Mr. Media Interviews by Bob Andelman
Monday, December 31, 2007
  David Simon, "The Wire" creator: Mr. Media Interview, Part 2
(Return to Part 1)

ANDELMAN: Let me ask you this, and this is a basic piece of business, but now I came to the show very late, and I think part of the reason I came to it late was the name. I just couldn’t get my arms around The Wire, so I want to ask you for people who might hear this or read this or haven’t seen it, can you give us kind of the Evelyn Wood breakdown of what the show is about and where the name The Wire came from?

SIMON: Sure. The Wire is a double entendre of sorts. It specifically refers to the electronic surveillance methods used by the police to try to undermine and take apart a criminal organization. In the first season, it would have been a drug organization, the second season, it was a smuggling organization, and so forth, but that’s more the literal reason for the title. The title really refers to almost an imaginary but inviolate boundary between the two Americas, between the functional, post-industrial economy that is minting new millionaires every day and creating a viable environment for a portion of the country, and the other America that is being consigned to a permanent underclass, and this show is really about the vagaries and excesses of unencumbered capitalism and what that has wrought at the millennium and where the country is and where it is going, and it is suggestive that we are going to a much more divided and brutish place, and I think we are, and that really reflects the politics of the people making the show. It really is a show about the other America in a lot of ways, and so The Wire really does refer to almost a boundary or a fence or the idea of people walking on a high wire and falling to either side. It really is sort of a symbolic argument or symbolic of the argument we are trying to make.

ANDELMAN: And is it a show of villains, anti-heroes, or something in between? The lines are never quite clear on people.

SIMON: Well, that’s by intent. I feel that a lot of American television, particularly in the cop show milieu, we came on the scene as presumably HBO’s answer to the cop show. That’s how we were initially marketed, and I think we weren’t willing to argue the point because our ambitions, which were different, were not credible until we had been on for a couple of years, but originally, we came as a cop show, and cop shows are exactly rooted in good and evil in the Sipowiczes and Joe Fridays and Pembletons of the world, and by the way, I wrote for Homicide, that’s how I learned to do television after they made my first book into the NBC show. Some of that is very well done and not without meaning. However, it does beg a certain question as to what our compulsion is about these sorts of hour-long morality plays and why they are the preponderance of what we absorb as our entertainment, and The Wire is fairly uninterested in good and evil. It regards its characters as being, it’s more sort of social determinist. I guess to follow it all the way back, most American drama on television is rooted in the Shakespearean tradition of the angst of the individual and his own conscience and his own struggle against himself. If you took at Tony Soprano or Al Swearingen and these other shows, there is a lot of Hamlet, there is a lot of Macbeth in their construct, and we are really stealing from older, less traveled tradition, which is that of the Greeks, and The Wire is really constructed as Greek tragedy, except we, post-moderns, have a hard time believing in Olympian gods that hurl lightning bolts and hit us in the butt and are indifferent to our morality or our desires or just basically jealous and whimsical and playful with humans, with mortals. But if you supplant the idea of those old Greek gods with post-modern institutions, with the police department, with the drug organization, with government, with the union, with the Catholic Church, with Enron, you start layering over the institutions that determine how individuals are going to be served by or serve society. Now you have some really indifferent gods, and so we are stealing from Euripides and Socrates and Aeschylus. Those are the guys.











ANDELMAN: Now let me ask you. You speak very elegantly, very philosophically about your program, but it’s also a program that’s full of, it’s very violent, it’s very tense. That can almost be paralyzing. I spoke to my wife this morning, and I was describing The Wire, which she has resisted watching, and I said, you know, there have been times where she has watched The Sopranos, and she has gotten to the end and said, I can’t watch that again for a couple of weeks. It’s just too much. I am overwhelmed. Have you gotten that response from…

SIMON: From some people. I think once people get three or four episodes in, they can’t help but watch. To that, I would just suggest, to go back to the Greeks again, Oedipus kills his father and sleeps with his mother; Antigone dies a horrible death for asserting her own demands of individuality and dignity. Don’t even get me started on Medea! Tragedy and violence and a look at the, if you get later into the dramatic tradition, a look at the profane in life is elemental to what we demand of drama. It’s almost a requirement of some serious drama to address themselves to the most basic human impulses. I don’t know how to make a show about nothing, and I certainly don’t know how to make a show about sort of a light-hearted romp through the end of the 20th Century, which, by virtue of the body count alone, has to be regarded as a failed century. There is a lot to be angry about, and there is a lot to be concerned about, and there is a lot to address ourselves to. And again, that’s the impulse behind the show. We are not saying dirty words to be naughty, and we are not showing any more nudity than we feel that is warranted under the construct of the story, if it’s required for the characters to be in the world they are in, and we are not using any more violence than would otherwise be necessary to address the plot. So I am not sure it’s that violent a show, and I am not sure it’s that profane a show as people say, and I am not even sure it’s that sexualized a show. I think it’s a combination of, it feels like these are real people in this situation, and if that’s the case, if people are disturbed by some of the stuff that happens in the given hour, they ought to be.

