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Nisha GanatraBrunch with Nisha Ganatra and Page Hurwitz (Brunch with Bridget, Episode 39)This week Bridget brunches with a couple of entertainment industry bigwigs. Page Hurwitz, Co-Executive Producer of Last Comic Standing and the writer/director/star of Chutney Popcorn, Nisha Ganatra stop by to talk about being out in the entertainment industry, the making of Chutney Popcorn, and why Bridget should rename her show.
Along the way, Bridget defames Page's dog, Page mocks Nisha's spiritual practices, and together they develop the future hit television show, Is This Rancid? Brunch With Nisha Ganatra and Page Hurwitz
Watch new episodes of Brunch With Bridget Friday nights at 2 a.m. on LOGO, and watch previous episodes of Brunch here.
(Brunch With Bridget, Episode 39) Submitted on November 8, 2008 at 11:11 pm Do go to the "Don't Go" screening in NYCOn Thursday night, Queer Black Cinema presents a screening of Don't Go, a new TV series from writer-director Amber Sharp. The series captures the lives of several people in a Los Angeles apartment complex. The diverse cast includes familiar names such as Skyler Cooper, Guinevere Turner (The L Word, Go Fish), Melange Lavonne and Nisha Ganatra (Chutney Popcorn).
Here's the trailer: … continue reading Submitted on November 14, 2007 at 5:49 pm Top 5 queer Asian-American women in entertainment and mediaMay is Asian Pacific American Heritage Month, which provides a perfect opportunity to give a shout out to the queer Asian-American women who have been out both in front of the camera and behind it, giving a much-needed face to the queer Asian-American community. 5. Alice Wu
The Stanford-educated computer scientist-turned-filmmaker burst onto the queer scene in 2004 with her debut feature film, Saving Face, about a Chinese-American medical student, Wil (Michelle Krusiec), who falls for a dancer, Vivian (Lynn Chen). The film, which began as a wholly independent feature from an unknown and previously untested director, went on to be picked up for distribution by Sony Pictures Classics, making it the first theatrically released film about an Asian-American lesbian. Wu is currently working on her second feature film, Paramount's Foreign Babes in Beijing, an adaptation of Rachel DeWoskin's memoir about a 21-year-old poetry major who goes to China to work for an American PR firm, then tries out for an acting job on a whim and becomes an overnight success on a Chinese soap. … continue reading Submitted on May 23, 2007 at 5:07 pm |
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