Hubbry Logo
Mike DaiseyMike DaiseyMain
Open search
Mike Daisey
Community hub
Mike Daisey
logo
8 pages, 0 posts
0 subscribers
Be the first to start a discussion here.
Be the first to start a discussion here.
Mike Daisey
Mike Daisey
from Wikipedia

Mike Daisey (born January 21, 1976[1]) is an American monologist, author, and actor. His monologue The Agony and the Ecstasy of Steve Jobs, about the labor conditions under which Apple devices are made, was used as the basis for a widely shared episode of the radio program This American Life, but the episode was later retracted for its factual inaccuracy after it was discovered that Daisey had lied about his experiences.

Key Information

Career

[edit]

Early monologues

[edit]

Daisey's early work includes Wasting Your Breath (1997), a monologue of the Great American Roadtrip, and I Miss the Cold War (1998), about Daisey's visit to post-Communist Warsaw and Cold War themes.

His 2001 monologue 21 Dog Years[2] was Daisey's break.[3] In 2002, Daisey published a book version of the tale under the same title,[4] and in 2004 the BBC aired his radio adaptation of his monologue on Radio 4.[5]

Daisey performed several non-traditional monologues during the 2000s. For All Stories Are Fiction (2004), Daisey made no notes of any kind until one hour before the performance, and then created a show extemporaneously onstage.[6] Similarly, in Mysteries of the Unexplained (2009), he performed a series of one-night-only performances, about Facebook,[7] bacon,[8] and the Boardwalk.[9] Daisey presented his 24-hour monologue All the Hours in the Day (2011) at Portland's TBA Festival in September 2011,[10] emphasizing themes of loss, transformation, and the desire for authenticity.

Invincible Summer

[edit]

Invincible Summer (2007) is about the history of the New York City transit system, loss, and democracy in modern-day America.[11]

The April 19, 2007 performance of Invincible Summer at the American Repertory Theater in Cambridge, Massachusetts, was disrupted when over 80 audience members from Norco High School in Norco, California, left the production mid-performance, after teachers and chaperones decided that they had heard too many obscenities. One parent approached the stage and poured water over Daisey's outline notes;[12][13] Daisey said that the destroyed papers were the original copy of the show's outline. He described the effect of the walk-out as "shocking".[12] Daisey later sought out and spoke with representatives of the group, including the member who destroyed his notes.[14][15]

The Agony and the Ecstasy of Steve Jobs

[edit]

The Agony and the Ecstasy of Steve Jobs (2010) examines globalization by exploring the exploitation of Chinese workers through the lens of what Daisey describes as "the rise and fall and rise of Apple, industrial design, and the human price we are willing to pay for our technology, woven together in a complex narrative."[16]

In January 2012, portions of the theatrical monologue were aired on the radio program This American Life.[17] The episode, titled "Mr. Daisey and the Apple Factory" quickly became the most downloaded episode in the show's history, with 888,000 downloads after two months.[18] Two months later, This American Life officially retracted the episode, having discovered that some of the personal experiences described by Daisey in his monologue had been exaggerated or fabricated.[18] A follow-up episode, entitled "Retraction", stood by the veracity of the claims Daisey had made about working conditions at Foxconn, but claimed Daisey had dramatized many of the personal details of his own experiences visiting China in his monologue. Daisey was accused of exaggerating the number of plants, people, and underaged workers he talked to, of claiming that the plant guards had guns, and of describing a worker with a crippled hand using an iPad for the first time as a Foxconn employee. This American Life also accused Daisey of purposely misleading them by trying to prevent them from contacting the translator he used in order to fact check his story. In an interview with host Ira Glass, Daisey admitted to giving the producers of This American Life a false name for the translator and also admitted that he lied about her contact information being changed. Daisey apologized to This American Life for allowing them to use his theatrical monologue in the "Retraction" program,[19] and made a full apology in a statement on his website.[20]

Since the controversy, Daisey has reformed his work and has continued to perform it, removing the five minutes of contested details and standing by his assertions that the conditions in Apple's supply chain violate China's own labor laws and remain inhumane.[21] He has performed this new version in six cities, including a run at Washington, D.C.'s Woolly Mammoth Theater, where Apple's co-founder Steve Wozniak joined the show for a post-performance discussion on August 4, 2012.[22]

In 2013, solo theatre artist Jade Esteban Estrada embarked on a five-city tour of the show.[23] "Jade Esteban Estrada knows how to draw an audience in and hold them in the palm of his hand," wrote Deborah Martin of the San Antonio Express-News. He puts that skill to fine use in The Agony and the Ecstasy of Steve Jobs, a solo show written by Mike Daisey exploring the cult of tech giant Apple.[24]

Daisey offers a complete, royalty-free transcript of The Agony, which has been downloaded over 130,000 times. The work has had more than 40 productions, and it has been translated into six languages.[25]

Post-controversy monologues

[edit]

Performed at Spoleto Festival USA, ArtsEmerson, the Cape Cod Theatre Project, and Woolly Mammoth Theater, The Orient Express (Or, the Value of Failure) (2012) is Daisey's story of the aftermath of his media scandal, and a trip he took to recreate the Orient Express, traveling from Paris to Istanbul.[26]

American Utopias (2012) is Daisey's monologue about the way that physical spaces influence people's shared goals, using modern American utopian models including Disney World, the Burning Man Festival, and Zuccotti Park and the birth of the Occupy movement.

