Finding the Money (2023) Poster

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6/10
Stop writing documentaries like they're movies
xenotype6 May 2024
It's an important, fascinating, and possibly revolutionary subject, but a maddeningly weak documentary.

Stop filming interviewees looking into camera. Stop writing documentary scripts with a pseudo-three-act, semi-thriller structure, and a catharsis at the end. Your audience is not supposed to feel uplifted by the finale, thinking they are now part of this wonderful movement to make the world a better place because they've sat on their behinds for an hour and a half, watching your documentary.

Your audience is supposed to feel intrigued, frustrated and furious! So they actually do something about the subject you want to make them care about!

It's the same cliche that permeates modern American documentary film making. First we spend an hour and twenty minutes talking about how things are messed up, only to be shown in the last 10 minutes that there is this huge and amazing movement of like-minded people doing their utmost to change things! The effect is that 9 out of 10 people who've watched such a documentary, are going to think: "Oh, dear. How terrible the world is. But I can sleep soundly knowing that somebody's already trying to fix it."

Spend less time on personal drama of the people featured in your documentary. Stop championing them as heroes, they don't need it to support their conviction. The strength of their conviction is what made you do the documentary in the first place! Unless it's the people that your documentary is about, which is not the case here, otherwise it would've had a different title. Instead, spend your 90 minutes of air time on giving us as much information as possible, and as clearly as possible. We don't need people staring us in the eye and enunciating every syllable of a five-word sentence taking 20 seconds to say it. Stop treating your audience like they're children! You expect us to understand complex matters in the world of global finance, and yet you sit us in front of people lecturing us like we're nine-year-olds in elementary school? Give us good narration writing. The documentary filmmaker is supposed to understand the subject matter well-enough to provide clear and engaging narration. The interviewees are there only to substantiate the narration! If you don't know what I'm talking about, watch some Adam Curtis.
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10/10
Completely changed my understanding (BA-Econ & MBA)
charlesrwhiteman25 November 2023
I consider(ed) myself to be a very knowledgeable about macro economics. This movie completely altered my understanding. I highly recommend. Taxation and government spending is obviously a subject that sparks a lot of political and ideological debate, but the film-maker exposes the hipocracy and misunderstanding that politicians of all ideologies share. I wish the movie was available by streaming it directly online. I would pay to see it again. I'd even give it away to friends for Christmas if it were possible to do so. Please try to increase the distribution of this really important information.
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10/10
The Power to Transform
unended11 May 2024
Finding the Money has the potential to completely upend the way you understand not only the economy but society as a whole. Few films, documentary or otherwise, can lay claim to that kind of impact upon the viewer. When the material presented is understood, suddenly everybody talking about govt policy-especially but not limited to fiscal policies like taxing and spending-starts to sound crazy. It's because they don't know what you now know. Or in some cases are pretending not to know it.

The myths that are propagated about the monetary system and the constraints it operates under are not accidents, but redound to the benefit of a power structure-a ruling class-that prefers the highly inegalitarian status quo. Economic inequality is not just an outcome of their preferred fiscal policies, but the very source of their political power. Understanding the power of fiat currency-and that money is not property belonging to individuals but a public utility-is essential to restoring egalitarianism and reclaiming democratic governance.
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1/10
Socialists & Climate agenda fanatics pretending to be Economists
evgeny-zislis12 May 2024
Stephanie Kelton and friends are presenting their radical Modern-Monetary-Theory (MMT) idea as the panacea to all of humanity problems. The main concept of MMT is that government can spend on whatever it feels like. At the end of the day, it is the bureaucrats in the government who get to decide where every citizen's toil and sweat should be channeled into. Should the government decide that Bill Gates needs to get all of your money, and he shouldn't have any competitors, they are wholly free to do so, and they are doing it. There is apparently no constraint or anything that can stop the government from choosing what is best for YOU.

The only thing that is supposedly "easy to calculate" and can stop the rampant spending by government is the risk of inflation. Kelton doesn't even try to explain what Inflation is, or how it is created, she just mentioned that it is important and easy to math out. So the government creating dollars and spending them into the economy in the trillions has nothing to do with inflation. As long as there are enough poor people who can use these dollars to spend like drunken sailors and keep the economy out of a depression.

If you ever had any interest in economy, and you read some significant books by influential economists in history, you might want to call 911 because this "documentary" is going to give you a heart attack.

The bureaucrats in the USSR would be really envious to have some of this MMT drug to explain away their perfect economic system.
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1/10
Boring redundant hyperbole
fdsafdsafd13 May 2024
Stephanie Kelton is a fool and a fraud. Once again Netflix produces a lemon

"Finding the Money" promises a revolutionary understanding of economics,

but instead delivers a one-sided infomercial for a controversial theory. The documentary relies on charisma, not critical analysis, to peddle Modern Monetary Theory (MMT) as the answer to all our financial woes.

Step Right Up, Folks, It's Snake Oil Economics!

The film hinges on Professor Stephanie Kelton's enthusiastic lectures. Kelton comes across as passionate, but passion doesn't equal peer-reviewed fact. MMT's core tenet - that governments can simply print money without consequence - is a recipe for economic disaster in the hands of most. The documentary ignores historical examples of hyperinflation caused by reckless money printing.

Where's the Beef? (Besides Kelton)

MMT is presented as a complete economic theory, but dissenting voices are scarce. The film cherry-picks interviews with a small group of MMT proponents, creating an echo chamber effect. Where's the debate? Where are the mainstream economists who find MMT wanting?

Pretty Pictures Don't Pay the Bills

The documentary uses flashy graphics to illustrate complex economic concepts. Unfortunately, these visuals can't mask the film's lack of depth. Serious discussions about inflation, interest rates, and currency valuation are left unexplored.

Finding the Money? More Like Losing Your Time

"Finding the Money" might appeal to those seeking a quick economic fix, but for anyone looking for a balanced and nuanced understanding of our financial system, this documentary is a waste of time. Skip the propaganda and head to your local library for some real economic education.
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