news Rudy Giuliani Documentary to Track His ‘Downward Spiral’ and ‘Fall from Grace’

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A new documentary about the public life of Rudy Giuliani is now in production, and it’s based on the 2020 Rolling Stone article “What Happened to America’s Mayor?” by Seth Hettena. The film will be directed by Academy Award-nominated “Cutie and the Boxer” filmmaker Zach Heinzerling, and two-time News and Documentary Emmy Award winner Gabrielle Schonder, known for her contributions to “Frontline” and “60 Minutes.”

The film is being produced and financed MRC Non-Fiction, a division of MRC, which is currently engaged with IndieWire parent company PMC in a joint venture partnership.

Per the official synopsis: “The film reflects on what Rudy Giuliani once represented to most Americans: a man whose steady response to the attacks of September 11th, 2001 transcended partisan politics and transformed him into a national hero, and explores how the man christened ‘America’s Mayor’ fell from grace and into a downward spiral that’s marred his once venerable reputation.”

“Zach and Gabrielle are both thoughtful storytellers who have had incredible success telling rich stories about complicated characters,” said Amit Dey, head of MRC Non-Fiction. “Of all the things one can say about Rudy Giuliani, ‘complicated’ may be an understatement but Seth’s article captured the essence of what we believe is a true American epic, from Flatbush to Four Seasons Landscaping, regardless of where it ends.”

“Rarely has a public figure in America fallen so far so fast in the public eye,” says Jason Fine, Rolling Stone’s director of content development. “As we’ve reported on Rudy’s downfall — his bizarre political maneuvering, shady business dealings, and now, being under criminal investigation by the same U.S. Attorney’s Office in Manhattan that he once ran — we see his story as a parable for the dark forces that have shaped American politics.”

Separately, another Giuliani documentary was recently announced from Campfire Studios and the team behind Hulu’s “WeWork,” to be directed by Jed Rothstein.

Giuliani fell back into the spotlight last year due to his appearance in “Borat Subsequent Moviefilm,” in which he’s seen engaging in questionable behavior while in a hotel room with Oscar-nominated actress Maria Bakalova, who is posing in the film as an underage journalist. Giuliani served as the mayor of New York City between 1994 and 2001. He also served as the lawyer to former President Trump.

Read IndieWire’s oral history of the Rudy Giuliani scene from “Borat Subsequent Moviefilm” here.
 
Giuliani has been an ass from day one. He became famous because he was mayor on 9/11, but his incompetence made a bad situation worse. He stuck the police & fire departments with communication systems that literally didn't communicate with each other, costing the lives of numerous firefighters because they didn't know the towers were about to collapse.

And, from an excellent article (link below): "even the quintessential image of the mayor on 9/11 - walking uptown through ravaged streets and swirling clouds of dust - reflect one of the flawed decisions that would cost lives on that day. Giuliani had sited New York City's Emergency Operations Center right in the World Trade Center complex, despite the fact that it had been bombed before, in February 1993." And that's not 20/20 hindsight - that idiotic decision was roundly criticized at the time.

Full article below - it summarizes well what's been discussed fully in many other places:

https://www.theguardian.com/world/deadlineusa/2008/jan/28/giulianisworstnightmare
 
Giuliani has been an ass from day one. He became famous because he was mayor on 9/11, but his incompetence made a bad situation worse. He stuck the police & fire departments with communication systems that literally didn't communicate with each other, costing the lives of numerous firefighters because they didn't know the towers were about to collapse.

And, from an excellent article (link below): "even the quintessential image of the mayor on 9/11 - walking uptown through ravaged streets and swirling clouds of dust - reflect one of the flawed decisions that would cost lives on that day. Giuliani had sited New York City's Emergency Operations Center right in the World Trade Center complex, despite the fact that it had been bombed before, in February 1993." And that's not 20/20 hindsight - that idiotic decision was roundly criticized at the time.

Full article below - it summarizes well what's been discussed fully in many other places:

https://www.theguardian.com/world/deadlineusa/2008/jan/28/giulianisworstnightmare

All true, but I believe he became mayor in the first place because he had already made a name for himself taking on the mob with rico
 
The only thing I remember good he did was "two cops per car." Cops in NYC used to literally drive around and respond to incidents BY THEMSELVES without partners. If memory serves correct it started at 8 pm but then became a 24 hour thing. Now it's normal, it would look odd to see a cop by themselves.
 
i've heard the reason he got so much media attention and praise in the early days is because most of our media is based out of nyc.
same thing happened with cuomo. all the major stations are broadcasting from nyc so they put the highlight on him.
 
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