Meet the strange attractors behind Dangerous Minds
When Dangerous Minds does dig for a bone, moreover, it digs deeper than the others. For instance, one day Metzger was spelunking through the 'net for La Dolce Gilda, a black-and-white short film he remembered seeing on Saturday Night Live in the late 1970s. "I couldn't believe no one had put it on YouTube," he says. "I discovered that the director had also done a feature film that was never released to home video. It starred Bill Murray. So I found it on an underground torrent tracker. Dubbed in German."
Mere days after that 2014 Dangerous Minds scoop, complete with a link to the full lost Bill Murray movie Nothing Lasts Forever, articles on the film popped up in the Chicago Tribune, Yahoo!, and Slate. It was front-page news for Britain's The Telegraph newspaper. For Dangerous Minds, it was just one of 13 articles posted that day, among them "Make Your Own Marcel Duchamp Chess Set with a 3-D Printer"; "Scenes from Marc Bolan's Funeral"; and "Freaky Armadillo Purse."
"Richard is an anthropologist of high weirdness," says David Pescovitz, a partner and editor at the popular blog Boing Boing, which is like an older, cyber-oriented brother to Dangerous Minds. "He doesn't judge. He doesn't exploit. His fascination and obsession is infectious."
"Weird, Inc." by Laurie Pike (Cincinnati Magazine)