EPISODE · Jun 23, 2015 · 49 MIN
E24 Eugene Jarecki:
from inspireland podcast
In this episode I was joined on the phone by author and documentary filmmaker Eugene Jarecki. Jarecki began as a director of stage plays before moving to the moving image and his last 2 feature length documentaries, Why We Fight and The House I live In, both won the Grand Joury Prize for documentary at Sundance. When I hung up the phone from Eugene I sat back in my chair feeling overwhelmed, Jarecki is a force of nature when he speaks about the subjects that inspire him. I was struck by his compassion, empathy, anger, and relentless optimism. That's the beauty of Jarecki's work, for all their quiet rage there's a palpable sense that things could and should be better. Our conversation covered plenty of ground as always, including: Eugene telling a great story about Paul Robeson. Eugene's description of the birth of The War on Drugs including it's historical racial motivation. Eugene points out that Nixon's take on addiction was more understanding than the version of himself he portrayed at election time. Eugene describes what the Prison Industrial Complex is and how it erodes the integrity of the democratic process. Wealth inequality in America. What we can do to influence our political system. Eugene was a superb and persuasive guest and I hope you enjoy listening to him as much I enjoyed speaking to him. Dave For full episode notes check out the blog at inspirelandpodcast.com
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E24 Eugene Jarecki:
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