0:00:20.573,0:00:24.473 Barry, do you think we should do something on here?[br]I think I might want to do a tag back over there. 0:00:24.473,0:00:26.634 BARRY MCGEE: Okay. 0:00:26.634,0:00:28.903 [BOTH LAUGHING][br] 0:00:32.299,0:00:34.672 KILGALLEN: We're nervous. [LAUGHS] 0:01:04.744,0:01:11.798 Ok, you guys can look at something else for a while. [LAUGHS] 0:01:11.798,0:01:13.687 Give her a stick. 0:01:14.964,0:01:18.065 KILGALLEN: You want me to go up there?[br]MCGEE: Okay. 0:01:18.081,0:01:23.833 KILGALLEN: There are random women who write on trains, but there's one-offs that I might see. 0:01:23.833,0:01:32.133 But, there's a woman who writes 'Judi Wynn' and I think I know where she works. 0:01:33.031,0:01:38.199 There's a woman who writes 'Batwoman' and I think she's from Oregon somewhere. 0:01:38.199,0:01:43.387 Yeah, there's not that many women who do it, at all.[br]It's definitely mostly men. 0:01:45.600,0:01:47.884 MCGEE: Do you want to go look at the trains? 0:01:47.884,0:01:48.868 [SOUND OF A TRAIN APPROACHING][br] 0:01:48.868,0:01:51.707 KILGALLEN: Oh shit, Barry, we should be...[br]They're going to see us then, no? 0:01:51.707,0:01:56.091 MCGEE: It's alright.[br]KILGALLEN: Alright, let's go walk out then. 0:01:56.091,0:01:59.391 MCGEE: Let's wave to them.[br] 0:01:59.520,0:02:02.141 KILGALLEN: Oh, because these trucks aren't even running. 0:02:02.408,0:02:04.541 [SOUND OF TRAIN HORN] 0:02:04.541,0:02:09.258 KILGALLEN: I do have a lot of heroines,[br]As well as a lot of heroes too, but...[br] 0:02:09.258,0:02:13.925 I like to paint images of women who I find inspiring,[br] 0:02:13.925,0:02:17.592 And I don't like to choose people that everybody knows. 0:02:17.625,0:02:23.792 I like to choose people that just do small things, and yet somehow hit me in my heart. 0:02:38.001,0:02:46.948 [SOUND OF A VIOLIN, ACOUSTIC GUITAR, AND BANJO GETTING READY TO PLAY] 0:02:46.948,0:02:50.715 I got interested in "old-time" music, particularly the banjo, and 0:02:50.715,0:02:57.365 In the beginning I would hear somebody playing music on a record, 0:02:57.365,0:03:02.787 And then I wouldn't know what they look like at all but I would imagine what they look like, and draw it. 0:03:02.787,0:03:06.531 [SOUND OF BANJO STRUMMING][br] 0:03:06.531,0:03:12.333 The records I would buy would have no women on them, ever. And Matokie Slaughter, for instance,[br] 0:03:12.333,0:03:16.716 She was the first woman I ever saw on a record, on an old-time record. 0:03:19.615,0:03:23.048 You know, I couldn't believe I had found a woman on there, and I didn't know it was a woman for a while, 0:03:23.048,0:03:27.817 Because the name 'Matokie', I didn't know what gender that was. 0:03:31.186,0:03:32.928 [SOUND OF BANJO STRUMMING CONTINUES] 0:03:32.928,0:03:36.253 Algia Mae Hinton, she plays kind of bluesy guitar.[br] 0:03:36.303,0:03:38.025 [SOUND OF ACOUSTIC GUITAR PLAYING A BLUES RIFF WITH FEET TAPPING ON A STAGE] 0:03:38.025,0:03:41.341 I saw her on a tape all about flat-footing and buck dancing. 0:03:41.784,0:03:45.827 She would do the flat-footing, and then she would turn around and put her guitar on her back, 0:03:45.827,0:03:50.525 And play the guitar, and dance, and it was pretty incredible. 0:03:50.525,0:03:53.375 [SOUND OF ACOUSTIC GUITAR PLAYING A BLUES RIFF WITH FEET TAPPING ON A STAGE CONTINUES] 0:04:02.142,0:04:06.225 She's a single mother and supports her children by playing her music. 0:04:12.812,0:04:19.351 [SOUND OF ACOUSTIC GUITAR AND FEMALE VOCALIST SINGING 'LOS CORONES'][br] 0:04:19.351,0:04:22.719 Or, I used to read a lot about the history of swimming, and... 0:04:22.735,0:04:27.314 The first woman to win the Olympics in 1912 was a woman named Fanny Durack.[br] 0:04:27.314,0:04:31.617 And she was from Australia, and she wore a full wool suit. 0:04:34.133,0:04:37.299 And the reason she won is because she swam the Australian crawl 0:04:37.299,0:04:40.484 And the other women weren't swimming that way. 0:04:41.250,0:04:49.916 [SOUND OF ACOUSTIC GUITAR AND FEMALE VOCALIST CONTINUES] 0:04:51.732,0:04:57.770 When I get down and don't feel like doing art, and I feel like giving it up, 0:04:57.770,0:05:05.486 Then the thing that keeps me going is the fact that[br]Maybe somebody will learn from what I'm doing. 0:05:08.595,0:05:14.752 When you put your work out there and somebody comes up to you and thanks you for doing it,[br] 0:05:14.752,0:05:20.587 And especially when young people come up and thank me, that is why I do work. 0:05:24.220,0:05:27.169 And I especially hope, you know, to inspire young women.[br] 0:05:27.169,0:05:34.004 Because I often feel like so much emphasis is put on how beautiful you are, and how thin you are, 0:05:34.004,0:05:39.261 and not a lot of emphasis is put on what you can do and how smart you are. 0:05:41.804,0:05:50.204 I'd like to change the emphasis of what's important when looking at a woman