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Entries by Becks Davis (546)

Thursday
Sep012011

Old Mission Peninsula: A solo photowalk

Earlier this week I shared my interviews with Carter Oosterhouse and Eric Stromer of GMC Trade Secrets. While I was on Carter’s property on the Old Mission Peninsula in Traverse City, I snuck away for a few minutes.

I went on my own personal photowalk on the grounds. I didn’t get to set up the shots and play as much as I would have liked to but I was just pleased to have the opportunity and spend a little quality time with my camera again.

The old barn. It now serves as Carter Oosterhouse's workshop.

The same shot as above with a black and white treatment.

Carter Oosterhouse and Eric Stromer. I believe that's the director between them.

This is the site of the future tasting room for Oosterhouse Vineyards. Opening in 2014.

The grapes are growing at Oosterhouse Vineyards.

Full disclosure: GMC and GMC Trade Secrets sponsored the trip to Traverse City. All of my expenses for the trip were provided. The opinions and words expressed here are my own.

Wednesday
Aug312011

Detroit Moxie's Weekend Roundup

To most people, Labor Day signals the end of summer. For us here in Detroit that means that cider mills, football games and fall colors are on the horizon.

But where did Labor Day come from?

Labor Day was first observed in 1882 to celebrate the American worker. There is some doubt about whose idea this was. Both Peter McGuire, general secretary of the Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners, and Matthew Maguire, a machinist, are credited with the holiday.

For the record, I’m going with the carpenter.

But hey, it’s still summer and there are always a million things to do on Labor Day weekend. Enjoy it while it lasts!

Weekend Roundup

1. Arts, Beats & Eats -Royal Oak will be rocking with delicous eats, delightful art and jamming bands. Featured performers include Jessica Hernandez, Dale Earnhardt Jr. Jr, Saving Abel and the Psychedelic Furs. September 2—5.

2. Hamtramck Labor Day Festival -Music, food and fun will be happening in Hamtown this weekend. Participate in the Golab-K—a 5K run, watch yacht races sail down Joseph Campau, nosh on Polish food and listen to live music. September 3—5.

3. Detroit International Jazz Festival - From Hart Plaza to Campus Martius, the city will be bopping with smooth jazz. Highlights include a poetry slam on Saturday, food from Slows BarBQ and Dirty Dog Jazz Cafe and kids activities throughout the weekend. Monday features Kevin Eubanks  and Kareem Riggins featuring COMMON. September 2—5.

4. Thai Food Fair - The Midwest Buddhist Meditation Center hosts this event on several Sundays throughout the warm months. Enjoy authentic Thai cuisine with your friends and families. September 4th.

5. 70 Years of Jeep - Celebrate the Jeep through its military and civilian use. The star of the show is a rare 1941 Willys MA. Now through December 30th. ( Note: The museum is closed on Mondays and some holidays.)

Do you know of a great event going on in Metro Detroit this weekend? Add it to the comments and share it with us!

Tuesday
Aug302011

Hunky carpenter Eric Stromer on trucks and northern Michigan

Earlier this week I told you about my whirlwind trip to Traverse City with GMC Trade Secrets. It was way too much to fit in one post so today I’m sharing my interview with Eric Stromer.

Eric Stromer—host of the HGTV show Over Your Head and starred on TLC’s Clean Sweep—is that hunky handyman that helps hopeless DIYers fix their home improvement problems.

And as I said before, Eric is extremely funny and he had us in stitches we were laughing so hard. He’s engaging and a great storyteller.

We hung out with him for quite a long time while Carter Oosterhouse was filming his scenes. Eric immediately made us feel at ease and comfortable. He told us about his three kids—all under the age of 13—and his wife and life in Los Angeles.

In the interview we talked about his involvement with GMC Trade Secrets, trucks, and northern Michigan. And yeah, the south of France and my husband came up too.

Check out my interview with Carter Oosterhouse and a little background on the trip. I also took my own solo photowalk on the beautiful grounds of Carter's home located on the Old Mission Peninsula in Traverse City.

