Wednesday, January 27, 2021

The First Rough Draft of History

This will serve as my review of the PBS Frontline Trump documentary, "Trumps' American Carnage", which dropped yesterday.

It is a typical example of the Frontline genre.  In this case they've created a well-produced, workmanlike account of Donald Trump's escalating assaults on democratic norms and institutions and his tightening grip on the Republican Party.  Since Trump's atrocities and the GOP's capitulations are far too numerous to capture in a single hour Frontline moves swiftly through the years, touching in the worst of the worst -- basically an hour-long timeline of key events of the Trump presidency from escalator to insurrection narrated by William Lyman, who is both the longtime voice of the Frontline series and (fun fact) the voice of Dos Equis beer.   

Since the thrust of the documentary is the accelerating pace and recklessness of Trump's authoritarianism, emphasis is placed on those examples along the way which most clearly illuminate that trajectory.  For example, two hours during which Trump ordered the teargassing and clubbing of peaceful protesters in Lafayette Square so that he could stage a photo-op is given more air time than Trump's year-long catastrophic refusal to deal with the COVID-19 pandemic seriously.  Instead, Frontline focuses on Trump's use of state lockdowns in response to the pandemic as an opportunity to whip his followers into a statehouse-storming, "Liberate Virginia!  Liberate Michigan! Liberate Minnesota!" frenzy.

I'm not faulting the Frontline producers for putting the emphasis where they did in order to tell the story they wanted to tell.  This was, after all, a one-hour documentary on Trump's steady progression towards open tyranny and violent insurrection and not a 20 hour disquisition on Everything Horrible Trump Did, so no beef from me on that score.

From the Frontline website:

From his first days as president to his last, how Trump stoked division, violence and insurrection. FRONTLINE investigates Trump’s siege on his enemies, the media and even the leaders of his own party, who for years ignored the warning signs of what was to come.

Like pretty much every other Frontline documentary you've ever seen, the story is advanced by a combination Mr. Lyman's disembodied Third Party Omniscient voice, a variety of People Seated in Chairs and various other narrative devices familiar to documentary enthusiasts such as photographs, video footage, audio recordings, Tweets, documents with highlighted text, etc.

And it's the People Seated in Chairs that gives me serious pause.

There are the Reporters -- Yamiche Alcindor, Peter Baker, Darlene Superville, Robert Costa, Susan Glasser and I'm probably forgetting someone -- who talk about the relevant stories that they have reported on.

There are the Villains like Corey Lewandowski, Roger Stone, Sean Spicer and Frank Luntz trying to look rueful, because it's only fair that we hear from bad guys.

Then there are the Republican Political Eunuchs: current office-holding potted ferns like Susan Collins, and those driven from office like Jeff Flake and Bob Corker, who now shake their head, dazed that St. Reagan did not come down from Republican Heaven to intercede. 

But what of the most important Person Seated in a Chair of all?  The Everyman?  The avatar for the PBS audience's outrage?  Who could Frontline get to look into the middle-distance and say "They were warned over and over and over, but did they listen?  Noooooo they did not and now their fucked!" seven different way?

Why The Bulwark's Conservative podcaster Charlie Sykes of course!   

In fact, other than William Lyman and Donald Trump himself, by my rough estimate, no one's voice is heard more often in this documentary that Mr. Sykes' to whom the documentary's literal last word is given .  And he is there as the representative of the only people in American who, so far as Frontline tells us, were wise enough and insightfully enough to be out there warning the country early on that they needed to take the threat of Donald Trump seriously:  Republican Never Trumpers.  

And that's problem for me.

Another problem is that, in this story of one of America's major political party rapidly succumbing to madness and barbarism, there is almost no sign of America's other major political party.  There is some audio of a woman not identified as Nancy Pelosi calling for a voice vote on impeachment in the House a year ago, and file footage of Adam Schiff warning during Trump's impeachment trial in the Senate that if the Senate let's him off the hook this time he will absolutely do it again and worse.  

But other than those two, brief cameos, the Democratic Party does not seem to exist at all.  

