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The group also has held meetings with top network executives from ABC, CBS, FOX and NBC, and throws a Muslim-inspired version of a Hollywood awards show each year for productions, both mainstream and independent, that advance understanding of Islam. In 2009, winners included "Slumdog Millionaire" and "The Simpsons," for an episode that featured Bart befriending a Muslim boy named Bashir. The goal is not to spoon-feed Hollywood Muslim-friendly storylines, but to increase awareness of the diversity of American Muslims and to be a resource for writers and producers, Nassar said. "There's only a small, small number of people who are trying to drive a negative agenda. Most of the time it's innocent oversight, and they're very happy to get our take on what they're doing, to get our feedback," said Nassar, who also attended the workshop and is an entertainment lawyer by training. That feedback has been an eye-opener and a challenge for some in the industry, where the Muslim-as-terrorist plot line has been an accepted story for years. "When you're sitting in the writer's room, and you've got to come up with a plot line and you've got to come up with a bad guy, it's really easy to pull that out and say, `OK, Muslim terrorist,'" said T.S. Cook, an Oscar-nominated screenwriter who will teach two of the four sessions. "It's a lazy man's way to villainy
-- and it's pretty ingrained." Writer Roger Wolfsen, who worked on the TNT drama "Saving Grace," said MPAC consultants were invaluable when he was assigned to write a script for an episode that featured a black death-row inmate who was converting to Islam. In the plot, the inmate Leon had a personal angel, Earl, who had been guiding him. Wolfsen's challenge was to show Leon's conversion and decide if his angel would change in appearance
-- or if he would continue to exist for Leon at all. MPAC's consultants urged Wolfsen to resist making Leon's character a militant, angry black man and instead suggested that he focus on the beauty and mystery of the moment of conversion. The collaboration paid off, he said. "Everything was my idea, but I didn't know a single detail. I didn't know how you convert; I didn't know what it means; I didn't know what an Islamic angel would say, how an Islamic angel would behave," Wolfsen recalled in a phone interview. In the end, Wolfsen showed Leon reciting the Islamic declaration of faith in his prison cell as his angel watches. When Leon opens his eyes, the angel is still there and greets him with a simple "Us salaamu alaykum," or "Peace be upon you" in Arabic. The episode was one of the high points of Wolfsen's career. "With every writer, you're always looking for new ways to provide freshness to your characters in abbreviated fashion," Wolfsen said. "You can do that, sometimes, by making somebody a believable Muslim."
[Associated
Press;
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