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Selena Blake

Occupation
Interests
Ms. Blake enjoys the success of her commercial modeling and acting careers.
The actress/model can be seen in mega-picture walk-ons and speaking roles such as Changing Lanes, and television programs HBO’s Sex and the City. When you change the way you look at things the things you look at change.
Misery we choose but trouble we find.
The power of life and death is in the tongue.
December, 2005

Her Film Project Happens to Be Her Project by Joseph Burger

The New York Times

Selena M. Blake lived at Queensbridge Houses during the many years when the gunfire of drug dealers crackled through the night and confirmed the public's view of the projects as a place of mayhem and menace.

Once, right from her mother's bedroom window, she saw one man fire at another and miss. Another time, while shopping, she had to drop to the ground after she heard the pop-pop of bullets. The gritty setting inspired a legion of rappers.

Yet Ms. Blake, 43, also knew a Queensbridge that never made the news, a place where bus drivers, postal workers and seamstresses kept an eye on one another's children in the courtyard jungle gyms, and borrowed potatoes to finish off a stew. She felt so secure that she often forgot to lock her door. In the late 1990's, it was a drug dealer who banged on it to let her know that the police were towing her car. "They look out for you here," she said.

"Everyone here knows we're all on the same level," she said. "You're not better than I am. I'm not better than you. We're just trying to raise our kids."

She had such great affection for Queensbridge, a checkerboard of six-story brick buildings along the East River in Long Island City whose 3,142 apartments and 7,054 tenants make it the nation's largest public housing project, that she wanted to correct the distorted portraits of life there. So a year and a half ago, with no experience producing films, she set out to make a documentary about Queensbridge.

She paid a camera crew $1,000 a day to film interviews with residents and former residents like the basketball star Ron Artest of the Indiana Pacers - known in the projects as Ron-Ron - until her money ran out. Then she cajoled Gregory O. Larkin, a filmmaker whom she met at a party in TriBeCa, to shoot the remaining film and edit it in her cramped apartment, where a bicycle takes up half the kitchen. She paid him $200 a week, and he taught her to operate a camera.

Ultimately, she and Mr. Larkin conducted 82 interviews and shot 75 hours of film. She estimates that she spent $100,000 - most of it from a half-dozen credit cards she used to the maximum, several thousands of dollars in loans from friends and relatives, and earnings from a patchwork of jobs including cooking for a catering firm, modeling and acting for commercials and appearing as an extra on TV shows.

An incomplete version of the hourlong film, "Queensbridge: The Other Side," was shown last month to current and former residents in a screening nearby at the American Museum of the Moving Image. The film, while a little rough in spots, does not mince words about its dark side, particularly the 1980's and 1990's, when crack, and resulting turf wars, made it, like much of the city, a danger zone. In 1986, there were 4 murders and 151 assaults within Queensbridge's borders.

The movie suggests that residents treated the problem as they would a spell of bad weather, taking sensible precautions like keeping their children home late at night in the same way that Floridians board up windows for a hurricane. "This is the place where if you don't have common sense, you learn it very fast," Ms. Blake likes to say.

And it tries to resolve a paradox about low-income projects: why places that have become a synonym for human misery should boast long waiting lists. Right now, 326 families are waiting to get into Queensbridge.

The film rapidly crosscuts interviews between "thugs," as it calls the troublemakers, and current and former residents who have made good. The latter include State Supreme Court Justice Carol Edmead; Mr. Artest, who baby-sat for Ms. Blake's son, Daniel Brown; Todd Craig, an instructor at Queensborough Community College who earned a master's degree from the Harvard Graduate School of Education; and such hip-hop luminaries as the rappers Marley Marl and Capone.

Marley Marl, whose real name is Marlon Williams, recalled gazing at the Manhattan skyline beyond the Queensboro Bridge like Dorothy beholding Emerald City in "The Wizard of Oz."

