Richard Metzger

(Redirected from Infinity Factory)

Richard Metzger (born July 28, 1965) is a television host and author.[1] He was the host of the TV show Disinformation (United Kingdom Channel 4, 2000–01), The Disinformation Company and its website, Disinfo.com. He is currently the host of the online talk show Dangerous Minds.

Richard Metzger
Metzger at Cinefamily in 2011
Born (1965-07-28) July 28, 1965 (age 59)
NationalityAmerican

Career

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For several years Metzger hosted a talk show, The Infinity Factory, broadcast on Manhattan public-access television cable TV and distributed online through Pseudo.com. It was similar in tone and appeal to Art Bell and George Noory's paranormal Coast to Coast AM radio show, on which Metzger had also been a guest. Many of the interview subjects on this show would go on to be features in the Channel 4 series.

Metzger was the host of the TV show Disinformation, which aired for two seasons (2000 and 2001) on Channel 4 in the UK as part of their late night "4Later" programming block.[2][3][4]

According to interviews, Metzger was told just twelve days prior to the first specials' air-date that he would have to cut 50% of the material from the show in order to pass the USA Network's corporate lawyers' scrutiny. Those four shows have subsequently been released on a DVD with a second bonus disc presenting highlights of The DisinfoCon, a 12-hour event featuring shock rocker Marilyn Manson via pre-Skype video chat, underground filmmaker Kenneth Anger, painter Joe Coleman, Douglas Rushkoff, Mark Pesce, Grant Morrison, Robert Anton Wilson, and others.

Metzger created the "Disinformation" website in 1996,[2][5] and was able to regain control of the intellectual property rights and a $1.2 million investment by the site's original backer, cable giant TCI (now AT&T Broadband) after TCI CEO John Malone had demanded funds be cut off when news of Metzger's "anarchist bullshit" reached him.[1][6] In 1997 he co-founded The Disinformation Company, which joined with Avenue A/Razorfish, and became part of the RSUB Network until 2001.

Books

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Metzger has edited two books. Disinformation: The Interviews (2002) features unedited interviews with several of the characters and thinkers who were guests on the series such as Douglas Rushkoff, Joe Coleman, Paul Laffoley, Grant Morrison, Kembra Pfahler, Genesis P-Orridge, and Howard Bloom.[7] The Book of Lies: The Disinformation Guide to Magick and the Occult (2003) is an anthology of occult essays.[8]

According to a footnote in Disinformation: The Interviews, Metzger is the uncredited male-voice interviewing Japanese pop singer Maki Nomiya of Pizzicato 5 on their song "This Year's Girl #2" (Matador Records EP CD: "5 x 5"). Metzger has also directed and produced several music videos in the 1980s for such New York "underground" luminaries as Bongwater[9] (their animated "Power of Pussy"), John Sex and others.

References

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  1. ^ a b Lipton, Shana Ting (Jan 29, 2004). "Richard Metzger's British TV show on the bizarre branches into other media". L. A. Times. Retrieved 23 April 2011.
  2. ^ a b Strausbaugh, John (30 July 2002). Richard Metzger's Disinformation, New York Press, Retrieved December 8, 2010
  3. ^ Gibb, Eddie. The lies are out there if you want to believe them, The Herald (Glasgow), Retrieved December 8, 2010
  4. ^ Lipton, Shana Ting. Willing to do odd jobs; Richard Metzger's British TV show on the bizarre branches into other media., Los Angeles Times, Retrieved December 8, 2010 ("Metzger's stock line at the beginning of each episode: 'If you don't wonder if we made this stuff up, we're not doing our job right.'")
  5. ^ Pelline, Jeff. (13 September 1996). A digital guide to the underground, CNET Networks, Retrieved December 8, 2010
  6. ^ Farren, Mick (4 August 2004). "Los Angeles is home to the most dangerous publishers in America. Feral House and Disinformation spec". L. A. City Beat. Archived from the original on 2009-07-09. Retrieved 15 December 2020.
  7. ^ Metzger, Richard (2002). Disinformation: the interviews. The Disinformation Company. ISBN 0-9713942-1-0.
  8. ^ Richard Metzger (2008). Book of Lies: The Disinformation Guide to Magick and the Occult. The Disinformation Company. p. 352. ISBN 978-0-9713942-7-8.
  9. ^ (6 October 2008). Guestblogger: Richard Metzger, Boing Boing, Retrieved December 8, 2010
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