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Baseball Primer Newsblog— The Best News Links from the Baseball Newsstand
Wednesday, March 31, 2010
No, no…this has nothing to do with the Ned Morehead retrospective (that doesn’t start until next mouth). This is the Sam Walker/Fantasyland flick!
“Fantasyland,” the documentary based on Wall Street Journal sports editor Sam Walker’s book asks, “What happens when an amateur goes toe-to-toe with professional fantasy touts in a high-stakes baseball league?”
There’s not even money even at stake in Tout Wars, just bragging rights. The film follows the often clumsy indoctrination of New York City stock investment analyst Jed Latkin as he attempts to break into a very select clique of experts while impolitely trying to crush them in the standings.
The book chronicled Walker’s similar experience years earlier when he ended up getting trounced despite employing an attractive female mole, a couple of assistants and his sports writer bona fides to interact directly with his players in-season at Major League parks. Walker remained in the league after the book was published and actually won the coveted championship in 2008.
After the screening, some colleagues were sharing a story that may well be apocryphal but sure sounds true. Ex-Mets general manager Steve Phillips was asked to be in a fantasy league and was convinced that he would dominate. He ended up getting dominated.
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1. Greg (U)K Posted: April 01, 2010 at 12:23 AM (#3490123)It was a lot like a scene in a pretty crummy documentary I saw a few months ago about these young filmmakers trying to track down John Hughes. One of them was convinced that despite the fact Hughes had withdrawn from public life for years, Hughes would be eager to talk to him because...gosh darn it, I like his movies! (As if the reason Hughes hadn't given interviews in the past several years was that no one likes his movies.)
There's a delusional arrogance to putting yourself in the centre of your documentary (don't know if that's accurate in Fantasyland, the guy they are following isn't the filmmaker I don't think, right?). I just don't get why that seems like such a popular way to do documentaries these days. That fellow who did that Simpsons documentary a few months ago really took the cake. I mean, you could make a pretty interesting documentary about the cultural impact of the Simpsons, but instead I found I was just following around some guy I didn't care about.
That's like saying Derek Jeter wouldn't be as good as you with a blow-up doll. Probably he wouldn't, no.
Not that dominating Steve Philips proves anything.
Are they re-releasing Darkon?
I don't think it's necessarily obsessive nerds, just obsessive people in general. Look at Man On Wire, Collapse, Grizzly Man, etc. Obsessives make good documentary subjects because they are different than ordinary people. An ordinary person might ride the elevator to the top of the World Trade Center, think it's a shame that oil is so necessary and think bears are cute. Only obsessives tightrope walk 1,360 feet in the air, devote their lives to describing a future world-without-oil and go live with wild animals.
If it's the one I think you mean, "that guy" was Morgan Spurlock, who also did "Super Size Me". So in his case, he's just going with what he knows.
In movies, why does the disproportionately-hot lady pick the sweet-but-withdrawn guy in the end, instead of the charismatic jerk? It's wish fulfillment for the audience.
Nerds have money, and nerds like seeing movies about other nerds that portray those nerds in a positive light, because they're able to project themselves and their own nerdery into the nerds on screen.
This is surprisingly true. A lot of my friends play D&D;fairly regularly, among other things, and the amount of money they drop on nerd products is incredible. You can never go wrong over-estimating how much a nerd is willing to part with for some new nerd product you create.
I must be a bad nerd, because I rarely spend money on my baseball nerd lifestyle. I mean, sure I pursue it at the expense of my relationships, jobs, direction in life, and free time...but money? Never!
You're doing a PHD. You have no money to spend.
You can save a ton of money living in your mom's basement and forgoing cool clothes or personal hygiene.
Because Michael Moore made millions doing it.
I guess by "a popular way" I meant not so much why is it a popular choice for filmmakers so much as, why is it so popular that a guy like Michael Moore can make millions doing it.
True. Though I am planning on spending every possible weekend in Belgium. That should eat up enough of my dough to make me seem like a good citizen.
Because Moore did a good job at it.
Meh. I actually think that Michael Moore is at his best when he is behind the camera, and he steps back and lets other people tell their stories. The most powerful scenes in his movies are told from the perspective of people that are directly impacted by the subject of his films. He's excellent at putting a human face on problems, and show that they're not just a matter for idle debate.
