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- From: richard@amega.demon.co.uk (Richard Palmer)
- Newsgroups: alt.tv.tv-nation,alt.answers,news.answers
- Subject: [alt.tv.tv-nation] Michael Moore FAQ (Part 1 of 3)
- Supersedes: <michael-moore-faq-1-898311437@amega.demon.co.uk>
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- Date: 26 Jul 1998 13:16:31 -0000
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- Summary: This faq contains information about Michael Moore, Roger and Me,
- Tv Nation, Canadian Bacon and Downsize This.
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- Posted-By: auto-faq 3.3 (Perl 5.004)
- Archive-name: celebrities/michael-moore-faq/part1
- Posting-Frequency: monthly
- Last-modified: Jul 24, 1998
-
- The Michael Moore FAQ Version 3.0
- (Updated Jul 24, 1998)
- Compiled by Edward Champion
- Updated by Richard Palmer (richard@amega.demon.co.uk) and
- Edward Champion (edchamp@mole.slip.net)
-
- * * *
-
- "Political humor is a good way of providing a message -- as opposed
- to giving a sermon." - Michael Moore
-
- * * *
-
- All comments can be addressed to Richard Palmer (richard@amega.demon.co.uk)
- or Edward Champion (edchamp@slip.net)
-
- * * *
-
- DISCLAIMER: This FAQ is strictly for informational purposes only.
- No copyright infringement is intended.
-
- Permission is given to distribute this FAQ, provided it is
- distributed in its complete format and the text within the FAQ
- remains unaltered.
-
- Many thanks go to the following individuals.
-
- David Pautler (pautler@ils.nwu.edu)
- Lincoln Stewart (imp@io.org)
- Kathleen Glynn (krglynn@aol.com)
- Alan Hamilton (alanh@primenet.com)
- Brent Smith
- johnr@vnet.ibm.com
- Jorn Barger
- Peter Shafran <pwslaw@worldnet.att.net>
-
- And anybody else missed out !
-
- * * *
-
- * - Indicates updated or new information.
-
- Contained within the FAQ:
-
- 0. The FAQ
-
- 0.1. What the hell is a FAQ?
- 0.2. Where can I get the latest copy of the FAQ?
- 0.3. Who do I send updates, revisions, corrections and error
- revisions in the FAQ to?
- 0.4. How did this FAQ come about?
-
- 1. Michael Moore
-
- 1.1. Who is Michael Moore?
- 1.2. What films/television has Michael Moore been involved with?
- 1.3. How can I contact Michael Moore?
- 1.4. Are there any web sites devoted to Moore?
- 1.5. Is Michael Moore married?
- 1.6. What was Michael Moore's early life like?
-
- 2. The Journalism Years
-
- 2.1. _The Flint Voice_
- 2.2. The _Mother Jones_ Fiasco
-
- 3. ROGER & ME
-
- 3.0. What is ROGER & ME?
- 3.1. How can I order ROGER & ME?
- 3.2. How did ROGER & ME come about?
- 3.3. What was the big controversy over ROGER & ME?
- 3.4. Who are some of the "stars" of ROGER & ME?
- 3.5. Michael Moore's ROGER & ME publicity diary
- 3.6. After ROGER & ME
-
- 4. PETS OR MEAT: THE RETURN TO FLINT
-
- 4.0. What is PETS OR MEAT: THE RETURN TO FLINT?
- 4.1. How can I order PETS OR MEAT: THE RETURN TO FLINT?
- 4.2. PETS OR MEAT miscellany
-
- 5. TV NATION
-
- 5.0. What is TV NATION?
- 5.0.1. Can I order tapes of TV NATION?
- *5.0.2. Has TV NATION been renewed?
- 5.0.3. If TV NATION isn't being aired anymore, how can I see the
- old episodes?
- 5.0.4. Is there an address for TV NATION?
- 5.0.5. Is there a newsgroup devoted to TV NATION?
- 5.0.6. Is there a TV NATION mailing list?
- 5.0.6.1. How can I get back issues of Veronica Moore's
- newsletters?
- 5.0.7. How can I contact Crackers or Yuri?
- 5.0.8. Are there any TV NATION web pages?
- 5.0.9. Can I order a TV NATION hat?
- 5.0.10. What's the story behind that amazing opening theme music
- and where can I get it?
-
- 5.1. TV NATION Episode Guide
- 5.1.1. The NBC 1994 Summer Replacement Series
- 5.1.2. The 1994 NBC End-of-the-Year Special
- 5.1.3. The Fox 1995 Summer Replacement Series
-
- 5.2. TV NATION BIOGRAPHIES
- 5.2.1. Louis Theroux, Correspondent
- 5.2.2. Rusty Cundieff, Correspondent
- 5.2.3. Janeanne Garofolo, Correspondent
- 5.2.4. Karen Duffy, Correspondent
- 5.2.5. Jeff Stillson, Correspondent
- 5.2.6. Merrill Markoe, Correspondent
- 5.2.7. Ben Hemper, Correspondent
- 5.2.8. Roy Sekoff, Correspondent
- 5.2.9. Crackers, the Corporate Crime-Fighting Chicken
- 5.2.10. Yuri Shvets, TV NATION Agent
-
- 5.3. TV NATION Miscellany
- 5.3.1. Unaired TV NATION Segments and Censorship
- 5.3.2. Michael Moore's Cobb County Diary
- 5.3.3. How did TV NATION come about?