"Fucking Fucking Fucking Ayn Rand" (2013) tackles Ayn Rand, the author of The Fountainhead and Atlas Shrugged and the creator of the Objectivist movement. The SunBreak described Daisey's performance as being "not as viscerally worked up as he has been elsewhere".[27]

Theatre and film

[edit]

Daisey's first play[clarification needed] The Moon Is a Dead World premiered at the Annex Theatre in Seattle, Washington on October 17, 2008.[28] It was previously developed at Soho Rep as a part of their 2008–2009 Writer/Director Lab Readings in a workshop directed by Maria Goyanes.[29]

Layover, Daisey's first film, was screened at the 2010 Cannes Film Festival.[30] He also stars in the feature film Horrible Child[31] with T. Ryder Smith, in an adaptation of Lawrence Krauser's play.[32]

Themes

[edit]

Jason Zinoman of the New York Times describes Daisey as having "a preoccupation with alternative histories, secrets large and small, and the fuzzy line where truth and fiction blur."[33]

Zinoman further expands on a common theme in which Daisey experiences "a mania in which he loses himself", in 21 Dog Years and Invincible Summer.[33]

Theater itself appears in Daisey's work, in both The Ugly American (2003), about Daisey's life as a 19-year-old drama student in London,[34] and How Theater Failed America (2008), a monologue critical of how modern theater has lost sight of its original mission.[35]

Critical analysis of powerful men and institutions often feature in his work. Monopoly! (2005) is critical of capitalism and details the rivalry between Edison and Tesla,[36] while Great Men of Genius (2006) profiled Bertolt Brecht, showman P.T. Barnum, scientist Nikola Tesla and Scientology founder L. Ron Hubbard.[37] If You See Something Say Something (2008), critical of the Department of Homeland Security, compares it to the days of tense alert during the Cold War.[38]

Reception

[edit]

Jason Zinoman said about Daisey's work in the New York Times: "The master storyteller...one of the finest solo performers of his generation. What distinguishes him from most solo performers is how elegantly he blends personal stories, historical digressions and philosophical ruminations. He has the curiosity of a highly literate dilettante and a preoccupation with alternative histories, secrets large and small, and the fuzzy line where truth and fiction blur. Mr. Daisey's greatest subject is himself."[33] Louise Kennedy described his monologues in the Boston Globe as "Sharp-witted, passionately delivered talk about matters both small and huge, at once utterly individual and achingly universal."[39] Heidi Weiss in the Chicago Sun-Times has said, "Enthralling...why be a journalist when you can spin stories like these?"[40]

While remaining optimistic about Daisey's ability to recover from the Agony scandal, Jason Zinoman, writing at Salon.com, criticized Daisey's ethics and his "defiant" insistence that the invented material was "dramatic license" rather than a lie.[41]

Personal life

[edit]

Mike Daisey was born in Fort Kent, Maine, and moved to the greater Bangor area in his childhood. He grew up between Fort Kent and Madawaska, his family moving to Etna when he was twelve.[42]

He graduated from Nokomis Regional High School,[43] and attended Colby College in Waterville, Maine.

Works

[edit]

Monologues

[edit]
  • 1997 Wasting Your Breath
  • 1998 I Miss the Cold War
  • 2001 21 Dog Years
  • 2003 The Ugly American
  • 2004 All Stories Are Fiction
  • 2005 Monopoly!
  • 2006 Great Men of Genius
  • 2007 Tongues Will Wag
  • 2007 Invincible Summer
  • 2008 How Theater Failed America
  • 2008 If You See Something Say Something
  • 2009 Mysteries of the Unexplained
  • 2009 The Last Cargo Cult
  • 2010 Barring the Unforeseen
  • 2010 The Agony and the Ecstasy of Steve Jobs
  • 2011 All the Hours in the Day
  • 2012 The Orient Express (Or, the Value of Failure)
  • 2012 American Utopias
  • 2012 Where Water Meets With Water
  • 2013 Fucking Fucking Fucking Ayn Rand
  • 2013 Journalism
  • 2013 All the Faces of the Moon
  • 2014 The Story of the Gun
  • 2014 Dreaming of Rob Ford
  • 2014 Yes This Man
  • 2014 The Great Tragedies
  • 2016 The Trump Card
  • 2018 A People's History[44]
  • 2020 Bad Faith

Plays

[edit]
  • 2008 The Moon Is a Dead World

Books

[edit]
  • Mike Daisey. 21 Dog Years. ISBN 0-7432-2580-5.

Films

[edit]
  • 2010 Layover

References

[edit]
[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Mike Daisey (born January 21, 1976) is an American monologist, , and recognized for his solo theater works that fuse autobiographical elements with examinations of corporate practices and technological impacts. His performances, often delivered without scripts in a storytelling style, have addressed topics ranging from employment at Amazon.com in 21 Dog Years: Doing Time @ Amazon.com to critiques of the U.S. theater industry in How Theater Failed America. Daisey garnered awards including the Obie, Drama Desk, Outer Critics Circle, and Lucille Lortel for Humor Abuse, establishing him as a prominent figure in contemporary . The monologue The Agony and the Ecstasy of , which detailed alleged labor abuses at facilities producing Apple products, achieved significant popularity but sparked controversy when portions were found to be invented, including claims of interviewing workers blinded by exposure and detained union organizers; Daisey conceded inaccuracies during fact-checking, leading to fully retract its broadcast of excerpts as misleadingly presented as factual reporting rather than theatrical narrative. Despite the fallout, Daisey maintained that such embellishments served the artistic truth of the broader labor issues, continuing to tour revised versions and other monologues exploring themes of power and resistance.

