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    The world is changing.
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    Its shifts have been subtle,
    imperceptible even.
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    And yet now, as I fly over the Atlantic,
    something's erupting.
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    Its rumblings have been long felt
    in Europe.
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    And yet, it is in America, where it is
    finding its drama, its crescendo,
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    its face.
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    If I were a sociologist, I might call this
    phenomenon, national populism.
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    And yet, being someone who seeks to
    understand the world through its people
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    I'm hesitant to begin this documentary by
    ascribing labels.
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    I am here because I'm seeking an
    understanding
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    not of what I've read about populism, but
    through the untold story
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    of what lies before me.
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    I'm arriving in America with no fixed
    route, a shoestring budget, no team
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    and few contacts.
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    And yet, what I'm certain of, is that I
    will be touching down
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    at a critical moment in its history
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    There is an election ahead, but I'll be
    running a different type of campaign.
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    It is one without party affiliation, lobby
    groups or the seeking of political power.
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    Rather, it is a campaign to seek the
    elusive heart of America.
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    And if she be willing, to narrate the
    story she wishes to tell.
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    As an outsider, passing through.
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    NEW YORK
    (flight announcement)
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    I have arrived in New York and America is
    before me.
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    My heart is beating and in being alone
    as I arrrive on this great continent
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    I think of the thousands of migrants who
    have touched upon her shores,
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    drawn by the calling of a fresh start, a
    dream of liberty, or in many cases,
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    the promise of freedom from tyranny.
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    The sense of being an outsider will never
    leave me in America, yet in some ways
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    will help me, in shaping my understanding
    of what it is to be truly American,
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    especially, as the fear of the other
    becomes used as an electioneering tactic.
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    Where does one start with the madness of
    America?
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    How does American politics work?
    Shit! I don't know!
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    Its conflicting ideas?
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    But I'm saying Bernie and Trump are the
    same person. Two old white men with a
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    different version of tan.
    - No, I'm just sayin' that popular...
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    Its clashing ideals
    Didn't Al Gore win the prime vote? - OK
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    Its cultural vivacity.
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    Hillary is only gonna win because
    its bad cop versus worse cop.
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    Kaleidoscopic intelligence of its people.
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    She told me in 9th grade,
    if you wanna know
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    how anything works in this country
    you follow the money.
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    Or the magnetism of its energy.
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    Even in black America there's a hierarchy:
    light skin versus dark skin, long hair,
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    short hair, kinky hair.
    What does that mean?
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    I realized that I was stepping into a
    cacophony of ideas, emotions and history.
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    I decided that rather than trying to order
    America...
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    And you're gonna give a guy whose tagline
    is "You're fired!" the nuke code? - Yes
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    ...that I would acquiesce to its madness,
    its inspiration, its narrative.
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    My first task was not to try to make sense
    of her, but to listen.
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    We're not founded on inclusive, we're
    founded on freedom. The idea that everyone
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    here, who believes in what we believe in, is
    cool. That's not inclusive, that's an agreement.
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    The immigrants? I'm talking about the
    immigrants throughout the last 300 years have
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    used the Statue of Liberty as a sign of
    freedom - Right
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    and escape from religious persecution
    and ethnic persecution.
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    There already is a fence,
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    so what's the difference
    between a fence and a wall, right?
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    (Jim) So it's a metaphor like...
    - it's a metaphor. It speaks for a bunch of hate.
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    But there's already a fence up there right?
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    They see, you know, these mamasitas and
    they hear all these things about Hispanics
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    being rapists and the women coming in and just
    being nothing more than cleaners,
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    and people to do your backwork shit. Then they see
    9/11 and they hear about the Chelsea
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    bombing so you know they're gonna blame
    ISIS. It's like let's fuck all these
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    people up. And they are on board with it.
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    We're an oil industry town and for us if
    the oil industry isn't turning, we're not
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    making money so there's all these workers
    but there is no money. There's very much a
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    sense of other. Anybody who says that
    racism is not alive in America in 2016 is
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    fucking crazy. Bottom line. Racism is
    alive and well. It's a problem. And it needs to
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    be addressed. I don't want my daughter
    growing up in a world the way it is today.
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    I've woken up on a beautiful morning
    in New York.
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    I have the feeling that I am within life
    and the first sense
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    that America is willing to share
    her story with me.
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    My head is buzzing with conversations of
    Trump's war, race, immigration, feminism
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    and I want to go out into life and be part
    of the ongoing dialogue of the city.
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    WHAT OF HOUSING
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    There's the greedy and the super rich that
    come in and use this as a playground
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    and just spit on it and leave.
    - Right
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    These people are so wealthy but they don't
    even live here. So that's one reality.
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    Then you have the reality of people who
    are homeless, who are ill and there's
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    nobody interested, or capable, or can afford
    to help them. So they just drift around here
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    and they're a real nuisance. I know I
    sound reactionary and crazy, but it's sad.
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    We read about populism as a social
    phenomenon and yet what is it really?
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    As I listened to New Yorkers speak of the
    consequences of exploding house prices
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    I began to understand the profound impact
    it has on the different earning brackets
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    of society.
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    Radical wealth disparity seems to be creating
    anger and jealousy at those looking upwards
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    and yet simultaneously a frustration and
    lack of empathy looking downwards.
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    It felt a profound signifier of social
    decohesion and I was fascinated to hear
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    how these phenomenons were playing out
    in the lives of normal people.
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    Many American families across the United
    States if they lose their jobs they're two,
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    three months from being homeless. I can't
    even contemplate what that means.
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    That means if you lose a job, that two,
    three months later, if you don't get a
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    substitute job and your car breaks down
    you can't fix it or you can't pay your
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    rent, you're homeless. I mean this is the
    wealthiest country in the world?
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    And understanding why people are voting
    for populists has to gravitate in the
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    reality that the issues are profound and
    real. Even people who would never vote
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    for populists, seemed as animated by the
    challenges of immigration, social security
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    and housing as those who would.
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    How can you have a Hitler, how can you
    have a Mussolini? I mean how can you have
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    that? With the Trump thing you get a
    little insight of how people are so angry
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    that they will vote for a madman.
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    Hitler came in because they were economically
    on their knees and I think, even though
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    you come to New York City and you see
    there's a lot of wealth and entertainment
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    and it's fun and people live here, and we're
    not on our knees, but a good part of
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    America, the backbones of America are on
    their knees. So why that can't happen again
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    and here we go, we've got Trump.
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    GAZBE + THE HUMAN HEART
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    I walk from Central Park, grateful for the
    honesty of the conversation, but feeling
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    melancholic about the state of things.
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    - Poetic right now or do I sound high?
    - Poetic. - Alright, poetic it is.
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    As if by design, a chance encounter with
    some young men reframed the narrative.
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    (Jim) That's fucking beautiful man. What's
    this song called?
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    - About my business.
    - This is amazing. The law of attraction
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    is so amazing and so heavily active and
    present.
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    (Jim) It's like Spiderman. There he goes,
    up there. (laughter)
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    (Jim) ...location change
    - Oh yeah
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    There was an indescribable energy of
    serendipity and connection. Within minutes
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    we decided spontaneously
    to film a music video.
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    This is one of the most beautiful things
    about the world even though there is so
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    much negativity. This is one of the
    positive things, this is beauty,
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    this is art, this is love right here.
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    ♪ about my business. I'm a pro,
    P-R-O.
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    Keystone on my witness
    T-O want me to fix this, end this, and ya'll want this♪
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    They follow this new rule order. Nobody
    just wanna be free. Everybody is locked
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    up in a box.
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    The way this world is going right now. I
    mean in this country, it's getting real
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    bad out here, but through all the
    negativity you see the fine, like this
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    man right here. My man, how you doin?
    - What's up man?
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    See a musician right here. Love the
    smile.
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    ♪ Some things that I can change to make me
    a better man. My yesterday is gone. Today
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    I'm a new me. Some hills I had to climb,
    some lessons know a time. Now I'm
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    a better man. Today, today I'm a new me. ♪
    - What's up man? - I like that.
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    Like I got up and danced with you. I hope
    that you would get up and dance with my son
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    when he danced. Like, what? I'm gonna be
    scared of you 'cause you're a different
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    color than me. What does that mean?
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    People, we degrade each other. You get what I'm saying?
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    We touch, we see, we feel, everything.
    - With lack of knowledge you do irrational things,
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    With knowledge, you know better,
    so you do better.
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    I'm just saying we're all the same. People
    are scared of that. I don't know why.
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    Everybody's gotta stop the hate and we all
    gotta come together and you know what?
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    Until that happens, we're in trouble.
    - I'm very worried. If we're gonna have a
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    reality show star be running for president
    we should have at least a good one.
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    If Donald Trump gets in to this presidency
    we're in trouble.
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    I don't know why, but as human beings we
    so often forget the gifts we have and the
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    blessings of each day. For the first time
    my investigation into populism had
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    penetrated the realm of intellect and
    issues. And in a chance meeting, the illusory
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    boundaries we hold up as human beings were
    being dismantled. New York was revealing
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    something too often kept in darkness. The
    human heart.
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    He's against the blacks, the whites, the
    gays. He's against everybody. The jews.
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    I mean what was wrong with this country?
    The muslims. I love the muslims. What's
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    wrong with the muslims? That's what makes
    us the United States of America.
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    People come over here from
    the other side of Brooklyn.
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    We feed most of the community here.
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    EXQUISITE EXPRESS AND SMALL BUSINESS
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    (Jim) so it's the best jerk chicken in all of Brooklyn?
    - In the world!
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    There is a presumption that populism is a
    manifestation of a rage felt by normal
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    people outside the political, economic
    and media elites.
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    Chicken is always good. Jerk chicken man.
    Beans and rice, and the white rice with
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    the little Catahoula as a side
    - (Jim) Enjoy your chicken.
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    (Jim) What of the challenge of having a
    business in America?
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    It is hard, hardest thing to do.
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    I wanted to gauge the temperature of small
    businesses...
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    (Jim) Nice people working here, friendly.
    - Yes.
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    ...get a sense of what hardworking people were
    feeling in the buildup to the election.
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    (Jim) I feel like I'm in a celebrity area
    now. - Oh yeah (laughter)
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    Give it a try. It's excellent!
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    Not wrong.
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    Have a blessed one, alright?
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    It's the sauce. The chicken is tender,
    nice and juicy.
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    Because you have so much tax
    you have to pay.
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    Not an easy thing to do. The economy is
    really tough right now.
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    Alright sweetie, be good.
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    (Jim) Where do your customers come from?
    - Guyana, Trinidad, Barbados, England
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    New Zealand, Australia, Mexico. All over
    the world they are from.
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    Then you have a lot of crazy people just
    like Donald Trump. So anything can happen.
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    We're the creation of the American dream.
    We want people to dream about coming to
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    America, thinking that they're gonna have
    freedom and opportunity like everything's
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    thrown at them, but in reality, like you
    said, you have to work for it.
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    Every race has an individual that has a
    dream. It's just fortunate that America
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    is where you can seek it. You get the
    opportunity to do whatever you want.
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    A PHILOSOPHY OF EVERYHING
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    American dream is a opportunity, for
    people to be here and make themselves
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    profitable in this country. And whatever
    car you want, you can go whatever place
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    you want. Restaurants that say
    "Come here." I won't clean the dishes
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    'cause I was born here. I was born in this
    house, you know what I'm tryin' to say?
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    They got hoods in Germany, they got dudes, tatted up,
    smokin' weed and they're white.
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    You know what I'm tryin' to say?
    Why does every president have to keep bein'
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    70, 80 years old? That's crazy. You know
    what I'm tryin' to say? Like Michael Phelps,
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    he's a modern-day white person, you know
    what I'm tryin' to say? Once they make up
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    for this error then it will be the
    constitution of 2016, not 17 whatever, you
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    know what I'm tryin' to say? Horses will
    never be replaced by cars, are you crazy?
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    And what she goin' "Nah, yo, don't do it yo,
    don't listen to them, yo.
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    The shepherds look back, and go
    let me shoot that sheep real quick!
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    He 'bout to fck up my whole fing plan...
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    We're gonna make you the president,
    you know what I'm tryin' to say?
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    We're not listening to y'all no more.
    Y'all fucking up America.
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    Y'all be fucking up the economy. You're fucking up mass shit.
    And there's new ideas out here.
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    It's 2016. It's psychological. You know
    what I'm tryin' to say?
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    I don't believe somebody took a rocket
    ship up there. I don't believe that earth
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    is round ass ball. You know what I'm
    tryin' to say? No one knows really where
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    this shit came from. You know what I'm
    tryin' to say? You don't know this is earth.
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    This shit man. You don't know what this
    is. You don't know, you never know.
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    Yo, I'm gonna tell you somethin'...
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    You don't know how the continents look,
    you never been a million miles in the air.
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    You take Florida, you don't know which way
    Florida is... who made the word plain?
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    I never did figure out exactly what James
    was trying to say, ...
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    - That's what I'm tryin' to say.
    ...but somehow his kaleidoscopic mish-mash
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    of similes, metaphors, allegories and
    analogies reflected the vastness of the
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    American experience and the challenge
    before me of attempting to understand it.
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    THE FIRST PRESIDENTIAL DEBATE
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    I'd been eagerly absorbing the colors and
    musings of the New York street.
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    Hillary's got more experience and she is
    the better candidate. Trump's not ready
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    for it. Simple.
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    Tonight, however, the election cycle would
    truly kick off.
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    I'm in Harlem and have managed to wing a
    ticket into the world famous Apollo Theater.
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    But this is a man who has called women
    pigs, slobs and dogs.
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    I don't feel as if it's show business. I
    think it's pretty serious.
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    And I'm very nervous about it.
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    I also have a much better temperament than
    she has. (boo-ing)
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    Nature says: Act now or else.
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    Donald thinks that climate change is a
    hoax, perpetrated by the Chinese. I think
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    it's real. (laughter)
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    Hillary mentioned that she is going to
    make fighting global warming a priority.
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    Donald was one of the people who rooted
    for the housing crisis. He said, back in
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    2006: Gee, I hope it does collapse, then I
    can go in and buy some and make some money.
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    - Well it did collapse. Nine million people.
    - That's called business.
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    You know what I think Trump is? He's like,
    what do they call that? You know, when the
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    End comes, the rapture and all that? Tribulation?
    He's like. - Satan incarnate.
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    - I'll be reducing taxes tremendously.
    - You haven't paid any federal income tax.
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    That's going to be a job creator like we
    haven't seen since Ronald Reagan.
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    It's going to be a beautiful thing to watch.
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    It's really unfortunate that he paints
    such a dire, negative picture
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    of black communities in our country.
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    African American communities are being
    decimated by crime.
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    - What are you gonna do with this?
    - You can't make this stuff up. (laughs)
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    African Americans, Hispanics are living in
    hell, because it's so dangerous.
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    You walk down the street, you get shot.
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    'Cause I think you were able to stand
    taller, you know and I think Americans,
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    that's when color didn't even matter
    anymore. It was just about: Wow, I'm so proud
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    to be an American. Now you wanna put your
    head in the sand and be like: OK, so I
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    have my passport, and I'm hidin' it.
