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Sh*tshow!

The Country's Collapsing . . . and the Ratings Are Great

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
A daring, firsthand, and utterly-unscripted account of crisis in America, from Ferguson to Flint to Cliven Bundy's ranch to Donald Trump's unstoppable campaign for President—at every turn, Pulitzer-prize winner and bestselling author of Detroit: An American Autopsy, Charlie LeDuff was there
In the Fall of 2013, long before any sane person had seriously considered the possibility of a Trump presidency, Charlie LeDuff sat in the office of then-Fox News CEO Roger Ailes, and made a simple but prophetic claim: The whole country is bankrupt and on high boil. It’s a shitshow out there. No one in the bubbles of Washington, DC., New York, or Los Angles was talking about it—least of all the media. LeDuff wanted to go to the heart of the country to report what was really going on. Ailes baulked. Could the hard-living and straight-shooting LeDuff be controlled? But, then, perhaps on a whim, he agreed. And so LeDuff set out to record a TV series called, "The Americans," and, along the way, ended up bearing witness to the ever-quickening unraveling of The American Dream.
For three years, LeDuff travelled the width and breadth of the country with his team of production irregulars, ending up on the Mexican border crossing the Rio Grande on a yellow rubber kayak alongside undocumented immigrants; in the middle of Ferguson as the city burned; and watching the children of Flint get sick from undrinkable water. Racial, political, social, and economic tensions were escalating by the day. The inexorable effects of technological change and globalization were being felt more and more acutely, at the same time as wages stagnated and the price of housing, education, and healthcare went through the roof. The American people felt defeated and abandoned by their politicians, and those politicians seemed incapable of rising to the occasion. The old way of life was slipping away, replaced only by social media, part-time work, and opioid addiction.
Sh*tshow! is that true, tragic, and distinctively American story, told from the parts of the country hurting the most. A soul-baring, irreverent, and iconoclastic writer, LeDuff speaks the language of everyday Americans, and is unafraid of getting his hands dirty. He scrambles the tired-old political, social, and racial categories, taking no sides—or prisoners. Old-school, gonzo-style reporting, this is both a necessary confrontation with the darkest parts of the American psyche and a desperately-needed reminder of the country's best instincts.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      March 19, 2018
      Pulitzer Prize–winning journalist LeDuff (Detroit: An American Autopsy) delivers a crackling critique of American culture using vignettes from his years traveling across the country and talking to everyday Americans for a Fox news segment called “The Americans.” Instead of covering fluff like pie-eating contests, LeDuff and his crew dug into stories about the Flint water crisis, the desperation of those who followed the siren song of the North Dakota oil fields only to find few jobs and low wages, and the rusting, corrupt husk of Detroit. LeDuff intersperses harrowing, white-knuckle moments, such as the time he forged a press pass to interview cattle rancher Cliven Bundy, who was at the time awaiting trial for his 2014 standoff with federal agents, with flashes of sweet irony, such as when LeDuff witnesses black staffers at a gas station deny a member of the Ku Klux Klan use of the restroom. LeDuff’s seething disgust for inequality, corruption, and discrimination is apparent throughout, and it’s made even more potent by LeDuff’s stylized reporting (“Down the road from the collapsing trailer-court cracker box was another brownfield, another dead factory, where dead-end children with blood-red teeth rummaged through filth”). This timely portrait of America is a superb example of contemporary gonzo journalism.

    • Kirkus

      March 15, 2018
      A notorious journalist attempts to unpack the complex political, social, and cultural issues that have come to dominate the American discourse.In the latest from LeDuff (Detroit: An American Autopsy, 2013, etc.), America is on the brink of a cataclysmic event; unfortunately, this is not a work of fiction. The author takes us from 2013 to 2017, from the moment he pitched a TV show idea to Fox News CEO Roger Ailes of spending "Year One of Our Trump in [his] underpants." His show, The Americans, showcased "everyday people who were trying to get by as the country and their way of life disintegrated around them." The author traveled across the country to gather material for his show. He spent considerable time in Detroit, dissecting the implications of racial disparities; in Ferguson, understanding the origins of the Black Lives Matter movement after the murder of black teenager Michael Brown; and on the Mexican border, trying to capture both the American and Mexican experiences of immigration. While LeDuff's insight is often sobering, his approach is sometimes self-serving and often acts like a disservice to the communities he attempts to capture on film. "A güero like myself flailing around in a ridiculous costume with a giant yellow banana had two purposes: It would get the attention of the smugglers, and it would make for good TV," he writes. The need for "good TV" comes up often, and it seems the author would do anything to reach that goal, even if it means embodying the stereotype of the white savior: "I gave the boy twenty dollars....I told him to remember his mother's sacrifice, and I welcomed him to America. Sometime in his life, I hope, he will think back on me....I gave him one of the press conference doughnuts. Chocolate cream filling." Readers may learn important lessons from the difficult realities of LeDuff's subjects but little thanks to him.A frustrating account of the current exasperating state of affairs. For a more penetrating portrait of similar issues, head back to Detroit.

      COPYRIGHT(2018) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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