Telemarketers | |
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Genre | Documentary |
Directed by |
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Music by | Robert Aiki Aubrey Lowe |
Country of origin | United States |
Original language | English |
No. of episodes | 3 |
Production | |
Executive producers |
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Producer | Claire Read |
Cinematography |
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Editor | Christopher Passig |
Running time | 53–63 minutes |
Production companies | |
Original release | |
Network | HBO |
Release | August 13 – August 27, 2023 |
Telemarketers is an American true crime documentary series directed and produced by Adam Bhala Lough and Sam Lipman-Stern. It follows two office workers who stumble upon the truth of their work at a telemarketing center and are determined to expose the industry. The three-part series aired on HBO from August 13 to 27, 2023.
Telemarketers follows Sam Lipman-Stern and Patrick Pespas, two employees at telemarketing firm Civic Development Group in early 2000s New Jersey, who discover the truth behind the work they've been doing. Under the impression they're raising money for firefighter and police charities, the vast majority of funds raised are actually going towards their employers. When the company is shut down by the Federal Trade Commission, Lipman-Stern and Pespas realize that the industry is far from destroyed and in fact, stronger than ever. Together, they seek to expose the telemarketing industry as the wide-scale scam that it is. [1]
No. | Title | Directed by | Original air date | |
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1 | "Part 1" | Adam Bhala Lough Sam Lipman-Stern | August 13, 2023 | |
In 2001, Sam Lipman-Stern is a high school dropout that finds work at the only place that’ll take him: New Jersey’s Civic Development Group, a telemarketing firm that employs the unemployable (ex-cons, teenagers, and drug addicts). Ostensibly raising money for police organizations, the employees engage in several illicit activities on a daily basis, many of which began to be recorded by Lipman-Stern. Sam befriends best caller in CDG (and active drug addict), Patrick J. Pespas. The two decide to make a documentary that exposes the inner workings of CDG and uncover where the money raised actually goes. Before things can get off the ground, Lipman-Stern is fired for posting the videos he recorded online, and not long after that, the entire firm is shut down due to a FTC case. Realizing that, despite the legal proceedings, the telemarketing industry is still alive and well, Lipman-Stern and Pespas decide to move forward with the documentary and discover that the real danger in their pursuit might not lay with the telemarketers, but the organizations they’re raising money for. | ||||
2 | "Part 2" | Adam Bhala Lough Sam Lipman-Stern | August 20, 2023 | |
In 2011, a year after CDG had been shut down, Sam catches up with his old coworkers and finds most of them struggling. He and Pat realize that the police fraternities that they were raising money for (and were apparently being scammed by CDG) were actually much more aware, and possibly involved, of the underhanded tactics used by the telemarketers. Despite this, none of them suffered any consequences in the FTC case, the two learning that they were protected by America’s lax regulations against not-for-profits, which the police fraternities claimed to be, despite amassing millions of dollars and very rarely paying out police officers and their families. Sam interviews telemarketers that are still in the game, including former co-workers Jeff and Shem, who, despite their own issues (i.e. Shem’s substance abuse), reveal themselves to be excellent salespeople by implying they work for the police. The National Fraternal Order of Police denies any involvement with telemarketing and Sam and Pat begin to feel like they’re being tailed by cops. A breakthrough in the case finally comes when the FTC commissioner that took down CDG agrees to an interview, but just as it happens, Pat disappears. | ||||
3 | "Part 3" | Adam Bhala Lough Sam Lipman-Stern | August 27, 2023 | |
In 2019, Sam has moved to Los Angeles and taken on various film-related jobs, all but abandoning the documentary. Pat floats in and out of Sam’s life, but knowing his history of substance abuse, Sam always fears the worst when years go by without hearing from him. Finally, Pat calls him a changed man, fully sober and ready to get back on the documentary again. Linking up with his cousin, filmmaker Adam Bhala Lough, Sam and Pat reconnect and discover that the telemarketing industry now primarily uses robocalls, with voices based on past callers. They manage to get another chance to interview FTC commissioner David Vladek, who reveals that police unions in America are too powerful to legislate, hence why they were left unharmed during the FTC’s original case