- 5.3.4. Related TV NATION addresses
-
- 6. CANADIAN BACON
-
- 6.0. What is CANADIAN BACON?
- 6.1. Is CANADIAN BACON available on video?
- 6.2. Why was CANADIAN BACON delayed from release so long? And
- how come I didn't see it playing at my local theater?
- 6.3. CANADIAN BACON miscellany
- 6.3.1. Were there any changes from the initial cut?
-
- 7. DOWNSIZE THIS! RANDOM THREATS FROM A UNARMED AMERICAN
-
- 7.0. What is DOWNSIZE THIS!?
- 7.1. How can I get it?
- 7.2. Some Chapter Titles
- 7.3. Relevant Links
-
- 8. THE BIG ONE with Michael Moore
-
- 8.0. What is THE BIG ONE?
- 8.1. Where can I see THE BIG ONE?
- 8.5. What happened with ...
- 8.5.1. Borders Bookstore
- 8.5.2. Richard Jewell
- 8.5.3. Detroit Newspaper Strikes
-
- 9. THE MICHAEL MOORE SHOW
-
- 9.1 What is THE MICHAEL MOORE SHOW?
- 9.2 Will THE MICHAEL MOORE SHOW have a regular time slot?
-
- 10. ADVENTURES IN A TV NATION
-
- *10.1 What is ADVENTURES IN A TV NATION?
-
- 11. BETTER DAYS
-
- 11.1 What is Better Days?
-
- *12. THE SHOW FORMERLY KNOWN AS TV NATION
-
- 13. Miscellaneous
-
- 13.1. Other Projects
-
-
- * * *
-
- 0. The FAQ
-
- 0.1. What the hell is a FAQ?
-
- A FAQ (pronounced "fack") is an acronym for Frequently Asked
- Questions. A FAQ contains information about a particular notion or
- subject. (In this case, filmmaker Michael Moore.) It is often
- utilized by people on the Internet to avoid people asking the same
- questions over and over again. In some cases, such as this one,
- the FAQ in question contains more than enough information than
- necessary.
-
- 0.2. Where can I get the latest copy of the FAQ?
-
- The faq is posted on the 16th of each month to alt.tv.tv-nation,
- alt.answers and news.answers.
-
- The latest version of this FAQ is available on the WWW
- at the following URL:
-
- http://www.amega.demon.co.uk/Moore/index.html
-
- The FAQ can also be found at Edward Champion's Self-Indulgent Home
- Page, located at:
-
- http://www.slip.net/~edchamp
-
- In addition copies of the faq can be retreived from the news.answers
- FAQ archive at
-
- ftp://rtfm.mit.edu/pub/faqs/celebrities/michael-moore-faq/
-
- 0.3. Who do I send submissions, updates, revisions, or error
- corrections in the FAQ to?
-
- Send any updates, etc, to Richard Palmer or Edward Champion (
- see email addresses above ).
-
- 0.4. How did this FAQ come about?
-
- This FAQ was written by Edward Champion, who compiled
- most of the information in it from various interviews, reviews
- and articles. I have been updating the faq from 1997 after
- Edward left the 'net for a while in 1996. Both Edward and I are now
- updating the faq.
-
- 1. Michael Moore
-
- 1.1. Who is Michael Moore?
-
- Michael Moore is a filmmaker and journalist born in Flint,
- Michigan. Formerly the editor of an alternative newspaper called
- _The Michigan Voice_, his unique approach to the two crafts has won
- him legions of fans and critical accolade, from notables such as
- Alexander Cockburn and numerous other critics. He is perhaps best
- known for his groundbreaking satirical documentary, ROGER & ME, and
- his critically acclaimed television series, TV NATION.
-
- 1.2. What films/television has Michael Moore been involved with?
-
- The following list contains everything that Moore has been
- creatively involved in. TV specials, interviews and other sundries
- have been excluded due to lack of time and for the sake of brevity.
-
- ROGER & ME (1989, 87 minutes) Directed by Michael Moore.
- Moore's cutting-edge satirical documentary that explores Michael's
- pursuits of General Motors chairman Roger Smith after Moore's home
- town, Flint, Michigan, has been devastated by layoffs.
-
- PETS OR MEAT: THE RETURN TO FLINT (1992, 24 minutes) Directed
- by Michael Moore. The sequel to ROGER & ME that follows-up on many
- of the individuals from the first film (Ben Hamper, the Rabbit
- Lady, etc.).
