Spears, you can be my back-up dancer.”

“I can’t believe you won’t transfer schools to be with me! I thought we were best friends! … NO, I don’t think I’m being possessive and unreasonable. I don’t know where you’re getting that from.”

Remember how my mom made me go to China with her for a month back in July 2001 and I was so bored out of my mind I’d thought I go insane? I began writing long letters to you everyday, which was very therapeutic – it was like a diary for my thoughts but with you as the end reader. I still remember some of what I wrote – “Losmeiya, it’s so dirty here. I think if your mom saw the place she’d have a heart attack.” “Losmeiya, I’m SOO bored. And my mom’s mad because I didn’t bring my piano books with me. Like I want to spend an entire month practicing piano in China.” I remember you putting all my letters neatly together in a giant folder because I had written so much and you said my writing made you laugh.

Remember how we stopped hanging out as much when we got to high school? I began focusing on my schoolwork while you began winning speech competitions all over California?

I still remember when we made our college decisions – you were heading off to Stanford and I was going to Cornell. I never worried about us drifting apart – we had already gone through so much together.

But remember when you asked me to think over our relationship last summer because you felt our values had changed and we weren’t the same people we were in the past? I remember being offended because I didn’t want to consider the possibility that I was being a bad friend. But that really made me think about where I wanted our relationship to be 5, 10, 30 years from now. I feel that’s what going through marriage or couples counseling must be like.  You’re in shock that your partner would accuse you of such things but when you think about it, realize that your partner’s right. Things aren’t the same now as they were in the past and we have to evolve together if we want to make it.

I remember how our relationship changed for the better after that. I feel so lucky now that you were mature enough to step back and say you weren’t happy with where we were headed. You said you did this because you cared enough about me to go through this uncomfortable phase because you had hope that I’d understand what you were doing.

Maybe that’s why we stayed best friends all these years. You were always there for me and made me a better person. I wasn’t close to my parents because they were working all the time and I didn’t have any siblings, but you were always there. I’ve only recently realized what a positive influence you were on me and I’m sure you will continue to be so as the years go by. In fact, when I’m asked to describe you, I just tell people you’re like a better version of myself.

Do you remember an old birthday card I gave you once? It had a picture of a sugar packet and container of cream walking around together with the tagline:

“Said the sugar to the cream, ‘Will you be my friend?’ ‘Said the cream to the sugar, ‘Till the Very End.’ Happy birthday to my very best friend.”

That’s going to be us. And that very lucky girl I mentioned at the beginning of this story? That’s me. I’m a very lucky girl to have you as my best friend.

Best Friends

BFF

Post-College Life has Been Pretty Freaking Amazing

Monday, July 12th, 2010

The view from work

The view from work - check out the rooftop swimming pool across the street and the boats in the water!

I’ve now been out of college for about a month and a half now, and post-grad life has been pretty fantastic.

Hours after graduation on May 30, I jumped on a flight down to Tampa to settle into my new life in Saint Petersburg. I had a pretty rough first week.

When I arrived, my facial skin reacted badly to the sun and my face became as red as a tomato. I looked quite horrendous, and pretty much cried myself to sleep every night. When I went to see my dermatologist later that week, everyone who looked at my face turned to stone. I’m kidding, they just looked horrified and crossed themselves.

Also, two days after I got in, the hybrid car that my mom shipped from CA finally arrived. However, there was a problem. I haven’t driven in over three years. It’s a little embarassing to admit, especially since I’m from Los Angeles, but I didn’t get my driver’s license until I was 19, the summer of my freshman year. I remember that day really well – I had to jump on a flight to Ithaca the next day, and was like, “I better pass this driving test! It’s not like I’ll have a second chance to take it.” Thankfully, I do pass, but I don’t get behind the wheel for the next three years. Flash forward to June 2010. I get my car. The driver who towed the car to FL is nice enough to give me a ten-minute lesson. I practice for two days and get the hang of it. I joke with my friends that I’m surprised I didn’t crash into a tree. But GUESS what happens the next day…. I crash into a F**KING TREE!

That was pretty embarassing. And it’s not like I was street racing when I crashed, I just turned out of a Boston Market parking lot too quickly.  I turned right, and I guess I lost control because the next thing I know, the front half of my car is completely buried in the tree. I’m fine (bumped my head slightly, sprained my hand, small cut on my chin), but the car’s not. And I had just gotten my FL license plates two hours ago! When I went back later to the tax office to get a refund, the customer service rep looked at me with exasperation, “You were just here this morning! WHAT a loser.” The car was pretty damaged, so I decided to just sell it to a junk car dealer. My mom’s Hybrid already had around 156,000 miles on it and it was a car from 2003, so getting rid of it wasn’t a bad deal at all. Getting around Saint Petersburg without a car actually isn’t really a problem. The bus system here is pretty decent, and I have no trouble getting around. It gives me more time to read the news on my iPhone anyway.

Also, I had to sleep on the floor my first week because my bed frame was ridicuously difficult to assemble. Target really should have let me known ahead of time that you needed three PhD engineers from MIT to put that sucker together.

That was a REALLY bad week. But, I kept telling myself that I would have really great material for my next stand-up act.

Okay, now comes the good news. I really like my job and I REALLY like the people there. The work is interesting (I am genuinely interested in the payments landscape, for reals). I work for a company called Revolution Money (name and brand is going to be changed soon) that American Express acquired last fall. We’re an online payments company (think PayPal) and are working on some very interesting things. I’d say more, but there’s a chip in my head that will explode if I do.

