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MediaCulture

Hollywood Keeps Dissing Documentaries at the Oscars

By Danny Schechter, AlterNet. Posted March 5, 2007.


Self-satisfied movie moguls keep dissing documentaries at the Oscar ceremonies, doing a great disservice to our political culture and democracy.
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New York, New York: "Yadda, Yadda, Yadda."

Remember that famous phrase from the Jerry Seinfeld show, a program that ruled the airwaves in part because of its absurdity? The comic got rich while avoiding any serious social commentary. On its last night "the show about nothing," held a farewell party at the real Tom's restaurant on New York's upper west side. Every TV truck in town was there to "go live" from this world-shaking historic cultural event.

On the very same night, two blocks away, the poet Alan Ginsberg, whose passions were about everything, was being memorialized at a packed New York Cathedral. No TV trucks turned out to cover the passing of a prophetic poet even though his death was page 1 News in The New York Times.

Jerry seemed to have taken the money and ran, but then turned up the other night on an audience pandering Oscar telecast. The man who stood for so little was given the job of introducing the documentary awards honoring films that chronicle our times and stand up for what really matters in a tinsel town that mostly doesn't.

If you saw the telecast, you saw what a jerk he was, putting down documentaries and trivializing their impact. What an outrage that Hollywood's patrons would chose Mr. Yadda Yadda to do these honors.

John Sinno, one of the documentary honorees that night has now bravely written an Open Letter to the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences to protest the way documentarians were treated so differently than other award categories where directors and actors were praised.

"When comedian Jerry Seinfeld introduced the award for Best Documentary Feature, he began by referring to a documentary that features himself as a subject, then proceeded to poke fun at it by saying it won no awards and made no money, " he writes. "He then revealed his love of documentaries, as they have a very "real" quality, while making a comically sour face. This less-than-flattering beginning was followed by a lengthy digression that had nothing whatsoever to do with documentary films. The clincher, however, came when he wrapped up his introduction by calling all five nominated films "incredibly depressing!"

Ha! Ha!

Sinno goes on, "Jerry Seinfeld's remarks were made at the expense of thousands of documentary filmmakers and the entire documentary genre. Obviously we make films not for awards or money, although we are glad if we are fortunate enough to receive them. The important thing is to tell stories, whether of people who have been damaged by war, of humankind's reckless attitude toward nature and the environment, or even of the lives and habits of penguins. With his lengthy, dismissive and digressive introduction, Jerry Seinfeld had no time left for any individual description of the five nominated films. And by labeling the documentaries "incredibly depressing millions" of viewers not to bother seeing them because they're nothing but downers."

Now I know some of you may be saying that wasn't it great that Al Gore won and that the issue of global warming was showcased at a ceremony that the former Vice President claimed was thoroughly "green." May I remind you that Gore himself was not the winner. Davis Guggenheim, the filmmaker who translated his power point presentation into a financially successful movie, won the revered statuette.

Bear in mind also that global warming is the cause du jour in Hollywood these days with even Arnold Schwarzenegger getting reelected on the strength of his becoming a born-again environmentalist. Climate change is a tres' chic and safe subject. Who but a few crank scientists and Bushies are against this danger. Gore himself said it was not political but moral. Not surprisingly, the movie was well funded with distribution by a rich company with lots to spend on marketing.


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See more stories tagged with: hollywood, documentaries, oscars

News Dissector Danny Schechter edits Mediachannel.org. His latest documentary is “In Debt We Trust. Comments to Dissector@mediachannel.org.

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View:
Wisegalah in Sydney
Posted by: wisegalah on Mar 5, 2007 3:41 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Seinfield's inability to understand anything significant is not really surprising.
His whole show was a demonstration that preoccupation with self may be rewarding to oneself but can also be richly rewarded by the non-discriminating.

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» RE: Wisegalah in Sydney Posted by: willymack
» Here, here Posted by: It'sTheFood
Silly
Posted by: kepstein7777 on Mar 5, 2007 4:37 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
You expect Hollyweird--or anyone else--to appreciate documentaries? You seem naively surprised that they don't.

It's like complaining that Paris Hilton gets lots of money and attention for nothing.

Seinfeld brought really cynical humor to sit-coms in an unprecedented way, and helped kill off a lot of "very special" sit coms for us. I appreciated that. Whatever the shambles of that crew are doing now is another matter.

Speaking of cynical, I noticed that you're a documentary filmmaker.

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Seinfeld died out with the end of his series
Posted by: itzamirakul on Mar 5, 2007 5:27 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
His only ability was playing ONE character and unlike others more talented, he has not been able to transfer that character to anything else.

His wife is a celebrity wanna-be and probably insisted that he be an announcer of SOMETHING...ANYTHING...so she could have a more important place in events.

Also, he is trying to put on a funny face again to detract attention from good friend Michael Richards' (Kramers') recent racial rant against African Americans. After all, Jerry and the rest of the Seinfeld gang want folks to buy their dvd and keep their riches rolling in.

I used to like the show and watched the re-runs every night until that racist rant. I'm through with the whole bunch now and nothing that Jerry Seinfeld has to say will keep me from watching and respecting documentary films.

I do think the Academy owes documentary film makers an apology for putting this idiot in as awards announcer for anything.

Seinfeld is no longer funny...

