The Daily - Sunday Special: A Sea of Streaming Docs
Episode Date: November 16, 2025There was once a time when documentaries could be found only on public television or in art-house cinemas. But today, documentaries are more popular and accessible than ever, with streaming services s...erving up true crime, celebrity documentaries, music documentaries and so much more.On today’s Sunday Special, Gilbert is joined by The New York Times’s chief television critic, James Poniewozik, and Alissa Wilkinson, a Times film critic, to talk about the documentaries that are worth your viewing time. On Today’s Episode:James Poniewozik is the chief TV critic for The Times.Alissa Wilkinson is a movie critic at The Times, and writes the Documentary Lens column. Background Reading:What ‘The American Revolution’ Says About Our Cultural Battles‘Come See Me in the Good Light’: The Sweetness After a Terminal Diagnosis Discussed on this episode:“The American Revolution,” 2025, directed by Ken Burns“The Alabama Solution,” 2025, directed by Andrew Jarecki and Charlotte Kaufman“The Jinx: The Life and Deaths of Robert Durst,” 2015, directed by Andrew Jarecki“Making a Murderer,” 2015, directed by Laura Ricciardi and Moira Demos“The Yogurt Shop Murders,” 2025, directed by Margaret Brown“The Perfect Neighbor,” 2025, directed by Beet Gandbhir“The Last Dance,” 2020, directed by Jason Hehir“Copa 71,” 2023, directed by Rachel Ramsay and James Erkine“Cheer,” 2020, created by Greg Whiteley“Last Chance U,” 2016, directed by Greg Whiteley, Adam Ridley and Luke Lorentzen“Pee-wee as Himself,” 2025, directed by Matt Wolf“The Remarkable Life of Ibelin,” 2024, directed by Benjamin Ree“Ladies & Gentlemen … 50 Years of SNL Music,” 2025, directed by Questlove“Cameraperson,” 2016, directed by Kirsten Johnson“An American Family,” 1973, created by Craig Gilbert“Look Into My Eyes,” 2024, directed by Lana Wilson“When We Were Kings,” 1996, directed by Leon Gast Photo: Mike Doyle/American Revolution Film Project and Florentine Films Subscribe today at nytimes.com/podcasts or on Apple Podcasts and Spotify. You can also subscribe via your favorite podcast app here https://www.nytimes.com/activate-access/audio?source=podcatcher. For more podcasts and narrated articles, download The New York Times app at nytimes.com/app.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
I'm Gilbert Cruz, and this is the Sunday special.
There was a time when documentaries could only be found on public television and maybe at your local art house theater.
But today, if you fire up almost any streaming service, you'll find that they're chock full of documentaries.
True crime documentaries, celebrity documentaries, music documentaries,
Poop Cruz documentaries, maybe there's just the one poop cruise documentary. Today, we're talking about it all. We're talking about documentaries. And if we're talking about docs, even in this era of incredible glut, there's one gentleman we have to talk about, and that is Ken Burns. He has made more than 40 documentaries. He's done jazz, which is the first one that I saw, baseball, the Civil War, country music, and so many other subjects. This month,
He's got a new one out, a six-part, 12-hour opus called The American Revolution.
Here to talk about Ken Burns and the wide, wide world of docs.
I've got two of my wonderful colleagues.
Alyssa Wilkinson is a movie critic at the Times.
She writes our documentary Lens column about new documentaries.
Hello, Alyssa.
Hello.
And James Panoazek is our chief TV critic.
He needs no introduction.
He has reviewed the American Revolution for us.
Hello, Jim.
Good day to you, sir.
Good day.
Well, let's start with the American Revolution.
It's a great place to start.
America started there.
Why not us?
This one is directed by Burns, as well as his co-director, Sarah Botstein and David Schmidt.
Jim, tell us about this new one.
So the American Revolution is sort of what you would expect from your experience of Ken Burns,
the celebrity guest voices, the sort of assembled voices,
assembled roster of historians commenting on the historical events and their context, all the
tricks he's developed to bring history to life, make it more kinetic, make it more auditory.
But it is also, you know, I would say not just the version of the American Revolution that you
learned in grade school, depending when you went to grade school.
Right up front, you were sort of set at the beginning of the stirrings of revolution.
From a small spark kindled in America, a flame has arisen, not to be extinguished.
But the narrative also turns to the Iroquois Confederacy,
which was a democratic governance arrangement among Native American groups that predated the American Revolution.
by centuries.
We know our lands
are now become more valuable.
The white people think we do not
know their value.
But we are sensible
that the land is everlasting.
So it makes clear that
this is going to be a story
of all the Americans.
Colonists, loyalists,
yes, but also Native Americans,
also enslaved Americans.
And to that extent, I think
it is a broadening of the story.
And at 12 hours, he's got a lot of space to broaden the story.
I would say that it's not one of his most surprising documentaries in terms of departing from his style.
