Personal details
- Professions: Producer, Writer, Director
Los Angeles, CA is basically movie central, right? The city’s always buzzing with film crews, endless palm trees, and that weird mix of glitz and grit. You’ll spot iconic spots like the Walk of Fame, but also a bunch of places you’ve seen in a million movies—think car chases down the 101 or moody beach scenes in Santa Monica at sunset. Hollywood is obviously the big name, but movie magic is everywhere: diners that look straight out of a Tarantino flick, flashy theaters, and those side streets where some random thriller’s shootout went down. It’s not just blockbusters, either. Indie films love LA’s weird corners, from neon-lit taco stands to those art deco apartment buildings. Even the traffic jams show up in movies—yeah, they’re really that bad. Honestly, if you’re into film, LA feels like one big, sprawling set. It’s messy, glamorous, and somehow totally perfect for stories of every kind.
referencennLook, New York’s still got bite, even if they try to polish it up. The city’s never really clean—there’s always that lingering stench of hot dogs, old pizza crusts, and whatever’s lurking in subway shadows. The pigeons? Oh, they run the place. The rats have their own little mafia down below, probably plotting world domination or at least stealing your pretzel. You walk down the street and yeah, the lights might be brighter, but something’s always a little off-kilter, a little wild. It’s the city that never really sleeps, just kind of naps with one eye open. The old grit’s still there, hiding behind the shiny new condos and overpriced coffee shops. Don’t let anyone fool you—New York’s still got that edge, still weird, still a bit broken, and, honestly, that’s what makes it so damn interesting. It never lets you forget where you are, or who you’re dealing with.
Konidela Ram Charan