-
- BLOOD IN THE FACE (1991, 78 minutes) Although Michael Moore
- didn't direct this documentary on right-wing extremist groups, he
- does appear halfway through the film as an interviewer. The film
- is distributed by First Run Features.
-
- TV NATION (1994, NBC, 8 episodes) For more details, see
- episode guide.
-
- TV NATION YEAR-END SPECIAL (1994, NBC, 45 minutes) For more
- details, see episode guide.
-
- TV NATION (1995, FOX, 8 episodes) For more details see
- episode guide.
-
- TV NATION YEAR-END SPECIAL (1995, FOX, 45 minutes) Unaired
- special, although a clip was shown on Moore's most recent
- appearance on LATE NIGHT WITH CONAN O'BRIEN.
-
- CANADIAN BACON (1995, 100 minutes) Written and Directed by
- Michael Moore. Moore's first narrative film starring John Candy,
- Rhea Perlman, Kevin Pollack, Alan Alda, Rip Torn, Bill Nunn, and
- Kevin J. O Connor. Alda is a liberal US president who decides to
- invade Canada to boost his popularity in the polls. Little does he
- realize the effect this will have on the population.
-
- THE BIG ONE(1997,90 minutes) Written,Produced and Directed by
- Michael Moore.
- Returning to the documentary style of Roger and Me,this film
- follows Moore on his booksigning tour around 47 American cities.
-
- THE MICHAEL MOORE SHOW (1997) A pilot for a weekly talk-show
- with Michael Moore as host.
-
- BETTER DAYS (1998) A sitcom by Moore under development, about a town
- where everybody is unemployed.
-
- 1.3 How can I contact Michael Moore?
-
- Michael Moore can be contacted via e-mail at MMFlint@aol.com.
-
- For those of you who prefer snail-mail, he can be reached via
- Dog Eat Dog Films at:
-
- PO Box 831
- Radio City Station
- New York, New York 10101-0831
-
- 1.4 Are there any web sites devoted to Moore?
-
- Yes, there are many.
-
- Michael Moore's official site is located at:
-
- http://www.michaelmoore.com.
-
- In addition, there is a Dog Eat Dogs Film site at:
-
- http://www.dogeatdogfilms.com.
-
- There are many sites devoted to TV Nation.
-
- The official TV Nation site can be reached at:
-
- http://www.spe.sony.com/TVN/m_moore.html.
-
- Pete's TV Nation Page can be reached at:
-
- http://www.owlnet.rice.edu/~repete/TVNation.
-
- A future version of the FAQ will attempt to chronicle all of
- the Internet resources currently available for Michael Moore. Feel
- free to e-mail the two authors if you would like to see your site
- listed.
-
- 1.5. Is Michael Moore married?
-
- Yes, Moore is married to Kathleen Glynn, who is the producer
- of TV NATION.
-
- 1.6. What was Michael Moore's early life like?
-
- In 1954, Michael Moore was born in Davison, Michigan, a suburb
- of Flint, to an Irish Catholic family of laborers. At 14, Moore,
- impressed by the Berrigans, joined a diocesan seminary.
- But a year later, he was asked to leave. Moore cited girls as the
- main proponent. He was forced to return to Davison High School,
- where he became a star of the school debate team, a student-
- government organizer and even authored a school play.
-
- "It was a religious theme and it ended when Christ comes down
- off the cross and is nailed back up. The people who nailed Christ
- back up were modeled on people in my town. They could recognize
- themselves."
-
- In 1970, Moore received the Eagle Scout award. His Eagle
- Scout project was a slide show exposing the worst polluters in
- Flint. After high school, Moore worked several jobs, including one
- at Buick, which he quit on his first day. In 1972, spurned on by
- Donald Priehs, his former government teacher, Moore decided to run
- for the school board and won; at 18, Moore became the youngest
- member to sit on the Flint City Council. Shortly after, Moore
- lobbied to get Priehs fired. Moore caused so much trouble for the
- town that a recall drive was attempted. Moore dropped out of the
- University of Michigan, Flint because he was too busy suing his
- town in court.
-
- Dissatisfied with urban politics, Moore resigned. But Moore
- was determined to get his views out to the public in some way. He
- organized antinuclear protests and rock concerts. While Moore got
- his economic training reading Alexander Cockburn, he set up a
- crisis intervention center. Eventually, Moore got a job as a
- public radio correspondent. But, one day, after a broadcast turned
- into a shouting match, Moore decided to abandon radio in favor of
- founding an alternative newspaper where he could properly get out
- his views.
