4B - Thursday, October 3, 2013 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Taylor Swift joins that of "The Giver" The rapper and late-a continue their Twitter riff a K challenges Kanye to a rap Each week we take shots at the biggest developments in the entertainment world. Here's what hit (and missed) this week. No eed for this mnovie __ Disney and Dreamworks releases first official trailer for the video game-based movie, "Need for Speed," which confusingly stars Aaron Paul broke viewership show, drawing 10.3 inale FC picks up 10-episode series eaturing the comedy folk duo Riki Lindholme and Kate Micucci 0 0 6 Design by Nick Cruz DETROIT SOUP From Page 1B 6:00 p.m. Simeon Heyer, owner of the old Jam Handy, paid $13,000 for the building, a fact he still has trouble wrappinghis mind around. "I don't have any money," Heyer said with a laugh. "The idea of me owning anything is absurd." Wearing a thin green sweater and pants that sagged low on his waist, he leaned against a wall in a corner near the entrance, a canary fluttering in a birdcage by his side next to a semi-circle of chairs hold- ingukuleles for aperformance later in the night - the canary belonged to the club Originally from Minnesota, Heyer moved to Detroit from Madison, Wisconsin when he was "bitten by the bug" - attracted, like many others, to the city's do-it- yourself culture. But, more impor- tantly, he wanted to be in a place where he felt he could make a dif- ference. "In Madison, you have a lot of DIY stuff that's not necessary," he said. "Whereas here there are so many things that are needed, whether it's SOUP or just a get- together." He bought the building with his brother three years ago as an acquisition property from Wayne County. After the Jam Handy organization left in the late 1970s, the property transitioned into a televised church, Faith for Amer- ica, followed by a string of other churches and even, for a time, a karate studio, before it became deserted, Heyer said. Renovating the property, for him, has become "more than a full-time job." it's a "lifestyle," he said, funded by creative ventures to which he rentsthe space, such as theatre groups and Detroit SOUP. He makes fixes based on necessity - fundraising for heating, install- ing plumbing, electricity. "Stuff happens asnit's needed," he said. His view of the space reflects the kind of ground-up, communi- ty-building mentality inherent to SOUP. "To the unaccustomed eye this neighborhood looks bombed out and unsafe. But it's not," he said. "As with a lot of parts of Detroit, people need a reason to go there. I think SOUP, and a lot of things that happen here, are a testament to what people trusting each other can accomplish." For the time being, he said, part of the city's character resides in individuals' willingness to rely on each other - after all, they kind of have to. "The city being weak and disor- ganized creates terrible problems for a lot of people," he said. "But it also creates opportunities. And the city is not capable of breathing down your neck. This wouldn't be possible anywhere else." 7:00 p.m. The word "democra- cy" comes to mind. Before a crowd of about 300, presenters get four minutes each to share their ideas and woo their peers for votes. Once the presentations finish, in infor- mal give-and-take sessions remi- niscent of a town-hall meeting, audience members ask questions, grilling presenters on how exactly they plan to spend the money. "That's my favorite part," said LSA senior Isabella Morrison, who started a SOUP-style dinner in Ann Arbor back in March. "People want to know where their money is going." Proposals are submitted on Detroit SOUP's website, with a cutoff date of the Sunday before the dinner. Typically receiving between 10 and 25 submissions per month, Kaherl and asteam of neigh- borhood SOUP leaders decide which four submissions appear most dedicated to helping Detroit and most deserve the chance to present. Winners are then required to return to a later SOUP to report on how they have used the money, a means of holding them account- able. As Kaherl told the crowd before presentations began, there are two rules to presenting at Detroit SOUP: Projects must be about Detroit and technology cannot be used to present, in keepingwith the stripped-down, barebones vibe of the event. Still, later in the evening, Kaherl introduced the new mobile Detroit SOUP app, allowing you to keep up with all things SOUP- related around the city. Tonight's four presenters include Green Living Science, a non-profit devoted to educat- ing Detroit youth on environ- mental issues; Eve's Angels, an organization that aids women trapped in the sex industry; Proj- ect PEACE, an organization that aids families of prisoners and ex- felons; and Ec2 Lab, a mentor- ing program fostering creativity among young people. Though some presenters were poised, others grew nervous from anxiety - four minutes is just not much time. At one point, Felisha Hatcher-Taylor, present- ing with her daughter Jordan on behalf of Ec2 Lab, broke into tears, overcome with emotion. "We won," she said after pre- senting. "The fact that we were here to raise awareness - that is winning." Kaherl, acting as the evening's emcee, implored everyone, if they had any ideas for funding or support for these organiza- tions outside of SOUP, to write their ideas on a sticky note and post the notes on posters near the voting table by the building's rear exit. "Even though only one project is going home with the money raised this evening, everyone goes home a winner!" read a pamphlet distributed on each table. When presentations con- clude, people literally break bread with their neighbors. Dis- cussions of the projects were encouraged. "Turn to your neighbor and ask this question: What proj- ect are you going to vote for?" Kaherl told the crowd before people began lining up for soup and salad, provided by Avalon Bakery. 