tv Frontline PBS May 1, 2021 2:00am-4:00am PDT
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>> what did i do? um... i don't have a clue of what i do for new year's eve. it was... before times, before corona. >> i turned 40 last year, so it was like, this is my 40th, we need to do loads of amazing things and we planned lots of amazing things. it was gonna be a brilliant year. um... yeah. ♪ ♪ (sirens wailing) >> the latest figures show that there've been 177 deaths... >> cases are now accelerating rapidly. more than 40,000 people have been infected... >> one million deaths from the coronavirus.
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♪ ♪ >> prakesh (speaking hindi): ♪ ♪ >> we are the heroes because we have exposed this "scamdemic" for what it is. >> covid is not more worse compared to other things that we've seen. (explosions, shouting) ♪ ♪ (chanting) >> i don't know how we will go ba to the normal life. everywhere there's a shift that's happening. >> carlos valencia (speaking spanish):
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♪ ♪ >> darly (speaking portuguese): narrator: now a frontline special presentation: the virus that shook the world. >> frontline is made possible by contributions to your pbs station from viewers like you. thank you. and by the corporation for public broadcasting. major support is provided by the ford foundation: working with visionaries on the front lines of social change worldwide. at fordfouation.org. additional support is provided by the abrams foundation, committed to excellence in journalism... the john d. and catherine t. macarthur foundation, committed to building a more just, verdant and peaceful world. more information at macfound.org. park foundation, dedicated to heightening public awareness of
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critical issues. and by the frontline journalism fund, with major support from jon and jo ann hagler and additional support from laura debonis and scott nathan. corporate support is provided by.. >> hi, i'm ryan reynolds owner of mint mobile. we're big fands of pbs, so this message will be delivered documentary style. since america's founding, people have struggled with communication plans. they called the pony express too slow making ponies everywhere feel like (horse sound), but times have changed. mint mobile offers no contract wireless plans unlimited talk and text, nationwide 5g coverage, and customers can bring their own phone. no ponies were harmed in making of this wireless company.
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>> xie: (music continues) >> happy birthday to you! happy birthday, dear amy! happy birthday to you! (cheers and applause) (blows out candles, laughter) (party audio abruptly stops) >> i didn't realize that you actually use those boards. (laughs) >> interviewer: yeah. >> amazing. (laughs) it's made my day! (chuckles) um, i'm amie burbridge. i'm a mom, i grew up in
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wolverhampton, and when i grew up i wanted to be a makeup artist. and somehow i ended up as a doctor. ♪ ♪ sometime in january, we jokingly were talking about covid, like... (scoffs) and it just didn't seem real. it was, you know, thousands of miles away, so, it was irrelevant to us, really. >> i first heard about it in january, but it wasn't in kenya. i knew it's a disease of the, the whites, the western people. >> (speaking spanish): >> we didn't think too much of it because it was in china, you know? a long ways from us. >> (speaking icelandic): >> then italy started and still you're like, "oh, poor italian,
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poor italian, they are really having it hard, hm?" yeah, yeah. it's completely crazy just really playing the ostrich, which put a head in the sand. ♪ ♪ (car horn honking) >> (speaking italian): >> burbridge: i have colleagues working in italy that were sending pictures, that were describing the patients they were seeing, the number of people dying, the number of people in intensive care units. and it still didn't feel real. "right, it's not-- it's not gonna be us." um... um, yeah.
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♪ ♪ (medical equipment beeping) (overlapping voices) >> the coronavirus continues to spread at speed. there are close to 90,000 cases worldwide. the vast majority of new cases are outside china. ♪ ♪ >> burbridge: i was getting scared by now. because we knew in early march that that would be us a few weeks down the line. i remember my first individual who was diagnosed with covid-19.
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and it was like, "oh, my god, it's come, it's arrived." um, and it was, uh... a shock, that first case, 'cause it was quite early on, actually. i can't remember the exact date. we didn't really know how to manage it because nobody did. there wasn't any research, there wasn't any evidence. (indistinct chatter) yeah, who else have we got for medics just so i'm on top of it? that's it, isn't it then? ooh, thank you! okay... she's poorly, isn't she? (audio fades) ♪ ♪ a lot of the stuff we did in the early stages turned out to be wrong, some of the treatments that we tried, because w didn't know. i went from having an incredible conversation with a lovely, lovely individual, um, and
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within two hours, um... she'd been transferred to the intensive care unit. she was intubated, she was ventilated, and she died. and i did absolutely nothing to help her, apart from give her false hope-- to her and her family. "oh, it's absolutely fine, we'll give her some oxygen, you'll be fine," and she died and that was my first, um, patient who died. and i remember her hair, her makeup, i remember what she was weing. i remember her name, i remember everything. i just felt like i was a bystander. hm, and i've felt like that in a lot of cases. because people just deteriorated quickly and died.
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we need to keep you in hospital. >> yes. >> burbridge: you have covid-19. >> yes. >> burbridge: are you-- you know you have coronavus? so we need to keep you in hospital, and we'll just keep a close eye on you tonight, okay? >> okay. >> burbridge: can i listen to your chest? >> yes. >> burbridge: okay. you feel very hot. (heavy coughing) >> europe has now become the epicenter of the pandemic. >> the government acknowledges that millions of us may get covid-19 because the virus can't be stopped. >> now is the time for everyone to stop non-essential contact with others. >> spain declared a state of emergency on saturday, placing the country in lockdown. >> (speaking spanish):
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(laughter) >> france is the latest country to take drastic measures to control the coronavirus pandemic. >> (speaking french): >> veronique (speaking french): >> veronique: >> a day of somber language... (overlapping voices) >> the pandemic is bringing life in the united states to a grinding halt. ♪ ♪ >> my name is dan rossi, i live in new york and i'm a vendor. you know, we sell hot dogs in front of the metropolitan museum of t. and we've been there about 13 years, but i've been in the business 40. 40 years.
