Wednesday, February 22, 2012

The Femmebots

Multimedia from the Female Gaze

Archive for the ‘Film’ Category

Week 5 Ideas

Posted by Femmebot On February - 17 - 2012

Melanie Feliciano
February 16, 2012

Yoga Murals (Non-fiction)
A yoga teacher who is tired of the typical yoga studio experience decides to teach outdoor classes in front of the most beautiful murals she can find in DC, Miami, LA and New York. The teacher and her students create their own art by photographing themselves in various yoga poses that enhance the murals. The story ends with a yoga class in Mexico City, where artist Diego Rivera, the father of mural painting, lived and worked in the 1920s.

The Wisest Tooth (Fiction)
A woman in her late 30s wakes up one morning with intense pain in her lower jaw. She is shocked to discover she has one wisdom tooth when her grandmother had told her as a child she was one of the lucky 35% of the population that would never have to worry about going through the pain of surgery like the “less evolved” humans around her. In this comedy, we see the woman accept her mediocrity as she waits for the oral surgeon to remove the “invading” tooth. At the end, she feels lighter, as if the weight of her big, fat ego had disappeared, and that she now has a better chance of becoming older and wiser than her snooty grandmother.

Big Bang Theory

Posted by Femmebot On February - 10 - 2012

big-bang-theoryA story: Left Brain vs. Right Brain
B story: Camera glasses
C story: Dodgeball

“The Big Bang Theory”
“East vs. West”
2/10/12
Melanie Feliciano

TEASER
INT. PHYSICS DEPARTMENT CAFETERIA
Wolowitz and Raj see a bulletin board with a notice for a dodgeball league.

Wolowitz says he was never good enough to play football, basketball or
soccer. He was always a mascot.

Raj says he was the best dodgeball player in the Dodgeball Federation of India.

The two look at each other and punch fists like Wonder Twin Powers.

ACT ONE
FADE IN:

INT. LEONARD AND SHELDON’S APARTMENT
Penny walks through the front door with a laptop and announces that
she has just taken the spinning dancer left brain-right brain quiz.

She says if the dancer spins clockwise, you use more of your right
brain. Counterclockwise, and you’re more of a left-brain person.

Sheldon pooh-poohs online quizzes as lonely hackers’ way of capturing
desperate single females’ IP addresses as he excitedly opens a FedEx
package and pulls out a pair of glasses that look exactly like
Leonard’s.

Leonard asks Sheldon why he’s suddenly wanting to go all “twinsies” on him.

Sheldon says, “It was either these or the spy sunglasses, and lord
knows the last thing I want to look like is a shady peeping tom while
I am recording people’s social interactions.

Penny grabs the glasses and says, “You mean, there’s a camera in
these? Like Lady Gaga’s snowboarding goggles?”

Leonard says, “Sheldon, you can’t just film people without them
knowing. It’s unethical.”

Penny puts the glasses on the coffee table and says, “Unless you’re a
waitress in LA.”

Sheldon says, “Penny, as much as I want to see you get your first big
break, the purpose of the glasses are not for show business, but
rather, an experiment in physics. When I am done, the Catholic Church
will be adding me to its list of apologies, under Galileo and the
Inquisition.

Leonard says, “Oh, Sheldon, do you really think you’re going to prove
Newton’s Three Laws of Motion wrong?

Penny tells Sheldon he should give science a break and balance out his
big fat left brain by trying three right brain exercises suggested by
the spinning dancer test:

1. Painting

2. Singing

3. Sex

Penny and Leonard stare at Sheldon.

Sheldon says one shouldn’t use spinning dancers to characterize brain
strengths. It provides a crude view of the “lateralization of brain
function,” or the concept that each side of the human brain
specializes in certain mental activities.

Leonard looks at Penny’s laptop and says he sees the dancer spinning
counterclockwise with his glasses and clockwise when he removes his
glasses.

Penny asks Leonard if he wants to make out.

Leonard says yes, puts his glasses on quickly and they leave Sheldon
alone in the apartment.

Sheldon looks at the laptop, raises his eyebrows and shuts it abruptly.

INT. PHYSICS DEPARTMENT CAFETERIA
Leonard, Wolowitz and Raj read the dodgeball rules.

Wolowitz says he can’t throw or catch very well so he will focus on
wearing the right gear.

Raj says he originally got his nickname “Brown Rocket” when he played
dodgeball in India.

Leonard squints to read the rules but he can’t see. He is wearing the
contacts Priya made him buy because he cant find his glasses.

Raj says he doesn’t want to hear about Leonard’s salacious activities
with his sister when they used to date.

Sheldon walks up to the table and hands Leonard his glasses. “I don’t
want to know what you and Penny were doing with mine but I want them
back.

Leonard says he doesn’t know where they are.