Also missing from this first rough draft of history is the Women's March, the rise of the Resistance, the massive Democratic voter registration drive and the unprecedented Democratic voter turnout that made it possible for the Democrats to take the House in 2018, which is the only reason there was an impeachment trial at all.

Instead, unless you were already very familiar with American politics, you could very likely come away from this documentary believing the following:

  • All the scary shit going on with the Republican Party -- the racism, the lies, the violence, the conspiracy mongering, the zeal for strong-man fascism -- all of it began with Donald Trump running for president.  There is no need to look for any pre-existing conditions any further back than that.

  • This entire period of American politics is defined by an internecine struggle between Conservative factions.  Nothing of any real importance to the story of the rise of Donald Trump exists outside of that context. 

  • The only real opposition Donald Trump ever faced came from a small group of plucky, sagacious Never Trumpers who warned their fellow Republicans "...over and over and over again about Donald Trump.  Who he was.  What he was capable of doing.  And they looked the other way. "

And that's a real problem for me.


No Half Measures


9 comments:

Marc McKenzie said...

DG, you nailed the issues that I had with the Frontline documentary (just finished watching it, in fact). I saw Lewandowski, Stone, and Sykes...and I fast-forwarded through all the times when Trump's (ex)crew came on. It was informative, but like you said--where were the Democrats? They talked to Susan Collins, Bob Corker, Jeff Flake...but they couldn't talk to Adam Schiff? Or Pelosi? Or hell, why not give Hillary Clinton a bit of time to say something?

Looks like you were right about what the media will do post-Trump.

Meremark said...

.

H E Y !! H E Y ¶l . HEY ! . FRONTLINE
______ . ______ --- . ______ FRONTLINE - * * LISTEN UP .

.
YOU BEEN PLAYED.

.

Sykes --->>. . ATE your GRANT. , , , farookin' FOOOLs .

wibble said...

Public broadcasting at all levels has been either throttled bare-handed or shot through with Republican moles for at least the past decade, if not this entire new century; it doesn't surprise me that they take every opportunity to disappear Democratic viewpoints.

Dave Pickering said...

I saw it last night. I wasted an hour watching PBS build lifeboats for Republicans.

Fritz Strand said...

Frontline lost its against the grain mojo many years ago when it started to team up with the NYT. That plus PBS forced to beg for contributions from the likes KMART took the edge off its edginess.

Fritz Strand said...

Oops...... Walmart

pagan in repose said...

Frontline has been on wobble legs since the Bush the lesser privatized PBS, and now you hear the voice of corporate America coming through PBS as you have since W screwed the pouch.

Gruntled said...

I checked out sometime before it was over because I lived through it. Also too, I can't stand the sight of the worst of the GOP being normalized. When Sikes came on I was hopeful of a recap and dissection by you.

Anonymous said...

I watched it and was frankly disgusted. In addition to the issues you (DG) correctly cite, the entire thing feels like a horror movie "mockumentary" much more than a news-based documentary. The heavy, strings-dominated low-chords music... then, scare chord! AAAAHHHH! Scary! Boogaboogabooga!

The entire thing is blatantly designed to play on the emotions of the viewers and influence their thinking, rather than simply presenting (all the available) facts and letting viewers draw their own conclusions. The lack of comprehensive examination of events is awful enough; draping the entire thing in psychological heartstring-tweaking robs it, IMO, of much of the weight it should have carried.

So first, yes indeed, this entire presentation is basically a fluff piece for the Never Trumpers who've already drafted out The New Conservative History of the Early Twenty-First Century, in which they are the noble forlorn heroes desperately struggling to right the ship (Democrats? Who, those crazy foamy-mouthed libtards? Nah, ignore them, we NTs are the REAL heroes here!). And second, even if all the facts - Democratic and grassroots efforts to ACTUALLY fix shit, more of the spectacularly awful goings-on of 2015-2021, and so forth - had been set forth, the format in which it was done simply drips with manipulation and inserted opinion, rather than factual presentation.

"You show me the pictures, I'll show you the war." Or in this case, you show me the pictures, I'll show you what I want the audience to think. Even if I agree with the inserted conclusion - which on many points I do - this is NOT the way to present. I'm reminded of the Fox hit pieces on President Obama - scary, low-chords string music and all.