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Being a Journalist in Mexico Can Be a Life-or-Death Experience

The documentary “State of Silence,” premiering at the Tribeca Festival, uses personal stories to explain the bleak situation for journalists in Mexico.

A man carrying a small child as he reaches for a dream catcher dangling from the ceiling. Posters are hanging behind them with photos of journalists who have gone missing.
Marcos Vizcarra, one of the four journalists featured in the documentary “State of Silence.” “Who cares about a journalist’s life if the boss says they’re scum?” he asks in the film, in response to the president of Mexico’s contentious relationship with the press.Credit...La Corriente del Golfo

Reporting from Mexico City

If you are going to make a documentary about danger, you have to take your camera to daring places. You have to point it at nefarious subjects, doing brazen things, and capture a level of authenticity essential for a credible film.

That was the case for the crew on “State of Silence,” which explores the existential threats faced by journalists in Mexico. For the documentary’s tense opening segment, the team accompanied the reporter Jesús Medina on a nighttime search for illegal loggers cutting down trees in a remote forest in the state of Morelos. When Medina, with his camera in hand, encountered one, the unsuspecting transgressor was fully masked — and brandishing a thundering chainsaw.

As Medina began his interview with the logger, the film crew was just a few steps behind, recording the scene while both men did their risky jobs, and as the journalist — no stranger to precarious assignments — de-escalated the situation into a businesslike conversation between two professionals.

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Un maderero ilegal entrevistado para la película. El equipo de Estado de silencio acompañó al reportero Jesús Medina en una búsqueda nocturna de madereros ilegales que talaban árboles en un remoto bosque del estado de Morelos.Credit...La Corriente del Golfo
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The reporter Jesús Medina.Credit...La Corriente del Golfo

“Sometimes you have no other work option and you have to do this out of necessity,” the logger explained. Medina got the point, and his story gently morphed into a nuanced profile of a worker toiling to support his family, despite the hazards.


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