    (laughs)
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    I wanna make America great again. We are a
    nation that is seriously troubled. We're
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    losing our jobs, people are pouring into
    our country.
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    ♪ I know, I know, I know, I know, I know ♪
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    ♪ Hey, I oughta leave young thing alone
    But ain't no sunshine when she's gone ♪
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    THE STATE OF AMERICA
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    Watching the debate, we were witnessing a
    clash of archetypes.
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    As an alpha male disruptor clashed with a
    schooled female establishment figure.
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    Again race and immigration came to the
    forefront. Trump's use of fear and
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    dramatization as an electioneering tactic
    contrasted sharply with Clinton's reasoned
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    and studied inclusivity. America was being
    presented with the starkest of choices
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    and again, I turned to the genius of the
    streets to summarize the crossroads at
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    which she had arrived.
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    Hey Jim, what's goin' on? I'll see you in
    about ten minutes, alright, bud?
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    Keep goin'. That makes it official.
    (Jim laughs)
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    (Jim)
    Don had lived the most colorful of lives.
  • 19:58 - 20:01
    From experiencing war in the US military...
  • 20:01 - 20:04
    (Don) The Berlin wall did not fall
    because they used bad concrete.
  • 20:04 - 20:08
    The Berlin wall fell because of my team.
    (laughing)
  • 20:09 - 20:12
    (Jim) ... to being a barber to the stars.
  • 20:12 - 20:15
    It isn´t a state - it is capital.
    It is life.
  • 20:15 - 20:17
    I use this to cut through the bullshit.
  • 20:17 - 20:20
    I use this to cut rid of the past
    of yesterday.
  • 20:20 - 20:24
    (Jim) Sensing my confusion
    about the state of America,
  • 20:24 - 20:26
    he took me under his wing, and
  • 20:26 - 20:29
    in introducing me to the
    inner life of Harlem
  • 20:29 - 20:32
    allowed me to experience it
    not as an outsider
  • 20:32 - 20:35
    but from within its very heart.
  • 20:35 - 20:37
    It brings my intelligence down
    a notch to answer
  • 20:37 - 20:44
    Trump´s, Donald Trump´s,
    you know ... just semantics.
  • 20:44 - 20:48
    (Jim) My central take-away from the debate
    was not about the issues themselves
  • 20:48 - 20:51
    but about the voices the candidates
    were bringing to them.
  • 20:51 - 20:54
    You wanna know the state of America?
  • 20:54 - 20:55
    From my perspective:
  • 20:55 - 20:59
    It´s very volatile right now.
  • 20:59 - 21:04
    How do you feel about New York
    switching up, flipping up, the way it has?
  • 21:04 - 21:06
    `Cause I feel a little way...
    (Woman) It up-rooted!
  • 21:06 - 21:08
    You know why? Because we don't
    stick together.
  • 21:08 - 21:09
    That´s just straight how it is.
  • 21:09 - 21:12
    We too busy like crabs in a barrel
    tryin´to pull you down
  • 21:12 - 21:14
    'cause you make a dollar...
  • 21:14 - 21:17
    (Jim) Trump is using fears as a tactic
    to divide people and to make
  • 21:17 - 21:20
    different groups afraid of one another.
  • 21:20 - 21:24
    I was curious if this fear was something
    populism is inserting into society
  • 21:24 - 21:28
    or if I can see evidence with nascence
    on the streets themselves.
  • 21:28 - 21:34
    We tend to protect the Donald Trumps
    for some strange reason.
  • 21:34 - 21:36
    I´m ain't making it, so I´m hatin',
    you know, dislikin' you,
  • 21:36 - 21:38
    I ain't gonna talk to street, like:
  • 21:38 - 21:40
    dislikin´you ´cause
    you makin´some for yourself.
  • 21:40 - 21:43
    And I´m too busy being negative tryin´
    like, how do you say,
  • 21:43 - 21:45
    tryin' to kick you down with me instead of
  • 21:45 - 21:51
    being united and we could come up together
    but a lot of people don´t think like that.
  • 21:51 - 22:00
    How was he even closely in the runnings
    for the highest political position of the world?
  • 22:00 - 22:05
    This is the state of mind of the world
    right now. We are not looking for a good,
  • 22:05 - 22:12
    pious leader. We are looking for
    the best cheater.
  • 22:12 - 22:18
    ♪ (music) ♪
  • 22:18 - 22:20
    Yes... (whispering)
    Who are you voting for?
  • 22:20 - 22:25
    Who are you voting for? - You are
    a very cute Harlem dog, aren´t you?! Eh?!
  • 22:25 - 22:30
    (Jim) I´d been lucky enough
    to feel the embrace
  • 22:30 - 22:33
    of the African-American community
    in New York.
  • 22:33 - 22:36
    Ahead of me now lay Ohio -
    where an old Italian American friend
  • 22:36 - 22:40
    Terry Roncagli had invited me
    to stay in his basement.
  • 22:40 - 22:44
    And where I hoped to find the next piece
    in the jigsaw of America.
  • 22:44 - 22:46
    This is what we do in
    Northeast Ohio.
  • 22:46 - 22:50
    (shouting) Hold that Ti-ger! Look at him!
  • 22:50 - 22:54
    Classic Northeast Ohio clambake.
  • 22:54 - 22:56
    - Come on Jim you're our guest.
  • 22:56 - 22:58
    We got some chicken on the grill...
  • 22:58 - 23:01
    Look at those beautiful people there cheering!
  • 23:01 - 23:05
    My cart, I drive around the neighborhood
    in the cart...
  • 23:05 - 23:07
    (singing) dede nenededede nene...
  • 23:07 - 23:08
    (man sitting) We, we don´t know him.
  • 23:08 - 23:10
    Rules of American Football...
  • 23:10 - 23:13
    Come on! Are you waitin´for a hammer
    to break the rocks, motherfuckers?!
  • 23:13 - 23:15
    Hit them as hard as you can.
  • 23:15 - 23:16
    Go, get `em, Tigers!
  • 23:16 - 23:18
    As legal as you can.
  • 23:18 - 23:19
    Cheaters!
  • 23:19 - 23:21
    Put the football in the end-zone.
  • 23:21 - 23:22
    (shouting) There we go! Catch and go!
  • 23:22 - 23:24
    (laughing)
  • 23:24 - 23:25
    But it´s all about how hard you hit `em.
  • 23:25 - 23:27
    Hold that, Tiger!
    (laughing)
  • 23:27 - 23:31
    (Jim) Shit, they lost!
    (laughing) Oh, my god!
  • 23:31 - 23:32
    GOLF CART REVELATIONS
  • 23:32 - 23:35
    (funny, "panicked" cheering and laughter)
  • 23:35 - 23:38
    (Jim) Hell, is there no safety belts in here?
    Feel like I'm
  • 23:38 - 23:39
    in a Ferrari!
  • 23:39 - 23:41
    (laughter)
  • 23:41 - 23:43
    (Jim, laughing in stress with pleasure):
    I´m not feeling safe.
  • 23:43 - 23:45
    Let´s get a bottle of liquor.
  • 23:45 - 23:46
    (Jim) Watch out for the car!
  • 23:46 - 23:47
    I see the fricking cars, Jim!
  • 23:47 - 23:50
    (Jim) And this place is really...
    It´s just like a Truman Show.
  • 23:50 - 23:52
    That´s for you.
  • 23:56 - 23:57
    (Jim, chug-a-lugged) Woah!
  • 23:57 - 24:03
    I'm really am a Trump-supporter
    only because I want change.
  • 24:03 - 24:07
    But I feel like, in the end,
    Hillary's gonna win.
  • 24:07 - 24:14
    I tell you what. Fricking Hillary is an
    entitled politician, who has done nothing.
  • 24:14 - 24:19
    Trump is an entrepreneur who has
    actually been a business man.
  • 24:19 - 24:22
    (cheering for joy) Yeah!
  • 24:27 - 24:32
    (Jim): I had been welcomed into the
    rituals, culture and hospitality of Ohio
  • 24:32 - 24:34
    by Terry´s family and friends.
  • 24:34 - 24:36
    (cheer and laughter)
  • 24:36 - 24:41
    I was fascinated how Ohio´s famous
    swing state status was reflected evenly
  • 24:41 - 24:43
    in this intimate friendship group.
  • 24:44 - 24:47
    Whereas Obama had won
    handsomely twice in Ohio,
  • 24:47 - 24:51
    the polls in early October were
    neck-and-neck between Trump and Clinton.
  • 24:51 - 24:54
    I wanted to dive deeper into
    the heart and mind of Ohio,
  • 24:54 - 24:57
    and asked Terry, if he would drive me
    to Cleveland.
  • 24:57 - 25:00
    (Terry) Walmart is the largest employer in Ohio,
  • 25:00 - 25:02
    and is also the largest employer
    in the nation.
  • 25:02 - 25:06
    When I was a kid growing up, the largest
    employers were the steel industry and
  • 25:06 - 25:12
    the auto-industry. Everyone had good
    raises, good benefits, health care
  • 25:12 - 25:14
    and we don't have that any more.
  • 25:14 - 25:17
    (Jim) As Terry told me about the
    changing face of Ohio,
  • 25:17 - 25:22
    I wondered about the social impact of
    these disappearing industries
  • 25:22 - 25:23
    on normal people.
  • 25:23 - 25:26
    I felt that to understand the human effect
  • 25:26 - 25:31
    I needed to witness the reality
    of the loss of manufacturing first hand.
  • 25:31 - 25:33
    - Hey bro!
    - My name is Jim, what´s your name?
  • 25:33 - 25:33
    - I´m Stutz
  • 25:33 - 25:36
    It turned out that my guide would
    once again appear
  • 25:36 - 25:38
    in the most unlikely of places.
  • 25:38 - 25:39
    THE NEW GILDED AGE
  • 25:39 - 25:41
    It´s the new Gilded Age.
    None of these people have to pay tax.
  • 25:41 - 25:46
    Only the working people are taxed to
    like a quarter of their income.
  • 25:46 - 25:50
    And we don't get much in return, because
    the infrastructure's falling apart,
  • 25:50 - 25:52
    the school system's falling apart.
    The health care is a joke.
  • 25:52 - 25:56
    The only thing that keeps this together is
    that people are so mollified by
  • 25:56 - 26:01
    Walmart and the Kardashians that they
    don't revolt. As long as they get,
  • 26:01 - 26:06
    as long as they can keep 500
    TV channels going, everybody will just
  • 26:06 - 26:08
    just sit there "uhhh..." (imitates a
    foolish sound), you know: transfixed.
  • 26:08 - 26:11
    (in a high-pitched voice) I'm gonna
    deconstruct some pizza, son! (laughs)
  • 26:14 - 26:18
    (Jim) I hit it off with the brilliantly
    named Stutz Bearcat.
  • 26:18 - 26:21
    By evening we were bonded by beer,
    Buddhism and music.
  • 26:22 - 26:26
    Buddhism demands that you become
    who you are.
  • 26:26 - 26:27
    That's the demand of Buddhism.
  • 26:27 - 26:31
    As you practice every day you become
    what it is that you are.
  • 26:31 - 26:35
    And what it is, I need, I'm right now,
    I'm a guy that needs a sip of beer.
  • 26:35 - 26:38
    (♪ plays a fast melody on the guitar ♪)
  • 26:38 - 26:41
    (Jim) Knowing I was hungry for insight
    in to the state of America, the next days he
  • 26:41 - 26:47
    introduced me to some of the impacts of
    the waning of the steel manufacturing
  • 26:47 - 26:49
    automobile industries in the Rust Belt.
  • 26:52 - 26:56
    Here there's always trillions and
    trillions of dollars to go to war.
  • 26:56 - 27:01
    To bomb some unfortunate people that
    happen to be walkin' around on high-grade crude.
  • 27:01 - 27:05
    There is always the money for that. There's never money for the infrastructure.
  • 27:05 - 27:07
    The city is collapsing.
  • 27:07 - 27:13
    And this is what we wind up with. You know,
    the skeletons that we have to walk over.
  • 27:13 - 27:16
    The skeletons that the capitalist system
    leaves behind.
  • 27:16 - 27:21
    OK, this is the old Richman Brothers
    tailoring company, from probably
  • 27:21 - 27:27
    1920 to 1970, maybe even earlier. But this
    is it, goes for blocks and blocks and
  • 27:27 - 27:31
    there are just thousands and thousands of
    men that worked here and they fed their
  • 27:31 - 27:35
    families working in this place. And now
    all these jobs are in China.
  • 27:35 - 27:39
    The people are chained to some fucking
    desk where they have nets outside the
  • 27:39 - 27:43
    windows so they don´t jump out and kill
    themselves. And all these jobs are in
  • 27:43 - 27:46
    China with people making, what?
    30 cents an hour, 20 cents an hour now.
  • 27:46 - 27:48
    Are you Taiwanese?
  • 27:48 - 27:49
    - Me?
    - Yeah.
  • 27:49 - 27:50
    - No!
    - Where?
  • 27:50 - 27:52
    - Chinese!
    - You´re kidding me. You are - he's lying.
  • 27:52 - 27:54
    - You are lying! (laughing)
    He's lying.
  • 27:54 - 28:01
    ♪ (soft guitar music in the background) ♪
  • 28:01 - 28:02
    - (Phrase in Chinese)
    - No!
  • 28:02 - 28:03
    - He didn't really buy this building.
    - Yeah, this is my building!
  • 28:03 - 28:04
    - I don't know English.
    - What will you do with it?
  • 28:04 - 28:08
    - I, I don't - You call my son.
    - How much money?
  • 28:08 - 28:10
    - I don't know.
    (Jim) - He wants to buy it from you.
  • 28:10 - 28:14
    - He buys from you.
    - No! - Whoah! - Ok.
  • 28:14 - 28:16
    - I got four dollars.
  • 28:16 - 28:18
    (Jim) You go again? - Really?
    - Let's go!
  • 28:18 - 28:24
    You know, this has been vacant for 50 years.
  • 28:24 - 28:26
    Whoah!
  • 28:26 - 28:28
    What will you do here?
  • 28:28 - 28:31
    Knock down? (makes noise of destruction)
    Knock down?
  • 28:31 - 28:33
    - No!
    - No? - Businesses?
  • 28:33 - 28:36
    - Chinese business, American business,
    both. - American business
  • 28:36 - 28:39
    I try to imagine, that how many people -
    like, you can just picture
  • 28:39 - 28:43
    the racks of clothes and all the machines,
    you know, hundreds of sewing machines,
  • 28:43 - 28:47
    hundreds of people working, you know,
    three shifts. They went all day.
  • 28:47 - 28:50
    This place closed, hell,
    when I was 16 or 17.
  • 28:50 - 28:53
    Matter of fact, I remember the jingle:
    (sings, snapping his fingers for the rhythm):
  • 28:53 - 28:55
    ♪ Richman Brothers, for your clothes.♪
  • 28:55 - 28:57
    That was the... (excited)
    I remember that jingle!
