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Jon Ronson

    10 mai 1967

    Jon Ronson possède une aptitude distinctive pour découvrir les courants cachés sous des événements apparemment ordinaires, explorant les marges de la société et la psychologie des croyances. Son travail brouille souvent les frontières entre le journalisme et le documentaire, en plongeant dans des sous-cultures inhabituelles et des idées non conventionnelles avec un œil vif et investigateur. L'approche de Ronson se caractérise par sa volonté de poser des questions inconfortables et d'explorer des phénomènes complexes avec un mélange de curiosité et d'analyse critique. Il invite les lecteurs et les spectateurs à considérer les aspects les plus étranges du comportement humain et les récits que nous construisons.

    Jon Ronson
    Frank
    What I Do
    So You´ve Been Publicly Shamed
    Them
    The Psychopath Test
    Lost at Sea
    • Lost at Sea

      • 471pages
      • 17 heures de lecture
      4,0(658)Évaluer

      Jon Ronson has been on patrol with America's real-life superheroes and to a UFO convention in the Nevada desert with Robbie Williams. He's interviewed a robot and asked her if she has a soul. He's travelled to the Alaskan theme town of North Pole (where every day is Christmas Day) to investigate a high school mass-murder plot. He's met a man who tried to split the atom in his kitchen and another who's preparing to welcome the aliens to earth. Jon Ronson is fascinated by madness, strange behaviour and the human mind, and he has spent his life exploring mysterious events and meeting extraordinary people. Collected here from various sources (including the Guardian and GQ) are the best of his adventures. Frequently hilarious, sometimes disturbing, always entertaining, these compelling stories of the chaos that lies on the fringe of our daily lives will have you wondering just what we're capable of.

      Lost at Sea
    • The Psychopath Test

      • 306pages
      • 11 heures de lecture
      4,0(6217)Évaluer

      In this madcap journey, a bestselling journalist investigates psychopaths and the industry of doctors, scientists, and everyone else who studies them.

      The Psychopath Test
    • Them

      • 250pages
      • 9 heures de lecture
      4,0(16966)Évaluer

      In this eye-opening portrait of extremist groups--75 percent of which are located in this country--Jon Ronson takes readers inside the hearts and minds of people often summarily dismissed as kooks and crazies.

      Them
    • From the Sunday Times top ten bestselling author of The Psychopath Test, a captivating and brilliant exploration of one of our world's most underappreciated forces: shame. 'It's about the terror, isn't it?' 'The terror of what?' I said. 'The terror of bei

      So You´ve Been Publicly Shamed
    • What I Do

      • 269pages
      • 10 heures de lecture
      3,8(626)Évaluer

      In part one, read about the time Jon inadvertently made a lewd gesture to a passing fourteen-year-old girl late at night in the lobby of a country-house hotel. And about his burgeoning obsession with a new neighbour who refused to ask him what he did for a living, despite Jon’s constant dropping of intriguing hints. And about the embarrassment of being caught recycling small talk at a party. In part two, read some of Jon’s longer stories, which explore manifestations of insanity in the wider world: the tiny town of North Pole, Alaska, where it’s Christmas 365 days of the year; behind the scenes at Deal or No Deal, which Jon likens to a cult with Noel Edmonds as its high priest; a meeting with TV hypnotist Paul McKenna, who has joined forces with a self-help guru who once stood trial for murder – but can they cure Jon of his one big phobia? As hilarious as it is perturbing, Jon Ronson’s new collection is a treat for everyone who has ever suspected themselves to be at the mercy of forces they can barely comprehend.

      What I Do
    • Frank

      The True Story That Inspired The Movie

      • 69pages
      • 3 heures de lecture
      3,7(50)Évaluer

      In the late 1980s Jon Ronson was the keyboard player in the Frank Sidebottom Oh Blimey Big Band. Frank wore a big fake head. Nobody outside his inner circle knew his true identity. This became the subject of feverish speculation during his zenith years. Together, they rode relatively high. Then it all went wrong. Twenty-five years later and Jon has co-written a movie, Frank , inspired by his time in this great and bizarre band. Frank is set for release in 2014, starring Michael Fassbender, Maggie Gyllenhaal, and Domhnall Gleeson and directed by Lenny Abrahamson. Frank: The True Story that Inspired the Movie is a memoir of funny, sad times and a tribute to outsider artists too wonderfully strange to ever make it in the mainstream. It tells the true story behind the fictionalized movie.