ANDELMAN: In terms of story, when people watch most TV shows, it doesn’t have to be sitcoms or even network dramas, but you have this expectation that at some point, all of these story lines will cross somewhere, and yet, that hasn’t really happened that much on The Wire.

SIMON: I think toward the end sometimes, but it’s a very delicate web. Usually, by the eleventh, twelfth, thirteenth episode, you start to see connections, stories that seemed disparate actually are headed toward each other, but having said that, we are willing to go longer and further with disparate story lines than any show, I think, before it. The ambitions of the show require that. I think, if you ask me what we are trying to do, we are not trying to do a cop show, we are trying to depict an American city. That’s a big thing, and we are trying to show how power and money route themselves through the modern city-state and why that city-state can’t solve its problems and maintain itself against its problems. That’s a lot to bite off and chew, and so we have to go far afield, and we have to trust in viewers’ ability to stay with the show.

ANDELMAN: Are there particular aspects of the story line that have changed over time in ways that you didn’t anticipate, either because maybe you are watching a character, and you are going, you know, this character should go this way in this…

SIMON: In the writer’s room, there is always a sense of discovery about what a character’s outcome should be or how they should get from point A to point Z. There is always a sense of discovery on the part of writers there, but the unique thing about the show is that we have known since, I think, the end of season one what the five, if we got five seasons, we had to beg for a couple of them, but if we got five seasons, we had five distinct themes we wanted to address. We knew what they were, we knew in order what they would be, we knew where we needed to place our characters at the beginning and the end of those themes, and we know how the show is supposed to end after this last season that we are about to start production on. That’s been a struggle to stay on that path because it’s always a struggle to follow a plan as opposed to just winging it, but it’s also been quite liberating because the nature of most TV shows, when they are designed as entertainment and not designed as specific stories about things, is that if a TV show finds success with one character or one romance or one theme, their job, the show owner’s job in Hollywood is to stay on that and keep repeating those moments that please viewers and to keep the show running for as long as possible, and our sense of what we wanted to achieve has been pretty rigorous. And we have said to ourselves, just because people love Omar or love Stringer Bell, the characters serve story, and we are really intent on executing the story that we conceived in the beginning. So it’s never about sort of appeasing the viewership and keeping the show afloat for as long as possible. When you try to keep a show afloat for as long as possible, you are eventually dishing out a thin gruel of old moments that you have already played for all they’re worth and just trying to sustain your audience. And we have sort of written without awareness of the audience.

ANDELMAN: So as you go into a fifth season, you are going into this planning on this being the final season.

SIMON: Yes. Absolutely.

Bob: There is no nine extra episodes to come at the end?

SIMON: No. I don’t think we have the… Again, we are not the money machine that some other shows are, and I don’t expect HBO to come begging us for another season, but actually, this last season, the fourth season, the one that dealt with the educational theme, the audience grew quite dramatically. Something happened. I would guess it was just people finally caught up to the show. They had the DVDs out there in advance, all seasons in advance of season four, and that was the first time they managed that, and I think the on-demand function, which became incredibly popular on HBO, helped people find the show, so it was sort of available in more platforms, and something clicked.

ANDELMAN: How has it kept going where Rome and Carnival and even Deadwood now have fallen before it?

SIMON: We’re cheaper.

ANDELMAN: That’s pretty straight-forward.

SIMON: We film in Baltimore, and that’s certainly part of it. Rome cost more than $100 million to make. You have the same number of hours of The Wire for maybe a third of the cost, and we are always under budget. We always turn a little bit of money back in almost as a good faith gesture. That earns you a certain amount of contempt in Hollywood, where everybody always goes over budget, but I learned television production, and Nina Noble, the other producer, she learned it at the foot of Tom Fontana and Jim Federdine. These are guys who played by the same rules. Tom said to me a long time ago, it’s not your money, so going over should not be a point of pride, and we have always been responsible, and by keeping the show’s budget in some proportion, I think it made it easier for them to say, “Okay, these guys, they say they can execute for x amount of dollars, let’s give them another season.” Practical economy of Hollywood.

