Writing in Vice, Thomas Morton complains that the outside media's coverage of Detroit is increasingly driven by lazy clichés, often produced by "reporters who don't want anything to do with the city but feel compelled by the times to get a Detroit story under their belts, like it's the journalistic version of cutting a grunge record":
The Michigan Central Depot is a hulking, bombed-out turn-of-the-century train station that's constantly used by papers and magazines as a symbol of the city's rot. The only problem is, aside from looking the part, it doesn't have too much to do with any of the issues it usually gets plastered above. It's owned by a billionaire trucking tycoon, not the bankrupt city; it was shut down back in the 80s, not because of any of the recent crap. Nevertheless, back in December when the auto executives were in front of Congress, Time ran a photo essay to go with the story, opening and closing with shots of the terminal. Three months later they ran another spread about the city's decay, although this time they limited the depot shots to one.
In addition to being a faulty visual metaphor, the train station has also been completely shot to death. For a derelict structure, it's kind of a happening spot. Each time I passed by I saw another group of kids with camera bags scoping out the gate. When I finally ducked in to check it out for myself, I had to wait for a lady artist from Buffalo, New York, whose shtick is taking nude portraits of herself in abandoned buildings, to put her clothes back on. Afterward I was interrupted by a musician named Deity who was making a video on the roof.
The city's second-most-overused blight shot is of the mile-long ruins of the Packard Auto Plant in East Detroit.
"This is the visiting reporters' favorite thing to see," [photographer] James [Griffioen] said. "The people all come here to shoot the story of the auto industry and they love this shot because they can be like, 'See that? That's where they made the cars,' and then forget to add the footnote that the plant's been closed since 1956."
In the past month alone, the plant's been used by the New York Times, the British Daily Mirror, and the Polish Auto Motor as a visual for stories it has no concrete connection to other than occupying the same city. The Packard also shows up twice in the same Time photo spread from December, although the second picture is just captioned with the street address to make it look like their photographer visited more than three sites.
The repetition is noticeable enough to have sparked a countertrend of positive stories, but they too pose problems:
All the stories about Detroit's many, many faults have fostered a backlash of journalists who decide to come in and write the "happy" piece about Detroit. The problem is that while there's a wide spectrum of problems for the misery tourists to explore (the 50 percent literacy rate, the $1,000 houses, that YouTube video of City Councilwoman Monica Conyers calling the council president "Shrek"), the posi reporters are stuck picking from a handful of urban gardens and art collectives. From what I could tell, these types of places seem like they're about two more interview requests away from pulling their own Stranger With a Camera.
I'd already felt like a pretty massive prick driving around devastated neighborhoods all day with an enormous camera hanging out the window, but I didn't know from shitty until I pulled up at one of East Detroit's community farms and tried to talk to a couple kids who were either loading or unloading some boxes of stuff. After staring at the mic clipped to my shirt like it was a severed baby's clit, one of the main guys (I think) explained their position:
"Look, we get like 30 emails a week from people. What happens is they go off and write their story and nothing ever happens here except we get more and more requests. Now, like, Delta's inflight magazine is contacting us. I don't know what to say to Delta's inflight magazine."
Later I found out that right after I'd shuffled off with an awkward smile, the dude stormed into his house and fired off a furious email to the person I'd been driving with, accusing him of wanting a bunch of "Billyburg hipsters" to move onto their block. I can't believe I got redlined in East Detroit.
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After staring at the mic clipped to my shirt like it was a severed baby's clit,...
Not ever having seen "a severed baby's clit" or knowing anyone who has, I'm not really sure in what manner someone would stare at one. Somehow, I don't think I really want to know.
What a piece of garbage the linked article is. Example:
The flip side is a simultaneous influx of reporters who don't want anything to do with the city but feel compelled by the times to get a Detroit story under their belts, like it's the journalistic version of cutting a grunge record.
"Time magazine sent a 24-year-old guy to Detroit," James Griffioen told me. "They wouldn't let him rent a car, so he was dropped off in a cab downtown. He's there for six hours and he's supposed to write a feature article on Detroit. For Time. He had a meeting with the mayor in the morning, the mayor stood him up, then he had a meeting with me, and that was it."
