Monday, June 28, 2010

"From the Diaspora" Extended Trailer

A trailer of my new documentary feature about 8 "olim chadashim" (new immigrants) from 6 continents of the world, and the excitement and complexities of establishing a new life and identity in the thriving city of Tel Aviv, Israel.

Friday, April 2, 2010

Israeli Pesach

So I’ve had some requests to talk about Passover in the Holy Land, compared to that in the US. So I’m going to take this time to do exactly this...

The Seder


- I just want to say that my Passover seder was finished in record time. Seriously, it really helps when the native tongue is Hebrew. Reading the Haggadah for them was probably like us reading a Dr. Seuss book in front of a table of well-dressed patrons. The goal for any U.S. Jew should be finding an Israeli to lead their next seder.

- They aren’t so big about hiding the “afikomen.” They put it away, but the whole hide & seek/giving kids rewards may be more of an American addition.

- The gefilte fish is still not liked here. Although, they add a really good jelly/sweet sauce to it that made me want seconds.

- They served rice at the table. They were Ashkenazi too. The whole rice/corn issue is really only a religious practice picked up by the Ashkenazi Orthodox community here. The conservative movement decided to adopt it in the States, but most of the country, aside from the Orthodox, doesn’t follow these rules. And the thought of giving up corn syrup is not really known.

Food

- Virtually the entire country, however, does not eat bread. It doesn’t matter how religious you are, about 70% of the country gives bread up. 15% will eat bread, but out of respect, not in public. The remaining 15% don’t care. And I think that 15% is the community I live in. I live in Yafo, which is an Arab town. They serve pita in public. However, they also offer kosher for Passover options at their establishments, which is respectable. Israel passed a law years ago that forbids even non-Kosher restaurants to serve bread.

- Kosher restaurants either close over Passover week, or serve kosher for Passover food. Israel has invented a kosher for Passover bread that is made from potato starch. It doesn’t taste great, but at least it doesn’t leave crumbs everywhere and constipate you for weeks even after Passover finishes.

- Most every food items here are made to be kosher for Passover. It’s a marketing tool to label proudly that your corn chips are still, somehow, kosher for Passover. It’s marketing suicide in the States.

- They too make fried matzo. But they mash it up into almost an oatmeal, and add sugar to it. It’s quite delicious.

Traditions

- Israelis have a sedar on the first night, and a huge dinner on the last night. Everything, from the banks to the supermarket, is closed the next day, and some for the entire Passover week. This is their holiday break. Makes it really inconvenient for ill-prepared Americans like myself.

- Most families go camping. It’s spring time, and they go north to enjoy the outdoors. I too just returned from a hiking and camping trip in Tiberias. Everything is blooming, and it’s nice because they don’t have any rules about where you can and can’t camp. We set up in a meadow on top of a hill overlooking the Kinneret (Sea of Galilee. Nobody was around. But many families camp on the beaches with fires and music.

- Everybody owns the EXACT, SAME tent. Literally.

- It’s a pain to get anywhere. Either the buses don’t run, or the streets are flooded with people. The sight of it looks like an alien movie where everyone is trying to get out of town using one highway.

- Camping makes Passover easier because the food one brings on a normal camping day is the same: peanuts, canned tuna, fruit, etc. It’s not great, but it seems to go by much quicker here because everyone is in on the same traditions.

-Hummus is still on everything.

I’ll try to think of some more differences. If you have any questions, shoot them my way and I’ll try to find an answer. Otherwise, chag sameach!

Saturday, March 13, 2010

Top Ten Things I've Learned About Israel

I've been here for more than 6 months now, and I've learned a thing or two about the great country of Israel.

So now I think it's a good time to share with you 10 important things to note:

10) The customer is always wrong. Even when you’re right, you’re wrong. And be prepared to get yelled at for being right.
9) A five-minute task takes a minimum of 3 hours. You feel every minute of it.
8) There is no such thing as a line. Any line that you see is made up entirely of tourists. And in the rare chance that you should be at the very front of that line, be prepared to be elbowed by a 90-year-old woman half your size.
7) Waitresses don’t believe in writing down your orders; They always mess it up too.
6) There aren’t any price tags. So if you think you’re getting a good deal, you’re not.
5) Touching a cat in Israel is like petting a raccoon in America. Don’t.
4) To enter a bar or club you need to be 18. Unless you’re an American guy, then you need to be an abstract age that is greater than what you are.
3) In the game Israelis call “basketball,” palming, traveling and foul-calling have definitions that only benefit the opponent.
2) The horn in your car is more of a status symbol than the car itself; The louder it is, the more respect you get.
1) It’s normal to wear boots and overcoats in 65 degree weather; It’s not normal to work when it rains.

Saturday, March 6, 2010

Chaos Films Commercial

A new post is coming soon. I promise.

In the meantime, here's a commercial we shot at my company. You may particularly get a kick out of the last few seconds...


Monday, February 8, 2010

Mike Huckabee in Israel

Gov. Mike Huckabee (Republican who will be running in the upcoming US election) came and spoke at the Knesset about the Israel/America relationship: What it is and what it may become. What he has to say is very interesting, and it emphasizes the struggle I discussed in an earlier post about being an American Jew (notably one who is/was in support of Obama).

Jonny, one of the subjects in my aliyah documentary, hooked me up as the video guy for Knesset member Danny Danon, and to composite a short video about the Huckabee ceremony. So here it is, with introductory remarks by Danon himself:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3-6Sx5e8PFQ

Would like to hear your comments.

Thursday, February 4, 2010

bROke aRaBIc

On January 26th, our program ended. And since then, I’ve been homeless. And what happens when a Jew is homeless…? We wander the desert. So me and my two friends planned a trip to Jordan. Visiting a third-world Muslim state may not have been what Moses and my nomadic Jewish ancestors had in mind when they themselves wandered the desert for 40 years searching for a home for the Jews. But hey, times have changed.


We didn’t have anything planned. We knew we wanted to see Petra—the ancient city/world wonder, we wanted to visit Wadi Rum—the desert in which they filmed Lawrence of Arabia, and we wanted to stay in Amman—Jordan’s capital city. We wanted to stay in Jordan for 4 days. But, of course, nothing goes as planned.

The best way to describe our trip is to describe Jordan itself. So below, I’ve compiled a list of national “whatevers” to describe our Jordanian experience.

National Currency: The Jordanian Dinar
This little fucker is as strong as the Euro. Who would have thought? This meant that our seemingly large exchange from shekels to dinars left us with less than 100 dinars. Of course, we didn’t realize our problematic money situation until we were already well into Jordan. A 20 dinar cab ride here, a 30 dinar Turkish bath there. Before we knew it, we were pooling together coins to buy cookies for dinner. “Dinars for Dinnar” is what we called our charity drive. We needed to reconsider our options if we wanted to last more than a day in Jordan. What would Moses do?

National Slogan: “I don’t understand why not!”
It wasn’t long before this phrase emerged from our lips. And with every ridiculous circumstance that arose, it continued to naturally find its way out. The phrase was first mumbled at the gates of Petra. A friend of ours went a few weeks earlier to Petra, and told us that the entrance fee was 21 dinars. So we budgeted accordingly. However, upon arrival, they said it cost 34 dinars. We wanted to know why the sudden jump in price. At first we thought they were giving us the “American” rate. But after talking to everyone on the Petra chain of command, we finally got an explanation in English. The manager told us that as of 2010, they made a “special deal." Wait until you hear this... Before 2009, you had the option of seeing Petra on your own, which only cost 21 dinars. If you didn’t want to see it on your own, then you could pay for a horse ride and for a tour guide (which would have cost you an additional 20 dinars). But now, as of Jan. 1, 2010, it is mandatory that you pay for a horse and tour guide -- which they give you at a “special” rate of only an additional 13 dinars -- bringing the cost of admission to a mandatory 34 dinars… What kind of bass ackwards deal was this?!
“Well what if we don’t want a horse ride or guide?” we asked furiously.
“Then you don’t go,” they replied.
“But do we still have to pay for it?”
“Yes.”
“Can we go in without the horse or guide for 21 dinars?”
“No.”
“I don’t understand why not!”

And it began…

National Bird: The Middle Finger
There was no way around the Petra “special.” So we paid. But our money situation got worse. When we arrived to where the horses were, we showed them our ticket and hopped on.

