Meet MJ. That’s the nickname of Mujaddid Alghazaly: Muslim. Yemeni. American. Cop. Badass.

He’s a 30-year-old, brilliant detective at the San Francisco Police Department. He grew up in Yemen inhaling 80’s pop culture and American action movies. He graduated from U.C. Berkeley with an engineering degree but decided to become a cop after graduation. He drives a Mustang, listens to Kanye, eats Pakistani food and hates hummus.

He’s also the lead character in a TV pilot initially created by Wajahat Ali and Dave Eggers for HBO. To find out more about how and why MJ was made, please check out Waj’s article over at The Atlantic.

In the meantime, enjoy the first half of the MJ pilot as Dave and Waj polish up the second half.

If you do enjoy reading our MJ, and you are an enterprising producer or filmmaker, feel free to get in touch. HBO has graciously returned the rights to MJ to us, and we’d still love to see it, in some way, on the small screen, or any screen. For now, however, we are happy to see the first half of MJ make its home here on McSweeney’s.

- - -

EXT. SHOOTING RANGEDAY

We see a close-up of a Yemeni-American man wearing goggles, arms outstretched, aiming a handgun toward the camera. This is MUJADDID ALGHAZALY. He’s about 30, handsome, short hair, clean-shaven. He has a small scar on his chin.

MJ
(into the camera)

Damn you.

He pulls the trigger three times.

MJ (CONT’D)

Damn you — bastard — fuckface.

He shoots three more times. He moves his neck around in a tough-guy way. It makes no cracking sound.

MJ (CONT’D)

Fuck — damn — piss — fuck.

We back up to reveal he’s at a shooting range, aiming at a paper target.

Next to him is a woman, about 40, with a blonde ponytail — cute, sun-weathered and stout. You’d almost think she was a soccer coach but she’s wearing a police uniform. This is SAM. She and MJ went through the academy together. There’s a slight bit of sexual tension between them. She thinks she wants more than friendship from MJ, but he sees her as more of an older sister, a friend, a dude.

SAM

Wow, you suck.

She pushes a button to bring the paper target forward. We see that MJ has done terribly.

SAM (CONT’D)

You have to pass a test to be a cop, right? You didn’t even hit the paper. Oh wait, you did here. Once. Here on the edge.

She holds up the target, pointing to a spot where he nicked it.

MJ

I think my contacts are itchy. And it’s windy.

SAM

There’s no wind and you don’t wear contacts. But really: Who knows about this? Does anyone else know how bad you are?

MJ

I’m done.

He takes off his goggles, hands them to SAM, and walks away.

- - -

EXT. PARKING LOT

MJ and SAM walk through the parking lot. It’s sunny and the sky is a brilliant blue. We see that the shooting range is near San Quentin, a few miles north of San Francisco. There are windsurfers visible in the background cutting across the bay.

SAM

What’re you doing for dinner? My kid got Madden. Maybe we order some burritos and —

MJ

Nah, I gotta do dinner at my parents’.

SAM

Am I invited? I haven’t seen them in a million years. I love hummus.

MJ

Hummus? There’s no hummus. Your kid doesn’t want hummus. And you don’t want to come over. This is the whole family. You don’t want the Yemeni Dysfunction Hour.

SAM

No, no. That’s exactly what I want.

MJ

I’m gonna do you a huge favor and not invite you and Tyson to my house.

SAM

Ah, chivalry lives.

MJ

I gotta go back to the station. You need a ride?

SAM points to her car — a new pickup. She walks with him to his car.

SAM

It’s weird. When you told me you’d made detective, I was jealous for a second, but then I realized you were in burglary. I mean, does anyone know that there are actual burglary detectives?

They’ve arrived at his car — a newish Mustang. He gets in, rolls down the window.

MJ

You know, when I met you, you were a pain in the ass, and you never stopped talking. But I figured eventually you’d slow down or learn to budget your verbal output in some way. But it’s been seven years now and you talk more than ever. And make even less sense.

SAM

I’m a medical marvel.

She does a sort of hocus-pocus maneuver with her hands.

MJ

See you around campus.

SAM

What campus? Police campus?

He laughs and drives away.

SAM (CONT’D)

There’s no police campus! You know that, right? We’re not in school? You know this?

MJ leaves the parking lot and drives along the waterfront highway. He turns up the music (Kanye?) and settles into a groove. He thinks he’s pretty cool.

- - -

OPENING CREDITS here, as MJ drives through Marin County, over the Golden Gate Bridge and into San Francisco.

- - -

EXT. CIVIC CENTER PLAZADAY

MJ pulls up his car behind a young woman wearing a business suit and heels, carrying a lunch bag. His car is following her pace, and from the looks of it he’s detailing her. She remains oblivious for a few beats, then quickly turns around. MJ ducks. After a few seconds, he lifts his head, assuming he was successful in his evasion. He peaks out, but the woman is nowhere to be seen.

BUSINESS WOMAN

What are you doing?

The woman is at his passenger side window.