So Morton makes a statement... and his anecdote-as-proof actually disputes his statement. The 24-year old reporter wasn't compelled by the urge to write about the economic conditions of the city, he was ordered by his employer to do it. We already KNOW Time Magazine is a piece of shit. Now we know that Thomas Morton can't even meet Time Magazine's standard of quality.
Also, there's something to be said about Detroit's ingrained ineptitude when a mile-long abandonment is still around over half a century later. Even Chicago's notorious Block 37 and abandoned Wisconsin Steel plant were rectified in less than half the time. So the Packard Plant ought not be a mere footnote.
One of the commenters nailed it: "Writing an article about the latest trends in writing articles and then doing it yourself? Typical VICE rubbish."
I had to wait for a lady artist from Buffalo, New York, whose shtick is taking nude portraits of herself in abandoned buildings, to put her clothes back on.
I agree with Russ2000--the images of the Central Depot and the Packard plant remind me of East Berlin when I was there in 1990 after the Wall came down--still lots of rubble left over from the war 40 years before. Not a good sign of a vibrant economy, and demoralizing to anyone in the area.
I worked in East Michigan during the "boon" years of the late 90's. There was all manner of new construction and renovation going on (the big kerfuffle was over casinos, but that's another show). Even then there were acre's of Detroit of abandoned factories, warehouses, and residential houses. Some of the interstates went right through them, and on a fair weather day as you drove with the windows open, you could hear shots ring out. And when night fell, entire neighborhoods became enter at your own risk.
Maybe it isn't fair to cite half-century old dilapidation as evidence of Motown's current woes. Then again, maybe the fact that downtown real-estate couldn't be put to profitable use in over fifty years is evidence of the prevailing corruption that spawns decay.
Also, there's something to be said about Detroit's ingrained ineptitude when a mile-long abandonment is still around over half a century later. Even Chicago's notorious Block 37 and abandoned Wisconsin Steel plant were rectified in less than half the time. So the Packard Plant ought not be a mere footnote.
This. Who cares when something is shutdown? I see business come and go all the time. The difference is that somebody usually moves in after one goes away. The fact that nobody is moving back in is all one needs to know about Detroit.
Wait, $1000 houses is not a positive thing?? Man, if I could deal with the weather, I could quickly build a walled city on the remains of $1000 houses.
The 24-year old reporter wasn't compelled by the urge to write about the economic conditions of the city, he was ordered by his employer to do it.
I don't think it matters, except to the extent that it indicates sloppy copy-editing at Vibe, whether the compulsion was felt by the correspondent or his editors.
Maybe it isn't fair to cite half-century old dilapidation as evidence of Motown's current woes. Then again, maybe the fact that downtown real-estate couldn't be put to profitable use in over fifty years is evidence of the prevailing corruption that spawns decay.
Maybe the fact that everyone keeps using the same shots suggests that they aren't interested in offering even that much context.
I got a nice little shot of a bum passed out at the base of the Soldiers and Sailors Monument in Campus Martius Park near the ice rink, with Christmas lights all around. Only used in on my own blog, though. 🙁
...and then forget to add the footnote that the plant's been closed since 1956.
It's been fifty three years! That proof of the economic doldrums right there. Any other city would have knocked it down, or refurbished it and made it into a trendy mall and condo complex.
I don't think it matters, except to the extent that it indicates sloppy copy-editing at Vibe, whether the compulsion was felt by the correspondent or his editors.
Copy editing? That's so 20th century.
Sloppy writing is sloppy writing. You do your own copy editing these days and live with the consequences
There was a recent NPR piece on independently wealthy artists moving to Detroit. They eventually mentioned that the trend was in the other direction. My favorite part was how the reporter acted as if Detroit's decline was essentially a natural phenomenon.
I don't care how many fucking counter protests these idiots hold to protest what they claim is a mischaracterization of Detroit, the place is an absolute fucking shithole, period. I was there for a six week stay at Henry Ford Hospital a few years ago, and I think I would rather stay in downtown Beirut circa 1985. The staff at the hospital told me that under no circumstances should I use the city buses because they were too unsafe to ride. Every fast food restaurant I went to, including Subway, had the staff standing behind bulletproof glass, like it was the fucking Pope-mobile. I half expected to see tumbleweed blow across the road, because the place was a fucking ghost town, even during rush hour. Over half the buildings "downtown" were boarded up and abandoned, and the only part of the city that was even half-way decent was the block or two around the new Tiger Stadium. The fucking manholes had so much smoke or steam or whatever the fuck it was coming out of them, around the clock, that it was as if the whole fucking place was on fire. And the police cars were so run down, you half expected to see them on blocks a few hours later. I even saw an elementary school and a branch of the public library boarded up. That the city is a part of the United States and is one of the first things you see when you enter from Canada is a fucking embarrassment.