But with the 250th anniversary of America's independence coming up and a lot of culture wars going on over America's history and how it's told and what people should and shouldn't say.
about it. There were certainly things that surprised me. Things like, one of the takeaways that I got
from was George Washington, you know, great American figure, not necessarily a great general
in terms of winning a lot of battles. Well, if you remember the musical Hamilton, I think there
is a line that he says there about having lost his first battle or something of that sort.
Yeah, you know, I need it wrapped at me a few times before I really retain it.
I'm not going to do that here.
Alyssa, what's your relationship to the work of Mr. Ken Burns?
So I wasn't a big TV watcher as a kid, but I was a big PBS TV watcher as a kid.
And my main memory of watching PBS as a kid is watching Ken Burns' documentaries during Pledge drives.
I don't know which ones they were looking at the kids.
the dates. I'm thinking it was possibly the Civil War or maybe the Congress. Although I think I also
was watching The Shakers. I think they just used to run them during Pledge Drive. Just like blurring in
your mind. They're just, you know, a lot of photos being panned across and like experts and people
being interviewed. So it's sort of a blur of history. But I assume that's sort of where I got my
idea of what a documentary was in the early part of my life. And also I was homeschooled from the
sixth grade onwards, which means that, you know, that was a big part of my history understanding
was this is, you know, these photographs, the experts, the firsthand accounts. That was really what I
understood a documentary to be for a long stretch of my youth. Did you learn a lot about the three
tenors from these pledged drives? I did. From Riverdance? The three tenors. River dance. Yeah,
you know, I don't know. I was kind of a pledge drive kid, I guess. How many tote bags does your family
Oh, we didn't never donate it. I just watch the pledge. I donate now. I don't need now. You're giving back. You're giving back through your work.
Sucked all this information out of PBS and never gave anything. Look, I have so many tote bags now. You don't even know. I think we all do. Yes.
I'd love to hear more about this perception in your mind of what you thought a documentary was, what it should be, how it should feel. We're going to talk a little bit more about things that subvert that form. But what, what
did young Alyssa understand a documentary to be? Yeah, I think like a lot of people, we think of
documentaries as a information-giving vehicle. You know, it's sort of like a visual magazine
article or a visual newspaper article. It's sort of like a visual podcast is almost how I start
to think about it, which is like, look at all this information being delivered to me. And in fact,
you know, Burns often has a book. In fact, I think there's a book that goes with the American
Revolution. That's right. So there's like a book that goes with the documentary.
And so they're kind of, they go hand in hand in their information delivery vehicles. And a lot of us, I think, get that idea because we then, when we're kids, we watch those documentaries in our history classes when our teachers just can't deal with us anymore or for whatever reason, right? But it's a good way to learn about history. Certainly, we get the visual images and the ideas. And we get these history clips also from, you know, to understand what did the civil rights movement look like. It's more exciting than just reading about it in a book.
I remember the feel of, you know, being in a wave and being part of something bigger than yourself.
And that's a very great feeling.
Jim, what would you say the reputation of Ken Burns is or the perception?
And do you think that reputation or perception is earned?
Or do his documentaries sort of subvert this very basic idea of what Ken Burns is?
Well, I was not always early in my TV critic career, and even before then, a huge Ken Burns fan.
I think I had the perception that maybe a lot of people have that his stuff was very earnest and worthy, but very sort of middle of the road, that it was making eloquent, well-produced case for things that people.
already agree on, right? Like, war is hell, you know.
Jazz is good. Yes, exactly. You know, we love baseball. You know, and there is that,
you know, there is a reason that this sort of thing is broadly appealing and, you know,
is Pledge Drive gold. But I've also come to see what he does as kind of more pointed and
radical over the years than I initially perceived it being, which I'm
I think partly is my just growing up and seeing more in it and partly is maybe a change in the times.
What he is trying to do is sort of create a canon of American history.
You know, whatever we think about the present, we agree, you know, this stuff happened in the past
and it happened for, you know, probably these reasons and this is where we came from.
And that is, you know, that it's gotten increasingly contentious over times.
I also think that a lot of his documentaries, they're really about more than the subject.
And to me, this is the thing that I come to documentaries for.
Like, you know, I'm not just trying to get like a Wikipedia download of information.
I want there to be a take and idea.
His National Parks documentary, I remember writing about when it came out somewhere,
it was like around the beginning of the Obama administration.
And I think each American can look into their own hearts and tell you,
this is my national park.
And it might be the great...
You know, and the idea was like, you know,
the national parks were like America's greatest idea
and we preserve this land.
And, you know, but it was also about an idea
that was very much currently being debated
at the time, which is,
do we need government to do things collectively
that the private sector is never going to do?
You know, and it doesn't come out and say that.
But it is engaging with ideas, all this stuff,
is engaging with ideas that are, you know, current and timeless.
