Paul Israel Pickman (born February 4, 1958) is an American film director, screenwriter, producer, newspaper publisher and columnist best known in United States of America for founding the Kackad[1] (Каскад) pronounced Cascade in English) Russian newspaper.
Pickman graduated in 1981 from the Gerasimov Institute of Cinematography film school in Moscow, with a degree in journalism and art of film directing. He was from Minsk, Belarus. His father, Israel Pickman (Russian: Израиль Цуриелевич Пикман) was a filmmaker who was well known in the USSR and a graduate of the same film school. His mother was Mera Volchenok, a chemical engineer.
Pickman came to public prominence in Belarus in the 1980s, joining his father in Belarus film studios where he had interned since high school. Like many other Jewish Soviets, Pickman left the Soviet Union for the United States in 1989.
In America, Pickman reinvented himself, meeting his second wife, Nelly, in 1994. Pickman embarked on a new project as a scriptwriter, film director and producer with his friend Avi Abramov as director of photography. They created an international documentary called Peace Sounds Sweet. Released in 1995, the movie was well-received and won an award at the Philadelphia International Film Festival. Shortly after, Pickman and his wife decided to launch Baltimore's Kackad Russian Newspaper in June 1995. Pickman serves as the newspaper publisher and columnist.
Pickman plays a pivotal role as a spokesman for the Baltimore Russian and Jewish Soviet immigrant community.
In 2014, Paul Pickman published a book called New Year in September.