MJ
(flustered)

Uh, Jennifer. Hey, wow, I was uh, I was trying to park. Have you seen any good parking spots around here? I mean, I saw you, and I was gonna ask you if you saw any… parking spots, because…

JENNIFER

Just stop.

MJ

… because you work for the city.

JENNIFER

You think public defenders have some parking space allotment?

MJ

I should buy you dinner.

JENNIFER

You know, last time I saw you, you said you forgot my number.

MJ

Yeah, my crap-Berry – lost all my numbers.

JENNIFER

Lost all your numbers.

JENNIFER smiles and hands him her official public defender card. He rubs his thumb over it. By the time he looks up, she’s already begun walking away and waves her hand in the air.

MJ leans out and yells:

MJ

Oh, look! Found a parking spot! Thank, Public Defender Lady!

JENNIFER keeps her stride.

- - -

INT. POLICE LOCKER ROOMFILLMORE DISTRICT

This is an ancient, humble and humbling locker room.

A few older guys are debating a trade the Giants just made.

We see another group of cops in various state of undress. One of them, MATTIUS, is reading the SF Chronicle while sitting on the bench in front of his locker. The other, DON, is almost in uniform.

MATTIUS

Fuckin’ Henry Hotel.

DON

That’s like Dawn of the Dead. Always comes back to life.

MATTIUS

Tainted evidence my ass.

DON

You know it’s political. You know this, right?

MATTIUS

I know.

DON

So just keep your head down for a week and your mouth shut. You never know who’s listening.

DON gives MATTIUS a nod to look up.

MATTIUS

Look who decided to show up.

He’s referring to MJ, who enters the locker room and proceeds to his locker. He feels their stares and he heard MATTIUS’s comment; his face tightens and flushes. Then he notices his locker is covered in some kind of white material. He touches it. It’s hard. He breaks off a piece. Plaster. Someone’s plastered his entire locker shut.

He looks around and most of the cops are both amused and supportive of this latest round of hazing. An older cop, doughy and sweet-faced, comes into the locker room, lost in his own thoughts. He notices MJ, and MJ’s locker.

RONNIE

Aw hell. Sorry they did that.

MJ

It’s all right.

MATTIUS and DON snicker and exit. Most of the other cops have left by now.

RONNIE
(confidentially)

Rite of passage. You being so young probably added to their, uh, enthusiasm. Wow, that’s a lot of plaster. (touching it) Jeez, that’s the most I’ve ever seen ’em use.

RONNIE is about 55, ruddy-complexioned. He’s an old-school, aw-shucks kind of cop who doesn’t pretend to be an intellectual. The type of Irish-descended cop who, ten years ago, might have called MJ a “towelhead” but is smart enough to adapt to changing times.

MJ is trying to get his head around how he’s going to get into his locker.

RONNIE looks around, seeing a few remaining cops watching them talk.

RONNIE

Let’s get a hammer or something. Come with me.

They leave the locker room. The whole police station is a low- budget, antiquated place, built into a converted grocery store. Here and there you see signs of the building’s former usage — low florescent lights, a deli case in the corner.

MJ and RONNIE find the supply closet. Now it’s clear that RONNIE wanted to be out of earshot so he could impart some life wisdom to MJ.

RONNIE (CONT’D)

Listen. Some of these guys are ten, fifteen years older than you and they’re still 35s. They see your, your… (deciding on the word) promotion as, you know, premature.

This stings. MJ’s face shows it. He might have suspected this kind of resentment, but hearing it from RONNIE is a body blow.

MJ

Do you see it that way?

RONNIE
(hesitates)

Aw c’mon. I’m just an old guy. We’re all just a buncha inbred Catholic school dummies.

MJ

Yeah, so?

RONNIE

So fuck em if they can’t take a joke. You passed the test. They’ll get over it. I’m over it.

This last comment takes MJ aback — even RONNIE had to get “over” it.

CUT TO:

INT. LOCKER ROOM — A BIT LATER

MJ has finished chipping off the plaster. There’s a large pile of it on the ground.

A young white cop, a few years older than MJ, walks by. This is AARON.

AARON

Jesus, think you can make a mess like that just because you’re a detective?

MJ smiles, unsure how to take this. As AARON walks away, he kicks some of the plaster down the hall.

AARON (CONT’D)

There’s some down here, too.

MJ stares into the locker, sure to give AARON no reaction. He breathes in, out. Easy. Easy.

- - -

INT. DETECTIVES’ OFFICE

It’s barely an office. Not what you’d expect from twenty- first century San Francisco police. It’s just a room, looking like a small cafeteria, with a few partitions, four desks, and three c. 1997 computers. One wall is covered with pictures of suspects and offenders.

Another wall is covered with what appears to be a giant computer printout of the precinct’s district. Colored thumb tacks — with each color representing a specific category of crime — dot the map. This is NOT CSI-San Francisco. This is how real police work is done in an under-funded department.

MJ sits down, opens up a thick file. It covers a series of burglaries of nearby apartments. The file is mostly photos of possessions stolen or recovered.

