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September 5, 2007

Art, Love, Death, Beck

No easy way to break into this tragic story first thing in the AM, but hey it involves music so pull up a chair morbid technophobes! Newsweek has a profile -- an extended, investigative obit of sorts -- about Theresa Duncan and Jeremy Blake, a relatively young, artistically successful, and ultimately suicidal couple who designed Beck's Sea Change cover and later crawled into a dark 'n' demented corner of their minds -- because the only connection they had to reality (and other people) were their computers. And because we know you're too busy tending to your email and IMs to read the full article, here's the Cliff's Notes!

Jeremy Blake and Theresa Duncan seemed like the perfect couple: beautiful, talented, successful and deeply in love. But beneath the idyllic surface is a darkly modern tale of obsession and paranoia fueled by instruments of a digital age. Duncan and Blake built their lives around computers and the Internet, using them to create innovative art, prize-winning video­games and visionary stories. But as time progressed, the very technologies that had infused their work and elevated their lives became tools to reinforce destructive delusions and weapons to lash out at a world they thought was closing in on them. By the end of their lives, this formerly outgoing and affable couple had turned cold toward outsiders. They addressed friends and colleagues from behind electronic walls of accusatory e-mails and confrontational blog posts, and their storybook devotion to each other slowly warped into a shared madness—what is known as a folie à deux. “This wasn’t who they wanted to be,” says Katie Brennan, a Los Angeles gallery owner and long­time friend. She compares the couple’s late-life delusions to “a kind of terminal cancer” that overtook the true Jeremy and Theresa.
Good times. The two met during a design for an award-winning video game (Theresa writing, Jeremy animating), and went on to create a critical acclaimed art instillation which lead to all sorts of cool career stuff -- like being asked by Beck to design the Sea Change cover.

That was the same year Paul Thomas Anderson had them design a sequence in the Sandler flick Punch Drunk Love. Things started going south in Theresa's career while Jeremy's was taking off, though, and Theresa got paranoid. Or just maybe the Scientologists were involved in a vast plot to thwart and destroy her career. She claimed the reason the free stress test loving religion was after her was 'cause she had first-hand info that Beck intended on leaving the faith, which made her “priority No. 1 for their paranoid and dangerous security wing. (A spokesperson for Beck denied to NEWSWEEK that the exchange ever occurred, and a spokeswoman for the Church of Scientology called Duncan’s allegations 'absurd.')."

So she did what anyone would do when frustrated with reality: She started a blog. The blog (called 'The Wit of the Staircase') was about all sorts of art and interests, but it also allowed her a place to mount a case against the Scientologists. But eventually her frustration and paranoia got the better of her, and she killed herself. Jeremey came home to find her, and after a few weeks of being on suicide watch, he left a note, went for a swim, and never came back. He couldn't live without her.

So the moral of the story? Don't become a Beck fan. And if you do, don't start a blog at some point there after! The combination of the two can be fatal. Hi Mom and Dad.

Oh and by the way: "A Belgian prosecutor on Tuesday recommended that the U.S.-based Church of Scientology stand trial for fraud and extortion, following a 10-year investigation that concluded the group should be labeled a criminal organization."

Posted at 9:58 AM
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16 Comments

this story is really bizarre. weird that newsweek is only just getting around to doing the profile... this story was all over the news weeks ago.

Posted by: ryan at 09/05/07 10:24 AM | Reply
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The New York Magazine feature was fantastic...

http://nymag.com/news/features/36091/

Posted by: Ace Cowboy at 09/05/07 11:02 AM | Reply
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Sounds like everyone I know on myspace.

Posted by: dannygutters at 09/05/07 11:12 AM | Reply
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this story fascinated me when i first head about it a month ago, i like scientology conspiracies

Posted by: jimmy at 09/05/07 11:33 AM | Reply
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I started the blog before I became a Beck fan, so I think I'm good. Although now I hate blogs and Beck. Have you ever seen the Scientology house in LA? It's like a Laura Ashley-designed doll house. I don't get it; are Scientologists big fans of the Victorian era?

Posted by: mrs at 09/05/07 11:36 AM | Reply
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is it just me.. or did two people die? sorry i found it kind of hard to laugh at the quips knowing this.

sad stuff. what part did they design in punchdrunk?

Posted by: caleb at 09/05/07 12:01 PM | Reply
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the beck cover and the "punch-drunk love" pieces were done solely by jeremy. get your shit straight.

Posted by: steve at 09/05/07 12:12 PM | Reply
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Steve, are you objecting to the implication that Theresa worked on those? If so, I'm not surprised there would be confusion about that, because Theresa herself fostered it (at least, she stated in her blog that she and Jeremy had worked for Beck; not sure what she said about Punch-Drunk Love). I remember thinking, when I read it, "O rly?" (Yes, I think like that.)

Posted by: beth at 09/05/07 12:33 PM | Reply
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Why is Stereogum making jokes and adding exclamation points to every other sentence? Two people took their own lives. C'mon...a little respect.

Posted by: chris at 09/05/07 1:45 PM | Reply
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The cloying tone of this posting disgusts me, Stereogum. You're better than this. Each day I get closer to deleting this blog out of my bookmarks.

Posted by: Dave at 09/05/07 2:39 PM | Reply
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Would some be so outraged at the tone if the couple were, say, Amy Winehouse and Axl Rose? I'd argue it isn't the deaths of these people that bothers some here as it is how much they may feel some likeness with them; after all, they were young, intelligent, successful, artistic, and very likely - incredibly hip.

As someone else pointed out, New York Magazine covered the story previously. The only reason it's covered again in Newsweek (and here and whatever other pub it's being covered) is the prurient nature with which we as a society become fascinated with the deaths of the young, attractive, successful, and well-connected. To say they (or at least one) potentially suffered from mental illness is obligatory, as most people who commit suicide or attempt to are suffering from mental illness. Most of them don't make Newsweek.

Posted by: mrs at 09/05/07 3:59 PM | Reply
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For the record, yes, I would have issues with the tone no matter who it was. I feel no more likeness with Jeremy Blake than I do with Axl Rose. They're both human beings that deserve respect in death Newsweek coverage or no.

Posted by: Dave at 09/05/07 4:09 PM | Reply
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don't mock the dead- its not cool. they were really talented people.

Posted by: audiotaco at 09/05/07 5:06 PM | Reply
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"So the moral of the story? Don't become a Beck fan. And if you do, don't start a blog at some point there after!"

Fuck off.

Seriously, proper fuck off.

Posted by: michael t at 09/08/07 8:42 PM | Reply
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holy shit i think im gonna make it!

Posted by: BDI at 09/27/07 12:11 AM | Reply
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vanity fair's got yet more on the whole mess: http://www.vanityfair.com/culture/features/2008/01/suicides200801

Posted by: jim at 12/12/07 1:19 AM | Reply
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