There wasn’t any need for the horses. In fact, next to the horse trail was a perfectly good walkway for people that somehow got around paying into the tourist trap. But since we already paid good money, we took the ride. We were literally on the horses for 5 minutes. It was like a carnival pony ride. But instead of little kids, 3 grown men in their mid-20s were the subjects of a Jordanian circus. We got off the horses, but before we could walk away, the guys who took care of the horses stopped us. “Now you tip us,” they said. “For what?” we asked. “For the horse rides.” “No way. You didn’t do anything. And we didn’t even want to take the horse ride in the first place. Your guys up front made us.” “You tip us!” Damnet. So we looked through our dramatically thinning wallets for some money. We each gave the three horse guys a dinar each for doing nothing. We started to walk away, but they stopped us yet again. “A dinar?! Give us more. At least 2 dinars each.” We couldn’t believe it. We give these guys a tip they didn't even deserve, and they give us the middle finger in return. I’ve never been harassed as much as I was in Petra. We’re tourists, yes, but we’re also on a budget. People that truly need the money are grateful for whatever they are given. These pricks just happen to work in a giant tourist trap where they’ve learned to guilt people into paying them more than they deserve. Well we stood ground and gave them the middle finger in return by walking away.

National Dish: Quarter chicken with rice
Now, the people who work in Petra don’t represent the people of Jordan. For the most part, people are very friendly, polite and truly like you visiting their country. Granted, I wouldn’t want to walk around Jordan handing out latkes and kepahs declaring my Judaism. But as Americans, they really had no problem with us. Except for one instance, which I will soon explain.

After the first day, we had to make a decision. Given our money situation we could either go to Wadi Rum for the day and then return to Israel, giving us a whopping 36 hours in Jordan. Or, we could take our chances and go to Amman for a few days, hoping that it would be cheaper than the area around Petra. We took the chance.

Amman is a cool city. It’s poor, but it’s an interesting place to walk around in (for a short amount of time). People are on the streets screaming at each other and selling shitty items for 4 times the amount they are worth. We walked by this “shoe store” which literally consisted of a blanket on the sidewalk and old, pairless shoes sitting in a giant pile. I guess shopping there would entail picking out two mismatched shoes and then walking away feeling good about your purchase.

Anyway, it doesn’t matter what food you order there because you’re automatically getting a quarter chicken with rice. You could order a cheese pizza and you’ll be given a quarter chicken with rice. The night we stayed in Petra, the owner of the hotel was a Bedouin. We told him that we were really hungry after walking around Petra all day. He nodded at us and told us that he had a big Bedouin meal for us. He came out with a puny plate of a quarter chicken with rice.

So in Amman, we asked our hotel owner for a hearty Jordanian dish. She recommended a place that featured “mansaf,” which is Jordan’s national dish. Great, we were hungry. We got to the restaurant and ordered the mansaf. “Would you like a quarter meal or a half meal?” “Definitely a half.”

While we were waiting, we couldn’t help but notice a Jordanian man from across the restaurant staring. This wasn’t any stare, though. It was a death stare. He could have cooked a quarter piece of chicken in under 30 seconds with that stare. We kept glancing over, and then glancing away. Similar to how a young guy and girl who have a crush on one another might glance. Is that what he wanted? A relationship? Perhaps he was on J-Date. Username: ObamaFan#1. No, but seriously he was about to kill us.

We were starving and felt uncomfortable, so the half order of mansaf couldn’t have come soon enough. The national dish was revealed and… bloody hell! It was a quarter chicken with rice.


Many things didn’t go our way. The hotels that promised heat were 35 degrees. The hotel that promised cable had only one channel – Palestinian news. There was no soap in the bathroom, so we couldn’t shower. Our trip was cut short (actually in half) because of money issues. And we were interrogated at the Israeli border about our expired visas. But with that said, things didn’t NOT go our way. We’d gladly sacrifice ALL (and more) of the little nuisances mentioned throughout this post in order to have our safety and health. Jordan isn’t Cancun. So the fact that we were Jews who safely traveled through an underdeveloped Arab country that only recently signed a “peace” treaty with Israel means we were pretty damn lucky in the end.

The border that separates Israel and Jordan is more than just a government line. On one side is a Jewish state and the other is a Muslim state. There are many differences in the way the states are run, but the similarities are what really stand out. Both are lands of midday tea, hummus, hookah bars and casual conversations that begin with a yell. Both are lands of desert and pasture, blue skies and basins. Both are lands of street vendors and over-priced broken merchandise. And, most importantly, both are lands that are immersed in religion, but really just want to live safely and happily with their loved ones. Traveling to your “enemies” land and seeing what the people and culture is about is one of the main things that leads to acceptance. The solution to our world’s problems is in the act of traveling and taking in culture. And for people who continue to hold onto hatred without venturing into the world of others, I have one slogan for you: “I don’t understand why not!”


Some pictures:
"Where the hell is Petra?"

Amman from a hilltop

Jordanian mountain range

Sunday, January 3, 2010

Resolution #4(8)

I started 2010 the same way I’ve started every other year of the past decade: With bROken resolutions.

It’s the third day of the New Year and my “Resolution” checklist looks as follows (green = completed; red = failed) :
1) Make a New Years Resolution checklist
2) Stop eating hummus x
3) Do nightly push ups x
4) Accept Israeli culture as circumstance; embracing it without anger x
5) Uphold my New Years Resolution checklist x

#2 and #3 were easy ones to break. In fact, I broke them both less than a few hours into the New Year. Quite simply, after our New Years celebration I ate a falafel sandwich with hummus and then fell asleep for the night.

But these weren’t the important resolutions. The important resolution – the one that I really wanted to uphold – was #4: Accept Israeli culture as circumstance; embracing it without anger.

The following post is dedicated to my reason for breaking it…

I love culture, and I usually embrace it with open arms. But the culture I’ve experienced in the past has only been temporary. For instance, when I traveled to Europe, I only experienced different cultures for a few days at a time. Because I had no personal ties to them, I submerged myself in the good, and easily disregarded the bad. It's much easier this way.

Israel, however, is much different. I'm tied to the land both physically and spiritually. Living here, it’s hard to ignore the cultural differences that shape the way your day plays out. And it's often angersome. As a result, I made a resolution to view such differences as elements of circumstance only. I will accept both the good and the bad of Israeli culture as a byproduct of the actions its residents have grown to know. In other words, the Israeli way of life will not anger me because I'm going to accept it for just being the way it is. I will, in turn, embrace it as a learning mechanism to improve my own life.

At least, that was the idea...

To anybody who has ever been to Israel, it should not come to a surprise when I say that my hopes and dreams I planned on executing through Resolution #4 were completely shattered by the means of… Israeli drivers.

In an article from Drivers.com, the author writes: “By all accounts, driving in Israel is getting worse: more honking, rudeness, cutting in.” This quote was written in 2001. If the author were to describe driving in Israel today, I think his quote would simply say, “Fuck.”

It’s chaos. Drivers swerve in and out of lanes without signal. Bikers ride the shoulders and (wait for it…) the sidewalks to get ahead. Bus drivers have been known to hit cars and then just drive off. There is constant beeping, yelling and gesturing. It's like a highway chase scene from a Bruce Willis film.

As a result, road rage occurs, and when it does, this tends to happen:

A highway accident just outside Tel Aviv.

The driving situation got so bad that the government had to implement a new stoplight. Before the light switches from red to green, it flashes yellow. The reason for this is because Israeli drivers got so anxious and impatient at stoplights that they began inching up during the red, falsely anticipating when exactly it would turn green. Drivers wound up blocking crosswalks and creating confusion with their prematurity. So the government gave drivers a yellow light to let them know when they could start inching up. But now this yellow light has essentially become their green light, making the situation just as problematic.

All in all, I don’t know what everyone is so impatient about. Israelis are perpetually tardy. So I guess there's something intriguing about rushing to be inevitably late.

Anyway, I thankfully don’t drive. But I do take the buses. And the same people who drive these buses, at one point, grew up driving cars.

So my friend and I were coming home from the basketball courts. There is pretty much only one bus that takes us to and from the basketball courts: Bus 48. Bus 48 NEVER seems to come. It’s the ghost bus. When I don’t need it, I see Bus 48 every 10-15 minutes. But when I do, I find myself waiting 45+ minutes.