Early Life and Influences

Childhood and Formative Experiences

Mike Daisey was born in and raised in rural northern along the border with , an area characterized by its wild, impoverished conditions. His family's tradition of voracious provided an early immersion in oral , instilling a foundational appreciation for unscripted, personal recounting of experiences. During high school, Daisey engaged deeply in speech and debate activities, specializing in foreign , where participants mentally compose and deliver policy analyses without prepared texts. This practice cultivated his ability to structure compelling arguments on the fly, a skill he later adapted to monologue . Influences from radio and performance figures such as , , and further expanded his understanding of storytelling's potential in live, audience-directed formats, alongside inspirations from southern preachers and guided city tours emphasizing spontaneous delivery. The isolation and economic hardship of his northern upbringing reinforced a reliance on communal tales and individual resilience, elements that echoed in his eventual turn toward theater as a medium for exploring human stories and societal critiques. These experiences laid the groundwork for his rejection of scripted dialogue in favor of outline-based, improvisational monologues, which he began developing after college in Seattle's experimental theater scene around 1996.

Entry into Theater and Initial Performances

Mike Daisey began his theater career as a in 1997, following studies in that included time as a student in around age 19. His debut , Wasting Your Breath, premiered that year and chronicled a Great American Roadtrip through a mix of comedic and confessional elements, performed without a fixed script but guided by outlines. This solo format, emphasizing and , marked his initial foray into theater, distinguishing it from traditional ensemble plays. In 1998, Daisey followed with I Miss the , another early that built on his emerging style of blending with broader cultural critique, staged in intimate settings to cultivate direct audience engagement. These initial works received limited but positive attention in alternative theater circles, establishing Daisey as an innovator in one-person storytelling rather than conventional roles. By focusing on , table-bound outlines during performances, he prioritized raw delivery over memorized lines, a technique that defined his entry phase. Daisey's breakthrough came in February 2001 with 21 Dog Years: Doing Time @ Amazon.com, a recounting his experiences as an early employee at the online retailer amid the dot-com boom's excesses. Premiering to critical acclaim, it expanded his reach beyond fringe venues, highlighting corporate absurdities through firsthand anecdotes and , and later adapted into a 2002 that sold modestly but amplified his reputation. These formative performances, totaling fewer than a dozen by 2001, laid the groundwork for Daisey's signature approach: extended solo pieces interrogating power structures via exaggerated personal testimony, often in regional theaters like those in and New York.

Major Works and Career Milestones

Pre-2010 Monologues and Breakthroughs

Mike Daisey's initial foray into came with Wasting Your Breath in 1997, premiered by Open Circle Theater in , which recounted a cross-country amid a deteriorating relationship, incorporating visits to sites like a and Marilyn Monroe's grave. The work drew praise from Seattle Weekly for its "honest, smart, and daring" approach to shocking personal revelations. This was followed in 1998 by I Miss the , staged by 24/7 Productions in , blending Daisey's travels to with interviews of veterans to examine lingering Cold War absurdities, earning acclaim from Seattle Weekly for its theatrical charm in distilling historical enormity. Daisey's breakthrough arrived in 2001 with 21 Dog Years: Doing Time @ Amazon.com, premiered at Seattle's Backroom, which satirized his stint as a and operative at the online retailer during the dot-com boom, highlighting corporate greed, cubicle drudgery, and CEO Jeff Bezos's through fictionalized letters to Bezos. The transferred Off-Broadway to , appeared at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival, and inspired a 2002 book adaptation, receiving widespread critical notice including a New York Times description as "absolutely hilarious" for its skewering of tech-industry excess. This success marked Daisey's emergence as a prominent monologist, with productions in venues like and Festival, establishing his style of seated, table-bound narration merging memoir and critique. Subsequent pre-2010 works built on this foundation, including (workshopped pre-2005, full productions at Festival and ACT Theatre), a recounting of Daisey's youthful theater misadventures in involving a postmodern troupe and encounters with sex workers, lauded by San Francisco Weekly as eloquent storytelling by a "master raconteur." Monopoly! premiered in 2005 at the Spoleto Festival, dissecting through rivalries like Tesla versus Edison, Microsoft's antitrust battles, and Wal-Mart's dominance, deemed "relentlessly interesting" by the for its historical narrative depth. Invincible Summer followed in 2006 at the , weaving Daisey's pre-9/11 New York experiences with the city's subway evolution and post-attack shifts, praised by the for elegantly fusing personal and epochal elements. Later entries included Great Men of Genius (pre-2010 productions at Public Theater and Berkeley Repertory), a series of biographical vignettes on figures like Bertolt Brecht, P.T. Barnum, Nikola Tesla, and L. Ron Hubbard, exploring themes of innovation and megalomania, described by the San Jose Mercury News as "big-time brain candy" for its ambitious scope. How Theater Failed America, debuting Off-Broadway at Barrow Street Theatre on May 16, 2008, indicted institutional theater's corporate capture and artist exploitation, directed by Jean-Michele Gregory and noted by Variety for its incisive industry critique. These pieces solidified Daisey's reputation for provocative, research-infused solos that interrogated power structures, though his narrative blend of verified events and dramatic embellishment foreshadowed later scrutiny.

