{ "html": "\x3cdiv class=\"general_button ctools-back-link\"\x3e\x3ca href=\"/resource-libraries/back?back_link=back-link\" class=\"back-link\"\x3eBack\x3c/a\x3e\x3c/div\x3e\x3cdiv class=\"resource-buttons\"\x3e\x3cdiv id=\"email-share-button\" class=\"general_button\"\x3e\x3ca href=\"/email-resource-library/6254\" class=\"email-share rounded ctools-use-modal ctools-modal-email-button-display-modal-style\"\x3eEmail\x3c/a\x3e\x3c/div\x3e\x3c/div\x3e\x3cdiv class=\"resource-general-item\"\x3e\x3cdiv class=\"view view-resource-tree view-id-resource_tree view-display-id-block_5 library-item view-dom-id-2\"\x3e\n    \n  \n  \n      \x3cdiv class=\"view-content\"\x3e\n        \x3cdiv class=\"views-row views-row-1 views-row-odd views-row-first views-row-last\"\x3e\n      \n  \x3cdiv class=\"views-field-title\"\x3e\n                \x3cspan class=\"field-content\"\x3eBodyguard to the Stars\x3c/span\x3e\n  \x3c/div\x3e\n  \n  \x3cdiv class=\"views-field-field-post-image-fid\"\x3e\n                \x3cspan class=\"field-content\"\x3e\x3cimg src=\"http://www.behrmanhouse.com/sites/default/files/imagecache/library_item_610w/posts/images/bodyguard%20shutterstock_63861274.jpg\" alt=\"\" title=\"\"  class=\"imagecache imagecache-library_item_610w imagecache-default imagecache-library_item_610w_default\" width=\"500\" height=\"343\" /\x3e\x3c/span\x3e\n  \x3c/div\x3e\n  \n  \x3cdiv class=\"views-field-field-image-cache-fid\"\x3e\n                \x3cdiv class=\"field-content\"\x3e\x3c/div\x3e\n  \x3c/div\x3e\n  \n  \x3cdiv class=\"views-field-field-inline-images-fid\"\x3e\n                \x3cdiv class=\"field-content\"\x3e\x3c/div\x3e\n  \x3c/div\x3e\n  \n  \x3cdiv class=\"views-field-body\"\x3e\n                \x3cdiv class=\"field-content\"\x3e\x3cp\x3eFirst it was Kabbalah. Then it was red string bracelets. Now, a new craze is sweeping through Hollywood\x26mdash;Israeli bodyguards. Brad Pitt hired one to protect him from a stalker, Britney Spears and Eva Longoria take them shopping, and Jackie Chan uses them to keep away fans who try to pick a kung-fu fight. IDF-trained bodyguards are fashionable because they use their brawn and their brains to protect celebs. \x26ldquo;We\x26rsquo;re experts in defining people really quickly, and knowing what we\x26rsquo;re up against,\x26rdquo; says Aaron Cohen, founder of Los Angeles-based IMS Security (short for \x26ldquo;Israeli Military Specialists\x26rdquo;). Cohen, a Beverly Hills native, made aliyah (immigrated to Israel) soon after graduating high school. He joined the Israeli army and eventually served in the elite Duvdevan combat unit, where he not only infiltrated a Hamas wedding to nab a known terrorist, but also once disguised himself as an American journalist to trap a terrorist funder. About his career switch from defending a country to guarding superstars, Cohen explains, \x26ldquo;Stalking is a form of terror. The formula is a lot like counter-terrorism.\x26rdquo;\x3c/p\x3e\n\x3cp\x3eIMS employs 22 former IDF (Israel Defense Forces) soldiers because they are trained to size up a threat level and respond quickly to prevent a crisis. Cohen is not interested, he says, in 300-pound gorillas as bodyguards. \x26ldquo;There are clever, nonaggressive ways to handle things.\x26rdquo;\x3c/p\x3e\x3c/div\x3e\n  \x3c/div\x3e\n  \x3c/div\x3e\n    \x3c/div\x3e\n  \n  \n  \n  \n  \n  \n\x3c/div\x3e \x3c/div\x3e" }