ANDELMAN: Now, episode fifty, the last episode of the fourth season, “Final Grades,” it felt like it could have actually wrapped up the series. There were a lot of things that were wrapped. There were a lot of things that were covered. We saw….

SIMON: Although they did just pull about seventeen bodies out of some row houses.

ANDELMAN: Right.

SIMON: I think that would have been the pregnant issue. I mean, listen, you never know if you are going to get cancelled, so you try to have some sense of resolution to every season, but the one thing that is different about HBO is they have never cancelled a show in the middle of its run, so you always know you are going to get to the last episode of your season. Whether you are going to get the renewal again at the end, that’s always an open question. It is television. Nothing is guaranteed. But we did feel like we left this one a little more open than maybe… I felt season three with the end of the Barksdale story was the one where we were probably the most vulnerable to somebody saying, “Well, it’s tidy, let’s call it a day.” I think there is more to be said on the theme of Marlo and those bodies in the houses, but ultimately we had one last theme, and we pitched it to HBO. We are going to slice off one last piece of this simulated city we built and address ourselves to that, and I think that will end it.

ANDELMAN: That’s interesting, because I felt like I got some closure, because it’s these people who are still alive, not the seventeen who were on that long piece of paper………

SIMON: I think it was actually twenty-two by the end. I am trying to remember the dialogue.

ANDELMAN: Okay. Yeah. It left me feeling satisfied. I knew that, obviously, lives go on and series, the characters theoretically go on, but I felt, okay, if it stops there, I feel pretty satisfied. But it’s even better to know it goes on.

SIMON: I think that’s exactly what Chris Ulbrecht was saying when he was contemplating whether or not to give us the next season, that if he had to end it here, he felt there was enough resolution at the end of the four. I blanched at that. I wasn’t quite in agreement with him, but he felt that he could hang his hat on it, there was enough resolution at the end of four.











ANDELMAN: What will be your involvement in season five, and are you working on anything to follow The Wire?

SIMON: My involvement is the same as all the other seasons, executive producer along with Nina Noble, dealing with all facets of production and working on the writing with Ed Burns, who is the other lead writer, and we have Richard Price, George Pelecanos, Dennis Lehane, you know, remarkable novelists who are committed to writing for the show. And we will execute one last season, I think probably ten episodes, I don’t think we need twelve to finish, and then put it to bed. And then move on to something else. I am involved with some other projects for HBO, and they may or may not go. I was involved in adapting a book called Generation Kill by Evan Wright. He was an embedded reporter with the First Marine Recon unit in Iraq during the invasion, and I think he wrote what is one of the great pieces of war reporting to come out of Iraq and in a great metaphorical piece for the tragedy there, and I am trying to adapt that as a mini-series for HBO. It’s written, and we are sort of waiting for the decision on HBO as to when to go on it.











ANDELMAN: So your next project will not torture the Baltimore Chamber of Commerce?

SIMON: Apparently not, not unless Baltimore can dress itself up as Baghdad, but Baltimore can be a lot of things. I have to say, Baltimore, there have been some brushes with the mayor and with some civic boosters, but the truth is, they have been very professional about it, and if you want to have a film industry anywhere, you cannot start dictating terms to the storyteller and saying, we only want a certain kind of story; we are happy to film that. But the film industry exists in places like New York and L.A. and larger markets regardless of story. Nobody reviews story in New York, and the Law and Order franchise alone I think has killed more people in Manhattan in a given year than are actually killed in Manhattan in a given year. Whereas, I think what disturbed some people in Baltimore is that this is really aggressively taking on such issues as the viability of the drug war, the education system, the death of unionized labor…

ANDELMAN: Political corruption…

SIMON: I think in some ways, the fact that it is so attenuated from the real is what bothers people, and I can’t help that. It’s like you are asking me to pull punches now that I can’t pull, but having said that, I think Baltimore would be more stressed out about it if we were from Hollywood and we just sort of landed in their city and said, all right, we are now going to be hyper-critical of you guys, having parachuted from another world entirely.

ANDELMAN: Or how would they feel if you were shooting “Baltimore” in Toronto?

SIMON: Right. The truth is, you can say anything is anything, and if it’s fictional, nobody can stop you, but I mean, the truth is, it shouldn’t be a bargain over the dollars for filming versus the city’s image. Some people put it that way. I never cast it that way. The way I cast it is, we are from here. I live in south Baltimore, and I am committed to staying in Baltimore as a citizen, and if you don’t think that I have the legitimacy to comment on where our city is going and what we are facing, okay, but you are going to have a hard time stopping me, because it’s genuine, it’s not motivated by any sense of cynicism about place or about… And I am not from somewhere else, I am from Baltimore, so what else would I write about?