And frankly, I have no sympathy for the people who live in Detroit or in the entire dysfunctional piece of shit state that is Michigan, the US's own third world enclave. When you live in a city that conjures up images of Calcutta, yet you still keep electing back the same individuals, simply because they have a D behind their name, you deserve whatever the fuck you get. And statewide, when you have the highest unemployment rate in the nation for years, you have massive deficits, businesses are fleeing at an unprecedented rate, and yet you still reelect Jennifer Granholm, I can only tell you "Go fuck yourself". I have no sympathy for the people who live in that shitty city or the shitty state in which it is located.
"That the city is a part of the United States and is one of the first things you see when you enter from Canada is a fucking embarrassment."
Many Canadian cable-television operators feature the Detroit CBS, NBC, ABC and Fox affiliates, perhaps as part of a government program to make Canada look better by comparison.
(Here in Halifax we get the Boston channels, which means everything is getting pre-empted for Ted Kennedy stuff this week.)
After staring at the mic clipped to my shirt like it was a severed baby's clit,
Two female genital mutilation references in H&R less than a week apart? What are the odds?
a lady artist from Buffalo, New York, whose shtick is taking nude portraits of herself in abandoned buildings
She must have been doing this for a long time to already have run out of abandoned buildings in Buffalo. The train station there looks like a shot from "Life After People".
I honestly think B ought to sit down calmly, take a stress pill and a deep breath.
I live in a Detroit suburb and work in Detroit. First you need to understand that the Detroit metropolitan area (population > 4 million) is actually a pretty nice place to live. The City of Detroit, (population < 900,000 and falling) is a wreck. The schools are a disaster (although the new superintendent of schools is actually kicking ass and scaring some of the crooks). The buses are no worse than city buses in any rust-belt city. It's true that some of the neighborhoods in the City proper look like a war zone. There are a lot of empty fields, some of which have pheasant living in them.
But there's nothing wrong with the police cars (well, aside from the fact that they contain Detroit police).
For every boarded up store in the downtown core there are new restaurants opening in the Wayne State area--four in the past month.
And yes, a few high end restaurants have reduced their prices, but local arts organizations raised over a million dollars in a day two weeks ago.
There's a farmer's marked on the Wayne campus, and another one in Grosse Pointe where you can get stuff like baby bok choi and squash blossoms. There are lofts where empty nesters are moving in (they're pretty cheap, and some of them are rather nice, including one across from the Detroit Symphony where Leonard Slatkin lived until he bought a house in one of the tonier suburbs.)
Yes there are murders, almost every day. But none of them are random--they are gang-related, and happen in gang-infested areas. There are no nice restaurants, theaters, chamber music concerts or nice houses in those areas, so I've never felt in any danger in Detroit.
The one time my car broke down in a slightly rough area a cop came up and parked behind us with his lights flashing until the tow truck came.
Not to say I'd whitewash this area, but reports of it's entrance to the third world are somewhat exaggerated.
Now, if the entire city was made a tax-free zone, schools were totally cut loose from the Board of Ed and they stopped arresting non-violent drug-users things might actually get better. But I'm still not leaving. I like it here.
When you live in a city that conjures up images of Calcutta, yet you still keep electing back the same individuals, simply because they have a D behind their name, you deserve whatever the fuck you get.
Except that Detroit has been in decline since it reached its peak population around 1950 -- during times that included multiple-term Republican governors (William Milliken: 1969-1983, John Engler: 1991-2003). And the city of Detroit declined even while, for much of that time, the surrounding suburbs grew and prospered.
Chicago, BTW, I'd say, came perilously close to heading in the same direction as Detroit (and Cleveland and other Midwestern cities)--Chicago had gotten pretty tatty in the 1970s and was floundering under the 'leadership' of Bilandic, Burns, and Washington.