So on the way back from the courts, we see Bus 48 stopped in the distance. It’s at the bus stop, and we just might be able to make it. We start running toward it. It finishes loading the passengers, and begins to take off. It makes it less than 5 feet from the bus stop when it hits a red light. We caught a break. If the light was green, Bus 48 would have driven away, and we would sit waiting for an unpredictable amount of time. But G-d must have changed it to red. My friend had a study session to attend, and I had some hummus to eat.

We arrive at the doors of Bus 48. The bus driver looks at us, and then turns his head to the road. “Let us in,” we yell while knocking on the doors. The bus driver shakes his head “no.” Wait, what? What the hell is this? The bus stop is 5 feet back, and he’s stopped at a red light. In the amount of time he took to shake his head “no,” we could have hopped on and paid him. But instead, we stood screaming at him to let us on while he waited at the traffic light for another minute and a half. He drove away the second it turned green, leaving two helpless Americans behind.

Both of us returned to the bus stop, quite angry. I was trying desperately to keep my cool. “Why the hell couldn’t he just let us on?” we pondered. “In America, they would have,” my friend said. But this act alone wasn’t the thing that shattered Resolution #4. The nail in the coffin came with what happened next.

A very old woman was waiting for another numbered bus. Perhaps the 18? Maybe the 82? I don't remember, but I do remember that it wasn't the 48. She was waiting several feet away from the bus stop. She signaled to the bus driver that she needed to get on. The bus driver pulled over as quickly as he could, completely blocking the two lanes of traffic. It was very difficult for this woman to get on. She tried getting on, but couldn’t. She felt bad about holding up the bus, so signaled to him to go without her. But the bus driver didn’t leave. Instead, he inched closer to the curb, and waited patiently as myself, my friend and a random passerby now helped to lift this woman onto the bus. The light was green, and people were beeping ferociously at this man to move his bus. But instead of succumbing to all the external pressures, this driver did what was right.

With this kind deed my resolution was shattered. At this moment I became absolutely irate with the driver of Bus 48. I realized that him not letting us on the bus wasn’t because of a bus company policy. I quickly remembered that there were no rules when it comes to traffic. The rules were dictated by the drivers themselves. And if one man can do the right thing, then so can another.

I absolutely refused to embrace this impatient, “every man for himself” Israeli mentality when it comes to certain elements of their culture, most notably driving. I couldn’t embrace this cultural occurrence without growing angry because I realized that it could have been prevented. This goes for any culture and any situation. Sometimes we feel as if we’re restricted by cultural circumstance and therefore accept cultural wrongs as rights. But this is not the case. We need to learn how to embrace culture in order to change circumstance. We can directly affect the actions that occur around us by utilizing the power from our differences. And I realized all this from a bus driver without a face.

As I mentioned, when the bus driver blocked the road people began to beep ferociously. However, when they realized that this man was blocking the road to help an old lady, the beeping stopped. Sometimes you can’t always see the good that’s being masked by the seemingly bad. And change is very much possible, even in a place as stubborn as Israel. Patience is what’s needed to gain that enlightenment.

The kind-hearted bus driver of bus 18? 82? assisted in the breaking of an old Resolution #4, and the formation of a new. So let me introduce to you my New New Year’s Resolution checklist:

1) Wish bROke eNgLisH readers a very happy and healthy 2010
2) Eat more hummus
3) Think about doing nightly push ups
4) Ignite change by becoming the kind-hearted bus driver deserved by Bus 48 (In good time…)

Monday, December 7, 2009

There is More Than One Type of Rock in the Desert

At lunch today, Avi was talking to the chef cooking his burger. Avi often tells me to talk to as many people as possible because you never know who needs someone to listen. So as Avi was acting as this cook’s therapist, saying “uh-huh,” “uh-huh,” “uh-huh” throughout the guy’s story about losing his junkyard to the government or something, I was watching the guy’s hands as they were cooking. It started as a simple daze, but then I noticed something. All of his fingernails were cut short, except for on his pinkies.

Holy shit, the burger king has coke nails.

Before I continue with this post, let’s go over the Drug101 basics. A coke nail is used as a small container for a cokehead to snort drugs from, located on the pinky finger. It’s not very covert, as coke nails are very noticeable to the rest of the public.

For instance, do you remember Bob Ross – the afro-headed painter on PBS who marveled people with his show “The Joy of Painting”?


Well now let's take an even closer look at the picture. Look at his pinkies cradling that raccoon…

Coke nails.

Sorry to burst some of your bubbles. But now you know where he got the inspiration for those “happy little trees.”

Anyway, Bob Ross isn’t Israeli, so we’re gonna move on.

After leaving the burger joint, I asked Avi if he was good friends with that chef.
“No, never met him in my life,” he replied.
“K. Well then I guess I’ll tell you that I think that guy is on coke.”
“Why do you say that?”
“Do you know what a coke nail is, Avi?”
Avi nodded his head yes.
“He had two of them.”

Avi started laughing.

“I don’t think that guy is on drugs. A lot of Israelis have those long pinky nails. It’s kind of a fashion statement.”
“What?! A fashion statement?!”
“Yeah, some think it’s fashionable.”
“A coke nail is fashionable?! Even if you don’t do coke?”
“When I was younger me and my friends used to keep our pinky nails long. I never tried drugs in my life.”

I couldn’t grasp my head around this concept. I just kept exclaiming, What?!

Avi just told me that coke nails were used for fashion and not necessarily drugs. What would prompt people to give the fashionable illusion that they were on coke?!

Cue: Cross-Dissolve into Israel’s fashion scene

I don’t know too much about Israel’s fashion scene (or fashion in general), but I do know that fashion depends on the city. For instance, the long-time fashion trend in Jerusalem has been a trimmed, black velvet overcoat complete with a sporty, black Louis Vuitton head covering and some payot that dangle effortlessly from the sides of the head, curled by non other than hair designer Ken Paves.


But seriously, Tel Aviv is much different than any other city in Israel. It’s bustling with fashion. Clothing store after clothing store line the streets of this yuppie city. As I said, I don't know much about fashion, but Tel Aviv seems “experimental” in my eyes. They wear overcoats and Uggs (even in 65 degree weather), which are sometimes accompanied with pink spandex or cut leggings. It's bizarre. Especially because these are just the men…

As I continued to think about what is and isn’t fashionable in this country, I came to a realization:

Israel is the coke nail of the Middle East.

Think about it. Compared to the other Middle Eastern countries, Israel is too small to even be the pinky. So it needs to overcompensate. Therefore, it acts as the coke nail, allowing it to become super productive and giving people that boost or kick to turn it into high gear to make this country as busy and hip as it is.

From its fashion scene to its army, Israel is so successful because of its ability to stand out. Much of the rest of the world sees us as an abnormality: "A Jewish state?? Over my dead cuticle!" In fact, many want to pretend that their hand is perfectly manicured. But they need realize the existence of the coke nail. Accept it. Embrace it. See what it can offer you.

But until that day, Israel needs to continue to stay in a coke-induced frenzy. We need to continue to party, and like a true addict, continue to refuse to come down from our high. Because as soon as just one eye begins to fall asleep, the big middle fingers of the world (like Iran) will quickly reach for the nail clippers.

So if we can just convince the rest of the hand to take just one lousy hit with us, for just one night of partying, this world can be the peaceful, cracked out place G-d intended it.

Thursday, December 3, 2009

Mommy... Wow! I'm..a..big..kid..now!

I’ve decided to make my own documentary. My posts are becoming infrequent because this project is eating up a lot of time. During the day it’s working with Avi, and at night it’s filming this project.

The idea for my doc is simple: The story of five Anglo olem (immigrants) as they attempt to establish a personal, new Israeli identity in the thriving city of Tel Aviv.

It’s easy, innocent and non-political. None of these, however, are shaping up to be true…

One of my lead characters is Jonny, an England-born Haredi who, at 23 years old, already has a wife and beautiful baby girl. We’ve been spending a lot of time together: watching TV, eating dinner and establishing a trustworthy relationship that will hopefully lead to a comfortable, on-screen persona.

I began filming him at a crucial point in his life. He just recently got a job with Knesset, the Israeli government (link it), as the personal driver of Danny Danon (this guy).

Jonny invited me to film him at a Knesset rally opposing the halting of more settlements in the West Bank. Obama wants settlement production frozen, and well, as you’ll soon find out, these guys want Obama frozen in return.