© 2007 by Bob Andelman. All Rights Reserved.



Labels: , , , , ,

 
Comments: Post a Comment



Links to this post:

Create a Link



<< Home
Exclusive interviews by Mr. Media, a.k.a., Bob Andelman, with celebrities and newsmakers in TV, radio, movies, music, magazines, newspapers, graphic novels, and comics! Listen LIVE online at BlogTalkRadio.com/mrmedia or download to your iPod or other portable MP3 player!



Subscribe to Mr. Media's RSS/XML Feed

Get MR. MEDIA Interviews delivered by email! Enter your email address:

Delivered by FeedBurner


Listen to Mr. Media on internet talk radio


The
Mr. Media
Interviews

By Bob Andelman


COMING SOON
Rory Freedman and Kim Barnouin
Skinny Bitch book series

MOST RECENT
Steve Rosenbaum
Magnify.Net, MTV UNfiltered

John Darnton
Black & White and Dead All Over, Neanderthal, The Darwin Conspiracy, The New York Times

Rabbi Bob Alper
What Are You... A Comedian?

Jerry Scott and Rick Kirkman
Baby Blues

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman
Zits

Brett DelBuono
The Cleaner

Ally Sheedy
Steam, WarGames, The Breakfast Club

Kate Siegel
Steam

Kyle Schickner
Steam

Joe Ariel
Eats Magazine, College Eats, Eats.com

Carolyn Lawrence
SpongeBob Squarepants, The Adventures of Jimmy Neutron: Boy Genius, Moral Orel

Catherine Taber
Star Wars: The Clone Wars

Ed Droste
Hooters Restaurants

TV STARS
Carolyn Lawrence
SpongeBob Squarepants, The Adventures of Jimmy Neutron: Boy Genius, Moral Orel

Brett DelBuono
The Cleaner

Catherine Taber
Star Wars: The Clone Wars

Tom Farley, Jr.
The Chris Farley Show, The Chris Farley Foundation

Jon Provost
Lassie

Anna Gunn
Breaking Bad; Deadwood

Paula Garces
Harold & Kumar; The Shield; Red Princess Blues

Milo Ventimiglia
Heroes

Cheryl Hines
Curb Your Enthusiasm

Jeff Garlin
Curb Your Enthusiasm

Michelle Borth
Tell Me You Love Me

Judge David Young
Judge David Young Show

George Gray
What's With That House?

Larry Thomas
Seinfeld's Soup Nazi/Postal

Robert Wuhl
Assume The Position, Arli$$, Hollywood Knights

Emeril Lagasse
Emeril Live

Tom Bergeron
Fox After Breakfast

Craig Kilborn
The Daily Show

Bill Boggs
The Corner Table

Soledad O'Brien
The Site

Chris Matthews
Hardball

Rob Kutner
Apocalypse How, The Daily Show with Jon Stewart


TV PRODUCERS
Katherine Fugate
Army Wives

Bill Prady
The Big Bang Theory; Gilmore Girls; Star Trek Voyager; Dream On; Muppets 3-D

David Simon
The Wire; The Corner; Homicide: Life on the Streets

David Fury
24, Lost; Buffy; Dream On

Bob Horowitz
The Singing Bee; Super Bowl's Greatest Commercials

Rasha Drachkovitch
Lockup

Kit Boss
Creature Comforts; King of the Hill

Star Price
Penn & Teller: Bullshit!

Rupert Holmes
Remember WENN

Stephen Chao
Fox TV


MOVIE STARS
Ally Sheedy
Steam, WarGames, The Breakfast Club

Kate Siegel
Steam

Billy Bob Thornton
Beautiful Door/Bad Santa

Catherine Taber
Star Wars: The Clone Wars

Joe Pistone
Unfinished Business: Donnie Brasco

Scott Miles
Little Chicago, Remember the Titans, October Sky, Star Trek Voyager

Oscar Isaac
PU-239

Jeremy Mitchell and Sheaun McKinney
Nemesis

Karolyn Grimes
It's A Wonderful Life

Tom Farley, Jr.
The Chris Farley Show, The Chris Farley Foundation


MOVIE DIRECTORS, PRODUCERS, DOCUMENTARY FILMMAKERS, and SCREENWRITERS

Michael Uslan
The Dark Knight, Will Eisner’s The Spirit, Batman, Batman Returns, Batman Forever, Batman and Robin, Batman Begins, Catwoman, Constantine, National Treasure, Swamp Thing, Shazam!, The Shadow, Constantine

