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DipPolitics

Scared to Get a MoveOn

from DipPolitics added 23 May, 2008 at 01:03 PM

avatar
rider-strong
wrote 1 yr ago
 
 

Image

“Grassroots” is always a positive term. Whenever I hear about a “grassroots campaign” or “grassroots support” for a candidate, my interest is automatically piqued: somebody cares enough to do something themselves, to step out on a limb.

In the same vein, in Hollywood, there’s a lot of respect for the “indie” spirit: the real do-ers who grab a camera, get their friends together and make something original. I got my start in entertainment in the 90’s, when there was a palpable sense that the true artists were the ones who didn’t worry what people thought and didn’t bother following the rules or waiting for a studio to give them the go ahead.

But the truth is, actually being grassroots or being indie yourself — it’s terrifying.

I’ve never been either. Sure, I’ve acted in independent films and I’ve protested plenty…but I’d never exhibited the sort of self-motivation that a grassroots or indie project, by definition, requires.

So when I got a mass e-mail from MoveOn.org announcing their “Obama in 30 Seconds” contest — an open call to make a campaign commercial in support of Obama — I read it with a vague kind of dread. This was something I was probably well equipped to do. Something I believed in.

I brought up the contest with my girlfriend and my brother, who are also in the industry and also fellow Obama supporters. We brainstormed. We doodled storyboards. We talked about the amazing people we could enlist to help us out.

But we couldn’t actually pull the trigger. We’d stop every few minutes to ask one another, “Wait — are we really going to do this?”

Because there were lots of reasons not to. The three of us were busy: auditions, jobs, school. None of us could afford to pay anybody, so we’d have to solicit a lot of favors (i.e., beg).

But I don’t think any of that was truly holding us back. It was something else.

When I was honest with myself, what I really wanted was to have a good idea for an Obama commercial, and then have an even better excuse to not be able to film it. That way, I could click on MoveOn’s website, watch the videos that did enter the contest and think smugly, “I could’ve done one, too….you know, if I just hadn’t been so busy that week.” It would be safer, in terms of my ego, to not do anything.

And that’s the real barrier to endeavors that are grassroots, or indie: the personal fear of failure. You’re terrified no one will want to join your project. It’s one thing to have a political conviction but it’s quite another to go knock on your neighbor’s door and tell them about a candidate you support. Just like it’s one thing to have good tastein movies, quite another to grab a camera and direct one. People are afraid to take political stands the same way that they’re afraid to take on artistic endeavors — both run the risk of alienation.

In this instance, these two fears were stacked on top of one another, and they formed a pretty intimidating wall. We went to bed after our day of brainstorming without a decision.

But in the early hours of the morning, I realized that the only way we could fail would be to not film something. In politics, and in art, real failure is not following through with your convictions. Which at its mildest, leads to asad compromise and at its worst, a tragic hypocrisy.

Which meant that if I actually believed in the phrase “audacity of hope,” I should probably have the audacity to get off my ass.

It was time to put my camera where my mouth was. It was time to follow through with my convictions.

And here was the crazy thing: once we decided to do it, it was the most satisfying project I’ve ever been a part of. Everyone wanted to help. The moment we said we were in production, it was like a magnet; we started getting phone calls from friends of friends asking how they could jump on board. We had a full soundstage, two cameras, 12 actors, a lighting package (and yes, a baby chicken) all for free. We only had to pay for pizza.

MoveOn registered over 1,100 videos in their contest. Considering each video probably had at least 10 crew members, that means a lot of people were going through the same process we were — a perfect marriage of a grassroots campaign and indie production.

We ended up making a comedy *commercial but what I got out of the process was completely earnest: the knowledge that the hardest step on the way to anything grassroots, anything indie, is the first one…getting over yourself.

