American military and hegemony take hold in formerly Buddhist Afghanistan, the Scythian "Shakya Land" where the Buddha was born that is now becoming a kind of "Skateistan" as war grinds Buddhist Bamiyan, Mes Aynak, and Kabul into dust (zeroanthropology.net/WQ). |
When it was published in 2011, investigative reporter Kim Barker had no idea how big her book “The Taliban Shuffle” would become.
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This story is based on a radio interview: Listen to the full interview.
As of December, it had sold fewer than 11,000 copies. Within a month, trailers for a film based on Barker’s book received nearly 5 million YouTube views.
Playing Barker in the movie adaptation, “Whiskey Tango Foxtrot,” is comedian Tina Fey.
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In a March 2011 review Michiko Kakutani, chief book critic at the New York Times, depicted Barker “as a sort of Tina Fey character who unexpectedly finds herself addicted to the adrenaline of war.”
What was remarkable, Kakutani wrote, was that Barker's "account of her experiences covering Afghanistan and Pakistan that manages to be hilarious and harrowing, witty and illuminating, all at the same time."
Nicholas Braun portrays Tall Brian (left); Tina Fey portrays Kim Baker in "WTF" (Frank Masi/Paramount Pictures and Broadway Video/Little Stranger Productions via AP). |
Reaction to that Tina Fey reference was swift, Barker says. “Within two weeks, Tina read the book and pushed Paramount to option the book on her behalf," she says.
Barker’s book uses gallows humor in chronicling her time reporting in Afghanistan and Pakistan for the Chicago Tribune between 2004 and 2009.
“I was simply using myself as a vehicle to tell the story of intervention in Afghanistan in the five years that I was over there,” says Barker. “It’s a memoir and I felt like I wanted to tell it in a darkly comic, absurd way."
Tina Fey made a splash as "Caribou Barbie" (Alaska Governor Sarah Palin) on SNL. |
“It’s about a reporter that has no experience covering conflict, or covering anything overseas, finding herself in Afghanistan and falling in love with covering the story there and the country. And as she’s doing so journalism is undergoing crisis, there’s war fatigue in the States and nobody really wants to hear what’s going on over there,” says Barker.
As excited as she is about the film, Barker admits she was nervous about how accurately the film would portray her story.
"It’s like in any of these things. When Hollywood gets a hold of something, they can do what they want. My biggest fear was probably 'Anchorman' in Afghanistan -- and it’s not that, which makes me very happy,” says Barker.
Statue at Bamiyan pre-2001 |
“I think they did a pretty good job keeping it as authentic as Hollywood has ever kept a movie about Afghanistan, for sure,” says Barker.
Bamiyan statues after CIA/Taliban came in |
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