The issue of the West Bank is problematic, to say the least. In a nutshell, the West Bank is occupied by both Palestinians and Jews. There is violence. But many Jews are still living in the West Bank and building settlements because they feel that if they give the West Bank to the Palestinians, they are just one step closer to taking over Jerusalem.

So when Obama says he wants the Jewish settlements to stop, his attempt at diplomacy is causing an outrage amongst right-wingers, and other Jews for that matter.

But I’m getting ahead of myself. First things first:

Jonny and I arrive early to the rally to set up. Jonny was nervous: getting us lost to the site of the rally, and smoking cigarettes like he was in a 1950s cop film. I, on the other hand, was feeling very confident. I was dressed nice, had my tripod and camera, and was ready to film my first rally.

However, upon arriving, that confidence instantly vanished: “Who are you?” “What company are you here filming for?” Shit. Ummm… Chaos Films. “Who? What’s Chaos Films? What channel is that?” Shit. Jonny please help me. “He’s filming a documentary about Anglo olem. Relax and let him in.” Thanks dude.

In the back row were the members of the Israeli television stations. They had high-tech cameras, powerful lights and tripods that rose up like the alien machines in “War of the Worlds.” Seriously, their power adapters were more expensive than my camera. So, naturally, when I parked my Fisher-Price film equipment right next to theirs, there were some smirks.



The demonstration started an hour and a half late. Not really a surprise. But once it got rolling it quickly heated up. People were yelling and arguing with one another. Poor Jonny had to translate everything for me.

But some of the stuff, despite being in Hebrew, I was able to understand. For example, I was able to understand what was being said when random crowd members ran up to the mic, waving their fists in the air yelling “Barack Hussein” at the top of their lungs. Not very concealed when it comes to their feelings toward Obama and his policies.

But the real story begins after the rally ended. Jonny and Danny Danon begin conversing. I am taping from a distance. Danny looks directly at me, the camera and then back at Jonny. He then asks Jonny, “Is he one of us?”

Am I one of what??

An extreme right-winger who hates Obama? No. A devout religious who heavily partakes in Israeli politics? No, I’m not.

But I am a Jew. One that cares about the well-being of Israel, but also supports the activities of my American homeland.

It’s a very difficult time right now to be an American Jew. Americans want peace, and Israelis need to take action in order to keep their country on the map. As a result, the relationship between Israel and America is changing drastically, making American Jews the rope in a tug-of-war. Bush and his gung-ho war cries were good for Israel, and made the relationship more pleasant. But I can’t say so much for Obama and his attempt at world peace. (This will be discussed in greater detail in the documentary.)

But at the root of a very serious confliction in a very necessary alliance is a politician who asks “Is he one of us?”, worried about a 23-year old with a Toys 'R Us camera exploiting his very concrete and outspoken views.

But his concerns are valid. It’s not uncommon in Israel that Jews exploit other Jews. But for what? This touches upon a huge political conflict. One bigger than Israel vs. America or Jews vs. Palestinians. A documentary in itself: Jews vs. Jews.

The religious divide in Israel is unbelievable. Jews make up less than 1% of the world’s population, and here we are judging one another based on how observant, far left or right we are. Secular Jews criticize Orthodox Jews and vice-versa. There are hate crimes within the Jewish community. WHAT THE FUCK! is a reserved way of summarizing the issue.

Most all Jews want to the same two things: a Jewish homeland and peace for their loved ones. But we remain overly concerned and critical of how one of our fellow Jews goes about achieving this common goal. We need to stop fighting over which way is the right way. We really need to start trusting one another; because when you are worrying about whether a fellow Jew is “one of us”, roadblocks remain in the path to progression. It’s so twisted: a fear of exploitation makes us exploit one another, ultimately distracting us from the bigger picture at hand.

With that said, Danon has generously granted me an on-camera interview to discuss, with Jonny, the nature of what it means to make aliyah as an Anglo today. I look forward to speaking with him, and continuing to share with you developments on this current issue and the documentary as a whole.

Thursday, November 26, 2009

A Joke Avi Told Me:

Shortly after the Pope had apologized to the Jewish people for the treatment of Jews by the Catholic Church over the years, Ariel Sharon, then Prime Minister of Israel, sent a proposal to the College of Cardinals for a friendly game of golf to be played between the two leaders, or their representatives, to demonstrate the friendship and ecumenical spirit shared by the Catholics and the Jews.

The Pope met his College of Cardinals to discuss the proposal.

"Your Holiness" said one of the Cardinals, "Mr. Sharon wants to challenge you to a game of golf to show that you are old and unable to compete. I am afraid that this would tarnish our image in the world."

The Pope thought about this, and because he had never held a golf club in his life, asked, "Don't we have a Cardinal that can represent me?"

"None who plays golf very well," a Cardinal replied. "But there is a man named Jack Nicklaus, an American golfer, who is a devout Catholic. We could offer to make him a Cardinal, and then ask him to play Mr. Sharon as your personal representative. In addition to showing our spirit of co-operation, we will also win the match."

Everyone agreed that this was a great idea. The call was made. Of course, Nicklaus was honored and he agreed to play as a representative of the Pope.

The day after the match, Nicklaus called the Vatican to inform the Pope of the result.

"This is Cardinal Nicklaus. I have some good news and some bad news, your Holiness," said the golfer.

"Tell me the good news, Cardinal Nicklaus", said the Pope.

"Well, Your Holiness, I don't like to brag, but even though I have played some pretty terrific rounds of golf in my life, this was the best I have ever played, by far. I must have been inspired from above. My drives were long and true, my irons were accurate and purposeful, and my putting was perfect. With all due respect, my play was truly miraculous."

"How can there be bad news?" the Pope asked.

Nicklaus sighed, "I lost by three strokes to Rabbi Tiger Woods."


Happy Thanksgiving from a land without turkeys or golf!

-Scott

Monday, November 16, 2009

A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to Obesity

There’s a reason I haven’t posted anything in a while. Actually, three reasons:

The first one is that my mom and grandma came to visit me in Israel. We had a great time touring, dining and taking in the Israeli culture.

The second reason is that I’ve been devising a very complex formula that, once complete, will shock the Middle East and modern world as we know it. More from this to come in upcoming posts.

The third and final reason is that, to put it quite frankly, I lost the use of my fingers. For a week I turned into a falafel. And falafels don't have fingers. I guess it's true that you do become what you eat.

But now that I’m seemingly human again, let me share a story with you…

Life at Chaos Films has been interesting. Avi and I are developing a very special bond. It’s just the two of us at the office everyday, and we spend a lot of time eating oranges, drinking Moroccan tea, and discussing how little work we’re getting done.

In a previous post I mentioned how the lunch breaks last as long as the workdays. Today I discovered why. In the room next to the Chaos Film office resides a highly acclaimed cinematographer named Addie. He worked on a short film called “Sinner,” which received a nomination for Best Short from the European Film Awards. The film is about a pedophiliac Rabbi and the Hasidic boy he takes advantage of. Anyway, the two of us went to get sabich down the street. Sabich is an amazing invention of a sandwich: fried eggplant, layers of tahina, a hard-boiled egg, and salad stuffed in a fluffy pita.

Just let me know if you want me to FedEx one to the States; it’s definitely worth the bypass surgery.

We walked for no more than two minutes before Addie spotted a man on the side of the road. He was just standing on the curb, snapping shots with his mobile phone of G-d knows what. He was Israeli, but seemed as excited and camera happy as an Asian tourist when they spot an Orthodox Jew in full wardrobe for the first time.

Addie sneaks up to him and gives him a bear hug. For about 10 minutes I stood listening to their conversation, trying to understand the Hebrew content by reading the excitement on their faces. But after 30 seconds, my mind quickly shifted to sabich and sandwiches.

When they were finished conversing, Addie told me that he’s a famous gaffer in the Israeli film industry. He said he worked with him on the set of “Sinner.”

As my dressed-to-impress friend Michele would have said, “Who? That shlubb?”

Upon entering the sabich stand, Addie got held up for another 15 minutes. We were waiting in line, when he spotted another random guy. Damnet. My stomach was absolutely eating itself. Of course, when Addie and the guy picked up conversation, I couldn’t understand a word they were saying. So I snacked on the free pickles and spicy salad every good restaurant in Tel Aviv offers. Not satisfying enough though. Waiting… waiting… finally they finished talking.

“Who was that guy?” I asked Addie.
“The son of the most powerful producer in Israel. The man behind Lebanon,” he replied.