The Agony and the Ecstasy of Steve Jobs

The Agony and the Ecstasy of Steve Jobs is a solo theatrical monologue written and performed by Mike Daisey, directed by Jean-Michele Gregory, that contrasts Daisey's enthusiasm for Apple Inc.'s innovations and founder with reports of labor abuses at , Apple's main contract manufacturer in . The piece premiered during the summer of 2010 at the Woolly Mammoth Theatre Company in , where it originated as a work-in-progress drawing from Daisey's recent experiences. Daisey structures the narrative around his lifelong affinity for Apple technology, including learning to write on an early Macintosh computer, and a biographical sketch of Jobs' career from countercultural roots to corporate leadership. This "ecstasy" is juxtaposed with Daisey's self-described 2010 visit to , , where he hired local interpreters to speak with dozens of workers outside factory gates about conditions including chemical exposure, long hours, and age restrictions. In the , Daisey recounts encounters with workers allegedly suffering permanent nerve damage from unventilated use of n-hexane—a for cleaning device screens—along with claims of employees as young as 12 or 13 operating machinery and facing repercussions for union activities. The work employs Daisey's signature style of direct address, props like an to demonstrate processes, and rhetorical escalation to underscore complicity in global supply chains, arguing that the pursuit of seamless exacts a hidden human toll. It questions the moral distance between end-users in affluent markets and exploited labor in hubs, framing Jobs as both visionary and enabler of systemic disregard for worker welfare. After its D.C. debut, the production toured venues including the in in January 2011 and returned to in 2011 and 2012. It achieved wider prominence with an run at in , starting previews on October 11, 2011—just days after Jobs' death on October 5—and officially opening on October 17, 2011, before extending through early 2012 due to strong ticket demand. The timing amplified interest, positioning the monologue as a timely reflection on Jobs' legacy amid revelations of supply-chain scrutiny. Subsequent iterations and adaptations, including a premiere in March 2012 featuring Lance Baker in Daisey's role, sustained its run across U.S. theaters.

Post-2012 Productions and Diversifications

Following the retraction of elements from The Agony and the Ecstasy of Steve Jobs by This American Life in March 2012, Daisey revised his approach to emphasize transparency in blending personal narrative with reported experiences, while continuing to produce monologues critiquing American society and culture. In late 2012, Daisey premiered American Utopias at the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago, with subsequent performances in 2013 at venues including Woolly Mammoth Theatre in Washington, D.C., and the Public Theater in New York; the work interweaves observations from Disney World, the Burning Man festival, and Occupy Wall Street to probe constructed ideals of community and perfection. Daisey's 2013 project All the Faces of the Moon consisted of 29 distinct monologues performed nightly over a month at , totaling approximately 40 hours and structured as an evolving "theatrical novel" addressing themes of loss, memory, and human connection through fragmented personal and historical vignettes. Subsequent works included The Trump Card in 2016, a solo performance dissecting Donald Trump's rise and its implications for political discourse, staged at . In 2019, Daisey undertook an expansive 18-part series spanning 32 hours at , focusing on pivotal failures in American history from onward. During the , Daisey debuted What the F**k Just Happened? in 2021 at the Kraine Theater in New York, limited to small vaccinated audiences and streamed online, recounting the disorientation of the preceding year through introspective storytelling. Beyond live performances, Daisey diversified into audio media with the All Stories Are Fiction, launched around 2013 and featuring adapted excerpts from his monologues, distributed via platforms like and to reach broader audiences with serialized narrative content. This shift allowed him to repurpose theatrical material into episodic formats, maintaining his focus on monologue-style delivery while adapting to digital distribution amid fluctuating live theater viability.

Key Controversies

Fabrication in Steve Jobs Monologue

In January 2012, This American Life broadcast an hour-long excerpt from Mike Daisey's monologue The Agony and the Ecstasy of , focusing on his purported firsthand encounters with workers at factories in , , where components for Apple products are assembled. The episode highlighted claims of severe labor abuses, including workers poisoned by n-hexane, guards using guns to intimidate union organizers, and thousands of workers mindlessly assembling iPhones. These accounts amplified public scrutiny of Apple's but were presented without sufficient verification, as Daisey positioned his narrative as derived from personal observation during a 2010 trip to . On March 16, 2012, issued a full retraction in its episode titled "Retraction," after producer Brian Reed retraced Daisey's steps in using the same interpreter, Li, who had accompanied Daisey. Reed's investigation uncovered multiple fabrications: Daisey claimed to have met workers crippled by n-hexane poisoning directly at an iPhone assembly line, but Li confirmed no such meetings occurred, and the victims were actually employed at a separate producing screens, not s; Apple had addressed the issue by switching to safer cleaning methods after media reports, but Daisey's portrayal exaggerated his involvement. He described interviewing a beaten union leader, "Li Rui," at Foxconn's gates who was arrested for organizing; Li stated no such person existed, and attempts to locate him failed, with Daisey later admitting the name and details were invented for the . Further discrepancies included Daisey's assertion of visiting multiple factories and meeting three generations of workers in one day, both denied by Li, who recalled only one facility tour; claims of workers with hands deformed by exposure, unverifiable and not witnessed; and a scene of 30,000 workers chanting in unison over iPhones, which Li described as a minor quality-control exercise involving far fewer people. During pre-broadcast , Daisey misled This American Life staff by providing a fabricated phone number for Li, preventing independent verification, and insisting certain elements were true despite contradictions. Host confronted Daisey, who acknowledged lying about the contact information but defended the alterations as essential to theatrical storytelling, arguing that precise facts would dilute the "emotional truth" of exploitation at . Daisey responded publicly on his blog the day of the retraction, framing the monologue as agitprop theater rather than journalism, stating he blended real events with composite characters and adjusted details for dramatic impact, as is conventional in his monologic form. He maintained that core issues—such as underage workers, excessive overtime, and dormitory overcrowding—were based on Li's translations and observable conditions, though not always tied to his claimed personal interviews. The Public Theater, hosting the show's off-Broadway run that opened on October 20, 2011, and extended post-retraction, made minimal revisions to the script, removing some fabricated scenes like the union leader encounter but retaining the overall narrative structure. The controversy did not halt performances, which continued into 2012, but it prompted Daisey to emphasize in subsequent defenses that audiences understand the work as performative rather than documentary. While Foxconn conditions have been corroborated by independent reports, such as those from the Fair Labor Association in 2012 documenting violations, Daisey's fabrications undermined the credibility of his specific anecdotes, blurring lines between advocacy and invention.

