206
Backers
$10,721
pledged of $10,000 goal
0
seconds to go
Funding Successful
This project successfully raised its funding goal on July 6, 2010.
Pledge $1 or more
A Punk Jews button to sport around town on your bag, your jacket, sweatshirt, or yamulke
Pledge $5 or more
Bubbe Pack - A cookbook sampler of traditional and delicious Jewish recipes. Courtesy of the online cooking series "Feed Me Bubbe." The best Latkes on the planet!! Hands down!
Pledge $20 or more
Shemspeed Pack - An EP from Shemspeed recording artists including Kosha Dillz, DeScribe, Y-Love, Diwon, Brody, and Eprhyme.
Pledge $40 or more
Y-Love Pack - Y-Love's debut record "This is Babylon" and the "Change" EP.
Pledge $50 or more
Dveykus Pack - A hysterical Jewish themed t-shirt from Dveykus.com! Let us know your preference and size!
Pledge $75 or more
Israeli Keffiyeh Package - The most Punk Jew scarf ever! The Israeli Keffiyeh, with its intricate Star of David pattern, and words "AM ISRAEL CHAI" (The nation of Israel Lives) in Hebrew. weaved into its fabric.
Pledge $150 or more
Punk Jews Mega Pack! - The Israeli Keffiyeh, Dveykus T-shirt, Y-Love EP and CD.
Pledge $200 or more
Tzedakah Pack - Shemspeed concert tickets, The Israeli Keffiyeh, Dveykus T-shirt, Y-Love EP and CD.
Pledge $300 or more
Mitzvah Pack - DVD of the 1st season of Punk Jews signed by Y-Love, Levi, Rivka and the creators of Punk Jews and Shemspeed concert tickets, The Israeli Keffiyeh, Dveykus T-shirt, Y-Love EP and CD.
Pledge $800 or more
A made-to-order Bubble Coat designed by Levi Okunov.
Pledge $1,000 or more
Shabbos Pack - A shabbos dinner in your honor with home-cooked traditional Jewish food like you’ve never tasted before with the creators and subjects of Punk Jews, plus other goodies.
Pledge $10,000 or more
Moshiach Pack!!! - The Punk Jews Emmy-award winning crew will produce a video of your next simcha (special occasion). It can be anything. Your wedding, Bar Mitzvah, birthday party etc.
Project By
Connected as Jesse Zook Mann (1048 friends)
Jesse Zook Mann is an Emmy Award winning producer and cinematographer from New York City. Recently, Jesse is producing the documentary series My 1st Time for NBC, which has earned top ratings for LXTV. In the past year My 1st Time specials have included coverage of the Summer Olympics, The Tribeca Film Festival, The NYC Marathon, and the Presidential Inauguration. Recently Jesse has been segment producing on NBC’s hit shows Open House New York, and 1st Look, as well as I Do. Jesse Co-Produced Splitting Hairs, the story of the World Beard and Mustache Championships, which was an official selection at the 2009 Silverdocs festival.
Jesse was born in Manhattan to hippie parents: a professional modern dancer mother and father in the used car business. He was raised in five neighborhoods in Queens and three towns on Long Island. Jesse attended the Park School at Ithaca College, where he organized activist groups addressing social justice issues. Jesse’s commitment to activism and media production often converge and have resulted in work for Democracy Now TV, The Samish Indian Nation, Youth In Action Now, The Social Justice Fund, Gay Lesbian And Straight Education Network, The Women And Cuba Collaboration, and Partners In Entertainment Against Cruelty Against our Elders.
Jesse has worked on projects for MTV Networks, MSNBC TV, Chanel, Nintendo, JC Penny, Broadway.com, Tony award winner Michael Cerveris, various broadway publicists, as well work airing on PBS.