That wonderful stone arch that says for the benefit and enjoyment of the people.
It doesn't say for the benefit and enjoyment of some of the people or a few of the people.
It says all of the people.
And for me, that meant democracy.
And for me, that meant I was welcome.
And I stepped outside.
And I think to try to do that to everyone, as opposed to your own personal Amen Corner,
is really kind of, like, that's metal.
You know, it's like a very, like, radical thing to do nowadays.
And it's interesting that, you know, he's so inextricable from PBS, too.
You know, you think of PBS, you think of Ken Burns, basically.
Yeah.
Because there's other filmmakers, I'm thinking of Frederick Wiseman,
who've tried to take on institutions throughout their long, long, long career.
And Fred Wiseman's been made 50 movies at this point.
But they're not airing on every public television station in the,
country, which is significant at this moment in history, obviously, with public funding getting
cut and all of those things. But I think Ken Burns doing what he does on public TV, those two
things can't be taken apart from one another. And it's kind of an embodiment of the idea of
public TV, which again, you know, I think just with the passage of time, to me, it seems more
radical and quaint. So Ken Burns, Frederick Wiseman, Alyssa, who you just referenced, these are
familiar names. They've been around for a very long time. But we have had this explosion in documentaries
and so much so, Alyssa, that you now write a weekly column about documentaries. It tries to
help people navigate the sea of work that's out there. Yeah, I mean, I write about at least a
documentary a week for the paper, and I see more than that. I go to a lot of documentary festivals
and try to see as many as I can. There's one happening right now in New York. There is one
right now in New York, Doc NYC, and there's a bunch more around the country all year long.
And it's, you know, it's really interesting because there's been a lot of ebbs and flows even over
the last 10 years. Documentaries are really affected by where the money is. I mean, that's true of
films generally, but because there's not kind of the same star power, it's often driven by, you know,
where the platforms are, what the stories are that are being told. And right now, the industry is
really struggling. There's not a lot of money for documentaries.
Unless they fall into a couple of different categories, one of which is cults, one of which is true crimes.
One is sort of the reputation burnishing celebrity marketing documentary, where the celebrity is the executive producer of the documentary.
And those are the kinds of films that get made.
And then a lot of other filmmakers want to make other kinds of films.
They want to tell other kinds of stories.
One thing about really, I would call quote-unquote, important documentaries, the ones that are telling stories that can actually change things in the world.
They take a lot of time.
I wrote about one documentary recently called The Alabama Solution that uses footage shot by prisoners inside the Alabama prison system.
The Alabama Department of Correction, the ADLC, they don't want the pub, they can see.
You know, you can't just walk in and shoot that in two weeks.
You have to have years of footage.
That kind of thing is hard to convince funders that it's worth doing.
So let's talk about documentary subgenres, what's getting made a lot right now.
As you mentioned, you cannot talk about documentaries without talking about true crime.
I was TV editor here at the Times in 2015 when it feels like a lot of this really started to pop.
The beginning of that year, you had HBO's The Jinks.
What were the divers for?
Obviously, they're looking for body parts, looking for something you can be used in evidence.
And then at the end of 2015, Netflix's making a murderer came out.
If the county did something or whatever and trying to plan evidence on me or something, I don't know.
And that seemed to sort of spark something or set something off.
Jim, they have a lot to answer for.
Do you have to, you know, deal with true crime sort of material as a TV critic here?
I mean, to some extent that I, you know, there is just so much television now that, you know, there has to be a bar for me to pay attention to it.
I was thinking about the question, you know, am I, am I into true crime?
documentary. And I feel that's like saying, you know, do I like cop shows? You know, well, I like the
wire, you know, I like Happy Valley. Like I like something that has a voice and ideas and is, you know,
saying something beyond what happened or just like, you know, look at these people. And there is
certainly true crime that's thoughtful and does that. The yogurt shot murders earlier.
this this summer on what HBO? How scary is that? I don't know that the city of Austin has ever
been the same since the yogurt shot murders. I mean, that was a loss of innocence for this town for
sure. You wouldn't think it would be thoughtful from the name, but it actually was a, yeah.
It was really less about giving you the lurid details behind a crime, and it was much more about
how our society reacts to shocking crimes and, you know, very much,
a meta way about the same impulse that drives the godzillion true crime documentaries,
podcast, et cetera, that we see out there now.
So that's interesting to me.
That's an idea.
That's something I can do something with.
It's interesting that true crime has gone so far down the path that there's actually a bunch
of projects this year that, including that one, that have kind of come back around and
are commenting on it.
Like, The Perfect Neighbor is one of the highest or most watched movies on.
Netflix.
That one is kind of a comment on true crime in addition to being a true crime documentary.
There's an upcoming film called The Zodiac Killer Project that's sort of a satirical
film about how I would have made the Zodiac Killer True Crime movie if I could have.