Broader Implications for Artistic Integrity

The exposure of fabrications in Mike Daisey's The Agony and the Ecstasy of Steve Jobs prompted widespread debate within theater and communities about the boundaries of truth in documentary-style . Critics contended that Daisey's blending of invented anecdotes—such as claims of personally interviewing dissident workers poisoned by n-hexane or witnessing union organizers beaten by guards—with verifiable facts eroded audience trust and undermined the monologue's advocacy for labor reforms. This blurring without clear disclosure was seen as a betrayal of artistic integrity, as it risked conflating emotional impact with empirical reality, potentially leading audiences to accept unverified horrors as firsthand testimony. The retraction on March 16, 2012, highlighted how such practices, when aired in journalistic contexts, amplify harm by lending undue credibility to falsehoods. Daisey defended his approach by invoking , arguing in the retraction episode that theater prioritizes "emotional truth" over strict factual accuracy, and that his fabrications captured the broader human cost of Apple's even if not literally his experiences. He maintained that the work's power derived from its role as rather than reportage, a stance echoed by some supporters who viewed the controversy as an opportunity to interrogate theater's conventions, where selective emphasis has long been tolerated to heighten dramatic effect. However, detractors, including theater critics, argued this rationale falters when performers mislead fact-checkers or present soliloquies as personal witness, as Daisey did by affirming disputed details during pre-broadcast verification. The incident underscored a tension: while may ethically amplify real injustices, undisclosed invention invites skepticism toward all claims, diluting the potency of genuine exposés like subsequent New York Times investigations into conditions. Longer-term, the Daisey affair influenced discussions on ethical standards in verbatim and investigative theater, prompting venues like to reaffirm support for provocative works while acknowledging the need for transparency to sustain credibility. It highlighted risks to public discourse, where fabricated narratives can initially galvanize attention to corporate abuses—Daisey's show drew millions of via radio—but subsequent retractions foster cynicism, potentially hindering authentic . Practitioners and scholars subsequently emphasized distinguishing between rhetorical license in pure fiction and the accountability demanded in works purporting to document real-world harms, reinforcing that integrity demands congruence between intent and audience expectation to avoid exploiting serious issues for spectacle.

Themes and Performance Style

Anti-Corporate and Labor Critiques

Mike Daisey's monologues often center on critiques of corporate power structures, with a particular emphasis on labor exploitation in global supply chains for . In The Agony and the Ecstasy of Steve Jobs, premiered in July 2010 at the , Daisey recounts his 2009 visit to Foxconn's massive factory complex in , , where he alleges workers endure grueling 12- to 16-hour shifts in facilities employing up to 400,000 people, living in crowded dormitories and handling toxic chemicals like n-hexane—a solvent known to cause —without proper ventilation or protective gear. He claims to have interviewed underage workers, some as young as 12 or 14, who were hired to meet production quotas for Apple products, highlighting the suppression of independent unions and the use of security forces to maintain order. These portrayals frame Apple and its late CEO as emblematic of a tech industry that prioritizes and profitability over human costs, with Daisey arguing that corporate audits—such as those conducted by Apple—fail to address root causes like excessive violating Chinese labor laws limiting work to 49 hours per week. While specific encounters Daisey described, including meetings with poisoned workers and union activists, were later found to be fabricated or unverifiable, independent reports corroborated broader patterns of abuse at , including the 2010 cluster of at least 18 worker suicides that prompted the installation of suicide-prevention nets and modest wage increases to 1,800 yuan monthly. Daisey extends his indictment to consumer complicity, positing that demand for affordable iPhones and iPads sustains these conditions, as corporations like Apple outsource to low-cost regions to minimize expenses while maximizing shareholder value. He contrasts the reverence for Jobs as a visionary with the ethical blind spots in supply chain oversight, questioning the moral foundations of capitalism where technological marvels are built on disposable labor. In earlier works like 21 Dog Years (2002), adapted from his experiences at Amazon.com, Daisey depicts the e-commerce giant's workplace as a high-pressure environment rife with surveillance, rapid hiring and firing cycles, and a cult-like devotion to efficiency that erodes employee autonomy, prefiguring his later examinations of tech-driven exploitation. Such themes recur across Daisey's oeuvre, portraying corporations as entities engineered for unchecked growth, where labor serves as a fungible input rather than a element deserving protection, urging audiences to confront the causal links between their purchases and distant worker suffering.