  • 28:57 - 29:02
    I got this this at the, (laughter)
    I bought this at the goodwill!
  • 29:02 - 29:06
    - No. (laughter)
    - I got this at the Goodwill in Los Filos.
  • 29:06 - 29:12
    China stole all our jobs, so it's good
    to see some Chinese people coming here
  • 29:12 - 29:13
    to bring some jobs back.
  • 29:13 - 29:16
    (laughing) - High Five!
  • 29:16 - 29:20
    I need to end up playing guitar and doing drugs
    and drinking every night.
  • 29:20 - 29:22
    (everyone laughing)
  • 29:22 - 29:26
    - Is he the bodyguard?
    - Big boss.
  • 29:26 - 29:27
    - Yeah, ah.
    - (Jim) Big Boss.
  • 29:27 - 29:28
    - Yeah, Big Boss.
  • 29:28 - 29:33
    (Jim) And that was the Richman factory!
    Wow!
  • 29:33 - 29:37
    ♪ guitar playing ♪
  • 29:37 - 29:43
    (Jim) I felt lifted by this brilliant
    interaction by an American raconteur and
  • 29:43 - 29:45
    a Chinese entrepreneur.
  • 29:46 - 29:50
    The Richman building was closed by its
    American owners - Woolworth -
  • 29:50 - 29:52
    in the early 1990s.
  • 29:52 - 29:57
    Even if the boom-and-bust capitalism Stutz
    described is responsible for its closure,
  • 29:57 - 30:01
    spaces like this were being easily
    appropriated by Trump as dire
  • 30:01 - 30:04
    consequences of a globalized world.
  • 30:05 - 30:07
    Once again, I was confronted by a paradox:
  • 30:07 - 30:12
    It was, after all, the Chinese who were
    at last planning to resurrect
  • 30:12 - 30:15
    this great icon of American manufacturing.
  • 30:15 - 30:20
    (night noises, whistling)
  • 30:20 - 30:25
    We need a change! We need a change,
    the country is getting worse every single,
  • 30:25 - 30:27
    whoah, this is too close.
  • 30:27 - 30:31
    Years ago, everbody was - you didn´t have
    to be a genius to get a job.
  • 30:31 - 30:34
    You could just go out, get a job
    working in a factory.
  • 30:34 - 30:42
    Maybe, Mr Obama is part of the Muslim
    faith, bringing America down with that.
  • 30:42 - 30:47
    And yet, you know, Hillary - no matter
    what she does - I think it's feminist.
  • 30:47 - 30:51
    I think it's a problem with men have
    with women.
  • 30:51 - 30:55
    They are attacking her on grounds that
    they would never attack a white male on.
  • 30:55 - 30:59
    (Jim) It was nearly time to leave
    Cleveland,
  • 30:59 - 31:01
    and my mind felt more frazzled than ever.
  • 31:01 - 31:07
    I decided, the only thing to do, was
    to ask a man who'd sold over two million
  • 31:07 - 31:09
    hot dogs, to help make sense of things.
  • 31:09 - 31:11
    (woman, cheering) Jim!
  • 31:11 - 31:13
    (hot dog diner owner) Old fashioned hot dog.
  • 31:13 - 31:14
    (guest) This is a landmark place
    in Cleveland, Ohio.
  • 31:14 - 31:16
    (hot dog diner owner)
    We've been going 87 years.
  • 31:16 - 31:19
    (guest) I can't help but think with Trump,
    so...
  • 31:19 - 31:23
    I feel like, right now,
    that's the way I'm leaning.
  • 31:23 - 31:27
    (hot dog diner owner) I take voting serious.
    And I'm leaning towards Trump right now.
  • 31:27 - 31:29
    He´s a guy who tells the truth.
    He's a real jolt.
  • 31:29 - 31:33
    - 2.1 million
    - 2.1 million - Hot dogs
  • 31:33 - 31:35
    (Jim) Who are you voting for?
  • 31:35 - 31:39
    (man) Trump, 'cause he is a businessman.
    (Jim) So why is he going to help America?
  • 31:39 - 31:41
    (man) 'Cause he's going to make us rich.
  • 31:41 - 31:43
    Sports and politics, that's all people
    talk around here.
  • 31:43 - 31:47
    No politician, no faith, you know.
  • 31:47 - 31:51
    He acts like a guy you can sit down have a
    beer with in the bar.
  • 31:51 - 31:54
    But as I said, I didn't say I was gonna
    vote for the guy.
  • 31:54 - 31:56
    (other man speaking) He appeals to the guys,
    who are angry and I understand that...
  • 31:56 - 32:00
    (hot dog diner owner) I ain't sayin.
    Yeah, he does appeal to me.
  • 32:00 - 32:05
    (man) You like that bombastic,
    macho talk of it. But it´s talk.
  • 32:05 - 32:06
    (hot dog diner owner) What?
    - 40 dogs.
  • 32:06 - 32:11
    40? Are you crazy? 40?
    A couple hundred a day.
  • 32:11 - 32:12
    - Really, 200?
    - Yeah!
  • 32:12 - 32:13
    - For you?
    - For me alone, yeah.
  • 32:13 - 32:17
    (man off-screen) She served in the
    White House. On paper, she is one of the
  • 32:17 - 32:20
    most qualified people we've had
    in a long time.
  • 32:20 - 32:23
    (hot dog diner owner) I don´t know, like I said, I
    really don´t know who I´m gonna vote for.
  • 32:23 - 32:26
    There are times I´m sayin´
    I´m not even goin´to vote.
  • 32:26 - 32:30
    (woman off-screen) Imagine if you lined up
    all those hot dogs one after the other,
  • 32:30 - 32:32
    we could go...?
  • 32:32 - 32:33
    (bar owner) It´d probably go to
    the moon and back!
  • 32:33 - 32:35
    (laughter)
    (man off screen) We could figure it out!
  • 32:35 - 32:40
    Look who supports him: Putin likes him, David Duke,
    head of the Ku-Klux-Klan, likes him.
  • 32:40 - 32:45
    Why these people - our enemies - like him?
    (pause) You know...?
  • 32:45 - 32:47
    (hot dog diner owner) David Duke's our enemy?
  • 32:47 - 32:48
    (guest) Yeah, David Duke, he's a neo-nazi!
  • 32:48 - 32:51
    (hot dog diner owner) I know who he is, I know exactly who he is.
  • 32:51 - 32:52
    (guest) He´s absolutely our enemy.
  • 32:52 - 32:55
    You know, we went to war against
    the Nazis, you realize that?!
  • 32:55 - 32:56
    (Diner owner) I understand that!
  • 32:56 - 33:00
    Hey, in America, you're allowed
    to disagree with people, man!
  • 33:00 - 33:04
    You are, yeah, I mean, the first thing
    you do is agree to disagree!
  • 33:04 - 33:07
    - Good hot dogs, man.
    - Right?
  • 33:07 - 33:08
    - Good hot dogs.
    - Right? That´s what Americans are being,
  • 33:08 - 33:11
    are all about: agreeing to disagree.
  • 33:11 - 33:14
    Well, who am I voting for? I haven't
    really made my mind up yet.
  • 33:14 - 33:15
    A LAMENT FOR KEITH LAMONT SCOTT
  • 33:15 - 33:15
    ♪ (woman singing a capella,
    crickets chirping in the background) ♪
  • 33:16 - 33:23
    ♪ Hands up, hit the ground, face down,
    they`re coming for you. ♪
  • 33:23 - 33:31
    ♪ Comply, no attitude, face black and blue,
    death is comin´for you. ♪
  • 33:32 - 33:36
    ♪ Death is coming for you. ♪
  • 33:36 - 33:41
    ♪ Death is coming for you. ♪
  • 33:41 - 33:44
    ♪ Ridin´in the white and blue... ♪
  • 33:44 - 33:47
    (Jim) I´m arriving in Charlotte,
    in North Carolina...
  • 33:47 - 33:50
    ... in the aftermath of the killing of
    Keith Lamont Scott.
  • 33:50 - 33:52
    ♪ (Soft guitar picking and
    ambient electronic music) ♪
  • 33:52 - 33:55
    The subsequent demonstrations turned
    violent as the anger of shooting biased
  • 33:55 - 33:57
    by police towards black people
    boiled over.
  • 33:57 - 34:01
    The Charlotte I discover is however, rather
    in grief.
  • 34:01 - 34:05
    For the first time, talk of the election
    is muted.
  • 34:05 - 34:10
    And yet the topic of race is thrust
    front and center into the national debate.
  • 34:10 - 34:14
    I would just say that we haven't made much
    progress from, you know, the early 1900s.
  • 34:14 - 34:18
    Because it's still, it seems like,
    the value of black lives does not matter
  • 34:18 - 34:21
    to the majority of society here in America.
  • 34:21 - 34:28
    The police...may genuinely be afraid, but
    then, what makes that racist is that
  • 34:28 - 34:31
    the fear is ingrained in them.
    ♪ (soft piano music raising) ♪
  • 34:31 - 34:35
    And you know, they cast this dream
    about everyone's equal.
  • 34:35 - 34:39
    But, when it comes down to it, it goes by
    what you show and not what you say.
  • 34:39 - 34:42
    Society tells them to be afraid of
    the Black Man.
  • 34:42 - 34:47
    How do we not see it coming?
    Or is this something we are not getting?
  • 34:47 - 34:50
    Society has made the Black Man out to be
    something to be feared.
  • 34:50 - 34:54
    Like me personally I think we failed.
    I feel like society is repeating itself...
  • 34:54 - 34:58
    ... over and over and over.
    Because all we do is nationalize.
  • 34:58 - 35:01
    And block our expansions into the cosmos
  • 35:01 - 35:06
    Which is why it´s so easy for them to
    go out and execute. The system has been
  • 35:06 - 35:10
    designed: fear the black man, kill the
    black man, exterminate the black man,
  • 35:10 - 35:11
    put the black man in prison.
  • 35:11 - 35:17
    It is those people that are angry.
    And when I say they are angry, it´s that
  • 35:17 - 35:21
    majority of the white population that are
    angry that things aren´t better for them.
  • 35:21 - 35:28
    So, how do they express that anger?
    And some of them go back to those old ways,
  • 35:28 - 35:29
    if you will.
  • 35:29 - 35:34
    (Jim) Each conversation I had in Charlotte
    seemed to reflect an experiential perception
  • 35:34 - 35:36
    of ongoing systemic racism.
    ♪ (soft guitar music) ♪
  • 35:37 - 35:40
    It made me think of the civil rights
    movement, not in historical terms,
  • 35:40 - 35:42
    but as an ongoing struggle.
  • 35:42 - 35:49
    It felt tragic, that systemic racism had to be thrust
    to the fore by Keith Lamont Scott´s death,
  • 35:49 - 35:54
    rather than as a creative discussion about
    American identity. And its need to
  • 35:54 - 35:58
    reconcile itself with its history of
    slavery, lynchings, and the murder of
  • 35:58 - 36:00
    civil rights´ activists.
  • 36:02 - 36:06
    If Barack Obama, the first black
    President, arrived as the Great Unifier,
  • 36:07 - 36:11
    yet in such a polarized environment,
    I wonder, what could the effect
  • 36:11 - 36:12
    of Trump be?
  • 36:12 - 36:14
    The Great Divider.
  • 36:15 - 36:23
    So just been researching about,
    about, some basics about hurricane conditions...
  • 36:24 - 36:26
    (laughs with gallows humor) Oh, fuck!
  • 36:26 - 36:29
    (Driver) Well, how are you gettin´there?
    (Jim) I´m renting a car. - Ok.
  • 36:29 - 36:33
    (Jim) Unless you wanna drive me...
    (Driver laughs)
  • 36:33 - 36:33
    STORM PREPARATIONS
  • 36:33 - 36:35
    (Jim) Anthony. Hey, it's Jimmy here.
    How you doing?
  • 36:35 - 36:39
    (driver) I would love to Jim,
    but I don´t know.. .You know? (laughs)
  • 36:39 - 36:41
    (Jim laughing) Oh, man.
  • 36:41 - 36:44
    (Voice on the phone) We'll be dodging
    stuff flyin´ through the air...
  • 36:44 - 36:48
    (Driver) I mean, I don´t wanna get caught
    up in no tornado or hurricane.
  • 36:48 - 36:51
    (Voice on the phone): Hell yeah,
    I do like a good whiskey too!
  • 36:51 - 36:53
    (Jim keeps laughing at himself desperately)
  • 36:53 - 36:55
    You know, I´m tellin' you, dem somethin',
    Mother Nature ain´t nothin' to play with.
  • 36:55 - 36:57
    (Voice on phone) You know, when it gets
    too bad Saturday, you and I'll both be
  • 36:57 - 36:59
    haulin' ass out of here soon.
  • 36:59 - 37:03
    (Jim) What the devil else do you need, when
    you are preparing for a hurricane.
  • 37:03 - 37:05
    (Imitating Yoda) You are so fast.
    Superman-onesie or bear-onesie?
  • 37:05 - 37:10
    In you go.
  • 37:10 - 37:11
    (Jim in deep voice) I´m your father.
  • 37:11 - 37:12
    Result. Mm.?
  • 37:12 - 37:17
    (noises from within supermarket,
    cars outside, rain on car´s windshield)
  • 37:17 - 37:25
    (Jim) I feel like this election has lost
    sight of people. And of how special
  • 37:25 - 37:32
    it is to be alive and sometimes ((cutting error?))
    bases in our humanity.
  • 37:32 - 37:36
    When our politics isn´t serving our
    humanity, then it has lost the plot. And,
  • 37:36 - 37:42
    I feel like that´s something that needs to
    be addressed globally in our politics.
  • 37:42 - 37:46
    120 miles an hour winds will tear a
    house down.
  • 37:46 - 37:49
    (pointing at a screen) The storm is here.
  • 37:49 - 37:51
    (Radio announcement): A tornado warning
    has been issued for our area.
  • 37:51 - 37:56
    (Jim) At what point with the strength of
    winds would you start having worries
  • 37:56 - 37:58
    structurly about the house?
  • 37:58 - 38:02
    - A hundred miles an hour.
    - And it´s 105 at the moment. - Yes.
  • 38:02 - 38:07
    - When it starts hittin´a hundred mile an
    hour, our asses are outta here! - Right.
  • 38:07 - 38:10
    If I see anything larger than a chicken flying' by,
    we´re getting the hell outta here.
  • 38:10 - 38:11
    (laughs)
  • 38:11 - 38:14
    Trees break, stuff flying through the air,
    that´ll kill ya if it hits ya.
  • 38:14 - 38:16
    There's your bed.
  • 38:16 - 38:18
    That´s like you being on a motorcycle
  • 38:18 - 38:19
    when you´re hitting a tree at a hundred
    miles an hour.
  • 38:20 - 38:20
    You're gonna die.
  • 38:20 - 38:23
    (laughs) It is, what it is.
  • 38:23 - 38:24
    ♪ (scary swirling sounds rising) ♪
  • 38:24 - 38:27
    (Jim) With the election storm in full
    swing, it felt somehow fitting to await
  • 38:27 - 38:29
    (♪ change to energetic, rhythmic music ♪)
  • 38:29 - 38:32
    Hurricane Matthew with Antony´s indomitable
    spirit, and charismatic hospitality.
