The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Monday, September 20, 2010 - 7A "Jenks! You owe me a Coke." A won derful 'World' Andrew Jenks ferent people for one week each, trying to gain perspective on how documents a week in they live and the challenges they face. the life on MTV Jenks first finds a roommate in rapper Maino ("All the Above"). By ALEX RUSS Maino has one request for Jenks Daily Arts Writer before moving in with him: "No cryin', no bitchin'." But while Everyone has heard the phrase Maino unsurprisingly proves to "you never know until you try it" be quite the clubbing aficionado, at least once in their life. Someone Jenks is still able to uncover more might assume about the artist's life than most they can know of his fans would know. After the everyday watching Lady Gaga show up at hardships of a World of this year's VMAs wearing a dress homeless per- made of meat (or more accurately, son, for example, JenkS watching her any time she shows but if they expe- Mondays at up anywhere), it's pretty easy to rience life with- 10 p.m. assume most popular musicians out a roof over are crazy and out of touch with their head, those MTV the real world. Sure, Maino is liv- harsh realities ing the life for a good part of the can become all the more clear. episode, but we also catch a less- This concept is what the new er-known side of him: Maino the MTV series "World of Jenks" father who faced hardships to get is trying to convey: You must where he is. immerse yourself in something Maino spent 10 years of his life to truly understand it. Though in jail for kidnapping, and when we've seen this idea on TV before he finally opens up to Jenks, he (see Morgan Spurlock's FX series means it sincerely when he says "30 Days"), "Jenks" still carries "Sometimes you gotta go through the possibility to show us a world hell to get to heaven." Maino went most of us will never truly under- on to get his GED and began writ- stand. The series follows young ing his music, all while in prison. aspiring filmmaker Andrew Jenks These are the kinds of raw, inti- ("Room 335") as he travels around mate moments that give the show the country and lives with dif- its power. In planning the show, Jenks made sure that his style of docu- mentary wouldn't simply watch someone's life from the sidelines. He immerses himself in Maino's life and does what he does for a whole week, from picking his son up at school to paying a visit to Maino's old neighborhood. How- ever, given that the show is deal- ing with a whole week's worth of footage, it's difficult to see how the entire experience could be displayed in 30 minutes of air- time. There's a lot more that could be learned about the lives of these people if the time was lengthened. While the audience does see and learn a lot in the 30-minute span, the limitations of the runtime take away a lot of possibilities for further delving into the lives of Jenks's tempo- rary roommates. Jenks may only have seen a glimmer of the spotlight for now, but if he comes back to his audi- ence every week with inspiring stories like Maino's and presents them in a similarly captivating manner, it won't be long before he, too, is thrust right into the spot- light. Sure, we may have seen this style of show before, but Jenks has something special going on. It will be truly exciting to see what he does each week. My past as a trailerjunkie B ack in May, Geoff Boucher, the theater to watch "Knight and year-old mind, they simply sucked. a blogger for the Los Ange- Day" in June, I shielded my eyes I've learned to be temperate in les Times, posted an article from the "Inception" trailer that ran my excitement for upcoming films about his visit to a local radio sta- before it. Whenever an "Inception" - meaning I talk little about them, tion, where he TV spot popped up in the weeks study only the basics and very spoke about leading up to the film's release, I rarely watch a trailer outside of the upcoming sum- muted the TV and looked away. theater. Perhaps that leaves me out mer blockbust- With the evolution of Internet of a few conversations, not to men- ers and what video, movie trailers are more cre- tion far out of step with my fellow movies to watch ative, imaginative and ubiquitous Screen Arts & Cultures majors, but for. In his visit, than ever before. Trailers no longer every film feels new, and I allow lie blurted out exist solely to run before theatri- each of them to screen unencum- rather pre- ANKUR cal releases, as they did in the days bered by previous experience. It's cipitously that SOHONI of "The Phantom Menace." These not objectivity, necessarily, but it Christopher ---- days, you can view a trailer online allows film watching to be as in- Nolan's "Incep- without ever stepping into the the- the-moment as possible. tion," due to be released more than ater. There was no need to go catch In the case of "Inception," I two months later, was "the only "The Twilight Saga: Eclipse" to see worked extra hard to hide from the movie that matters." the new "Harry Potter" trailer. A hype until July 16 and the film's Boucher's declaration was a sign quick search on YouTube brings it release. And even as director Chris- of the movie world's burgeoning to you in full HD. topher Nolan continues to build up