But really, the Detroit story is fairly simple -- after the '68 riots, most of the white people with money moved out, and once it crossed that tipping point, it has never recovered. For much of that time it has had leadership that was militant (Coleman Young), corrupt (Kwame Kilpatrick) or both (Monica Conyers). Even now, 40 years after '68, Detroit leadership has trouble co-operating with Lansing and suburban leaders based on belief that they're trying to 'steal' Detroit's 'jewels' (as in the recent fight over renovating Cobo Hall). Dennis Archer was the exception. He was very excellent...but unfortunately he was also too smart to stay in the job (he left to become president of the American Bar Association).
Yes, the city of Detroit is an embarrassment for the 10 million people in Michigan, but they had no idea how to fix it even when times were flush, so I don't see the city changing for the better any time soon.
Everyone has their favorite way of using the internet. Many of us search to find what we want, click in to a specific website, read what's available and click out. That's not necessarily a bad thing because it's efficient. We learn to tune out things we don't need and go straight for what's essential.
Everyone has their favorite way of using the internet. Many of us search to find what we want, click in to a specific website, read what's available and click out. That's not necessarily a bad thing because it's efficient. We learn to tune out things we don't need and go straight for what's essential.
Fifty percent literacy? Holy cow.
A lot of Robocop was filmed in east Dallas but it looks a lot better now.
After staring at the mic clipped to my shirt like it was a severed baby's clit,...
Not ever having seen "a severed baby's clit" or knowing anyone who has, I'm not really sure in what manner someone would stare at one. Somehow, I don't think I really want to know.
Detroit is the sphincter of Michigan.
What a piece of garbage the linked article is. Example:
The flip side is a simultaneous influx of reporters who don't want anything to do with the city but feel compelled by the times to get a Detroit story under their belts, like it's the journalistic version of cutting a grunge record.
"Time magazine sent a 24-year-old guy to Detroit," James Griffioen told me. "They wouldn't let him rent a car, so he was dropped off in a cab downtown. He's there for six hours and he's supposed to write a feature article on Detroit. For Time. He had a meeting with the mayor in the morning, the mayor stood him up, then he had a meeting with me, and that was it."
So Morton makes a statement... and his anecdote-as-proof actually disputes his statement. The 24-year old reporter wasn't compelled by the urge to write about the economic conditions of the city, he was ordered by his employer to do it. We already KNOW Time Magazine is a piece of shit. Now we know that Thomas Morton can't even meet Time Magazine's standard of quality.
Also, there's something to be said about Detroit's ingrained ineptitude when a mile-long abandonment is still around over half a century later. Even Chicago's notorious Block 37 and abandoned Wisconsin Steel plant were rectified in less than half the time. So the Packard Plant ought not be a mere footnote.
One of the commenters nailed it: "Writing an article about the latest trends in writing articles and then doing it yourself? Typical VICE rubbish."
I had to wait for a lady artist from Buffalo, New York, whose shtick is taking nude portraits of herself in abandoned buildings, to put her clothes back on.
[citation needed]
I agree with Russ2000--the images of the Central Depot and the Packard plant remind me of East Berlin when I was there in 1990 after the Wall came down--still lots of rubble left over from the war 40 years before. Not a good sign of a vibrant economy, and demoralizing to anyone in the area.
I worked in East Michigan during the "boon" years of the late 90's. There was all manner of new construction and renovation going on (the big kerfuffle was over casinos, but that's another show). Even then there were acre's of Detroit of abandoned factories, warehouses, and residential houses. Some of the interstates went right through them, and on a fair weather day as you drove with the windows open, you could hear shots ring out. And when night fell, entire neighborhoods became enter at your own risk.
Maybe it isn't fair to cite half-century old dilapidation as evidence of Motown's current woes. Then again, maybe the fact that downtown real-estate couldn't be put to profitable use in over fifty years is evidence of the prevailing corruption that spawns decay.
Also, there's something to be said about Detroit's ingrained ineptitude when a mile-long abandonment is still around over half a century later. Even Chicago's notorious Block 37 and abandoned Wisconsin Steel plant were rectified in less than half the time. So the Packard Plant ought not be a mere footnote.