Really?? That shlubb?

Screw it. Don't care anymore. Let’s eat.

I submerged myself into complete eggplant fatassness. It was amazing.

For some reason Israelis don’t eat lunch until mid-afternoon: anywhere from 2-4 pm. And since I’m not yet an Israeli, I’m usually starving by this point. One reason Israelis stay thin is because their days don't revolve around food and thinking about the next time they're going to eat. They only eat when they're hungry, and they take their time doing it. They utilize lunch to really get to know their surroundings: the walks to, the encounters from, and the conversations during. They eat slowly, often asking their company in-depth questions. This angers people like me: people who have already shoveled down their sandwich and who now focus more on biting into their company's untouched sandwich than answering the questions posed.

There's a huge difference in culture when it comes to lunchtime. Americans, like myself, always seem to be in a rush. We use the day to thoroughly plan out what we're going to eat next, allowing the cravings to become so unbearable that we hurry to our meals, scarf them down, and eat more and more to satisfy the hunger. It's sickening. In a nutshell, we make pie charts to decide what to eat, but then get so hungry that we just end up eating pies and nutshells.

Anyway, we finished our sandwiches, and after lunch -- on Addie’s and my waddle back -- we walked past an average guy talking on his cell phone.

“Do you know who that was?” Addie asked subtly and rhetorically. “Samuel Maoz, the director of Lebanon.”
“Really?” I asked looking back. “Why didn’t you say ‘hi’?”
“Ehh. He was on his cell phone. But apparently he was offered the chance to direct the next Alien movie.”

Holy shit! That shlubb?!

What the hell was going on? It was 3 pm on a workday, and in our 10-minute walk to and from lunch, we saw three influential figures in the Israeli film industry! But unless Addie had pointed them out, nobody would think they were anything but shlubbs. There were no limousines, no suits, no Bluetooths, and definitely no paparazzi. In fact, Addie informed me that even the hottest Israeli models need to call the paparazzi to tell them where they’ll be in order to get any publicity. Imagine a time in America where Bradgelina knocks on photographers’ doors begging them to photograph their new adopted baby. Actually, scratch that, they kinda already do... But you get the point.

The thing is, nobody is bigger than life here. People know people, but unlike the States people don’t make an extra effort to make sure people know the people they know. They are content with just knowing. If that all makes sense.

On Avi’s back burner is an IMAX movie about the city of Jerusalem. This is a huge project, if it ever surfaces. It’s only on the back burner because it hasn’t yet received the large funding necessary. And that’s primarily because the director who was committed to the project was recently and suddenly jailed. Guess who I found out that director was ... Roman Polanski. Holy shit; talk about bad timing for Avi. But the only reason I found this out was because Ben, my British colleague, read over one of Avi’s e-mails. Avi would never brag about his affiliation with Roman Polanski. That’s not what the film industry is about here. It’s about making friends and making good movies with one another. Art at its purest.

No matter how highly influential Addie and Avi are or grow to become, it’s nice to be reassured that they’ll never be too “famous” to get a sabich with me. Which makes me now understand another very important aspect of filmmaking: enjoying lunch, so to speak. It's important to not think about the lunch breaks in too great of depth. It messes with your cravings. Take a step back. Enjoy yourself. Eat slowly. Don't run to lunch and stuff yourself quickly in order to rush back to your isolated cubicle. In the end it's counterproductive. Communication and taking in one's surroundings is the key to success. Appreciating the smaller things really keeps people grounded and real. Ultimately, this will translate into the inspiration one needs to really dig deep to successfully accomplish what they love and desire. It brings out the shlubby filmmaker in all of us. Lunch at its purest.

Later that evening I accidentally stole Avi’s office keys. So I was on my way back to return them when I ran into a familiar face. It was a kid who I had played basketball with weeks earlier. As we walked by each other, we shared one of those awkward moments where you know the other person knows you, but you’re not sure if you know them well enough to stop them for small talk. But feeling left out from all the cool run-ins Addie had earlier, I decided to stop him.

In our brief two-minute conversation, we discussed basketball, the brutal Israeli allergy season, and what we do in Tel Aviv. He mentioned that he’s a chef at a bakery. We then finished the conversation with a heterosexual exchange of numbers to further discuss getting together for a game basketball and for a taste-test of his pastries.

On the surface, Israelis appear aggressive and jagged. But given the chance, the majority of them will immediately treat you like family.

Avi and I haven't yet accomplished much film work. But he has taken me under his wing and treated me like family. And at my current stage this is more important as it has indirectly taught me the power of not being too self-centered as to truly appreciate and absorb my environment around. This, I'm discovering, will be a primary factor to advance me creatively and professionally in the field.

Two months into my internship, I may not have my own gaffer or any connections to famous, jailed directors. But I can now proudly say that I do have a contact in the bakery industry: One that can likely hook up a whole film crew with baked goods, allowing them to submerge with me into a complete and utter state of fatassness.

It sounds like a fair trade off: They teach me the true values behind successful world filmmaking, and I teach them how to truly stuff their faces the American way.

Friday, October 30, 2009

Makeshift Mentality

How many Israelis does it take to fix a leaky ceiling?

Two Israeli maintenance guys working on the dripping coming from above my bed. Sorry for the blurriness.

Last night came the first true rain of the season, and it came hard. It was raining cats and homeless, as some might say. I was at an outdoor bar when it started to really come down. Many Israelis huddled under tarps, thinking they might melt. Others did rain dances as they embraced the rain’s true significance: An end to a very rough drought season and the start of… well… whatever they call the mildly less hot season that comes after drought season.

As the rain ensued, everyone at the outdoor bars made their way to the indoor bars. The lines to these clubs started to grow and grow and grow, eventually becoming giant blobs of soaked, anxious Israelis. People started becoming ultra-aggressive to try to get in, tugging at the bouncer and clawing their way to the front. If you’ve ever tried to get on a crowded bus in Israel, you know exactly what type of aggression I’m referring to. By looking at the strip of bars that makes up the “namal” (aka, the port), you would have thought one of two things: either the port was sinking and the clubs were the life rafts, or the Messiah was on a bar crawl.

My guy friends and I decided to take the “Titanic” approach and use the “women and children first” rule to get into the club. We grabbed our cute, now soaking wet, girl friends and shoved them to the front. (We left the children behind to guard the alcohol). And after a few bROke Hebrew words from the girls to the bouncers, we were quickly in.

But the club was empty. What the hell? The line made it seem like the club was hosting a Jonas Brothers concert, yet inside it wasn't filled anywhere near capacity. These Israeli pricks. These sick, twisted club owners and bouncers were more focused on creating a facade of fun than letting in cold, wet, hopeless Israelis and tourists who just wanted to have a successful night out. I’m actually pretending to give a shit. I really didn’t care. I was already inside and warm. Survival of the fittest.

Anyway, the real trouble began at home. On the whole, Israelis have this sort of makeshift mentality. If something serves its purpose for the time being, it’s good enough for them. So, yes, the makeshift housing that is my apartment served quite well for the dry season. But now that it’s virtually monsooning outside, I think it’s time to prevent my ceiling from perpetual leaking.

Early this morning, I felt a bead hit my blanket. I was sleeping so I ignored it. A few seconds later, another hit in the exact same spot. I tried shifting, but the beads were now hitting quicker and quicker, creating vibrations throughout my bed. I looked up, and sure enough it was raining in my room. Damnet.

But I was just too tired to care. So I moved my bed, and fell back asleep.

When I reawakened this afternoon, I was angry. Not necessarily because of the Everglades that had formed next to my bed (I was actually quite excited to buy some crocs and fish and charge admission), but because I knew I would have to deal with our repair guy. His name is Etai. Two months ago, we told Etai about our ant problem and our broken air conditioner. He said he would be right back to fix them. We’re still waiting.

Etai is pretty much in hibernation unless a pretty girl asks for assistance. Then he’s the most productive man alive. But I don’t have anything to offer him. Unless, by chance, Etai happens to get his kicks from scrawny American guys dressed in Delta “underwear” that was accidentally bought on sale at the mall (see “Don’t Get Your Panties in a Jumble!”). But that doesn't seem likely.

Sure enough, Etai didn’t show up.

But two other maintenance men did. And they came fast. It was like a Jimmy John’s commercial in that a few seconds after I made the phone call, they were at my door. I couldn’t believe how prepared they were. Almost like they knew the housing complaints were going to come as hard as the first rains that brought them. They came in with smiles and ladders, and before I even finished my breakfast, they were gone.