Deborah Del Prete
Will Eisner’s The Spirit

Kyle Schickner
Steam

Paul Hertzberg
CineTel Films

Robbie Cavolina, and Ian McCrudden
Anita O’Day: The Life of a Jazz Singer

George Motz
Hamburger America

Scott Miles
Little Chicago, Remember the Titans, October Sky, Star Trek Voyager

Chuck Workman and Stephen J. Kern
In Search of Kennedy, Superstar: The Life and Times of Andy Warhol, The Source

Richard Brody
Everything Is Cinema: The Working Life of Jean-Luc Godard

Katy Chevigny
Election Day, Deadline, Arctic Son, Arts Engine, Media That Matters Film Festival

Bob Balaban
Bernard and Doris

David Sington
In the Shadow of the Moon

Bret Carr
RevoLOUtion

Alex Ferrari
Broken

Jules Feiffer
”Feiffer,” Popeye, Carnal Knowledge, The Man in the Ceiling


POLITICS
Rep. Dennis J. Kucinich
Politifact.com; St. Petersburg Times

Bill Adair
Politifact.com; St. Petersburg Times

Pete Von Sholly
Capitol Hell

David Andelman
A Shattered Peace

John Amato
CrooksandLiars.com

Philip Shenon
The Commission: The Uncensored History of the 9/11 Investigation

Katy Chevigny
Election Day, Deadline, Arctic Son, Arts Engine, Media That Matters Film Festival

Chuck Workman and Stephen J. Kern
In Search of Kennedy, Superstar: The Life and Times of Andy Warhol, The Source


STAND-UP COMEDIANS
Rabbi Bob Alper
What Are You... A Comedian?

Jeff Kreisler
My Wall Street Journal; Indecision 2008

Robert Schimmel, Part 1
Cancer On $5 a Day

Robert Schimmel, Part 2
Cancer On $5 a Day


HEALTH
Brian Frazer
Hyper-Chondriac


MAGAZINE EDITORS
Stacy Collins and Breann McGregor
Playboy Special Editions

Jason Snell
Macworld

Chris Napolitano
Playboy

Kim Kleman
Consumer Reports

Seth Bauer
The Green Guide

Mary Kay Culpepper
Cooking Light

Tamara Conniff
Billboard Magazine

Tatiana Siegel
The Hollywood Reporter

Carey Winfrey
Smithsonian Magazine

Lisa Granatstein
Mediaweek

Eric Rhoads
Radio Ink

Dale Hrabi
Blender

Samir Husni
"Mr. Magazine

Jamie Ceasar
Digizine

Bob Guccione Jr.
Spin

Rob Tannenbaum
Details

R. Seth Friedman
Factsheet 5

Heather Findlay
Girlfriends

Chris Gore
Film Threat

George Myers, Jr.
George Jr.

Bruno Maddox
Spy

Randall Lane
P.O.V.

Chip Rowe
Playboy Advisor

Barbara O'Dair
US

Roger Black
Reader's Digest

David Lauren
Swing

Julie Lewit-Nirenberg and Nancy Nadler LeWinter
Mode

Sandra Beckwith
The Do(o)little Report


RADIO

Alec Foege
Right of the Dial: The Rise of Clear Channel and the Fall of Commercial Radio

Tom Taylor
Inside Radio

Tom Leykis
The Tom Leykis Show


BLOGGERS, PODCASTERS and WEB SITE PRODUCERS
Steve Rosenbaum
Magnify.Net, MTV UNfiltered

Joe Ariel
Eats Magazine, College Eats, Eats.com

Will Jerro
MonkeySee.com

Alan Levy
BlogTalkRadio.com Founder

Jim McBride
Mr. Skin

Stephen Chao
WonderHowTo.com

Stephen Chao (VIDEO)
WonderHowTo.com

David Bankston
Neighborhood America

John Amato
CrooksandLiars.com

Chris Barr
C/NET

Scott Woelfel
CNN Interactive

Mark Brown
Using Netscape 3

Brian Hecht
Electronic Newsstand


NOVELISTS
John Darnton
Black & White and Dead All Over, Neanderthal, The Darwin Conspiracy, The New York Times

James Sheehan
The Mayor of Lexington Avenue; The Law of Second Chances

Kristin Harmel
How to Sleep With a Movie Star; The Art of French Kissing; When You Wish