Okay.
Film Predators is also about the To Catch a Predator show.
And then there was another HBO show a couple years ago.
mind over murder, which was also kind of an unpacking of the genre. So it's sort of like we know the
tropes of true crime so well that we can watch shows about true crime and understand what they are
because we know what they are. Yeah. Yeah. The, you know, there's been a true crime boom
in documentary filmmaking, certainly in podcasts. But if we go back even farther than that,
it feels like there's a giant category that we all have watched. Maybe we watch with our
family members over the holidays, but we never really talk about, which is the nature documentary.
If there's something that maybe is more sort of anodyne than a history documentary, it's a nature
documentary. But now we have reached a stage where we have the sickest cameras ever invented
and you could just go places you never were able to go to before. Yeah. And probably like,
certainly for me, like my first experience of documentary was that, you know, we get to watch a movie day
in school. And, you know, there would be something where I didn't.
and like an otter is trying to escape from a wolf and it has a voice.
You know, those, like, you know,
or are we like Disney-type documentaries.
I will admit, in the right mood to being a sucker for this sort of thing,
like the technology and just the ability to capture rare moments is stunning nowadays.
And also, and I don't mean this disparagingly, like,
they can be sort of screen-savory for me.
in the best way.
And voyeuristic, too.
It's like, I could never watch this otherwise.
Yes.
Can one be voyeuristic toward, like, penguins?
I guess you can.
Yeah, totally.
They deserve their price.
They might be molt before going to sea to fatten up for courtship.
Others are already courting, parading back and forth with a special ritualized walk.
I mean, the thing that I find funny is that there are so many iterations.
in a lot of these series and productions
that it becomes like a challenge of classification.
It's sort of, you know, this one is organized by continent.
This one's going to be by biosphere.
This one's going to be by, you know.
This is about the forest.
This is about the oceans.
You can't just say, you know,
a bunch of cool nature crap, volume 50.
There needs to be some sort of taxonomic principle
that says this is a different...
But we all know we just want to watch a bunch of cool nature crap.
Another big category, and I say this is someone who is not a person who watch a sports generally,
but is the sports documentary.
Yeah.
You know, the 30 for 30 series, which was the ESPN series, feels like one of the big touchstones of TV documentaries over the past decade plus.
I just think of remember the officials threatening to throw a flag on us if we didn't
not shake your opponent's hand.
Some of the language that was said there, the coin toss.
It was just not right.
Hillman to make the toss as a visitor.
You have all of those, and then you sort of peak the first year of the pandemic with the last
dance.
Yeah.
Yes.
Michael Jordan's the only player that could ever turn it on and off.
And he'd never freaking turn it off.
It was a very odd experience.
Maybe the both of you remember this.
March 2020 was Tiger King, a genuine sensation on Netflix.
and then the month later, the last dance premiered.
Yes.
And it felt like documentaries sort of ruled those first few months, for me, at least, of the pandemic.
Yeah, and those two could not be more different as watching experiences.
Absolutely.
Even though it was very watching Michael Jordan just kind of sit there in the last dance
and talk was almost an uncanny experience for me.
I remember watching those games.
Oh, yeah.
Totally.
Not a sports guy at all, but, you know, in the...
the 90s, you could not not know about the Chicago Bowls. And, you know, it's kind of, you know,
is it partly that this is one of our few remaining areas of mass culture, you know, thing that all
kinds of people know about. Yes. Well, also, I have, as a, not a huge sports person myself,
but the raw material of sports is so cool to see how documentarians shape it into different kinds of
stories. During, I think, the last Olympics, I went on the Criterion channel and realized they had
the full collection of all of the Olympic documentaries. Incredible. And some of them are made by
some of the greatest documentarians of their time. Yeah. I mean, I very much recommend watching
them. And you get to see them grappling with, like, actually the moment and what the Olympics
are supposed to say at that moment, sort of the message of the Olympics at that moment, which is
gets pretty dark in some moments of the Olympics, you know, especially right around World War II in particular.
V for victory. Victory, not in war, not in wealth, not in tyranny, but in sportsmanship and in peace.
I wrote recently, I think last year, actually, about a movie called Copa 71, which pulled footage from this World Cup event.
That's a massive stadium.
It's a men's football match?
Where a women's soccer tournament took place.
It's women's football.
What?
And it was sort of like the footage was buried
because they were so mad that this event had taken place
and nobody knew it had happened.
And so it was brought back out and made into this documentary.
Why didn't they know about this?
So you see like all these interesting types of stories
being political stories or like stories about gender,
stories about the potential of the human spirit
or also the sort of dark.
dark side of that, able to be told out of the raw material of sports. I really, I think that's
part of why they make for such interesting documentaries. Yeah, I know that this had its critics,
but I remember, and this is more series than the sort of thing that you're talking about,
but I was very captivated by cheer when that was on Netflix a few years back.