  • 38:32 - 38:36
    A few days earlier, Hillary Clinton had
    named Trump supporters:
  • 38:36 - 38:39
    a basket of deplorables.
  • 38:39 - 38:43
    It reflected the trend in the media
    to confuse the antagonism of Trump´s
  • 38:43 - 38:47
    rhetoric, with the very real issues
    many Americans were facing.
  • 38:47 - 38:53
    My grandfather worked in the mines. And my
    brothers, my uncles, we made a living, we
  • 38:53 - 38:56
    had a family, we raised our children here.
    You know, that´s how we did it.
  • 38:56 - 39:00
    And all of the sudden the government comes
    here and says: We´re gonna put so many
  • 39:00 - 39:03
    regulations. Hillary Clinton got on
    national TV and so did Obama:
  • 39:03 - 39:06
    If you´re in the coal business, you better
    be looking for another job.
  • 39:06 - 39:09
    All of those thousands and thousands of
    people out of work.
  • 39:09 - 39:12
    And, I mean, there are no other jobs.
  • 39:12 - 39:15
    We need to take care of our own,
    take care of this country,
  • 39:15 - 39:19
    get our backbone back, our
    infrastructure back, our jobs back.
  • 39:19 - 39:23
    You know people with pride.
    You know, people used to have pride when
  • 39:23 - 39:27
    they went to work. We´ve manufactured,
    we´ve made things, we've worked together in the
  • 39:27 - 39:32
    United States to achieve things. And now,
    we don´t manufacture anything.
  • 39:32 - 39:36
    (Jim) We woke the next day to the news that
    the eye of the hurricane had changed course.
  • 39:36 - 39:40
    And would make landfall at Myrtle Beach,
    less than five miles away.
  • 39:40 - 39:42
    (Jim) So the actual eye is coming here?
  • 39:42 - 39:47
    Main surge in the eye of that storm
    is going to be here 'bout 1:30 today.
  • 39:47 - 39:52
    Only eight miles from here a tornado set down
    and tore up houses and property.
  • 39:52 - 39:57
    (Jim) Antony was noticeably more nervous
    than the previous day. And yet,
  • 39:57 - 40:01
    in the spirit of true American adventurism,
    insisted we head to Myrtle Beach,
  • 40:01 - 40:03
    to see for ourselves.
  • 40:03 - 40:05
    (Jim) So, where are we gonna go?
  • 40:05 - 40:09
    - Down towards North Myrtle Beach.
    - Are you ready for this? - I just don´t know!
  • 40:09 - 40:13
    - The gas stations are closed.
    But you know what? The liquor store is open.
  • 40:13 - 40:15
    (laughing)
    The liquor!
  • 40:15 - 40:20
    Everything east of Oceanside and Highway
    17 is mandatory evacuated,
  • 40:20 - 40:21
    because of the flooding.
  • 40:21 - 40:23
    - Okay.
    - And the when the surge comes in
  • 40:23 - 40:27
    the ocean is gonna push all that water
    which we already have flooding down there now.
  • 40:27 - 40:32
    (Jim) Wow. Gunning it down when this
    fucking hurricane hits land.
  • 40:32 - 40:34
    I can't believe it's hitting here.
  • 40:34 - 40:39
    This is where the water comes in off
    the ocean into the channel.
  • 40:39 - 40:41
    (Jim) Not a soul on the streets.
  • 40:41 - 40:46
    The ocean is straight in front of us.
    - Okay. Woaaah, man they're gonna come down.
  • 40:46 - 40:48
    (screaming) We're at the ocean now!
  • 40:48 - 40:52
    Fuck me!
  • 40:52 - 40:55
    That's the ocean beginning to come in.
  • 40:55 - 40:59
    They said it's gonna get even worse...
    - An hour or two.
  • 40:59 - 41:04
    (Jim) That's scary shit,
    and I'm not staying here for long.
  • 41:04 - 41:05
    I'll tell you that much!
  • 41:05 - 41:09
    That is exactly where it's coming in.
  • 41:09 - 41:17
    But a surge could come in any time, yeah?
    - Yeah, yeah.
  • 41:17 - 41:20
    They say it's supposed to happen any time
    after 2.
  • 41:20 - 41:27
    (Jim) Wow! Yeah! It's coming through!
    Wow, look at that!
  • 41:27 - 41:28
    We probably need to get out of here.
    - I think we should get out.
  • 41:28 - 41:31
    Let's do it. I think, one big surge can
    come in any time now.
  • 41:31 - 41:32
    Oh my god!
  • 41:32 - 41:33
    It's coming in with fury now.
  • 41:33 - 41:37
    I mean, c'mon. Jesus! Look at this.
    It's coming in.
  • 41:37 - 41:39
    See the ocean...we're running...
    right now we're running parallel.
  • 41:39 - 41:42
    different voices
    (Jim) That's where a tornado
    hit earlier.
  • 41:42 - 41:43
    Blew the roof clean off.
  • 41:43 - 41:49
    This whole area is prone to flooding.
    Now that the water is breaching the dunes
  • 41:49 - 41:53
    off of the beach, this whole area is gonna...
    it will flood.
  • 41:53 - 41:57
    (Jim) Let's not get trapped.
  • 41:57 - 42:00
    Look at how the roads flooded.
    - Ah, okay. Wow.
  • 42:00 - 42:01
    This is our last chance to get out of here.
    Literally.
  • 42:01 - 42:03
    I can't get through there.
    - Oh my god!
  • 42:03 - 42:08
    But you got an exit route, do you? (exhales)
    Yeah, that was scary!
  • 42:08 - 42:14
    Just seeing the road close like that, thinking
    "Wow, can we not get out of here?
  • 42:14 - 42:16
    Do we need to get higher ground?"
    - Well, sometimes I ask myself in life
  • 42:16 - 42:22
    "Why do I have to be with the one guy who
    wants to be out in all of South Carolina
  • 42:22 - 42:25
    when the fucking eye of the storm is
    hitting?"
  • 42:25 - 42:28
    You just gotta grow a set of nuts and go with it.
  • 42:28 - 42:32
    (both laughing)
  • 42:32 - 42:34
    Hey, it's one of lifes adventures.
  • 42:34 - 42:40
    (radio playing) It's very tough
    getting around with hundreds
  • 42:40 - 42:42
    of areas of roads closed.
  • 42:42 - 42:43
    (Aftermath - Part 1)
    There's another road blocked up there.
  • 42:43 - 42:44
    No way to get through and
    down the 905, huh?
  • 42:44 - 42:44
    Rolling on the river!
  • 42:44 - 42:48
    Oh, shit!
  • 42:48 - 42:52
    As if by design to epochal events
    struck both Clinton and Trump's campaigns
  • 42:52 - 42:54
    as Hurricane Matthew hit.
  • 42:54 - 42:56
    Oh, this is not feeling good at all.
  • 42:56 - 42:58
    Properly going through a lake.
  • 42:58 - 43:02
    On the one hand the access to
    Hollywod tapes revealed
  • 43:02 - 43:06
    Trumps bragging about his sexual exploits
  • 43:06 - 43:08
    and predatory approach towards women.
  • 43:08 - 43:11
    On the other, Wikileaks began publishing
    thousands of emails from Clinton's campaign.
  • 43:11 - 43:17
    The aftermath reflected not just
    the perilous state both candidacies...
  • 43:17 - 43:20
    - The wind.
    - You could hear trees snap.
  • 43:20 - 43:26
    But signified we were now within the heart
    of a truly unprecedented presidential cycle.
  • 43:26 - 43:27
    It's terrifying.
  • 43:27 - 43:30
    Neither campaign would ride out
    the aftermath
  • 43:30 - 43:33
    with the dignity of the people
    they were set to govern.
  • 43:33 - 43:39
    I just thank God that that's all that was lost, cause it could have been
  • 43:39 - 43:40
    a whole lot worse
  • 43:40 - 43:44
    Kind of get the yard straight in the process.
  • 43:44 - 43:48
    So, that's Dad up there!
    How you doing, Dad?
  • 43:48 - 43:50
    Are you alright?
  • 43:50 - 43:53
    Did you get out of the beach, okay?
    - Yeah, I was alright.
  • 43:53 - 43:58
    That's a Dad doing a proper Dad's work!
    - That's a true homeowner for you.
  • 44:06 - 44:08
    (music plays)
  • 44:08 - 44:13
    It is hard to describe how the feeling
    changes as one drives south.
  • 44:13 - 44:16
    You notice it in the landscape.
  • 44:16 - 44:19
    Hear it in the accents.
  • 44:19 - 44:23
    But more so, in the caress of the air around you.
  • 44:23 - 44:26
    There is an ease of being as it envelops you.
  • 44:26 - 44:30
    As if you can breathe in a new way.
  • 44:30 - 44:32
    There is a sense of inversion when in
    the South.
  • 44:32 - 44:39
    As if, in slowing, you can hear America's plurality
    of voices with greater clarity.
  • 44:39 - 44:45
    And with it a recognition that to truly
    understand America
  • 44:45 - 44:48
    each one must be heard.
  • 44:48 - 44:50
    Absorbed.
  • 44:50 - 44:51
    Interjected.
  • 44:52 - 44:59
    ♪ I wanna live in a blue sky
    I wanna live in a blue sky ♪
  • 44:59 - 45:17
    ♪ I wanna live in a blue sky
    I wanna live in a blue sky ♪
  • 45:21 - 45:22
    It's always about me.
  • 45:22 - 45:24
    People keep asking me
  • 45:24 - 45:28
    have we, have I ever seen anything
    like this. And I keep saying "no".
  • 45:28 - 45:29
    THE VOICE OF THE BLUES
  • 45:29 - 45:34
    And I just hope to God that I don't see
    another campaign like this one.
  • 45:34 - 45:36
    America can do better.
  • 45:36 - 45:39
    Than what we have seen here tonight.
  • 45:39 - 45:41
    This was just disgraceful.
  • 45:41 - 45:44
    Most people feel like, you know,
    the rich stay rich.
  • 45:44 - 45:46
    The poor stay poor.
  • 45:46 - 45:47
    ♪ (singing) Misery ♪
  • 45:47 - 45:50
    The middle class work to keep
    from being poor.
  • 45:50 - 45:54
    ♪ (singing) You can't have me no more.♪
  • 45:54 - 45:55
    But to make the rich richer.
  • 45:55 - 45:58
    People feel forgotten about.
  • 45:58 - 46:01
    ♪(singing) I ain't got time.♪
  • 46:01 - 46:04
    We throw away more food on a daily basis
    that could actually
  • 46:04 - 46:06
    probably feed the whole world.
  • 46:06 - 46:10
    Alabama
  • 46:10 - 46:12
    I feel like a lot of American politics all
    depends on who you know
  • 46:12 - 46:13
    and what kind of money you have.
  • 46:13 - 46:17
    The thing is we're fucking choosing
    between two fucking morons.
  • 46:17 - 46:20
    It would be so cool to have the first
    female president.
  • 46:20 - 46:23
    - Absolutely.
    - However, I find it really pathetic
  • 46:23 - 46:26
    that Hillary Clinton can barely beat Trump.
  • 46:26 - 46:28
    (What of The American Dream?)
  • 46:28 - 46:31
    Half of us work our asses off just
    to make ends meet.
  • 46:31 - 46:33
    That American dream is something that
    you saw in the 50's.
  • 46:33 - 46:36
    - Yes!
    - You can't tell me shit's not rigged!
  • 46:36 - 46:38
    Something's coming. Change is coming.
  • 46:38 - 46:39
    Whether it's gonna be good or bad.
  • 46:39 - 46:42
    But change is coming.
    I know people like us who work
  • 46:42 - 46:44
    our asses of are tired of the people
    like who run our country.
  • 46:44 - 46:49
    (Louisiana)
  • 46:49 - 46:52
    New Orleans is in a constant state of decay.
  • 46:52 - 46:58
    It's the lowest place in America
    but it is a beautiful type of decay.
  • 46:58 - 47:03
    It's a fascinating type of decay because
    the leaves are turning yellow.
  • 47:03 - 47:09
    There is always something bright green
    coming right up with it.
  • 47:09 - 47:13
    Louisiana is teeming with life
    and really has a longing for life.
  • 47:13 - 47:15
    A BEAUTIFUL STATE OF DECAY
  • 47:15 - 47:18
    It's everywhere. And it's beautiful.
  • 47:20 - 47:23
    You know, everybody has to
    watch what you say
  • 47:23 - 47:24
    to be politically correct.
  • 47:24 - 47:28
    This just started the last two years.
    It's like "oh my god."
  • 47:28 - 47:32
    Like the statues. You know the statues
    have been in New Orleans for
  • 47:32 - 47:34
    I don't even know how many years.
  • 47:34 - 47:36
    What I discovered in the South
  • 47:36 - 47:39
    was not a sense of wanting to ignore
    or forget history.
  • 47:39 - 47:43
    But a feeling that it had come to terms
    with its own past.
  • 47:43 - 47:45
    Look but they want to tear down a statue though.
  • 47:45 - 47:49
    They couldn't. It was hard find a racist in New Orleans.
  • 47:49 - 47:53
    They tried to start all that stuff but we're all been married to each other.
  • 47:53 - 47:54
    We don't have colors here.
  • 47:54 - 47:55
    We have shades.
  • 47:55 - 47:59
    We, New Orleans, have been
    mixed for so many years.
  • 47:59 - 48:00
    Oh my god.
  • 48:00 - 48:05
    They try to start all that racial stuff.
    That stuff doesn't work with us.
  • 48:05 - 48:07
    Never has. Never will.
  • 48:09 - 48:14
    It seemed that the South felt itself
    appropriated by the so-called culture wars,
  • 48:15 - 48:16
    CULTURE WARS
  • 48:16 - 48:18
    embodied by the removal of
    confederate statues.
  • 48:18 - 48:21
    How many years? And now all of sudden
    they're racist
  • 48:21 - 48:24
    or somebody is being offended by a statue.
    Give me a freaking break.
  • 48:24 - 48:29
    The politicization of culture was
    dredging up old divisions
  • 48:29 - 48:31
    of racial tension,
  • 48:31 - 48:34
    which the South felt it was organically
    moving on further.
  • 48:34 - 48:37
    As a nation I think
    it's coming together.
  • 48:37 - 48:42
    Still gonna take some time, but...
    everything does.
  • 48:42 - 48:46
    And I believe in that.
    We all gonna survive.
  • 48:46 - 48:48
    I'm tired of America's self hatred.
  • 48:48 - 48:52
    I can prove to you very quickly that
    we're not a racist country.
  • 48:52 - 48:55
    We elected a black president twice.
  • 48:55 - 48:59
    Black comprised a little less than 13%
    of the population.
  • 48:59 - 49:06
    music playing
  • 49:06 - 49:09
    New forms of music are not born in
    fancy neighborhoods.
  • 49:09 - 49:13
    Or where people get a lot of money from
    the government.
