New Aspire Series About African-American Faith Leaders: The Scroll

Posted on February 6, 2013 at 8:00 am

The Scroll is a new series from director Parrish Smith shown on Magic Johnson’s Aspire Network featuring intimate, inspiring interviews with more than 50 African-American clergy.

 

Some of the faith leaders featured in the documentary are: Bishop T. D. Jakes, Rev. Al Sharpton Jr., Rev. Bernice A. King, Dr. Calvin O. Butts III, Rev. Dr. Jamal Bryant,Bishop Noel Jones, Pastor Floyd H. Flake, Bishop Kenneth Ulmer, Bishop Charles E. Blake, Rev. Dr. Della Reese Lett, Bishop Paul S. Morton, Pastor A.R. Bernard, and Bishop Joseph L. Garlington.

Smith generously took some time to talk to me about the series.

What surprised you most about making “The Scroll?”

How long it took to make it!  It was supposed to take one year, but it took three years to get access to the ministers, to get through their staff.  We got rejected, we would fax and call and and email and talk to assistants and they would say “who are you?”  We got no’s for a long time.  After a while, the yeses started to come through but the process took a long time.

What made them reluctant to participate?

Ministers and pastors have bulls eyes on their backs.  People have bad intentions and want to exploit them.  A lot of people see pastors as crooks.  One pastor gets caught in a scandal and all of a sudden all pastors are bad.  So many ministers are protective.  And there’s the scheduling problem as well.  They have traveling ministries and the scheduling is difficult.  But the primary problem is they don’t know who you are, and that’s understandable.

Were some of them concerned that revealing too much about themselves would interfere with their ministry?

Not necessarily.  We interviewed a few people we did not use because they weren’t being open and forthcoming.  But mos of them were.

What makes somebody a great preacher?

A minister told me that “a great sermon is the one you need at that particular time.”  A great preacher is subjective.  But perhaps he tells a story about how he overcame obstacles.  And perhaps you are sitting in the congregation going through something and it hits you at that time and hits other people at that time.  A great preacher is someone who can deliver a great message and a timely message from the heart.   But it comes from God; it doesn’t come from them.  They move themselves out of the way and let it flow through them to the congregation.

What is the importance of music in the church?

Music is a form of ministry, another form of prayer.  I know some people who really don’t get much out of church or out of the sermon, but they do from song.  Particularly in an African-American church, that tradition of music is historical in our culture.  Old gospel spirituals, old hymns, have been with us for a long time.  It’s a huge element in church.

Is humor important in ministry?

Yes and no.  Humor can help deliver a message.  But some people just want a strong, powerful message, very direct.  Some people think if it’s humorous, it’s not too strong.  I like it.  I think it helps to ease what they’re saying.  I know ministers who use humor and some who don’t.

What do you think about congregations taking advantage of new technologies to reach people?

If you stay home and watch church, you’re missing the fellowship.  If you’re at home watching it online you’re missing the camaraderie that you get in church.  But you have to change with the times.  You have to evolve and transcend the technology.  You can reach people who can’t come to church.  They can watch and still get the message.

How can churches reach out to younger people?

Some churches and some denominations are more traditional, like many AME churches.  They can lose the younger audience.  But if the pastor is young and the service is more upbeat, they can appeal to a younger crowd.  I was raised in a church that was very traditional.  I got very bored with church.  I went to college and didn’t go to church.  It wasn’t until I heard Kirk Franklin and more modern gospel that it brought me back to church, a church that wasn’t as structured and traditional, with shorter services.  The message was still there but the organ was replaced with more upbeat music.  That brought me back.

What do you want people to take away from watching this series?

It’s all about faith and hope.  We all go through trials and tribulations in life.  Hurricane Sandy, Katrina, the shooting in Connecticut, natural disasters and personal challenges.  “The Scroll” is about faith to help us Ministers are often unsung heroes.  We are distracted by the small percentage who are in the media for their mistakes instead of focusing on the good that most of them do.  Ministers are very smart, they’re great orators, and they give so much.  We don’t see them teaching children and going to hospitals and inspiring people every day, all the things that they do.  We see them on Sunday but they do so much more.  And “The Scroll” is a homage to my father, who was a pastor.

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Documentary Spiritual films Television

Jewish Gilt — New Television Series on the Jewish Channel

Posted on February 4, 2013 at 8:00 am

Jewish Gilt with Jonathan Greenstein is a wonderful new series on the Jewish channel that explores the precious artifacts treasured by Jewish families and the stories that go with them.

