One
night last week I took my Media Studies class on a field trip to see the
opening night of the San Francisco Film Festival’s Doc Stories at the Castro
Theater. As befits an opening, the theater was all lit up, and nicely dressed people were
flooding in, but my students, aged 19 to 22, were the youngest people by some
thirty to fifty years so they rushed to the candy counter and bought popcorn
before they sat down – all of them, I noted, near the aisles, in case they
wanted to bail. Then they stared somewhat uncomprehendingly at the organist,
who rises up and plays during the pre-show interlude, and giggled. To them, I
fear, the Wurlitzer and its music were of the same era, and equally schmaltzy,
as the subject of the film, which was the magazine Rolling Stone.
photo by Emily Marcus |
Rolling
Stone: Stories From the Edge is a new documentary that will run on HBO on Nov.
6th and 7th by filmmakers Alex Gibney and Blair Foster;
it is funded and sponsored by Rolling Stone magazine itself. (Note: the
documentary is in two parts; we only saw only part 1.) It comes hard on the
heels of Sticky Fingers: The Life and Times of Jann Wenner and Rolling Stone Magazine, the new biography of Jann Wenner by Joe Hagan, which apparently is
surprisingly critical of its subject: according to the New York Times, Wenner
was so angered by his portrayal, he pulled out of planned book tours and called
the finished book something “deeply flawed and tawdry, rather than substantial.”
Of
course, this so-called ‘controversy’ has only helped the book’s overall profile
and sales, and surely indicates a far better book than one might expect.
Rolling Stone, the documentary, is it’s opposite, a fawning
hagiography, much more what Mr. Wenner probably intended as his legacy. And while it is nonetheless enjoyable to watch and probably, in
many ways, very accurate – Rolling Stone DID scoop the main stream press on the
Patty Hearst kidnapping, it did create a venue for new journalism, it did
observe, mirror, and chronicle the vast cultural changes of the 1960s, the
irony of watching this movie in this era of fake news and constant self-promotion
was truly vexing. I would definitely recommend watching it anyway, for its
great footage of Tina Turner, John Lennon, Bruce Springsteen and Hunter S.
Thompson, but as a teaching tool, it worked only in a negative fashion. When
the lights came up, I noted that, as expected, all but one of the kids had bailed.
The
thing is, there is much that my students cannot know about Rolling Stone – a
back story that is too complex to add to any film. Some of the back story here
is great – I enjoyed Greil Marcus’s description of Mario Savio’s arrest at a UC
Berkeley free speech rally, though it’s buried at the end of the film for some
reason – but you have to bring a lot of knowledge to that. Plus, it’s different
watching footage of a very early Bruce Springsteen show (prefiguring the ‘I saw
the future of rock ‘n’ roll…’ remark) having been there (that is, at a show
very like it); to paraphrase Greil himself, it was performances like those that
both saved my life and broke my heart.
This era Bruce. |
It’s
different, too, knowing the fates of some of the writers and of the magazine
itself. In one scene, Cameron Crowe talked about a piece he wrote on Led
Zeppelin, which Jann Wenner later criticized to his face for being too
deprecatory; for saying exactly what the band wanted to hear. Crowe praises him
for his editorial acumen, but you can only wonder then, where did it go? It’s
sort of heartbreaking comment, in light of subsequent events: not just this
film, and not just Wenner’s anger at his biographer for NOT saying what he
wanted to hear, but the whole descent of Rolling Stone magazine; the descent of
journalism itself. Are they all just tools of the machine now? It would seem
so.
scene from almost famous: not crow, not bangs |
Rolling
Stone has recently been put up for sale, presumably it will go to a media conglomerate, a move which will no
doubt change it, though probably not that much, since it has long just been a
vehicle for big stars and movies and Hollywood in general. In some ways,
Rolling Stone has been a victim of the internet, but not entirely, it was also
a victim of its own world view.
What
the film gets right – and my students don’t know – is just how meaningful it
was for so many years. I cannot even stress how much mileage I personally have
gotten out of having “written for” Rolling Stone. I never wrote a feature for
them – those were almost all assigned in-house – but I did a lot of record and live reviews, and people really respect that, even now. I’ve written way more
and better stuff for other places, but at job interviews, no one looks at my CV
and says, “Wow, you wrote for Spin?” Incidentally, watching the film made me
think a little bit about that. You know how I got assignments in the days
before email? I called them on the phone. Obviously, it’s easy for editors to
not take a call from a writer they don’t want to hear from. So getting them to take
your call involved meeting those people in the real world and schmoozing them,
generally at CMJ or SXSW, and that, as you can imagine, has its perils.
