July 4th, 2004

Friends,

Where do I begin?  This past week has knocked me for a loop. 
"Fahrenheit 9/11," the #1 movie in the country, the largest grossing
documentary ever.  My head is spinning.  Didn't we just lose our
distributor 8 weeks ago?  Did Karl Rove really fail to stop this?  Is
Bush packing? 

Each day this week I was given a new piece of information from
the press that covers Hollywood, and I barely had time to recover
from the last tidbit before the next one smacked me upside the head: 

** More people saw "Fahrenheit 9/11" in one weekend than all the
people who saw "Bowling for Columbine" in 9 months.

** "Fahrenheit 9/11" broke "Rocky III's" record for the biggest box
office opening weekend ever for any film that opened in less than
a thousand theaters.

** "Fahrenheit 9/11" beat the opening weekend of "Return of the Jedi." 

** "Fahrenheit 9/11" instantly went to #2 on the all-time list for
largest per-theater average ever for a film that opened in
wide-release.

How can I ever thank all of you who went to see it?  These records
are mind-blowing.  They have sent shock waves through
Hollywood -- and, more importantly, through the White House.

But it didn't just stop there.  The response to the movie then went
into the Twilight Zone.  Surfing through the dial I landed on the
Fox broadcasting network which was airing the NASCAR race live
last Sunday to an audience of millions of Americans -- and
suddenly the announcers were talking about how NASCAR champ
Dale Earnhardt, Jr. took his crew to see "Fahrenheit 9/11" the night
before.  FOX sportscaster Chris Myers delivered Earnhardt's
review straight out of his mouth and into the heartland of America:
"He said hey, it'll be a good bonding experience no matter what
your political belief.  It's a good thing as an American to go see."  
Whoa!  NASCAR fans -- you can't go deeper into George Bush
territory than that!  White House moving vans -- START YOUR
ENGINES!

Then there was Roger Friedman from the Fox News Channel
giving our film an absolutely glowing review, calling it "a really
brilliant piece of work, and a film that members of all political
parties should see without fail."  Richard Goldstein of the Village
Voice surmised that Bush is already considered a goner so Rupert
Murdoch might be starting to curry favor with the new
administration.  I don't know about that, but I've never heard a
decent word toward me from Fox.  So, after I was revived, I
wondered if a love note to me from Sean Hannity was next. 

How about Letterman's Top Ten List: "Top Ten George W. Bush
Complaints About "Fahrenheit 9/11":

10. That actor who played the President was totally unconvincing

9. It oversimplified the way I stole the election

8. Too many of them fancy college-boy words

7. If Michael Moore had waited a few months, he could have
included the part where I get him deported

6. Didn't have one of them hilarious monkeys who smoke
cigarettes and gives people the finger

5. Of all Michael Moore's accusations, only 97% are true

4. Not sure - - I passed out after a piece of popcorn lodged in my
windpipe

3. Where the hell was Spider-man?

2. Couldn't hear most of the movie over Cheney's foul mouth

1. I thought this was supposed to be about dodgeball

But it was the reactions and reports we received from theaters
around the country that really sent me over the edge.  One theatre
manager after another phoned in to say that the movie was getting
standing ovations as the credits rolled --in places like Greensboro,
NC and Oklahoma City -- and that they were having a hard time
clearing the theater afterwards because people were either too
stunned or they wanted to sit and talk to their neighbors about
what they had just seen.  In Trumbull, CT, one woman got up on
her seat after the movie and shouted "Let's go have a meeting!"  A
man in San Francisco took his shoe off and threw it at the screen
when Bush appeared at the end.  Ladies' church groups in Tulsa
were going to see it, and weeping afterwards.

It was this last group that gave lie to all the yakking pundits who,
before the movie opened, declared that only the hard-core "choir"
would go to see "Fahrenheit 9/11."  They couldn't have been more
wrong.  Theaters in the Deep South and the Midwest set house
records for any film they'd ever shown.  Yes, it even sold out in
Peoria.  And Lubbock, Texas.  And Anchorage, Alaska!

Newspaper after newspaper wrote stories in tones of breathless
disbelief about people who called themselves "Independents" and
"Republicans" walking out of the movie theater shaken and in
tears, proclaiming that they could not, in good conscience, vote
for George W. Bush.  The New York Times wrote of a conservative
Republican woman in her 20s in Pensacola, Florida who cried
through the film, and told the reporter: "It really makes me
question what I feel about the president... it makes me question
his motives."

