Monday, 28 April 2025

Article: Radio Ga Ga - Talk Radio

The most penetrating aspects of the movies Talk Radio and Natural Born Killers, directed by Oliver Stone, reside in how well they touch upon the intimate effect broadcasting can have on its audience. Both prey on how easily the media entices people. Natural Born Killers, the tale of two homicidal maniacs, is presented in a schizophrenic style which liberally borrows from everything Television. From 50s sitcoms to 30-second cola adverts. The assault on the senses is bludgeoning, with the film frantically establishing the perverse nature of being drawn to toxic media. Subtle may not be the best word for Talk Radio, but it is less manic. However, this doesn’t stop the film from showcasing the seductiveness of entertainment media. Its lead performer, Barry, whose self-destructive tendencies shatter his personal life, unleashes hell on his angry yet captivated audience. Most of Barry’s listeners can’t seem to stand him. Many straight out despise him. All of them can’t wait to see what he says next.

Talk Radio is an overlooked movie in Stone's filmography. Even his duds get mentioned more often. I only recently saw a clickbait listicle bemoaning the age differences in Alexander (2004). However, Stone’s movies are usually larger in scale. Talk Radio is intimate and personal in ways many of Stone’s movies are not. Yet it pierces the skin of America now just as well as his more talked about features. One disturbing reason Talk Radio feels so relatable is how well it explores parasocial connections broadcasters have with their audience. Such audio broadcasting ingrains itself profoundly with its audience due to its immersive nature. In the same way, content creators in the current era can present themselves as authentic while hiding their problematic sides, Barry is a complicated ball of conflict. A presenter who holds an innate ability to feed the lonely and dangerous in the middle of the night, positioning himself as a know-it-all truth sayer to all the insomniacs who are comforted by his voice and their thoughts.

Based on both the off-Broadway play written and performed by lead performer Eric Bogosian, and the non-fiction book Talked to Death by Ted Savinar, Talk Radio is also based on the real-life death of Alan Berg, a liberal-leaning, Jewish, shock jock, murdered by a Neo-Nazi faction after recording an episode of his show. Whereas people viewed Berg as a humourist, with a tone that sounded like he was in on a joke, Eric’s Barry Champlain is a far more difficult creature. Someone who is not as easy to love. Champlain’s innate ability to entertain with his quick-wittedness enables him to ditch his suit-selling job to become a Talk Show radio host. Champlain’s confrontational style has his show receive well-wishers who love what he does, along with hostile callers, bigots and far-right extremists who phone in with threats and intimidation. His ability to trigger hostility from everyone is not just a defining element of Barry’s show but also helps dismantle most of his close relationships. His reckless behaviour causes rifts between himself and his crew. His ego and general hostility only help to ensure an uneasy relationship with Ellen (Ellen Green), his ex-wife. Unbelievably (or maybe not these days), Talk Radio starts with Champlain’s show on the cusp of being picked up nationally. This decision excites and aggravates the provocateur and soon bleeds into the emotional mixing bowl of Barry’s life.

The two films Oliver Stone directed before Talk Radio, Platoon (1986) and Wall Street (1987), were grand morality plays. The young protagonists found themselves being fought over by two opposing forces, with both films becoming a grander allegory for the soul of America. That may sound hyperbolic, but when were Oliver Stone movies above some grandstanding? Despite its smaller stage, Talk Radio is no different. However, this film plays out as if the battle for the country's spirit had been lost long ago. Cynicism drives the loose narrative as Champlain goads his listeners to lose their rag over their bigoted views, their loneliness, or anything. Both Barry and his devoted following gain a kick charge out of the on-air battles, with listeners furious with the DJ, but doing little to remove themselves from the firing line. Barry is no different, stoking himself up for these debates, finding himself wound up by the bigoted ignorance on display. As the grand conductor, Barry feels he can do whatever he wants on his show. But as the corporate sponsorship of national airplay looms large over his head, there’s a sinking feeling that Barry may have sold his soul to something more damning: Censorship.

Gene Siskel likened Barry to Taxi Driver’s Travis Buckle. Bitter, complicated, while harbouring a burning desire to do the right thing the wrong way. Barry sees his show as a platform for no-holds-barred free speech. He goads bigots and racists, runs rampant with his bitter misogyny and mocks those who are desperate and confessional. He sees no victims. If the audience wants to listen, then they are willing to call. If they want to call him, then the terms of engagement are with Barry. In real life, Alan Berg enjoyed stoking the fires to gain a reaction. But Berg, who battled alcoholism and seizures in his lifetime, was also someone who understood the absurdities that came with his ventures. Even if despised by his audience, Berg wanted them to think. To be unglued from their binary belief systems, even though he saw the folly. Barry goes to work every night, only ever seeing the void, and having it stare straight back at him. At one point, Barry fed up with a chuckling huckster who pretends to have real problems, invites the caller to the station on air as a guest. The airheaded buffoon, glad for the attention calls Barry’s bluff and comes in, contaminating the airwaves with inane, half-baked discourse. It’s one of the film's most potent moments. Highlighting that while free speech is something people fight for, not everyone is as intelligent as they are loud.

