HBO documentaries built their reputation on access, scandal, prestige, and difficult truths. In this episode of Second Cut, we look at The Newspaperman: The Life and Times of Ben Bradlee and Bama Rush to ask what happens when a documentary is shaped by a powerful subject’s own memory, or blocked from fully accessing the story it wants to tell. We discuss HBO’s documentary history, Sheila Nevins, America Undercover, Bill Nichols’ documentary modes, Ben Bradlee, the Washington Post, JFK, Watergate, the Pentagon Papers, and All the President’s Men. Then we turn to Rachel Fleit’s Bama Rush, sorority culture at the University of Alabama, TikTok panic, class, race, sexual assault, conformity, the Machine, and why the film may be most revealing in the stories it cannot fully investigate. Subscribe for more film criticism, history, and theory-driven conversations. Follow Second Cut: YouTube: @SecondCutPod Substack: https://secondcutpod.substack.com Socials: @SecondCutPod Email: secondcutpod@gmail.com Chapters 00:00 Intro: HBO, truth, and Bama Rush TikTok 01:33 HBO Max in the UK and streaming access 02:35 HBO as cable, film studio, and documentary brand 04:07 Documentary theory and Bill Nichols’ six modes 10:36 Subjectivity, “new documentary,” and TV nonfiction 12:08 CBS Reports, PBS, Frontline, Arena, and UK documentary TV 15:26 Sheila Nevins, America Undercover, and HBO’s documentary identity 18:40 HBO’s prestige documentary machine 20:11 The Newspaperman: Ben Bradlee and All the President’s Men 23:13 “No reverence for the truth” and Bradlee’s memoir voice 26:17 Bradlee’s background, Harvard, polio, and privilege 27:35 The Navy, authority, and the foreign correspondent fantasy 30:15 JFK, friendship, journalism, and compromised access 34:46 Bradlee at the Washington Post 36:49 The major story and the editor as celebrity 40:22 The Pentagon Papers, Watergate, and Nixon 46:30 Sally Quinn, Kissinger, and Bradlee’s contradictions 47:46 Diversity, Janet Cooke, and the Post’s major mistake 50:44 Bradlee’s family life, regrets, and final years 54:06 The Newspaperman as memoir documentary 59:36 Bama Rush: shifting to sorority culture 01:00:26 Sororities from a UK perspective 01:03:07 Rachel Fleit, TikTok panic, and the access problem 01:07:14 What Bama Rush could have been 01:10:39 The four young women followed in the documentary 01:15:03 Shelby, achievement culture, and pageant polish 01:16:02 Isabella, belonging, anxiety, and self-image 01:17:20 Michaela, race, identity, and Alabama sorority history 01:22:18 Holliday, trauma, partying, and missed inquiry 01:27:09 Sorority conformity and “Kappa first” 01:28:49 Rankings, fraternities, and the male gaze 01:31:20 The Machine, Alabama politics, and what the film avoids 01:35:07 Bid Day, undercover footage, and the missing Rush story 01:36:40 Bama Rush as negative space 01:38:29 Social media footage and future documentary problems 01:39:16 Final thoughts 01:40:10 Plugs and outro Music: Awakening (Instrumental) by Wataboi https://soundcloud.com/wataboi Creative Commons — Attribution 3.0 Unported — CC BY-SA 3.0 Music promoted by FDL Music https://youtu.be/X2oQNUOmk2k