"What I liked about Queensbridge was the roar of car wheels going over the bridge - there was a certain hum - and it was very meditative for me," he said. "I used to go over to the park and write lyrics and dream and look at Manhattan. One day, I was going to take over Manhattan."

Ms. Blake, who still has the lilt of her native Jamaica, was a young mother when she moved to Queensbridge in 1987 with her mother after living in an apartment in East Elmhurst, Queens. She was put off by knots of street-corner idlers. But meeting neighbors changed her impressions. In an interview, she said that when she had no money, "the Spanish family on the second floor would feed me." She starts the film by flashing statistics that disprove some popular notions. Only 21.6 percent of Queensbridge's tenants receive welfare, and, excluding the elderly, almost all the rest are employed, though Queensbridge's average gross annual income is less than $20,000 and the average rent is a little more than $300 a month The average tenant has been there 16 years.

Queensbridge, one of nation's earliest projects, was built in 1939 by the administration of Mayor Fiorello La Guardia. Many early residents were veterans of World War II. The film highlights a group of elderly Italian-American women, who in the 1950's called themselves the 12th Street Girls, and other early tenants who recalled that friends were envious of amenities there, like elevators and incinerators, and bathtubs that were in the bathroom, not the kitchen. None of the 12th Street Girls live there anymore.

The residents recall the time Sugar Ray Robinson visited Queensbridge to show children at the Jacob Riis Settlement House, the community's social center, how to box. Riis was also where the actor Mel Johnson Jr. learned to tap-dance 16 shuffles and a time step, a skill he used when he appeared in the Broadway musical "Eubie."

Justice Edmead, an African-American who lived in the projects from 1951 to 1965, recalled the friendships between black and white families in one of the few city neighborhoods where the races lived together.

"We were all in this pot together, this pot called Queensbridge Houses," she said. "Everybody looked out for everybody else's children. If you did something in the street, they would take care of you right there, and it was never a question that the neighbors couldn't do it."

Whites, though, began moving out in the late 1950's. Some moved because they were earning enough to afford moderate-income projects that had opened, like nearby Ravenswood. Others left because they did not feel comfortable when blacks became the majority.

By the mid-70's, when Mr. Craig, the college instructor, was born, life was harder, though a sense of community still held fast. "When I was growing up, I knew somebody was a crack head, but that was somebody's mother," said Mr. Craig, 31. In some frames of the movie, a man known as Uptown Ali, who spent 11 years in prison for selling drugs, is shown returning to Queensbridge to encourage teenagers to stay off them. "I was part of the ones messing the projects up," he says. "So now I think it's only right for me to help clean it up now."

Life in Queensbridge has improved with the overall drop in crime. Residents say drug dealing has plummeted since February, when Roslynn R. Mauskopf, the United States attorney in Brooklyn, announced the arrests of 37 people for selling drugs on "the Hill," as Queensbridge's shopping plaza is called. In 2004, there were no murders and just 25 assaults, according to Housing Authority statistics.

Ms. Blake hopes her film will help polish Queensbridge's image.

"If kids today will say 'I don't have to feel bad because I'm from the projects,' it will be worth it," she said.

November, 2005

Filmmaker Exposes the Real Truth About ‘The Bridge’ By Heidi Morales

Vol. 35, No. 9 First Class U.S. Postage Paid — Permit No. 4119, New York, N.Y. 10007nyc.gov/nycha September 2005

 

By Heidi Morales

Selena Blake and co-producer Gregory Larkin in front of Queensbridge Houses. For more information, log on to http://spaces.msn.com/members/maynovproductions or e-mail Ms. Blake at maynovproductions@msn.com.

 

BY NOW, I’M SURE WEVE ALL BEEN EXPOSED TO THE NEGATIVE PORTRAYAL OF PUBLIC HOUSING DEVELOPMENTS IN THE MEDIA. But those who have lived and continue to live in public housing know that there are good, hard working, community-minded people residing in public housing developments. There are people who make it their life’s work to serve their community.