Rider Strong

*Strong’s entry, “It Could Happen to You,” won the Funniest Ad award in MoveOn’s contest

 

 

avatar rider-strong wrote 1 year and 5 months ago

 

Comments

Archive said 1 year and 1 month ago:

Alice cobey said: Mr. Srong, Great job! Your video wasn't just funny; it was also very moving and poignant. Congratulations on the product and on making it happen. Like our soon-to-be president Senator Obama, you inspire change in the rest of us :)
 

Archive said 1 year and 1 month ago:

Victor Ly said: Hello, Mr. Rider Strong, Thank you for sharing your ad with so many other Obama supporters. I watched "It Could Happen to You" during the general voting stage, and I can honestly say it was one of my two favorite ads (the other was "Purple"). I thought an ad like "It Could Happen to You" was very attention-grabbing, and was hoping it'd be the winner (and this has nothing to do with the fact that I was a "Boy Meets World" fan). In any case, thanks for sharing; all the people to whom I showed the video really liked it. Please continue being a fellow supporter of Obama; I applaud you for what you stand for. Take care, Victor Ly
 

Archive said 1 year and 1 month ago:

Chris Rushlau said: I mean Obama's uncle. The thing I don't like about Obama is that he is so remote, but, living in our society where it doesn't take much to pull down a whole mountain of grudges on you, it's amazing he can stand up like he does. I wish he would speak from the heart. It's hard to do when you're so encased in your emotional armor. But if you can't speak from your heart, people can't follow your directions. Because you only follow a leader you know.
 

Archive said 1 year and 1 month ago:

Chris Rushlau said: Sorry, I neglected to say--so impressed was I with my own brass balls--the German camp was liberated in April--this was 1945. Obama says his uncle stayed apart for six months when he got back. Lewis Sorley, in his biography of Creighton Abrams, Army Chief of Staff 1972-4 and before that the top commander in Vietnam and, in WWII, commander of Patton's lead tank battalion, quotes a Jewish officer in Abrams' WWII battalion: "I joined the Army to fight fascism and discovered the Army was full of fascists." Maybe that's why Obama stayed apart for six months. Remember, you can't have a fascist army without the support of a fascist society. My concern: Rider says, in a bit I read of his blog, he "couldn't pull the trigger" in making the ad. There's an old National Guard saying: it doesn't take much to pull a trigger. It takes a lot to take responsibility for your actions and, to quote another Army leadership principle, to develop a sense of responsibility in your subordinates. We seem to be headed in the opposite direction.
 

Archive said 1 year and 1 month ago:

slag said: Which meant that if I actually believed in the phrase “audacity of hope,” I should probably have the audacity to get off my ass. It was time to put my camera where my mouth was. It was time to follow through with my convictions. Well said! And right on!
 

Archive said 1 year and 1 month ago:

Chris Rushlau said: This is neither the time nor the place but my Purple Heart from the Mosul dining facility lets me say this here: If Obama doesn't know the Soviets liberated Auschwitz and not his uncle's army--well, Helen Caldicott, the disarmament activist, said she was shocked to interview Reagan and discover he didn't know how our nuclear arsenal was distributed among bombers, missiles in silos and missiles on submarines--apparently not a clue. Auschwitz is in Poland, which is east of Germany. Let me check my facts: how close did the US Army get to Poland, or Czechoslovakia, across the border from Auschwitz, by the close of WWII: Reuters say his uncle liberated a labor camp in Germany. The Soviets got to Auschwitz in southwest Poland in January. Well, Reagan turned out all right, right?
 

Archive said 1 year and 1 month ago:

GinaM said: I'm glad you got over yourself Mr. Strong - the commercial was great. The funny part of your commercial was that I believe there are many people who are actually afraid of the message of hope being spread by the Obama campaign. They are afraid of change.
 

Archive said 1 year and 1 month ago:

Larry Richman said: Excellent piece, and congratulations on a well-deserved award for an equally excellent "commercial" -- or indie short, as the case may be. You touch upon so many great notions here. Fear of failure = failure to act = complacency and acceptance of the status quo. Bravo!
 

Archive said 1 year and 1 month ago:

Emma said: I am English, but even I felt the joy of the video. I know it is a comedy, but there is also such a wonderful feel to it.
 

Archive said 1 year and 1 month ago:

Rich O said: I loved the winning ad - very moving. I loved this one too - could just as easily have been the winner. Thank you for sharing your work - wonderful!
 

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