>> ... Next Generation ... L Size Star et's get going with the latest scoop. ComePlayDetroit's men's basketball league had its spring basketball championship, with team Made in Detroit, captained by Alex Simpson, defeating team Greenberg in the finals. Our co-ed tennis league kicked off the first week of June with 20 co-eds playing mixed doubles tennis at Birmingham Groves High School on Monday nights. Each week, a male and female are randomly paired together to play against another male and female randomly paired together. This allows everyone to play with different partners each week, and it's a great way to meet others! Our first official sand volleyball league started up this month in Midtown at Z's Villa. The venue is a great local dive bar with an amazing outdoor sand volleyball ComePlayDetroit kicks off some summer fun. court and lights so you can play all night. Between the outdoor televisions, delicious food, wide variety of beverages and horseshoes, there is enough to keep you busy all night long! Our Sunday softball league in Southfield has seven men's teams and nine co-ed teams, and more than 220 players coming out each week at Inglenook Park. You can bring your family out to watch some games (men's: 10 a.m.-noon; co-ed: noon-1 p.m.) and enjoy the beautiful park with a jungle gym for the kids to play on ... and the occasional ice cream truck. And don't forget, everyone is welcome to join us on Monday and Wednesday at Como's in Ferndale, as our kickball teams go up for food and drinks after their games. Ask for the ComePlayDetroit special for two pitchers of beer and an extra-large pizza for only $28! MARIELLE TEMKIN I JN INTERN 40 June 28 2012 CPD Mazel Toys Congratulations to David Herc and Dr. Erica Lewis, who were married at Knollwood Country Club on Saturday, June 2. It was an honor and a privilege to stand up for David and to share in their celebration. Adam Rubin and Natalie Kulbersh also said their vows at Knollwood Country Club a week later, on Saturday, June 9, in a beautiful ceremony. Congrats! Be sure to check out www. comeplaydetroit.com , as we will be opening registration for a variety of late summer leagues soon. E David Herc and Dr. Erica Lewis Michael Bassirpour Filmmaker goes from Farmington Hills to the Hollywood Hills. yan Lewis, who grew up in Farmington Hills, is the }fit executive producer of the recently released stoner comedy, High School. And that's not the only Michigan link to this film, either — it was filmed entirely in Howell and Detroit in 2008. It seems Lewis, 29, is a good-luck charm for bringing movies to Michigan; his project before High School, a film titled Demoted, planned for release this summer, also Ryan Lewis was filmed in Michigan. "Right after we finished filming Demoted, the tax credits were passed. So we went back to California, We'd like to give a shout out to ComePlayDetroiter Mike Bassirpour on his newest career venture. Mike opened up Advanced Recycling, the first metal recycling center in Livonia. We wish Mike a ton of success. For more information, visit www.advrecycling.com or call (734) 266-2700. figured out all the prices and Michigan ended up being the place we picked [for High School]," said Lewis. The film, which was directed by John Stalberg and stars Matt Bush, Sean Marquette and Adrien Brody, chronicles the trials of the senior class' valedictorian who smokes marijuana for the first time, only to have the principal announce that he will be testing the entire school for drugs. He decides that the only way to escape punishment is to get the entire school high. Lewis' involvement in the movie industry started when he attended the University of Michigan to study film, and "got lucky enough to land an internship" between his freshman and sophomore years in Massachusetts, working on a movie called Passionada. "It was just doing production assistant- type stuff, but I got to see everything that was going on and see just what it meant to make a movie," he explained. Executive producing is much different from that of the assistant role he filled as an intern. Lewis said that, for High School, he "found the script and took it through the development process, and I was on set for the entire production from casting onward." He added that Warren Zide, who hails from Southfield, also was a producer for the film. Lewis emphasized the friendly atmosphere on the set. "The director and co-writer were really just the consummate filmmakers. They were professional and hilarious, and they brought a sense of camaraderie to everybody on set that made it a unique and fun experience." High School screened at the Sundance Film Festival in 2010 and had a "great reception," according to Lewis. On rottentomatoes.com , most critics gave the film a "rotten" rating, but one wrote, "It's exactly what it appears to be: a funny-enough stoner comedy with a Adam Rubin and Natalie Kulbersh likable cast." Nearly all audience members on the site said the film is very funny. Another of Lewis' recent projects was co-producing Fat Kid Rules the World, directed by Matthew Lillard. It screened at the Seattle International Film Festival on May 18. He said he "loves bringing everybody together to make the film, and producers get to be a part of the whole process.... producing is where my heart lies." Regarding Gov. Rick Snyder's removal of the unlimited tax credits for filmmakers in Michigan, Lewis' mother, Marsha Lewis of Franklin, said, "It's terrible. There were a lot of movies made here [between 2008 and 2009], and it had such a trickle- down effect for offshoot companies like caterers, restaurants and hotels. It's a real blow to our economy not to have [the tax credits]." While Snyder has not reinstated former Gov. Jennifer Granholm's 42 percent rebate system, which lured production companies like Flipzide — the company that produced High School and Demoted and for which Lewis is the head of development — to Michigan, the governor plans to double the current allotment, from $25 million to $50 million, for 2013. The Lewises are members of Temple Shir Shalom in West Bloomfield. E