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Join us for the
Found Magazine Issue 2
Launch Party on
Saturday, October 19th
at 6 pm!
FOUND IMAGES FROM
FOUND MAGAZINE





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1.
What started this affinity with found objects?
When
I was just a little shorty, my brothers and me used to go spelunking
in
my dad's basement study which was filled floor to ceiling with papers
and
junk. We were forbidden to go in there but every time my dad left
the house
for a few hours we organized a mini-expedition. Somehow we'd got
it in our
heads that he was in the CIA; we wanted proof. We never found any
CIA
stuff, but we managed to piece together lots of other pieces of
his life,
stuff he never talked about--old jobs, old girlfriends. Yeah, I
guess we
were big-time snoops, but it was fascinating to me to read through
his
battered old letters and flip through scuffed-up snapshots. So these
were
my first finds. Then when I started finding stuff on the streets
and in
alleys and on city buses, I got high off that stuff too, experiencing
all
these unknown strangers at their most raw.
2.
Describe the process you go through when selecting the right
pieces for the magazine.
Well,
I sit at a table with mounds of notes and letters that folks around
the world have found and sent in to me--I start sifting through
it and when
I find something I like, I tape it on to a page. I think I'm most
attracted
to finds that give you a real powerful sense of someone, you know,
enough
elements of a story so that your imagination kicks in and starts
filling in
the blanks. I'm always amazed how deeply you can experience someone
through
their little abandoned half-page love notes. My favorite finds are
the ones
that are funny and absurd and heartbreaking all at the same time,
the ones
with complicated emotions. They feel most true to me since most
of the time
we really do feel so many emotions all at once.
3. Now that the magazine has a large
distribution, have you received notification from folks that your
found items are there original letters, cards, pictures, etc.?
Yeah,
I kind of expected that folks like this might feel violated and
be
kinda pissed off, but their response has surprised me. The few times
this
has happened and someone's gotten in touch and said, "Hey,
that's mine!"
they've seemed to feel honored and a bit mystified. One girl said,
"I can't
believe so many people are interested in the minute details of my
love
life!"
4. Okay, here is the obligatory,
what is the oddest item that you received? Did it make you laugh
or did it cause immense fear?
A guy
in D.C. sent in a color slide he found on the street of Sam Donaldson
with his shirt off. It caused immense fear.
5.
I think found pictures are the saddest items, they just seem
more personal than a anonymous letter or destroyed birthday card.
Can you comment on some pieces that left you feeling a tad empty.
There's
so much sadness in this world, sometimes it feels overwhelming when
you're looking through all these found notes and photos, one after
another.
There's so many people who want something so badly but seem like
they're not
gonna get it, so many folks made miserable by love, so much bleak
yearning
out there. Sometimes I've started crying after reading a bunch of
notes.
It's rarely one single note that'll get me to that point, just the
compound
effect of reading 14 sad notes in a row. The ones that shred me
the worst
are love letters written either from prison or to someone in prison.
The
idea of being separated like that from the one you love makes my
soul ache.
When
I look back through my own journals I see that when I'm feeling
crazed
and heartbroken I write a dozen pages a day and when times are great
I
hardly write a word for a couple months. I think folks are most
likely to
put pen to paper when they're hurting--so that's why the lion's
share of
found stuff seems to be forged from pain.
6. You are simply put, a rock star
of the caliber of Winger and Motley Crue when it comes to finding
discarded items. What is your most impressive find?
It's
a crayon drawing of a pretty green hillside, and on the hillside
there's a gigantic cross skewering a profusely-bleeding stick figure,
and a
caption at the bottom that says in big block letters, "Yankees
in 5."
Inexplicable!
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7.
There are collectors of found items (shopping lists, family Christmas
photos) who have a private stash. Could you comment on some of the
people that you have run into in your travels.
I've
been absolutely floored by the dedication of some of these
finders--people who've been doing this since before I was born,
folks who'll
bring a boiling pot of water outside in winter to delicately extract
a note
they've discovered frozen into the sidewalk ice. The most exciting
thing
for me to see is that there are so many of us, such a huge community
of
people who get inspired and giddy over found stuff. And the hard-core
finders defy categorization--they are housewives, homeless teens,
CEOs,
farmers, professional athletes, Denny's waitresses, Navy Seals,
skate punks,
and senior citizens.
8.
A good find gives you the rare chance to look into another person's
life. Have you discovered that most folks are dealing with the same
issues (work, love, betrayal, good pumpkin pie)?
Yes.
It's always a rush for me to recognize that even folks who seem
to be
leading very different lives than me still seem to be grappling
with so many
of the same things. Reading these found notes, I end up feeling
connected
to all people. We're all sharing this same wild experience of being
human.
9. Another question about the submission
process, do you feel that some items you receive are too good to
be true and must have been forged? I am thinking of the television
show in the mid-nineties where people sent in home videos of funny
moments, but near the end of the series they all become men purposely
allowing children to toss a baseball at there groin.
The
ones that are to good to be true --are(-italics) true. See, truth
is
stranger than fiction. The couple of fakes we've gotten were easy
to spot
because they simply weren't --weird(-italics) enough. Our policy
of
drawing and quartering all hoax-sters has also been an effective
deterrent.
10. What is next for Davy Rothbart
and Found magazine?
This
Nation of Millions tour is gonna be unbelievable. I can't wait to
see
what people all around the country have been finding. Then I'm just
gonna
keep putting out Found collections every 6 to 12 months. Next year
we may
do a nice color book with some of our all-time favorite finds. And
a CD
which'll have great Found audio bits, plus some fantastic bands
playing
songs they've written based on Found notes. Meanwhile, I'm doing
some more
of my own writing, some more pieces for This American Life, working
on a rap
album, and finishing up my documentary film about a 9 year-old boy
in
South-East Washington D.C. named Emmanuel Durant, Jr. I hope to
show that
around the country next fall. All of these projects feel related
to
Found--each one's an attempt to capture people's stories.
Davy Rothbart is an all around nice
guy and the creator of Found Magazine. He is best known for his
role as the skinny kid in Curly Sue with James Belushi. He is currently
working on Found the Musical, it is very loud and from what I hear
will certainly tap into the teen/young adult market.
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