In an interview with the San Francisco Chronicle, Feinberg stated that he “stewed” over the relocation of the collection and enlisted Philadelphia documentarian Dan Argott and producer Sheena Joyce to create the film over two years.
[7] The film was criticized by officers of the Barnes Foundation as biased, with president Derek Gillman telling The New York Times, "It was made by people hostile to the move and ... that's why we didn't cooperate with the filmmakers.
The documentary investigates the demise of American print journalism through interviews with a collection of Pulitzer Prize-winning journalists, and also follows bankruptcy proceedings of the Philadelphia Daily News newspaper.
Feinberg was identified in the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette as living in Bryn Mawr, a census-designated place in Lower Merion Township, Pennsylvania, the municipality where the Barnes Foundation was originally located.
Feinberg studied the Dramatic Arts at Franconia College and worked as an assistant to producer and director Otto Preminger before later being employed in the CBS Network's Research and Development Department.