Sara Zarr
Story of a Girl; Sweethearts

James Grippando
The Pardon

Tim Dorsey
Hurricane Punch

Peter Golenbock
7: The Mickey Mantle Novel


MUSIC
Peter Salett
In the Ocean of the Stars, Forgetting Sarah Marshall, Superbad, Role Models

Robbie Cavolina, and Ian McCrudden
Anita O’Day: The Life of a Jazz Singer

Legs McNeil
Please Kill Me: The Uncensored Oral History of Punk, The Other Hollywood: The Uncensored History of the Porn Film Industry, Punk Magazine

Mike Edison
I Have Fun Everywhere I Go, High Times, Screw, Cheri, Main Event, Penthouse


SEXUALITY
Rory Freedman and Kim Barnouin
Skinny Bitch book series

<Chip Rowe
Dear Playboy Advisor: Questions from Men and Women to the Advice Column of Playboy Magazine

Jenny Block
Open: Love, Sex, and Life in an Open Marriage

Robbie Lee,
The Straight Man's Pocket Guide To Picking Up A Hottie-Written by a Woman Who Loves Women

Brian Alexander
America Unzipped

Jim McBride
Mr. Skin

Stacy Collins and Breann McGregor
Playboy Special Editions

Chris Napolitano
Playboy

Chip Rowe
Playboy Advisor

Heather Findlay
Girlfriends

Jonathan Riggs
Prism Comics: Your Guide to LGBT Comics, Instinct Magazine


CULTURE & SOCIETY
Rory Freedman and Kim Barnouin
Skinny Bitch book series

<

Roger Bennett,
Camp Camp, Disco Bar Mitzvah

Mike Edison
I Have Fun Everywhere I Go, High Times, Screw, Cheri, Main Event, Penthouse

Julia Roberts
Motherhood to Otherhood

Julia Roberts
Motherhood to Otherhood

Rick Smolan
America at Home, A Day in the Lie of America, America 24/7


FOOD
George Motz
Hamburger America

Joe Ariel
Eats Magazine, College Eats, Eats.com

Ed Droste
Hooters Restaurants

Mary Kay Culpepper
Cooking Light


BIOGRAPHERS, HISTORIANS and A.J. JACOBS
Legs McNeil
Please Kill Me: The Uncensored Oral History of Punk, The Other Hollywood: The Uncensored History of the Porn Film Industry, Punk Magazine

David Michaelis
Schulz and Peanuts

Todd DePastino
Bill Mauldin: A Life Up Front, Willie & Joe: The WWII Years

David Andelman
A Shattered Peace

Marlise Kast
Tabloid Prodigy, Globe magazine

Chuck Workman and Stephen J. Kern
In Search of Kennedy, Superstar: The Life and Times of Andy Warhol, The Source

Larry "Ratso" Sloman
The Secret Life of Houdini

Pete Williams
The Draft

Richard Weiner
Webster's New World Dictionary of Media and Communications

Will Russell and Scott Stuffitt
I'm A Lebowski, You're A Lebowski

Brian Alexander
America Unzipped

A.J. Jacobs
The Year of Living Biblically

David Hajdu
The Ten-Cent Plague: The Great Comic-Book Scare

Philip Shenon
The Commission: The Uncensored History of the 9/11 Investigation


JOURNALISTS
Marlise Kast
Tabloid Prodigy, Globe magazine

Jeff Kreisler
My Wall Street Journal; Indecision 2008

Bill Adair
Politifact.com; St. Petersburg Times

Alberto Ibargüen
Knight Foundation

Sree Sreenivasan
Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism; WNBC-TV

Eric Deggans
St. Petersburg Times "The Feed" Blog

Howard Finberg
NewsU

Dave Jones
The New York Times

Pete Hamill
New York Daily News; The Drinking Life

Chuck Shepherd
News of the Weird


CRIME
Joe Pistone
Unfinished Business: Donnie Brasco


BUSINESS
Ed Droste
Hooters Restaurants

Alec Foege
Right of the Dial: The Rise of Clear Channel and the Fall of Commercial Radio

Daniel Pink
The Adventures of Johnny Bunko, Free Agent Nation, A Whole New Mind

Alan Levy
BlogTalkRadio.com Founder


COMIC BOOKS

Gene Colan
Marvel Comics, Iron Man, Daredevil, Howard the Duck, DC Comics, Batman

Blake Bell
Strange & Stranger: The World of Steve Ditko, I Have to Live With This Guy!