against CDG. Sam and Pat meet Sarah Kleiner, one of the few journalists who have consistently investigated telemarketing scams and police union’s involvement with them. She encourages them to learn more about modern telemarketing firms, so Pat acquires a job and goes undercover as a telemarketer, discovering that the firms have progressed to calling for “scam PACs” that permit them to not have to disclose that they are paid callers or the percentages of where donations go. Sam and Pat attempt to interview several police unions but all of them turn them down. They eventually attend the national Fraternal Order of Police event where they manage to interview the vice president of the Texas FOP, who denies that his particular lodge no longer uses telemarketing fundraising, but claims that he cannot speak for any other one. They are able to get a sit-down interview with Senator Richard Blumenthal, who had attempted to clean up the telemarketing industry in the 1990s. The eventual interview is cut short by Blumenthal, who doesn’t address any of Pat's concerns about the industry and promises that action will be taken if it needs to be. Six months later, Blumenthal has not made good on his promise and ignores all attempts at contact. |
In 2001, Sam Lipman-Stern began working at Civic Development Group, a telemarketing firm focused on raising money for police organizations. Lipman-Stern, an aspiring filmmaker, began recording all the debaucherous events at the office, including employees doing drugs, getting tattoos, and employing sex workers in the office bathrooms, activities that were all permitted as long as employees made their quota. Lipman-Stern began posting the videos on YouTube, eventually getting fired due to videos being public online. Lipman-Stern was informed by his co-worker Pat Pespas that Civic Development Group was keeping the majority of donations raised. This, coupled with the firm being penalized “$18.8 million, the largest penalty ever handed down in a consumer protection case”, [2] by the Federal Trade Commission, inspired Lipman-Stern to expose the company on film. [3] He and Pespas began a documentary project, hiring crew off Craigslist and investigating the company and interviewing charity experts and victims of scams. Just as they were getting furthest in the investigation, Pespas disappeared, relapsing into his substance abuse and the documentary was shelved. [4]
Lipman-Stern continued work on the project sporadically, including some scenes shot whilst he attended film school at Temple University. [4] In 2019, Lipman-Stern met his cousin-through-marriage, filmmaker Adam Bhala Lough, who was running All Facts, a documentary production company with a partnership with Rough House Pictures, the production company headed by David Gordon Green, Danny McBride, and Jody Hill. [5] Hearing the story of CDG, Bhala Lough asked Lipman-Stern to loan him the footage, which was in multiple formats and largely unlabeled. Lough spent a weekend in Joshua Tree National Park watching the raw footage, and came to the conclusion that a project could be made with the material. He and Lipman-Stern began developing the project. [6]
The rough, New York Metropolitan-area feel of the footage reminded Bhala Lough of the films of his friends Josh Safdie and Benny Safdie. Bhala Lough sent footage to them and asked them to direct the project, but they were unable to commit due to their obligations to the film Uncut Gems. Lipman-Stern and Bhala Lough then developed the project into a docuseries, with the Safdies boarding as executive producers via their Elara Pictures banner, as did Green, McBride, Hill, and Brandon James of Rough House. [7] [8] [9] In 2020, after the show had been pitched and acquired by HBO Documentary Films, Lipman-Stern and Pespas resumed their investigation with a full production team. They reached out and interviewed several police lodges that had been the beneficiary of telemarketing funds, as well as Scott Pasch and David Keezer, the owners of Civic Development Group, who declined to participate. [10]
Telemarketers received critical acclaim. On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, 96% of 25 critics' reviews are positive. The website's consensus reads: "Hold the phone! A truly stranger than fiction scandal is recounted with addictive aplomb in this gritty and farcical docuseries." [11] On Metacritic, the series has a weighted average score of 81 out of 100, based on 13 critics, indicating "universal acclaim". [12]
Critic/publication | List | Rank | Ref |
---|---|---|---|
Time | The 10 Best Shows of 2023 | 7 | [13] |
Vulture | The Best TV Shows of 2023 | 5 | [14] |
The A.V. Club | 30 Best TV Shows of 2023 | 10 | [15] |
Slate | The 10 Best Shows of 2023 | Top 10 | [16] |
The Hollywood Reporter | The Best TV Shows of 2023 | Honorable Mention | [17] |
The Wall Street Journal | The Best TV Shows of 2023 | Unranked | [18] |
W Magazine | The Very Best TV Shows of 2023 | Unranked | [19] |