I just didn't have a heart. I just didn't care about anything or anyone. And without
chill it in, I would have not made it.
It'd have been over for me.
In the same way, well, why do I
like watching Friday Night Lights?
Yeah.
You know, it's because it's about
people and wanting things
and, you know, a certain culture.
And it's about, you know,
what people will do
to get the things that they want.
Last chance, you.
I also felt the same way.
A great show about just, you know,
what will you do to,
to get to where you need to be when you have no other options.
I sit in the bed and I think like, okay, I'm playing football for him,
but I'm also missing him growing up.
But if I get to the NFL, I'd be able to give him whatever he wants,
whatever he asks for.
All right, we've talked about a lot.
I think it's time for a break.
And when we come back, we are going to have some very hardy recommendations
for documentaries that our listeners might enjoy.
Okay, Jim and Alyssa, I'm going to ask you two to recommend some documentaries, both new and old, that you think listeners should watch.
Jim, let's start with you.
A show I really loved from earlier this year was Peewee as himself.
Hi, kids.
Guess where?
Why?
I'm having a party, and you're invited.
This was a film about Paul Rubin slash Pee-E-Herman,
the late great children's performer and artist,
who cooperated with the movie and didn't.
Do you hear that?
I don't hear it.
You had to.
You had to.
You didn't see...
You can see...
He's interviewed for it, gave access to much of his materials.
Also, throughout the documentary in his interviews,
is very ambivalent about the idea of how much he wants to reveal about himself
and how much control he can have and cannot have...
Go ahead. I'm ready. I'm ready.
You had conceived of a whole arsenal
and fully developed characters before Piwi, right?
Had I?
It ends up being, to me,
not just a fascinating portrait of, like, an artist who I just think can't be rated highly enough in pop culture,
but also about the effects of creating and living under a persona and very much about the documentary process itself
and what it can tell you and what it can't tell you.
I kept who I was a secret for a really long time, and that served me very well.
as I wanted it to, and then it didn't.
That is a great recommendation.
I've wanted to watch that for a while.
I was going to watch it this weekend.
I didn't get to it.
You can find it on HBO Max or Max Plus or whatever they call themselves now.
Whatever they are by the time this airs.
Alyssa, give us one.
I'm going to start with a documentary from last year called The Remarkable Life of Ebelin.
Our deepest sorrow.
in the fact that he would never experience friendships, love.
This is a good example of how documentaries can be totally unlike anything that you think a documentary can be.
So it's about a young man who had a degenerative disease and passed away when he was in his early 20s.
And after he died, his parents went into his blog to post something about his passing and started getting emails from.
all these people.
He was an incurable romantic.
They kept talking about how their son had meant so much to him, to them, and how, you know,
how he had changed their lives.
And they didn't understand because their son had been literally confined to a wheelchair,
hadn't left the house in years and years.
He would listen and, like, remembering back then that he was there from me.
And I could also talk to him about the stupid things.
And come to find out he had been.
part of this guild on World of Warcraft.
Oh, I've heard about this one.
Yeah, and so they went in and got hundreds of thousands of pages of logs from World
of Warcraft, which keeps the chat logs, and got animators and recreated basically all of these
scenarios.
And then he just wrote back, this is too emotional for me.
And I was like, well, you need to be emotional as well from time to time.
then you know you have mattered to people.
I mean, it sounds corny when I say that,
but it is the most amazing documentary that I saw, I think, last year entirely.
So I highly, highly recommend it,
not just for, you know, seeing what a documentary can be,
but also because it's incredibly moving
about how we connect with one another.
It's just, it's really quite moving.
So The Remarkable Life of Evelyn, I-B-E-L-I-N, it's streaming on Netflix.
Jim, let's go back to you.
Yeah, so you may not have heard it, but Saturday Night Live had a 50th anniversary recently.
Are you kidding?
Why didn't they say anything about that?
That was this year?
Well, it was this year.
Or it wasn't it last year.
S&L loves having a birthday, and it celebrates it for like five years.
And the one good thing to come out of this one was a film.
and make sure I get this right.
Ladies and gentlemen,
50 years of S&L music.
Ladies and gentlemen.
Saturday.
New York.
Jolt of electricity.
Iconic.
Musical history.
Game.
They turned over S&L's,
you know,
entire library of musical guests
to Questlove.
And now here's Prince.
I was there when Prince came on the very first time.
And he only got one song.
He sang Party Up.
He is an excellent documentarian
and musician, obviously.
And his film.
making is so musical.
It's just it's percussive.
It's, you know, he knows just when to cut.
I remember at the end he's saying,
I'm not gonna fight no one.
Through his mic down and walked off the stage.
Gonna have to fight your own damn war.
We don't want to fight no more.
Obviously, there's a lot, as with all these things,
just a lot of, you know, remember when and nostalgia.