  • 49:13 - 49:16
    They're born on the streets and on the sidewalk.
    A little messy sometimes.
  • 49:16 - 49:19
    They're born in places like this.
  • 49:21 - 49:24
    We're the wealthiest nation in the world.
  • 49:24 - 49:28
    And we're below like the highest ranks
    like out of the top ten
  • 49:28 - 49:30
    of how many categories?
  • 49:30 - 49:37
    music playing
  • 49:37 - 49:45
    I think that this neigborhood is gonna
    become just another wealthy neighborhood.
  • 49:45 - 49:46
    A museum.
  • 49:46 - 49:49
    What's destroying the country: only 10%
    of the people vote!
  • 49:49 - 49:53
    You're willing to kill and die for
    the right to vote and won't do it.
  • 49:53 - 49:55
    And you're talking about a revolution?
  • 49:55 - 49:57
    Why don't you using the revolution you got?
  • 49:57 - 50:00
    music playing
  • 50:05 - 50:07
    TEXAS
    - I think that this is going to be
  • 50:07 - 50:10
    the debate where Trump is going to go all out.
  • 50:10 - 50:13
    He's gonna lash out.
    He's gonna say whatever he feels like.
  • 50:13 - 50:16
    He's gonna grab the debate by the pussy.
  • 50:16 - 50:17
    That's what's gonna happen.
    That's what I think.
  • 50:17 - 50:19
    THE FINAL US PRESIDENTIAL DEBATE
  • 50:20 - 50:23
    (Trump) We we have some bad hombres here
    and we're gonna get them all out
  • 50:23 - 50:25
    No one's hating. Anyone, anywhere right here.
  • 50:25 - 50:28
    Like no one has any anger or hate towards them.
  • 50:28 - 50:31
    We're just good people all having a good time.
  • 50:31 - 50:35
    (Trump) She wants to open borders. People
    are gonna pour into our country.
  • 50:35 - 50:39
    I'm not gonna let someone project on me
    what my country is.
  • 50:39 - 50:43
    When I'm sitting here, having a beer.
    You know, having the best time of my life.
  • 50:43 - 50:47
    (Clinton) You're not up to doing the job.
    crowd cheering
  • 50:49 - 50:52
    It's hard to believe that the race
    is actually so close.
  • 50:52 - 50:56
    When you get to watch the debate and
    see what he has to say
  • 50:56 - 50:58
    that is acutally a lot of it is nonsense.
  • 51:00 - 51:02
    I want it. That's why I got it on my back
    in the beginning.
  • 51:02 - 51:05
    It's because I give a shit about the
    people around me.
  • 51:05 - 51:06
    People matter.
  • 51:06 - 51:10
    And you know building a wall is bullshit.
  • 51:10 - 51:13
    I literally, like when you ask me for a
    sip of my beer.
  • 51:13 - 51:18
    I literally got emotional because like bro
    like we just met.
  • 51:18 - 51:21
    You know like I'm a giving heart.
    That's who I am.
  • 51:21 - 51:25
    Like we just met. You know like you feel
    comfortable enough with me.
  • 51:25 - 51:32
    You know, no hate. Nothing like, you know,
    60 years, you know 60, 50 years ago that shit would've never happened.
  • 51:32 - 51:35
    I would had to take a drink in a fountain.
    You know, back outside
  • 51:35 - 51:37
    or some shit like that.
  • 51:37 - 51:39
    You know, so. That's how far
    we've come.
  • 51:39 - 51:42
    And that's, things like this,
    is what makes this country great, man.
  • 51:45 - 51:48
    America was continuing to reveal its
    different faces to me.
  • 51:49 - 51:53
    Texas had voted Republican in every
    election since 1980.
  • 51:53 - 51:56
    And yet, despite the polarity with the debate
  • 51:56 - 51:58
    it showed me a version of an America
  • 51:58 - 51:59
    at peace with itself.
  • 51:59 - 52:02
    Republican, Democrat sat side by side,
  • 52:02 - 52:05
    and for a brief moment I felt a healthy
    conversational
  • 52:05 - 52:08
    and interactive approach to politics.
  • 52:08 - 52:10
    Ahead of me, however, lay Austin
  • 52:10 - 52:13
    where the reality of the economic divides
  • 52:13 - 52:15
    would present themselves in stark colors
  • 52:15 - 52:18
    and if there's one thing a populist leader
    understands
  • 52:18 - 52:21
    it's how to exacerbate existing tensions
  • 52:21 - 52:23
    and use them for political gain.
  • 52:27 - 52:28
    woman screaming
  • 52:43 - 52:46
    Those of sometimes strangers fighting
    one another.
  • 52:46 - 52:50
    over something that they may stepped
    on each other's foot...
  • 52:50 - 52:51
    THE GOSPEL OF THE SIDEWALK
  • 52:51 - 52:54
    in the club, while they gettin' drunk or something..
  • 52:54 - 52:56
    You know something that don't make any
    sense.
  • 52:56 - 52:59
    Or this lady decided she wanna go over
    here with this gentleman
  • 52:59 - 53:01
    and that gentleman didn't think she should.
  • 53:01 - 53:05
    They never really fightin' over anything that
    matters.
  • 53:05 - 53:08
    (Jim) What matters, Linda?
  • 53:08 - 53:10
    What matters is life.
  • 53:10 - 53:12
    And preservin' it.
  • 53:12 - 53:16
    And learnin' and teachin' one another
    how to survive with each other.
  • 53:16 - 53:20
    We don't know how to do that.
  • 53:20 - 53:21
    You know.
  • 53:21 - 53:25
    And racism -
    that needs to be dead and gone.
  • 53:25 - 53:28
    Those that started it is dead and gone.
  • 53:28 - 53:31
    Let it die with them. You know what I'm
    sayin'?
  • 53:31 - 53:35
    We are a whole new generation and we
    got new generations to come.
  • 53:35 - 53:37
    What are we teaching them?
    How to stay in the past?
  • 53:37 - 53:41
    It was in my meeting with Linda
    that I realized
  • 53:41 - 53:45
    my grappling with America had somehow
    gone in the wrong place.
  • 53:45 - 53:48
    Linda's words, "what matters is life,
  • 53:48 - 53:49
    preserving it"
  • 53:49 - 53:51
    struck at my core.
  • 53:51 - 53:54
    Like most I'd been pulled into the drama,
  • 53:54 - 53:55
    the divisions,
  • 53:55 - 53:57
    the conflicting ideas in the spectacle.
  • 53:57 - 53:59
    Sitting by her side
  • 53:59 - 54:02
    and within her gentleness and kindness
  • 54:02 - 54:05
    I was introduced to a new perspective
    of America.
  • 54:05 - 54:10
    That night, I watch from my van as two
    old friends shared a joint
  • 54:10 - 54:12
    and prepared for another night on the streets.
  • 54:12 - 54:15
    I felt a sense of humility before the grace
  • 54:15 - 54:18
    with which they seemed to bear their lot in
    in life.
  • 54:18 - 54:19
    And I felt a sense of shame
  • 54:19 - 54:21
    that for all my wrestling with America
  • 54:21 - 54:24
    that I not had the courage to reach as hard.
  • 54:24 - 54:28
    I vowed that I would play a new hand
    in the game.
  • 54:28 - 54:33
    From this point, I wanted to tell the story
  • 54:33 - 54:34
    of the untold election.
  • 54:41 - 54:45
    Oh, it's a rush.
    It's a big rush.
  • 54:49 - 54:51
    The wildest woman you ever had in your life.
  • 54:52 - 54:54
    I mean crazy.
  • 54:55 - 54:58
    It's not, are you're gonna get hurt,
    it's when.
  • 54:58 - 55:02
    shouting
    Now, now, now!
  • 55:04 - 55:05
    Broken ribs.
  • 55:06 - 55:08
    I broke my femur like six times.
  • 55:09 - 55:11
    Got more screws right there.
  • 55:13 - 55:14
    I broke it comin' off a bull.
  • 55:17 - 55:19
    I got slammed down face first in the dirt.
  • 55:19 - 55:23
    I got screws right here.
  • 55:23 - 55:25
    Every muscle in my body aches.
  • 55:26 - 55:27
    Got surgery on my eye.
  • 55:28 - 55:30
    I do this because I love it.
  • 55:31 - 55:32
    Broke my shoulder.
  • 55:34 - 55:37
    Bein' able to ride a bull?
    Like being on top of the world.
  • 55:39 - 55:40
    Right here, across this one.
  • 55:42 - 55:44
    I was enjoying my first rodeo.
  • 55:44 - 55:46
    It seemed on the surface
  • 55:46 - 55:51
    a quintessential expression of American
    energy, brawn, and gumption.
  • 55:51 - 55:55
    And yet, in attempting to peel away
    the layers of this seemingly most
  • 55:55 - 55:58
    southern traditions, I found my own
    impressions once again
  • 55:58 - 56:00
    subverted.
  • 56:01 - 56:05
    The rodeo is wonderfully multicultural, in both
    its origin and its expression
  • 56:05 - 56:07
    of modern culture.
  • 56:07 - 56:11
    Yet articulates a conservatism way beyond
    debating, villainization, and populous rhetoric.
  • 56:11 - 56:15
    It's not an American sport.
  • 56:15 - 56:18
    I mean, the original vaqueros in Mexico,
  • 56:18 - 56:21
    they got rodeo started and I mean
    everybody just went from there.
  • 56:21 - 56:28
    It's Brazil, Cuba, Mexico, America.
    It is a international sport.
  • 56:28 - 56:30
    It is a conservatism of family values,
  • 56:30 - 56:35
    love of nature. Values that are in no way at
    odds with liberal sentiment
  • 56:35 - 56:38
    about the environment and
    looking after one another
  • 56:38 - 56:40
    (Jim) Is this one of your lot?
    - It's my son.
  • 56:41 - 56:45
    We're thankful that we spend a lot of time
    doing it
  • 56:45 - 56:50
    and exercising, running and bein' the best
    we can be.
  • 56:50 - 56:52
    So, we're blessed because of that.
  • 56:53 - 56:54
    Cowboy life.
    Country life.
  • 56:55 - 56:58
    Hunting, fishing, riding, everything.
    laughs
  • 56:58 - 57:00
    When you go beyond the politics
  • 57:00 - 57:03
    you find these things are just
    an expression
  • 57:03 - 57:04
    of one another.
  • 57:04 - 57:06
    In the rodeo, I found an America
  • 57:06 - 57:08
    overcoming itself.
  • 57:08 - 57:12
    It pointed to the artificiality in the
    divides of the Right and the Left.
  • 57:12 - 57:15
    And the illusion of how our politics
    characterizes us.
  • 57:15 - 57:17
    As if from two separate species.
  • 57:17 - 57:21
    The way I feel about America now is that
  • 57:21 - 57:25
    we need to put all the racial differences
    aside,
  • 57:25 - 57:28
    all the business aspects aside,
  • 57:28 - 57:30
    and get back to being a faith-driven country.
  • 57:30 - 57:32
    We need to go back to understanding that
  • 57:32 - 57:34
    and become a country as one
  • 57:34 - 57:36
    you know, through faith.
  • 57:36 - 57:38
    It doesn't matter what religion you are.
  • 57:38 - 57:40
    We just need to come together as we're
    all come from the same cloth.
  • 57:40 - 57:42
    And just, we need to put our differences aside
  • 57:42 - 57:45
    and work together and that's the
    bottom line.
  • 57:46 - 57:47
    Never givin' up.
  • 57:47 - 57:50
    Never let an injury back you down.
  • 57:50 - 57:52
    There's a number of things.
  • 57:53 - 57:55
    It's more of in your heart.
  • 57:55 - 57:57
    It's not how you look,
  • 57:57 - 57:58
    how you talk,
  • 57:58 - 57:59
    how you dress.
  • 57:59 - 58:00
    It's more of all in your heart.
  • 58:03 - 58:07
    But where it is in the moment a
    hell of a shape.
  • 58:07 - 58:09
    You know.
    Need to be something done about it.
  • 58:09 - 58:13
    So, for one thing they need
    to vote for Trump.
  • 58:13 - 58:15
    And give him a shot.
  • 58:15 - 58:18
    And since he's a business man then maybe
    he can get a bunch of stuff done.
  • 58:18 - 58:21
    And if he didn't get up there and corrupted
    get corrupted like the rest of them.
  • 58:21 - 58:24
    You gotta get this country turned around.
  • 58:24 - 58:27
    You can't keep going into debt.
  • 58:27 - 58:33
    Because if they do, they're gonna fold
    the money system as we know it today.
  • 58:33 - 58:39
    We're 20 trillion dollars in debt
    and all of this is been since Reagan
  • 58:39 - 58:41
    went in office.
  • 58:41 - 58:42
    My sign out front says it all.
  • 58:42 - 58:46
    No matter who wins this election we're
    gonna lose here.
  • 58:46 - 58:49
    In the way the election is going,
    they're not talking about us.
  • 58:49 - 58:52
    You know, Trump is talking
    about the little man.
  • 58:52 - 58:54
    Small businesses all over America
    are the same way.
  • 58:54 - 58:57
    But the Democrats aren't talking about the
    little man.
  • 58:57 - 58:59
    They're taxing us out of existence.
  • 58:59 - 59:01
    I would always like to believe that
  • 59:01 - 59:03
    everybody is gonna be better in the end.
  • 59:03 - 59:06
    But it's gonna take an awful lot of us
    workin' really hard to do that.
  • 59:06 - 59:10
    And that's what we're lacking in America
    now.
  • 59:11 - 59:12
    People working really hard at something.
  • 59:12 - 59:17
    I think they want it too easily. They think
    that somehow that the government
  • 59:17 - 59:19
    is gonna promise that they don't have
    to do anything for that.
  • 59:19 - 59:22
    It's like an effortless thing and all of the sudden
    everyone is happy.
  • 59:22 - 59:26
    That is not reality.
  • 59:26 - 59:28
    Not reality at all.
  • 59:29 - 59:31
    (New Mexico)
  • 59:33 - 59:34
    American and Mexican border is
    right up there.
  • 59:34 - 59:37
    El Paso used to be Mexico.
  • 59:37 - 59:41
    A lot of California used to be Mexico.
  • 59:41 - 59:43
    Majority of people are supporting him
  • 59:43 - 59:45
    of Anglo-Saxon people.
  • 59:45 - 59:46
    THE WALL OF WHITE SUPREMACY
  • 59:46 - 59:48
    Who over the last 40 years
  • 59:48 - 59:53
    they seen that the erosion of white supremacy.
  • 59:53 - 59:55
    What's gonna happen if he does win,
  • 59:55 - 59:57
    and if that wall is built.
  • 59:57 - 60:00
    These people, a lot of these people are
    already in
  • 60:00 - 60:03
    they're barely making it now as it is.
  • 60:03 - 60:06
    They don't like what's happening.
    They don't like it.
  • 60:06 - 60:13
    They feel like they're being a minority
    now. They're not a majority like they
  • 60:13 - 60:16
    used to be at one time. They're
    the minority now. And they don't like it.