I work with the technology team and spend a lot of time doing system documentation – basically, writing instruction manuals on how everything (and I mean everything) works on the back and front end. I initially didn’t understand 90% of what the developers said, but I’m beginning to comprehend more and more everyday. If I start coding in several months, I will be pretty damn impressed with myself. This knowledge will be pretty helpful if I do decide to go entrepreneurial within the payments industry someday (although definitely not for a while).

Also, my work hours aren’t too crazy yet, so I often find myself with free time in the evenings and the weekends. During my first two weeks, I spent a lot of time reading and watching movies, but after a while, got tired of being an observer. I decided to start “creating things,” and since then, have started writing short stories and comedy pieces. Two pieces written so far include a short story about a college student on the verge of graduation who has an emotional affair with an older, married friend (NOT autobiographical, I swear to God), and a long but hilarious (I think so anyway) monologue about the thoughts one has about their future when they’re just starting out in the work force after college.

I’m also trying to put together a coherent three-act comedic story/screenplay. MUCH harder than it looks. I have so much respect for the Arrested Development writers and the pressure they must have been under to come up with something so brilliant every week.

I’d go outside after work but it’s so hot and sunny here that I avoid the outdoors like my life depended on it. Am always a bit afraid I’ll burst into flames if I stand outside for too long. And I’d prefer to stay as pale as possible. I’ll wait until around November or something before venturing outdoors so I won’t have to walk around with a Hazmat suit on.

Lastly, the people at work are really quite amazing. The work environment at Revolution Money is quite relaxed, and there’s a very familial environment within the  technology team that I work with. Feel very blessed with my first post-grad job. Never in a million years would have guessed I’d end up in the card payments industry in Florida after graduation.

One of my favorite people - Kimberly Nichols - I sometimes wish I had a Georgia accent like hers

One of my favorite people - Kimberly Nichols - I sometimes wish I had a Georgia accent like hers; will definitely need to take more pics with other people!

Don’t Mess with Marge Gunderson – An Ode to Frances McDormand

Monday, January 4th, 2010
Frances McDormand as Marge Gunderson in Fargo

Frances McDormand as Marge Gunderson in Fargo

I watched Fargo by The Coen Brothers last night and was simply fascinated by 1) their accents and 2) Marge Gunderson, played by Frances McDormand.

First off, I’m a big Frances McDormand fan. She’s always had this “I’m doing my own thing and don’t care what people think about me” feel to her. She has never looked like your typical female Hollywood star (I remember seeing her at the Oscars in 2006 for her Best Supporting Actress nomination in a regular suit and GLASSES!) and hardly ever “does herself up” in hair and makeup. In her movies, she never looks like she’s wearing makeup and often at times, I wonder if she’s even bothered to comb her hair. She’s quite possibly the most natural-looking woman I’ve ever seen in show business. I wish I had the guts to wake up, throw some clothes on, and walk out the door, but I care too much about how I look.

It’s also in the movies Frances does – I’ve noticed that she only does films where she gets to play a strong female character. The very first film I’ve seen of hers is Laurel Canyon (one of my all-time favorites), where she plays the dominant, free-spirited record producer having an affair with a musical client half her age. In Something’s Gotta Give, Frances has a small role as a professor of women’s studies at Columbia University and says some interesting stuff about the double standards inflicted upon women.

In Fargo, Frances plays the seven-month pregnant Marge Gunderson who ends up saving the day. I thought that role was incredibly interesting – her pregnancy reinforces the fact that she’s female, but the fact that she would go out and work “in the field” so far along is surprising, especially in her often dangerous line of work.

Marge Gunderson is also not sexualized in the movie at all. Frances has a “mom” hairstyle, barely any makeup on, wears a pregnant belly (fatsuit), and is covered head-to-toe in police gear. Despite her pleasant attitude and accent (which almost veers on comical), she is very smart and figures out the crime due to hard work and her instincts.

There are some interesting comments on the IMDb boards about Marge’s representation in Fargo -

From J_win7: Not only in her police work is she sharp, but she’s sharp and respectful with people as a whole…

She emotionally and verbally supports her husband, who obviously has the “lesser” of the two jobs, through her pregnancy.

She’s courteous with Mike when he oversteps, both on the phone and in person.

She’s straightforward and clear with Proud foot, letting him know that she knows he’s involved and also his parole history. She’s done her homework, has him right where she wants him, but still doesn’t push him. It’s like she makes him aware so he can make the right decision.

Marge isn’t out to prove anything… like she tells Jerry, she’s just doing her job. Even when she has the upper hand, she doesn’t embarrass the other party, but instead is quite civil and respectfully honest with them. She’s easily one of the most likable characters in film history for that “catch more flies with honey than vinegar” way of carrying herself.

Yes, she’s a pregnant woman from a small town, but her job is a police officer and she does her job well.

From Redisca: …Marge’s character is a parody of the traditional detective. After all, traditionally, this is one of the most hypermasculine archetypes in literature and cinema. So to have those shoes filled by a pregnant woman in her thirties simply takes it out of the cliche territory.

Check out the very first scene where we see Marge. This is about 30 minutes into the film after the story is set up. We see Marge’s interactions with her husband, her police partner, and how sharp she really is. In this clip, she comes in around the 3rd minute so feel free to skip until then.