8A - Monday, November 14, 2011 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.cam 8A - Monday, November14, 2011 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom DIRECTOR INTERVIEW Power for the people TV/NE W MEDIA COlUMN What late night's lacking 'Electric Car' director discusses auto industry story By SEAN CZARNECKI Daily Arts Writer Not many people have a vision wide enough to encompass the entire auto industry. Even while the Big Three are bouncing back, a worldwide recession and a gov- ernment bailout have left that vision as muddled as ever. For the people of Michigan - a state whose identity and livelihood are welded to the Motor City - such uncertainty could shake the confidence one has in the future. With just a quick glance at the posters and displays outside the screening of "Revenge of the Electric Car," it becomes evident that writer-director Chris Paine stands among those he chroni- cles - individuals with the fore- sight to plan for a sustainable future. Not only did his first film, "Who Killed the Electric Car?" reveal and clarify the forces that caused the electric car to fail, but it also documented the direc- tions the auto industry might take. It was an ambitious film with simple roots. "In 1996, I leased an elec- tric car (the EVi) from Gen- eral Motors, and it changed my thinking about cars," Paine said in an interview with The Michi- gan Daily. After driving that car for five years, its production was discon- tinued and he wondered why. "I wanted to make a film about why electric cars were such a great technology," Paine said. "Along the way we sort of stum- bled into this bigger story of why the car was stopped." But following the release of "Who Killed," there seemed to be a revolution: The electric car was revived. "GM went bankrupt and the auto industry was reduced to bailouts, and at one point, I think even a CEO of a car company went to Washington D.C. driving in an electric car," he recalled. "That was quite a turnaround." Change was finally happen- ing, and thus "Revenge" was , born. Whereas the first film was concerned with what was happening inside the industry, Pain explains that "Revenge" is "about character and overcom- ing challenges ... how the inside changes." In other words, this film chronicles the individuals who will in effect govern the future of the auto industry, and by extension, the future of Michi- gan. Paine believes that the hub of 21st century auto technology innovation - and future jobs - could be located in Michigan. But this story isn't over. "The electric car touches on so many issues, if you wanted to do a film on this today, it'd be like six hours," Paine said, as if to acknowledge where "Who Killed" and "Revenge" might fall short. But his films are meant to inspire interest in the topic, not postulate on every facet the industry and its future. "It was better to get people to try these things and have the experience for themselves (rath- er) than try to make a big dia- tribe about why the government messed up," he said. So will Paine dive back into the electric car story? "If I find another angel inves- tor that wants to support another project, then I might do another one," he said. Then, with a smile, he added, "But there will be many more stories, whether they're written by people like you or other film- makers or television people. The electric car story is just starting." There's a plague seeping over America - well- dressed, carefully coiffed men (and one woman) are throt- tling the late-night airwaves, mugging for laughs and sitting across the table from stars shame- lessly pro- motingtheir upcoming offerings. It's the late night KAVI talk show host: SHEKHAR There are too PANDEY many of them, and their adherence to an antiquated model is sinking this mini-industry. Here's the list of the current slate of hosts: David Letterman, Jay Leno, Conan O'Brien, Jimmy Fallon, Jimmy Kimmel, Craig Fer- guson, Jon Stewart, Stephen Col- bert, Chelsea Handler, Bill Maher and, quite inexplicably, Carson Daly (if a tree falls on the set of his show, does it make a sound?). Before delving further, full disclosure: At the time of writing this article, I'm pursuing a job at NBCUniversal. Now back to our regularly scheduled postulating. The needless glut of late-night talk shows became apparent during the Conan O'Brien-Jay Leno "Tonight Show" hoopla in 2010, aptly called "The War For Late Night" by New York Times reporter Bill Carter. The ground- swell of "Team Coco" support was surprising and inspiring- galva- nized bysocial media outlets - but the movement and its fallout shone a light on the late-nighttalk show medium and called its rel- evance into question. "Conan" on TBS predictably shot off with four million viewers for its premiere last year, before settling into an average of nearly two mi week.] too ma less th: past ye Whe The on sold-o ones th picture illustra of our second don't fi model. It'sa progra progra man, P Fergus mat: o ing on( a rotati daily t lines"), in lesse close w or com built in not wo Mc W A br provet occurn NBA s appear Anthor show - ing tra intervi tunity for nug ilion viewers for its second the interview aired at 11 p.m., it But Team Coco has lost far had been announced that Car- ny members, averaging melo would be joiningthe New an a million viewers in the York Knicks, so seeing him play ar. coy with Conan was an incredibly ere did all theviewers go? bizarre and pointless 10 minutes. es that flocked to Conan's The late-night savior is then at tour last summer, the Jimmy Fallon, who has built an rat changed their Facebook idyllic home in this new-media es to the Conan-as-Obama world (with the help of the best ation? Though the passion band in late night, The Roots). His generation fueled Conan's rotating comedy bits are unabash- chance, our viewing habits edly idiotic ("Wheel of Carpet t the old-school talk show Samples," "Lick it for Ten"), alongside a weekly hashtag game a model that far too many and parody clips like "6-bee" and ms submit to - of those "Jersey Floor" that are perfectly ms listed, six (Lena, Letter- tuned for viral consumption. allon, Kimmel, Conan and Fallon further breaks ground on) follow an identical for- with his requisite celebrity inter- pen with a monologue riff- views - this is the age of Twitter current events, follow with and YouTube, where celebrity ing comedy bit (Letterman's underexposure is a paradox, op 10 list, Leno's "Head- and Fallon has adapted accord- bring in Celebrity A, bring ingly. He takes it to the next level, er-known Celebrity B and engaging his guests with games - vith a musical performance - like beer pong with Helen Mir- edy act. The model was ren and "shoe golf" with Taraji P. the past, and it's clearly Henson - and other shenanigans rking in the present. (see: "A History of Rap"with Justin Timberlake), unveiling the sparsely seen goofy natures of our ebeer on favorite celebrities. pre p g Conan had the chance to revi- rith M irren talize and redefine the talk show, much like Jimmy Fallon, his "Late Night" successor, is doing. Why has Conan become so averse to eakthrough moment to risk? This is the man that kept he model's creakiness talkshows relevant for the past ed on February 21 when two decades with creations like tar Carmelo Anthony Triumph.the Insult Comic Dog. ed on "Conan." Landing It's nottoo late for him to reas- ny was a huge coup for the semble Team Coco and build his - Carmelo was inblister- audience back - and if the rest de discussions and the of the industry wants to survive, ew was a perfect oppor- Team Kimmel, Team Ferguson for Conan to probe him and the rest will have to start ,gets of information about their recruitment process. which team he was going to join. Problem is, talk shows almost always tape in the afternoon and are played at night. By the time Pandey is gunning for alate- night spot on OWN. To help, e-mail kspandey@umich.edu. 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