-
- 2. The Journalism Years
-
- 2.1. _The Flint Voice_
-
- At 22, Moore started up _The Flint Voice_ (which later
- expanded into_The Michigan Voice_). He served as editor of _The
- Michigan Voice_ for ten years, taking on issues that no other local
- publications would print about. He attacked Flint's police force,
- criticized the policies of its conservative mayor and, of course,
- chided General Motors at every opportunity. In the process, he
- brought on acrimonious attacks by _The Flint Journal_, itself a
- buffer for General Motors. _The Voice_ rose in paid circulation to
- 5,000 and Moore triumphantly continued, until he got a phone call
- from San Francisco.
-
- 2.2. The _Mother Jones_ Fiasco
-
- Moore was offered the editorship of _Mother Jones_ magazine,
- an opportunity to bring his voice to a national level.
- Immediately, he took the bait. He sold _The Michigan Voice_ and
- moved to San Francisco. His girlfriend, Kathleen Glynn, gave up
- her graphic design business to join him.
-
- When Moore took over the editorial rein of _Mother Jones_
- magazine, he felt that the publication had taken "a slide into safe
- mediocrity." He wanted to evolve _Mother Jones_ from what was
- essentially a harmless yuppie publication into something
- revitalizing the magazine's old working class ties and exposing the
- social ills of the nation.
-
- He met with the editorial staff the first day he was hired and
- Moore took the liberty to bash the magazine, telling everybody that
- he wouldn't print anything in the last three issues and asking if
- anybody in the room could defend themselves against this claim. He
- brought in several new writers, including Ben Hamper, Hugh Drummond
- and Alexander Cockburn. The September 1986 issue of _Mother Jones_
- featured Ben Hamper on the cover and an excerpt from his book,
- _Rivithead_.
-
- But, he found conflict. Richard Schaufler, an ad rep, was
- fired for being associated with a Marxist group, the Democratic
- Workers Party, and the _Mother Jones_ managers had fired him after
- two days, much to Moore's chagrin.
-
- The tension culminated when Moore refused to print an article
- written by Paul Berman against the Sandanistas in Nicaragua. It
- claimed that the Sandanistas were Leninist souvenirs of the New
- Left and that they had betrayed the promise of the revolution.
- Moore claimed, "Reagan could easily hold it up, saying, 'See, even
- _Mother Jones_ agrees with me.' The article was flatly wrong and
- the worst kind of patronizing bullshit. You would scarcely know
- from it that the United States had been at war with Nicaragua for
- the last five years." Needless to say, Adam Hochschild, the owner
- and publisher of _Mother Jones_ didn't like Moore's style and
- promptly fired him.
-
- Polemicist Alexander Cockburn put his reputation on the line
- by writing a scathing article on the affair, getting his column
- pulled from several major liberal weeklies.
-
- Moore filed a $2 million lawsuit against Hochschild, suing for
- unlawful dismissal and, after a well-publicized blowup, Hochschild
- agreed to settle out of court.
-
- 3. ROGER & ME
-
- 3.0. What is ROGER & ME?
-
- ROGER & ME is the top grossing documentary of all time.
- Released by Warner Brothers in 1992, ROGER & ME showed the
- devastating effect General Motors had on the Flint, Michigan
- community after closing several plants. Thousands of workers were
- laid off. The film chronicled the devastation of the Flint,
- Michigan community as well as focusing on Moore's attempts to meet
- Roger Smith, the CEO of General Motors.
-
- The film was lauded for its unique combination of Moore's
- acerbic editorializing and the film's exploration of the
- deterioration of the Flint community in such a casual, accessible
- and personal manner.
-
- ROGER AND ME appeared on more than 100 critics' 10 Best Films
- of the Year lists - including those of Vincent Canby, Janet Maslin,
- Caryn James (New York Times), and Gene Siskel (Chicago Tribune). A
- number of critics - from the New York Post, National Public Radio,
- and Seattle Times, to name a few - named "Roger and Me" one of the
- "Ten Best Films of the Decade." The film also received the
- following awards - Best Documentary: National Board of Review, New
- York Film Critics, Los Angeles Film Critics, and the National
- Society of Film Critics; Best Film Award: Toronto Film Festival,
- Vancouver Film Festival, and Chicago Film Festival; and the
- Audience Award: Berlin Film Festival.
-
- 3.1. How can I order ROGER & ME?
-
- ROGER & ME is readily available through Warner Home Video for
- $19.95. You can also find it at most video retail stores.
-
- 3.2. How did ROGER & ME come about?
-
- After Moore was fired from _Mother Jones_, Moore sank into a
- deep depression, consisting of watching a lot of films. Although
- he continued to write for _The Nation_ and several newspapers,
- Moore quickly got homesick and retreated back to Flint.
-
- When Moore arrived back in Michigan, he began to study General
- Motors' effect on the town more fastidiously than he had done
- before. He suddenly realized that he could present
- his vision of the world on film. He announced his plan to make the
- movie to his friends.
-
- "We thought he was fucking crazy," said Ben Hamper.
