Watch 'Winnebago Man' movie for free on hulu.com

The outrageously funny, critically-acclaimed documentary "Winnebago Man"is available to view for free on www.hulu.com for a limited time. Here's the link to watch it now. WARNING: GRAPHIC LANGUAGE.
  
"Winnebago Man" (2010)
Directed by Ben Steinbauer
Type "The Angriest Man in the World" into any search engine, and one name appears — Jack Rebney, a.k.a. "The Winnebago Man" — an '80s RV salesman, whose hilarious, profanity-strewn, on-the-job meltdown was captured on video and passed around on VHS tapes, before exploding into an Internet phenomenon seen by millions. When a young filmmaker sets out on the seemingly impossible task of tracking down Rebney, who disappeared 20 years before, he finds Rebney living alone on a mountain top, as sharp-tongued as ever, but more intelligent and lovable than anyone could have imagined. WINNEBAGO MAN is an outrageously funny look at viral culture and an unexpectedly redemptive tale of one man's response to unwanted celebrity.

About the original 1988 viral video that inspired the documentary
Following a two-week video shoot in August 1988, a 4-minute outtakes reel mysteriously surfaced, and came to be known as the "Winnebago Man." While the completed sales video was sent to Winnebago dealers to promote their 1989 Itasca Sunflyer motorhome, copies of outtakes began circulating amongst the crew and their friends on VHS tape and eventually spread amongst tape traders to become an underground phenomenon. In 2005, when the online video revolution took off, Jack Rebney became one of the first internet folk heroes. Today, the "Winnebago Man" clip has been seen by more than 20 million people, and has attracted a cult following in Hollywood. The "Winnebago Man" has been quoted in movies and on TV by everyone from Ben Affleck to Alec Baldwin to SpongeBob SquarePants, and earlier this year, Conan O'Brien named "Winnebago Man" as one of his all-time favorite videos on YouTube. There's even a painting of Jack Rebney — as Shrek — that hangs in offices of Dreamworks Animation.

Jack Rebney Today
After traveling to New York, LA and San Francisco for the theatrical openings of "Winnebago Man", the 80-year-old Rebney has returned to his mountaintop cabin, where he continues to live alone with his beloved pit bull, "Buddha." He would like audiences to know that he's very pleased with how the film turned out. "It's not War and Peace. It's not Doctor Zhivago," Rebney says, "But, it says something, that after seeing it, people come up to me and throw their arms around me and they're still laughing. People come up to me with tears in their eyes. It's not surprising, then, that I like the film. And I haven't liked anything in about 20 years." Rebney and the film's director, Ben Steinbauer, have become good friends and they speak on the phone almost every day.

"Winnebego Man"is also available on DVD.
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