8 votes and 0 Reviews

Rotten Tomatoes® Score 93%

77%

In Theaters: April 26, 2017 (limited)

          May 5, 2017 (limited)

        


          May 12, 2017 (limited)

1h 33m | Documentary

  Watch Trailer

OBIT takes a behind-the-scenes look at the New York Times obituary team. The daily job of veteran journalists such as Bruce Weber, Margalit Fox and William Grime is to take a look at the lives of people who’ve just died, make a case for their impact and newsworthiness, and do them justice in 500 words – all in the seven hours before deadline. It also gives us a look at newspaper practices of an almost bygone era. Google often doesn’t have information on minor events that took place fifty years earlier. So the obit writers use the old-school archives of musty clipping files and photos that only the most veteran reporters at most papers remember using.

Director: Vanessa Gould

Studio:

Producer(s): Caitlin Mae Burke, Vanessa Gould

Official Site: obitdoc.com

8 votes and 0 Reviews

Rotten Tomatoes® Score 93%

77%

In Theaters: April 26, 2017 (limited)

          May 5, 2017 (limited)

        


          May 12, 2017 (limited)

1h 33m | Documentary

  Watch Trailer

OBIT takes a behind-the-scenes look at the New York Times obituary team. The daily job of veteran journalists such as Bruce Weber, Margalit Fox and William Grime is to take a look at the lives of people who’ve just died, make a case for their impact and newsworthiness, and do them justice in 500 words – all in the seven hours before deadline. It also gives us a look at newspaper practices of an almost bygone era. Google often doesn’t have information on minor events that took place fifty years earlier. So the obit writers use the old-school archives of musty clipping files and photos that only the most veteran reporters at most papers remember using.

Rotten Tomatoes® Score 93%

77%

In Theaters: April 26, 2017 (limited)

          May 5, 2017 (limited)

        



          May 12, 2017 (limited)

1h 33m | Documentary

OBIT takes a behind-the-scenes look at the New York Times obituary team. The daily job of veteran journalists such as Bruce Weber, Margalit Fox and William Grime is to take a look at the lives of people who’ve just died, make a case for their impact and newsworthiness, and do them justice in 500 words – all in the seven hours before deadline.

It also gives us a look at newspaper practices of an almost bygone era. Google often doesn’t have information on minor events that took place fifty years earlier. So the obit writers use the old-school archives of musty clipping files and photos that only the most veteran reporters at most papers remember using.