  • 60:19 - 60:23
    This is a good place if you want to
    start in life all over again, there it is,
  • 60:23 - 60:25
    you know? But you have to want it.
  • 60:25 - 60:29
    You have to actually say to yourself
    "I don't wanna be here" you know?
  • 60:29 - 60:31
    Because this is the bottom of the barrel
    almost
  • 60:31 - 60:37
    I want to prove the old people they can
    do a lot of things.
  • 60:37 - 60:44
    For me it was almost a greater power was
    directing me. And to go through that I had
  • 60:44 - 60:48
    to go through hell in order to learn
    what I was being trained for.
  • 60:49 - 60:52
    I don't know if that makes any sense to
    you at all.
  • 60:52 - 60:54
    But that's, that's what I live and that's
    what I believe.
  • 60:54 - 60:58
    I would've never ended up taking care of
    homeless people if I didn't...
  • 60:58 - 61:02
    wasn't immersed in it myself.
  • 61:03 - 61:08
    (Jim) My experiences in Austin had shown
    me that there is no true understanding
  • 61:08 - 61:10
    of America without confronting the
    epdidemic of homelessnes.
  • 61:10 - 61:15
    If, as Gandhi mused, a nation's health can
    be judged by how it treats its
  • 61:15 - 61:20
    weakest member. Then how does one grapple
    with this epidemic in the
  • 61:20 - 61:25
    world's richest country?
    Perhaps we're all complicit in some way.
  • 61:25 - 61:31
    We demonize the homeless, make them
    outcasts, deprive them of their humanity
  • 61:31 - 61:35
    and settle our conciousness with a few
    dollars chucked into a hat once a month.
  • 61:35 - 61:42
    In the Opportunity Center in El Paso I
    came across what can only be described as
  • 61:42 - 61:46
    twin forms of heroism. Both in the work of
    those choosing to wrestle with the plight of
  • 61:46 - 61:51
    those most in need. But even more so, the
    power of spirit of those
  • 61:51 - 61:55
    trying to claw themselves out from
    destitution itself.
  • 61:58 - 62:03
    I like your accent! Don't say where you're
    from, I'm gonna guess. Australia!
  • 62:03 - 62:07
    Close-ish. (laughter) Actually from
    Scotland!
  • 62:07 - 62:09
    Scotland! Ah, I didn't think of that!
  • 62:09 - 62:12
    -What you think I'm talkin'? Chicken.
    - I'm chicken juice.
  • 62:12 - 62:14
    -Your a what?
    - I'm chicken!
  • 62:14 - 62:18
    - Yeah, you're chicken shit!
    - Yeah. I'm chicken shit! (laughs)
  • 62:25 - 62:28
    If it wasn't for them we'd be in trouble.
  • 62:29 - 62:32
    - What are you making here?
    - Rosaries!
  • 62:32 - 62:36
    - Okay! Wow you make it so quickly, Reso!
    - Yes
  • 62:36 - 62:38
    - Wow! Beautiful work my friend!
    Thank you so much!
  • 62:38 - 62:41
    - This is a present for you!
    - Oh no!
  • 62:41 - 62:45
    - It's a present for you. Yes, sir.
    - Oh – does it get it...
  • 62:45 - 62:49
    oh my god, I will wear it
    with so much pride!
  • 62:49 - 62:52
    (Jim) What struck me in the Opportunity
    Center was the thin red line
  • 62:52 - 62:56
    between the circumstances of one life
    and the next.
  • 62:56 - 63:01
    In America it feels the safety net between
    falling through the social order
  • 63:01 - 63:05
    is far thinner than in Europe.
    And I was aghast at how a missed bill,
  • 63:05 - 63:11
    a freak injury, a lost job or an
    unexpected illness could prove so
  • 63:11 - 63:13
    fundamentally life-changing.
  • 63:13 - 63:23
    Being 54 years old with no insurance and a
    ...a pretty serious medical condition
  • 63:23 - 63:26
    it's...it's very scary and depressing.
  • 63:26 - 63:30
    Then I had an illness where
    I ended up in the hospital
  • 63:30 - 63:33
    and my hospital stay ate
    all of the money that I had
  • 63:33 - 63:36
    and I had no place to go
    after I was hospitalized.
  • 63:36 - 63:38
    And that's how I ended up
    here.
  • 63:39 - 63:42
    (Jim) It made me realize that keeping
    homeless people at a remove
  • 63:42 - 63:45
    is not just an act of cowardice
    in society at large,
  • 63:45 - 63:48
    but also an expression
    of the protective layer
  • 63:48 - 63:51
    the wealthier class
    build around themselves.
  • 63:51 - 63:54
    To shield themselves from the gritty
    potential in life.
  • 63:54 - 63:59
    See, I help everybody 'cause I know how hard
    things are, you know?
  • 63:59 - 64:08
    There are hard times right here. Everybody's broke or you know,
    They want to smoke a cigarette, food, whatever I can. I share everything I got.
  • 64:08 - 64:12
    Well, I think that there is alot of people
    who are not willing
  • 64:12 - 64:14
    to hire homeless people, not willing
    to give them a chance.
  • 64:14 - 64:18
    But I do believe that there is still
    good people in America.
  • 64:18 - 64:23
    (Jim) The election had become a noise of
    clashing ideas and archetypes.
  • 64:23 - 64:25
    A mirage of shock, fantasy and drama.
  • 64:26 - 64:30
    I felt at last I had arrived at
    a more substantial reality.
  • 64:30 - 64:34
    That revealed itself
    in the simple way a human being suffers.
  • 64:34 - 64:39
    I'm here in a lot of ways but...
  • 64:39 - 64:43
    what brought me here was...
  • 64:43 - 64:46
    trying to find my... myself.
  • 64:48 - 64:51
    You know, there's a lot of people just
    getting richer and richer and richer
  • 64:51 - 65:02
    while uh, more and more people from
    middle class below are just going way way
  • 65:02 - 65:04
    down below the poverty line.
  • 65:04 - 65:08
    (Jim) Seen in this way, a measure of
    society became how it treated those
  • 65:08 - 65:10
    who had fallen through its safety net.
  • 65:10 - 65:14
    As such I felt the Opportunity Center
  • 65:14 - 65:18
    offered not just opportunity to those
    lives it was helping rebuild -
  • 65:18 - 65:24
    but also to society itself.
    - Making money, eating too much,
  • 65:24 - 65:30
    drinking too much. These are wrong
    things. The human,
  • 65:30 - 65:36
    they don't want to understand how to live
    better.
  • 65:36 - 65:42
    How do we create an atmosphere that's
    friendly and safe and caring of the people
  • 65:42 - 65:47
    that are rejected by the people in El Paso
    and everywhere else?
  • 65:47 - 65:54
    - You're right! (laughter)
    - Jose, put it there. Oh crap! (laughter)
  • 66:03 - 66:05
    The cowboy life is the only life.
  • 66:05 - 66:10
    My dad was once a – he was first,
    last and always a cowman.
  • 66:10 - 66:13
    The cattle industry is still going.
  • 66:13 - 66:17
    It's had a lot of heartaches and heartbreaks,
    having to
  • 66:17 - 66:23
    sell down your herd or sell it off
    and then start over again.
  • 66:23 - 66:26
    And there's an old story about the guy,
  • 66:26 - 66:31
    you know, some rancher said, "What would
    you do if you had a million dollars?"
  • 66:31 - 66:35
    "I reckon I'd just stay in
    the cattle business 'til it's all gone."
  • 66:35 - 66:40
    This old stove is what keeps
    my house warm all winter.
  • 66:40 - 66:45
    High integrity and hard-working
    and do the best you can
  • 66:45 - 66:49
    and as my nephew said, when my dad
    passed on three years ago...
  • 66:49 - 66:57
    He was ninety years old.
    And he was such an amazing man!
  • 66:57 - 67:00
    And he always tried to make
    things better.
  • 67:00 - 67:05
    (Jim) The transformative effects of
    globalization on traditional ways of life
  • 67:05 - 67:09
    is often presented in
    curiously statistical ways.
  • 67:09 - 67:12
    The deeper I traveled into America,
  • 67:12 - 67:14
    the more I witnessed longing
    for ways of life
  • 67:14 - 67:18
    irrevocably changed through modernity.
  • 67:18 - 67:20
    Within this yearning
    was a discernible pain,
  • 67:20 - 67:23
    not just in the difficulty
    of rural life...
  • 67:23 - 67:27
    It doesn't matter how hard it gets -
    you just keep pushing through.
  • 67:27 - 67:29
    You push through, you push through.
    Perseverance.
  • 67:29 - 67:31
    Perseverance, doing the best you can.
  • 67:31 - 67:34
    Those are the things
    that I learned from my folks.
  • 67:34 - 67:39
    (Jim) But moreover, an acute sense of
    personal and human loss.
  • 67:39 - 67:40
    THE HIDDEN INPUTS OF A GLOBALIZED WORLD
  • 67:40 - 67:42
    And our town was booming!
  • 67:42 - 67:47
    We had businesses that were everywhere!
  • 67:47 - 67:53
    I love my town. I love it
    with all my heart!
  • 67:53 - 67:58
    I hate to see it just going downhill.
  • 67:58 - 68:05
    Everyday something closes
    and somebody moves.
  • 68:05 - 68:10
    And you never see that one person
    again that you knew. That it so sad.
  • 68:10 - 68:14
    In the last – what is it, three years –
  • 68:14 - 68:17
    we've had I don't know
    how many overdoses.
  • 68:17 - 68:20
    Heroine overdoses.
    Of young kids!
  • 68:20 - 68:24
    It's almost like it's the devil's playground.
  • 68:24 - 68:27
    THE DEVILS PLAYGROUND
    (& ITS SAINTS)
  • 68:27 - 68:32
    Smoking a bowl! (laughter)
  • 68:35 - 68:40
    (??) (01:08:39) one of the most beautiful
    places you've ever been.
  • 68:40 - 68:45
    One of the most radical places. Back in the
    day, it was something else!
  • 68:45 - 68:50
    I'm an aboriginal of this country and hello!
    I'm barely being talked about
  • 68:50 - 68:53
    - when it comes to race.
    - If I thought that Trump would be
  • 68:53 - 68:57
    in there I'd put a bullet in his head if I
    had the opportunity.
  • 68:57 - 69:03
    They talk about all these other nationalities
    that came from everywhere as a minority.
  • 69:03 - 69:08
    - They never say American Indians.
    - I don't trust the man. I think he's
  • 69:08 - 69:12
    a Hitler.
    - I wish I could just ask the whole
  • 69:12 - 69:16
    United States about this. Everbody,
    wherever they came from is a descendant
  • 69:16 - 69:18
    from somewhere else.
  • 69:18 - 69:22
    I think he's the worst of all the worst!
    (music playing)
  • 69:30 - 69:31
    COLORADO
  • 69:31 - 69:34
    - Yeah these roads are really beginning
    to get icy up here in the mountains.
  • 69:34 - 69:36
    Heading towards Silverton.
  • 69:36 - 69:41
    You know this race is going
    down to the wire. You've got Trump making
  • 69:41 - 69:46
    this crazy late surge. Two weeks ago his
    campaign was dead in the water and
  • 69:46 - 69:52
    suddenly the head of the FBI released
    these emails and Clinton's campaign is
  • 69:52 - 69:56
    just being absolutely taken to pieces
    three days to the election! Is it gonna
  • 69:56 - 70:01
    stabilize or is Trump's rampantness
    gonna come back?
  • 70:01 - 70:03
    Wow, it's really getting snowy. I really
  • 70:03 - 70:07
    want to get to Silverton and find somewhere
    to stay 'cause this isn't cool at all.
  • 70:07 - 70:17
    To tell someone like myself, a small
    business owner, uhm when he didn't pay
  • 70:17 - 70:19
    taxes for all those years, to say,
    "Well, I didn't pay taxes
  • 70:19 - 70:22
    because I'm smart." You know and then there's
    someone like me that doesn't make that much money
  • 70:22 - 70:24
    and has to pay a certain amount of taxes
    every year?
  • 70:24 - 70:27
    I mean to me it's an insult to say
    something like that.
  • 70:27 - 70:30
    In other parts of the country there's
    tension between the political views.
  • 70:30 - 70:32
    Have you found any of that in Silverton?
  • 70:32 - 70:35
    -Oh lots of people here.
    - Oh there's lots of it! People are stealing
  • 70:35 - 70:38
    signs, they get in people's face and
    argue with them - it's pretty ugly.
  • 70:38 - 70:44
    I think that there's a big section of
    America that uhm, thinks that America's
  • 70:44 - 70:48
    going in the wrong direction because we're
    becoming more liberal on social issues.
  • 70:48 - 70:51
    And it scares them.
    - People've runined the country and
  • 70:51 - 70:56
    whether you agree with it or not it's your
    opinion but it's in trouble right now.
  • 70:56 - 70:59
    And terrorist groups are growing way
    faster than they should be allowed to.
  • 70:59 - 71:02
    We used to deal with that so that they
    wouldn't cause the world harm -
  • 71:02 - 71:04
    that's not happening anymore.
  • 71:04 - 71:07
    We hear there's some serious crime going
    on in Silverton. (laughter)
  • 71:07 - 71:10
    If there's a bad character that came to
    town I'll hear it from six different people
  • 71:10 - 71:11
    before the day's out.
  • 71:11 - 71:14
    - Big time crime in these parts!
    - Big time in this area! (laughter)
  • 71:14 - 71:18
    Is this how you managed to come across me
    after five minutes of being in town?
  • 71:18 - 71:20
    That's right! Someone said "I don't know,
    some cat with an accent.
  • 71:20 - 71:22
    You better check him out!" (laughter)
    - They come in that way or if they come
  • 71:22 - 71:26
    in that way, we can make sure we lock the
    town down!
  • 71:26 - 71:31
    - I'm glad I'm not getting arrested!
    - (laughter) Eh, not yet!
  • 71:31 - 71:34
    (Jim) I'd been lucky enough to be welcomed
    into the fold by
  • 71:34 - 71:38
    Silverton's law enforcement community.
    Once again I was struck by the apparent
  • 71:38 - 71:41
    contradiction between America's internal
    divisions...
  • 71:41 - 71:45
    Political period of the last couple of
    years has been knock down, drag out
  • 71:45 - 71:49
    - politics here lately.
    - They're the ones that everybody of course
  • 71:49 - 71:55
    - looks up to or listens to or sees.
    - (Jim) And its consistent capacity
  • 71:55 - 71:57
    to show welcome and hospitality to a
    stranger.
  • 71:57 - 72:00
    Guys, you know we don't understand the
    tea and strumpets thing or whatever you
  • 72:00 - 72:04
    - guys say, but... (laughter)
    - Showing the American spirit in the redneck
  • 72:04 - 72:05
    - trucks there? (laughter)
  • 72:05 - 72:08
    (Jim) I hoped to find out more about small
    community life...
  • 72:08 - 72:11
    - Well when the shit hits the fan we all
    together and do what needs to get done.
  • 72:11 - 72:14
    (Jim)... and the role of guns in America.
    - This is a kalashnikov.
