This morning I heard that there is a documentary about the trashiest of white trash. Maybe on Showtime or HBO. Anyone seen this? From what I've heard it has a certain trainwreck appeal.
that's not that uncommon in families in the area of Alabama where i grew upIt is a couple of years old and is almost too much to believe. It fosters every hick/redneck/inbred/hillbilly stereotype all into one family.
That explains a lot of the posts I've read from you.that's not that uncommon in families in the area of Alabama where i grew up
i was a transplant from dallas, tejas via tuscaloosa, so i was one of the more aculturemerated onesThat explains a lot of the posts I've read from you.:biggrin2:
I watched this documentary several years ago, and then caught the new one a week or so ago on HBO. 'Jesco White, The Dancing Outlaw' is absolutely hilarious. You really do need to watch it before you see 'The Wild and Wonderful Whites of West Virginia.' I think you can pretty much watch the entire original documentary about Jesco on youtube.The documentary is pretty popular in an underground sense. It's the same family that brought us "The Dancing Outlaw" Jesco White.
Jesco White - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
the mountain top removal is a damn shame. on top of the lives its destroying, that area is beautiful countryComing from a family with roots in the coal fields of southern West Virginia (my grandfather was a coal miner until a mine accident crippled him, after which he was let go and became an alcoholic), I don't doubt that the characters are real. When the coal seam went bust, the bottom dropped out of the only real industry in the area. A drive through the coalfields is a depressing thing today.
Nowadays, the coal mining done there is done through mountaintop removal. It is a destructive, ugly process (wells for miles around are rendered non-potable due to the amount of heavy metals released into the water table), but the legislature in Charleston lets them get away with it.
I agree. I love me some mountains. Another cruddy thing is that it takes next to no workers to do it, just a handful of heavy machine operators, so it doesn't even really create (or retain) many jobs. My grandmother was from Keystone, WV, and the mountain just south of town has been decapitated, leaving a flat-topped hill and an ugly scar.the mountain top removal is a damn shame. on top of the lives its destroying, that area is beautiful country
yep, that's one of the things i hate worst about it. coal mining is a crappy, tough job, but it was honest work and supported a lot of familes. the folks pushing it continually use the "jobs" angle. and they have the gall to say the mountain is better after they "reclaim" it than before.I agree. I love me some mountains. Another cruddy thing is that it takes next to no workers to do it, just a handful of heavy machine operators, so it doesn't even really create (or retain) many jobs. My grandmother was from Keystone, WV, and the mountain just south of town has been decapitated, leaving a flat-topped hill and an ugly scar.