Bryan Young
began producing political documentaries with 2005's award-winning, critically acclaimed This Divided State which documented the furor over free speech in a small conservative community in Utah in the weeks leading to a speaking engagement by filmmaker Michael Moore. The New York Times called This Divided State "filmmaking gold." He's co-written and co-directed (with Elias Pate) a documentary film about guerrilla marketing during the 2004 Sundance film festival, two feature length films and they also co-script a comic book. His latest film, which he wrote and produced, Killer at Large, a dissection of the American obesity epidemic, is available on DVD nationwide He blogs daily about politics at the official blog for This Divided State and about film and comic books at Big Shiny Robot!

Blog Entries by Bryan Young

Look at the Birdie: A Review of Kurt Vonnegut's New Book

Posted October 2, 2009 | 02:37 PM (EST)


Later this month Delacorte Press is publishing a brand new collection of unpublished short stories by the late, great Kurt Vonnegut, Jr. Look at the Birdie collects 14 short stories that were written during Vonnegut's early days and have been dusted off since his tragic and untimely death in...

Read Post

DC Vertigo Writer Joshua Dysart Talks Politics, Comics, and The Unknown Soldier

1 Comments | Posted September 4, 2009 | 11:58 AM (EST)


For those who don't know, The Unknown Soldier was a comic book based war hero from the late '60s. War comics were popular and through the '60s and '70s, and The Unknown Soldier, a bandaged and scarred master of disguises, bedeviled the Nazi's during World War II for close...

Read Post

Is Obama Selling Us Down the River to Big Pharma?

70 Comments | Posted August 8, 2009 | 05:22 PM (EST)


I've been on pins and needles watching the health care debate rage on. On the television, the radio, the newspapers, the Internet. Everywhere.

I can't help it. It's the most important issue we're facing today and when things go wrong I can get pretty angry.

You can imagine...

Read Post

We Need a Fairness Doctrine for Health Care Lobbying

14 Comments | Posted July 7, 2009 | 01:24 PM (EST)


I'm in the camp of people who believes that health care is the single most important issue before Congress at the moment. Sure, the economy is in bad shape, but if people weren't having their homes foreclosed on them because they're swimming in medical bills the economy would be in...

Read Post

Want the Public Option as Much as I Do? Then Get Mad

15 Comments | Posted June 27, 2009 | 02:32 PM (EST)


I've been following the debate about health care reform with bated breath, just like the rest of you. This is perhaps the most important issue being negotiated in our country right now, both in the Congress and the media.

Like most of you, I'm frustrated that the reform being...

Read Post

Looking Back at the Original Star Trek Motion Pictures

2 Comments | Posted May 28, 2009 | 12:23 PM (EST)


"You know what six movies average out to be really good? The first six Star Trek movies!" --Phillip J. Fry,

Ever since the release of the most recent Star Trek motion picture a couple of weeks ago, the original adventures of the crew of the USS Enterprise have been...

Read Post

Gov. Huntsman (R-UT) Goes to China

6 Comments | Posted May 17, 2009 | 04:28 PM (EST)


By now, everyone knows that the early word is that Utah Governor Jon Huntsman has been tapped by the Obama administration to be the ambassador to China.

I know it might seem counter-intuitive for Obama to be picking a Republican from one of the reddest states in the nation...

Read Post

God Bless You, Mr. Vonnegut

Posted April 11, 2009 | 02:32 PM (EST)


It was two years ago today that Kurt Vonnegut, Jr. passed away. It doesn't seem all that long ago, really, and looking back on what I had written when I found out, I still feel much the same way.

I wish he could have seen how far the world...

Read Post

Gettysburg Distress! Spider-Man and Captain America Team-Up for Abe Lincoln's 200th!

Posted February 17, 2009 | 04:07 PM (EST)


In order to celebrate the 200th anniversary of Abraham Lincoln's birth, Marvel comics had planned events to cover all of President's Day weekend.

Starting midday Wednesday, Marvel made the entire Spider-Man/Obama Inaugural Special available online for free at this location. Not only will all 6 pages of...