Oh, I remember seeing that performance, this, that, you know,
Shnade O'Connor, Elvis Costello, blah, blah, blah.
But, you know, it's also just, it's like a cultural history of the last 50 years that you can dance to.
Ladies and gentlemen, you are so lucky tonight.
Charlie XX.
Tame Impala.
Bill Wayne.
Justin Bieber.
Griana.
That's still on Peacock, and highly recommend.
Excellent recommendation.
Alyssa.
I want to recommend Kirsten Johnson's documentary camera person for.
from 2016, which I believe is streaming on HBO Max.
Entertainment is okay, but journalism is...
I film, that's a cinema.
It's a movie.
Yeah.
There is a movie.
I have documentary and friends who would say
there's kind of before-camera person
and after-camera person in documentary world.
Kirsten Johnson is a cinematographer
who shot like Citizen-Four.
Fahrenheit 9-11,
just some of the great documentaries.
But for this film, which she describes as kind of a memoir,
she went back and got B-roll, essentially,
like kind of all the stuff on the cutting room floor
and put together a memoir of seeing.
So it's kind of stuff that she saw while shooting these.
We never go to our own trauma.
We are just putting things inside ourselves.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
By thinking this is something what we need to do, and it's a work.
And it's all footage that sort of describes what it is to watch all these things happen while you're shooting these films.
Because she's shot in war zones.
She's shot with sexual assault victims.
She's shot obviously, you know, very funny moments.
She's shot with Jacques Derrida.
So you get kind of all these.
The funniest.
I mean, a laugh riot, that guy.
And so what you end up getting is a film about the ethics of seeing and the act of seeing and what it means to look at things, what it means to look at people, what it means to look through a camera at people and to ask people to do that as they're chronicling, you know, the world's real kind of horrors and also beauty and all of those things.
So it's really, it's a stunner.
It was a, as the kids like to say, it was a game changer in the world of documentary, camera person, it's on HBO Max or whatever, whatever it's called today.
Jim, one more from you, please.
Okay, so I want to recommend, we've been talking about a lot of recent stuff, I want to recommend that you watch an American family, which is the Earth television documentary.
For seven months, from May 30th, 1971 to January 1st, 1972, the family was filmed as they went about their daily routine.
It was a PBS series aired in 1973 that was a raw cinema verity look at, we're just going to take cameras, and we are going to shadow.
and, you know, California, American family living in, I believe it was Santa Barbara,
and just see what their lives are like without commentary.
If you, you may need to go to a doctor tomorrow.
But it's just mainly this aching.
I hate doctors, and it's mostly a headache.
Well, Lance, just put a cold cloth on your head.
Uh-huh, okay.
And you don't have any aspirin.
You may not believe it now, ended up being like a tremendous hit and sensation
and controversy at the time
because it ended up
capturing a great deal of
dysfunction
and the dissolution of a marriage
and the coming out of
a son
and it is
both a cultural
landmark of just kind of
just the 70s
like it is just the most 70s thing
that ever 70s.
You know
and is just a
landmark of television
you know, in the sense that, you know, it was a big influence,
for instance, on the early seasons of the real world
when that was being created,
which in turn influenced 50% of the reality TV
that you're watching today.
Now, here's the situation.
Unfortunately, as far as I can tell,
the series is not widely available in streaming.
I'm not, you know, suggesting that you do this,
But, you know, if someone were to go to YouTube and type in a search,
one might find uploaded, at least partial versions of many of the episodes.
And it's fascinating, and it's a, you know, landmark piece of American culture
that I wish more people had the opportunity to see.
I'm not seeing that we led such, you know, a super average, ordinary life.
But you went into your room one year and you didn't come out for about two more years.
Except at night when you lurched out to the window.
Release the American Family Tapes.
Please.
Alyssa.
We're going to give you one more.
Well, then the one I want to talk about is look into my eyes, also from last year, directed by Lana Wilson.
Grandma's here.
That doesn't surprise me.
Okay.
Because she's like, party and pulling up a chair.
And she's like, okay, so let's have a discussion.
She's like, let's chat.
It's about psychics, sort of.
Okay.
So Lana reached out to seven different psychics in New York City and asked if she could film readings that they conducted with clients.
And so you basically are in the room with them as they're conducting readings and you're watching them.
I feel like your birth mother still thinks about you, but it's like a very...
And the movie is not there to credit or discredit them.
You're just there.
And then in the course of the movie, they talk to her about what they think is going on.
Where I kind of fall back to is I really feel like I have this presence and this energy and this spirit with me.
And I hope that I'm channeling something outside of me.
And one of them is a pet psychic?
Like the first month, I diagnosed a UTI and a cat.
It's a movie putting you in the room, and it's just asking you to say, what's happening, or maybe not ask what's happening, but just to be there.
And not that I thought I could really do this either, but I was hearing such great feedback, and it was a way I thought out of my situation, which it was, and I don't just...
