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The New York Times' $3 Million Touch

fugees_stjohn_013007.jpg
SO MONEY Fugees, St. John (inset)
Yesterday's Wall Street Journal account of the film rights feeding frenzy and subsequent $3 million payday for a story by New York Times reporter Warren St. John inspired murderous envy in the hearts of journalists everywhere. The Times piece, which ran on the paper's front page earlier this month, told in heartwarming terms the tale of a Clarkston, Georgia, soccer coach and her ragamuffin team of players, all school-age refugees from places like Afghanistan and Sudan.

The story of "The Fugees," with its Kicking and Screaming-meets-God Grew Tired of Us hook—St. John is concurrently working on a book about the team—set dollar signs spinning in the eyes of Hollywood producers. Universal beat out Scott Rudin and Sony Pictures with a bid of $2 million up front and another $1 million if the movie actually goes into production. St. John, the Times, and the coach, Luma Mufleh, will split the proceeds—the precise shares have not been disclosed—with some significant chunk going to set up a fund for the refugee children.

Everybody wins, right? Well, not Shelia M. Poole, the Atlanta Journal-Constitution reporter who first wrote about Mufleh and the Fugees almost two years ago (the story isn't available online).

While Poole's April 2005 dispatch, which weighed in at 928 words compared to St. John's 6,000-word opus, hit many of the same notes that St. John picked up on—the young player who saw his own father killed in his homeland, Mufleh's yellow Volkswagen Beetle, the contracts promising good behavior that she makes the kids sign to join the team—it apparently lacked the filmic heft to interest Hollywood. That, and Scott Rudin doesn't have his assistant read the Atlanta Journal-Constitution out loud to him each morning.

Reached in Atlanta, Poole said only, "Isn't it awful?" before hanging up. Reached again several hours later, she declined to elaborate.

Photo: New York Times

Comments

Every publication -- major and otherwise -- finds a local story of national interest and builds on it as St. John did... Several authors regularly work on something but maybe only one of them -- for some reason or other -- gets the attention.

The Atlanta Journal obviously is a major paper but it took the Times piece to sell the story...

Didn't Truman Capote do exactly that in "In Cold Blood.?"

Posted by: bob cole on February 1, 2007 12:50 PM

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