"Reclaiming Popular Documentary"--Hot off the presses!

 
reclaiming.jpeg

The UPS guy showed up with such urgency at 9:00 pm last night, the truck’s stereo blaring at top volume as he pulled up.  I wasn't expecting anything and I couldn't figure out what could possibly be so important. Turns out he had reason to be excited. He had my brand-new, hot-off-the-presses copy of Reclaiming Popular Documentary (Indiana University Press), edited by Christie Milliken and Steve F. Anderson. Lots of great material in here : public television and its relationship to the doc ecology; aerial cinematography and the fly-over documentary genre; food docs; popular music docs; eco-docs; melodrama in popular documentary; true crime docs; viral media; etc. The collection also happens to include my essay "Errol Morris, the New York Times, Docmedia, and Op-Docs as Pop Docs” (not sure if the UPS guy realized that, but...)..

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What’s the gist of it? Well, you’ll have to read it, but it’s got some scope to it (MK-Ultra, Seymour Hersh, journalism, photography, Abu Ghraib, “docmedia,” online newspapers, the assassination of John F. Kennedy, smallpox, biological warfare, Steve Bannon, etc.), largely because the work of Errol Morris—in motion picture and print form—has so much scope to it, even if one focuses almost entirely on Morris’s involvement with the New York Times alone. Which of Morris’s films are discussed? Well, primarily a trio of his contributions to the New York Times’ Op-Docs series—The Umbrella Man (2011), November 22, 1963 (2013), and Demon in the Freezer (2016)—as well as The Thin Blue Line (1988) and Wormwood. (2017).

Once again, I find myself in excellent company--contributors include Zoé Druick, Mike Baker, Patricia Aufderheide, S. Topiary Landberg, Rick Prelinger,, Ezra Winton, the late Jonathan Kahana, and many others.

If you’re interested in learning more about the book, its contents, and its authors, you can find that information here.

It's been a long, strange, but fruitful trip, Christie and Steve--congratulations, and thank you for all the hard work!

aj

True Story

 
fig. a:  diptych

fig. a: diptych

The following is a slightly revised and considerably updated version of a story I posted on Instagram back in November.

————

The toughest guy at our junior high school was a guy named Bart Simpson. No joke. Thing is, the context was rather different at the time: this was roughly 5 years before Matt Groening began creating Simpsons shorts for The Tracey Ullman Show.*

Anyway, among other personality quirks, Bart was convinced he was the reincarnation of Jim Morrison, which was particularly strange (people ARE strange) because he was born a couple of years BEFORE Jimbo died in 1971.

At the end of eighth grade, when our yearbooks were released to us, Bart grabbed my friend Kevin’s yearbook and scribbled something in it. Kevin was powerless to do anything because this was Bart Simpson, the toughest guy in school, after all, and he was terrified that his yearbook would be returned to him with all kinds of vulgarities that would be hard to explain to his mother.

When Bart finally handed back his yearbook it read “smoke dope / snort coke / drink wine / feel fine / —Jim Morrison.”

This inscription was still pretty hard for Kevin to explain to his mom, but it was considerably cooler than what he’d been expecting.

Five years later, when The Simpsons appeared on the scene, it became infinitely cooler.

Or, at least that’s the way I remembered things decades later.

Recently I asked Kevin to confirm this story. Turns out I was pretty close, but that Bart’s text was even more noteworthy than I remembered.

It read: “smoke dope / snort coce [sic] / drink wine / feel fine / p.s. Have a nice sumer [sic] / me / Jim Morrison / The Doors [captured in the form of their distinctive logo] / #1.”

fig. b:  Jim Morrison in his own words

fig. b: Jim Morrison in his own words

The truth is stranger than non-fiction.

The Truth / #1.

aj

*And, thus, about 7 1/2 years before it debuted as a stand-alone television show.