It is not a movie that really gives you any preconceptions about what's happening.
And that's so hard to find in the documentary world.
I think that we normally walk into a documentary
with a lot of like, this is the angle.
It's just very open-ended.
It's very emotionally intimate.
It's actually quite beautiful.
So, yeah, A-24 actually released it,
and it's streaming, I believe, on HBO Max as well.
As someone who's lived in New York for a while
and has walked by many a storefront psychic,
that actually sounds pretty fascinating.
I think I want to check it out at some point.
I want to toss a recommendation out of my own.
If that's okay here, it's one of my favorite movies of all time,
which is weird, again, because I'm not a sports guy,
but it is a documentary from 1996 called When We Were Kings.
Oh, yeah.
Fast last night I cut the light off my bedroom, hit the switch,
was in the bed before the room was dog.
It's a documentary directed by Leon Gast.
It's about the Rumble in the Jungle,
the 1974 fight in Zaire
between George Foreman and
Muhammad Ali
it features some of the
greatest talking heads I've ever seen
primarily Norman Mailer
most dictators are unbelievably ugly
or plain Franco
Hitler and George Plimpton
that the fate issue had said
that a woman with trembling hands
would somehow get to
Foreman
a succubus
and that impressed me enormously
And George Plimpton is wearing a Searsucker suit the entire time.
Amazing.
Talking about Muhammad Ali, the phenomenon, you know, witnessing him, writing about him and being there for the rumble in the jungle.
Spike Lee is one of the talking heads.
Muhammad Ali is one of the greatest shit talkers of all time, right?
Having access to all of, you know, his mockery of George Foreman and the lead up to the fight.
Yeah, when I get to Africa, we're going to get.
get it on because we don't get alone.
I don't like him.
He talks too much.
And then it's intercut with footage from the Zaire 74 Music Festival, which was this music
festival that was organized to happen at the same time of their performances by B.B. King
and James Brown and a bunch of other people.
It's just, it is fascinating.
I've watched it several times, which is not something I feel like people do normally with documentaries.
It's fantastic.
I still remember seeing that.
The scene where, you know, Ali's, like, these training and locals are, like, chanting
from Ali, Ali, Bomaier.
Yes, yes.
When I'm trying to psych myself up for something now, I died still, you know.
That means kill him.
I think Norman Mailer's saying Ali Bumai over and over again has been stuck in my mind
for about 15 years.
The world of documentary and of nonfiction filmmaking is so vast.
And there's so many things, obviously, listeners that we have not had time to mention.
Concert documentaries as a genre, the seven-up films, political documentaries like Fahrenheit 9-11,
the two documentaries that were on our 100 best movie list of the 21st century, which were the gleaners and I and the act of killing.
We could just talk forever about the stuff, but we cannot.
We're going to have a list of all the documentaries that Jim and Alyssa and myself talked about in the show notes.
so please look at those
and when we come back
we're going to end this week
as we end every week
with a little game
Okay
Alyssa Jim
it is game time on a scale
of one to 10
one being poop crews
Ted being Ken Burns. How excited are you?
Six.
Fifteen. Okay.
Our game today is in three rounds.
Buzz in when you know the answer.
Winner will get a point.
Hands on buzzers, please.
Hands on laptop buzzers.
Here we go.
Round one, which we call Burns Baby Burns.
The answers to all of these questions in this round
will be the subjects of documentaries by
Ken Burns. Here we go. In addition to the work for which he is best known, this 19th century icon
was a newspaper reporter, a steamboat pilot, and the inventor of the board game Memory Builder.
J.P. Mark Twain? Mark Twain, that is correct. Mark Twain, 2002 film. In 1884, P.T. Barnum
marched 21 elephants, including his most famous elephant jumbo to cross this structure to prove its stability,
anxious public.
Alyssa.
The Brooklyn Bridge.
The Brooklyn Bridge.
Correct.
1981 film Ken Burns' directorial debut.
The first of these federally protected areas was created in Wyoming in 1872, the most recent one in
West Virginia in 2020.
He hit it before.
I buzzed in too fast.
I think you paused a little too much, but I'm disqualifying myself here.
Calm down the two of you.
That was a setup.
Jim.
Panoi. No, no, no, no, Alyssa, I buzzed in too early. We live in a society.
Alyssa. We do. The National Park. National Parks, that is correct.
This athlete released a comedy album called I Am the Greatest,
six months before becoming a world champion and changing his name.
Jim.
Muhammad Ali.
Mohamed Ali.
Subject of a 20. You guys are being too nice to each other. Stop it. Stop it.
It would have been a strong guest.
Thomas Jefferson believed that these two explorers might confront
Woolly mammoths, well-speaking natives and volcanoes on their journey west of the Pacific Ocean.
Jim.
Lewis and Clark.