This. Who cares when something is shutdown? I see business come and go all the time. The difference is that somebody usually moves in after one goes away. The fact that nobody is moving back in is all one needs to know about Detroit.
"After staring at the mic clipped to my shirt like it was a severed baby's clit"
What the fuck is wrong with you???
And anyway, shouldn't that be a baby's severed clit or did you actually mean the clit of a severed baby?
Jesus, I thought I was reading Suderman.
Wait, $1000 houses is not a positive thing?? Man, if I could deal with the weather, I could quickly build a walled city on the remains of $1000 houses.
Not if i do it first, Kwix.
The 24-year old reporter wasn't compelled by the urge to write about the economic conditions of the city, he was ordered by his employer to do it.
I don't think it matters, except to the extent that it indicates sloppy copy-editing at Vibe, whether the compulsion was felt by the correspondent or his editors.
Maybe it isn't fair to cite half-century old dilapidation as evidence of Motown's current woes. Then again, maybe the fact that downtown real-estate couldn't be put to profitable use in over fifty years is evidence of the prevailing corruption that spawns decay.
Maybe the fact that everyone keeps using the same shots suggests that they aren't interested in offering even that much context.
I got a nice little shot of a bum passed out at the base of the Soldiers and Sailors Monument in Campus Martius Park near the ice rink, with Christmas lights all around. Only used in on my own blog, though. 🙁
It's been fifty three years! That proof of the economic doldrums right there. Any other city would have knocked it down, or refurbished it and made it into a trendy mall and condo complex.
Here we go.
I don't think it matters, except to the extent that it indicates sloppy copy-editing at Vibe, whether the compulsion was felt by the correspondent or his editors.
Copy editing? That's so 20th century.
Sloppy writing is sloppy writing. You do your own copy editing these days and live with the consequences
There was a recent NPR piece on independently wealthy artists moving to Detroit. They eventually mentioned that the trend was in the other direction. My favorite part was how the reporter acted as if Detroit's decline was essentially a natural phenomenon.
Like, for example, leaving off the punctuation.
.
i'll spot ya a dot Russ
I don't care how many fucking counter protests these idiots hold to protest what they claim is a mischaracterization of Detroit, the place is an absolute fucking shithole, period. I was there for a six week stay at Henry Ford Hospital a few years ago, and I think I would rather stay in downtown Beirut circa 1985. The staff at the hospital told me that under no circumstances should I use the city buses because they were too unsafe to ride. Every fast food restaurant I went to, including Subway, had the staff standing behind bulletproof glass, like it was the fucking Pope-mobile. I half expected to see tumbleweed blow across the road, because the place was a fucking ghost town, even during rush hour. Over half the buildings "downtown" were boarded up and abandoned, and the only part of the city that was even half-way decent was the block or two around the new Tiger Stadium. The fucking manholes had so much smoke or steam or whatever the fuck it was coming out of them, around the clock, that it was as if the whole fucking place was on fire. And the police cars were so run down, you half expected to see them on blocks a few hours later. I even saw an elementary school and a branch of the public library boarded up. That the city is a part of the United States and is one of the first things you see when you enter from Canada is a fucking embarrassment.
And frankly, I have no sympathy for the people who live in Detroit or in the entire dysfunctional piece of shit state that is Michigan, the US's own third world enclave. When you live in a city that conjures up images of Calcutta, yet you still keep electing back the same individuals, simply because they have a D behind their name, you deserve whatever the fuck you get. And statewide, when you have the highest unemployment rate in the nation for years, you have massive deficits, businesses are fleeing at an unprecedented rate, and yet you still reelect Jennifer Granholm, I can only tell you "Go fuck yourself". I have no sympathy for the people who live in that shitty city or the shitty state in which it is located.
Kwix-
1) How much bribe money do you have to get through the city bureaucracy?
2) Does your skin have enough melanin that you won't be agitated against as an interloper?
3) How in the world are you going to afford the necessary insurance?
"That the city is a part of the United States and is one of the first things you see when you enter from Canada is a fucking embarrassment."
Many Canadian cable-television operators feature the Detroit CBS, NBC, ABC and Fox affiliates, perhaps as part of a government program to make Canada look better by comparison.
(Here in Halifax we get the Boston channels, which means everything is getting pre-empted for Ted Kennedy stuff this week.)