When he puts himself in front of the camera to do stupid publicity stunts, or starts going off on his paranoid conspiracy theories, his movies fall apart. The more he talks, the more he comes across as a rambling idiot.
He's the worst thing in all his movies.
But the "obsessive nerds" documentary is a little different from what Moore does. It's not like Moore spends an entire movie following one person or group of obsessed people, though that might be an interesting next step for him, because he really is very adept at humanizing people who do and think strange things and placing them in a context that fits in with his big picture.
I agree, but Moore isn't necessarily going to be objective about what works and doesn't work in his own movies, especially when the movie as a whole is well-received. If he gets good reviews and makes money, then as far as he's concerned he did something right. Why mess with a good thing? And people who are slavishly copying his formula aren't going to take time to think about whether individual parts of it work or not - they're just going to rip and run.
forgoing having a girl friend....
And I actually did see Brief History, Fast Cheap, and Mr Death in multiplexes, though your general point that Morris is no Spielberg in the industry is well-taken.
Not just documentaries -- think The Big Bang Theory, think The 40-Year-Old Virgin. Movie studios are gearing their PR around ComicCon. We're in an Asperger-friendly era.
Sadly, it is the wrong kind of nerd. Where is my 8 season television show documenting the several decades of diplomatic history leading up to World War One? I ask you!
EDIT: Though I guess Rome and the Tudors are examples of that type of pop culture.
Not just documentaries -- think The Big Bang Theory, think The 40-Year-Old Virgin
Moneyball: The Movie...
A band I've overlooked, obviously.
Title ideas:
Stalking the Black Lotus
Mana Live
Forestwalk with Me
... actually some Googling indicates that there are several such documentaries in the works, though they need better titles. One is called I Came to Game!
I know very little about this topic and think it could make an awesome TV show. Imagine if it were a Mad Men-style period lifestyle examination too.
If you're interested in that topic, I recommend the book Dreadnought, by Robert Massie. It's a fairly thorough and well-written examination of the time period.
It looks good. I am not much of a fan of military history, but the Amazon reviews suggest this covers a much wider ground than naval improvements.
It's not uncommon at the tournaments I go to to see someone with a camera recording footage, though I imagine it's usually for a college class or something. I'm aware of I Came To Game's existence, and I imagine it will have a decent amount of focus on Dave Williams given that he's best known for something outside of Magic.
It does. The follow-up book (Castles of Steel) is pretty much purely a military history, but Dreadnought just uses the naval arms race as an organizing principle of the book, which is more about the diplomatic and personal side of years leading up to the war.
I haven't read "Dreadnought", but a quick glance tells me I did buy it at some point because there it sits on my book shelf. Your positive review will most likely get me to crack it open this weekend.
Lets do the Time Walk Again.
or
Time Walk an Egyptian.
Best In Show
As for the plethora of documentaries covering obsessives and weird people, that's just part of our cultural need to point and laugh at those inferior to us. One series that comes to mind is "Stephen Fry in America", which is often a very interesting look at America from the POV of a Briton. But even though Fry did the show with the express purpose not to "sneer at the Americans", nonetheless his show contained a meetings with a Jewish Voodoo priestess, people living in an underground missile base, ecohouse dwellers, and Bigfoot believers, and visits the Transcendental Meditation headquarters in Iowa.
I think I learned a lot more about the British and how they view Americans through that program than I did about Americans.
Also, watching Stephen Fry get progressively drunker in a whiskey distillery was more than worth the price of admission.
Dave Williams the pitcher?
The format worked well with Roger & Me, because (1) at that point, Moore could still pass himself off as "everyman", and (2) the fate of Flint, MI had a direct impact on his life, and the lives of people he knew. It was a very personal project, and you could see that coming through througout the film.
When he tries to copy that format in other films, he gets diminishing returns out of it, until now he's basically a caricature of himself.
Dave Williams the poker player, runner-up WSOP Main Event 2004.
Along the same lines, Tuchman's The Proud Tower is a great look at Europe leading up to the war.
Fast, Cheap, and Out of Control.
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