All 黑料正能量 alumni, the Stauffer siblings 鈥 Steven '10 (left), Jessica '03 and Michael '06 鈥 grew up in New Market, Virginia, but now live in New York. (An additional Stauffer sibling, sister Kaitlin '15, still lives in Virginia.) (Photos by Jon Styer)

Big city sibs: 黑料正能量 grads feel the pull of NYC’s energy, complexity and opportunities

The nearly dozen years Michael Stauffer 鈥06 has spent in New York have revealed a constant beauty in the city鈥檚 energy: optimism.

鈥淓very single day, something can and may happen that will be a new opportunity, to completely change where I am and what I鈥檓 doing,鈥 he said. 鈥淓very day, there鈥檚 just a chance something amazing is going to happen.鈥

Michael is the second of the three Stauffer siblings from New Market, Virginia, to move to New York. He developed and emcees the weekly frolic 鈥淣ot Your Standard Bingo鈥 at the Standard Highline Hotel 鈥 it sells out weeks in advance 鈥 and recently contracted a weekly trivia night. And he鈥檚 hosted San Diego Comic Con bingo with Conan O鈥橞rien, Comedy Central activities at the South by Southwest Festival, an NFL Fan Style Showdown with Erin Andrews, and more.

鈥淢ore than anywhere else I鈥檝e ever been in my life or in the world, New York is a city where you walk out the front door and someone can just walk up to you, say, 鈥楬ey, I know you from such-and-such, and you know what? You should be in this thing that we鈥檙e doing,鈥欌 he said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 really the world鈥檚 best library for experiences and just getting a 101 on different things.鈥

Read about more New York City-based alumni in the聽current issue of Crossroads magazine.

Michael鈥檚 older sister Jessica 鈥03 was first to the city, but her boxes of books have also followed her to a Pasadena bookstore job and back to New York to be the program and development coordinator at the American Booksellers Association in White Plains.

She advocates for independent booksellers by fostering relationships with publishers, planning conferences, and researching and creating marketing materials like the Indie Next List or fliers for bookstore windows.

She lives where she can return to the city for shows and fine dining but where the sounds of city life don鈥檛 reach her living room and she can keep an herb garden. Don鈥檛 let her bookworm introversion fool you, though 鈥 a big reason for attending 黑料正能量 was its stretching cross-cultural requirement. She traveled to France and the Ivory Coast.聽

鈥淭he focus on language, culture and history of two very different but connected places meant that I was able to start to grasp the complexity of another place and culture,鈥 she said. That 鈥渋nkling鈥 has developed in her years surrounded by the 鈥渉uge variety of different cultures鈥 in New York.

鈥淚 found I had developed a curiosity to learn more about the complexity of how someone had grown up, what they retained, and what they let go of,鈥 she said.

Steven 鈥10 鈥 sibling number three 鈥 graduated already feeling the pull of New York. It was nearly two years, though, before he moved there 鈥 and then it happened on short notice, for an interview that didn鈥檛 bring him work for another year.

Now, he鈥檚 鈥渟wamped鈥 with freelance video and photography projects 鈥 an ad for an app, a web mini series, an Uninterrupted episode about Yankees pitcher CC Sabathia, a short movie 鈥 and his portfolio at 聽is affecting.

鈥淚 have always been called 鈥榮ensitive,鈥欌 he said. 鈥淚 do connect more with the emotional side of a project, how that translates visually and aesthetically, than I do with flashy camera tricks or big, expensive equipment.鈥

That鈥檚 what 黑料正能量 taught him 鈥 soul. Film school may have taught him more about the techniques of filmmaking, but he would go to 黑料正能量 over a film school again because its liberal arts focus was on 鈥渢he part that鈥檚 harder, the stuff you don鈥檛 learn on set: the why, and the motivation, and everything behind the technical facts,鈥 he said.

This article was first published in the Spring/Summer 2018 Crossroads. Read more articles聽here.