Wolowitz gasps suddenly and announces they can’t play unless they have
at least five players and two of them have to be women.

Amy walks up to the table and announces that she just got off the
phone with Bitch Magazine to explain why women are so good at
remembering the past, categorizing information and planning for the
future and men are not.

Leonard says it must be because women are naturally more left-brained.
“Or is it right brained?”

Sheldon harumphs at the left brain-right brain crap and says he is
shocked at Amy for selling out her knowledge as a brain scientist to
the pop culture feminist delusion of empowerment that merely
perpetuates the mass consumption of shoes and make-up.

Wolowitz begs Amy to join the dodgeball team.

Kripke walks over to the group and asks Amy to join his team.

Amy looks over at Sheldon and says she would be more than happy to do so.

ACT TWO

INT. PENNY’S BEDROOM
Penny brushes her hair and tells Amy that she has been exercising her
left brain by balancing her bank account and playing with a Rubik’s
cube.

Amy stares at Penny’s chest as she speaks and tells her that her left
side definitely looks larger and she should keep at it.

Penny models different pairs of high heel shoes and tells Amy she
should start using more of her feminine wiles to bed Sheldon because
it’s the only way he is going to become a more balanced human being.

Amy tries on Penny’s shoes when there is a knock on the door. Penny
goes to answer it when Amy sees the glasses sticking out from under
the bed.

Amy comes out of the bedroom and sees Leonard wearing his glasses and
looks confused.

Leonard asks Penny if she has seen Sheldon’s camera glasses.

Penny says no, that she left them on the coffee table the day before
when Sheldon announced his plans to film human social interaction.

Amy hides the glasses behind her back.

Leonard says the only way Sheldon will join the dodgeball team is if
he can film the entire game with his glasses.

Penny says “OMG! I used to play dodgeball in Nebraska all the time! I
catch a mean ball!”

Amy says Penny should play on her team instead (innuendo) to teach
Sheldon a lesson.

Leonard says he doesn’t care which team Penny plays on, as long as she
has fun (innuendo).

Amy is astounded by Leonard’s show of love and is convinced it’s
because sex bonds humanoids into symbiotic partnerships.

INT. PHYSICS DEPARTMENT GYM
Wolowitz arrives with green knee-high socks, short shorts, wife beater
and pencil moustache.

Sheldon, Burnadette and Raj, dressed as a girl, walk up behind
Wolowitz and put their hands on their hips like superheroes.

The other team is made up of Kripke, Leonard, Amy, Penny and one other
physicist.

Sheldon gets hit on the left side of his head and begins to recite bad poetry.

I feel different ways on different days
Depending on the weather or the stock exchange
Climbing up higher
My head is on fire
I feel like a liar
And still I feel different ways
On different days
Depending on the TV or my Facebook page

Amy is horrified and intrigued by Sheldon’s performance.

INT. LEONARD AND SHELDON’S APARTMENT
Wolowitz and Raj watch the spinning dancer on an iPad.

Wolowitz says, “If I look at her foot, I see her spinning counterclockwise.”

Raj says, “All I see are her nipples.”

Sheldon grabs the iPad as the sound of a Skype ring interrupts him.

It is Amy.

Sheldon gasps and throws the iPad on the sofa.

Raj picks it up and says “Oh my God, she’s naked! And she’s spinning clockwise!

Sheldon grabs the iPad back and tells Amy to put her clothes back on.

Amy says she recorded his entire performance at the dodgeball game and
posted it on Tumblr because she is so proud of him. She wants to hear
him recite poetry again, that she really enjoyed the exhibition of his
right brain and would like to see more.

Sheldon says he has always used both sides of his brain and that he is
glad she is supportive of his art.

TAG
INT. PHYSICS DEPARTMENT CAFETERIA
Raj and Wolowitz ooh and ahh at an iPad.

Sheldon asks if they are watching the footage Amy shot at the game,
and that he is working on a sonnet.

He glances at the iPad and then looks away with disgust.

Wolowitz turns his head and the iPad sideways and says he didn’t know
Leonard was so flexible and that Penny was so…

Raj passes out.

FADE OUT.