An older man walks in. This is SGT. CONROY. He’s white, bald, a bit heavy, and intense. He looks over MJ’s shoulder for a second.

SGT. CONROY

Is that the jewelry thing? (Off MJ’s nod) This goes with that, probably.

He dumps a new, thick, file on MJ’s desk.

SGT. CONROY (CONT’D)

New one on Union last night. Just called in.

MJ

Thanks.

CONROY looks at the wall of suspects.

SGT. CONROY

So. Now you’re here.

MJ

Yup.

SGT. CONROY

I didn’t say it before, but I’m proud of you.

MJ

Thanks.

SGT. CONROY

Even when you were at the academy I figured you’d make detective. Maybe not so soon, but— (off MJ’s rolled eyes) I’m shittin ya. I made detective at 29. We prodigies have to stick together… Wait. You haven’t officially started, have you?

MJ

Monday.

SGT. CONROY

So you’re here for kicks?

MJ

Figured I’d get a jump.

SGT. CONROY spends a long moment assessing him.

SGT. CONROY

Let’s go for a ride. We’ll get a statement from the new robbery, and I can show you around.

As they get up and leave the station:

MJ

I grew up in the Bay, you know, so…

SGT. CONROY

Indulge me. Let’s pretend I know a little more than you.

- - -

EXT. STATION PARKING LOT

MJ and SGT. CONROY get into CONROY’s car, an unmarked American sedan, and drive.

Through the Fillmore District…

CONROY

Okay, this is the dividing line between the Fillmore and Japantown. You know the Fillmore —

MJ

I do. I told you—

Across Geary…

CONROY

Right, so here’s Japantown. About three blocks total. There’s maybe 300 actual Japanese people here. They’ve got the one pagoda, though. See the pagoda?

They head uphill, through the residential districts of Pacific Heights…

CONROY (CONT’D)

This is lower Pacific Heights. Not quite fancy yet… Wait… Wait. NOW we’re fancy. See?

The houses are huge, old, painted in pastel colors. They get to the top of a huge hill. Here the houses are as big as whole blocks, worth $20-30 million each.

CONROY (CONT’D)

These are the mean streets of your district, MJ. It’s either old money or funny money. (Pointing to various houses) Hedge fund, hedge fund. VC. Hedge fund. Facebook.

They descend the hill.

CONROY (CONT’D)

Now we’re in Cow Hollow. Oop, just passed Cow Hollow. Now we’re in the Marina. I have no idea where the dividing line is and neither does anyone else. Maybe Union Street is Cow Hollow? I have no clue. But anyway, this is where the young money shops. And the only place in San Francisco you’ll see people still wearing their Greek letters from college.

On cue, Conroy points to a young man wearing a Dartmouth sweatshirt with Delta Chi letters on it.

SGT. CONROY

Love that.

- - -

EXT. MARINA APARTMENTCONTINUOUS

MJ and CONROY are walking down Union Street. The sidewalk’s full of dressy people eating at outdoor cafes. Between a clothing boutique and an upscale furniture shop, they arrive at the door to an apartment.

CONROY

Okay. This woman, Denise Michaelson, says they stole some jewelry and cash. I’m thinking it’s connected to the other ones.

He rings the bell.

CONROY (CONT’D)

I’m just here for support, okay? You handle it. And listen, MJ… (jokingly serious) …I believe in you.

MJ clears his throat.

A woman, about 28, answers her door. This is DENISE MICHAELSON. She’s pretty, athletic, wearing Juicy Couture sweatpants.

DENISE

Yes?

MJ

Hi. Denise?

DENISE

Yes.

MJ

I’m detective Alghazaly. This is Sergeant Conroy. You reported a theft?

DENISE
(suddenly formal)

Yes, I did. Um, officers.

They all stand for a second.

MJ

Can we come in?

DENISE

Oh. Sure.

They step in. DENISE is examining MJ.

DENISE (CONT’D)

Wait. I know you. You went to Cal.

Slight nod from MJ.

DENISE (CONT’D)

You were in the International House?

MJ

For a second.

DENISE

I think you dated a friend of mine. Jackie Gillespie?

MJ

No, sorry.

They start making their way up the narrow stairs.

DENISE

Never? Not one date?

MJ
(a trace of doubt)

Nah… I don’t…

He’s deeply embarrassed in front of the sergeant, who is enjoying all this too much.

DENISE

Weren’t you from Syria or something?

They arrive at her door.

MJ

Yemen. Still am.

They go inside the apartment.

DENISE

Yemen! Right. Wow. (a beat, during which she’s presumably thinking of the history of Yemen and its struggles) Rad. So now you’re a detective. That is insane!

SGT. CONROY is loving this. He’s grinning like a chimp. MJ tries to get back on track.

MJ

So you were burglarized yesterday?

DENISE

So crazy. I was at the Triangle for maybe two hours. We got back and—

MJ

Who got back? You have roommates?

DENISE

I do. But this was with a…

CONROY

You can say “Male companion.”

DENISE gives him a withering look. He backs down.