Holy shit. That was fast!

But a little too fast…

I don’t know much about maintenance work, but I do know that preventing a ceiling from long term leakage takes some work. Perhaps some plaster. Perhaps some caulk. Perhaps some research to accurately pinpoint the source from which the water is coming. But anything beyond makeshift.

But I was too impressed with how quickly maintenance responded to my complaint that I wasn’t thinking about any of this. For the rest of breakfast I couldn’t help but place Israel on a pedestal. It was amazing. Imagine all the possibilities for Israel -- I thought to myself -- if Israelis were this punctual and seemingly productive with all their priorities. They already have one of the strongest militaries in the world, but imagine all the other fields they could lead in. It made me smile.

After breakfast I walked over to see my new, proud, world-renowned water-resistant ceiling that was made for me in record time by two productive Israelis.

I looked up and…. Oh, fuck.

How many Israelis does it take to fix a leaky ceiling?

Apparently more than two…

My new cardboard roof

Monday, October 26, 2009

Don't Get Your Panties in a Jumble!

Beach season is nearing its end for Israelis, but I’m just getting into wardrobe.

I didn’t bring much with me. Just two duffel bags: one of electronics and one of clothes. So I'm consequently doing laundry once a week. And I hate it. Every opportunity I have to avoid spending a day trying to read the illegible Hebrew instructions on a package of detergent designed to look like a package of chocolate ice cream so that kids will convince their parents to buy it but instead trick me into eating a few spoonfuls causing me to burp up bubbles for the rest of the week, I’ll gladly take. So in order to stop from regularly attending the laundromat, I decided to buy more underwear…

My first stop was the “shook.” For those unfamiliar with the shook, it’s the major outdoor market where everything is cheaper, but at the cost of swarming flies. So I’m not sure why I thought this would be a good place to shop for my underwear. Maybe it’s because there’s something enticing about buying discounted boxers. That with every step you take in this sweltering heat, you feel good knowing that your undercarriage is as Jewish as you are. If I’m going to chintz on my shirts and pants, there’s no reason my undergarments should be left out.

Anyway, upon arriving at the shook, I only found these obnoxious boxers. Really obnoxious. Like tight stretchy boxers with little glistening beads sequenced along the lining. You just, by the way, witnessed the first time I’ve ever used the words “boxers” and “glistening beads sequenced” in the same sentence. But it was only a matter of time in Israel.

I stood at the underwear stand for about 15 minutes staring at my options. The Israelis were yelling at me to buy or move on. But I was weighing out the pros and cons in my head:

Pro -- I wouldn’t have to shop for underwear anymore;
Con -- I would have to say I bargained for underwear.
Pro -- I could get three for $3;
Con -- I would have to wear them.
Pro -- I won’t have to do laundry as often;
Con -- I would have to wash them first.

My final verdict: Yes. This is definitely worth it.

But as I opened my wallet to buy the goods, I was bROke. So it was back to my apartment for some cash, and back to the drawing board.

I decided to check out the mall to see what it had. It would be more expensive than the shook, but at least I wouldn’t have the promise of a musical number from “All That Jazz” occurring in my pants.

I walked in, and had no idea where to even begin. So I stopped to ask the cute barista at The Coffee Bean.

“Eefo underwear?” I asked.

Despite being bROke Hebrew, “Eefo underwear” sounded much cooler than saying, “Excuse me ma’am, but can you please tell me where the ‘Arse’-free underwear shop is?”

She pointed me to the Delta store. It had a shamrock for a logo. Maybe I’d get lucky. I went inside and saw some numbers written on the wall. “A sale?!” I rushed over to the underwear section. I double-checked with three different people to make sure I was in the male underwear section. They laughed but said, Yes. You never can be too sure here.

Anyway, I then found out that it was indeed a sale: Buy one at full price, get the second half off. Of course I jumped at the opportunity to buy two packs of three boxers each. The last two packages at that. I quickly grabbed them. They were my size, pre-packaged and looked like they were of solid color (not sequenced with beads). Good enough for me; I was in and out with no hesitation.

Though, upon arriving home, I wish I hadn’t impulse underwear shopped. I opened the packages and my chin hit the floor. I couldn’t believe it. No description needed, just look at what I bought…



My first reaction was to sue Delta for false advertisement. This wasn’t underwear! This was a Medieval torture device. One of those contraptions that slowly killed you by starting at the testicles. All it was missing were the metal spikes. But I’m sure I could buy those separately at the shook.

The last time I wore anything remotely resembling this strange “underwear” was in 5th grade when I dressed up as Quail Man for Halloween. But even then I was only wearing “whitey-tighteys.” These weren’t “whitey-tighteys.” They were on a whole other level. They were “tighty-tightys”… with a face-lift.

But I could no longer return the tighty-tightys to the store. I probably could have before I did a reenactment of Tom Cruise’s Risky Business dance. But now it was too late. So I was only left with one option: Become an Israeli. I must embrace these undergarments. Show them off whenever and wherever I could: In the mall. On the beach. At the “namal” by the beach. Maybe I’ll even talk to some Israelis about starting a club:

Topic for Week One: Finding a pair in pink.
Topic for Week Two: Stretching in areas densely populated with tourists.
Topic for Week Three: Properly perming your chest hair to accompany your undies.

Now, I try to make my posts have some sort of final message about Israeli culture and lifestyle; a message that connects cultures east and west, all the while trying to bring the content of my posts to a level beyond mediocrity. And this post is no different. So with that said, my important, relevant, insightful message that everyone should take away is this:

Israeli underwear fucking sucks.

As I was walking out of Delta, the cashier had some final words that I didn't remember until now:

“Be careful about how you wash them,” she said. “They tend to shrink.”

I’m never doing laundry again…

Thursday, October 22, 2009

I've Got Mixed Feelings About My Love-Hate Relationships...

Today, my favorite Moroccan, French, Israeli, screenwriter, brain surgeon, whatever friend with that wilderness of chest hair came into the Chaos Films office. You might remember him as Michele, the guy who pretty much called me and everybody else at the Lebanon film premier “shlubbs.” If you don’t remember him, read the post “Underdressed to Kill.” But that post doesn't nearly do his character justice. As you'll soon find out, he is highly animated, extremely stubborn, and just one of those all-around characters that you know G-d created to watch while eating a bucket of popcorn. Anyway, he came into the office today for a meeting, and of course things got heated…

There’s this film production market called "Berlinale," to which Michele has been wanting to pitch his story The Syrian. If accepted to Berlinale, there's a very high probability that Michele's story will get some sort of distribution deal. Many big name actors and filmmakers attend the market to hear about all the new movie ideas. And even though The Syrian script sucks, the story may actually be good enough for him to pitch on its own. However, before anyone can attend Berlinale, they need to be accepted.

It's the responsibility of the storyteller to understand what Berlinale is and how the application process works. It's crucial, in fact. After all, they are the ones who need to perfectly fill out the application, hand it on to an initial producer (my boss Avi), and then proceed to convince other producers at the market to fund his or her story.

Michele has no experience in the movie industry. However, it’s important to note that he acts like he does. So he comes to the office today, demanding that the Berlinale application for his script The Syrian be completed in time. The application is due in a week. It requires about 15 pages worth of intricately worded essays. In English. And up until today, Michele, of course, had never seen a copy of the form.

Michele has these hopes and dreams and illusions. And what those illusions tell him is that he’s going to be the next big storyteller to come out of Hollywood, despite living in the Middle East, knowing limited English, and refusing to do any required work.

It was myself, Michele and Avi in the meeting today. Michele came up with the idea to mark the initials of the person who would complete various elements of the application. Fine. That may actually be a good way for us to progress on a form in which we have absolutely no chance of finishing by next Thursday. We start scrolling down, and I see him vigorously writing initials in his red pen. He goes through 3 pages in about 30 seconds, and then hands me the form:

It reads: S.F., S.F., S.F., S.F., A.B., A.B., S.F., A.B., S.F., M.I., S.F.