Newsday reported on a self-described "ardent Bush/Cheney
supporter" who went to see the film on Long Island, and his quiet
reaction afterwards.  He said, "It's really given me pause to think
about what's really going on.  There was just too much -- too much
to discount." The man then bought three more tickets for another
showing of the film.

The Los Angeles Times found a mother who had "supported
[Bush] fiercely" at a theater in Des Peres, Missouri: "Emerging
from Michael Moore's 'Fahrenheit 9/11,' her eyes wet, Leslie
Hanser said she at last understood. 'My emotions are just....' She
trailed off, waving her hands to show confusion. 'I feel like we
haven't seen the whole truth before.'"

All of this had to be the absolute worst news for the White House
to wake up to on Monday morning.  I guess they were in such a
stupor, they "gave" Iraq back to, um, Iraq two days early!

News editors told us that they were being "bombarded" with
e-mails and calls from the White House (read: Karl Rove), trying
to spin their way out of this mess by attacking it and attacking me. 
Bush spokesman Dan Bartlett had told the White House press
corps that the movie was "outrageously false" -- even though he
said he hadn't seen the movie.  He later told CNN that "This is a
film that doesn't require us to actually view it to know that it's
filled with factual inaccuracies."  At least they're consistent.  They
never needed to see a single weapon of mass destruction before
sending our kids off to die.

Many news shows were more than eager to buy the White House
spin.  After all, that is a big part of what "Fahrenheit" is about --
how the lazy, compliant media bought all the lies from the Bush
administration about the need to invade Iraq.  They took the
Kool-Aid offered by the White House and rarely, if ever, did our
media ask the hard questions that needed to be asked before the
war started.

Because the movie "outs" the mainstream media for their failures
and their complicity with the Bush administration -- who can ever
forget their incessant, embarrassing cheerleading as the troops
went off to war, as though it was all just a game -- the media was
not about to let me get away with anything now resembling a
cultural phenomenon.  On show after show, they went after me
with the kind of viciousness you would have hoped they had had
for those who were lying about the necessity for invading a
sovereign nation that was no threat to us.  I don't blame our
well-paid celebrity journalists -- they look like a bunch of
ass-kissing dopes in my movie, and I guess I'd be pretty mad at
me, too.  After all, once the NASCAR fans see "Fahrenheit 9/11,"
will they ever believe a single thing they see on ABC/NBC/CBS
news again?

In the next week or so, I will recount my adventures through the
media this past month (I will also be posting a full FAQ on my
website soon so that you can have all the necessary backup and
evidence from the film when you find yourself in heated debate
with your conservative brother-in-law!).  For now, please know the
following: Every single fact I state in "Fahrenheit 9/11" is the
absolute and irrefutable truth.  This movie is perhaps the most
thoroughly researched and vetted documentary of our time.  No
fewer than a dozen people, including three teams of lawyers and
the venerable one-time fact-checkers from The New Yorker went
through this movie with a fine-tooth comb so that we can make
this guarantee to you.  Do not let anyone say this or that isn't true. 
If they say that, they are lying.  Let them know that the
OPINIONS in the film are mine, and anyone certainly has a right
to disagree with them.  And the questions I pose in the movie,
based on these irrefutable facts, are also mine.  And I have a right
to ask them.  And I will continue to ask them until they are
answered. 

In closing, let me say that the most heartening response to the film
has come from our soldiers and their families.  Theaters in military
towns across the country reported packed houses.  Our troops
know the truth.  They have seen it first-hand.  And many of them
could not believe that here was a movie that was TRULY on their
side -- the side of bringing them home alive and never sending
them into harms way again unless it's the absolute last resort. 
Please take a moment to read this wonderful story from the daily
paper in Fayetteville, NC, where Fort Bragg is located story.

http://fayettevillenc.com/story.php?Template=local&Story=6429101

It broke my heart to read this, the reactions of military families and
the comments of an infantryman's wife publicly backing my movie
-- and it gave me the resolve to make sure as many Americans as
possible see this film in the coming weeks.

Thank you again, all of you, for your support.  Together we did
something for the history books.  My apologies to "Return of the
Jedi."  We'll make it up by producing "Return of the Texan to
Crawford" in November.

May the farce be with you, but not for long,

Michael Moore
www.michaelmoore.com
mmflint@aol.com

P.S. You can read letters from people around the country
recounting their own experiences at the theater, and their reactions
to the film by going here:

http://www.michaelmoore.com/words/latestnews/breakingnews/index.php?id=55


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