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Filmmaking process
Filmmaking process
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am a native Philadelphia writer/producer who also develops content that focus on the relevant topics that affect our communities, our country, and our planet.
I came across your documentary, Return to El Salvador, on www.huffingtonpost.com while researching stories about immigration for my Original Series for Television titled Meal Ticket. I must say wow! I became interested immediately and went to your site since I too have generated a keen interest as to why people of Latin America go through treacherous obstacles to leave their native lands. Meal Ticket conveys a solid storyline about migrant workers from Latin America and immigration. Many of my characters were based on natives of El Salvador who have come to America in search of a meal ticket.
I am seriously looking for partners to get this to the masses. I've solicited the script to many people on both coasts and it has been received very well. I would like to share the materials with your company. Below is a synopsis of the series. I also attached the pilot script as well.
Titled: Meal Ticket
Genre: Drama
Tagline: Everyone is entitled to a meal ticket; however everyone has to eat.
Logline: A 20 year old male who works in a busy upscale Washington, DC restaurant to help finance his return to Howard University. While working in the restaurant, he realizes that everyone who passes through the restaurant’s doors is waiting for a person or thing to depend on as a source of financial support; or in this case, a meal ticket.
Setting: Washington D.C., during America’s "era of stagnancy” and into the "new era of change“.
Premise: Meal Ticket is a character driven drama series based on making dreams happen in a dream taking world. We all have big dreams a...
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...nd leeches because he is perceived as their meal ticket. For the average young man, this all seems overwhelming and great, but to Keith its the life. Keith feels that becoming PRO is his destiny. However, an athletic career is not so promising due to football's high risk. Consequently, Keith will eventually figure that out the hard way.
Or take Bret’s roommate, Pinks. Pinks is an ambitious product of Queens, New York City who is an aspiring rapper/advertising major at Howard University. Although Pinks is a talented artists, he is a victim of cerebral palsy and is disabled. Since Pinks is disabled he depends on his talent as a lyricist and not on his degree to earn a living.
I hope that my story has sparked your interest and motivates you to actually read the MEAL TICKET SPEC PILOT.
Thank you for your time and all the best to Return to El Salvador.
Stephen Boos has worked in the food service industry for over 30 years. He started as a bus person and subsequently trained as a chef’s apprentice. Steve’s mother believed that a college education was something that everyone should receive. She felt that a college degree was a good investment in Steve’s future. In 1976 at his mother’s insistence, Boos moved to Northeastern Ohio to attend Kent State University where he earned a bachelor’s degree in business administration. After graduation, Steve began working for East Park Restaurant as a line cook. Using his education as a foundation, Steve made a point to learn everything he could about running a restaurant, from cutting meat to the bi-weekly food and beverage orders. His versatility, keen business sense, and ability to control costs resulted in Steve’s promotion to General Manager, as role he has held since 1995.
Bill Buford, New York Times writer, and avid home cook, unsuspectedly steps into the chaos of Babbo, an Italian restaurant owned by the boisterous, Mario Batali. His quiet and orderly life is shattered by the disorder and ruthlessness of a Michelin star kitchen. While Bill’s superego controls many aspects of his life, he is mostly driven by his id in the kitchen. When first beginning his tenure in the kitchen, Bill carried with him his superego drive, often incorporating his New York upper-middle class societal ideals into his manners and actions. These ideals which include politeness, orderliness, and a strive for perfection are often overshadowed and defeated by the chaotic environment of the kitchen and the self-centered nature of the
O’Connor, K., Sabato, L. J., Yanus, A. B, Gibson, Jr., L. T., & Robinson, C. (2011). American Government: Roots and Reform 2011 Texas Edition. United States: Pearson Education, Inc.
From War to Prosperity: 1940 - 1980. (2008, November 20). In Land of Contrast: A History of
Shreve, P., & Nguyen, B. M. (2006). 30/30 Thirty American Stories from the Last Thirty Years. New York, New York: Pearson Education.
Henretta, James A., and David Brody. America: A Concise History. Vol. 1. Boston/New York: Bedford/St. Martin's, 2009.
Create-a-meal, no my friend, instead you are given the tools to create-a-setting. You are presented with brilliant horses and jubilant music, bright colors and beautiful scenery, a blissful introduction, indeed. Shockingly enough, in the second paragraph it is quickly taken away from you. A dagger penetrates your balloon image. You are told that the smiles and happiness of the city are not genuine. Ursula K.
Ariana Vivas was only 9 years old when she handed a note to Illinois Representative Luis Gutiérrez during a press conference an advocacy group had organized. Ariana, like many young Hispanics, had been born in the Unites States. However, her father was part of the recent deportations that countless of undocumented immigrants and family members dread. Ariana’s testimony of her father’s deportation is a common story among children with undocumented parents. The documentary, Immigration Battle, explores the controversial issue over immigration. Immigration Battle takes you inside the halls of Congress to give you a perspective on the fight over immigration, the debate, the politics, as well as how Washington really works.
Barbour, Christine, and Gerald C. Wright. Keeping the Rupublic. 4thth ed. Washington DC: CQ Press,
Politics is the heart of America. To enact change in a major area of the nation, the politics must be discussed to no end and one must know how to speak the words of the...
Wilson, James Q., John J. DiIulio, Jr., and with Meena Bose. American Government: Institutions & Policies. 12th ed. Boston, MA.: Wadsworth Publishing, 2011.
1. O’Conner Karen and Larry Sabato. American Government: Continuity and Change, alternate 2004 ed. Longman Publishing, 2004.
Throughout the 1970s, the ability of any one person to work hard enough to transcend social stratification in the United States became difficult due to various domestic challenges. The reality Americans begun to see during the ‘70s was bleak, this being contributed in great part to ecopolitical events. In the year 1974, a recession begun that has continued to affect the United States economy to this very day. Harold Meyerson, a writer and journalist for the Washington Post and The American Prospect in the article “The 40-Year Slump” notes “The middle-income jobs of the nation’s postwar boom years have disproportionately vanished. Low-wage jobs have disproportionately burgeoned. Employment has become less secure. Benefits have been cut. The dictionary definition of “layoff” has changed, from denoting a temporary severance from one’s job to denoting a permanent severance” (1). It is important to consider this point because it really lays the foundation of the 1970’s; one of little hope, and one shaken by what became known as the 1973-1975 Recession. This recession affected practically every person living in the U.S, and changed the perception of the workplace. Through low-economic growth and high inflation, the economic term “stagflation” came about, and negatively influenced the success of countless Americans. Alejandro Reuss, co-editor for the magazine Dollars & Sense in the article “That ‘70s Crises” asserts "The economy seemed trapped in the new nightmare of “stagflation,” so called because it combined low economic growth and high unemployment (“stagnation”) with high rates of inflation” (1). This is a valuable point to consider, as this term is still used to this day, and has affected all aspects of life for many Americans. Mic...
“Decades of Change - 1960-1980.” Outline of U.S. History. U.S. Department of State. 2011. Web.
Schmidt, Shelley, and Bardes. American Politics and Government Today. Wadsworth Publishing Company, 1999, pgs. 325-327.