Full disclosure: GMC and GMC Trade Secrets sponsored the trip to Traverse City. All of my expenses for the trip were provided. The opinions and words expressed here are my own.

Sunday
Aug282011

Behind the scenes with GMC Trade Secrets & my interview with Carter Oosterhouse

Two weeks ago I headed up to Traverse City to go on the set of GMC Trade Secrets featuring Carter Oosterhouse, Eric Stromer and Sam Talbot. As a DIY, design and cooking show junkie this was like winning the lottery.

It was a whirlwind trip lasting just over 24 hours. We left Monday morning and I was a bit apprehensive. Spending four hours in a car with strangers isn’t always easy. The team from GMC, Joe LaMuraglia and Lisa Gilpin, were fabulous. They made me feel comfortable by the time we hit I-75. For the record—they took safe and appropriate care of me.

And once we got to Traverse City the GMC Trade Secrets team took great care of us. Yes, a Meijer run at 11pm may have happened.

Also joining us on the trip was Chris Gardner of ManMadeDIY and Curbly.com. He’s one smart cookie and I felt like a novice next to him.

GMC Trade Secrets features videos on home repair, décor and cooking with the good looking men I mentioned above as hosts.

Carter Oosterhouse—who you might remember from Trading Spaces, Carter Can and Red Hot & Green—is a born and bred Traverse City boy. His love of northern Michigan is very apparent and besides owning a home up here, he and his older brother have started Oosterhouse Vineyards not far from his home on Old Mission Peninsula.

Carter Oosterhouse. Photo credit: GMC Trade Secrets

Carter Oosterhouse chatting with us on his porch in Traverse City, Michigan.

Eric Stromer—host of the HGTV show Over Your Head and starred on TLC’s Clean Sweep—also owns a home in northern Michigan on Higgins Lake.

Eric Stromer. Photo credit: GMC Trade Secrets

Eric Stromer showing us his fabulous smile and personality.

Sam Talbot placed third on season 2 of Top Chef. He is the Executive Chef at Imperial #9, a sustainable seafood restaurant in New York City and also at Surf Lodge in Montauk, NY.

Sam Talbot. Photo credit: GMC Trade Secrets

Chef Sam Talbot sitting on the steps of the property owned by Carter Oosterhouse.

GMC Trade Secrets is usually shot in California but this time they opted to film at Carter’s sprawling home in Traverse City. Oddly enough, the three men had never all been in the same place at the same time until this shoot.

Yes, all three of them are very handsome men who are in the spotlight. But you know what? They were some of the most down-to-earth, friendliest guys that I've ever met.

Eric regaled us with stories and we were laughing so hard that we had to be shushed by a production assistant many times because they were rolling film on the other side of the barn. He was generally interested in who we were and getting to know us.

Carter went out of his way and took Joe, Lisa and I on a private tour of his new vineyard. He drove over the fields and took us out to the future tasting room of the winery and explained the layout. Right now they are growing Chardonnay, Riesling and Pinot Noir.

We only had a little bit of time to spend with Sam as he didn’t arrive until Tuesday—but again—what an outstanding guy! He explained his “integrative kitchen” movement to our perked up ears.

Check out my interview with Carter where he talks about northern Michigan, Detroit and his design style.

 

Check out my interview with Eric Stromer. I also took my own personal photowalk on the grounds of Carter’s home so stay tuned for those photos too.

Finally, if you’re looking for DIY, design, home repair or cooking advice be sure to take a look at the GMC Trade Secrets channel.

Full disclosure: GMC and GMC Trade Secrets sponsored the trip to Traverse City. All of my expenses for the trip were provided. The opinions and words expressed here are my own. _

Friday
Aug262011

An intern takes on Detroit & he can't wait to return

This is a guest post by Josh Sidorowicz. I met Josh online over a year ago when he began commenting on my posts here and we began following each other and chatting on Twitter. I had the pleasure of meeting Josh in real life a few weeks back.