Blending Fact, , and Personal Narrative

Mike Daisey's monologues characteristically interweave verifiable facts from his research and travels with fictionalized elements and autobiographical reflections to construct immersive narratives that prioritize emotional resonance over strict factual accuracy. He has described this approach as inherent to theater, stating that his works employ "a combination of fact, , and dramatic license" to convey broader truths about power, labor, and , rather than adhering to journalistic standards of objectivity. This method draws from influences like , featuring intimate, first-person storytelling delivered without a , where Daisey positions himself as both and commentator. In The Agony and the Ecstasy of Steve Jobs, premiered in 2010, Daisey exemplifies this blending by rooting the piece in his personal obsession with Apple products—detailing his acquisition of devices like the and —before transitioning to dramatized accounts of factories in , , based on a 2009 trip organized with interpreter Li Gu. Factual elements include observations of worker conditions, such as exposure to n-hexane solvent without proper ventilation, drawn from Daisey's on-site interviews with over 100 individuals. However, he incorporated invented scenes, such as the encounter with "Liu," a fictional with a chemically burned hand who claimed to have been beaten and disappeared after , to heighten the narrative's impact on corporate exploitation. Daisey later conceded these fabrications after scrutiny by in March 2012, which verified that Liu did not exist and that elements like disassembly demonstrations were staged rather than eyewitnessed. Daisey maintains that such inventions serve theater's purpose of illuminating "the human story" through emotional authenticity, arguing that literal facts alone fail to evoke the necessary or empathy toward systemic issues like supply-chain abuses. He distinguishes this from , which he views as bound by verifiable , insisting that his monologues never purported to be reporting but were misconstrued when adapted for non-theatrical formats without caveats. Critics, however, contend this risks misleading audiences, particularly when presented in sold-out venues or media outlets expecting factual integrity, blurring lines between and artifice. Despite revisions post-2012 to excise confirmed falsehoods, Daisey upholds the technique across works like American Utopias (2011), where personal anecdotes about economic disillusionment merge with speculative critiques of .

Reception and Impact

Positive Reviews and Cultural Influence

Daisey's monologues have been acclaimed for their masterful narrative technique and provocative examinations of power structures, earning him recognition as "the master storyteller" and "one of the finest solo performers of his generation" from . His 2004 work Humor Abuse garnered the , Drama Desk Award, Outer Critics Circle Award, and Lucille Lortel Award, highlighting his skill in blending personal anecdote with cultural critique. Additional honors include the Bay Area Critics Circle Award and the Sloan Foundation's Science and Technology Award for his explorations of and . The Agony and the Ecstasy of Steve Jobs, premiered in 2010 and revised for its 2011 New York run, received commendations for its socially conscious urgency, with reviewers praising Daisey's ability to deliver "compelling" theater that confronts consumer complicity in global labor exploitation. Critics noted its "clever message" in urging audiences to reconsider the human cost behind technological marvels, positioning it as a catalyst for ethical reflection on corporate practices. The production's hypnotic was lauded as "gifted," transforming abstract supply-chain issues into visceral, empathetic encounters. The monologue exerted significant cultural influence by elevating public awareness of labor conditions at Foxconn factories supplying Apple, at a time when U.S. attention to these issues was minimal. Daisey was widely credited with prompting consumers to "think differently" about the origins of their devices, fostering broader discourse on ethical manufacturing and inspiring activism around corporate accountability. Its adaptation for This American Life in January 2012 amplified this reach, drawing millions of listeners and contributing to heightened scrutiny of tech industry supply chains, even as subsequent fact-checking revealed embellishments. The work's emphasis on forging "bonds of empathy" between Western audiences and Chinese workers underscored its role in humanizing distant economic realities.

Criticisms of Honesty and Effectiveness

In March 2012, This American Life host Ira Glass issued a full retraction of an episode featuring excerpts from Daisey's monologue The Agony and the Ecstasy of Steve Jobs, after Marketplace reporter Rob Schmitz verified that Daisey had fabricated significant elements of his claimed firsthand experiences at Foxconn factories in Shenzhen, China. Specific falsehoods included Daisey's assertions of personally interviewing over 100 workers, including a 12-year-old child laborer and victims of n-hexane poisoning who suffered nerve damage from using the chemical to clean iPhone screens without proper ventilation; in reality, Daisey met only about 30 workers through his translator, none matching those descriptions, and the poisoning incidents—while real and linked to Foxconn suppliers—occurred at a different facility where he conducted no interviews. Daisey admitted to Glass during a recorded confrontation that he had lied about these encounters and other details, such as meeting an imprisoned labor organizer who did not exist, stating, "I deeply regret that I allowed myself to compress things." Critics contended that Daisey's deliberate blending of verifiable facts with invented personal anecdotes eroded in his , portraying it as manipulative rather than authentic. Theater reviewers and journalists, including those from , questioned whether such "dramatic license" crossed into ethical fraud when Daisey presented the monologue as rooted in his actual 2007 trip to , leading audiences to conflate theatrical exaggeration with journalistic reporting. This blurring, they argued, not only misled listeners—such as the This American Life audience of millions who initially accepted the story as corroborated—but also invited skepticism toward legitimate investigations into supply-chain labor abuses, as detractors could dismiss broader critiques as similarly embellished. Regarding effectiveness, detractors asserted that Daisey's approach ultimately hampered awareness efforts by prioritizing emotional impact over factual rigor, resulting in backlash that overshadowed documented Foxconn issues like excessive overtime and chemical exposures reported in audits since 2006. Independent analyses post-retraction noted that while Daisey's work amplified media scrutiny—prompting Apple to conduct further supplier audits—its reliance on unverifiable claims reduced long-term for activist theater, potentially alienating policymakers and consumers who prioritize evidence-based over narrative persuasion. Some observers, including ethicists in media discussions, highlighted that the exemplified how self-serving embellishments in can degrade audience discernment, making it harder to assess genuine NGO or journalistic reports on corporate practices.