  • 72:14 - 72:18
    It says, "kalashnikov this way,"
    a little play on, walk this way!
  • 72:18 - 72:24
    So I'm glad to see people coming and
    caring enough to find out what America
  • 72:24 - 72:30
    is like. Not what the American government
    is like. What America is like!
  • 72:30 - 72:33
    Well I think first of all we kid ourselves
    to believe that we're in a true democracy
  • 72:33 - 72:38
    anymore. We're in what I consider a system of
    legalized bribery. I mean when over
  • 72:38 - 72:40
    ninety percent of every decision in the
    House and Senate is in direct proportion to
  • 72:40 - 72:43
    the money that put that person in the
    office
  • 72:43 - 72:49
    - that's not democracy. That's bribery.
    - Some care about it from the heart rather
  • 72:49 - 72:53
    than from the power structure. And our
    politicians are no different than
  • 72:53 - 72:57
    politicians any place else.
    It's a power struggle.
  • 72:57 - 73:01
    We're ready for some major...major reforms
    that need to happen soon and maybe such a
  • 73:01 - 73:06
    circus-like election as this will kind of
    bring that about.
  • 73:06 - 73:10
    Most of us have, whether it's one side
    of the political spectrum or the other,
  • 73:10 - 73:19
    all have America at heart. And want
    to make it what it's supposed to be.
  • 73:19 - 73:21
    And so, anyway. (chuckles)
  • 73:21 - 73:24
    - I'm doin' good man, how are you?
    - Man, good to see you!
  • 73:24 - 73:29
    (Jim) The British will always view the
    American addiction to guns with a
  • 73:29 - 73:32
    degree of bemused curiosity and
    quizzical bafflement.
  • 73:32 - 73:36
    - So Bruce, I hope that's not a Scottish guy
    you've got on the target over there!
  • 73:36 - 73:39
    - Make my day, punk!
    - That's the one. (laughter)
  • 73:39 - 73:43
    I will point it at Steve's truck.
    'Cause I don't like Steve very much.
  • 73:43 - 73:48
    (Jim) And yet, for better or worse,
    firearms are engrained into the American
  • 73:48 - 73:55
    conciousness. The right to own a gun is
    synonymous for many US citizens with the
  • 73:55 - 74:01
    notion of freedon itself. Regardless of my
    personal feelings about deadly weapons, I was
  • 74:01 - 74:04
    impressed at the discipline and diligence
    of the Silverton police force.
  • 74:04 - 74:11
    Here, you or anybody else, you would call
    me and I will do everything in my power
  • 74:11 - 74:19
    at risk to myself to be there at your
    darkest hour.
  • 74:19 - 74:23
    - You going hot? (shot)
    - Fucking hell that's got a kick!
  • 74:23 - 74:29
    - You look like Doc Holiday in that hat!
  • 74:34 - 74:39
    UTAH
  • 74:41 - 74:47
    It is the day before the elections!
    Nearly at Salt Lake City. Just stopped
  • 74:47 - 74:53
    rolling to seeing some amazing countryside!
    So beautiful! This country just takes
  • 74:53 - 74:57
    the breath away at every turn. Even in this
    moment when it's going so berzerk
  • 74:57 - 75:04
    so crazy! You know what, this election
    became for me not about Donald Trump
  • 75:04 - 75:08
    or Hillary Clinton. It's become about the
    American people, it's become about these
  • 75:08 - 75:12
    mavericks I've come to know and learn
    and love. I'm just hoping that,
  • 75:12 - 75:17
    you know there's a sense of redemption
    and healing and coming together after
  • 75:17 - 75:20
    this election. Because all the people I've
    met, every single one of them deserves it.
  • 75:20 - 75:27
    Something is in the air and I just hope
    that it's a moment which can lead to great
  • 75:27 - 75:33
    self-reflection and like the true spirit
    of America to come through, that I have come across
  • 75:33 - 75:35
    and so much of this upon
  • 75:35 - 75:40
    this journey. Come on America!
    Inspire us all again like only you can!
  • 75:40 - 75:41
    ELECTION DAY
  • 75:41 - 75:46
    Okay, it's Election Day! Let's go see what's
    gonna happen!
  • 75:46 - 75:51
    Who are you supporting today? Wanting
    a female president, aren't you?
  • 75:51 - 75:53
    - Who are you voting for?
    - I have no idea and I won't know until
  • 75:53 - 75:54
    - I get in there...
    - Oh, I'm just terrified.
  • 75:54 - 75:58
    - ...and think long and hard about who
    I hate the least.
  • 75:58 - 76:01
    How'd you feel if you wake up and he's got
    the nuclear codes tomorrow?
  • 76:01 - 76:07
    - Uhm (laughs) yeah...
    - I think Trump has such an ego that he'll
  • 76:07 - 76:13
    - try really hard to do a good job.
    - You know, the reason why I'm deciding when I
  • 76:13 - 76:17
    get there is 'cause uhm it's been
    impossible for me to pick a side so to speak.
  • 76:17 - 76:23
    You're still undecided! You're two yards
    away from the polling booth and you still
  • 76:23 - 76:24
    - don't know.
    - Confusion, anxiety. (laughter)
  • 76:24 - 76:28
    It's two capitalists running against
    each other, who are both billionaires.
  • 76:28 - 76:31
    Make Americanos great again! (laughter)
  • 76:31 - 76:35
    They say get back to a better time but
    they never say what time that is. And they
  • 76:35 - 76:36
    never said what made it better back then.
  • 76:36 - 76:39
    So the sun is going down over Salt Lake
    City soon
  • 76:39 - 76:44
    and when it comes up again,
    America will have a new president.
  • 76:44 - 76:45
    ELECTION NIGHT
  • 76:45 - 76:47

    Clinton in the lead in Florida!
  • 76:47 - 76:50
    The election is already seasawing from
    Left to Right ...
  • 76:50 - 76:52
    (radio) Trump has a lead!
    - I mean it's just so dramatic and Clinton
  • 76:52 - 76:58
    has gone ahead. It's seasawing, it's sea-
    sawing. I mean I'm not an American man and
  • 76:58 - 77:01
    I'm totally on a knife edge.
    Looking quite good at the moment in
  • 77:01 - 77:05
    Florida for Clinton. (Yes, yes,yes!)
    No one knows where it's going.
  • 77:05 - 77:10
    Trump is winning in Florida, but look at
    that: Clinton ahead in Texas!
  • 77:10 - 77:14
    My youngest daughter is uh, going to
    school at the University,
  • 77:14 - 77:19
    Montana State University. Election night-
    the party that she's putting together for
  • 77:19 - 77:25
    her friends and her dorm is a R.I.P
    America Night. A Rest In Peace America
  • 77:25 - 77:27
    - Night.
    - I'm calling this "Erection Day"- we're
  • 77:27 - 77:31
    - screwed either way!
    - Hillary gets the flu and she can't be on
  • 77:31 - 77:38
    - election? Really? I have a vagina! And I
    have kids to take care of. And if you
  • 77:38 - 77:45
    really can't hold it together, with a
    vagina! I'm seriously, I'm a Buddhist.
  • 77:45 - 77:53
    To the Trump supporters out there: find
    the primary sources for yourself and uh
  • 77:53 - 77:56
    - discover your own path to knowledge.
    - One thing, what she do?
  • 77:56 - 78:00
    - If you had the chance to go back in time...
    - Okay, ask me!
  • 78:00 - 78:02
    - and end the life of one Adolf Hitler...
    - And?
  • 78:02 - 78:07
    - ...would you do so?
    - No.
  • 78:07 - 78:12
    - Why not? It's an interesting line of inquiry.
    - Okay, okay, why would you?
  • 78:12 - 78:20
    - Because I believe that given a chance to
    oppose forces against humanity I would
  • 78:20 - 78:25
    - do so. For Hitler or for Trump.
    - Wait, wait. Guess what? You weren't
  • 78:25 - 78:30
    - there and you can't change history.
    - And that's unfortunate, but having
  • 78:30 - 78:33
    - visited the polls and I have done what I
    feel is my American duty.
  • 78:33 - 78:36
    - But you can't change history, son.
    - And I hope I can change history going
  • 78:36 - 78:41
    - forward tonight. I've tried my best to
    do so and we will see what the outcome is.
  • 78:41 - 78:45
    - Mind you, you did. You tried to change
    history. I'm proud of you for trying to
  • 78:45 - 78:46
    - make a change.
    - And I, you.
  • 78:46 - 78:50
    - Thank you, I didn't vote. I'm Buddhist,
    I don't need to change history. It'll
  • 78:50 - 78:52
    - happen with or without me.
    - That's your choice.
  • 78:52 - 78:54
    - It is my choice.
    - Have a good night.
  • 78:54 - 78:57
    - I am. I'm having a blessed evening,
    thank you. (laughter)
  • 78:57 - 79:00
    (radio) Ohio shifting Republican as well
    at the moment.
  • 79:00 - 79:04
    It changed so much. Trump is up across the
    board.
  • 79:04 - 79:07
    (radio) Donald Trump will carry a huge
    prize, Texas...
  • 79:07 - 79:11
    He's up in Florida, he's up in Ohio, he's
    up in North Carolina...
  • 79:11 - 79:16
    - Hillary's got it in the bag.
    - Look how red it is! It's just terrifying!
  • 79:16 - 79:20
    -We're working west, as soon as we get to
    the west coast...
  • 79:20 - 79:23
    I'm so stressed out by your American bloody
    election, that I had to come and get some
  • 79:23 - 79:26
    cigarettes!
  • 79:26 - 79:31
    - Still fucking stressful! (laughter)
    (radio) The coast hasn't voted. The entire
  • 79:31 - 79:37
    half of the liberal constituency has not
    voted. - It's rigged!
  • 79:37 - 79:41
    - Virgina just won! For Hillary Clinton!
    - I feel good, a ittle nervous.
  • 79:41 - 79:46
    - Ohio was lost to Democrats!
    - Ohio is gone, it has gone to Trump.
  • 79:46 - 79:50
    - How many electorial votes go to Ohio?
    - I have no idea!
  • 79:50 - 79:53
    - Me fucking neither! (laughter)
    - I'm disappointed that the American people
  • 79:53 - 79:58
    - are so racist oriented.
    - If Michigan and Wisconsin go to Trump
  • 79:58 - 80:04
    - it's over. (cheering)
    - We just won California!
  • 80:04 - 80:05
    - Californiaaaaa!
  • 80:05 - 80:09
    But Trump won Idaho.
  • 80:09 - 80:11
    Hillary just passed Donald Trump.
  • 80:11 - 80:15
    If we lose
    Wisconsin, Michigan, it's over.
  • 80:15 - 80:19
    So I'm dashing across town
  • 80:19 - 80:22
    and we do not know which way it is going.
  • 80:22 - 80:25
    Trump has just won North Carolina.
  • 80:25 - 80:26
    It's official.
  • 80:26 - 80:28
    His message has connected with people.
  • 80:28 - 80:31
    The world is changing.
    The world is changing.
  • 80:31 - 80:35
    I'm nervous because Ohio
    is normally a good predictor,
  • 80:35 - 80:36
    and they totally failed us.
  • 80:36 - 80:41
    If Trump wins, there will be
    a Republican House, Republican Senate,
  • 80:41 - 80:46
    a Republican president who's likely
    to put in multiple Supreme Court Justices.
  • 80:46 - 80:49
    This is Roe v. Wade going away.
  • 80:49 - 80:51
    But know all of you...
  • 80:51 - 80:53
    You're too high, like aw, dude...
    We are foe today.
  • 80:53 - 80:58
    This is traditional marriage
    being reinstated likely.
  • 80:58 - 81:01
    This is not just undoing what Obama did.
  • 81:01 - 81:05
    This is undoing decades of
    stuff that we all care deeply about.
  • 81:05 - 81:07
    That's what all of you did...
  • 81:07 - 81:10
    and this is how all of you
    got to where you are now.
  • 81:10 - 81:13
    This is a really, really shitty moment.
  • 81:13 - 81:15
    If this is going the way
    it looks like it's gonna go.
  • 81:15 - 81:18
    I think the polls are still close,
    too close to call.
  • 81:18 - 81:22
    Barring the miraculous,
    I think Trump is our president,
  • 81:22 - 81:24
    which says a remarkable
    thing about democracy.
  • 81:24 - 81:28
    Which is that we get what we get
    and we have to acknowledge
  • 81:28 - 81:33
    the reality of what our populous is
    and what it wants.
  • 81:33 - 81:37
    We come together when
    we're at the hardest times,
  • 81:37 - 81:39
    you know.
    Evolution happens at the precipice.
  • 81:39 - 81:41
    It's, it's like a nightmare.
  • 81:41 - 81:43
    I'm here for the girls. That's me.
  • 81:43 - 81:45
    All the beautiful things get torn apart.
  • 81:45 - 81:52
    I just think I underestimated
    how misogynistic and xenophobic
  • 81:52 - 81:56
    and terrible so much of America is.
  • 81:56 - 81:58
    There are people
    putting children to bed tonight
  • 81:58 - 82:01
    and they're afraid of breakfast.
  • 82:01 - 82:05
    And I'm scared for all of my friends
    and anybody who's different.
  • 82:05 - 82:09
    I have Muslim friends who are texting me
    tonight saying, "Should I leave the country?"
  • 82:09 - 82:13
    Our president is someone who
    fears difference in all shapes and sizes.
  • 82:13 - 82:15
    This was a whitelash.
  • 82:15 - 82:17
    It's nearly 11 o'clock.
  • 82:17 - 82:18
    It hasn't been announced yet.
  • 82:18 - 82:22
    But we don't want to feel
    that someone has been elected...
  • 82:22 - 82:26
    by throwing away some of us.
  • 82:26 - 82:31
    The atmosphere has
    died in the Democratic Convention.
  • 82:31 - 82:36
    A solid 21% chance.
    - It's not nothing.
  • 82:36 - 82:39
    We're pretty much Germany
    in the 1940's right now.
  • 82:39 - 82:42
    Those parellels are uncanny.
  • 82:42 - 82:43
    Hope does last!
  • 82:43 - 82:47
    He's loud. He says he can
    single-handedly fix the problems
  • 82:47 - 82:49
    by eliminating minorities.
  • 82:49 - 82:54
    Sounds like, you know. A certain somebody.
  • 82:54 - 82:58
    I think a Trump presidency will...
  • 82:58 - 83:00
    We're fucked 'cause of Trump!
  • 83:00 - 83:03
    end acceptance of diversity.
  • 83:03 - 83:10
    I'm on my own in a cinema
    meant to be a party for the presidency.
  • 83:10 - 83:12
    Donald Trump about to take the stage...
  • 83:12 - 83:15
    Depressed, buddy.
  • 83:15 - 83:20
    ... introduce to you the President Elect
    of the United States of America,
  • 83:20 - 83:22
    Donald Trump.
  • 83:22 - 83:24
    Now it is all hitting me in the chest.
  • 83:24 - 83:26
    Kind of like a bad porno.
  • 83:26 - 83:31
    Thank you.
    Thank you very much everybody.