DENISE

I was out with a friend. And when I was gone or whatever, someone must have gotten in. Everything was locked. I always lock everything—

MJ starts walking around, looking for signs of forced entry, anything. DENISE watches, intrigued.

MJ

And you noticed something missing when you got back?

DENISE

Not until the next day. I went to put on some earrings and basically everything was gone. I have some pictures of some of the stuff. I wore these things to a friend’s wedding recently.

DENISE hands MJ a few pictures showing a unique, beautiful, pink pearl necklace, sapphire earrings and bracelet.

DENISE (CONT’D)
(noticing MJ’s holster)

So you have a gun.

MJ nods.

DENISE (CONT’D)

That’s serious. Did you study being a cop at Berkeley?

MJ

No, engineering.

DENISE

Oh. And you don’t have to wear a uniform? I never understood who got to dress in regular clothes.

SGT. CONROY

Your friend was recently promoted to detective. One of the youngest in department history.

DENISE
(to MJ, almost punching him in the shoulder)

Congrats!

SGT. CONROY

And detectives wear ‘regular clothes.’

MJ, desperate to get this back on topic:

MJ

The report says the stolen items were worth about twelve hundred dollars. That right?

DENISE

About.

MJ

And the patrol thought the thief probably came through the window. This one?

DENISE

That’s the only one that opens.

MJ goes to a window that looks out on the fire escape. He opens the window, steps onto the escape, and examines it for a second. He looks down, and up.

He ducks back into the apartment.

MJ

This go to the roof?

DENISE

Yup.

MJ starts up the fire escape. He stops.

MJ

Does this work?

DENISE walks over to the window, where she sees MJ examining a security camera of some kind. It’s fastened to the fire escape.

MJ (CONT’D)

It’s pointing directly in the apartment, so if we can get the tape, we might have some idea of—

But DENISE is flummoxed.

DENISE

I’ve never seen that thing before.

- - -

INT. CONROY’S CAR

They’re driving back to the station.

SGT. CONROY

Probably some security system the landlord set up.

MJ

Without the tenants’ knowledge? A bunch of cameras facing in?

SGT. CONROY

You think he’s pervy?

MJ

We need to find out who has access to the footage.

SGT. CONROY

Kind of brilliant idea. He rents to pretty young ladies, sets up cameras…

CONROY is getting lost in his sick reverie. MJ stares at him.

SGT. CONROY (CONT’D)

Cut me some slack. I’m in a loveless marriage.

MJ

With Cheryl? No you’re not. Cheryl’s the best.

SGT. CONROY

Yeah, I know.

MJ

But you’re thinking of setting up some security camera outside your bedroom now.

Conroy shrugs.

SGT. CONROY

Might price one or two…

They pull up to MJ’s car.

SGT. CONROY (CONT’D)

Please tell me you’ve got somewhere else to be. You can’t spend your whole day off here.

MJ

Nah. Gonna head over for family dinner.

SGT. CONROY

Good man. See you Monday.

CUT TO:

EXT. BAY BRIDGEDAY

MJ drives over the Bay Bridge to the East Bay. It’s late afternoon, and golden light from the low sun reflects off the windows of the homes in the hills.

- - -

EXT. WEST OAKLANDDAY

MJ makes his way through West Oakland — some tidy working-class homes and some desperate situations, too.

MJ parks his car on a broken-down block. Graffiti everywhere. Vacant lots. There’s a ramshackle liquor store on the corner. The awning is frayed and falling down. This is the GO-GETTERS MARKET. Nearby, a few prostitutes operate in broad daylight. A tricked-up Land Rover is out front.

MJ locks his car and jogs across the street toward the market.

- - -

EXT. GO-GETTERS MARKET

As MJ is walking up to the store, he approaches THE GATE, a notorious drug-dealing mecca right next to the store. The Gate is a high reddish fence with an array of holes and slots. In practice, buyers slip money through the holes in the fence, and drugs come out through another hole.

As he’s approaching, a deal is concluding. The buyer, too oblivious to know MJ, staggers away. MJ lets it slide.

MJ pauses for a second, and time appears to slow down. We see everything from his perspective as he takes it all in. He scans the openings in the Gate. A pair of eyes behind the fence appear through one opening, then are gone. A twenty-dollar bill is slipped through another hole. A tiny plastic packet comes through another hole, low to the ground. On the ground below, a pair of shell casings. Now, in the house behind the Gate, a curtain opens, a shadow is visible briefly, then disappears.

A second or two has passed in real time but MJ has seen it all in slow motion, and has seen enough to write a 12-page report on the Gate operation.

Now time resumes its regular speed.

In front of the market, MJ is stopped by a black man in a black suit and bow-tie. This is MUHAMMAD. He’s got a stack of Nation of Islam leaflets in his hand. He’s with three other members of the NOI.

MUHAMMAD
(sniffing the air)

You smell that?

NOI BROTHERS
(also smelling)

Mmmm, something smells nasty.

MUHAMMAD

Know what it is?

MJ

Let me guess. Ba-

MUHAMMAD

Bacon!