 

One woman in a small, cluttered apartment—visual proof of nearly 20 years of habitation, is trying to change the image of “the projects.” Selena Blake—long-time resident of NYCHA’s largest development, Queensbridge Houses, single mom, part-time model, actress, caterer, and now full-time documentary film producer— is trying to show the world that public housing is home to many good people.

 

Ms. Blake has decided to thank the Queensbridge Houses community for all of the years of friendship, care and loyalty it has shown her and her family by producing a documentary, an oral history of sorts, of “The Bridge” as it is known by many. It was after her son Daniel graduated from high school that Ms. Blake realized that a lot of what she and her son were able to accomplish was because of the “family” she had created at the development.

 

Ms. Blake said living at The Bridge has been a godsend. “I looked back and I said, wow, there are some really good people here. I’d love to just show the other side of Queensbridge. I’ve been on Park Avenue, I’ve been in the Atrium on 57th and Park Avenue where my girlfriend lives…and believe it or not I prefer being in Queensbridge. It feels like home; I’m comfortable here, the people know you…I don’t get that anywhere else.”

 

However, Ms. Blake, who moved to Queensbridge with her mother and son in 1987 from their home in Jamaica, wasn’t always a believer. “It took me a couple of years of blending in, the neighbors baby-sitting for me, the upstairs neighbors, and the downstairs neighbors. My mom was on dialysis; they would help with the wheelchair coming up…they were very helpful. It’s amazing how we judge things by the way we think things should be and we put them in that little box.” So in an effort to say “thank you” to her Queensbridge family, Ms. Blake took every cent she had and hired a professional film crew for a little over $1000 a day to record the stories of the people of The Bridge.

 

Five weeks later the funds were gone and the project was nowhere close to being finished. It wasn’t until she met her current co-producer, Gregory Larkin, at a networking mixer that the project really took off Mr. Larkin is the technical brain of  this project and Ms. Blake is the creative genius behind it. “I wasn’t supposed to be doing this; I was just supposed to give guidance, consulting services,” said Mr. Larkin.

 

But “Queensbridge: The Other Side” has become a full-time job for Mr. Larkin who puts in an average of 15 hours a day recording and editing. His belief in this documentary is so great that this seasoned media professional is doing all this for only $200 a month. Now with over $50,000 in debt between credit cards and small business loans, and thousands of dollars invested in recording and editing equipment, Ms. Blake still needs just as much to finish putting her documentary together.

 

She has interviewed over 115 people and has about 75 hours of footage including still pictures from the 1930’s and 1940’s, that were given to her by residents, or that she’s been able to find in the LaGuardia Archives. She’s even interviewed a group of Jewish women who lived in Queensbridge in the 1940’s. Ms. Blake and Mr. Larkin hope their documentary inspires other filmmakers to explore the hidden history and the “diamonds in the rough” of public housing. They hope to see “Queensbridge: The Other Side” on PBS and the local television channels.

 

 “I hope just to see it out there because people need to check the stereotype at the door and come open your mind and take a look at this…At least I know a seed is planted and somehow you are going to see housing projects and the people in them in a different light,” said Ms. Blake.

 

Mr. Larkin added that working on the documentary has helped him appreciate what he called, “the silent majority—the good hard-working people of ‘the projects. ’Now I’m the biggest advocate for public housing! ” Ms. Blake said she plans to use any proceeds gathered from the film to help build another community center, and she challenges celebrities like NBA star Ron Artest and rapper Nas, who have come out of Queensbridge and are part of the documentary, to give back to the community.

 

She plans to have the film completed this month.

Documentary Heralds A New Era At Queensbridge Housesby Ron Brownlow, Western Queens Editor

 by Ron Brownlow, Western Queens Editor, Queens Chronicle October 20, 2005

 

Movie producer Gregg Larkin worked across the street from Queensbridge Houses for many years, but he never went inside. He had no reason to go there, and, besides, he had seen how it was portrayed in the media. 


   But work on a documentary about the Long Island City complex, the nation’s largest housing project, has taken him there at all hours of the day, nearly every day for the past year. No one has shot at him, no one has tried to sell him drugs and no one has harassed him.