-
- Nevertheless, his friends agree to volunteer and Moore had his
- movie crew. After winning a $58,000 out-of-court settlement from
- _Mother Jones_ for his unfair dismissal, he put the money directly
- into the film. Moore sold his house, had yard sales and set up
- weekly Bingo games to raise the remainder of the $260,000 budget
- for ROGER & ME. At one point, Moore even sold his bed. When he
- ran out of money, he would wander the streets in search of empty
- cans and bottles he could recycle.
-
- "We didn't know f-stop from F TROOP."
-
- Moore hooked up with filmmakers Kevin Rafferty (ATOMIC CAFE)
- and Anne Bohlen (WITH BABIES AND BANNERS) for a week to learn
- how to use the equipment. He got old friend Wendey Stanzler to
- edit the film, who Moore had met at the crisis intervention center.
-
- Moore and his cadre had never had any film experience before. At
- one point, when filming an interview with Jesse Jackson, Jackson
- showed Moore how to operate the tape recorder. But, Moore had the
- consolation of two professional camera operators he had hired to
- shoot the film.
-
- After successful viewings at several film festivals and Jim
- Pierson's efficient lobbying, Moore started to draw a smell
- distributors followed. Eventually, after meeting with several
- studios, he sold the negative to Warner Brothers for $3 million.
-
- 3.3. What was the big controversy over ROGER & ME?
-
- Michael did an interview with Harlan Jacobson of _Film
- Comment_, in which Jacobson charged Moore with the sequential
- rearrangement of certain chronological events within the movie.
- For example, Reagan's visit and the pizza shop was in 1980, before
- he was president and Robert Schuller came to Flint in 1987, after
- the Great Gatsby party. This criticism was later reaffirmed by
- film critic Pauline Kael in a review in the _New Yorker_ when she
- declared ROGER & ME "a piece of gonzo demagoguery."
-
- In defense, Moore stated in the interview, "The movie is
- essentially what has happened to this town during the 1980's. I
- wasn't filming in 1982...so everything that happened happened. As
- far as I'm concerned, a period of seven or eight years...is pretty
- immediate and pretty devastating....I think it's a document about
- a town that died in the 1980's, and this is what happened....What
- would you rather have me do? Should I have maybe begun the movie
- with a Roger Smith or GM announcement of 1979 or 1980 for the first
- round of layoffs that devastated the town, which then led to
- starting these projects, after which maybe things pick up a little
- bit in the mid '80's, and then _boom_ in '86, there's another
- announcement, and then tell that whole story?....Then it's a three
- hour movie. It's a _movie_, you know; you can't do everything. I
- was true to what happened. Everything that happened in the movie
- happened. It happened in the same order that it happened
- throughout the '80's. If you want to nit-pick on some of those
- specific things, fine."
-
- Moore's take on this is also further evinced in the ROGER & ME
- publicity diary.
-
- 3.4. Who are some of the "stars" of ROGER & ME?
-
- Kay Leni Rae Rafko: Miss Michigan, who says she's "a big
- supporter of employment."
-
- Ben Hamper: Moore's friend and GM auto worker, who put himself
- in a hospital due to the ensuing stress of getting fired.
-
- Ronald Reagan: He buys a pizza for 12 unemployed locals and
- tells them to move to Texas.
-
- Bob Eubanks: He returns to his home town to do a county fair
- version of "The Newlywed Game."
-
- Pat Boone: Spokesman for General Motors, who got a free
- Corvette and stationwagon out of the deal.
-
- Anita Bryant: Sings "You'll Never Walk Alone" to Flint
- denizens.
-
- Robert Schuller: Paid $20,000 to inspire Flint locals.
-
- Fred Ross: Deputy Sheriff of Flint who evicts people from
- their homes.
-
- Rhonda Britton: aka The Rabbit Lady, elicits forth the film's
- central question, "Pets or Meat?"
-
- The Amway Woman: Working for Amway to determine people's
- colors.
-
- 3.5. Michael Moore's ROGER & ME publicity diary
-
- The following article was printed in the July 15, 1990 edition
- of _The New York Times_. It is an interesting glimpse into the
- life Moore led while publicizing ROGER & ME.
-
- 'ROGER' AND I, OFF TO HOLLYWOOD AND HOME TO FLINT
- By Michael Moore
-
- Flint, Mich.
-
- There were omens. I don't believe in omens, but they were
- there, nonetheless.
-
- I had made a movie called "Roger and Me," and Hollywood wanted
- it. I had never been in Hollywood. On the flight out, the guy
- next to me was reading Tom Clancy's latest thriller when he
- suddenly began reciting what I recognized as the Latin version of
- the Act of Contrition. He then keeled over into the aisle.
-
- When I arrived in L.A., I was taken to a hotel on the Sunset
- Strip and given the bungalow where John Belushi had bought the
- ranch. I asked for a new room and went off to a meeting with
- studio executives. Somewhere between "first look" and "net
- profit," the TV screen across the room went blank: the curtains
- mysteriously moved and someone shouted that a quake had hit San
- Francisco.