MJ

Ha ha. Never gets old, Brother Muhammad.

MUHAMMAD

Brother Mujaddid. Here’s one for you.

He hands him one of the flyers — the usual protest leaflet advocating boycotting liquor stores run by Muslims.

MJ

You gave me one last week, and the week before—

MUHAMMAD

And next week, and the week after that, until your father does the right thing.

MJ
(playfully)

Don’t you have to work, man?

MUHAMMAD

I am, right here, right now, working — for the sake of Allah.

MJ

Of course. Allah has you passing out leaflets.

MUHAMMAD

And how about you? One Alghazaly sells the devil’s piss, makes the brothers lose their minds. And the other Alghazaly comes along and locks them up. Mmm mmm beautiful. You Yemenis — gotta hand it to you — it’s a tidy racket.

MJ

Assalam Alaikum, Brother Muhammad.

MUHAMMAD

Walaikum Assalam, Brother Mujaddid.

- - -

INT. GO-GETTERS MARKET

MJ enters. There’s a bling-heavy customer at the front counter. When the door jangles open, he turns quickly and when he sees MJ, he lowers his eyes and quickly leaves. The Land Rover outside takes off.

The man behind the counter is MO — short for Mohammed — a Yemeni-American, about 25, wearing gold chains and a new baseball hat, the mirrored sticker still on the bill. He puts on a big smile, papering over whatever transaction just happened.

MO
(in Arabic to MJ)

Hey dumbass.

MJ
(in Arabic)

Says the guy working at the liquor store in West Oakland.

They shake hands across the counter.

MJ (CONT’D)
(now back to English)

Friend of yours, Mo?

MO

Just a valued customer.

They look at each other for a long moment. MJ could make trouble, but he decides to let it sit for now.

The front door jangles again and an older black man enters and goes to the drinks cooler in the back.

MJ

When’d you get in town?

MO

Two weeks ago.

MJ

Pop’s already got you working?

MO

Always working, man, always working. The hustle, you know.

MJ

Hey, if you talk to the dealers next door, can you tell them to tone it down a bit? It looks like Amsterdam out there. They ever bust anyone there?

MO shrugs, laughs.

Another guy, about 24, comes out from the back with a stack of sodas. This is KHALEEF.

He’s skinnier than MO, and less inclined to street life. He’s wearing a loose button-down shirt.

MJ (CONT’D)

Hey.

KHALEEF
(realizing who it is)

Damn. I see a ghost.

They do a one-shoulder embrace.

MJ

I thought you were in school.

KHALEEF

School?

MJ

You said you were gonna do law.

KHALEEF
(laughing)

Yeah, yeah. Well, I’m tryin to take some classes at the local—

MO
(to MJ)

Stop puttin stupid ideas in his head. We need him here. Even though he sucks as a guard.

KHALEEF

You know, I don’t even want to do this stupid shit. I want—

Mo slaps him upside the head.

MO

Yeah, I want a blow job and a lollipop, but you don’t see me whining! Now just do the job and keep your eyes on the abd. (This is a derogatory word in Arabic for the black customer in the store.)

KHALEEF

Why do I gotta guard shit when Rent-a-Cop’s in the house?

MO slaps skin with KHALEEF.

MJ

See this?
(shows him his badge, SF POLICE)

KHALEEF

Yeah, SF — “SUCKAS FRONTING AS A POLICE DEPARTMENT

MO

With Khaleef on this one, MJ. If you were Oakland PD, then you’d be a real cop dealing with real shit.

KHALEEF

You’d be cracking heads and killing innocent fools on BART.

MJ

Yeah, yeah, just give me some flour, gotta’ bring it home.

MO

What you think this is, a grocery store?

MJ finds some flour. MO is surprised.

MO (CONT’D)

That stuff’s probably five years old. I keep telling your pops to update the inventory, but you know him and money. No disrespect—(calling out to the customer by the cooler) Hey, you looking or buying? This isn’t a museum.

The man puts his one beer on the counter and starts taking out his change.

MO (CONT’D)

Four dollars.

CUSTOMER

Four dollars? This costs two!

MO

Four dollars. This ain’t 1970 anymore, old man.

During this exchange, KHALEEF has changed the channels and lands on KTVU local news.

They’re showing a reporter, RENEE GALVEZ, outside City Hall, with the words “POLICE CHIEF OFFENDS ARAB AND MUSLIM AMERICANS.”

MO (CONT’D)

Hey, turn it up.
(to MJ)
You hear about this?

MJ shakes his head. His mouth is open in shock.

RENEE GALVEZ

We’re here at City Hall, where earlier today Police Chief Jenny Wong made comments that have been denounced by Arab and Muslim American groups.

MJ moves closer to the TV.

RENEE GALVEZ (CONT’D)

Yesterday, two men were arrested when the van they were driving was considered a possible threat. It had been parked in front of City Hall for twenty minutes. When asked about the arrest today, Police Chief Wong said this:

We see a clip of the police chief, a middle-aged Asian-American woman wearing a full police uniform, doing an impromptu interview while walking out of City Hall.