Personal Life and Background

Family and Personal Relationships

Mike Daisey was born on January 21, 1976, as the oldest of four children in a family that relocated to northern during his early years before settling in Etna, Maine, when he was twelve years old. Limited public details exist regarding his siblings or parents, with Daisey's autobiographical works occasionally referencing a rural, working-class upbringing marked by economic challenges and familial dynamics, though these narratives blend personal anecdote with performative elements. Daisey has been married to Jean-Michele Gregory since at least the early ; Gregory functions as his primary director, dramaturg, editor, and collaborator on nearly all his monologues and productions. Their partnership integrates personal and professional spheres, with Gregory shaping Daisey's performances through iterative development processes that occur in close proximity, often during rehearsals or revisions up to hours before shows. This collaboration has been described by Daisey as essential to refining his raw, exploratory monologues into structured works, though it remains intertwined with their marital relationship without publicly detailed timelines or events. No verifiable public records indicate that Daisey and Gregory have children, and Daisey has not addressed parenthood in interviews or works focused on family life. Occasional references to appear in his performances, such as a recounting a trip to Disney World invited by a , involving Gregory and other relatives, but these serve thematic purposes rather than biographical disclosure. Daisey's personal relationships beyond his marriage remain largely private, with public focus consistently redirecting to professional output over intimate details.

Public Persona and Self-Presentation

Mike Daisey cultivates a public as a provocative solo monologist, performing extended narratives seated at a desk equipped with a and minimal props, such as a glass of water or an , to deliver extemporaneous storytelling that blends personal , political critique, and dramatic embellishment. His onstage presence is marked by earnest , unblinking conviction, and physical intensity—heavy-set frame sweating under spotlights, profane language, and gesticulations that shift fluidly between confession, , and historical exposition. This performative self contrasts with Daisey's self-described private demeanor, which he portrays as quieter and more observant, emphasizing listening over the endearing charisma projected onstage. He positions himself as an unfettered pursuer of obsessions, crafting monologues to explore curiosities without constraint, a method he defends as essential to theater's capacity for revealing emotional truths beyond strict . In media appearances on platforms like and , Daisey reinforces this image as a fierce, zany defender of progressive values, often targeting corporate power structures. Daisey's self-presentation draws comparisons to predecessors like , emphasizing a , audience-immersive style that prioritizes impact over verbatim accuracy, as evidenced in his response to fabrications in The Agony and the Ecstasy of , where he argued for art's license to employ "necessary fictions." This approach has earned acclaim as that of a "master storyteller," though it invites scrutiny for blurring lines between and in public discourse.

Comprehensive Works

Monologues

Mike Daisey's monologues consist of solo, extemporaneous performances lasting approximately two hours, delivered without a fixed script and evolving with each iteration to incorporate audience response and current events. He has created more than a dozen full-length works since his debut in 1997, often blending personal experiences with broader critiques of corporate power, technology, , and cultural institutions. These pieces premiered at venues such as , , and Spoleto Festival, with many transferring to runs in New York. Daisey's early monologues focused on personal journeys and historical reflections. Wasting Your Breath (1997), premiered at Seattle's Open Circle Theater, recounts a cross-country amid relationship breakdowns and self-examination. I Miss the Cold War (1998), staged by 24/7 Productions in , explores the end of bipolar through autobiographical lenses. 21 Dog Years: Doing Time at Amazon.com (2001), originating at Seattle's Speakeasy Backroom before moving to New York's Cherry Lane Theatre and the Fringe Festival, details Daisey's tenure at Amazon during the , highlighting corporate excesses and employee exploitation. Subsequent works expanded into corporate and technological critiques. All Stories Are Fiction (2004), premiered at Performance Space 122, featured unrepeated narratives generated nightly to emphasize storytelling's improvisational nature. Monopoly! (2005), debuting at the and later at the American Repertory Theatre, juxtaposes historical rivalries like Tesla versus Edison with modern antitrust cases involving and Wal-Mart's market dominance. The Ugly American (workshops pre-2005, full production at ) draws from Daisey's time directing theater in , examining class dynamics and artistic pretensions through a romantic entanglement. Later monologues addressed security, theater, and global economics. If You See Something, Say Something (2008), premiered at Woolly Mammoth Theatre Company in Washington, D.C., traces the post-9/11 security apparatus, including the neutron bomb's history and visits to nuclear sites. How Theater Failed America (2009), performed at the Public Theater and Barrow Street Theatre, indicts the U.S. theater industry's commercialization and loss of artistic risk-taking, implicating Daisey himself in the critique. The Last Cargo Cult (2009) links Daisey's travels to a South Pacific island venerating American cargo cults with the 2008 financial crisis's absurdities. The Agony and the Ecstasy of Steve Jobs (premiered 2010, over 200 performances across 18 cities through 2012) examines Steve Jobs's legacy, Apple's innovation, and labor conditions at Foxconn factories in China, based on Daisey's unauthorized visit to Shenzhen. An excerpt aired on This American Life in January 2012, reaching millions and sparking audits by Apple suppliers, but a subsequent investigation revealed Daisey fabricated elements like worker encounters with poisoned n-hexane and union organizers confronting him directly, leading to the episode's retraction. Daisey maintained these inventions served theatrical truth over literal accuracy, distinguishing performance from journalism, though critics argued it undermined advocacy for verifiable labor abuses. Post-2012 works include experimental cycles like All the Faces of the Moon (2013), a series of 29 unique monologues performed consecutively over a lunar month at the Public Theater, connected thematically but varied nightly. Journalism (2013) reflected on media ethics amid Daisey's controversies. The Trump Card (2016) dissected Donald Trump's rise, with Daisey releasing a script for public performance without royalties to amplify its reach. In 2019, he presented an 18-part cycle at Woolly Mammoth on pivotal moments in American history, totaling 32 hours. A 2021 monologue addressed the COVID-19 pandemic's disruptions, performed both live and online. These later pieces continue Daisey's pattern of site-specific, evolving narratives challenging institutional narratives and personal complicity.