United States Senator Richard Blumenthal’s appearance in the series finale was widely criticized. Despite promising the filmmaking team an hour-long conversation, Blumenthal cut short the interview with Pespas after three minutes and failed to provide any meaningful responses to Pespas’ findings on the telemarketing industry, leaving the room and having his staff usher the filmmakers out, after further promising that his staff would meet with the filmmakers. Blumenthal and his team would ignore all attempts at follow-up contact by the filmmakers in the months following the interview. [23]
Nearly two weeks after the finale aired, Blumenthal issued a statement that he planned to request appropriate agencies to review their actions and recommend policy changes regarding the kind of telemarketing fraud that the documentary covered. Specifically, he was “preparing to send letters to the heads of the Federal Election Commission and the Federal Trade Commission this week, requesting that each agency conduct a review of their tactics and recommend policy changes to help regulators step up enforcement against unscrupulous callers who “prey on” Americans’ goodwill and political contributions.” [24]
On October 2, 2023, less than two months after the series premiered, a media release was published revealing that Pespas had been missing since September 29 and had been last spotted in a bar in Pittsburgh. The filmmaking team relayed messages from Pespas’s family and friends asking for help in locating and returning him home. [25] On October 26, 2023, director Lough shared on social media that Pespas had been “found and returned safely to his wife”, thanking those who had helped in the search and asking for them to now respect Pespas and his wife’s privacy. [26]
Telemarketing is a method of direct marketing in which a salesperson solicits prospective customers to buy products, subscriptions or services, either over the phone or through a subsequent face to face or web conferencing appointment scheduled during the call. Telemarketing can also include recorded sales pitches programmed to be played over the phone via automatic dialing.
The National Fraternal Order of Police (FOP) is a fraternal organization consisting of sworn law enforcement officers in the United States. It reports a membership of over 355,000 members organized in 2,100 local chapters (lodges), state lodges, and the national Grand Lodge. The organization attempts to improve the working conditions of law enforcement officers and the safety of those they serve through education, legislation, information, community involvement, and employee representation.
Jehane Noujaim is an American documentary film director best known for her films Control Room, Startup.com, Pangea Day and The Square. She has co-directed The Great Hack and The Vow with Karim Amer.
Cold calling is the solicitation of business from potential customers who have had no prior contact with the salesperson conducting the call. It is an attempt to convince potential customers to purchase the salesperson's product or service. Generally, it is an over-the-phone process, making it a form of telemarketing, but can also be done in-person by door-to-door salespeople. Though cold calling can be used as a legitimate business tool, scammers can use cold calling as well.
Telemarketing fraud is fraudulent selling conducted over the telephone. The term is also used for telephone fraud not involving selling.
Tom Mabe is an American comedian, YouTuber, prankster, and jingle writer.
Adam Bhala Lough is an American film director, screenwriter, and documentary filmmaker from Fairfax, Virginia. Known for his dramas about subcultures and popular youth cultures, several of Lough's films have been selected as part of the Sundance Film Festival, and is the only filmmaker with a feature film and a documentary in the festival, as well as a screenplay selected for the annual Sundance Screenwriter's Lab.
Joshua Safdie and Benjamin Safdie are independent American filmmakers and actors based in New York City, who frequently collaborate on their films. They are best known for writing and directing the crime thriller films Good Time (2017), starring Robert Pattinson, and Uncut Gems (2019), starring Adam Sandler.
HBO Documentary Films is an American production and distribution company, a division of the cable television network HBO that produces non-fiction feature films and miniseries.
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Lenny is a chatbot designed to scam bait telemarketers, scammers, and other unwanted incoming calls using messages.
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One vacancy is a 10,000-square-foot street-level space once occupied by the Civic Development Group. The phone call center left Muskegon, leaving Fricano looking for another call center or turning the space into a banquet center.
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