TV- Broadcast and Cable Industry Terms

Posted by Femmebot On February - 10 - 2012

Film and Video Industry TermsTV- Broadcast and Cable

Affiliate station                                   a local television station which is independently owned but contractually affiliated with a television network to broadcast the programs of the network

avail                                                                             a commercial advertising slot available for sale during a particular program

basic cable                                                       a group of cable networks and programming provided by a local cable operator for its lowest fee; does not include pay cable or “premium” networks

broadcast                                                         to send an electromagnetic signal through the air from a transmitter to a receiver

cable franchise                                     a legal right issued by a local governmental jurisdiction, such as a state or county, to a local cable operator which allows the operator to provide service within that jurisdiction

cable television network         a national corporation which provides scheduled programming to local cable operators in exchange for subscriber fees

commercial television network           a national corporation which transmits regularly scheduled programs through television stations which it owns and operates or through independently owned television stations which it affiliates with

cost-per-point                                                 a measure of advertising costs based on how many thousands of viewers a program attracts

DBS                                                                            direct broadcast satellite- a service to provide cable networks, pay-per-view programs and, in some cases, local television stations to subscribers by transmitting a signal from a satellite to a small dish on the subscriber’s dwelling

day-parts                                                        a sectioning of the broadcast day into periods of time that are characterized by the demographics of the predominant viewers and are used for scheduling decisions

diary                                                                            a written record of household television viewing for a period of a week that is sent to the ratings service

demographics                                                  the statistical characteristics of a specific human population, such as a television or movie audience; typically includes age, sex, and race

first-run syndication                           the initial licensing and first showing of a program in the off-network market which consists primarily of local television stations

HUT                                                                           households using television – the number of households in the U.S. which are watching television at a particular point in time; also called the “available audience”

Independent station                            a local television station that is not owned by nor affiliated with a commercial television network or PBS

local cable operator                             a company which has a cable franchise to provide television programming over cables from the company office to the subscriber’s home

member station                                   a local television station that is affiliated with the Public Broadcast Service; normally a non-profit organization, local government or university

movie-of-the-week                              a made-for-television film produced specifically for a slot in an ongoing series of film presentations or a film licensed for such a slot

MSO                                                                           multiple system operator – a company which owns a number of local cable operators in different locations or jurisdictions; an example of  horizontal integration

national presenting entity       an organization that executive produces and provides programs to PBS; often organized to support films by and/or for particular groups within the society

national program service         programs selected and regularly scheduled by PBS for its member stations in an effort to compete with the commercial television networks

O & O                                                                         owned and operated – a local television station that is owned and managed by a commercial television network

off-net syndication                             the process whereby programs which were first broadcast on a television network are reused by a collections of buyers including local television stations and cable networks

passive meter                                                  a device that attaches to a television that indicates to the rating service whether or not the television is turned on and to what station or network

pay cable                                                         in general, the system for transmitting television signals and programming by wire to the homes of fee-paying subscribers; also refers to the cable television networks for which the local cable operator charges an extra or premium fee over the basic cable rate

pay-per-view                                                  a cable television delivery method wherein the subscriber is billed only for specific programs as they are made available and selected by the subscriber

pay television                                                 subscriber-paid-for television, generally the first pay television window for a film which is presented uncut and uncensored; includes cable and satellite delivered options.

people meter                                                   a device, similar to a remote control, that is used to tell the rating service not only that the television is on and to what station or network, but also who in the household is watching

pilot                                                                            typically a ninety-minute or two-hour movie-of-the-week that is produced as a hopeful forerunner to a television series

potential audience                               the number of households in the U.S. with a television, “TV Households”; currently estimated to be 111.4 million as of September 2006

public access channel                          a channel(s) the local cable operator provides to the residents of the local jurisdiction for the production and dissemination of local programs; negotiated as part of the cable franchise agreement

rating                                                                           the number of households tuned to a particular station and program expressed as a percentage of the potential audience or households with television

regional network                                 a co-op organization created by a group of PBS member stations in a region of the country to review and negotiate a license for independent programs

share                                                                            the number of households tuned to a particular station and program expressed as a percentage of the HUT

subscriber                                                        a person who pays a fee to a local cable operator or DBS operator for service; also, a person who contributes to a PBS member station

target audience                                   a specific audience segment or demographic which a television or cable programmer seeks to reach with a television or cable program

underwriter                                                     an entity that provides tax deductible funds to a PBS member station or to the PBS National Program Service to help pay for the production of programs

Week 3 Ideas

Posted by Femmebot On February - 9 - 2012

Melanie Feliciano
February 9, 2012

The Clumsy Cook (TV Series)

A Latina bombshell whips up traditional recipes like arroz con pollo, tamales and strawberry empanadas and then hosts dinners for politicians, economists, and NGOs. Her dream is to put these movers and shakers in one room with good food so that they connect the dots of international problems and come up with innovative solutions. The show is based on a column I wrote of the same name for The Biscayne Times community newspaper in Miami.

Urban Mermaidz (Fiction)

This is the next story after “The Witches of Coconut Grove.” After Gysela leaves the company in Coconut Grove, a hurricane catapults her to the year 2050. Coconut Grove and the rest of Planet MyAmi is now underwater so Gysela moves to the top floor of a skyscraper and starts her own company with the Urban Mermaidz. One day, Sharky B, a computer programmer by day and a DJ by night, hacks into their central operating system. Gysela is annoyed at first and then falls in love with Sharky B. To the dismay of the Urban Mermaidz, she decides to chop off her head to become a housewife. Based on one of my romances, the style is science fiction meets Sex in the City.

