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-Caveat Lector-

Dude, Where's My Country?

    In the wake of Super Size Me, director Morgan
    Spurlock tackles a range of American woes

by Joy Press
June 10th, 2005 3:34 PM
<http://villagevoice.com/screens/0524,tv1,64886,28.html>

30 Days
Wednesdays at 10 on F/X, starting June 15

Just a year ago, Morgan Spurlock showed America what a
regurgitated Big Mac looks like in Super Size Me. Not
only did this debut film become the fourth-highest-
grossing documentary ever, but Spurlock's merry Mac
attack apparently shamed McDonald's into discontinuing
the supersize mode entirely. He bounded onto the screen
like a skinnier, younger, less abrasive Michael Moore. A
populist from the heartland-West Virginia, actually-
Spurlock talks the language of regular folk, but he also
appeals to the boho crowd: As he points out repeatedly
in Super Size Me, his girlfriend, Alex, is a vegan chef.
Leaving behind intellectual analysis (the kind of thing
that irritates ordinary Americans), Spurlock laid out
his case without insulting anyone-except the fast-food
conglomerates-in an entertaining, personal way that
flirted heavily with elements of reality TV.

30 Days, a six-part television sequel to Super Size Me,
warps the line between documentary and reality TV even
further as it weaves through American culture. Each
episode stages an everydude's-eye view of topics ranging
from tabloid fodder (binge drinking and anti-aging
techniques) to the more provocative (Islam and
homosexuality). In the riveting first episode, Spurlock
and girlfriend Alex take a vacation in other people's
misery, literally, by spending a month surviving on
minimum wage. It feels like a retort to The Simple Life.
Instead of forcing Paris Hilton and Nicole Richie to
adjust to the limits and deprivations of working people,
the producers of that show encouraged them to wreak
havoc on their hosts' carefully budgeted lives and
wrinkle their perky noses at the icky things folks do to
get by. Whereas Morgan and Alex approach their task
earnestly, only to be crushed by the enormity of it all.
With no savings, they can't afford a deposit on a decent
apartment and end up in an ant-infested place over a
former crack den.

"Home sweet hovel," Alex mutters after a day busing
tables at a coffee shop where nobody tips. Having walked
home in order to save on bus fare, our frail vegan chef
settles down to a nightly dinner of canned beans and
crackers she's stolen from work. Morgan rises before
dawn to get to construction jobs where the take-home pay
is $44 for 11 hours of exertion. He can pass for a good
old boy thanks to his trucker's mustache and down-home
drawl, but really he's so unaccustomed to physical labor
that he injures himself. And because the pair has no
health insurance in this painfully realistic scenario,
the medical bills threaten to capsize their fragile
budget.

As in Super Size Me, Spurlock threads wisps of data
through the narrative in an unobtrusive but effective
way. For instance, the statistic that couples who make
less than $25,000 a year are more likely to get divorced
plays out before us, as Morgan and Alex struggle to make
time for pleasure in their exhausting lives. These young
liberals theoretically live consciously back in
Manhattan-making careful decisions about what foods they
put into their bodies, for instance-but their relative
prosperity insulated them from more basic worries. Now
they have to be excruciatingly aware of every move they
make. Can Morgan afford to sacrifice a day's work to
stand in line at the free clinic? Should they splurge on
a birthday dinner for Alex? They eventually decide to
celebrate the occasion in the cheapest manner possible,
only to have their budget destroyed when a bus
cancellation forces them to take a cab home.

Maybe it's the starvation kicking in, but the duo wander
through the whole episode in a daze. They are stunned
and teary-eyed when they discover that the local church
has a store where poor people can pick up donated
furniture, clothes, and other essentials. "Every town in
America should have a free store!" Spurlock proclaims,
visibly moved-but not moved enough to place the concept
in any political context or reference previous movements
that supported the idea, like the Diggers in the '60s.
The episode does a fine job of conveying the everyday
reality of the working poor. But this is ultimately
Social Justice Lite, lacking the kind of incisive
analysis you'd get from Barbara Ehrenreich (who wrote
about her own version of the living-on-minimum-wage
challenge in Nickel and Dimed) and never daring to
propose any kind of political initiative to redress the
inequality. Presumably for fear of appearing . . . well,
politicized.

In the other five episodes, Spurlock restricts himself
to voice-over commentary while we watch other wholesome
American guys play lab rat on his behalf. There's the
37-year-old dad who whacks out his body with a 30-day
regime of steroids and anti-aging serums (with effects
similar to those Spurlock suffered after a month on his
McDonald's diet) and the devout Christian insurance
salesman who agrees to live as a Muslim in a Detroit
suburb. Wife Swap with an educational twist, 30 Days
wants to change minds by exposing viewers to other
perspectives-and judging by the average people on the
street Spurlock quizzes about Islam, there are an awful
lot of couch potatoes in need of serious schooling.

It would be easy enough to accuse Spurlock of blatantly
duplicating the career moves of Michael Moore, who
followed the breakout success of Roger and Me with the
series TV Nation and The Awful Truth. But the funny
thing is that Spurlock was a reality TV pioneer, working
at the scummier end of the spectrum. In 2000, he created
an Internet show called I Bet You Will that was picked
up by MTV. A predecessor to Fear Factor and Jackass, it
dared people to eat disgusting things or humiliate
themselves for small wads of cash. Just one example of
the things people will do to make a living.

_______________________________________________________

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www.ctrl.org
DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
==========
CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic
screeds are unwelcomed. Substance—not soap-boxing—please!   These are
sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory'—with its many half-truths, mis-
directions and outright frauds—is used politically by different groups with
major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought.
That being said, CTRLgives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and
always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no
credence to Holocaust denial and nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
========================================================================
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