Josh Sidorowicz is a native Metro Detroiter and a junior at Michigan State studying broadcast journalism and political science. This summer he worked as an intern at Crain’s Detroit Business. After graduation, he hopes to return to Detroit to work full-time.

It’s become a bit of a cliché.

Anyone who knows me knows I’m a bit over the top when it comes to rooting for my hometown Detroit. And funny thing is, for quite a few years now, I knew I loved and supported the city, but unfortunately had never spent enough time in it to fully understand it and all of its complexities and its inevitable quirks.

I, like many others in the area, would make my way downtown for the usual Tiger’s baseball game or annual auto show but rarely would I actually have the time or opportunity to stay in the city and experience all of the things and places I would so ardently read about on blogs and hear about on the news. Of course being away at school nine months out of the year didn’t help matters either.

And also, like so many others, I even started my own pro-Detroit blog halfway through my freshman year at college—some two years ago already—because I became so fascinated with the impending renaissance that seemed to be taking shape here. Somewhat embarrassingly though, beyond the blogs and Internet, my Detroit experience was severely lacking.

But all of that changed this summer when I was afforded the opportunity to actually work in the city as an intern at Crain’s Detroit Business. Undoubtedly I’ve seen and experienced more in these past three months than I was ever able to experience in the past three years.

From meeting and interviewing business owners, local entrepreneurs and the latest and greatest movers and shakers currently in the D, to being sent out on assignment to locales I might’ve never thought to venture to otherwise, being an intern in Detroit was the best thing to happen to me yet.

I remember my first day on the job back in late May. I was accompanying Nathan Skid, one of Crain’s multi-faceted young reporters who also serves as their multimedia guru guy and foodie blogger. We were on assignment in Corktown where we were meeting two brothers, Ben and Dan Newman, who were about to unleash a revolutionary product in the city of Detroit: bagels.

Yes, bagels.

Sure, in any other city, two brothers trying to start a company making bagels out of their cramped loft would be anything but news and far from revolutionary, but this isn’t just any other city. And so, I remember sitting there across the table from the two brothers during the interview—intently captivated and becoming giddy—as I listened their passion, vision for the city, and determination to want to start a business here in the D.

This feeling never seemed to fade even as I continued to meet and interview more individuals in the city like the Newman brothers. I was reminded time and time again why I was inspired to want to become a journalist in the first place and why I wanted to be one in Detroit of all places. Journalism is and has always been about telling the stories of others.

Detroit is almost bursting at the seams with individuals who have incredible stories to tell.

Whether it be the story of Torya Blanchard, who put everything she had on the line to open up a creperie shop, to Jackie Victor and company who opened the now hugely successful Avalon International Breads bakery in Midtown’s Cass Corridor at a time when drugs and prostitution were more readily available than a fresh baked loaf of bread.

The honor and privilege I felt each time I was able to sit down and talk with one of these individuals to hear their stories is indescribable. It occurs to me now, as the summer winds down and I prepare to head back to Michigan State to begin my junior year, that I am more enamored by this city now than I ever was before.

Because at the core of Detroit, what makes this place so special and so resilient, is the undeniable human spirit that simply won’t give up in this town. It was when I started engaging with that human spirit—like I was finally able to do this summer—that I began to understand Detroit.

And even beyond that, it wasn’t until I put myself down in the thick of it that I was able to fully grasp what this city is all about. Whether it was sitting at the counter in Corktown’s Astro Coffee shop looking out the window across Michigan Avenue to the old train station or walking down Willis Street in Midtown and seeing people, families and children sitting under umbrellas reading, eating and conversing on a summer afternoon while the smells of fresh bread waft out of Avalon.

To understand the city, you can’t just read about it in the papers and hear about it from people like me, people like Becks or countless others who have hoisted Detroit on their backs for one reason or another.

No, to fully understand Detroit, you have to live it, you have to breath it and you have to see it for yourself. 

Follow Josh at jdetroit and on Twitter.

This is the first installment of the Detroit Stories series. If you haven’t already done so, check out the background of Detroit Stories.