Story of the Eye

Posted by Femmebot On February - 7 - 2012

story-of-the-eyeI would like to adapt Georges Bataille’s “Story of the Eye.” I was introduced to the book by an artist I met on a bus in San Francisco in 2001. The visual that stuck with me was Simone sitting in a saucer of milk, although the name of the book is what led me to explore my own obsession with eyeballs. I had been writing my first short story in a writing workshop called “Angela’s Lair” which was about an agoraphobic woman who runs a voyeur web site from her tiny apartment. The character wouldn’t dare set foot outside her apartment, for fear she would get raped or murdered, and yet she would get naked in front of the cameras (ie, eyeballs) in her apartment on a daily basis.

Years later, after eating too many mushrooms in Miami, the story evolved into a surrealistic tale of a woman who sleeps with a cancer survivor and wakes up in the morning with eyeballs on her boobs, which she later calls “The Boob Tube.”

I’ve got lots of footage already of eyeballs and I would like to use this and perhaps shoot some new footage for this adaptation.

While researching, I found this interesting interview with Bataille about the guilt that comes with being a writer because it is a frivolous and childish thing to be in the eyes of the commercial world. I hope to throw myself fully into my immorality through this exercise!!!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QQVCzj8fWc0&feature=youtube_gdata_player
Fade in

ext. watergate – day

int. kitchen – day

A saucer of milk.

SIMONE, a girl wearing a black pinafore with a starched collar, stands in front of the stove.

Turns on the gas flame.

Walks to the refrigerator.

Opens it.

A cat runs to the saucer. Paces around it.

Simone closes the refrigerator.

Holds a carton of eggs.

Takes one out.

Drops it into the pot.

Rolls her eyes as if bored of waiting for the water to boil.

EXT. WATERGATE – day

People running.

People sweating.

A BOY running.

int. kitchen – day

Simone rolls an egg on the counter top.

The cat laps the milk.

Runs away.

EXT. WATERGATE – day

The Boy stops in front of the Watergate.

Looks up.

int. kitchen – day

Simone shoves a whole hard-boiled egg in her mouth.

Mother (VO)

The tutor is here! What are you doing?

The boy stands in the doorway.

The cat rubs up against the boy’s legs.

Simone stares at the boy with the egg in her mouth.

The cat moves toward the saucer of milk.

Simone walks toward the boy.

Takes the egg out of her mouth.

Drops it on the ground.

Mashes it between her toes.

The cat licks the egg.

SIMONE

Do you dare me to sit in the saucer?

The cat rubs up against Simone’s legs.

BOY (VO)

I dare you.

ext. watergate – day

The boy runs out.

Stops to catch his breath.

Holds his sides.

Breathes heavily.

Looks up at the building.

int. kitchen – day

Simone keeps her eyes fixed on the boy.

Lifts the saucer of milk to a chair.

Lifts her dress.

Sits on top of the saucer.

The boy exhales. He was holding his breath.

They stare at each other.

The boy lays down on the floor, eyes still fixed on Simone.

ext. street – day

Car speeding.

Boy (VO)

Thus a love life started between the girl and myself.

int. living room – day

The boy stands in the doorway.

Simone buries her head in his shoulder.

Simone

I don’t want you to jerk off anymore without me.

ext. street – day

Car speeding from the other direction.

Boy (VO)

It was so intimate and so driven that we could hardly let a week go by without meeting.

Black

Sound of cars crashing into each other.

EXT. STREET – day

Simone and boy stand over MARCELLE’s body. The head is ripped off and bloody.

Simone strokes Marcelle’s hair as if it is the most beautiful thing she has ever seen.

The Boy watches Simone and rubs his crotch.

INT. office – day

Simone rubs herself on a bookshelf and moans.

Boy (VO)

Simone was usually very natural; there was nothing heartbreaking in her eyes or her voice.

EXT. STREET – day

Simone and Boy shoot pictures of MARCELLE’s body and post them to Facebook.

Boy (VO)

But on a sensual level, she so bluntly craved any upheaval that the faintest call from the senses…

INT. office – day

Simone, Boy and MARCELLE screw on a desk.

Boy (VO)

…gave her a look directly suggestive of all things linked to deep sexuality…

EXT. STREET – early morning

Rain hits the pavement.

The boy runs past the Capitol building.

The boy runs past the Washington monument.

The boy runs past the Lincoln Memorial.

The boy runs past stores in Columbia Heights.

Boy (VO)

…such as blood, suffocation, sudden terror, crime; things indefinitely destroying human bliss and honesty.

The boy pants in front of the Watergate.

INT. office – DAY

The boy, Simone and Marcelle heave and sweat on the desk, grasping for each other.

Fade out.