Darwyn Cooke...
The Spirit

Daniel Pink
The Adventures of Johnny Bunko, Free Agent Nation, A Whole New Mind

Jonathan Riggs
Prism Comics: Your Guide to LGBT Comics, Instinct Magazine

Arie Kaplan
Speed Racer, MAD Magazine

Paul Fitzgerald, Cindy Jackson and Stuart Henderson
Will Eisner & PS Magazine

Danny Fingeroth
Disguised as Superman, Superman on the Couch, Spider-Man Editor

Wendy Pini and Richard Pini
Elfquest; Masque of the Red Death

Pete Von Sholly
Capitol Hell; Morbid

Joe Sinnott
Fantastic Four/Brush Strokes with Greatness

Chuck Dixon
The Simpsons Comics

Peter Kuper
Stop Forgetting to Remember

Trina Robbins
GoGirl!

Drew Friedman
Old Jewish Comedians

Dennis O'Neil
Batman

Mike Richardson
Dark Horse Comics

Aaron Warner
The Adventures of aaron

Jim Lee
Heroes Reborn

David Hajdu
The Ten-Cent Plague: The Great Comic-Book Scare

Howard Chaykin
American Flagg

Gary Chaloner
John Law

Gary Chaloner
John Law Podcast


COMIC STRIPS
Jerry Scott and Rick Kirkman
Baby Blues

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman
Zits

Mort Walker
Beetle Bailey, Hi & Lois

Todd DePastino
Bill Mauldin: A Life Up Front, Willie & Joe: The WWII Years

Charlos Gary
Café Con Leche, Working It Out

Jules Feiffer
”Feiffer,” Popeye, Carnal Knowledge, The Man in the Ceiling

Stephan Pastis
Pearls Before Swine

Mark Tatulli
LIO

Ray Billingsley
Curtis

Bill Griffith
Zippy the Pinhead

Lee Salem
Universal Press Syndicate


WILL EISNER: A SPIRITED LIFE

Michael Uslan
The Dark Knight, Will Eisner’s The Spirit, Batman, Batman Returns, Batman Forever, Batman and Robin, Batman Begins, Catwoman, Constantine, National Treasure, Swamp Thing, Shazam!, The Shadow, Constantine

Deborah Del Prete...
On Frank Miller and Producing “The Spirit” Movie

Darwyn Cooke...
On Reviving “The Spirit” for the 21st Century

Paul Fitzgerald, Cindy Jackson and Stuart Henderson...
On Will Eisner & PS Magazine

Howard Chaykin...
On Fighting with Will Eisner

Drew Friedman...
On What’s Wrong With the Biography, Will Eisner:A Spirited Life

Andrew D. Cooke...
On Producing the Documentary, Will Eisner: Portrait of a Sequential Artist

Pete Poplaski...
On Working With Will Eisner, Now and Then

Gary Chaloner...
On Refitting Eisner’s “John Law” Character for the 21st Century

Gary Chaloner Podcast

Bob Andelman...
On Writing the Biography, Will Eisner: A Spirited Life

Benjamin Herzberg...
On Working With Eisner to Craft Fagin the Jew and The Plot”

Ted Cabarga...
On Working With Eisner in the 1960s at PS Magazine

Mike Richardson...
On Publishing Eisner’s Last Day in Vietnam

Denis Kitchen...
On What’s New at Will Eisner Studios

Scott Hampton and Bo Hampton...
On Being Eisner’s Studio Assistants

Abraham Foxman...
On Publishing Prospects for The Plot in the Middle East


My Photo
Name: Bob Andelman
Location: St. Petersburg, Florida, United States

Bob Andelman is the host and producer of the “Mr. Media Interviews” podcast. He is also the author or co-author of 9 books including: Will Eisner: A Spirited Life; Built From Scratch; Mean Business; The Profit Zone; The Corporate Athlete, Stadium For Rent and several others. Complete biography & book reviews here. Looking to hire a collaborator or writer for a book? Contact my agent, Michael Bourret. Magazine editors can contact me directly.


Subscribe to Mr. Media Podcasts
My Odeo Channel
Never listened to a podcast? Learn how

Contact
Send us an email.

Need to send Snail Mail?

Mr. Media
P.O. Box 7327
St. Petersburg, Fla.
33734-7327 USA

SKYPE:
BobAndelman

AIM/iCHAT AV:
BAndelman

Mr. Media on MySpace

Mr. Media on Facebook

Books by Bob Andelman

My MyNN Profile

My status


    TwitterCounter for @andelman




    Blubrry player!