He assigned me to about 70% of an application which I knew 0% about. The one section with Michele’s "M.I." initials next to it was the Writer’s Contact Information. Wow, thanks for the contribution. He generously assigned Avi and I the tasks of answering the form's following questions (taken nearly verbatim from the document, but not in the same order):

1) What do you hope to get out of the Berlinale Co-Production Market? (S.F.)
2) Why should this film be an international co-production? (S.F.)
3) How do you want to set up the film as an international co-production? (S.F.)
4) Which positions are open to potential co-producers/partners? (S.F.)
5) Have you participated in or applied for any other co-production market(s)
or any development and/or training initiatives with this project? (Please name) (S.F.)
6) Treatment (5-8 pages) (S.F.) (Still don’t know what the hell this means, by the way)
7) Script Excerpt (5 pages) (S.F.)
8) Synopsis (25 lines) (S.F.)
9) Company Profile (A.B.)
10) Financiers/Partners already confirmed (A.B.)
11) Writer’s name (Please write in crayon) (M.I.)

There are also required (*) aspects of the form like “Director’s Note and Visual Concept (25 lines)”; “Director’s Biography/Filmography (5-7 lines)”; and “Main Cast” that Michele elected to answer with a simple “N/A.”

I think more fitting initials for Michele should be: M.I.A.

After M.I.A. presented us with this foolproof plan of how he was going to submit this application professionally and on-time to Berlinale, Avi calmly flipped. At first Michele started yelling because he couldn’t understand why this couldn’t be done in one week. Then Avi started yelling back because he couldn’t understand how one could possibly think that this could be done in one week. There was no director, no cast, no crew, a shitty script, and a man who had no other answers but to point the finger at everybody else.

“We’ve had plenty of time to fill out!” M.I.A. yelled. “Why do you now tell me of all these things!”

Eventually the yelling became too heated and difficult to continue in English. They were really only speaking English because I was in the room. But when the content of the argument became much bigger than me, they switched back and forth between Hebrew and French.

I understood various words of the argument, helping me keep up with what they were saying. I heard words like impossible, idiot, and my favorite, Scott. I forget, but I hope they weren’t using them all in the same sentence.

Anyway, after sitting there awkwardly for about 10 minutes, Avi sits back in his chair and starts speaking English. He was speaking to Michele, but now also indirectly to me:

“Filmmaking is a very tedious process. You can’t cut corners in this industry. If you are not prepared to submit a project, you need to be patient. You can’t rush the process. Everything takes time, Michele, if you want to do it right. It’s like a diamond cutter. People can tell when a diamond is fake and when it is very well done. All the small things show. Filmmaking is the same. You can’t come in here not prepared and expect everything to be good. It’s your story and your vision. Scott can help you word stuff and I can help you pitch it. But ultimately, it’s going to have to be you.”

Avi actually speaks really good English. So that grammar wasn’t too far from how he legitimately talks.

“Scott, will you please leave the room. I need to speak to Michele in Hebrew now,” he continued, in similar fashion to how a mobster might send away a young child before performing a hit.

I gladly left.

The yelling presumed on the other side of the door. But I wasn't listening. I sat at my computer, hearing only the replayed words from Avi’s mini speech. They really resonated with me. So many people are like Michele when it comes to the film industry. Everyone thinks it’s easy and that they can become a famous Hollywood figure overnight. Including myself at times. We are all looking for our 15 minutes. But working at this office -- seeing how Avi conducts business and takes on projects -- I’m learning a lot about the filmmaking profession. Profession being the key word. It’s tedious, stressful, and most of all, unstable. But this is precisely what I think drives me most to want to continue in this field. The most insignificant results are emphasized a million times because of the work it takes to get there. People are so proud when they complete even the shittiest 5-minute film ever uploaded onto YouTube. And with good reason.

As I was witnessing the highs and lows of Michele and Avi’s relationship, I immediately understood the relationship I have to develop with the film industry if I want to survive. It has to be nothing short of love-hate. If it's all love -- like the relationship most have with the film industry -- then we all become walking/talking Micheles.

For the past week and a half I’ve been working with a former BBC employee, named Ben, on the pitch of a documentary feature film. He’s been working to edit a 3-minute teaser, and I’ve been writing the document that we plan on sending to PBS, BBC and some French and Israel financers. The story is about the dramatic exodus of the Jews of Algeria in the 1960s, told through the eyes and music of Maurice El Medioni, the 2007 winner of BBC’s World Music Award. The documentary is much more complex than this. But that’s what the pitch and trailer are for.

Anyway, after about 20 hours spent on the actual writing of the 3-page pitch, and another 15 hours researching methods to properly pitch it to these big wigs, I’m fed up. So now it’s time for you guys to do the assistant producing…

The link at the bottom of this post will bring you to the pitch. I posted it on my other Web site as I couldn't figure out how to attach a Word document to this blog. It's only the text, which is really all I care about. But give me your input: Can you envision the story? What changes would you make to the narrative? Would you grant our production money – roughly $50,000 – to make the film (keeping in mind that you work for one of the aforementioned production companies)?

Your suggestions and honesty can only help us. We haven’t sent anything yet. As I am now immune to tiny details, it’s up to you to catch the nitty gritty stuff that may get us turned away. Don’t hold back. Because if this project gets proper funding, Ben and I get assistant producer credits as well as creative input into the final cut. But we’re not so concerned about that now. Instead, we spent a good portion of the day discussing how much this project has made us hate the 2007 winner of BBC’s World Music Award – Maurice El Medioni.

But to tie all this stuff together, I want to go back to the Michele fiasco…

I was sitting at my desk working on this Maurice project, when 45 minutes later Michele walks out of Avi’s office with a big smile on his face.

“Uh-oh,” I thought to myself.

He walks over to my desk with the Berlinale form in hand.

“Avi says we can finish this in about 12 hours,” M.I.A. said. “So I’m gonna call and e-mail you this weekend to complete!”

On my tombstone, instead of carving in my name, please just use a red pen and write my initials:
(S.F.)


Click here for the pitch. Its working title is "Maghreb Vista." Again, pay no attention to the formatting. Look forward to your comments.

Saturday, October 17, 2009

Lost in Transliteration

My eNgLisH is bROke, but my Hebrew is worse. For three weeks prior to my internship, I was in an ulpan class for five hours a day. The word “ulpan,” I’ve learned to discover, is just a fancier name for “complete waste of time.” In three weeks I’ve learned only three words: kafe, Anglit and zayin. Which translate to: coffee, English and penis. You know… the essentials.

Anyway, it’s not such a big deal not knowing any Hebrew. I’m able to get around just fine with English. Like today, when I had to stop at the currency exchange to convert my dollars to Shekels…


So I was walking down Alenbi St., looking for the best exchange rates, when I spotted the store pictured above. (Study the photo as it will be referred to often in the upcoming story). The double-sided sign sitting on the stoop of the entrance really enticed me to exchange my money here.

“I wanna get cange,” I said.

The teller looked confused.

“What?” he asked.
“I wanna get cange.”
“What’s this cange?” he asked.
“You know, converting my American dollars to Shekels,” I replied.
“You mean change?” he said.
“No, cange. Like your sign says.”
“I do not understand.”
“Hold on one sec,” I replied.

I went back outside and looked at the sign again. But my attention went from the double-sided sign to the sign at the bottom of the window. I looked at it closely, and then went back inside.

“I’m sorry,” I said. “I would like to get some chang.”
“Change?”
“Yeah, chang.”
“I don’t understand what you mean chang. Where you from?”
“America.”
“Is word chang in English?”
“Yeah, but it is usually associated with the Asian culture.”
“So why would have chang here?” he asked.
“I dunno. But it’s advertised outside.”
“Would you like change?” He sounded frustrated.
“Hold on just one more sec.”

I walked back outside. And after rescanning the two signs, I looked up at the sign above the store. “Ahhh... Change” I mumbled under my breath, suddenly now realizing what the teller was talking about.

“I’d like to get some change,” I said with a smile on my face as I slapped a hundred dollar bill on the counter.

The teller stared at me for a couple of seconds.

“You’re an ignorant moron.”

Alright, so he may not have said that. And I have to admit, much of that story was embellished. And by embellished I mean completely fabricated. But you probably picked up on that when I said I slapped a hundred dollar bill on the counter. Everyone knows my wallet has never seen a hundred. But seriously, there's a bigger issue at hand. As frustrating as it is speaking with Israelis – whether it be trying to practice your Hebrew or just getting by in their hurried English – they make more of an effort with language than we do. I feel it’s a moral responsibility to learn the native tongue of the country one’s living in. But I haven’t taken any initiative. After the three-week ulpan class finished, I haven’t looked at any notes whatsoever. I loaded the Rosetta Stone Hebrew disc onto my computer, but I have yet to install it. So if the teller actually would have called me an “ignorant moron,” he would have been right.