-
- Later, it was announced that Universal would suspend the
- Earthquake ride on its studio tour. It was the only thing that
- made sense all day.
-
- All of these events seemed to point to an obvious conclusion
- -- I should have stayed in Flint, Mich., my hometown and subject of
- my 1989 film, "Roger and Me." But four studios wanted to
- distribute my movie. One studio head's first commitment to me was
- "I'm surprised G.M. hasn't had you shot!" Another exec bragged
- that his studio was putting out top quality films. "C'mon," I
- said. "Ninety percent of the stuff you guys make is just junk."
- He responded, "I'm deeply offended by that remark. It's more like
- 80 percent." Eventually, after we made sure it would play with
- "Tango and Cash" in at least a hundred cities, we sold "Roger and
- Me" to Warner Brothers.
-
- On the Road
-
- In November 1, I began a 110-city tour to convince Americans
- that they should go to see a documentary that was a comedy about
- 30,000 people losing their jobs. Much of it is a blur to me now.
- I remember only St. Louis (site of the world headquarters of Tums),
- Fort Lauderdale (the Swimming Pool Hall of Fame) and Birmingham,
- Ala. (No. 1 in the country for hip and knee replacements) Twenty
- times a day I answered the same 30 questions. To keep myself from
- sinking into some catatonic state of boredom, I began to make up
- new answers to the questions and change them every day. I believe
- that on only three occasions I was asked something different. "How
- old were you when you lost your virginity?" (People magazine), "Do
- you believe in God?" (The Chicago Tribune) and "Will you sign an
- autograph for my poodle?" (The New Yorker)
-
- It seemed like I spent hours at a time discussing with
- journalists whether "Roger and Me" was a "real" documentary. Many
- did not want to explore the political issues raised by the movie.
- But there were some journalists who livened things up a bit. For
- instance, there was the time a film critic broke into a hotel room
- occupied by me and two friends who had worked on the film. When we
- opened the door and caught her, we asked to see if she had put
- anything in her bag. She became offended, ripped off her clothes
- and screamed, "Frisk me! Frisk me!" We didn't, but we gave her
- two thumbs up and called hotel security.
-
- Then there was the day Phil Donahue came in to Flint to
- broadcast two shows on the hometown's reaction to the movie. Ten
- minutes before we go on the air, the Flint police inform me there
- may be a sniper in the audience and, uh, would I like to wear a
- bulletproof vest? (Was this just their way of saying "break a leg"
- before going on, or does this also happen to the cross-dressers and
- infidels who regularly appear with Phil?)
-
- The high point of the film's release was learning that "Roger
- and Me" had become an answer on "Wheel of Fortune." The low point
- was reading that, in announcing the opening, the New York Times had
- changed my name to "Roger Moore" and the country was thrown into a
- dyslexic frenzy with two out of three people now shouting "Hey,
- Roger!" to me on the street.
-
- A Day in the Life
-
- If I were to pick one day that typified my experience in
- Hollywood with "Roger and Me," it would have to be Jan. 16 of this
- year. Here's how my journal read that day:
-
- 6:50 A.M. -- I hear a noise at my hotel room door. Someone
- has slipped a note under it. Oh, no. It's those guys from William
- Morris again. There are 12 separate agents from Morris trying to
- sign me up. I tell them repeatedly I don't want an agent, but
- that's like saying no to the LaRouchites at O'Hare. It only
- encourages them. Would I like to do lunch, brunch, nails, swim and
- gym or how 'bout in a spin in my Miata? Their names all begin with
- "B" -- Bret, Brad, Brent, Bika -- and they are all very nice-nice
- to me. But I want to sleep and keep the 10 percent.
-
- 9 A.M. -- TV interview. It's one of those entertainment news
- shows. The reporter has brought notes. She begins. "Michael,"
- she says, and then pauses to look at her notes, "tell
- me....about....yourself," I hate this attention to detail.
-
- 10 A.M. -- Magazine interview. The reporter wants to know if
- the proceeds from my next film will go to the P.L.O. I ask him if
- the rumors that he's dating Qadaffi's daughter are true. He
- doesn't laugh. He's not the first to ask this weird question. I
- think it all started back at the New York Film Festival, when an
- audience member asked me what my next film would be, and the first
- thing that came to mind was "a comedy western about the Middle East
- called 'West Bank Story.'" Some people got a little crazy about
- this...which has made me think maybe it's not such a bad idea.
-
- Noon -- L.A. Film Critics Lunch, Beverly Hills. "Roger and
- Me" is being presented with the award for best documentary. This
- is the only Warner Brothers film to pick up any of the New York or
- Los Angeles critics' awards this year, and the winners public
- relations people I'm sitting with don't seem to mind. Spike Lee's
- film "Do the Right Thing" has been chosen as the best film of 1989,
- and I agree.
