Read American Elsewhere Online
Authors: Robert Jackson Bennett
TRANSCRIPT OF PROGRESS INTERVIEW
c10.37a-jc
CONDUCTED BY MICHAEL DERN, CHIEF OF STAFF
JANUARY 3
RD
, 1974
: So it’s one hundred percent necessary that this is taped.
MICHAEL DERN
: One hundred percent.
: Why? Who’s going to listen to this?
MICHAEL DERN
: Um. Not many people.
: How many is not many?
MICHAEL DERN
: One?
: One? One person?
MICHAEL DERN
: They get played, once. Then they get stored. Safely.
: Come on, Michael.
MICHAEL DERN
: You’re awful curious about this.
: Yes, I am awful curious about what happens to tapes made of me, of me talking. How would you like it? Wouldn’t you be worried?
MICHAEL DERN
: I have been taped so many times, I don’t even notice anymore.
: But you do know what happens to the tapes.
MICHAEL DERN
: Yes. The tapes get transcribed.
: Okay. Then what?
MICHAEL DERN
: Mm. Probably shouldn’t. But. Then the transcriptions get circulated to a committee—a really important committee—with your name removed.
: What? Why the hell would they do that?
MICHAEL DERN
: Because there’s always a chance that someone—I don’t know who, but some asshole—could leak the interview.
: Ah. Because we do such [singing] topsecret work.
MICHAEL DERN
: Yeah. You do. You do, you know.
: Yeah. I know all about that.
MICHAEL DERN
: Still, they want to hear, you know, thoughts, opinions, et cetera. They want to hear it out of your mouth. But not, you know, your mouth.
: Is your name redacted?
MICHAEL DERN
: Nope.
: Well aren’t you special.