Selena Blake has spent the last two years
working on a soon-to-be-completed documentary
about her home, Queensbridge Houses.
(photo by Ron Brownlow)

 “I did have a sense of fear the first time I came here,” he said, “but now, I just walk in. And I notice that other people are just walking in. This is just a place where working people live.” 


   Larkin hopes that “Queensbridge: The Other Side,” the documentary he is helping edit and produce, will help others see the complex the way he has come to see it. “We’re hoping that this will be the beginning of a sociological approach of how to tell the story of projects in America,” he said.


   To be sure, the 96-building complex— which officially has 15,000 residents but which locals say has thousands more—has produced more than its fair share of dope fiends, crack heads and gang members.


   But the days when residents heard gunshots every night are long gone. And with its low rents and its close proximity to Manhattan and multimillion-dollar Long Island City developments, Queensbridge is starting to look like the place it was when it first opened in 1939.


   “This was a great place,” Larkin said. “It had a little bit of a problem, and it is a great place again.”


   The film is the brainchild of Selena Blake, a model and actress who has lived in the complex for nearly 20 years. “I want to raise public awareness that Queensbridge is not a bunch of thugs and drug dealers,” she said.


   Thinking the project would take a few weeks to film, Blake hired a camera crew at the cost of $1,000 a day. They lasted a week, until she could no longer afford to pay them and had to start filming on her own.


   Two years later, Blake has compiled 75 hours of interviews with current and former Queensbridge residents, including state Supreme Court Judge Carol Robinson Edmead, Mark Samowitz of Broadway Stages sound stage, Assemblywoman Catherine Nolan and hip-hop luminaries Nas (Nasir Jones), Havoc and Marlon (Marley Mar) Williams.


   It has not been easy. She works about 18 hours a day, both on the film and at various media and catering jobs. And she has sunk about $100,000 of her own money into the film, maxing out several credit cards and surviving several eviction notices in the process.


   But every time she thinks about giving up, someone she’s interviewed calls her to tell her how thankful they are. “There’s a power that is higher than me navigating this project,” Blake said. “You’re not doing this by chance or mistake. You were meant to do this.”


   The film is divided into three sections: past, present and future. It starts with old photographs and interviews with elderly former residents, most of whom are Jewish or Italian-American. The footage shows a place where children of different races played together in harmony, where poor children did not know they were poor and where white police officers were godparents to black children. “I think everyone should grow up in the projects,” one elderly woman says.


   Then came Vietnam and the civil rights era, when heroin and later crack cocaine ripped the fabric of the community apart, when “white” friends became “whitey.” The film moves to a new generation of residents, mostly African-American, who learned not to trust the police. Queensbridge stopped looking like a rung on the ladder into the middle class. Blake herself was once caught in a shootout between police and gang members. “The most inspiration I had from Queensbridge was to get out of here,” says an interviewee who lived there at the time.


   Even during the worst of times, Queensbridge has been an astonishing incubator of talent, from professional athletes and the originators of what became rap and hip hop, to ministers, actors, Harvard graduates and politicians. Larkin calls it “the sophistication of the street.”
   “In many ways, the projects are a more evolved and developed form of civilization than the suburbs or rural areas,” he said. “There’s so much competition here that you have to stand out.” Views of the Manhattan skyline just across the East River, he added, no doubt spurs that drive.


   But these extraordinary stories have been for the most part buried under an avalanche of news about murders, gang wars and drug busts. That narrative has stuck, despite real change in the last decade.


   “The narrative is that I’m going to walk in here and they’re going to kill me,” Larkin said, recalling his own thoughts when he first started visiting Queensbridge last year.


   Blake’s documentary will change that. Both she and Larkin predict that the complex is about to come full circle. “Queensbridge is becoming a multicultural, multi-ethnic community where people respect one another,” she said. “I’m planting the seeds for change.”


