Neil Drumming is an American journalist and filmmaker. Formerly a producer with the radio show This American Life, in 2020 Drumming became managing editor with Serial Productions, the company that created the podcasts Serial and S-Town. Drumming began his career writing for the Washington City Paper, and later wrote for Entertainment Weekly and Salon. He also wrote and directed the 2014 film Big Words.
Drumming's first feature film, Big Words, premiered at Slamdance Film Festival in January 2013.[7] Drumming wrote and directed.
Set on November 4, 2008, the night of Barack Obama's historic election as the first black President of the United States,[8]Big Words revolves around three friends who 15 years earlier had had "a promising hip-hop group and are now dealing with the challenges of being in their late 30s."[9] Selecting the film as a New York Times "Critics' Pick," Jeannette Catsoulis's review praised Drumming's "whip-smart screenplay" and "droll, insightful dialogue," describing the film as "an engrossing, coming-of-middle-age drama."[10] Writing in The Independent, Darren Richman compared Drumming's filmmaking to Noah Baumbach, both in the directors' relationship to the characters their films depict—like Baumbach, "Drumming seems to love his characters because of rather than in spite of their flaws"—and in the films' subject matter, noting that a "sense that things haven’t quite gone to plan, reminiscent of Baumbach’s Greenberg, hangs over Big Words from first frame to last."[11]
Drumming is a producer for This American Life.[15] He has also been on air for the show, reporting segments around themes of family and friendship.[16] In October 2019, he became the first black person to host an episode.[17]
In 2020, he left This American Life to become managing editor at Serial Productions, with plans to oversee an expansion from the company’s first two podcasts, Serial and S-Town.[18]
Personal life
While at the Washington City Paper in the late 1990s, Drumming became a close friend of writer Ta-Nehisi Coates, then still a student at Howard University; Drumming eventually became godfather to Coates's son. In a 2015 segment of This American Life, the two discussed the trajectory of their friendship over the next two decades of their personal lives and respective careers in media.[19]
^"Big Words". BAM.org. Archived from the original on 22 August 2016. Retrieved 20 August 2016.
^Dreher, Rod (December 14, 2015). "If You Get Rich And Famous…". The American Conservative. Archived from the original on 29 August 2016. Retrieved 20 August 2016.