i say in the book that in hallow king, we followed him in creating a national holiday and a monument and a thousands and a hundred public schools. we've turned him into this icon and forgotten he was human. forgotten how radical he was. we've forgotten that the i have a dream speech had a first half that talked police brutality and reparations and fact that america had made a promise that it had come back with insufficient funds on that check and i wanted to write a book that reminded us that king was someone who failed, who had flaws, who had frustrations, who was deemed unpopular. he was two thirds of all americans. in 1966. so they disapproved of martin king, not that they disapproved of his stance, the vietnam war. they disapproved of him, period and in large part, as we're going to talk about later. that was that was due to the fact that the fbi was surveilling him and spreading rumors about his personal life? so i wanted to write a book that showed he carried on despite it all of that, despite the fact that the nation on him, then his own government turned on him, he not only c