The point is: Israelis’ bROke eNgLiSh is light years ahead of any bROke language Americans fail to learn. The fact that they even have a sign in another language – even if "change" is spelled three different ways – is a significant advancement from anything I’ve seen in the States. We’re spoiled in that every other culture revolves around our needs, and we don’t take the time or exert the energy to reciprocate when we have the opportunity. This is exactly what so many foreigners have a problem with when it comes to American culture, and I think our culture really needs to cange.

So after I’ve completely mastered all the dirty words in Hebrew, I’m going to continue to practice my Eevreet

Thursday, October 15, 2009

Wash. Rinse. Repeat sparingly.

Things in Tel Aviv are always under construction. It’s not that there are huge skyscrapers that always need repairing. But rather, the Israelis are counterconstructive, so to speak. Anyway, they are doing some digging and repairs on our building, and warned us that the water would be shut-off from midnight until five in the morning.

Now when an Israeli says midnight to five AM, what that usually means is 2:30 until about 9 AM. They’re always late. At least when it comes to things that absolutely, positively have to be done on time. Last night everyone was prepared for a midnight cut-off. To be safe, many even planned to have all their water needs finished by 11:30. But nobody was prepared for a 10:30 cut-off. The water was shut off an hour and a half early! But it was my fault for not anticipating this. After all, at some point the construction workers had to make up for their perpetual tardiness.

Israel has a water shortage. This shouldn’t come to a surprise since it’s in the middle of the desert. But the past years have been especially bad. Many of the crops have been ruined because of drought, which in turn largely affects their agricultural production. (More about this here.)

Locals are used to limiting their water intake. They grow up practicing habits like turning off their faucets mid-brush or eating grapes without washing them. Unlike Americans who take two 30-minute steaming hot showers per day. When the bathroom mirrors fog up, Americans see this as an obstacle preventing them from staring at themselves, while Israelis see it as a chance to collect and drink the condensation.

Anyway, you can only imagine the apocalyptic crisis that must have occurred in our Anglo-dominated building when the water was cut short an hour and a half early. Chaos. “The water is out?! OMG!” some yelled. “I still have to brush my teeth!” others panicked. I too was upset, as I was quite dehydrated from running around the building screaming about not having water.

But none of these situations were as serious as poor Michelle’s. Michelle had just returned from a long jog on the beach. She smelled. And as she heated up the water and prepared for her shower, she was denied her basic right to cleanliness.

“I may not be able to go to work tomorrow,” she worried. But that didn’t make much sense. Israelis, mainly the religious, go days without showering or wearing deodorant. If anything, a nice bath may be considered a health violation here.

But since there was absolutely no way of knowing when the water would be turned back on, we improvised. We grabbed two water bottles that my friend had in his refrigerator, and planned to bathe Michelle. She quickly eliminated the idea of a full-body wash due to the fact that two guys were conducting this operation. Actually, really only one; I was more taking pictures. Which also didn’t help our plea for a full frontal wash. But her hair was the most important thing that needed to be cleaned. And due to the amount of hair she had, there wouldn’t have been enough water for her body anyway.

She tilted her head back and my friend started washing. And as he was scrubbing, I couldn’t help but think of Adam Sandler’s Israeli character, The Zohan. “I just want to make people silky-smooth!” I kept quoting in my head as I watched my non-Israeli (yet now honorary Israeli) friend masterfully wash Michelle’s hair with two bottles of water. I was witnessing Middle Eastern magic.

"The Zohan" washes Michelle's hair with a water bottle in the sink because of the building's early H2O shut-off.

Moving on, at about 11:45 PM, about 15 minutes after finishing Michelle’s Israeli wash and 15 minutes before the water was supposed to be turned off, I returned to my room. I was still very thirsty, and forgetting that the water was shut-off, I turned on the faucet to get a drink. And of course, the water started to flow. I ran to the bathroom and turned on the shower. That was flowing too. Everyone started to come out of their rooms: “The water is back on!”

In my last post I talked about the very relaxed approach of an Israeli. We figured that since the water was turned off at 10:30, there was no predicting the next time it will be turned back on. So we panicked and tried to make the best of our situation, as most Westerners do. But had we just relaxed and waited a bit longer, the water would have been working fine; Michelle could have taken a full-body shower and I wouldn’t have been mentally preparing myself for another Yom Kippur fast. Patience is an essential skill to have as a developing Israeli.

But still, at least for one night we were able to convince an American girl to only use two bottles of water to wash her hair. I’m seriously putting in a bid to the Israeli government to receive some sort of Environmental Metal of Honor…

Monday, October 12, 2009

Underdressed to Kill

Yesterday was my first day of work at Chaos Films. And to say the least, it was somewhat chaotic. Within the first hours I was given the assignment to read, analyze and discuss a script that the company will be submitting to Berlinale (link for more info) in order to get the story developed. The script is called The Syrian, and, honestly, the script doesn't do the story justice.

Anyway, more from this in future posts. My boss, Avi, told me and the screenwriter of The Syrian, Michele (the guy's way of spelling it), to attend the premier of an Israeli film called Lebanon. He gave us his tickets, and the two of us were entering a world of Israeli film in which neither of us were familiar with. (Lebanon is a film that takes place entirely inside an Israeli tank. I highly recommend seeking it out in a few months in America. Here's an article about it.)

Michele, a 40+ year-old French Moroccan who is struggling to keep his feet grounded with his new script, picked me up to attend the premier. I was wearing black pants with a nice polo, but he was dressed much finer. He had black slacks, polished black shoes, and a black button-down exposing an Israeli wilderness of chest hair. When we were younger and sent away to have trees planted in Israel, I didn’t realize they were being planted on his chest. He looked and acted like his screenplay had already hit it big.

“You’re not dressed well enough,” he said to me upon entering his silver convertible.
“What do you mean? I think I look nice.”
“You need button-down. None of these, howdoyousay, T-shirts.”
“Well, it’s too late now. It’s gonna have to do.”
“Ehhhh. I guess. People will just think you’re somebody’s son.”

If there’s anything I both appreciate and loathe about Israeli culture it’s that there’s never a standard for dress, yet people will always make a brutally honest comment about your wardrobe.

We were the first ones to arrive, despite being late. But that was OK because we had infinite access to the free food and drink offered. As we stuffed ourselves, more and more people began to arrive. Supposedly many of them were famous. But as I was looking for these famous people, I couldn’t tell any of them apart. Everyone was wearing house clothes. Even, as Michele pointed out, the famous ones. This was a premier, right??

“Am I still too underdressed?” I asked Michele somewhat rhetorically.
“No, no. Everyone here looks so shlubby. I hate it. I hate that about Israel. When I was younger and used to dress up for school because it made me feel good, my teachers used to ask me if I was getting married.”
“Why do you think that is?”
“I think because of the army. The army makes us so disciplined that afterward nobody cares to dress up. It’s completely the opposite of America. Nobody, not even the janitor, would dare not dress up to a movie premier.”

At first, I couldn’t tell if this was something I liked or disliked about Israeli society. The only people that really dressed up were the main people of the film, and of course Michele. On one hand (the hand that Michele wanted to slap everyone with), Israeli’s don’t take much anything, aside from the army, seriously. They’re never on time, they rarely dress up, and their lunch breaks range as long as their workdays. However, they’re more relaxed. They stressed enough throughout their services that now they feel an obligation to relax. And being relaxed works for them in the long run as they have somehow created a first-world country in a third-world environment.

Furthermore, being underdressed isn’t a big deal because they don’t judge one another as critically as we do in America. Never once at this huge (yet small in comparison) premier did I hear any sort of Joan Rivers-type characters yell “Who are you wearing?!” The superficial society that has enveloped America doesn’t exist here.

We entered the theater and there I sat: In Israel, next to a French Moroccan, who wrote a script called The Syrian, watching a war movie called Lebanon.

And then I began to chuckle to myself as I realized how lucky I was to be in the situation I was in, as well as what I was going to wear to work tomorrow…

It was a good first day.

(Some pictures of the premier below)

The actors of "Lebanon" dressed somewhat nicely.

Some important studio executives dressed very nicely.

The other famous "shlubbs" of the Israeli entertainment industry.