Our mission is to invigorate people through the power of stories.
Looking back to Peabody Conversation with Alex Gibney, executive producer/director of “Mr. Dynamite: The Rise of James Brown,” who he describes as “very much a part of the civil rights and black power movement in a way that was really transformative because he could speak to a mass audience in a way that so many people couldn’t.”
“There’s this very pernicious silencing of the press that happens around the Church of Scientology, and a lot of people are afraid to speak,” says Kristen Vaurio, producer of Going Clear: Scientology and the Prison of Belief. Based on Lawrence Wright’s book, the 2015 Peabody winning documentary “takes a look at the dangers of blind faith and where that can take people,” according to writer/director Alex Gibney.
The 1960s brought The Beatles and The Rolling Stones to the United States, and rock ‘n’ roll surged in popularity on AM radio and American television. But even more culturally important than the British Invasion was the role homegrown music played in crossing race barriers, serving as an expression platform for the Civil Rights Movement. No one man more fully personified this transitional period of culture, music, dance, performance and showmanship than James Brown.
Mr. Dynamite: The Rise of James Brown follows the soul legend from birth through his lasting legacy. Not only did he revolutionize music by creating three new genres, Brown also played a major role in the Civil Rights Movement. “What he hadn’t really reckoned with or properly understood,” Alex Gibney said, “is how he was very much a part of the Civil Rights and Black Power movement in a way that was really transformative because he could speak to a mass audience in a way that so many people couldn’t.”
Alex Gibney’s biography of the hardest working man in show business gets up and gets on the scene, telling a fascinating story about race and culture and politics with amazing archival clips and interviews with musicians who worked with him.