I had the pleasure of speaking to Greenstein about the show.

I’ve seen the episode of the show and I think it’s just great – so tell me how it all came about.

14 years old I get thrown out of a Jewish school, and I’m free at 1 o’clock in the afternoon and I take a job in an antiques store, somehow evolving over the next 30 years to become America’s antique Judaic expert and if you Google me I have probably 10,000 articles about antique Judaica.  The story is obviously a lot deeper than that, but that’s it in a nutshell.

About a year ago, I was contacted by a TV producer in Los Angeles that wanted to put together a “Jewish Pawn Stars” or a “Jewish Storage Wars” about antique Jewish ritual art.  But it would have meant me flying back and forth to L.A. constantly, so co-incidentally within a week The Jewish Channel which is located here in New York – Manhattan – they contacted me also, and both had the same brilliant idea literally within a week of each other.

I took the gig – I thought it would be fantastic, and it was local.

What I like best about the show is that it’s as much about the stories as it is about the value of the objects.

Absolutely, 100%. It’s never only just about money – I own other companies, other businesses, real estate firms and things like that. But Judaica – it’s a passion, it’s a love.

I love history in general, I love Jewish history in particularly obviously because I’m Jewish – so each and every time I get a piece in front of me it’s a whole life new experience. You have a life experience in your hands.

Many of the objects that come to you were treasures that were passed down in families and often hidden, and brought along when everything else was left behind, right?

Yes, that’s correct. Most of the items that survived the Holocaust came to this country between 1880 and 1917, during the wave of the big immigration before WWI.

Anybody that managed to get out of Eastern Europe, Russia, Poland, obviously Germany, and any of those areas – any time after that really they were not allowed to take too many things because of communism. You know, they just didn’t allow anything to leave the country – if you left you left by yourself, and if you got lucky you didn’t get killed.

Obviously in the Holocaust, Hitler not only destroyed all of our people that were still living at the time but took each and every object of art and melted for the war effort. They melted brass, they melted silver, they melted iron, copper obviously – whatever small items were made of gold.

They even took Torah scrolls, which is the Old Testament, and they used them for leather, so Hitler not only succeeded in murdering 6 million Jews, but there wasn’t much left in Europe. That’s why these things are not only so interesting but so rare and valuable.

And you see a lot of the items that were found even in the poorest of homes – so that would be Sabbath candle holders and spice boxes?

Judaica really is any item – any tangible object that’s associated with the Jewish religion, you know, mainly revolving around the Sabbath.  Our Sabbath is Friday night, Saturday night – Friday night we’ll welcome the Sabbath in by saying a prayer or a small sanctification over a glass of wine or grape juice, and that’s in a Kiddush cup.  On Saturday night we dismiss the Shabbat – you know, the Sabbath, with a small little prayer over cloves, over fragrances, because we’re so sad that the Sabbath is leaving that we get to be invigorated and woken up, so we smell cloves.  Sabbath candles are obviously on Friday night – we light the candles before we say the blessing, which also illuminates the home for the Sabbath.

Now, all of these three items could be made decoratively depending on where the Jew was living at the time – if he was living in Germany, let’s say in 1910, it was the art deco influence. If a Jew was living in Poland in the 1920’s it was much more a simplistic art. Jew’s never really had their own style of art – they’d just develop wherever they were living at a time.

Other objects of Judaica – the big ones are menorahs.  Hanukkah is a very popular holiday towards the end of the year.  Because it’s such a celebratory holiday, it’s usually very decorative and very beautiful.

Now, as the decorativeness increases that the value of these things increases significantly.  Most Jews were very, very poor. It’s only when we came to this country that we were able legally to be allowed to try and make money. But back in the old country Jews were peasants, so to find something extravagant that was owned or commissioned or by a wealthy Jewish family is very rare.

And what are some of the objects in your family that have special meaning to you?

It’s interesting that you ask that. We’re Americans for close to six generations on one side, and seven generations on other. We moved from Vienna in the 1840s from what I’m told one side, and from Hungary or what was then the Austria-Hungarian Empire of in the 1870s. So over the course of generations we became very un-Jewish my family, just through assimilation and generations of nobody really caring. Both of my parents were born Jewish, but they just weren’t very observant.   So there really was nothing left. Because we came here so early, just over the course of the last 100 or 150 years I guess it was lost, or sold, or just not cared about – which is something that we find constantly.

