Skip to main content

Joan Braderman Reads the National Enquirer

Joan Braderman

1982 00:28:00 United StatesEnglishColorMono

Description

Award winning documentary filmmaker and cultural critic Joan Braderman takes a look at the National Enquirer and demolishes the newspaper's ideology and content. Analyzing the fact that the Enquirer is the tabloid that everybody reads but nobody admits to. Braderman shows how it's agenda of reporting gossip and the lowest common denominator of news has influenced even the so called intellectual progressive media such as the "New Yorker" and the "New York Times". Braderman has recently finished her documentary The Heretics about a seventies feminist art group based in NYC.

“The artists' first venture into video performance is a manic enactment of the relationship of readers with tabloids. Championing gossip as "history according to women and more likely to be "true" than the New York Times," she takes us on a schizophrenic personal narrative tour of the world according to the Enquirer.”— Martha Gever

Slandering the publisher on screen in true tabloid form, Braderman and De Landa create a style of scratch video, using sometimes vibrating, luridly framed video switcher "wipes" which both satirize and describe tabloid journalism's own glitzy style. An unreconstructed lover of tabloid fantasy, Braderman's face and body fly through the headlines and photos she loves in this brilliant and disturbing satire about popular culture and its ubiquitous place in our lives.” — Elizabeth Hess, Village Voice

About Joan Braderman

With a reputation in both academic and media circles for producing "stand-up theory", Joan Braderman, award-winning video artist and writer, started making videos in the 1970s, working with political organizations and on numerous documentaries — from the streets of Philadelphia and the South Bronx (for a Bicentennial Without Colonies (1977) and Peoples’ Convention, Convencion Del Pueblo (1980), to Nicaragua. Waiting for the Invasion, a collaboration with Dee Dee Halleck, Skip Blumberg, Shu Lea Cheang et al, won Best Documentary Award at the Global Village Documentary Festival in NYC in 1984 and was broadcast on Public TV. Madre; Tell Them for Us (1985), made with Jane Lurie, was shown in the U.S. House of Representatives. With a group of other women artists and critics, she co-founded the influential Heresies, A Feminist Publication on Art and Politics.

On a dare from Paper Tiger TV producers, she designed a show with filmmaker and digital theorist, Manuel De Landa, parodying / slandering the National Enquirer, which resulted in the infamous, Natalie Didn’t Drown (1983). Inventing a style that has been dubbed, "stand-up theory", she delivered a one-woman, lunatic performance, at once embodying and sharply analyzing the schizophrenia of U.S. culture.  Few have matched the technique, bravery and humor of her high camp 1986 piece, Joan Does Dynasty, in which she invades the iconic prime-time soap opera of the greedy Reagan '80s. Braderman works between the cracks of pleasure and power. Joan Does Dynasty showed at the Whitney Biennial, the Edinburgh Film Festival, MoMA, the AFI National Video Festival, and many other venues, and is said by critics to be the, "most widely distributed feminist video ever made."

Braderman has continued to work for media democracy, promoting independent film and video in her art making and teaching. She taught at Hampshire College, Massachusetts, as Professor of Video, Film and Media Studies. Recently she has been focusing on issues such as U.S. culture’s fascination with glamour and celebrity — which she unabashedly shares. Thirty Second Spot Reconsidered (1988) won the Critics’ Choice Award in the New England Film and Video Festival and was included in Image World at the Whitney.  No More Nice Girls (1989) won First Prize in the Daniel Wadsworth Video Festival, premiered at the Collective for Living Cinema and was included in the Decade Show at the Studio Museum of Harlem. Joan Sees Stars (1993) premiered at Video Visions, part of the New York Film Festival, and at the National Film Theater in the UK, won a Citation from the Black Maria Film Festival, and Best Dramatic Criticism award at the Atlanta Film Festival, among other honors. Video Bites (1998) was selected for inclusion in the Pandæmonium Festival of Moving Images in London. As Braderman continued to plant her own body irreverently into the space of movies and TV, the De Cordova Museum in Massachusetts gave her a retrospective in 1995. Her work is held in permanent collections in such places as the Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam, the Museum of Modern Art, NYC, the Institute of Contemporary Art, London and the Georges Pompidou Center, Paris.  She recently returned from a Fulbright Fellowship in Porto, Portugal.

With her unique performative style, combining black humor, spatial irony and collage, she continues to take over the spaces she "appropriates" from the media corporations. Braderman brilliantly embodies for viewers the ways that popular culture makes us and breaks us; torments and heals us; lies and enrages us.  The spaces of her work look like high chroma pastiches of images of a star-struck viewer fighting her way through the era of AIDS and backlash, woven with moments so familiar in the worlds of globalized pop culture that a kind of eerie, vernacular "other world" is created. Her work is simultaneously highly articulate, politically compelling, and scandalously funny.