      Frank
    • Out of the Ordinary

      • 256pages
      • 9 heures de lecture
      3,7(1749)Évaluer

      Jon Ronson’s subjects have included people who believe that goats can be killed by the power of a really hard stare, and people who believe that the world is ruled by twelve-foot lizard-men. In Out of the Ordinary, a collection of his journalism from the Guardian, he turns his attention to irrational beliefs much closer to home, investigating the ways in which we sometimes manage to convince ourselves that all manner of lunacy makes perfect sense – mainstream, domestic, ordinary insanity. Whether he finds himself promising his son that he will be at his side for ever, dressed in a Santa costume, or trying to understand why hundreds of apparently normal people would suddenly start speaking in tongues in a Scout hut in Kidderminster, he demonstrates repeatedly how we all succumb to deeply irrational beliefs that grow to inform our everyday existence. Out of the Ordinary is Jon Ronson at his inimitable best: hilarious, thought-provoking and with an unerring eye for human frailty – not least his own. Praise for The Men Who Stare at Goats: ‘Not only a narcotic road trip through the wackier reaches of Bush’s war effort, but also an unmissable account of some of the insanity that has lately been done in our names’ Observer Praise for Them: Adventures with Extremists: ‘A funny and compulsively readable picaresque adventure through a paranoid shadow world’ Louis Theroux, Guardian

      Out of the Ordinary
    • Why are Iraqi prisoners of war forced to listen to Barney the Purple Dinosaur's theme tune repeatedly, at top volume? Why have a hundred de-bleated goats been secretly placed inside the Special Forces command centre at Fort Bragg, North Carolina? Has the US Army really enlisted the help of Uri Geller?In The Men Who Stare at Goats, Jon Ronson searches for answers to these and many other questions, revealing some of the extraordinary beliefs at the core of the War on Terror.So unbelievable that it has to be true – this is the real-life account that inspired the film.

      The Men Who Stare at Goats
    • Alles beginnt mit einem mysteriösen Päckchen, das an Neurologen auf der ganzen Welt verschickt wird. Es enthält ein unheimliches Buch, eine Nachricht, aber keinen Absender! Alle sind sich einig: Hier ist ein Psychopath am Werk! Jon Ronson versucht, das Rätsel zu lösen, und begibt sich auf eine filmreife Mission, die so wahr wie gruselig ist. Seine Recherche führt ihn zu »Tony«, einem verurteilten Mörder und diagnostizierten Psychopathen, der beteuert, einer Fehldiagnose zum Opfer gefallen zu sein. Jon wird auf seiner Reise schnell klar, wo sich die meisten Psychopathen aufhalten: Sie bewegen sich inmitten der Gesellschaft, sie sitzen an den Schalthebeln der Macht, sind Firmenbosse, Politiker und spielen in der Finanzwelt eine führende Rolle - kurzum: Sie lenken sogar unsere Gesellschaft.

      Die Psychopathen sind unter uns
    • In den 1970er-Jahren hatten einige hohe Strategen in der US-Armee die Idee, Hippie-Ideale für eine gewaltlose Kriegsführung umzusetzen. In den 2000er-Jahren werden, als Resultat davon, Kriegsgefangene im Irak durch das stundenlange Anhören von Trickfilmmusik bei voller Lautstärke gefoltert. In der Zwischenzeit hat die US-Armee die Hilfe von Uri Geller in Anspruch genommen, versucht, durch Wände zu gehen und Ziegen durch Telekinese zu töten. Klingt haarsträubend, ist aber wahr. Jon Ronson, Spezialist für das Aufdecken fast nicht zu glaubender Tatsachen, zeichnet in seinem zweiten Buch faktenreich, klar und lakonisch die Stationen einiger verrückter Ideen und ihre realen Folgen auf. „Durch die Wand“ ist gleichzeitig beängstigend und absurd-witzig, tragisch und erhellend.

      Durch die Wand