    AddThis Feed Button
    Alltop, confirmation that we kick ass

    Find Podcasts About
    powerer by PodLounge.com.au
    Blogarama - The Blog Directory Entertainment blogs Seed Newsvine Add to Technorati Favorites Podcasting News Subscribe to My Odeo Podcast Top Blogs Preview with Feedage Add to AOL! Add to My Yahoo! Add to Google! Add to MSN Subscribe in NewsGator Online Add to Netvibes Subscribe in Pageflakes Subscribe in Bloglines Add to RSS Web Reader View with Feed Reader Add to NewsBurst Add to meta RSS Add to Windows Live online counter Add to Onlywire News & Media Blogs - Blog Catalog Blog Directory Directory of Entertainment Blogs Romow Web Directory - Online Internet Marketing Center Link With Us - Web Directory Subscribe in Mefeedia Blog Carnival Index - browse the archives PodNova Download Juice, the cross-platform podcast receiver My Zimbio
    Archives

    11/12/06 - 11/19/06 / 11/19/06 - 11/26/06 / 12/24/06 - 12/31/06 / 12/31/06 - 1/7/07 / 1/7/07 - 1/14/07 / 1/14/07 - 1/21/07 / 1/21/07 - 1/28/07 / 1/28/07 - 2/4/07 / 2/4/07 - 2/11/07 / 2/11/07 - 2/18/07 / 2/18/07 - 2/25/07 / 2/25/07 - 3/4/07 / 3/4/07 - 3/11/07 / 3/11/07 - 3/18/07 / 3/18/07 - 3/25/07 / 3/25/07 - 4/1/07 / 4/1/07 - 4/8/07 / 4/8/07 - 4/15/07 / 4/15/07 - 4/22/07 / 4/22/07 - 4/29/07 / 4/29/07 - 5/6/07 / 5/6/07 - 5/13/07 / 5/13/07 - 5/20/07 / 5/20/07 - 5/27/07 / 5/27/07 - 6/3/07 / 6/3/07 - 6/10/07 / 6/10/07 - 6/17/07 / 6/17/07 - 6/24/07 / 6/24/07 - 7/1/07 / 7/1/07 - 7/8/07 / 7/8/07 - 7/15/07 / 7/15/07 - 7/22/07 / 7/22/07 - 7/29/07 / 8/5/07 - 8/12/07 / 8/12/07 - 8/19/07 / 8/19/07 - 8/26/07 / 8/26/07 - 9/2/07 / 9/2/07 - 9/9/07 / 9/9/07 - 9/16/07 / 10/7/07 - 10/14/07 / 10/14/07 - 10/21/07 / 10/21/07 - 10/28/07 / 11/4/07 - 11/11/07 / 11/25/07 - 12/2/07 / 12/2/07 - 12/9/07 / 12/9/07 - 12/16/07 / 12/16/07 - 12/23/07 / 12/23/07 - 12/30/07 / 12/30/07 - 1/6/08 / 1/6/08 - 1/13/08 / 1/13/08 - 1/20/08 / 1/20/08 - 1/27/08 / 1/27/08 - 2/3/08 / 2/3/08 - 2/10/08 / 2/10/08 - 2/17/08 / 2/17/08 - 2/24/08 / 2/24/08 - 3/2/08 / 3/2/08 - 3/9/08 / 3/9/08 - 3/16/08 / 3/16/08 - 3/23/08 / 3/23/08 - 3/30/08 / 3/30/08 - 4/6/08 / 4/6/08 - 4/13/08 / 4/13/08 - 4/20/08 / 4/20/08 - 4/27/08 / 4/27/08 - 5/4/08 / 5/4/08 - 5/11/08 / 5/11/08 - 5/18/08 / 5/18/08 - 5/25/08 / 5/25/08 - 6/1/08 / 6/1/08 - 6/8/08 / 6/8/08 - 6/15/08 / 6/15/08 - 6/22/08 / 6/22/08 - 6/29/08 / 6/29/08 - 7/6/08 / 7/6/08 - 7/13/08 / 7/13/08 - 7/20/08 / 7/20/08 - 7/27/08 / 7/27/08 - 8/3/08 / 8/3/08 - 8/10/08 / 8/10/08 - 8/17/08 / 8/17/08 - 8/24/08 / 8/24/08 - 8/31/08 / 8/31/08 - 9/7/08 / 9/7/08 - 9/14/08 /


    Powered by Blogger

    Subscribe to
    Posts [Atom]