Reporters jostle each other, following her down the hall.

POLICE CHIEF WONG

As a matter of policy, we always investigate suspicious vehicles near City Hall. In this case, it was a no-brainer. The men were Middle-Eastern and they were sitting in a van outside City Hall. The van’s got Arabic writing on the side. It raises some red flags.

Now back to RENEE outside City Hall.

RENEE GALVEZ

As it turned out, the men were from a catering company delivering falafel to the office of the mayor himself.

MJ, MO and KHALEEF shake their heads.

MO

That is some broke-ass shit.

RENEE GALVEZ

I’m here with Nasser Khan from the Arab-American Cultural Center.

The camera backs up to include a middle-aged man in a suit, standing with GALVEZ.

RENEE GALVEZ (CONT’D)

What has been the response from the Arab-American community?

NASSER KHAN

Well, there has been outrage of course. Clearly this is a case of racial profiling, and Chief Wong has some explaining to do. And we eagerly await that explanation.

RENEE GALVEZ

Thank you, Mr. Khan. Protests are planned for tomorrow and will likely get louder until Police Chief Wong clarifies or recants her remarks. This is Renee Galvez reporting from City Hall.

INT. LIQUOR STORECONTINUOUS

MO
(disgusted)

That’s your boss?

KHALEEF

What a dumbshit. Asian chick, too. You’d think she’d know better.

No response from MJ. He can’t believe it.

MJ’s phone buzzes. It’s from his mom. The text reads: “where r u? Dont forget bring flour.”

MJ

See you guys.

MJ stops abruptly as he’s about to exit. He turns around and looks at MO.

MJ (CONT’D)

And hey. Not in my pop’s store.

MO

Wha? Whaddya mean?

MJ

You know what I mean. Don’t make me bust my own blood.

- - -

INT. MJ’S FAMILY HOME, OAKLANDEVENING

MJ enters with his laundry bucket. Inside the bucket there’s the flour and some drinks he picked up from the liquor store. The sound of commotion as he opens the door.

The living room is cozy and personal — traditionally Yemeni. The couches have flowers or solid colors — red, burgundy, beige. A very bright Persian rug covers the wood floors. On the walls, Quran decorations and Quranic verses, and a picture of their ancestral home in Yemen, a stone and adobe structure on a mountain.

They have a 60-inch TV with two different satellite dishes — one for regular TV and one for Yemeni channels.

BROOKS, a white family friend who converted to Islam years ago, is sitting in the living room watching AL JAZEERA.

ZAIBA, MJ’s mother, is commander of the kitchen and finishing cooking the meals while texting on her iPhone.

MARYAM, MJ’s sister, is the sous chef.

The tempo of the scene is rushed, colorful, chaotic.

ZAIBA

Ya Maryam! Maryam, take care of the aseed and maraq. I’ll do the kabsa.

MJ makes his presence known.

MJ

Yes, I have arrived! No need to get up.

No one does.

MJ (CONT’D)

Salaam alaikum, hey Ama — you trust Mayram with the maraq?

MARYAM
(annoyed)

When was the last time you made anything?

MJ

I brought the flour. I can’t vouch for its freshness. Brooks, long time no see, make yourself at home.

Brooks takes his feet off the coffee table.

MJ gives the flour to MARYAM. BROOKS looks up, maybe a bit too interested in MARYAM.

TWO KIDS run over and give Uncle MJ a hug. These are the children of MJ’s brother YAHYA and his wife MANEEZA.

MJ (CONT’D)

Hey little stinkos.

SULAYMAN is 5 years old, black hair, bowl cut, looks like his mom. He’s wearing a THOR T-shirt and wielding a fake THOR inflatable hammer.

MEJGAN is 7, with long black hair done in two braids. She’s wearing a beautiful sundress.

MJ picks them up, makes eating noises into their stomachs and throws them on the couch.

MJ (CONT’D)
(to Yahya)

Salaams, Bro.

YAHYA acknowledges — barely. He looks up from his phone while texting. YAHYA looks like MJ, but is a bit rounder — the picture of a man who’s enjoying family life. He does a quick double take to make sure his wife MANEEZA doesn’t notice his texting. She does.

MANEEZA is in her late 20’s, Afghan-American, very pretty — big eyes, long black hair. She’s helping set the meal and fussing over the two kids.

MJ (CONT’D)

Do I smell Maneeza’s Afghan qabbali pillow?

He greets his sister-in-law.

MANEEZA

I’m glad someone likes it. Your mother, on the other hand—

She gives a look to her mother-in-law ZAIBA. The Yemeni mother still hasn’t made peace with the fact her daughter-in-law is an Afghan.

YAHYA
(to MJ)

Hey, will you shut it? I’m gonna have to hear this all the way on the drive back to Fremont.

MANEEZA

No you won’t. You never listen. (to MJ or anyone) You know he wears a headphone in his right ear when he drives?

YAHYA ignores it.

MJ
(to his mom)

Where’s Aba?