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Must Hollywood dictate our culture?
Posted by: iwantchange on Mar 5, 2007 5:42 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I can think of a several commendable hollywood films dissed by the Academy and ignored by the media. "The War at Home," comes to mind. Was it dissed because of Martin Sheen? But so many independent films and documentaries have been overlooked forever. So many of them should be required in schools, like "Falluja, April 2004," "Here in America," "Iraq for Sale," Part of the problem is they are independent of Hollywood money. The other problem is journalists. I never go to big screen theater and pay to see movies for entertainment value...I can always rent or buy later. But I do spend a lot of money at Brave New Films, Iron Weed Films and Progressive Films. Talk about over looked brilliance! I put my money where my mouth is. I wish more writers were spreading the word about the films we should see rather than worrying about academy awards. I subscribe to a dozen alt-news and commentary sites and not a one of them has a section reviewing independent films and documentaries. Is this politics as usual? Are we destined to be mediocre and mainstream? I say, be the change you want to see.

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Document the truth is Not of concern to Hollywood Only $$$:
Posted by: mite on Mar 5, 2007 8:45 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
One of the best films and in the top 100 on google in the past couple years:

America: Freedom-to-Fascism- by Aaron Russo

Terrorstorm- by Alex Jones- www.infowars.com

Loose-Change:

But truth that threatens the Staus-Quo will never be main-stream Media. If one watches these movies (DVD's) and verifies the facts in them one knows the fear of these elites in Banking-Corporations-Government.

Also search google for: theft-by-deception
money-masters Parts 1&2

Then read our U.S.Constitution" Article 1, Section 8 and wonder why Congress committed these acts of treason.

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I hear that people who live in rural CA HATE Hollywood.
Posted by: maxpayne on Mar 5, 2007 8:58 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It kind of reminds me of Thomas Frank's "What's the Matter With Kansas?" where he points out how the Hollywood bigshots actually benefit from economically conservative policies all the while having fun rubbing voters the other way by feigning liberalism. You see, voters get angry when Hollywood stars jump into politics which usually turns out to be on social issues. They can always count on voters to show their anger in the wrong direction and indirectly give them more benefits at their own loss. Case in point, a couple of female rock stars kiss each other on TV and voters get angry and vote to give them more tax cuts.

P.S.: I hear that CA gets a lot of ballot initiatives on the economic front but that Hollywood either goes silent or openly supports Big Business against the working class. Sad.

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Everyone should see 9/11: Press For Truth
Posted by: LeftWright on Mar 5, 2007 10:23 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
and then consider whether they still think the government myth of 9/11 has any validity at all.

The FBI now admit that they don't know who the 9/11 "hijackers" were. They also admit that they have "no hard evidence" linking bin Laden to 9/11.

Two illegal wars and over five years later and we still don't know who did it.

Isn't it time we had a new investigation into 9/11?

The truth shall set us free. Love is the only way forward.

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» fifthworld - Posted by: LeftWright
Academy Frauds: docs are the last truth still standing
Posted by: wleming on Mar 5, 2007 12:10 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Documentarys remain the Last... film/video form allowed to tell the truth-within the corporate media matrix. Little wonder that Seinfeld, the sultan of Simp, would slag the people who are not part of the Academy Fraud. Hollywood is the flash point where greed meets dummydown- little wonder that it hires a Seinfeld to play Michael Richards --but the N word here was Numbskull.
The Academy Awards... ? The electronic Nuremburg at the heart of corporate dumb.

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Academy Frauds: docs are the last truth still standing
Posted by: wleming on Mar 5, 2007 12:15 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Documentarys remain the Last... film/video form allowed to tell the truth-within the corporate media matrix. Little wonder that Seinfeld, the sultan of Simp, would slag the people who are not part of the Academy Fraud. Hollywood is the flash point where greed meets dummydown- little wonder that it hires a Seinfeld to play Michael Richards --but the N word here was Numbskull.
The Academy Awards... ? The electronic Nuremburg at the heart of corporate dumb.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

Iraq in Fragments
Posted by: dredge on Mar 5, 2007 2:09 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I have not seen Inconvenient Truth. But interms of prescience, I thought Iraq In Fragments was so powerful and poetic. I wanted it to win. The Oscars were a gloss fest. The producers have finaly perfected them to be digested like a regular fastfood meal. I'm sort of glad that the true colors of this entertainment conglomerate was so transparent, but at the same time, after reading this blog story, I forget that exposure is so important for documentary films. Equally-exposure is so important for valuable information that is increasingly being censured by the the Info-tainment industry..what used to be news media.

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Who needs Hollywood?
Posted by: greekTowner on Mar 5, 2007 6:44 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"This will make it much more difficult for independent filmmakers work to qualify for the Best Documentary Feature Award, while giving an advantage to films distributed by large studios"

What a cry-baby

Documentary filmmakers need Hollywood that bad?

Sad

Don't they any better that all the causes that Hollywood "supports" is window-dressing?

There are other more qualified outlets for good documentary films.

Have your own awards, for example.

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Article is true but ignores reality
Posted by: DaBear on Mar 7, 2007 10:03 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I work and live in—well, the margins at least—Hollywood. Yes, it's fucked up, but it's a living. The reality is the AA's are nothing more than a career marketing thing. We writers shoot for the Nickel Award and if we're really lucky in Vegas, an Oscar in adapted or original sw. But even then, we all know it means shit except as a marketing tool. Most of us think it's fuckin' hilarious that the rest of the nation is so damned obsessed with so much stoopid. I feel for doc-writers and producers, but the truth is, I don't go to the AA's to find documentaries, I can get those online and I don't need a damned circus to tell me what's good. I know good stuff when I see it and the 'Net lets me find everything that's out there.

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