winnebago-man-wide

About two decades ago, Jack Rebney filmed a Winnebago commercial that would change the world of viral video forever. In the punishing heat of an Iowa summer, Rebney’s two-week Winnebago shoot made Rebney extremely irritable, which consequently made the entire video crew miserable. In fact, the crew got so incensed with Rebney’s oppressive treatment that they made a blooper reel of the shoot, which was then unleashed upon the world. The video shows middle-aged Rebney screaming profanities and other nonsensical statements. It is, in a word, remarkable. In the years before internet video, this reel was passed around from person to person using VHS tapes, but since the advent of Youtube, the clip has been seen by over 1 million people online. I could continue describing how funny it is, but instead, here it is for your viewing pleasure [Warning: THIS VIDEO IS EXTREMELY NSFW]:

Director Ben Steinbauer’s hilarious and powerful new documentary, Winnebago Man, asks the universal question that many of us have probably wondered about: What happens to people like Aleksey Vayner and Ghyslain Raza after they became viral video sensations? Steinbauer was fascinated with Rebney’s video and became determined to track him down to find out how the video had changed his life, if at all. Along the way, he interviews people involved with the actual Winnebago shoot depicted in the video to find out exactly what happened that fateful summer that resulted in the creation of the blooper reel (the dissemination of the reel resulted in Rebney being fired). He also talks with people who have enjoyed Rebney’s video; if you’ve seen the video yourself, you know that there’s something cathartic, even therapeutic, about watching an old man completely lose his shit. In watching the film, I got the sense that there’s also something a little bit profound about sharing that experience with millions of other anonymous viewers out there in the world.

Winnebago Man contains a brief, smart analysis on the appeal of viral videos. Why are we able to laugh at a video of a woman falling off a table and injuring herself? One large reason is that these videos are context-less: We don’t know who the people involved and we don’t know what happened before or after the clip was filmed. This mystique allows us to revel in seeing others humiliated and injured. But while internet videos can be, in some ways, dehumanizing, they also allow us to entertain others through our foibles, our flubs, our almost-fatal injuries.

Steinbauer eventually locates Rebney and meets with him a few times to chat with him about the extent of his internet fame. It’s hard to explain exactly what makes Steinbauer’s film entertaining and moving without giving away spoiler-y details about these meetings, but suffice it to say, Rebney, as a personality, does not disappoint. What emerges from the film is a nuanced, funny, touching profile of a cantankerous old man, who just happens to have entertained millions with some random swearing a couple decades ago.

Steinbauer has put together an insightful documentary that does what any great documentary does: While illuminating the life and circumstances of another person, it also makes us examine ourselves a little bit more closely. In making this film, Steinbauer has gotten to the core of what makes videos like Jack Rebeney’s funny, but he also unexpectedly speaks to that part in each of us that derives fulfillment from knowing that we’ve entertained and touched the lives of others. In the end, it seems, there might be a little bit of Jack Rebney’s spirit in all of us.

I had the opportunity to speak with Ben Steinbauer after his film screened at Independent Film Festival Boston. We talked about why, out of all topics, he decided to make a film about Rebney, and what he had to go through to get it completed. You can download the interview by clicking here or listen to it in your browser below:

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David Chen can be reached at davechensemail(AT)gmail(DOT)com. You can also follow his updates on Twitter or Tumblr.

  • this is the most exciting news ever! everyone should check out the Found Footage Film festival because thats where winnebago man got his start.
  • Haha, never seen that before. I wish it was O'reilly making the commercial.
  • Justin
    "I can't make my fuckin' mind work"

    Apparently that's not a good excuse for missing an assignment, according to my english teacher.
  • The write up itself was hilarious. I was cracking up reading about it. I wouldn't have thought that the video could have been any funnier...but it was. It was like watching my grandfather sell an RV.
  • they used to show these clips, along with the angry televangelist, on the old school daily show when craig kilbourn was the host. i was always curious to know more about that guy, i think documentaries of this type are fascinating. i'm stoked. i also wish my coffee was in a 'my mind is a piece of shit this morning' coffee mug.
  • Jonatán
    Ben Steinbauer is my professor at UT, he deserves this, he's a really humble person.
  • mike
    Great film -- Ben does a fantastic job and Jack is such an intriguing character. I expect this film to do great things and hope it gets the release and promotion it deserves.
  • Wow, I was on a commercial shoot like that once. Some company owner though he and his son would be perfect in selling their concept and for 2 days we kept saying they need to practice and get comfortable in front of the camera. They keep refusing. We suggested getting an actor, they refused that too.

    Finally when it came to shoot time all they did all day was flub their lines and get more and more frustrated. After blowing a whole day and god knows how many tapes, we called it. There is a reason professionals get paid to do this.

    That was just one day. I can't imagine 2 weeks dealing with this guy.
  • Ben is the best! I took a film class of his 2 semesters ago and he totally deserves this! Way to go!
  • edc1
    next up is 'dramatic chipmunk: the untold story', or 'the internet: mostly stupid bullshit that people pretend to like' at the iff
  • timothy
    winnebago man the musical, coming to broadway
  • Bill
    Check out any radio station before Clear Channel, and you'd hear this same stuff when someone was trying to cut last minute copy from the illiterate sales weasel who dumped it in his lap at 6 PM on a Friday. I make Rebney sound like a Freshman.
  • wick
    "fter blowing a whole day and god knows how many tapes, we called it. There is a reason professionals get paid to do this. " Amen. Countless times I've told sales reps: Why do car dealers think they can do radio ads? We don't sell cars! ...blank stare...
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