Blogging The Casbah: 2012-06-17

Wednesday, June 20, 2012

International Surfing Day and first major press for Surfing the Middle East


Today was International Surf Day. I woke up in Santa Barbara, CA, at 4:00AM, and drove down to Santa Monica to the Surfrider beach clean up that you can read about here. I then made my way across LA--along the 405 freeway--to the Surfrider studio where I did an interview and had the chance to plug my book. And, of course, the Surfrider's annual campaign drive for new members. I'm working to get that interview now . . . and it'll be up on YouTube (and this blog) in a few days. Thanks everyone again for the good times and the first major event for Surfing the Middle East! Book available here.

Make up!
The set

 "The Tax Man" from the Kottonmouth Kings

A friend comments on the Surfing the Middle East Facebook fan page:  
"That poor, unsuspecting soul on the other end of the line... He just wants to donate some hard-earned cash, not discuss the tenets of National Socialism at length." Clearly, a Big Lebowski reference.
 
 Great girls . . . I'm in love

 Screen shot book plug from the show

Screen shot just before I'm interviewed


Never taken off makeup before (and I guess I've never put it on either)
 so, this is how you do it, right?


The interview will come in a few days! Stand by.

Monday, June 18, 2012

Surfing around the closed Israeli-Lebanese border


The following blog post is the copy from my hardcover book and a photo essay of my Middle East surf endeavor. Sound off in the comments section.


Shredding Middle East Stereotypes
with a California Weapon


Major in political science. Graduate with honors. Fail to find a job. Go surfing in the Middle
East.

Rogue journalist and self-admitted California wave junky Jesse Aizenstat couldn't find a real job after college. But his two passions, Middle East politics and surfing, seemed like a good fit for a freelance gig. What the hell? Why not surf from Israel to Lebanon?

His Jewish background may have earned him a free flight to Israel, but it wouldn't give him a pass to surf in Hezbollah-controlled South Lebanon. Even navigating the tangled towns and streets of his ancestral homeland wouldn't be a cakewalk. But then again, this dyslexic writer with a maddening lust for annoying truths wasn't looking for easy, he was looking for real.

A journalistic experiment to surf
around the explosive Israeli-Lebanese border 
From Day One, the signs of violent conflict are everywhere: rocket craters, barbed wire, tear-gassed protesters, gunfire, and night patrols. But finding a shoreline touched by the best swell in the Med proves a welcoming counterpoint to the tension. Trouble is, peace, like riding a perfect wave, never lasts long. Turns out you can't just surf from Israel to Lebanon. You gotta take an air/land route. Over an inland desert. Through freaking Syria.

Other than hatred, the same surf report, and the desire to blow each other to smithereens, Israel and Lebanon seem to share little else. Like Aizenstat, they are political, cultural, and generational misfits in search of control over their identities and destinies. The author calls 'em like he sees 'em, and goes along for the ride. It gets a little deviant, a little insane, a little frightening, but in the end is fully satisfying. You couldn't ask for a better ride.



First Leg:"It's like Maui with Rockets" (Israel)


 Second Leg: Up, but first around: Israel to Lebanon (Jerusalem, West Bank, Jordan)



 Third Leg: Unsimply, Lebanon (Lebanon)



Michael J. Totten blurb

Blogger Michael J. Totten has read and reviewd my book. He writes:
Surfing the Middle East is what you’d get if you crossed surf rocker Dick Dale with Hunter S. Thompson and dropped him into a war zone. Jesse Aizenstat makes me yearn to return to the Middle East and learn how to surf. Michael J. Totten, author of The Road to Fatima Gate


Doesn't get any better than that.