-
- Spike, though he doesn't know it, has been a real inspiration
- to me. The week after I saw "She's Gotta Have It" in October 1988
- I decided to get started on "Roger and Me." I've read his books,
- hired his lawyer and producer's rep, used the lab he used -- and
- spent $10,000 less! Last week, Gene Siskel said on his show that
- 20 years from now, when they look back at the Reagan era, two films
- will stand out as the statement of our times -- "Do the Right
- Thing" and "Roger and Me." To be mentioned with Spike in that
- way...well, it was undeserved, I thought, but what a great feeling.
-
- After the lunch, Spike came up to me and suggested we get
- together and talk. The Warners public relations rep overheard this
- and went ballistic. "You can't do that," she interrupted. "You
- have a full afternoon of interviews, and there is no time for
- anything else." She had edged herself between Spike and me and was
- motioning to the door. Spike looked over the top of his glasses at
- me, and then at her and then back to me with a grin that said,
- "Just who's in charge here, Mike?" "Well," he said, "give me a
- call sometime when you're in New York" and left. I thought about
- this for the rest of the afternoon.
-
- 5 P.M. -- I am now at the NBC studios in Burbank, where I'm to
- be a guest on the "Tonight" show, with Jay Leno as the host. Jay
- comes into my dressing room 10 minutes before the show and tells me
- of the pressure G.M. has been putting on NBC regarding my
- appearance. He shows me a "Truth Packet" that G.M. had sent over
- for him to read. It includes a story from Film Comment and a
- review by Pauline Kael. G.M. has been very busy making copies of
- these and sending them to journalists around the country.
-
- Film Comment is a publication of the Film Society of Lincoln
- Center. Lincoln Center had received a $5 million gift from G.M.
- just prior to its publishing of the piece trashing "Roger and Me."
- Coincidence? Or just five big ones well spent?
-
- (Later, I would learn that G.M. had sent a directive to their
- advertising agencies to pull all G.M. ads from "The Donahue Show"
- on which I appeared, and The New York Times reported G.M.
- threatening to yank their commercials from any show that has me on
- as a guest.)
-
- Jay Leno expresses his displeasure with receiving such
- literature and encourages me to let them have it on the show.
-
- 7:30 P.M. -- The "Tonight" show went well. I've escaped from
- the public relations department and the driver and gone over to see
- a friend from Flint. I'm eating a hamburger when I get a call that
- The New York Times is looking for me. I call the reporter and he
- tells me that Ralph Nader's office is speaking out against the
- movie and both Nader and the United Auto Workers Union have sent
- him some of the same materials opposing the film that G.M. sends
- out.
-
- All of a sudden, I feel like I'm in that "Star Trek" episode
- and I'm on this planet where everything is the exact opposite of th
- way it is on Earth. Well-off liberals seem to really be disturbed
- by the movie, as if it tells some dirty little secret of the yuppie
- era. Where was the U.A.W. leadership when thousands of jobs were
- being eliminated? Where was Ralph Nader? We need the union and we
- need Ralph Nader, so why don't they get on with their work and not
- G.M.'s?
-
- 10:30 PM -- I've just finished "The Larry King Show" (he drank
- two cans of Lipton's sugared ice tea while we talked) and stopped
- by a newsstand to pick up tomorrow's Los Angeles Times. This
- headline ran across the top of the Calendar section: "Will
- Controversy Cost 'Roger' an Oscar?"
-
- What was the "controversy?" Hold onto your seats: Their
- investigations had revealed these four points: (a) The wealthy
- homes in the movie were shot on a different street than stated; (b)
- the rats in the film were actually imported from Detroit and thus
- were not Flint born; (c) that the chronology was wrong, because the
- tourism projects to save the town were built before the factory
- closings (absolutely not true); and (d) the pizza parlor cash
- register was stolen just before Reagan's lunch with the unemployed
- not during it (an important distinction).
-
- The L.A. Times quoted an unnamed member of the Academy
- committee who said that "Roger and Me" didn't stand a chance of
- even being nominated because they were easily "five better films"
- that the committee has seen. This was the same quote given last
- year by a committee member, Mitchell Block, when he explained why
- "The Thin Blue Line" was not nominated. Mr. Block has a financial
- interest in who gets nominated; he owns a documentary distribution
- company and, in the last 10 years, nearly one quarter of all films
- that have won the Academy Award for best documentary have been
- Mitchell Block films.
-
- The Academy votes tomorrow. The L.A. Times has held this
- story to the last minute, so we have no chance to respond to it
- before the vote. A reporter at the paper phones me the next day to
- say that publishing this article seemed like an obvious attempt to
- influence the Academy's vote and violated The Time's ethics. The
- vote is taken, and "Roger and Me" is not nominated. The five films
- that get the nod -- three are distributed by Mitchell Block -- are
- all out of chronological order, but no articles appear in The L.A.
- Times pointing this out.
