Photography and Recap - Tulane vs. Syracuse, 9/21

Monday, September 23, 2013

Forgot how much fun it is to shoot—especially sports. Great time trolling the sidelines of the Syracuse football game this past Sunday! A few creme of the crop photos are available here.

Check out the game recap here

The Daily Orange

Wednesday, August 28, 2013

Incredibly excited for the opportunity to have a weekly sex and health column for Syracuse University's daily student newspaper, The Daily Orange.

Check out my profile here: http://dailyorange.com/writers/jillian-thaw/

And this week's topic, extrinsic vs. intrinsic motivation, is directly found here!

Always so amazing to get a chance to do what you love.

L'ecrivain gastronomique

Monday, June 24, 2013

After 3 weeks in France and Norway all I want to do is study and read about food--but from a different angle. Time to further my passion here, especially given I start graduate school in a few days!

1. Le Guide Culinaire - Auguste Escoffier
2. The Art of French Cooking - Julia Child
3. La Repertoire de la Cuisine - Louis Saulnier
4. Larousse Gastronomique: The World's Greatest Encyclopedia - Libraire Larousse
5. The Flavor Bible - Karen Page
6. World Atlas of Wine - Hugh Johnson
7. French Provincial Cooking - Elizabeth David
8. Science in the Kitchen and the Art of Eating Well - Pellegrino Artusi
9. French Women Don't Get Fat - Mireille Guiliano
10. The New Food Lovers' Companion - Rob Herbst
11. The Cheese Lovers' Companion - Sharon Tyler Herbst
12. Cheese Primer - Steven Jenkins

Booklist IV

Thursday, April 25, 2013


  1. Drop Dead Healthy – AJ Jacobs
  2. Cooked - Michael Pollan
  3. The Beauty Myth - Naomi Wolf
  4. Secrets You Keep From Yourself - Dan Neuharth 
  5. The Beauty Experiment – Phoebe Baker Hyde
  6. The First 20 Minutes – Gretchen Reynolds
  7. King Leopold's Ghost - Adam Hochschild
  8. The Social Animal – David Brooks
  9. Anatomy of Violence - Adrian Rains
  10. Why We Get Fat - Gary Taubes 
  11. Food Politics - Michael Pollan
  12. Flight Behavior - Barbara Kingsolver
  13. The Emperor of All Maladies - Siddhartha Mukherjee 
  14. Which Comes First, Cardio or Weights? –Alex Hutchinson 
  15. Suicide by Sugar - Nancy Appleton; G. N. Jacobs
  16. The Vitamin D Revolution - Soram Khalsa
  17. In Defense of Food - Michael Pollan
  18. Collapse - Jared Diamond
  19. Buddha in Blue Jeans - Tai Sheridan
  20. Food Politics - Marion Nestle
  21. What to Eat - Marion Nestle
  22. Skinny - Diana Spechler
  23. Food Justice - Gottlieb and Joshi
  24. Dad is Fat - Jim Gaffigan (audiobook)
  25. The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy - Douglass Adams (audiobook)
  26. You Just Don't Understand! – Deborah Tannen
  27. Mindless Eating - Brian Wanskins
  28. Fat Land - Greg Critsen
  29. The Omnivore's Dilemma - Michael Pollan
  30. The Best Advice I Ever Got - Katie Couric 
Reading a lot of nonfiction (as usual) and preparing for summer with some fiction but also for my start at Syracuse University's Newhouse School in July by all the Michael Pollan (<3). This is the last booklist for a long while, because the next few books I'll be reading are going to be textbooks!

HOLY COW!

Precursory Writing

My newest for Green Global Travel is right here!

Green Global Travel

Thursday, February 28, 2013

I did forget to mention that I have been contributing to this snazzy online magazine for a few weeks now! Go check out Green Global Travel; it's a magazine right up my alley, and centered on not only eco-tourism and sustainability, but also environmental issues and news.

Which is where I come in! I contribute environmental and eco-based news stories to the website. Here's what I have so far, and I'll make sure to upload other stories separately as they come!




Book Journal: The Meaning of Sports

Sunday, February 24, 2013

Another incredible example of well-crafted nonfiction. 


The Meaning of Sports: Why Americans Watch Baseball, Football, and Basketball and What They See When They Do by Michael Mandelbaum

Mandelbaum really gets the ball rolling here; he jumps in from the onset and provides some great sociological and anthropological reasoning as to why our society enjoys these sports--and how that enjoyment differs. He smartly and cleanly associates each sport with a specific period of American history: baseball and the pastoral, agrarian age; football and the industrial age; and basketball and the post-industrial, knowledge-based age. That easy-to-access metaphor is extended throughout the entire book.
In academic fashion, Mandelbaum takes a very essayist approach to his presentation, with lots of footnotes, listed analysis, and comparisons. It works wonders. The information is intelligent but so cleanly presented—it really has a great effect on the reader, myself included. Information, emotion, and/or concepts you've known about the sports —baseball's languid nostalgia, football's bellicose, made-for-TV action, and basketball's sociological influences—are expounded on and offer great breadth and insights to further develop those core concepts and associations. 
 My personal favorite chapter was the extremely well-done analysis of baseball. 




I was quite familiar with much of his football analysis, though that's because I've read several other books on the subject (Sal Paolantonio's How Football Explains America comes to mind specifically); as such, it was a slight, albeit intelligent, dog paddle of familiar concepts, mainly in the historical sections. Basketball, much like the sport itself, flowed continuously as a chapter, and the history of its roots in Indiana and the connection of individualized growth for inner-city kids were particularly fascinating points.
BUY IT AND READ IT! A must for anyone interested in not only sports, but American history, sociology, and culture.


Rating: 10/10 






 
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