Lewis and Clark, from Lewis and Clark, the Journey of the Corps of Discovery in 1985.
That was round one.
We are headed now into round two, which is called Netflix and Kill.
I'll give you the title.
I will give you the title of a film.
You tell me if it's an Academy Award-nominated documentary or a Netflix true crime documentary.
Here we go.
Cutie and the Boxer
Alyssa
Academy Award
Nominated Documentary
Oscar nominee
2013 about the marriage
of Japanese artists
Nariko Shihara
and Ushio
The Betrayal
Jim
Netflix
This is an Oscar
nominated documentary
about a
Laotian immigrant
living in New York City
Who killed
Vincent Chin
Jim
Oscar
Oscar
Manson.
Alyssa.
Netflix.
This is an Oscar-nominated film from 1972.
No?
You're confusing it with chaos, the Manson murders.
Which is a Netflix documentary.
Next, the hatchet-wielding hitchhiker.
That's not real.
Someone buzzing, please.
I'm not buzzing in on this one.
That's not real.
It's not real.
It is real.
It is real.
a 2023 Netflix documentary about the rise and fall of internet celebrity turned convicted
murderer, Kai, the hatchet-wielding hitchhiker.
Are you, okay, well.
Round three.
No objections will be noted.
Round three, final round.
Raise your voice, we are calling it.
I am going to play you a clip of the narration from a documentary.
You name the narrator.
You get a bonus point if you can tell me what documentary they are narrating.
Oh boy
From now on
The couple has but a single goal
Keeping their egg alive
Alyssa
That is Morgan Freeman
And it is the march of the penguins
Correct, you got both right
Perfection belonged to the bears
But once in a while
Treadwell came face to face
With the harsh reality of wild nature
Alyssa?
It's, I mean, it's Werner Herzog, and it's, oh, my God, Grizzly Man.
Grizzly Man by Werner Herzog, correct.
All right, you're doing great.
Next.
Although over 100 million people live on America's East Coast.
This is also where you find 200,000 square miles.
Jim.
Well, I mean, it's Tom Hanks.
It is Tom Hanks.
Do you know the name of the film?
I certainly do not.
Okay.
That is called.
the Americas. Oh, yes. One of those taxonomical
later shows. Okay. Next celebrity
narrator. By the late 1930s, moviegoing had become an essential part of American culture.
More than half the adult population went to the movie.
Alyssa. Well, it's Meryl Streep. It is Meryl Streep. I don't remember the name of this.
This is the Netflix documentary 5 came back about American filmmakers who also went to World War II.
Next celebrity narrator.
He said all our modes of transportation, boats, trains, planes, cars, the way we produce our food, the way we build our cities, almost everything we do releases carbon dioxide.
CO2.
Jim.
It's Leo DiCaprio.
It is Leonardo DiCaprio.
Something, something.
climate.
Yeah, pretty close.
Pretty close.
This is a film called
Before the Flood.
Oh.
All right.
I think it was called
Something, something climate.
Something, something climate.
Ten points to Jim.
Okay.
Frederick Dumas and I,
after all this time,
still think it is a privilege
to go down again
and live for a while
inside the sea.
Jim.
Jacques Cousteau.
Jacques Cousteau.
Jacques Cousteau
Jacques Cousteau
Baguette
Do you have any idea
What the name of this film is?
I do not
Neither
I would not have been able to guess this one
The film is called
The Silent World
I could not name a single
Jacques Cousteau movie
But no
We can all name Jacques Couste
Okay that was the final question
We are going to tally up
The score here
Holy cow
Alyssa
Pulled it out
Really?
Wow
I think this is the closest score
we've ever had
You won by one point
Wow
Wow.
So, Jim, next time, don't make jokes about something, something in our events of documentary.
If you had guessed correctly, we would have gotten to a sudden death round.
Amazing.
You should have called it back.
You win something.
It's over here.
Okay.
We call it the Gilby.
Oh, I'm aware.
It is a cheap mass purchase small golden trophy with my face on this.
Oh, my God.
Amazing.
It's going right on my desk.
Congratulations.
That looks exactly like the spelling bee trophy I got in second grade.
Thank you.
I'm honored.
It's just, it's, I'm honored.
It doubles as a shot glass.
I like to thank the academy.
Yes.
It is.
Put some fireball in there.
I will.
I am honored that the two of you came on to talk documentaries.
What a great conversation.
Alyssa, thank you.
Thank you.
Jim, thanks so much.
I enjoyed this, and that is nonfiction.
This episode was produced by Alex Barron, who's also our Quizmaster, with help from Dalia Haddad and Luke Vanderplug.
It was edited by Wendy Dorr and engineered by Sophia Landman.
Original music by Dan Powell, Marion Lozano, Alicia Be Itoop, and Diane Wong.
Special thanks to Paula Schumann.
Thanks for listening.
See you next week.
Thank you.
