The above review is spot on. I wonder which classmate/alum it was?
I started to have concerns about our MFA Social Documentary Film film-making program in the first semester but was too overloaded with work to really think seriously about dropping out. I really regret "finishing what I started" and not heeding the writing on the wall that was blatant by midway through my second semester. I had some documentary experience but not a lot. Now I hate myself for not taking the money I spent on school and spending it on gear and my first film instead (I did of course end up having to spend almost 20,000 on my film that was a requirement to graduate anyways - this is a hidden cost of SocDoc MFA they hide from incoming students). This is an old "Filmschool" argument but in this case it is true --- definitely.
The faculty are basically a suck-up club to Maro Chermayeff who uses the program's faculty positions as a political favor (though she still can't manage to win festivals) and the student body as slave labor for her own films. The higher up you go on the faculty hierarchy the more they suck up (though there are a surprising number of faculty who are open to me about how little respect those working closely with her have for her- this was one of my early tip-offs I wish I heeded.) The worst of these is Micah Fink (who you see dressed up a soldier on the faulty page - cool war journalist guy) who barely bothers to teach his class because he knows all he really has to do is suck up to the chair for job security).
The worst part of the Maro cult is that they are all living 30 years in documentary's past. They openly resent cutting edge stuff like, you know, the internet. Even though it is a film MAKING program (and Maro loves to throw around the "maker" buzzword) it is really a documentary history program. Why did I ruin my life with student debt for this?
In an attempt to find the positive (in the totally cynical "balanced" psuedo-journalism smokescreen I learned at MFA SocDoc) I will say the facilities are very nice. You have a lovely LOOKING school in a decent nabe in NYC to squat in for two years. Some students held onto this plus to tightly that they actually slept there all the time. Even with NYC astronomical rents they still didn't get their money's worth.
I would say that the "network" was a plus from the school except even the most talented students only got the low pay throwaway jobs faculty didn't want and the documentary film world is so cut throat that stories of alumni sabotaging each other's film projects are absurdly common. This program is like everything bad that people say about the School of Visual Arts times 1000.