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- NEWS ARTICLE: January 28, 2000
How
We Got Alan Keyes to Dive Into Our Mosh Pit
(and
other scenes from our first week of shooting)
Michael
Moore
Dear friends,
Yes, that mosh
pit the one that has thrown a big, weird monkey wrench into the
first week of the 2000 Presidential campaign was ours.
And the marching
band outside the execution of Billy Hughes in Texas on Monday night,
complete with cheerleaders chanting, "George [Bush], George, he's
our man! If he can't kill 'em, no one can!" that was ours, too.
And, yes, that
was us with Rage Against the Machine on Wednesday as we forced the
New York Stock Exchange to hit the panic button and slam down the
steel gates over their doors, sealing off the entire building an
hour before closing time, and resulting in my near-arrest by the
men who wear the Giuliani blue.
All this, and
we are only four days into shooting our next season of "The Awful
Truth." If this is what a typical week is going to be like for us
this time around, then I guess the line item in our budget for "lawyers
and bail money" is grossly underestimated.
We usually don't
like to discuss what we're up to before we air our work on Bravo
and Channel 4 U.K., but the Iowa Mosh Pit has become such a huge
item in the news that I thought you might want to know just what
the heck is going on.
It was bizarre
watching the Republican Presidential debate Wednesday night, with
Bush and Bauer and Keyes all going nuts over what we did Sunday
night at the Iowa Caucuses. New York Times columnist Gail Collins
called it "the defining moment" of the campaign so far (to read
her column in the Times click here www.nytimes.com/library/opinion/collins/012800coll.html
Jay Leno devoted
a chunk of his monologue to it Thursday night. BBC Radio woke me
up this morning wanting an explanation.
Here's what
happened:
As part of what
will be our ongoing "coverage" of this year's Presidential election,
we decided to go to Iowa to see how far these candidates will go
to get an endorsement. We know they will take money from just about
anyone and promise favors and legislation to the highest bidders.
With that as our system of "democracy," it leaves us, the people,
with few avenues to have our voice heard.
So, we announced
to all the contenders for the White House that "The Awful Truth"
will endorse any candidate who jumps into our mosh pit. Simple as
that. No large sums of dirty money, no favors or back-room deal
making. Just dive into the outstretched arms of 100 degenerate but
registered youth, and you are our candidate.
I hauled this
mosh pit around Iowa in a large flatbed truck, crisscrossing the
state and inviting the Presidential candidates to join the teeming
and tattooed masses. The response from the candidates varied from
a stunned and frightened Steve Forbes (who quickly walked by the
pit giving it a nervous thumb up), to front-runner George W. Bush
(who told me, "behave yourself, Michael I see you're up to your
old tricks why don't you go get a real job?")
Gary Bauer,
on the other hand, called the Des Moines police who sent five cruisers
and a paddy wagon to arrest the pit. The police, though, could not
contain their laughter when they arrived and saw the group of purple-haired,
pierce-lipped, 18-year olds jumping wildly in place to the music
of Rage Against the Machine.
Next, we drove
over to a town hall event being staged by former Reagan ambassador,
Alan Keyes. As the mosh pit rolled into the parking lot, with Rage
music blaring ("It has to start somewhere/ It has to start sometime/
What better place than here/ What better time than now..."), Keyes
staffers came outside to see what all the noise was about. When
informed that Keyes could get the endorsement of "The Awful Truth,"
Keyes' national field director dove into the pit, hoping that would
suffice for our support. He then brought out "Uncle Sam," a Keyes
supporter who was dressed in full Uncle Sam regalia. He, too, jumped
in.
But we told
the Keyes staff that it had to be Keyes himself. Minutes later,
Alan Keyes emerged and, against the loud protests of his Secret
Service agent, Keyes climbed to the top of the makeshift stage on
the back of the truck and dove backwards into the screaming mosh
pit. He then body-surfed the entire pit, carried like a wave on
the outstretched hands of the tightly compact crowd. He did a couple
of body slams with a spiked-hair youth from Ames High School and
left the pit with the official endorsement of the show.
"We knew Alan
Keyes was insane," I told the press who were trying to understand
the irony or the point. "We just didn't know HOW insane he was until
that moment. We now feel a responsibility to test the remaining
field of candidates."
