Rockwriter wrote:I go into this in pretty great detail in the book, since I interviewed so many of the same people. I asked each of them in turn what they thought of the finished product of BTM, and no surprise, almost everyone was dissatisfied with the show's final edit.
Bob Garcia thought VH1 was simply trying to elicit negative reactions from everyone regarding the relationships between the band members, while ignoring that it was all of them together that made the band as good as it was. Jim Cahill thought they missed out on how good the run was at the top . . . from 1977 until 1982, how good that period was for the band, that's what he thought they missed. Derek Sutton thought the whole thing was unfair to Dennis, believe it or not, while Jim Vose thought VH1 was too nice to Dennis. Todd and Glen were both interviewed for more than an hour, then only tiny little quotes were used, and neither one felt represented. The new lineup was only barely touched on. VH1 didn't even try to talk to anyone from Wooden Nickel, didn't even try to talk to any of John Curulewski's family. I also feel that Dennis, JY and Tommy all came off badly, because VH1 took some negative things out of contect and broadcast them. The whole thing is really a bare bones storyline fleshed out by a lot of out of context footage that tells an overly simplified and overly dramatized version of the Styx story.
Having said that, hey, that's kinda what BTM is all about, isn't it? It's infotainment, not real journalism. Minus commercials you have 43 minutes to tell a story spanning more than thirty years . . . a little over a minute for each year of story. They also conducted the interviews at the worst possible time, at a time when people's recollections were colored by their anger at what was going on in deciding how to split up the business and assets of thirty years. It just didn't come off . . . but then again, it was enormously successful, and after it aired the Styx back catalog exploded in sales. So in that sense it was positive. That's TV junk journalism in a nutshell . . . .
Yes. Exactly. Yet, 7 years later, Yogi and others are still going into cardiac arrest over it. lol