Milton Miron
Writing
Known For

Documentary about the gender-bending San Francisco performance group who became a pop culture phenomenon in the early 1970s.
The Cockettes

The world-famous Cockettes enact Tricia Nixon's wedding to Edward Cox on June 11, 1971. Hurtme O. Hurtme, television correspondent, covers the wedding and interviews celebrities in attendance such as Golda Meir, Indira Gandhi, Jacqueline Onassis, Queen Elizabeth, and Elizabeth Taylor. Coretta King sings. During the reception, Eartha Kitt puts LSD in the punch. All hell breaks loose.
Tricia's Wedding

The Nixon Administration falls apart in a farcical manner in the time of the Watergate Scandal.
White House Madness
Gidget’s parents sell her brain to science in order to buy a Winnebago. Years later, Gidget gets her revenge when her brain is transplanted into the corpulent body of a surfer who is investigating a plot by aliens to transform humans into loaves of french bread.
They Saved Gidget's Brain
The great emancipator emerges from the sewers of L.A. to interrupt a gay slave auction, but finds show biz a more viable option for presidents these days.
Abe Lincoln in California
Sebastian (b. Milton Miron), a 90-year-old accountant and tax preparer in Los Angeles, reflects on his pursuit of a creative life as an underground filmmaker and impresario during San Francisco's counter-cultural heyday.
Life and Taxes
A disinformation release.
Ollie's Slide Show
Hitler's home movies rediscovered?