Kid from Project Inspires Filmaker by Jared McCallister

Daily News Article

July 10 2005


 

 

When Jamaican-American filmmaker Selena Blake first met Cozart Ruffin, she had her doubts about him, but now, the 25-year-old Long Island City resident is one of her heroes.

Ruffin had traveled a path taken by too many young people in the city's Queensbridge Houses. He had several run-ins with the law and is on probation for a third-degree weapons possession charge. But for him that's in the past, before he learned of his mother's life-or-death need for a kidney.

"At first I thought he was a thug," Blake said, referring to Ruffin's typical inner-city attire. "When I got to know him, I thought he was a really cool kid," she said. Blake calls Ruffin a hero for donating a kidney to his mother in February, staying out of trouble and consistently looking for a job and finding work.

Ruffin - who is now employed and buoyant about getting into the film industry - is concerned about a recent arrest that seems unfair. He was arrested and charged with criminal trespass for entering another building in the housing project he lives in.

On May 5, Ruffin was coming from a Queensbridge building across Vernon Ave. when he was stopped, questioned and arrested by housing police officers.

Ruffin feels the arrest stems from the lingering bad rap the housing project has in the minds of authorities.

Reports of drug dealings, gangs, related crimes and arrests have dominated the news about Queensbridge in recent years. To keep the drug problem under control, police have kept up a visible and active presence in the project.

But sometimes, innocents get caught up in the enforcement initiative at the project, said Blake, who is creating a documentary about famous and exceptional people from the complex. She hopes to counter the negative image the houses have and show that most Queensbridge residents are law-abiding.

"That's the problem going on here," she said, noting the lack of activities for young people in the neighborhood.

"He [Ruffin] wants to be a filmmaker, but here's nothing here for teenagers and young people; there are no resources," said Blake, who wants to establish a youth center after completing her film.

Originally published on July 10, 2005

July, 2005

A Bridge to the Past, Shining a light on housing project by Clem Richardson

By  Clem Richardson

New York Daily News

July 4, 2005

 

 

Selena Blake doesn't live in those Queensbridge Houses.

Not the ones in the news, riddled with drugs and violence.

Blake has spent almost 20 years in her Queensbridge Houses, in Long Island City, Queens, in the shadows of the Queensboro Bridge, and she says they are not like that anymore.

Blake's Queensbridge, the largest housing project in the country with 96 buildings and more than 15,000 residents, is a safe place, close to Manhattan, where even between jobs she can make the rent and afford to feed herself and her son.

And living there, she said, allowed her as a single parent "the freedom to be a mom" to her son, Daniel Brown, 18.

"The rent was low enough that I could afford to take jobs where I could be here when he got out of school every day," said the caterer, actress and model, who has appeared in a few "Sex and the City" episodes and several magazine shoots. "I could attend all the school functions and meetings because I didn't have to work all the time to pay the rent. I felt perfectly safe here, because people were looking out for us."

And though she had seen the bad days - "before I moved here, I had never seen so many young men standing around on a corner," she said - the place has improved radically since 2001, when police increased their presence.

Blake wants more people to see Queensbridge that way.

That's the idea behind "Queensbridge: The Other Side," a documentary on the complex that Blake has been filming during the past year.

Yet all of her experience in front of the camera hadn't begun to prepare Blake for work behind it. For instance, at first she hired a professional film crew - at a couple thousand dollars a day.

They lasted a week - the same time her money ran out.

Then there were the film permits, surety bonds and insurance, costs that had to be met even when Blake said she didn't know how she would pay her rent.

"I've had a few eviction notices, and sometimes I have no idea why I started this in the first place," she said. "But every time I start thinking I want to stop, something comes up to keep me going. The money appears from nowhere, or someone calls to tell me how much they enjoyed talking to me. That keeps me going."

With a crew of volunteers and sometimes wielding the camera and sound equipment by herself, Blake said she has captured more than 75 hours of interviews with Queensbridge residents past and present.