Alec Baldwin appears as the network head, Dan. He might be yet another of the contemptible corporate stooges that Baldwin loves to play. However, his big scene, where he pulls rank on Barry with a string of inflammatory comments, touches on themes found in Stone's Talk Radio and Natural Born Killers. Barry may feel he is a truth-teller.  A societal judge, jury and executioner for the masses. The crowd respond to him as if he were a holy preacher. But capitalism has already worked out how to market Barry. As much as Barry may not accept it, he’s being made to wake up and realise that he is considered mere entertainment fodder. Nothing more than a socio-political jester of sorts. In Natural Born Killers, this idea is folded over and baked into the ideal of Micky and Mallory Knox. A murderous couple whose story can have soda adverts slotted into breaks for the MTV generation. The horrific juxtaposition in Talk Radio is that what lies within the relationship between Barry and his audience is just as invasive, with an even more emotional intimacy. While he may be the commodified “voice of reason”, Barry’s words are designed to disrupt a caller’s core beliefs. Natural Born Killers has a Wikipedia page dedicated to so-called copycat killers. Talk Radio is based explicitly on the assassination of a media personality whose words and views were taken on board with a seriousness that people never believed they would be. Both of Stone’s films press a succulent question: when does our media consumption break down into actual derangement with people acting on words with extreme prejudice?

Despite being rarely talked about, Talk Radio features some compelling technical work. Managing to take a stage show with a limited cast and allowing buzz with the same energy as its protagonist. Talk Radio was made before the director began manipulating varied film stocks with more gusto. But the hyper-kinetic editing made more apparent in the likes of Natural Born Killers can be seen seeping through. Moments of the film feel fuelled by a cocaine binge in the editing room. It’s different to explain the “awake late” slightly strung-out feel that lingers in shots. Cinematographer Robert Richardson also shows his command of craft here. The combination of frantic cutting combines with a myriad of shots utilised to keep the frame interesting. From swirling cameras and split-diopters to figures reflected in windows, the film volleys an array of techniques and compositions that keep the eye alert in a film which is often just talking. In one of the few scenes in which we leave the confines of Barry's radio station to a basketball game, Stone restricts the scene to almost nothing but tight close-ups, making the surroundings even more suffocating than expected. Fans, well-wishers and hate listeners approach Barry with the DJ having no way of discerning who is friend or foe. When the action heads back to the station, the amount of space suddenly becomes startling.

This mixture of theme and form is not only staggering at times but surprising, in that Talk Radio isn’t talked about that much. Stone’s louder movies take up much of the spotlight, but Talk Radio was released at the same time that the likes of Howard Stern and Rush Limbaugh were becoming more prevalent, so it’s a little shocking that it feels a little forgotten. Three decades on Talk Radio still manages to be an absorbing watch. Managing to be both enticing and repulsive. It provides a disturbing reminder of the power of free speech, accountability and commodity. Its relevancy feels more potent in the era of unregulated podcasts and the internet. In a 2017 interview with The Guardian, Eric Bogosian mentions the rise and influence of Talk Radio:  

“The right then took it [Talk Radio] over, which wasn’t the case at the time. I was looking at someone who will pretty much say anything to get a rise out of his audience, which in turn increases his ratings. Look at Rush Limbaugh. He has described himself as an entertainer. At the same time, he’s messing with issues which are of the greatest importance to all of us. You’ve had a similar problem with Brexit: someone starts tossing this football around for fun and before you know it, they’ve changed policy.”

Watching Talk Radio now is especially chilling. As Barry hurtles towards self-destruction he screams “How deep into the muck we can immerse ourselves?!”. Slowly realising some of his self-righteous hypocrisy. Those who were tossing the football around have started to act.  As we become more siloed off by tech, and the effect of media has caused more rampant division, we now have an answer to the muck question. We can get deeper into the muck than you can imagine Barry. We can plunge into the depths.


Talk Radio is a difficult one to find. Although it may be on Apple TV. I watched it on a out of print Network distributed DVD.

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