  • 83:31 - 83:36
    Sorry to keep you waiting.
    Complicated business.
  • 83:36 - 83:38
    Complicated business.
  • 83:38 - 83:42
    I've just received a call
    from Secretary Clinton...
  • 83:42 - 83:48
    The victory of Trump is
    part of a global movement.
  • 83:48 - 83:54
    There's no doubt of a shifting sense,
    the West is changing.
  • 83:54 - 83:58
    Some people might argue
    that there is some type of positive...
  • 83:58 - 84:01
    because if so many people
    want change then it has to happen.
  • 84:01 - 84:08
    But what does that change mean
    when it is characterized by xenophobia,
  • 84:08 - 84:14
    by division, by pointing fingers,
    by hostility, by anger, by racisms?
  • 84:14 - 84:16
    It's hard to see where it's going.
  • 84:16 - 84:24
    People need to come together more.
    I think.
  • 84:24 - 84:28
    The evil is taking over with
    a lot of things here, in these days.
  • 84:28 - 84:31
    I don't even know what town I'm in.
  • 84:31 - 84:34
    There are protests breaking out across
    the country.
  • 84:34 - 84:37
    The rhetoric of his
    campaign can't be undone.
  • 84:37 - 84:41
    Look at history where
    this language leads to.
  • 84:41 - 84:44
    I'm on the way up to Oakland tonight.
  • 84:44 - 84:47
    There's been protests
    breaking out across the US.
  • 84:47 - 84:49
    I'm just heading towards this protest
  • 84:49 - 84:51
    to see what the
    feeling is here in California.
  • 84:51 - 84:52
    CALIFORNIA
  • 84:52 - 84:54
    We are going up against
    a corrupt adversary.
  • 84:54 - 84:56
    And we can't match his corruption.
  • 84:56 - 85:00
    Because if we match his corruption,
    he will take us out easily.
  • 85:00 - 85:03
    How we feeling tonight?
    (cheering)
  • 85:03 - 85:06
    What we have to do is make sure
  • 85:06 - 85:09
    that we are fighting against
    the corruption within ourselves
  • 85:09 - 85:12
    while we're fighting against
    corruption in this society.
  • 85:12 - 85:18
    To accept this is to
    accept a repeat of history.
  • 85:18 - 85:21
    There will be no "I never knew."
  • 85:21 - 85:25
    The Republicans win
    the House, the Senate,
  • 85:25 - 85:27
    the fucking judicial court.
  • 85:27 - 85:32
    The Republicans haven't won that
    much since 1928 through the fucking history.
  • 85:32 - 85:35
    I really do feel we have to come from love.
  • 85:35 - 85:36
    Fuckers!
  • 85:36 - 85:40
    You cannot fucking be non-violent
    to somebody who is violent towards you.
  • 85:40 - 85:43
    Martin Luther King fucking finds that out
    when he got his ass assasinated.
  • 85:45 - 85:47
    We have to march...
  • 85:48 - 85:49
    ...and strike...
  • 85:57 - 85:58
    ...like we never have.
  • 85:59 - 86:03
    This division has been going on
    since the entire history of this country.
  • 86:03 - 86:06
    It's only now there's
    such a mass uprising against it.
  • 86:06 - 86:08
    We did kill 95% of
    the native people that lived here.
  • 86:08 - 86:10
    Of like what, 12 million?
  • 86:10 - 86:11
    Fucking indiginous land.
  • 86:11 - 86:13
    You fucking asshole!
  • 86:13 - 86:15
    We're not divided,
    we can unite against something like
  • 86:15 - 86:18
    corporatism or the government
    and that is truly dangerous.
  • 86:18 - 86:21
    Death to the idea that
    love can solve racism.
  • 86:21 - 86:23
    Death to the idea that
    love can solve capitalism.
  • 86:23 - 86:25
    Death to the idea
    that love trumps hate.
  • 86:25 - 86:27
    It's about resistance,
    it's about organized resistance.
  • 86:32 - 86:35
    These corporations back
    every war that we see.
  • 86:35 - 86:37
    They back everything that is corrupt.
  • 86:37 - 86:40
    They don't back anything good.
  • 86:40 - 86:44
    (shouting)
  • 86:44 - 86:49
    They're fucking arresting people!
    That's fucking violent!
  • 86:49 - 86:55
    Them fucking taking us to jail,
    it's fucking violent.
  • 86:55 - 86:56
    I believe that it's necessary
  • 86:56 - 86:59
    to resist the rise of fascism
    in violent ways, yeah.
  • 86:59 - 87:01
    We can never be divided!
  • 87:01 - 87:05
    Maybe in a state like Nazi Germany.
    I don't know.
  • 87:05 - 87:07
    Because how else would
    you have countered that?
  • 87:07 - 87:09
    When he spoke against Mexicans,
  • 87:09 - 87:12
    when he spoke against queer folks,
  • 87:12 - 87:15
    I am a gay man
    and I'm at a point where
  • 87:15 - 87:20
    I can't really articulate
    the fears I have for this country.
  • 87:20 - 87:22
    Fuck who?
    Fuck Trump!
  • 87:22 - 87:26
    I'm a member of the LGBTQ community
  • 87:26 - 87:28
    and I feel a lot better
    going to sleep at night
  • 87:28 - 87:33
    knowing that I have not, like, practiced,
    like if I say fuck Donald Trump,
  • 87:33 - 87:36
    that's for me very hateful.
  • 87:36 - 87:39
    We gotta do this together, man.
    There's no other way.
  • 87:39 - 87:42
    You gotta eradicate
    this shit with love, alright?
  • 87:46 - 87:49
    The original Constitution mentions slavery,
  • 87:49 - 87:51
    and slavery, 2/3 a person.
  • 87:51 - 87:54
    A black man was 2/3 a person. What?
  • 87:54 - 87:58
    You can't expect people who've been
    oppressed for so many fucking centuries
  • 87:58 - 88:00
    to just be peaceful up until now.
  • 88:00 - 88:03
    Do you think we just
    gonna be holding hands
  • 88:03 - 88:04
    and marching
    and singing all the fucking time?
  • 88:04 - 88:07
    The bitch is a dump. Fuck that [n-word] Trump!
  • 88:07 - 88:10
    The next thing is to stand up
  • 88:10 - 88:15
    and fight for everything
    that this country is for.
  • 88:15 - 88:17
    And I want you to remember
  • 88:17 - 88:19
    that we got four long years
    of opposing this motherfucker.
  • 88:23 - 88:25
    They didn't allow women to vote.
  • 88:26 - 88:27
    Last night I got teargassed.
  • 88:27 - 88:31
    The Constitution needs to evolve.
  • 88:31 - 88:32
    We don't want no special treatment.
  • 88:32 - 88:34
    We want what the Constitution
    says that we deserve.
  • 88:34 - 88:36
    But what we know is,
  • 88:36 - 88:38
    the Constitution wasn't written
    to give us what we deserve.
  • 88:38 - 88:44
    People protest and they want to stand there
    like little fucking bitches with some firearms and shit.
  • 88:44 - 88:47
    But, nah. They won't to do it alone.
    Fuck that.
  • 88:47 - 88:48
    And you look at history,
  • 88:48 - 88:51
    you look at when Mussolini
    and Hitler were elected,
  • 88:51 - 88:51
    and you say,
  • 88:51 - 88:52
    how did the whole world
    sit there and watch this happen?
  • 88:53 - 88:56
    It is a fucking shame
    that he got elected into office.
  • 88:56 - 88:57
    And it's a fucking disgrace,
  • 88:57 - 88:59
    and a slap in the face
    of every American out here.
  • 88:59 - 89:01
    We always talk about love,
  • 89:01 - 89:05
    but if we keep doing
    all these so called violent protests,
  • 89:05 - 89:08
    that's not love.
  • 89:08 - 89:10
    We talk about love so much,
  • 89:10 - 89:13
    but in all our protests,
    that's not love.
  • 89:13 - 89:15
    First they came for the Jews,
  • 89:15 - 89:17
    and then they came for this
    and then they came for that.
  • 89:17 - 89:18
    And I was quiet.
  • 89:18 - 89:20
    And then they came for me,
  • 89:20 - 89:22
    but there was
    nobody left to stand up.
  • 89:22 - 89:27
    I believe that Donald Trump's presidency
    is the rise of facism in the United States.
  • 89:27 - 89:31
    If we look at history and
    we look at the rise of facism in the 30s,
  • 89:31 - 89:36
    everything that happened then
    is happening now.
  • 89:36 - 89:39
    I want to see Swiss cheese buildings
  • 89:39 - 89:43
    that these rich people own
    and let them send a message to them-
  • 89:43 - 89:45
    - What's a Swiss cheese building?
  • 89:45 - 89:47
    A Swiss cheese building.
  • 89:47 - 89:49
    A building that's been bombed,
    that's been shot through.
  • 89:49 - 89:52
    - So you want to see
    this stuff getting torn down?
  • 89:52 - 89:53
    Why not?
  • 89:53 - 89:56
    It makes me very afraid.
  • 89:56 - 90:02
    It makes me afraid
  • 90:02 - 90:09
    for the people I love
    who I know best.
  • 90:11 - 90:17
    But it makes me very afraid
    for the people I don't know
  • 90:17 - 90:21
    who are my family
    because I'm of the family, Human.
  • 90:22 - 90:28
    THE POETRY OF THE PACIFIC
  • 90:30 - 90:34
    I've reached the Pacific Ocean.
  • 90:34 - 90:38
    I reflect on my broken half move
    through America's cities,
  • 90:38 - 90:43
    valleys, dirt roads, outhouses, motels,
    homeless shelters, rodeos,
  • 90:43 - 90:45
    swamps and highways.
  • 90:47 - 90:51
    My heart is pregnant with its colours,
    its kindness, its faces,
  • 90:51 - 90:53
    its mesmeric beauty.
  • 90:54 - 90:57
    My mind races wearily,
    consumed with its madness,
  • 90:57 - 91:02
    its contradictions,
    paradoxes, and parallels.
  • 91:02 - 91:04
    I'm anxious and worried
  • 91:04 - 91:07
    that in juxtaposing
    so many voices with one another,
  • 91:07 - 91:11
    if I've done injustice to
    the poetry of each individual I've met.
  • 91:11 - 91:15
    Did I lessen their voices
  • 91:15 - 91:17
    by being too open
    to life in all its vastness?
  • 91:17 - 91:21
    Should I have set
    more limiting parameters,
  • 91:21 - 91:25
    tried to explore one issue
    rather than grapple with its totality?
  • 91:25 - 91:28
    And yet, as I look out over the Pacific,
  • 91:28 - 91:33
    my heart gives in to the
    contraction and dilation of the ocean.
  • 91:33 - 91:37
    Its ineffability, its raw, violent power,
  • 91:37 - 91:39
    and its capacity for glacial stillness.
  • 91:39 - 91:43
    This ocean is America.
  • 91:43 - 91:47
    And it is too vast to consume,
    too multiplex to comprehend.
  • 91:47 - 91:51
    It's only in giving into it,
    into accepting its nature,
  • 91:51 - 91:53
    that I can be one with it.
  • 91:54 - 91:58
    It's a broken quilt, a violent patchwork.
  • 91:58 - 92:04
    But it is this very fragmantation
    that makes me love it so intensely.
  • 92:06 - 92:09
    NEW YORK
  • 92:12 - 92:17
    My political road movie
    shot on a shoestring budget is at its end.
  • 92:17 - 92:21
    ♪ Everything's got too much for me ♪
  • 92:21 - 92:26
    ♪ How I would love to join the free... ♪
    (Children of the Moonlight continues)
  • 92:27 - 92:29
    The presidency,
    the incoming administration is kind of
  • 92:29 - 92:36
    like a, it's like a hurricane just
    offshore that's about to make landfall.
  • 92:36 - 92:38
    America is more conflicted than ever.
  • 92:38 - 92:42
    Its past evanescent,
    its future uncertain.
  • 92:42 - 92:45
    I'd been for a short time
    a part of its dream
  • 92:45 - 92:49
    and in doing so,
    have witnessed its nightmares.
  • 92:51 - 92:53
    There is an idea that is America,
  • 92:53 - 92:56
    and yet it forever wrestles
    with what that idea is.
  • 92:56 - 93:01
    Yet nonetheless,
    its history remains in its own hands.
  • 93:01 - 93:04
    It is Democracy itself
  • 93:04 - 93:07
    which is celebrated
    in the manifold voices I've heard.
  • 93:07 - 93:11
    And it's those same voices
    which will protect that Democracy.
  • 93:11 - 93:13
    Even as it is challenged and threatened
  • 93:13 - 93:16
    in ways it could never have imagined.
  • 93:16 - 93:20
    America remains the emblem
    of our longing and our dreaming.
  • 93:20 - 93:26
    My conversation with it has been
    one of the great experiences of my life.
  • 93:26 - 93:30
    And now I give back
    the gift it gave to me.
  • 93:30 - 93:32
    I am hopeful that it might, in it,
  • 93:32 - 93:35
    remember its own beauty, and recognize
  • 93:35 - 93:39
    that its diversity and
    abundance drives its special energy.
  • 93:40 - 93:41
    Most of all,
  • 93:41 - 93:44
    I hope it will renew
    its conversation with itself.
  • 93:44 - 93:47
    Not just with a lighter tone,
  • 93:47 - 93:51
    but a willingness, once again, to listen.
  • 93:51 - 93:54
    (Children of the Moonlight playing)
  • 94:23 - 94:26
    Actually, I've never really
    listened to the Beatles...
  • 94:26 - 94:28
    Welcome to your first morning in Ohio!
  • 94:28 - 94:32
    He didn't feel insulted either
    and I kept going, oh bullshit!
  • 94:32 - 94:34
    He's like,
    that's a cool dude.
  • 94:34 - 94:36
    I like small government.
  • 94:41 - 94:45
    You just want to wear a t-shirt that say
    The Beatles on them and seem cool.
  • 94:46 - 94:48
    You're lame.
    - This is not going in the documentary!
  • 94:48 - 94:51
    Í'm not having anything
    said against the Beatles!
  • 94:51 - 94:52
    Let me ask a question.
  • 94:52 - 94:54
    How much we getting paid today?
  • 94:54 - 94:55
    I wish I was getting paid.
  • 94:55 - 94:57
    And I get nights like tonight.
  • 94:57 - 95:02
    You get some random Scottish flirt
    that just comes in and gets...
  • 95:02 - 95:06
    This is really good!
  • 95:06 - 95:08
    It does the job, man, I tell you.
  • 95:08 - 95:11
    Guaranteed to withstand 200 mph winds.
    You're in luck.
  • 95:12 - 95:13
    I'm not afraid of Trump.
  • 95:14 - 95:16
    He's too fucking stupid
    to fuck things up that badly.
  • 95:18 - 95:19
    They cheated, Jim!
  • 95:20 - 95:21
    You motherfuckers have a good night.
  • 95:21 - 95:24
    God bless.
    - You too.
Title:
vimeo.com/.../424261861
Video Language:
English
Duration:
01:35:24

English subtitles

Incomplete

Revisions