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Michael Moore Is a Big Fat Stupid White Man

Release date: 10 May 2005
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Watching Michael Moore in actionpassing off manipulating facts in Bowling for Columbine, spinning... Read More

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Product Description

Watching Michael Moore in actionpassing off manipulating facts in Bowling for Columbine, spinning statistics in Stupid White Men and Dude, Wheres My Country?, shamelessly grandstanding at the Academy Awards, and epitomizing the hypocrisy hes made a kings fortune railing againsthas spurred authors David T. Hardy and Jason Clarke to take action into their own hands. In Michael Moore Is a Big Fat Stupid White Man, Hardy and Clarke dish it back hard to the fervent prophet of the far left, turning a careful eye on Moores use of camera tricks and publicity ploys to present his own version of the truth.Postwar documentarians gave us the documentary, Rob Reiner gave us the mockumentary, and Moore initiated a third genre, the crockumentary.How, they ask, does Moore pull off a proletarian, man-of-the-people image so at odds with his lifestyle as a fabulously wealthy Manhattanite? And how large of an impact do his incendiary, ill-founded polemics have on the growing community that follows him with near-religious devotion? Loaded with well-researched, solidly reasoned arguments, and laced with irreverent wit, Michael Moore Is a Big Fat Stupid White Man fires back at one of the lefts biggest targetspolitically and literally.

Product Details

Title: Michael Moore Is a Big Fat Stupid White Man
Author: David T. Hardy
Publisher: REGAN BOOKS
SKU: BK0011601
EAN: 9780060779603
Number Of Pages: 272
Language: English
Binding: Paperback
Release date: 10 May 2005

About Author

Jason Clarke is a writer and web developer on assignment to find out as much about as many things as possible. His website jasonclarke.org has been around for more than 10 years, and during that excessive run he's written hundreds of essays on pop culture, politics, business and media, almost always with an eye towards how the internet and technology are changing what we love to do, and how we do it. Jason's first book, 'Michael Moore Is A Big Fat Stupid White Man' (co-authored with David T. Hardy), takes a sometimes satirical but always in-depth look at one of America's most outspoken, disingenuous public figures. Lauded by the Stanford Review, Flint Journal, and many other publications, the book spent six weeks on the New York Times, Wall Street Journal, Amazon.com, and Publisher's Weekly Best Sellers lists in the summer of 2004. The book arose from Moorelies.com, a weblog Jason built and edited to expose the hypocrisy of Michael's Moore's public persona. Moorelies.com became one of the most visited blogs on the web during its run, earning more than 5 million visits in two years and garnering hundreds of mainstream media mentions. He later founded Clarke Creative Group, a consulting firm that helped authors, bloggers, and entrepreneurs gain traffic, followers, and attention. Jason lives with his family in Orono, Maine. He likes watching and writing about movies, cooking, and making plans small and large. Dave Hardy was born in Phoenix, AZ, in 1951, and has lived most of his life in Tucson. He graduated from the University of Arizona College of Law in 1975, after serving as an editor of Arizona Law Review and on the Moot Court Board. In 1974, he published the first law review article to argue for an individual rights understanding of the Second Amendment. From 1975 to 1982 he practiced law in Tucson. In 1982 he moved to Falls Church, VA, married, and began work with Interior Department's Office of the Solicitor, doing the strangest legal work he had ever handled. (As part of his duties, he listened to undercover lizard buys going down). In 1992 he returned to Tucson and to private practice (largely spent suing the government). In 2000, with the late Mike McNulty and reporter Lee Hancock, Hardy played a major role in reopening the Waco issue (an independent counsel was appointed the morning after he defeated the FBI's chief spokesman while on ABC Nightline). His legal writings have been cited twice by the United States Supreme Court and by eleven of the thirteen U.S. Circuit Courts of Appeals.

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