Evan Kleinman is a 2-time Emmy nominated producer. For the past three years, he has produced for the Saturday primetime lifestyle series on NBC, LXTV 1st Look, and NBC’s hit real estate series, Open House NYC, both of which air on national television, the web, the Taxi Entertainment Network, Los Angeles gas station TVs, NJ PATH trains, Jet Blue, and Continental Airlines. In addition, Evan produced Made in Coney Island, a documentary about Coney Island’s past, present, and uncertain future, which was an official selection of The Coney Island Film Festival in 2008. In 2005, Evan spent a year teaching English in Japan, and produced various short documentaries about life as a foreigner. In the past, Evan worked on Race to Execution, an eye-opening documentary by Emmy-award winner Rachel Lyon about the death penalty in America, which aired on the Independent Lens series on PBS in 2006. Evan was also the editor for Girls: Moving Beyond Myth, a film about the challenges facing young women today, which is educationally distributed by Girls, Inc. As a student at Ithaca College, Evan produced the documentary entitled Livin’ the Music, Livin’ the Dance that follows a break dancing group as they prepare for a national championship and was awarded the James B. Pendleton Grant in 2004.
Saul Sudin is the writer and director of Jurotrip: “A Jewish, Historical, and Artistic perspective on a trip through the Northwestern Mediterranean” and The Stetson Pin. His films have been featured in various film festivals and have been shown at the Brooklyn Academy of Music’s BAM Rose Cinema and the Museum of Jewish Heritage in New York. He received his BFA in Film from the Pratt Institute with a minor in Film History and was the recipient of the Outstanding Merit Award in Media Arts & Film. He has directed, edited and done camerawork for a wide range of projects spanning commercial, short film, documentary, online media, interview, music video, award ceremonies, and television.
way to make your goal guys! congrats, I didn't realize I needed to submit my info to get my recipe book, cha ching!
Congrats, this looks great! Best of luck.
-Ken, Alli, and Max
Evan - a pleasure meeting you this weekend...this is AMAZING. Thank You both for your contribution to humanity. :)
good luck folks, just made a small contribution with grand hopes for an awesome project.
from melbourne, australia
http://jewonthis.wordpress.com/
Hi everyone,
Glad to see we've already got some takers for our latest gift offering "The Bubbe Pack" courtesy of the online cooking series "Feed Me Bubbe." However, I must clarify some confusion. As you may have noticed, we are giving them away for only $5. The reason for that is it is not a full cookbook but a cookbook sampler of a select few recipes. Thank you for your support of Punk Jews and hope you enjoy the cookbook sampler courtesy of "Feed Me Bubbe."
All the best,
Evan
I'm not sure how you order the t-shirts.
I didn't see any space.
Please advise. eugeno@aol.com
to you guys*
hate typos.
Hey! I was interested in this because of the title, and also didn't have much to give, but having grown up Orthodox Jewish in Miami, wanted to back a great looking project. Then, I watched the video, and there was Levi Okunov! He once left me a beautiful rendition of "Eishes Chayil" on my voicemail before Shabbos. Best of luck you you guys.
Didn't have much to give but I definitely had to support what looks to be an awesome project! Can't wait to see these mini-docs!
We certainly don't have any intention to lump anyone into any category - that's the point! I hope the lack of categorization makes your view of the project less silly, and hope you can enjoy some of the stories we have, all are very personal and very different.
-Jesse
I find two things very silly about this:
1) It's ridiculous to lump everyone featured in that video in the same category.
Some are trying to bring Torah into places where it's not so known like Secular society. These people will not give up on their Torah- even at the expense of being unaccepted by the secular world, though they truly hope to be accepted (for good reason- it can really fix things!).... See More
Others are trying to bring Secularism (including Torah-prohibited things) into places where it's not so known like the Torah world. Perhaps they even confuse the two entirely. These people will not give up their Secularism- even at the expense of being unaccepted by the Torah world, though they hope to be accepted.
There cannot be a bigger difference between the two "movements", and this promo severely confuses them.
2) These "movements" aren't really new at all.
The first "movement" mentioned above has always come and gone... you have the great Sefardic poets like Ibn Ezra, for example. This isn't a reason to shy away from it- rather we need more of this type of Torah-observant creativity.
The second has also always come and gone... you have the whole movement of Hellenistic Jews, for example. We should have learned our lesson to stay away from this destructive path already.
*sigh*
I think this clarification is very important for people to think about.