ZAIBA, MJ’s mom, is cooking while reading her iPhone.

MJ grabs something to drink from the fridge and gets closer to his mom, who’s hypnotized by a text message.

MJ (CONT’D)
(very close and loud)

Ama?!

ZAIBA
(startled)

What? What?

MJ
(laughing)

Wow, you are an addict! Where’s Aba?

MARYAM passes by, puts the food on the dining table and quickly tries to spy BROOKS, who does the same to her after she turns away.

ZAIBA

I don’t know. With his mistresses probably. Go get him and tell him to get ready. He’s been with them for an hour.

- - -

EXT. PATIONIGHTCONTINUOUS

MJ steps out of the house onto the backyard patio. We hear the family’s commotion and chatter in the background and see them moving about in the kitchen. MJ shuts the door — he closes his eyes and exhales.

The patio reveals a well-kept garden — an old tree that bears fruit, some planted shrubs, and a nice, small vegetable garden. There’s mint in the garden from a plant called shadhab, native to Yemen.

There’s a small shack close to the patio door with the door ajar. Lights are on.

MJ enters and sees the back of his father — seated, carefully trimming his bonsai plants. He talks to them in a hushed, loving voice, like a doting parent or paramour. MJ feels like he’s interrupting a private moment.

MJ

Aba.

His father, ISA, doesn’t hear.

MJ (CONT’D)

Nothing. Aba. Aba!

ISA

Hunh? What? What?

MJ

Happy birthday.

ISA
(brushes it off)

Yeah, yeah. Come. Come, look at her. Mashallah — look how she’s grown. Mmm. Beautiful shape.

MJ

Does Ama know you’re cheating on her with … plants?

ISA

Oy!
(quick flash of anger, slaps his hand)
(beat)
Apologize.

MJ (amused and shocked at the same time)

I don’t think they speak English.

ISA (in Arabic)

Respect, ya Mujaddid!

MJ

I don’t think they speak Arabic either.

ISA

Apologize or get out of my house!

MJ
(to the plants, in Arabic)

Ana asif, habaybi. [“I apologize, my beloveds”] Mubsuit? [“Are you content?”] (now to his father) Happy birthday. Thought it’d be wiser to give you your present outside.

ISA

La! I’m not a child, I don’t want a present—

MJ takes out a slim Fedex package and hands it to ISA. ISA’s eyes widen and his mouth drops. He looks up with a child’s smile and briefly grabs MJ’s cheeks with both hands.

ISA (CONT’D)

Ah, you do love me, ya habibi. Shukran!

ISA has already begun opening the Fedex package. He takes out a notebook where he finds flattened KHAT leaves carefully pressed in between each page. Khat, a stimulant chewed by men in Yemen, is illegal in the U.S. ISA takes one stem and begins plucking off the leaves and chewing them.

ISA (CONT’D)
(suddenly worried)

Does your mother know?

MJ gives a “Really, you’re asking me this?” look.

ISA (CONT’D)

She always knows. (eating the khat) Mmmm. Alhamdulilah. Ya Mujaddid… you made an old man happy. Come, come, have some.

MJ

You know I can’t.

ISA

Why? No one is here.

MJ

I’m a cop, and khat is illegal. I can’t do it.

ISA

But you can buy it?

MJ

You want it or not? I can’t believe you’re talking to me about hypocrisy.

ISA

You accuse me? It’s your uncle—

MJ

Your brother!

ISA

My brother, right. Everyone knows what he does, eh? What happens inside his liquor shop. The type of people who work for him. The type of women who work for him. Right under your own nose but, no, you never go arrest him.

MJ

Concentrate on cleaning your own business first, Aba.

ISA

What does that mean?

MJ

Don’t put me in a difficult position. I choose to look away, but—

ISA

But what? Mr. Bigshot cop is going to come threaten his own father? What, MJ? Will you turn on your own family and community? Why don’t you go clean up your department, hunh? You want to talk about filth! They’ve trained you well.

MJ

They trained me to do my job.

ISA

It’s not supposed to be your job! My son was supposed to be an engineer, but no, he’s a cop. You could have been the first Alghazaly from Shayir to leave all this… Take us away from this. And, look, what do you do?

MJ

Well, I’m sorry, as always, to disappoint you. Anyway, Ama says come inside and get ready.

MJ turns around and walks toward the house. ISA, left alone with his khat and bonsai, watches MJ leave, and then returns to his beloved plants.

- - -

INT. KITCHENCONTINUOUS

MJ weaves through the kitchen chaos, picks up his laundry bucket, and heads upstairs.

- - -

INT. LAUNDRY ROOMCONTINUOUS

MJ dumps the bucket on top of the washing machine. MARYAM quickly rushes into the room, makes sure no one sees her, and quietly closes the door. MJ barely registers this.

MARYAM

Did you get it?

MJ

What? The flour? I gave it to you.

MARYAM

No, fool, the cake! Aba’s birthday cake?

MJ is dumbfounded.

MARYAM (CONT’D)

Idiot, I left you three messages.