Read Post

Nuclear Pork, the Stimulus Bill and Why You Need to Call Your Congressperson

Posted February 10, 2009 | 09:30 PM (EST)


With the passage of the Stimulus bill in the Senate, both houses of Congress will work to reconcile the bill. Hopefully, they'll work to take out the most egregious examples of lunacy in the bill.

Hopefully they can bring the tax cuts down and increase the spending.

But in...

Read Post

Early Look: Spider-Man Meets Obama

Posted January 8, 2009 | 02:32 PM (EST)


In order to commemorate the inauguration of Barack Obama, President-elect and admitted Spider-Man collector, as 44th President of the United States, Marvel Comics just had to have Spider-Man meet the new President.

"When we heard that President-Elect Obama is a collector of Spider-Man comics, we knew that these two historic...

Read Post

Exclusive: MAD Magazine's Dumbest Person of 2008

Posted December 8, 2008 | 03:39 PM (EST)


As promised in my revelation last week, the usual gang of idiots over at MAD Magazine have allowed me to exclusively unveil to Huffington Post readers (and the world) who the dumbest person of 2008 is. And for the magazine that employs someone as preposterously stupid as Alfred E....

Read Post

An Exclusive Look at MAD Magazine's Worst of 2008 List

Posted December 3, 2008 | 12:45 PM (EST)


In an effort to appeal to a crowd other than the snot-nosed, obnoxious thirteen year old market, the usual gang of idiots at MAD Magazine have been on the nose this election season with biting political commentary. (You can see the previous Huffington Post exclusives of that commentary here...

Read Post

Batman R.I.P.? I Doubt it.

Posted November 30, 2008 | 09:23 PM (EST)


I'm sure you've all been reading the reports of Batman's death. Much like the death's of Superman (in 1992) and Captain America's death (in 2007, which I wrote about at the time) the media always seems to pay attention to the world of comic books when something major...

Read Post

Come See a Killer at Large in New York

Posted November 14, 2008 | 10:49 AM (EST)


I've spent the last couple of years working on a documentary about the American obesity epidemic and it's finally time to pull the sheet off of the sculpture, as it were.

We're having our premiere next week in New York and I wanted to invite the readers of the Huffington...

Read Post

Why I'm Still an Undecided Voter

Posted November 3, 2008 | 04:55 PM (EST)


No, I'm not a moron.

And no, I've never had any suicidal inclinations to vote for John McCain and Sarah Palin.

I'm still straddling the Obama/Nader fence. And I know what a lot of you are suddenly thinking. I get an earful of it (or at least an inbox full...

Read Post

Obama's Missed Opportunity on Health Care at the Debate

Posted October 7, 2008 | 11:05 PM (EST)


At the debate tonight a woman in the audience asked Obama: "Should health care be treated as a commodity?"

The moral, ethical, and American answer is, "No."

Obama's answer? A laundry list of what his plan will do, but no answering of the question. His plan was laden with health...

Read Post

A Few Movies to Remember Paul Newman By

Posted September 27, 2008 | 11:49 AM (EST)


Paul Newman acted in some of my favorite movies, both new and old, and he acted at an ability some only ever dream of. From Cool Hand Luke to Road to Perdition and Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid to The Hudsucker Proxy, Newman made the movie theatre a better...

Read Post

Review: Jonathan Ames' The Alcoholic (Plus a Huffington Post Exclusive Look at Monica Lewinsky's Cameo)

Posted September 22, 2008 | 11:19 AM (EST)


Set for release on September 30th from the Vertigo imprint of DC Comics, The Alcoholic chronicles Jonathan Ames' semi-autobiographical descent into writing and alcoholism with a backdrop of his family life, relationships and various misadventures.

Illustrated by Dean Haspiel (who illustrated Michael Chabon's Escapist), The Alcoholic is alternately poignant...

Read Post

Exclusive: MAD Magazine's Election Coverage, Sarah Palin Edition

Posted September 3, 2008 | 06:30 PM (EST)


The usual gang of idiots over at MAD Magazine have once again offered Huffington Post readers the first look at some of their political coverage from the issue that hits stands October 14th.

Last month they gave us a look at movie posters featuring Obama and McCain, but...

Read Post