8:00 p.m. Before leaving her home in Munich, Germany for a week-long trip to Detroit, There- sa Juranek knew one thing about the city: The food is cheap. "We only read bad stuff about The Detroit SOUP program meets once a month at the od Jam Handy building on C it back in Germany," Juranek, 29, said at her table, surrounded by people she'd only met minutes earlier. "You just read about how bad it is, and we wanted to see if it was true." An automotive journalist, she's here with her boyfriend Axel Gundermann, a photog- rapher, to research and write a more positive story about Detroit for people back home. The reality, they said, has been a welcome surprise. In their short stay, they've been charmed by the city's warm and welcom- ing atmosphere. When they meet Detroiters on the street, they're engaged in friendly conversa- tion, which wouldn't happen back home, they said. Between mouthfuls of bread, Gundermann said an event like SOUP would likely fail back in Germany. When asked why, he turned to Juranek and spoke a few words to her in rapid-fire German. After a moment, they both sighed. "(Germans) are too uptight," he said. "For whatever reason, crowdfunding works much bet- ter in the U.S." While Kaherl said SOUP has become more formal since its creation three years ago, the atmosphere here is mellow. Engineering junior Chelsea Pugh helped start a t-shirt com- pany called DCH Apparel with four other University students last year that teaches design and marketing skills to students at Detroit Community High School. The company won fund- ing at last December's SOUP dinner. What began as a class project in "Change by Design," a class in the Penny W. Stamps School of Art & Design, has per- sisted - thanks, in part, to the SOUP micro-grant. Pugh remembers the casual, laid-back atmosphere from when her group won nearly a year ago. "There are some events where it's really professional and every- one's dressed up and pitching these entrepreneurial ideas," she said. "But (at SOUP) it was really nice to see that everyone was a normal person. It wasn't like venture capitalists or any- thing. It was normal people who wanted good ideas in their com- munity." More than just time to think about voting, the dinner itself is a kind of theatrical experience. A bearded man in a top hat goes table to table, lecturing strang- ers on the vital importance of the schwa sound in linguistics as a means to develop a universal, global language; a ukulele club performed; a small child chased a dog through the crowded mass of bodies. But mainly people chat, net- working and finding new ways of working with each other to get ideas and projects started. "What I like about it is that the people are deciding," said Mary Luevanos, a Detroiter and president of the Community for Latino Artists Visionaries and Educators. "The folks here are making the decision and when they're done with it they go off and use the money thatthey need it for. It's not a foundation decid- ing. No one's pulling the strings." 8:45 p.m. The winner is announced: It's Eve's Angels, the organization dedicated to assisting women in the sex trade. Marissa Sheehy, presenting for the organi- zation and a self-described "res- cued angel," says the $1,519 they've received will help establish a safe house for the girls. "We won $1,500, whichis amaz- ing for speaking for four minutes," she said shortly after winning. By night's end, crumbs and plastic bowls lined with red streaks of soup sauce lie scattered across tables. Yet, within min- utes, the plywood, tablecloths, collapsible chairs, candles, bread and soup are whisked away in MARLENE LACASSE/Daily Detroit's East Grand Boulevard. efficient fashion by eager, capa- ble volunteers, jumping at the chance to help clean up and play their part. Soon, the room is empty, save for a few stay-behinds. A group of bearded men in flannel shirts and tight pants drinks beer and laugh by the bar. Most of them live in the neighborhood; some live in the same building. Sheehy does a video interview, still in shock over her win. Standing by the entrance, where a man has begun to play a white piano, Kaherl lets out a deep breath. She says the event was a success. "Everyone walked away with some sort of resource, some sort of knowledge about how they can participate together," she said. She plans on taking the next day off, but then it's right back to work. "With Detroit SOUP we're just going to keep moving into neighborhoods, giving people the chance to share their hearts, their ideas." And by the rear exit, Heyer is locked in heated conversation with two friends, who are also heavy into the Detroit-renova- tion scene. He gestures wildly, like a man possessed, as he dis- cusses the many buildings he knows of in the city that deserve repurposing. When asked what's next for the old Jam Handy now that Detroit SOUP has finished, he shrugs. SOUP will be back in November, he says. Until then a couple will get married here the 6 following weekend, a theatre group might use it for rehearsal space. But primarily, he'll keep working - maybe adding lights, painting walls, replacing doors. Whatever it is that needs to be done. "As with most things here, everything's so informal," he said. "We just do a little bit at a time. It's still mostly just a shell of a building." Find out what's going on at UMichI What happens on campus, stays on campus. Free or Phone and Android? I