Dinner: A Love Story, the Trailer!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VJDNi1Otstc
I realize I'm not breaking any journalistic ground with this observation, but I'm going to say it anyway: It's kinda crazy what you can check off The List when you're not surrounded by small people asking for a snack or to tie a soccer cleat or to find the math notebook which was right here a second ago and to look at me! Look at me! Look at me! Take, for instance, an unseasonably warm winter Friday this past February. My friends Ed Nammour and Kate Porterfield showed up in my kitchen at 8:00 am -- a few minutes after Andy and I shepherded Phoebe and Abby to the bus stop -- and by the time the girls disembarked seven hours later, brains filled with fractions and parallelograms, Ed had shot this crazy beautiful honest-to-God Book Trailer for me, complete with a thing called B-Roll? Do you guys know from B-Roll?
I'm exaggerating a bit there -- B-Roll is one of the few terms I knew going into the whole production, but that's about where the knowledge tops off. A big reason why I chose a career as an editor and then opted for the blog medium when I started Dinner: A Love Story 2 1/2 years ago, was because I didn't have to, you know, talk. With my mouth. Out loud. In front of people. I warned Kate -- who was serving as the off-camera interviewer, and who you might remember for coining the page-turner concept -- that she would have her work cut out for her. I was not going to be able to put a sentence together in any kind of coherent way. I am a writer! I speak through my keyboard and like to have time to scratch my chin while formulating unique insights!
"Jenny," Kate replied to all this. "You're not talking about North Korea here. You're talking about dinner."
See why I forced her to be on set with me? Five hours later, I had managed to articulate a few thoughts about family dinner and my book, and why this project has meant so much to me as a parent these past few years. And Kate was on the 1:20 train back to Brooklyn, where her daughters were returning from their school day.
I hope you have some time to watch it and, if you like what you see, to share it with other people who might be inspired to catch the family dinner bug, too. If you love what you see? Well, by now, I think you know what to do. And if you'd rather spend those 3 minutes and 57 seconds reading about North Korea, I'll crystallize the video and the book and the entire mission of DALS for you with one quote I said at about 3:09:
"What I tried to do with this book is cover all the things that can happen at the family dinner table during all stages of a family's life."
That means the Just-Married Days, the New Parent Days, and the Bonafide Family Dinner Days, when we get to have conversations at the table that don't begin with the phrase "If you don't eat that fill-in-the-blank...."
Of course, I'd be remiss if I didn't acknowledge that Ed's work was far from over when the bus came at the end of our shoot day. He spent more hours than I can bear to think about whittling the 60 minutes of dinner-talking and pizza-flipping footage into the 3:57 narrative you see above. How I got so lucky to live around the corner from a filmmaker and commercial director who (on the side!) loves to support local projects...I'll never know. I'm just glad I got to meet him that day five years ago when he, his wife, and six other families bid farewell to their kindergartners at the bus stop.
Reminder: A week from today, April 24th, be sure to check in with DALS! We have an exciting proposition for you which, amazingly, doesn't involve our yogurt-marinated chicken. Well, it sort of does, I guess. But only peripherally.