She has wrangled talks with NBA star and Queensbridge native Ron Artest; rapper Nas (Nasir Jones), another local made good, and still is trying to nail one with legendary rap producer Marlon (Marley Marl) Williams, who, with MC Shan, created "The Bridge," an early rap megahit about life in Queensbridge.

She has gotten New York Supreme Court Justice Carol Robinson Edmead, actor Mel Johnson, assemblymen and -women, court officers, police officers and sometimes-reluctant residents to sit for her. Advertisements in neighborhood papers and word of mouth got her a sitdown with a group of Jewish and Italian-American women who grew up in Queensbridge back in the 1940s - the project was opened in 1939 - who met just so Blake could capture them on camera.

Her interview subjects produced hundreds of still pictures that also appear in the documentary.

Blake also found Greg Larkin, a professional film director and producer, at a Black Filmmakers Foundation mixer. Larkin said he was so impressed with Blake's drive to finish the project that he signed on.

"I see this as an opportunity to tell a great story," Larkin said. He noted that when Queensbridge residents were mostly Jewish and Italian, "There were a lot of social programs available that they used to get out of the projects. Those programs don't exist here anymore, and that means it's more difficult for people to be as upwardly mobile."

Blake estimates she has sunk about $50,000 into "Queensbridge" and probably needs about as much to finish it.

 

Queensbridge ready for its closeup

To learn more about Selena Blake and "Queensbridge: The Other Side," go to spaces.msn.com/members/maynovproductions/  or E-mail her at maynovproductions@msn.com.

Originally published on July 4, 2005

Clem Richardson writes the City Beat and Great People columns. Prior to joining the Daily News in 1993, he worked for New York Newsday, the Miami Herald, the Chicago Sun-Times, the Atlanta Journal-Consitution and the Anderson Independent newspapers. The Duke University graduate is married and the father of two.

crichardson@
edit.nydailynews.com

May, 2005

Film about 'The Bridge' hopes to dispel myths by Matthew Monks

Film about 'The Bridge' hopes to dispel myths

By Matthew Monks

05/19/2005

 

The NBA's Ron Artest and rapper Nas are among a handful of celebrities who grew up in Queensbridge Houses. But those stars are outshone by the country's largest housing project in a documentary wrapping up this summer in Long Island City.

Producer Selena Blake is out to dispel the city-run development's bad rap as a haven of drugs and crime in her full-length film, "The Bridge: The Other Side."

"My vision was to show people the other side of Queensbridge," said Blake, a single mother who raised a son inside the 64-year-old development that made headlines in February when police broke up a 37-person drug ring that for years had treated the neighborhood like an open-air cocaine market.

"We've got a handful of people (here) who are not very good to other people, to themselves. It's just a handful," Blake said during a recent interview inside her apartment. "Most are decent people like myself. I don't consider myself a hoodlum. There's hundreds of us. There's thousands of us. You don't hear about the hardworking average people. You hear about the drugs."

Blake wants to change that with her independently financed film, a labor of love that started out last summer as a modest project but now consumes her life.

Artest and Nas are among the four dozen well-to-do Queensbridge natives who describe in the movie how the massive, 26-building project locals call the "'Bridge" figured into their success. Others include State Supreme Court Justice Carol Robinson Edmead and actor Mel Johnson.

Blake has little filmmaking or editing training, so she hired a New Jersey crew at $1,000 a day to tape her first interviews. Five filming dates later she was broke. Despite the dent in her finances, she was hooked on the project.

It surely would have fallen through last fall had she not met 48-year-old Gregory Larkin, the former communications technology director for Jamaica's Allen AME Church and director of Queens Public Television's York College Branch.

Larkin at first agreed to give Blake some technical advice on cheaply shooting and cutting a film. But the woman kept badgering the Jamaica resident until her passion won him over.

"The reason I got involved is because I saw the level of work" she was putting into it, said Larkin, who is billed as the feature's director. He recalled telling himself: "This person here, she's doing this with no knowledge, no background in film. This person should be rewarded in some way."