-
- Home Again
-
- I'm back in Flint now. On Father's Day, a plane flies over
- the city with a banner that reads, "NEED CASH FOR FATHER'S DAY?
- CALL JULIE'S PAWN." Things haven't changed much here. In fact,
- they've gotten worse. The day my video is released, a local video
- store asked me to stop by and sign some autographs. Hundreds
- showed up, most to tell me their own stories of being laid off, to
- ask me for help, for money, for something.
-
- It's all pretty depressing until a process server stops by to
- issue me a summons. Deputy Fred, the sheriff in the film who
- evicts families from their homes, has sued me because he believes
- his "performance" in the film should be compensated. I explain to
- the media, which have tagged along that I do not pay police for
- evicting families. Instead, for the next week, anyone who is
- thrown out of their house by this man, give me a call, and I'll pay
- your deposit so you can get a new house immediately.
-
- I am told that I am prohibited from appearing on certain radio
- and television stations in Flint. I was also supposed to speak to
- a group of Soviet teachers visiting Flint, but the school system
- was afraid of a backlash from G.M. A local teacher quietly
- approaches me at the video store and asks if I can slip him a
- bootleg copy of "Roger and Me" so that he can secretly show it to
- the Russians in a private hotel room in Flint. Maybe they can also
- sneak me in to talk to them also. In Flint. In America. In 1996.
-
- The irony was too much. It should have been in the movie.
-
- 3.6. After ROGER & ME
-
- The profits from "Roger and Me" enabled Moore to establish the
- Center for Alternative Media, a foundation that is dedicated to
- supporting independent filmmakers and social action groups. To
- date, the foundation has dispersed more than $400,000 in grants.
-
- From a January 1993 _Esquire_ interview:
-
- "I had a lot -- a _lot_ of offers to reprise ROGER & ME. Or,
- as the Hollywood people would say, 'Do your ROGER & ME shtick
- again.' I turned down a lot of money."
-
- From an excerpt in the October 12, 1992 _New Yorker_:
-
- "I came to New York City to write," says the filmmaker Michael
- Moore. "Too many distractions in Flint." Moore flashes his now
- familiar smirk, but he's only half joking. He's in New York, all
- right, in the dismal common room of the posh Upper West Side
- apartment building where he lives. Outside, sirens shriek, cabbies
- beep, and boom boxes thump, but no matter. Here he can work. In
- Flint -- well, Flint, Michigan, is not only his home town but the
- desolate setting of his comic 1989 documentary, ROGER & ME, which
- raged at General Motors for plant closings and layoffs that,
- according to Moore, destroyed Flint's economy. The movie achieved
- the largest box-office gross in documentary history (if you don't
- count concert films), and it made Moore famous. Too famous. "I
- was shopping in Flint, and one of the employees got on the phone:
- 'Attention, K mart shoppers. Michael Moore has entered the store.'
- Know what I'm saying? And I'm hiding, you know, behind the
- Valvoline."
-
- Moore got invited to a lot of big premieres. He sat on panels
- for aspiring filmmakers, spouting forth advice and several grants.
- At an Independent Film Project conference in New York, Moore pulled
- out his checkbook and started giving grants on the spot.
-
- 4. PETS OR MEAT: THE RETURN TO FLINT
-
- 4.0. What is PETS OR MEAT: THE RETURN TO FLINT?
-
- It is the 1992 follow-up to Moore's documentary ROGER & ME
- that explores the community of Flint two years later. Interviews
- with Ben Hemper, the Rabbit Lady and others are included, along
- with a couple of glimpses into Moore's post-ROGER AND ME success
- and segments from various talk shows.
-
- PETS OR MEAT was shot on Hi-8 and is 24 minutes in length.
-
- It was also featured with two other shorts edited together in
- a film titled TWO MIKES DON'T MAKE A WRIGHT, that had a brief
- theatrical run.
-
- 4.1. How can I order PETS OR MEAT: THE RETURN TO FLINT?
-
- PETS OR MEAT: THE RETURN TO FLINT can be ordered through Dog
- Eat Dog Films. Contact the Dog Eat Dog Films site for more
- information at:
-
- http://www.dogeatdog.com
-
- 4.2. PETS OR MEAT Miscellany
-
- From the October 12, 1992 _New Yorker_:
-
- Having to blend in with auto supplies is a mark of celebrity
- by any standard, but Moore's troubles were only beginning. PETS OR
- MEAT, his twenty-three-minute sequel to ROGER & ME, was shown on
- PBS last week, and the next day Moore's Voicemail was blitzed; he
- had, rather foolishly, revealed his office phone number in the
- film. "Three hundred and fourteen calls!" he says. "And that's
- just the first day. Eighty per cent were people who lost their
- jobs and wanted to talk to me, but there were some -- Well, one guy
- needed help because he said there was a conspiracy against him
- involving the government and Sigourney Weaver."
-