Although comedy is her profession, Nadine has accomplished a lot in her young age. She is a national champion black belt, a world-class soccer player, and an avid snowboarder. She started playing soccer at the age of 4, and continued playing through college where she majored in Biology, but quickly realized her destiny was to tell jokes, not to wear a lab coat. So she decided to be funny while finishing her Bachelors Degree in biology and continued on to get her M.B.A. Nadine’s comedy style is much like her athleticism, fearless. She’s made her way up the comedy ladder very quickly, and has become a club favorite at many of the country’s top comedy clubs, including the Improv chain. Performing in the Boston Comedy Festival and being noted as the “one of the youngest and brightest up and comers” and traveling to the Middle East to entertain the troops are just a few of her notable accomplishments. These days Nadine splits time between the stage, a radio studio, her computer blogging, and a television studio. Nadine’s TV, Radio, Writing credits include: national commercials, talking head roles on E! Entertainment, Showtime’s Hot Tamales Live, The Skinny: Fat Free News, The Sunny Side of The Truth: Real World Hollywood, TVgasm, Zazreport, Daddy’s Girls, Jerseylicious, celebrity interviews on Mania TV, a weekly half-hour television show that syndicates to colleges across the country for National Lampoon and a nightly radio show on XM Satellite Radio.
5 Comments
will this be like Engaged and Underage? I LOVED that show–delusional teenagers living in their parent’s basements with no jobs thinking they know what love is? Fantastic.
Fantastic. They really have high morals on MTV. 16 and Pregnant, Teen Mom, and now young married couples. If only these idiots knew what it is like. I was 22 when I got married and I regret it to this day.
My parents got married at 18 and are still together and madly in love, celebrating their 35th wedding anniversary this summer. It’s not for everybody but that doesn’t mean it’s not for anybody.
Amen, captain. Some people think their bad experiences define everyone else’s as well. My parents got married at 22; granted, it was another generation. Do I think it’s smart to get married before you are able to make sure you can stand on your own two feet first? Nah. But that doesn’t mean everyone will fail.
Captain and Judgy — You both make excellent points. I was 21 and my husband 23 when we married eight years ago (it’s no thirty-five — yet — but we’re getting there). We bought our own house, paid our own bills, only borrowed money from our parents once, and paid it back in full as soon as we were able. We’re established now and did it all on our own, and I’m pretty proud of that.
As far as marriage goes, it’s all about compromise, commitment, and determination. It’s going to take work, but if you want it to last and you’re mature enough to put that work in — regardless of how young you married — it will!