obsession with the film, provoked That said, Internet trailers aren't a reputation of creating films that by its explosive trailer. Knowing full new. I was quietly binging on Apple. actually meet the hype, I'll still well how huge the hype for "Incep- com's flourishing collection of trail- avoid the pitfalls of adolescent film tion" would become, I became ers in the early-to-mid 2000s, dete- obsession with his upcoming work. increasingly hesitant, yet increas- riorating into a little ADD movie It turns out, however, that ingly tempted, to join the excite- freak and memorizingthe sounds Boucher was somewhat correct ment. I was surprised that Boucher, and images of every single one. I in his original assertion. When I someone who had undoubtedly seen think of movies from summer 2010, countless blockbusters pass without "Inception" is the first and only living up to their hype, would make .lfilm that really springs to mind. But so speculative a statement about How trailers I can afford the effort to think a something so uncertain. little harder. I saw numerous films As important as film is to me, ruinedthe this summer, and more than one and as vital as blockbuster movies m - f e has left a lasting impact. This was are in sustaining Hollywood, it's mindeed the summer of "Inception." difficult to be open to hype, given But it was also the summer of "Toy how disappointing long-awaited Story 3," "Scott Pilgrim vs. the films often are. It's a common prob- watched them over and over and World," "City Island" and "Cyrus." lem, especially among those who over again. I ended up knowing the One may rise above the rest, but I pin their hopes to a certain film, trailers better than the films. wouldn't love movies if I only loved that the film's release crashes and Case in point: summer 2004. I them one at a time. burns, leaving the hype and hope was more hyped up for that sum- "Inception" should not be the crippled in its stead. mer than any other season before. only film from this summer that The problem begins with trail- I was shooting up the trailers for matters to you. If that's the case, ers, the movie geek's most tempting "Van Helsing," "Troy," "The Day perhaps you've been swayed by and yet least-fulfilling drug. The After Tomorrow" and "Spider-Man movie trailers and have forgotten cry of "we don't want to miss the 2" like there was no tomorrow. And to focus on the real thing. If you're previews - that's the best part!" is when the films came around, they looking for more fulfilling trips to well and alive these days - just not didn't even stand a chance. The the theater, maybe it's time to stop quite like it used to be. trailers rocked; the films sucked. checking out trailers and just check Trailers ruined movies for me, at Perhaps that was unfair, because out the films. least for a few years. I went full film the films didn't objectively suck geek and overdosed. And I promised (with the exception of "Van Hels- Sohoni doesn't eat appetizers for not to go in that direction again. ing"); they just sucked relative to fear of overhyping his meals. Send him That's why, when I sat down in their trailers. But in my then-14- some oysters at asohoni@umich.edu. S1S GET YOUR SENIOR PORTRAIT TAKEN Monday 9/20 - Friday 9/24 in the Sophia B. Jones room of the Michigan Union Rosanne Cash brings country to UMS lineup By JOE CADAGIN Daily Arts Writer For the first time in its 132 years, the University Musical Society will fea- ture a country Amejican music artist - Rosanne Cash. Roots The daughter Arneiican of the immortal Johnny Cash, Rosanne Cash Tonight at is far from your 7p.m. typical guitar- Cobblestone picking country Farms Barn crooner. When she emerged as an artist in the Rosanne late '70s and early Cash '80s, Cash stirred excitement with Saturday a number of at 8 p.m. chart-topping Hill Auditorium hits, including Tickets from $10 "Seven Year Ache." Her unique style, which is heavily influenced by rock and pop, attracts a wide fan base inside and outside the realm of country music. "(Her) lyrics weren't the same old stories of love gone wrong as in usual country music," said WCBN radio host and long-time country enthusiast Jim "DJ Tex" Manheim. "They had fresh lit- erary devices in them. She was The sitting fee is just $10! This price includes your portraitfeatured in the 2011 Michignensian Yearbook Sign up online by visiting www.OurYear.com and entering School Code: 87156 Phone 734.418.4115 ext. 247 E-mail ensian.um@umich.edu Rosanne Cash last came to Ann Arbor for January's Folk Festival wPCA Bring in this ad and receive $2 off the sitting fee. enormously successful." For her UMS debut, Cash will be applying her cutting-edge style to a very traditional set of songs from her newest album, The List. The album was inspired bythe advice of Cash's legendary father. When Cash was singing backup vocals on her father's tour, John- ny Cash noticed that his teenage daughter knew very little about country music. In order to expand his daughter's knowledge, Cash jotted down a list of "100 Essesntial Country Songs" for her to explore. "I think he was alarmed that I might miss something essential Cross country off 'The List. about who he was and who I was," Cash said on the UMS website. "He See CASH, Page 8A Michiganensian Y E A R B O O K