After staring at the mic clipped to my shirt like it was a severed baby's clit,
Two female genital mutilation references in H&R less than a week apart? What are the odds?
a lady artist from Buffalo, New York, whose shtick is taking nude portraits of herself in abandoned buildings
She must have been doing this for a long time to already have run out of abandoned buildings in Buffalo. The train station there looks like a shot from "Life After People".
I honestly think B ought to sit down calmly, take a stress pill and a deep breath.
I live in a Detroit suburb and work in Detroit. First you need to understand that the Detroit metropolitan area (population > 4 million) is actually a pretty nice place to live. The City of Detroit, (population < 900,000 and falling) is a wreck. The schools are a disaster (although the new superintendent of schools is actually kicking ass and scaring some of the crooks). The buses are no worse than city buses in any rust-belt city. It's true that some of the neighborhoods in the City proper look like a war zone. There are a lot of empty fields, some of which have pheasant living in them.
But there's nothing wrong with the police cars (well, aside from the fact that they contain Detroit police).
For every boarded up store in the downtown core there are new restaurants opening in the Wayne State area--four in the past month.
And yes, a few high end restaurants have reduced their prices, but local arts organizations raised over a million dollars in a day two weeks ago.
There's a farmer's marked on the Wayne campus, and another one in Grosse Pointe where you can get stuff like baby bok choi and squash blossoms. There are lofts where empty nesters are moving in (they're pretty cheap, and some of them are rather nice, including one across from the Detroit Symphony where Leonard Slatkin lived until he bought a house in one of the tonier suburbs.)
Yes there are murders, almost every day. But none of them are random--they are gang-related, and happen in gang-infested areas. There are no nice restaurants, theaters, chamber music concerts or nice houses in those areas, so I've never felt in any danger in Detroit.
The one time my car broke down in a slightly rough area a cop came up and parked behind us with his lights flashing until the tow truck came.
Not to say I'd whitewash this area, but reports of it's entrance to the third world are somewhat exaggerated.
Now, if the entire city was made a tax-free zone, schools were totally cut loose from the Board of Ed and they stopped arresting non-violent drug-users things might actually get better. But I'm still not leaving. I like it here.
When you live in a city that conjures up images of Calcutta, yet you still keep electing back the same individuals, simply because they have a D behind their name, you deserve whatever the fuck you get.
Except that Detroit has been in decline since it reached its peak population around 1950 -- during times that included multiple-term Republican governors (William Milliken: 1969-1983, John Engler: 1991-2003). And the city of Detroit declined even while, for much of that time, the surrounding suburbs grew and prospered.
Chicago, BTW, I'd say, came perilously close to heading in the same direction as Detroit (and Cleveland and other Midwestern cities)--Chicago had gotten pretty tatty in the 1970s and was floundering under the 'leadership' of Bilandic, Burns, and Washington.
But really, the Detroit story is fairly simple -- after the '68 riots, most of the white people with money moved out, and once it crossed that tipping point, it has never recovered. For much of that time it has had leadership that was militant (Coleman Young), corrupt (Kwame Kilpatrick) or both (Monica Conyers). Even now, 40 years after '68, Detroit leadership has trouble co-operating with Lansing and suburban leaders based on belief that they're trying to 'steal' Detroit's 'jewels' (as in the recent fight over renovating Cobo Hall). Dennis Archer was the exception. He was very excellent...but unfortunately he was also too smart to stay in the job (he left to become president of the American Bar Association).
Yes, the city of Detroit is an embarrassment for the 10 million people in Michigan, but they had no idea how to fix it even when times were flush, so I don't see the city changing for the better any time soon.
"I had to wait for a lady artist from Buffalo, New York, whose shtick is taking nude portraits of herself in abandoned buildings,..."
What, did she run out of those in Buffalo when they tore the Aud down?
Everyone has their favorite way of using the internet. Many of us search to find what we want, click in to a specific website, read what's available and click out. That's not necessarily a bad thing because it's efficient. We learn to tune out things we don't need and go straight for what's essential.
latest trend
Everyone has their favorite way of using the internet. Many of us search to find what we want, click in to a specific website, read what's available and click out. That's not necessarily a bad thing because it's efficient. We learn to tune out things we don't need and go straight for what's essential.
latest trend