Plays and Theater Productions

Mike Daisey's theatrical output consists predominantly of solo monologues staged as intimate, narrative-driven productions at regional theaters, venues, and festivals. His early work Wasting Your Breath (1997) premiered at Open Circle Theater in , marking his initial foray into extended solo performance exploring personal road trips and relational dissolution. This was followed by I Miss the (1998), also debuting in with 24/7 Productions, incorporating interviews with veterans and reflections on a trip to . 21 Dog Years: Doing Time @ Amazon.com (2001) gained prominence after premiering at Seattle's Backroom in February 2001, transferring to New York City's for a six-month run in 2002, where it satirized dot-com excess through Daisey's experiences at the company. Later productions like (2003), recounting youthful theater misadventures in , premiered at the Festival and toured to venues including ACT Theatre and , with a adaptation airing in 2005. All Stories Are Fiction (2004–2005) innovated by delivering unique, improvised narratives nightly at Performance Space 122, later at ACT Theatre and Portland Center Stage, eschewing repetition for ephemeral storytelling. Daisey's mid-career works expanded to major institutions: Monopoly! premiered at the 2005 Spoleto Festival before runs at American Repertory Theatre and Ohio Theatre, dissecting corporate power via historical rivalries. Invincible Summer (2006) evoked pre-9/11 New York at the Public Theater, Yale Repertory Theatre, and Spoleto. How Theater Failed America (2008) critiqued institutional decline during its Public Theater Under the Radar Festival premiere and subsequent Barrow Street Theatre engagement. If You See Something, Say Something (2008) investigated security apparatus origins at Woolly Mammoth Theatre Company before Public Theater dates. Innovative formats persisted in All the Faces of the Moon (2013), a series of 29 consecutive unique monologues over a lunar month at the , each tailored to nightly themes. Productions like The Last Cargo Cult (2009) at linked Pacific to economic crises, while Great Men of Genius (2006) profiled eccentric figures in segmented bio-logues at and Berkeley Repertory. Beyond solo work, Daisey appeared in a 2002 New York reading as Corporal Billy Jester in a multi-cast piece. His pieces, often directed collaboratively (e.g., Barring the Unforeseen by Jean-Michele Gregory in 2010 at IRT Theater), emphasize unamplified, table-bound delivery to foster audience proximity.

Books and Written Works

Mike Daisey's primary published book is 21 Dog Years: Doing Time @ Amazon.com, released on June 4, 2002, by Free Press, a division of Simon & Schuster. The 240-page work adapts and expands his earlier monologue of the same name, chronicling his brief tenure as a customer service representative at Amazon.com during the late 1990s dot-com boom. It details the company's rapid growth, internal chaos, employee exploitation, and cult-like atmosphere under founder Jeff Bezos, framed through Daisey's satirical lens as a "cube dweller" navigating stock option hype, grueling shifts, and corporate absurdities. The narrative intersperses factual anecdotes with fictionalized elements, such as imagined letters to Bezos, to critique themes of greed, , and the era's , which burst shortly after the book's depicted events. Daisey portrays Amazon's early culture as one of boundless ambition marred by dehumanizing practices, including mandatory overtime and surveillance-like management, drawing from his approximately three-week stint starting in 1998. While not a strictly journalistic account, the book reflects Daisey's firsthand observations, later echoed in broader critiques of tech industry labor conditions. Beyond this, Daisey has not published additional full-length books, though scripts from select monologues, such as The Agony and the Ecstasy of , have appeared in limited print or transcript forms tied to theatrical productions rather than standalone literary works. His written output otherwise consists of essays, posts on his personal site, and contributions to outlets like , often extending themes from his performances into commentary on , , and .

Film and Media Appearances

Daisey wrote the screenplay for the short film , directed by Ted, which premiered at the 2010 Cannes Film Festival and was later distributed by Lars von Trier's . The film depicts a couple trapped in an airport , blending themes of confinement and absurdity. He starred as a lead character in the experimental feature Horrible Child (2011), directed by Lawrence Krauser and produced by Best Ten Dollar Suit Pictures, alongside and . The film adapts Krauser's play, incorporating talk-opera elements and exploring isolation through a family's limited external contacts, primarily via television. Filmmaker Steve Anderson recorded a cinematic version of Daisey's monologue If You See Something Say Something during its run at in 2009, capturing the performance's extemporaneous style focused on post-9/11 surveillance and security theater. Daisey's s have featured prominently in radio media, including a broadcast excerpt from The Agony and the Ecstasy of on on January 6, 2012, which detailed alleged factory conditions in and became one of the program's most downloaded episodes with over one million listens. The segment was retracted in full on March 16, 2012 (episode 460), after investigations by and confirmed fabrications, including invented encounters with workers and union activists that Daisey could not verify. Daisey maintained the inaccuracies did not undermine the monologue's broader truths about labor practices, though the retraction highlighted tensions between theatrical storytelling and journalistic standards. He has appeared in television segments, such as a 2011 PBS NewsHour feature discussing the ethical implications of consumer electronics production tied to his Steve Jobs monologue. Additional media includes extended interviews on outlets like Seattle Channel's Art Zone in 2018, where Daisey previewed historical monologues.

References

Add your contribution
Related Hubs
User Avatar
No comments yet.