MJ looks at his phone. He sees three missed calls from “MARMAR,” his childhood nickname for his sister.

MJ

Oh. Shit.

MARYAM grabs his hand, which is holding the phone, and looks at the screen. She turns to him, triumphant.

MJ (CONT’D)

Well… you should have texted. You know I hate voicemail.

MARYAM

Mujaddid! Ama’s gonna be pissed, and she’ll blame it on me as usual. (looking at his bucket of laundry) And hell no, I’m not washing your boxers again!

She turns to leave, exasperated.

MJ

Hey.

MARYAM

Hey what?

MJ
(earnestly)

There’s no shame in living here.

MARYAM

I’m not ashamed.

MJ

You’ll get a job. Then you can move out. In the meantime, just… relax.

MARYAM

Don’t tell me to relax.

MJ

Brooks is here. Be cool.

MARYAM

I know he’s here. (blushing) Shut up. Don’t embarrass me in front of him. You’re such an ass.

A voice is heard from downstairs.

ZAIBA (O.S.)

Maryam! I need you!

MJ

I take it you haven’t told them about registering this semester.

MARYAM

Don’t you dare!

MJ

Someone’s gonna tell ’em soon enough—

MARYAM

Yeah, but it isn’t going to be you.

With a twist of his fingers, MJ seals his lips and throws a dirty shirt at MARYAM.

She catches it, immediately throws it back at MJ’s face, and leaves the room.

- - -

INT. LIVING ROOM/DINING ROOMNIGHT

The food is now prepared and laid out on the floor in a lavish spread. The lights are dimmed, the room warm with candlelight. All is beautiful and festive. MJ takes his seat.

A quick look around the room at all the faces of family –- his brother, sister-in-law, best friend BROOKS, sister, mother. MJ takes a moment to recognize how lucky he is.

And now ISA makes a melodramatic entrance. He’s wearing traditional, formal Yemeni clothing — a white thobe with an impressive turban on his head. A gold jambiya, the Yemeni dagger, hangs around his neck.

The family is confused, amused and in awe.

MJ
(whispering in Arabic)

What, he couldn’t find a crown?

MJ’s father doesn’t hear. He’s beaming.

ISA

Khalas! Let’s eat!

CUT TO:

INT. LIVING ROOM/DINING ROOMLATER

We’re at the end of the main meal. Plates are filled with remnants; a few people are still nibbling on their food. The family is ready for dessert. We enter mid-conversation — ISA holding court.

ISA

All I’m saying is that a police chief who talks like that…

ZAIBA
(to MJ)

I told you this career was not the one for you.

ISA

She should know better. A Japanese lady.

MJ

Chinese.

ISA

Again Yemenis and Muslims get treated like dogs.

ZAIBA

Well, you owning liquor stores doesn’t help matters.

YAHYA

Here we go.

ISA

Again, again, again with the liquor.

ZAIBA

It’s haram! Tell him, Brooks. Tell him.

BROOKS
(gently)

Well, the consumption of alcohol is a major sin in Islam—

ISA

Brooks, you’re learned and I respect you, but don’t give me a khutba [sermon] in my own home.

ZAIBA

No, do! Tell him! He never listens! You tell him!

ZAIBA’s phone buzzes. This is becoming more annoying for ISA.

ISA
(to Zaiba)

My love, don’t forget that Jack Daniels bought your dress. Budweiser paid for this house. And Heineken bought that damn iPhone. And tell Fatima to stop calling you!

ZAIBA

This is for our startup!

ISA

Ha! Your mother — the day of judgment will come before she actually does anything with this “startup.”

As they continue to bicker, the scene slows down as MJ takes it all in. We witness the chaos from his perspective, picking up the minor details that everyone is missing. He spies YAHYA sneaking out his phone and texting with one thumb. MANEEZA glares at her husband. BROOKS is playing eye-tag with MARYAM, who gets up and goes to the kitchen.

This is something that recurs with MJ — he finds himself, even amid a crowd, temporarily apart from it all, noticing, cataloging, calculating.

Then he re-enters the flow.

MARYAM
(emerging from the kitchen)

Okay, enough.

MARYAM brings out the Bint Al Sahn [a dessert bread eaten with honey dessert] with gaudy plastic numerals, 6 and 3, stuck on top. She sets the dessert down in front of ISA and lights it. The family is about to sing Happy Birthday and segue from awkward fight mood to celebration, but ISA curtly and firmly ends their attempts at singing by waving his hand.

MARYAM (CONT’D)

Sorry we couldn’t get you cake.

She gives MJ a look.

ISA doesn’t care. He gazes at the 6 and 3, somber and reflective. There’s an uncomfortable pause.

ISA

My father passed at 63.

The family registers this.

YAHYA
(soothingly)

We know, Aba. We know. But you’re still here. And you will be for a good long time.

ZAIBA takes ISA’s hand.

SULAYMAN

Make a wish, grandpa, make a wish!

ISA gives a resigned chuckle. He looks at his family around him. He closes his eyes, inhales, blows out the candle. The room goes dark. Everyone cheers.