I have objects come to our market and we have objects that come to our gallery – you get people that have really either lost interest or have no need for the Judaic artefacts in their household. Because these items survived the wars, only through their escape to America – generally during the wave of great Jewish emigration, over the course of 100, 120, 130 years, a lot of times families assimilate.

You know, I bought a kiddush cup from a person the other day from a men whose father’s father was Jewish. These things just descended in their family – he had absolutely no use or no sort of emotional attachment to it. He just wanted to sell it.

So in America only a very small percentage or religious and observant, and most Jews in America are not traditionally observant of Jewish rituals. Many are attached to Jewish culture, but during the course of assimilation these things become available for sale.

I think that one of the things that makes these objects so intriguing is that they’re associated with rituals that did occur in the home, whether you’re talking about a seder plate or an etrog box or a mezuzah – those are the things that are in the home and not in the synagogue.

Mezuzahs are very collectable, but generally not very expensive. You could find an antique mezuzah selling for like $40 or $80, because it’s not really decorative. Most Jews that were living outside of the country who obviously had them on the doors, kind of hid them and recessed them in the doorway itself, not to attract too much attention. So not a lot has survived, however there was on artisan in the 1960s – Ilya Schor. He made mezuzahs out of silver and they become extremely rare and extremely collectable. I’ve sold those between $15,000 and $25,000 apiece.

Is it difficult because of the Holocaust and the many other expulsions of Jews over the world to get provenances and documentation on these pieces?

For the most part the answer is yes. When it comes to personal objects, the majority of them – the overwhelming majority of them come from homes right here in New York or in America. I just came back from L.A. – there’s a tremendous Jewish population there also. There’s over half a million Jews in California.

So most of the objects I come across either come from collections that have been there for dozens and dozens of years – recently we just bought a spice box for $337,000 from the Gustave Tuck collection. That provenance goes back to the 1920s, which was just awesome.

But anything that came out of Europe – it’s very difficult to tell where the provenance came from. Mostly the communities were completely destroyed and there was nothing left, you know? If you found a torah ornament, let’s say from Krakow, Poland, there’s nobody there to say who had this or who this belonged to. That just doesn’t exist.

So many of these things are in private collections and museum collections, and theoretically they’re “provenance-less.”

One thing I’ve always been very curious about – featured on the episode I saw was the guy who had that amazing, amazing collection that just went on forever. What is it that makes somebody a collector? What is that makes somebody want to have not just one spice box, but 25 spice boxes?

It’s a disease, it really is! They have a disease – it’s just a good disease! A person in my opinion is born a collector. When I was four years old my grandfather used to take me to an Aquaduct racetrack, and I used to go on the floor, collect the losing tickets and put them in order. You know, collecting is in nature – it’s people who are born to accumulate and collect.

But when it comes to the Jewish religion and the Jewish culture, people that may not necessarily be observant – they may not be religious, but they want to decorate their home with their heritage. They want to buy three spice boxes, four kiddish cups, and once you get the fourth one you kind of want that fifth example – one from Germany, one from Poland, one from the Ukraine, let’s get an example from Iraq, let’s get an example from Lithuania, you know.  Many collectors burn out after five or six purchases, but then you have tremendous collections – like Michael Steinhardt.  He’s selling his collection now actually, but he accumulated over 700 pieces over the course of the last 20 years of collecting.

You know, you find something that you’re attracted do that you don’t have, you buy it.

 

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Television

Today’s Big Game: The Puppy Bowl

Posted on February 3, 2013 at 12:00 pm

Animal Planet’s most popular show is the Puppy Bowl, now in its ninth year.  Today’s broadcast features fan favorites like the Water Bowl Cam, tail-gating fans, and the hamster-steered blimp, this year’s big game is sure to be a tail-wagger. For the first time ever, viewers can see slow motion replays with the new Cute Cam. And be on the lookout for the cheerleaders — they’re hedgehogs!

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Television

Jen Chaney on Liz Lemon and “30 Rock”

Posted on January 31, 2013 at 3:59 pm

Two television programs with almost-identical themes premiered in the fall of 2006.  They were both behind-the-scenes shows about the writers and performers on a late-night topical sketch comedy series.

One was an hour-long drama from “The West Wing’s” Aaron Sorkin, starring “Friends” alum Matthew Perry.  The other was a half-hour comedy from Tina Fey, then best known as the Weekend Update anchor on “Saturday Night Live.”