In
other words, the race wasn’t always to the fittest, it was to the boldest – yet
another reason why women’s bylines appear so infrequently. In my day, the early
1990s, you could count on one hand the names of women who appeared in Rolling
Stone in the reviews section. And have a few fingers left.
I
want to emphasize here that at the time, I didn’t think that was weird. It
never really occurred to me that we, women, as a class, were oppressed: my male
editors, Anthony and Will, were great guys; I liked them, and nothing bad or abusive
ever happened to me there. (#notme #notthere.) But the thing is, in that era, I
did not have the language or the tools to understand how I was being
marginalized anyway. The film Rolling Stone really helped me understand why that
was, because the film does it too. A simple example: at the start of the
film, it acknowledges that the magazine was begun by Jann Wenner and his wife
Jane, who brought much of the money to it; it also says she worked extremely
hard, though it doesn’t say at what (ad sales, probably). But she’s never
mentioned again in the film – not until, in the Q and A after the screening,
her son Gus, said, “the magazine founded by my father and mother.” (My
italics.)
Next,
early on, the film devotes an enormous and really pretty salacious segment to
groupies, including explicit sex scenes, plaster casters, etc. From the
cinematic point of view, it’s very true to Rolling Stone's ethos – that women were
objects, groupies, fun and funny, ‘stylish’ etc. But if that’s what women are
regarded as within their hermetic world, you can see exactly why women as
critics weren’t encouraged or welcomed, and why women like me, who desperately
wanted to be that, felt weird and other around the whole scene. If you’re supposed to be giving blowjobs, you
certainly aren’t also supposed to be also saying things like, “Hmmm, that song sounds
incredibly similar to “Pale Blue Eyes.” At least that was always my experience.
Looking back, trying to navigate that milieu as a woman was hard and confusing. It took a huge emotional toll on me.
Plastercasting. Duh. |
The
film gives a little bit of love to Tina Turner, though Yoko Ono is practically
ignored in favor of John Lennon (after all, she’s just his wife). Otherwise,
the female world of Rolling Stone is represented entirely by Annie Leibovitz. As
I said, the film is brutally true to what it was like there, but it would have
been nice if they’d acknowledged that as problematic: by not doing so, the kids
in my class just dismissed it – the magazine, that is, which they don’t worship
in the same way and now never will -- as old fashioned and sort of full of shit.
Anyway, they’re good Media Studies students, and they know self promotion when
they see it.
All
this aside, I would not dismiss this film entirely. I would even recommend
watching it when it comes out on HBO if you are interested in media, magazines,
and especially in the cultural history of the 1960s and 1970s. Although it is
not an objective document, the filmmakers made some great choices of how to
illustrate the making of a magazine. One great choice was having actual stories
themselves, the prose, read aloud over footage of the artists they are
discussing. Another was using the actual taped recordings of the interviewees
over the text – so you hear the transcript of John Lennon’s interview, being spoken…by John
Lennon. It’s riveting. The sequence on
Hunter S. Thompson (read by Johnny Depp) is especially good, and reminded me of
reading “Fear and Loathing On The Campaign Trail” with my class at Evergreen
last year; re-reading, or maybe a better way of putting it is re-swallowing, his
outraged tirade against Richard Nixon
and Republican political machine just after that election of you know who was
so pointed and poignant that it helped us all work through hard times.
Fear and Loathing on the Campaign Trail was originally published in Rolling Stone as a monthly feature, and even today it stands out as a unique and fearless document: not only does it commend Rolling Stone for sticking with it, but it entirely convinces one of
the merits of subjectivity as a journalistic tool. It’s a great moment in the
form, but as we all know now, it ends in tragedy. As does Rolling Stone, I think. As does Rolling
Stone.
Rolling
Stone: Stories From the Edge airs on HBO on Nov. 6 and 7.
Sticky Fingers: the Life and Times of Jann Wenner and Rolling Stone Magazine by Joe
Hagan, is available in bookstores everywhere.
2 comments:
Great thoughts Arnold. I am often agog at not only the shit you slogged through but how you still shine with the expectation of greatness around the corner. You are truly a great fan and writer. Massive respect. Whittaker, out.
The era in which you wrote for SR seems so far away. In other respects, has never left The past isnt past.
Post a Comment