For $200 a week Larkin is putting in 14-hour days to help Blake realize her dream. It's an expensive one: She has racked up $30,000 in credit card debts.

"American Express has been my sugar daddy. Unfortunately, it's the kind that wants my money back," Blake said. "Every single dollar that I have made goes to this project. I can show you eviction letters for not paying the rent ... I've thought about everything I can sell. My car is up for sale. I've got a pair of size 12 shoes - do you know anybody who wants to buy them?"

She wants to have the first cut of the film by September.

Reach reporter Matthew Monks by e-mail at news@timesledger.com or by phone at 718-229-0300, Ext. 156.

©Times Ledger 2005

March, 2005

The Queensbridge Project

Company Mission: Public Awareness from the Inside Out”
 
MayNovember Productions L.L.C. investigates controversial subjects from the inside out by presenting realistic viewpoints through personal experiences of the people by the people.
 
We evoke reasonable doubts in viewers to challenge stereotypes,
and educate inquisitive minds connecting them to the other side.
We strive to produce programming without borders; and without ethnic, cultural or religious bias in an attempt to tell the true essence of the subject’s story.
 
Our target audiences watch network, cable, municipal and public broadcasts, purchase DVDs as well as download and stream Internet content media.
 
Documentary Objective: “Present The Other Side of a Misrepresented Community” The Queensbridge Housing Project documentary compares and contrasts urban essentials to the suburban values of the “American Dream.”
 
 “Home Sweet Home” is a place called, ‘”The Bridge.”
 
 
Selena M. Blake – Executive Producer/Journalist

Born in Jamaica, West Indies Ms. Blake still enjoys the success of her commercial modeling and acting careers. She reminisces how her years at Queensbridge supported her through tough times.
 
The actress/model can be seen in mega-picture walk-ons and speaking roles such as Spiderman, Hurricane Carter, Best Man, Death To Smoochy and Changing Lanes; television programs HBO’s Sex and the City, NBC’s Law & Order SVU, and TNT Network’s Monday Night Mayhem.
 
Print advertisement and top agencies still tap Selena for high profile corporate clients: American Express, Revlon, Eckards, Phillips, Saturn, Parade Magazine, All Woman Magazine (Cover), AT&T, The New York Times, and many more.
 
 
Synopsis

This documentary is based on the lives of the people, like my family, living in “The Bridge;” the Queensbridge Housing Project.
It’s not about drug dealers, crackheads or prostitutes. These segments of society are not the majority of the 15,000+ residents who reside here.
 
The majority of Queensbridge residents are hardworking multi-cultural, multi-ethnic families trying to make ends meet; keeping their children off streets and in schools.
The history of “The Bridge,” is told through the stories of these residents.
 
This documentary speaks of their struggle for change, success in career and life, of those who remain, and those who have moved away; yet many continue to support the community.
 
 
The interviews share and reveal an awareness of the community’s triumphs and tragedies. The Queensbridge community would be no different from Westbury Long Island, Scottsdale Arizona, Scarsdale New York or even your neighborhood; if in these neighborhoods, 15,000+ people did not live on top of each other within a six block radius with limited resources and assets. However, we all face the same challenges of raising a family and coping with the daily grinds of life.
 
This documentary shows that Queensbridge is home in the truest sense of the “American Dream.”
It is no bed of roses, neither is it a bed of thorns.
 
 
Heralded as the New York City’s community of choice for post war veterans and their families,1939 marked the construction completion of the Queensbridge Housing Project.“
 
“The Bridge” from inception was built as a stepping stone for families to save up enough money to buy a house, or rent a larger apartment. A few decades later, most families were unable to achieve the same goals as their predecessors, due chiefly to economic disadvantages.
Now, second and third generations of low income families are trapped in a community which was not designed for permanent living.
 
These families and individuals try to survive the perils of life in a place they call home,  the best way they know how.
 
“The Bridge” is a place based on emerging ethno-social and religious cultures. Queensbridge has left it’s mark as an important part of New York City’s urban history.
 
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