I not only assumed that Sorkin’s “Studio 60” would be a triumph, I actually loved it.  Critics and audiences did not.  Meanwhile, “30 Rock,” lasted for seven years.  While it never had a huge audience, it had a very loyal one, and it has been very influential.  In fact, Sorkin himself appeared on one episode, making fun of “Studio 60.”

The always-brilliant Jen Chaney has an insightful piece on Slate about Fey’s influence as a woman writing and producing her own show, both in paving the way for producer/writer/stars like Whitney Cummings and Lena Dunham and in her commentary on the television business and the corporate world.

But if we learned anything from 30 Rock—aside from the fact that it’s possible to get away with putting both Jane Krakowski and Jon Hamm in black face when done in the proper comedic context—it’s that the TV business is liberally peppered with “dummies,” as Lemon would call them. Some are actual dummies, while others may be legitimately intelligent individuals, like Jack Donaghy, who nevertheless fill their network’s programming lineup with shows that cater to dummies (MILF Island). What is great and smart does not always survive, and with every flicker of progress for TV gender equality comes a setback, like the recent cancellations of Fox’s Ben and Kate and ABC’s Don’t Trust the B—- in Apt. 23, both of which were created by women.

Even though more opportunities for women now exist, TV comedy, like TV in general, still remains an unquestionably male-dominated field. Modern Family has been the Emmy-anointed Best Comedy on television for three years running, but only one of the 12 producers credited with last year’s victory is a woman. Fewer than half of the members of the writing staff of The Big Bang Theory are Pennys as opposed to Sheldons. According to IMDB, in the 20-plus years that The Simpsons has been on the air, only seven of its 71 episode-writing credits belong to women. Even the 30 Rock writing staff skews male but, to its credit, just barely: According toNBC, five of its 12 current writers are women.

The story of the show within the 30 Rock show reflects this reality in its usual hyperbolically humorous terms. Just look at Liz Lemon’s arc: She started out running a sketch-comedy series called The Girlie Show, which was defeminized to become TGS with Tracy Jordan and, finally, in a recent act of corporate-sponsored desperation designed to save the show from cancellation, turned into Bro Body Douche Presents the Man Cave, with Liz Lemon’s name in the credits changed to Todd Debeikis. The subtext: Sure, there’s a lot more lady business on TV these days. But ultimately, the place is still Bro-Town.

Which brings us to what may be the most important lesson and legacy of 30 Rock, at least for those looking at it as a guidepost for women in the entertainment field: the relationship between Liz Lemon and Jack Donaghy. Much has been said about the fact that Fey and her writers smartly opted to avoid a romance for their two foils, even though there were occasional zaps of sexual energy between them. Others—most notably Linda Holmes at NPR—lamented the degree to which Lemon eventually turned into a completely inept pseudochild who couldn’t function without approval from Daddy Donaghy. That piece and others expressing frustration with the state of Liz Lemonism circa the latter seasons of 30 Rock prompted Emily Nussbaum of The New Yorker to leap to the defense of both Lemon and her relationship with her superior. “Liz needed Jack because her life was a mess, but their rapport wasn’t primarily based around gender: it was about the cocky powerful suits versus the smug weakling creatives, although this satire was done (for once) with a woman at the center,” she wrote.

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Actors Television Writers

Who Let the Dogs Out — New Hallmark Series About the Skateboarding Dog

Posted on January 31, 2013 at 8:00 am

Tillman the Skateboarding Dog, who surfs and snowboards, too, rolls onto the Hallmark Channel in the new original series “Who Let the Dogs Out,” premiering Friday, Feb. 1 (1 p.m. ET/PT, 12C).  “Who Let The Dogs Out” is the story of a very special, hugely adventurous bulldog named Tillman who has a taste for outdoor recreation.  The Hallmark Channel Original Series chronicles Tillman and his owner Ron as they travel the nation in search of the most spectacular, high-flying canines, while running into some celebrity guests along the way, including Betty White, Florence Henderson, Gary Sinise and many more.

Named after the great U.S. Army Ranger Pat Tillman, Tillman the dog is described by Ron as less a bulldog and more “a ballerina, in the shape of a pot roast.”  Tillman learned skateboarding because Ron’s other pooch, a Rottweiler, had a thing for small wheeled contraptions, pushing them around, but never actually riding them.  However, when Tillman saw the skateboard, it was love at first ride.  Ron picked up Tillman his very own board, and the rest is history.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vlYylzcGdMs
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