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Having emigrated with his family to the US during the Iranian Revolution, Maz spent most of his youth desperately trying to fit in with his adopted culture - whether that meant learning to play baseball or religiously watching Dallas with his female relatives. But none of his attempts at assimilation made a difference to casting directors, who only auditioned him for the role of kebab-eating, bomb-toting, extremist psychopath.
In this laugh-out-loud memoir, Maz shares his struggle to build an acting career in post-9/11 Hollywood - from playing a terrorist on 24 to playing a terrorist opposite Chuck Norris to his mother asking, "Vhy you alvays terrorist?!" (Followed by, "Vhy you couldn't be doctor?!") But finally, through patience, determination, and only the occasional unequivocal compromising of his principles, he found a path to stardom. And he also learned the proper way to die like a bad guy on TV.
6 pages, Audiobook
First published February 17, 2015
Run to Overcome: The Inspiring Story of an American Champion's Long-Distance Quest to Achieve a Big Dream by
Meb Keflezighi, another immigrant story, it was interesting to hear a similar story from a different perspective. The jokes that he writes in here didn't always hit home with me though. It's either because I am not as familiar with Mr. Jobrani's work as I would like to be or because humor doesn't always translate as well on the written page as it does on the comedy page, but I do think fans of Mr. Jobrani will enjoy this book more. Another problem I had was that Mr. Jobrani tries to write certain dialogue with a Persian accent. But, like other books I've read that have tried to write dialogue with accents, it just makes things more confusing. This is even more frustrating considering that many of Mr. Jobrani's jokes come about through his dialogue with other people. Thus, again, I must say that those who are already familiar with Mr. Jobrani's stand-up work will get more out of this than I did, but it was still interesting.