Bill Moyers: There is a fellow in city government here in New York who’s a policy wonk and a die-hard Wire fan. He was hoping I would ask you the one question on his mind: “David Simon has painted the most vivid and compelling portrait of the modern American city. Has he walked away from that story? And if he has, will he come back to it?”David Simon: I’ve walked away from the Wire universe. It’s had its five years. Stories have a beginning, middle, and end. If you keep stuff open-ended and you keep trying to stretch character and plot, they eventually break or bend.
Bill Moyers: What is it about the crime scene that gives you a keyhole, the best keyhole perhaps, into how American society really works?
David Simon: You see the equivocations. You see the stuff that doesn’t make it into the civics books, and you also see how interconnected things are. How connected the performance of the school system is to the culture of a street corner. Or where parenting comes in. The decline of industry suddenly interacts with the paucity and sort of fraud of public education in the inner city. Because The Wire was not a story about America, it’s about the America that got left behind.
Bill Moyers: I was struck by something that you said. You were wrestling with this one big existential question. You talked about drug addicts who would come out of detox and then try to steel-jaw themselves through their neighborhood. And then they’d come face-to-face with the question—which is…?
David Simon: “What am I doing here?” You know, a guy coming out of addiction at thirty, thirty-five, because it often takes to that age, he often got into addiction with a string of problems, some of which were interpersonal and personal, and some of which were systemic. These really are the excess people in America. Our economy doesn’t need them—we don’t need 10 or 15 percent of our population. And certainly the ones who are undereducated, who have been ill-served by the inner-city school system, who have been unprepared for the technocracy of the modern economy, we pretend to need them. We pretend to educate the kids. We pretend that we’re actually including them in the American ideal, but we’re not. And they’re not foolish. They get it. They understand that the only viable economic base in their neighborhoods is this multibillion-dollar drug trade.
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Bill Moyers: Are you, as someone [Eds: The Atlantic] said, “the angriest man in television”?
David Simon: I saw that. It doesn’t really mean much. The second-angriest guy is, you know, by a kidney-shaped pool in L.A. screaming into his cell phone because his DVD points aren’t enough. But I don’t mind being called that. I just don’t think it means anything. How can you have lived through the last ten years in American culture and not be? How can you not look at what happened on Wall Street, at this gamesmanship that was the mortgage bubble, that was just selling crap and calling it gold? Or watch a city school system suffer for twenty, twenty-five years? Isn’t anger the appropriate response? What is the appropriate response? Ennui? Alienation? Buying into the great-man theory of history—that if we only elect the right guy? This stuff is systemic. This is how an empire is eaten from within.
For more, go here.
Here’s a trailer from the new season of “Treme”:
Thanks to @weabcion for Tweeting me that link.
UPDATE: Thanks to links provided by GITS reader Francisco Magdaraog, here is video of the Moyers-Simon interview:


Looks like Moyers is republishing in print what you can actually watch on YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qulcqNMHVic
It is a tremendous interview, though spoiler warnings glory if you haven't seen The Wire.
Simon's a sharp guy. Highly recommend reading his Homicide: A Year on the Killing Streets, the non-fiction book that kickstarted his Hollywood career.
Thanks for pointing us to this interview. Amazing.
Bill Moyers and David Simon, that is a lovely pairing, thanks for this, Scott and weabcion. Another interview with Simon at Alternet: http://www.alternet.org/culture/150747/why_the_creator_of_%27the_wire%27_turned_the_camera_to_new_orleans/
@Francisco: Updated OP with your video links.
@Atlanta: Thanks for that. Per Francisco, I read Simon's non-fiction book "Homicide: A Year on the Killing Streets" when it first came out, inspiration for the NBC series. That was my favorite TV 1-hour drama before "The Wire." So thanks for the interview.