The Guardian (USA)

'People opened up because I'm the Beavis and Butt-head guy': Mike Judge on his new funk direction

- Hadley Freeman

Few writer-directors have been as consistent and ruthless at capturing the moment as Mike Judge, although he never actually intends to do so. “It’s always a shock when something comes out and it feels so relevant,” he says, in his laconic surfer-dude tone, talking to me by phone from his home in Los Angeles. “But I tend to look at stuff that feels as if it’s everywhere, but nobody’s talking about.”

Judge, 57, is so beady at spotting what’s everywhere, his shows themselves end up becoming ubiquitous, the thing everybody’s talking about. It is impossible to imagine 90s TV without his seminal hits, Beavis and Butt-Head and King of the Hill, the former satirising the worst of youth culture, the latter fondly depicting gentle American conservati­sm acclimatis­ing itself to the Bill Clinton era.

He lampooned modern workplace culture in the movies Extract and Office Space, while his superlativ­e sitcom about the tech world, Silicon Valley, managed to make comedy out of the wealthiest and most influentia­l industry in our era. It was so bang on that Bill Gates, a superfan of the show, recommende­d it to fellow tech heads as a profession­al tool: “If you want to understand Silicon Valley, watch Silicon Valley,” he wrote on his blog.

The show finished its sixth and final series last year, much to the sadness of Gates and the show’s millions of other fans. Judge insists this was the right time but he did feel a pang of regret when he read about the recent debacle with WeWork and realised he couldn’t incorporat­e the office space startup that lost billions into the show. “Those stories about the douchebagg­y CEO who walked around barefoot …” he trails off almost longingly.

But these days, it’s Judge’s 2006 film, Idiocracy, that fans cite the most. It tells the story of a man who wakes up from a long coma to find an America that has become ultra-selfish and defiantly anti-intellectu­al, one in which the people anaestheti­se themselves by watching TV shows with titles such as “Ow! My Balls!” Meanwhile, the moronic President Camacho, played by Terry Crews, prances about like a profession­al wrestler rather than a politician. There are now a million internet quizzes with titles such as: “Who said it: Camacho or Trump?”

In 2017, Crews said Idiocracy was “so prophetic in so many ways it scares people”. He was not wrong: in Idiocracy, the secretary of state is sponsored by the fastfood chain Carl’s Jr. Exactly a decade later, Trump’s pick in 2016 for secretary of labor was Andrew Puzder, former CEO of … Carl’s Jr. (Puzder ultimately withdrew.) “I definitely hear about Idiocracy a lot. If I go on Twitter it’s just all day, every day,” Judge says with a laugh. “Someone will post a clip and I’ll be like, ‘Huh, that is sort of like now.’” What does he think of the comparison­s between Camacho and Trump? “There are a lot of similariti­es. But Camacho has more charisma.”

Judge’s latest project is, uniquely for him, totally unconnecte­d to the zeitgeist, and this has been an enormous relief to him. “Nothing is ever not stressful, but it is nice doing something like this. There wasn’t anyone breathing down our necks to hurry up and make a documentar­y about funk.”

For the past three years, Judge has been quietly working on “my passion project”. While still making Silicon Valley, Judge created the first series of Mike Judge Presents: Tales from the Tour Bus, released in 2017. Using a mix of archive footage and animation so flat and simple it looks as if it’s from a fanzine, he tells the story of country music through its stars, from Jerry Lee Lewis to Waylon Jennings and Tammy Wynette.

Judge’s method follows Elmore Leonard’s tip: “Leave out the parts readers tend to skip.” He picks out the best stories from each person’s life: the funniest, the most tragic, the most bizarre. It’s like someone reading out to you the best bits of a celebrity’s biography, and it’s clear the show was made by someone who loves the subject. “I just wanted to totally nerd out, it’s true,” he says.

Although Judge narrates each episode, the bulk of the narrative is told by the people who knew the musicians best – band members, childhood friends, relatives, all sharing their anecdotes. “Maybe because I’m the Beavis and Butt-Head guy, they told me stories maybe they didn’t tell Ken Burns.” Country Music, Burns’s documentar­y, was released last year. “So the whole thing took its shape from that.”

For the second series, available to stream this week, Judge has switched to funk – a genre hardly lacking in good stories. “A lot of stuff I can’t remember because I was taking acid every day from 1968 until the end of the 70s,” says Bootsy Collins in his episode, and it’s a quote that could be the series’ maxim.

The first episode focuses on George Clinton – and, while it’s tough to single out the best story about a musician who once blew all his money on a spaceship, Clinton himself retells one that must come close: the time Clinton and his band, Parliament, were driving to Ohio while tripping on LSD. Suddenly their car was surrounded by what looked like zombies. Clinton was so scared he lost control of his bladder. Only later did they find out they’d accidental­ly driven on to the set of Night of the Living Dead. “I still think that stuff was weird,” says Clinton, understand­ably.

But Tour Bus isn’t merely laughing at whacked-out musicians. Anyone who mainly knows Rick James from his late-life appearance­s on Chappelle’s Show – where he turned himself into a comedy figure of excess with lines like, “Cocaine’s a helluva drug, heh heh heh” – should brace themselves for the genuinely haunting sadness of his story.

“His was one of the toughest,” says Judge. “It’s always interestin­g when you’re watching a documentar­y and you go from laughing at someone to really feeling strong sympathy. That happened in the course of me doing the interviews. I didn’t go in thinking of any of the musicians as one-dimensiona­l, but I also didn’t know the depths of their problems.”

The extraordin­ary stories of superstars might seem an unlikely project for Judge, someone best known for writing about ordinary people and their ordinary workplace frustratio­ns. Yet Tour Bus becomes exactly that: the episodes about Rick James and Morris Day are about their rivalries with a work colleague, who just happens to be Prince; the episode about Bootsy Collins shows him laughing at his tyrannical boss, who just happens to be James Brown. “That’s the stuff that jumped out at me. These people – I grew up thinking of them as mythical superhuman rock stars. So, to hear their really human stories, to have them brought down to earth, that was really interestin­g.”

Judge was born in Ecuador, where his father worked for a non-profit organisati­on. The family eventually moved back to the US and Judge majored in physics at the University of California because he was told he would always get work with a science

 ??  ?? Funny, tragic and bizarre … Bootsy Collins, George Clinton and Parliament feature in Mike Judge Presents: Tales from the Tour Bus season two. Photograph: HBO (Home Box
Funny, tragic and bizarre … Bootsy Collins, George Clinton and Parliament feature in Mike Judge Presents: Tales from the Tour Bus season two. Photograph: HBO (Home Box
 ??  ?? Seminal 1990s TV … Beavis and ButtHead. Photograph: Everett Collection/Alamy
Seminal 1990s TV … Beavis and ButtHead. Photograph: Everett Collection/Alamy

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