English essay
‘60 Days In’: Everyday People Are Sent to a
Violent Prison in the Most Insane Reality TV
Show Yet
The television series documents seven volunteers who agree to serve as undercover agents in a
corrupt county jail. It debuts March 10 on A&E.
Jen Yamato, 03.09.16
It’s always taken a certain alchemy of bravery and brio to even desire to become a reality
TV star, but A&E Networks changed the otherwise glam reality game with some of realitydom’s
most harrowingly human setups: real people sharing tough stories. Hoarders. Intervention.
Goddamn Duck Dynasty.
Their latest docuseries 60 Days In treads such stomach-churning ground that, at times,
you truly wonder if all seven of the average civilians who signed up to spend two months in a
county jail—for (social) science and, y’know, ratings—will make it home in one piece.
The 12-episode series follows an “unprecedented” prison reform program conceived by
Clark County, Indiana, Sheriff Jamey Noel, a ruddy-cheeked, stocky man who landed the
sheriff’s gig only to find he inherited a county jail rotted through by corruption and extreme
anarchy.
“Before I took office… the inmates were running the facility,” he tells the camera, posing
for a glossy stand-up shot that gives 60 Days In an unfortunate sheen of opportunistic slime.
“People were getting arrested on purpose because drugs were cheaper to get in jail,” he says,
while security footage from the compound’s 300 cameras cut through scenes of violent cellblock
brawls and shockingly conspicuous drug use.
Noel says he staged raids to sweep narcotics out of his jail, but the problems persisted. He
suspected both inmates and guards were in cahoots moving contraband throughout an invisible
network he couldn’t reach. So he came up with a LEGITIMATELY INSANE IDEA: Why not
recruit normal, law-abiding citizens to go undercover in this very dangerous prison rife with
drugs, violence, and lawlessness and have them operate as informants?
Why not? Oh, maybe the extraordinary liability of possible harm coming to any of Noel’s
civilian moles deep undercover in the clink? 60 Days In raises the question immediately: What
kind of person would sign up to take such a risk?
Pretty average upstanding Americans, it turns out. The septet of innocent citizens in the
show hail from diverse backgrounds, each with their own honorable reasons for signing on.
There’s Zac, a former Marine who hopes the experience helps him land a job with the DEA—so
much so that he leaves his wife and baby back home to join the program. Tami, a 20-year veteran
police officer, also has a wife and daughter waiting for her but is driven by a foster home
upbringing to understand how the other half lives behind bars.
After the first two episodes, which debut back-to-back this Thursday, it seems likely at
least a few of these incognito prison test subjects will not be escaping bodily harm or worse after
60 days in the shit. Not that they seem to understand what’s at stake as the premiere episode
unfurls.
With the exception of the sheriff who came up with this brilliant idea to clean up his jail,
one overseeing officer on the ground, and the show’s producers who moonlight as a
documentary film crew, nobody has knowledge of this secret program. Not even the guards, who
may or may not also be dirty themselves, know that these newbie criminals are actually
completely unprepared normal persons who have been cast—I mean, recruited—to serve as state
informants.
The first episode is structured much like any reality competition show. We meet the
“characters,” see their webcam audition tapes, make a home visit or two with the adoring
families who don’t quite understand why their loved one has gone off the deep end for a
television show—but support them nonetheless.
Also mind-blowing is the fact that, although given fake arrest and conviction records,
they’re instructed to go by their real identities—with the exception of one woman who has a
pretty great reason for using an alias: She’s the daughter of Muhammad Ali. “If my father didn’t
have Parkinson’s and was bright, he wouldn’t go for this!” Maryum Ali, a social worker by
trade, laughs to the camera while still a free woman.
These seven fake inmates undergo “training”—if that’s what you can call a few days
sitting in a classroom, learning from burly professionals how not to be made as a rat in jail, who
not to piss off, what not to do AT ALL COSTS in order to avoid being labeled a snitch. For
example, Prison Economics 101, or how to spend money without borrowing from the wrong
people. How not to let anyone steal too much of your food, otherwise “they’re gonna think
you’re a bitch.” Don’t intervene in prison fights. Don’t break the law. Don’t hide in your cell too
much. Don’t go outside your cell too much. Whatever you do, don’t blow your cover.
Nervously scratching his head through all of this is Jeff, a professional “security officer”
who worries about defending himself if attacked. Blond, bespectacled, and of a gently doughy
build, he’s doing the program to prove he can make it as a bona fide correctional officer and
graduate from his position as a mall cop back home in Iowa.
“He,” a colleague who has seen the show declared with a grim sigh, “is going to die.”
It’s worth noting that, technically speaking, snitching is what these reality show
participants are being paid to do—willingly move into a volatile county jail with virtually no
safety net or protections in place in order to observe the crime and corruption that may be taking
place in the shadows.
That said, it’s riveting stuff once the charade gets going. Call it Undercover Inmate. Once
in the slammer where they’re forced to trade their street clothes for prison orange and leave the
world they know behind, it starts to get real for everyone involved. One participant gets a little
too cozy with the pod boss who runs their cellblock like a mini fiefdom, worrying the prison
admins who are discreetly monitoring their lab rats from afar.
Another participant, a schoolteacher named Robert, inspires the most concern right off
the bat. From episode 1 he’s conspicuously flippant about the risks at hand, comparing the prison
system to a country club where inmates get to lie around watching television all day on the
government’s dime. When Robert finally saunters into his jail pod his condescension lands him
in a precarious position, painting a giant target on his back that slick editing suggests leads
directly to a violent encounter.
The moral complications of this precarious setup escalate quickly, augmented by a
dramatically throbbing score. It’s a mutually beneficial arrangement for Sheriff Noel, whose
gamble could pay off with huge exposure for his maverick brand of prison reform, and for the
producers, who can blame the program if anything goes horribly wrong. More questionable is
what the seven participants will have gained when their time on the show is up, for by the end of
episode 2, hidden cameras capture suspicious inmates plotting nefarious deeds.
Is it any wonder A&E just green-lit a second season?
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Accessed on 26 November 2016 on The Daily Beast website at www.thedailybeast.com/
articles/2016/03/09/60-days-in-everyday-people-are-sent-to-a-violent-prison-in-the-most-insane-
reality-tv-show-yet.html