When I was in high school, I was invited to participate in a peer development program called The Media Project. We were a group of kids from different backgrounds and ages who wrote, directed and helped produce our own scripts about the day in the life of a teenager and the pressures that kids face. Think The Breakfast Club - but on a shoe-string budget.
We also included footage of us sitting around in a group, talking about our lives. It was reality TV...before there was reality TV. The show earned local awards and national attention; I was featured in a segment on Good Morning America (is that even a show anymore?!). It aired on the local access channel, and was so well received from the community that the producers received funding to run the project a second year. The second installment was much different. Instead of writing scenes, it featured lots of group dialogue where we talked candidly and included a spotlight on several kids, including me. I talked about my recovery from drug and alcohol abuse.
One of the adults involved in the program was friends with David Bryne of the Talking Heads. He agreed to be interviewed by two people about his experiences as a teenager and a young adult. Since I had been involved for the entire two years, I was voted to be one of the the interviewers. I was very honored to be chosen; the Talking Heads song This Must Be The Place (Naive Melody) is one of my favorite songs written and I loved his quirky movie, Stop Making Sense. We spent a full day in Los Angeles for the interview. David had invited us to his home and we conducted the interview on the outdoor patio of his house. My impression was that David didn't spend much time there. Other than having a sound studio set up in one of the bedrooms, he had very little furniture or personal possessions at his house.
If you've seen videos of David Bryne and wondered if his twitchy persona was just part of an act, I can tell you with certainty that it is not. He is, in a word, bizarre. During the taping, David would suddenly lurch forward and the camera man would momentarily lose him in the shot. The interview was so painfully awkward that that aside from an intro to our video, we were unable to use any of the footage. But he was incredibly gracious and kind; I had stupidly stubbed my big toe while I was there and it bled profusely. He was very concerned and had asked if I needed anything - band-aids or some hydrogen peroxide?
David signed several autographs for the crew but I was too shy to ask for one. I ended up receiving one anyway and it's carefully tucked into one of my photo albums. I wish I had a link to a copy of the video to share on my blog, but I find nothing when I do an internet search. Qu'est-ce que c'est?
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