On Wednesday
night, the five remaining Republican candidates held their big New
Hampshire debate. And what did they spend their time fighting about?
"The Awful Truth Mosh Pit!" The Reuters news agency called it "surreal,"
and Gary Bauer went into nutty overdrive accusing Keyes of being
"anti-family" because he was moshing to the music of "The Machine
Rages On" (!), calling the group "pro-terrorist" and saying that's
what the "kids at Columbine" listened to.
For the past
three days, our phone has been ringing off the hook. Hundreds of
papers around the country have covered the story. The pundits on
all the blowhard cable shows can't shut up about it. And for some
reason, for at least the better part of one week, we have been able
to get the Republicans to stop talking about who will be best at
taking away women's rights or building more prisons and forced them
to occupy their time arguing about the moral merits of the Mosh
Pit.
As we head into
the weekend, we are loading up the flatbed truck and driving off
to New Hampshire with our portable mosh pit. We will personally
attempt to greet John McCain if he was tough enough for the Hanoi
Hilton, this will be like Motel 6; Al Gore the mosh pit is perhaps
the only place where being stiff is an asset; and Bill Bradley we
are convinced this will be his only chance to stage a comeback (plus,
he's the only candidate big enough to kick every one of these kids'
butts).
Keyes had been
written off in Iowa before he jumped into our pit. The day after
moshing, he scored an upset third-place finish in the double digits
among those who actually cared about caucusing (90 percent of all
Iowans knew better and chose not to vote). These other candidates
would be crazy if they DIDN'T jump into the pit!
"The Awful Truth"
is willing to multiple-endorse, just like the big money people do
when they write big checks to both the Democrats and Republicans.
To be known as the only group to have endorsed Alan Keyes is something
we may just never be able to live with, and we are hoping to rectify
that in New Hampshire.
This past Monday
night, we attended the execution of death row inmate, Billy Hughes,
in Huntsville, Texas. George W. Bush is now responsible for approving
and carrying out the killing of 117 people, a record. We decided
to show up and celebrate his achievement. We brought a marching
band, cheerleaders and fans to hold a tailgate party in the prison's
parking lot. How did the pro-death penalty crowd react? Well, they're
threatening a lawsuit, so we'll do our best to get it on the air
in May.
A few weeks
ago, I was asked by Rage Against the Machine to direct their next
music video, something I've never done. Their song is about the
evils of our economic system and the era of greed in which we live.
So, like, I had a few ideas...
On Wednesday
we quickly set the band up on the steps where George Washington
was first sworn in as President, on the corner of Wall and Broad
Streets in lower Manhattan. Quite a large crowd came out of the
brokerage houses and banks where the business of America is conducted
on a daily basis.
The police also
came out. They ordered the makeshift concert to cease, but before
we had a chance to stop, four officers jumped me and put me in one
of those police locks like you see on that excellent and informative
show, "COPS." One tried to break my arm, the other put a choke hold
on my neck. In all my years of shooting in New York, I have never
had this happen, and all I could think of was, well, I just hope
it's a new plunger.
When the band
and the crowd saw this, they went nuts. Hundreds of them jumped
two police barricades and tore across the street to the front door
of the New York Stock Exchange, ground zero of American Capitalism.
It was a sight to behold. The police were so distracted with carting
me away they couldn't catch up to the band who, by this time, had
made it inside the first set of double doors to the Exchange.
At that moment,
someone must have hit the riot button inside the Stock Exchange
because suddenly these large steel gates came crashing down in front
of the second set of double doors. Then all the gates of the Exchange
came down. Clank! Clank! Clank! For the first time anyone could
recall, the New York Stock Exchange went into lockdown a full hour
before its official closing time. The police left me and rushed
over to break up the madness. But the band and their fans are faster
than I was and escaped the clutches of the police.
You can catch
the video on MTV in mid-February and me in court by late March.
Well, that's
my first week back at work. If you'd like to see footage of Alan
Keyes in our mosh pit or me body slamming Senator Orin Hatch click
here: www.michaelmoore.com/moshpit.html
Or check out
the Rage scene on Wall Street. www.michaelmoore.com/rageslide1.html
I'll be back
reporting live and moshing from New Hampshire on "Politically Incorrect",
Tuesday night, February 1, on ABC.
Until then...
Michael Moore
MMflint@aol.com
www.michaelmoore.com
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