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we got hit hard. you go down new york city, you expect mobs-- there was nobody. it was like a ghost town. you know, people did what they had to do. but we got hit hard. and that location, in front of the met? it's basically a tourist destination. and the only thing these tourists want is a new york hot dog, and it can be pretty, uh... rough, sometimes, you gotta really move sometimes, real fast. everyone's talking their different language, you don't know what the hell anybody's saying, but they point to a picture and you give them a hot dog-- it's fun, it is, you know. ♪ ♪ uh... i said, well, in two months, i'm in the red. i need maybe $2,000 or $3,000 a month. to get us through, i'm gonna borrow that money, i'm gonna find someone and borrow the money, i know people who
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borrow the money. i've been in some really tough situations in my life, and this just seemed like, if it... if it's just money, we'll get through it, if it's just money. and i'll make sure everything's okay. you know, don't panic, just... it'll play out, it'll be all right. ah... so what do you wanna do? i got a marriage, i've got four daughters, i've got 14 grandchildren. my oldest grandson is 21 and my youngest granddaughter is three-months-old, so that's quite a mix, you know. get outta here. leave this kid alone. that's what makes me go to work. knowing that i have responsibilities. >> yes, vinny, yes! >> keep your mouth closed. keep your mouth closed!
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(laughter, weight clanging) >> rossi: i went ahead and i set up an area for weights and everything so my grandsons could work out, you know. (indistinct chatter) i mean i think those few months were the hardest nths of my life, just sying home, you know, and doing nothing-- how can you do nothing every day, you know? anybody who retires has gotta be crazy. how can you, how can you not work-- i don't get it. (laugh it was pretty boring, i gotta tell you. (laughs) i understand everything that's going on, and it's the right thing to do, the distancing, the keep things closed, the open things up in portions, i understand all that. but it's still taking a very big impact... >> yeah. >> rossi: on everybody, and i'm not just talking about us.
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(clanging sound) sitting around everyday, every day, i go downtown every day, i sit there for a few hours and there's absolutely nothing going on-- nothing. >> it's crazy. >> rossi: this time, if it was a normal year... >> we'd be so busy. >> rossi: but we're all right, god bless america. ♪ ♪ (engine rumbles) ♪ ♪ >> valencia (speaking spanish):
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>> the number of infections worldwide, 400,019... (news reports in multiple languages) >> in wuhan, which has been on lockdown for nearly two months, the quarantine rules have been slightly relaxed. if no new cases are reported for 14 days, the restrictions could be reduced further. ♪ ♪ >> xie: >> yang:
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>> ♪ we don't need no coronavirus, we don't want now just to stay at home ♪ >> (speaking portuguese): >> it goes away, it's going away. let's see how it all works out but i think it's gonna work out fine. you do certain things that you do when you have the flu, i mean, view this this the same as the flu. >> meanwhile, in new york, they're struggling to manage the sheer numb of deaths. (belarussian song continues) >> ♪ we don't need no... ♪ >> ...chinese virus. >> ♪ we don't want now just to stay at home ♪ (finishes song)
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>> rossi: i did two tours in vietnam, enlisted when i was 17 right out of high school. donald trump is not the kind of guy who i would ever want to be leading me, he just doesn't have it, you can just see it. ♪ ♪ all we had to do was just say, let's take a precaution and wear a mask. but his argance and stupidity, thinking that he's smarter than the doctors, that he's smarter than everyone, it just... he's gotten a lot of people killed. his thing was this virus is gonna disappear, why do i need a mask? you gotta be a clown to wear a mask, i'm a tough guy, you know. it's stupid, people, people are dying, you know? what is the big deal about wearing a mask-- what's the big deal, you know? (birds chirping)
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every day i would go down there sometimes twice a day and just check on the cart. what we would do is we kept the carts in position where we work. so that nobody takes my spot, you know? i do that a few nights a week. and then i have somebody else check on it the nights that i'm not there. i'll be sleeping there tonight, so yeah. no one's gonna help you, you know? you're on your own. we had one year... there was a blizzard. we're talking snow. and i did a $600 day. in a blizzard, whe people couldn't even move, i mean, that's how bad it was. now there's zero.
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and this is for britain's nhs workers, carers, and everyone helping to fight this coronavirus pandemic. (applause, clanging) (applauding) (applause) >> burbridge: oh, has it started? ooh... ah! (applause, cheers, whistles) (laughs) >> thank you! >> burbridge: it's amazing... (cheers, applause) do you know, i'd forgotten about that. isn't that crazy that so much has happened, that every thursday, 8:00 p.m., clap for carers, yeah, yeah. (cheers, applause)
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lockdown was the right thing to do. and when it did happen it was like, oh, this is, this is what we need. on your marks... get set... >> go! >> burbridge: but, i knew everything was gonna change. the children went to stay with their dad, because i was like, i can't contact them, they can't come to the house, because the house is clearly riddled with covid, and if they walk in they're gonna get it and they're gonna get sick. just thinking about it now, the fact that, um... i couldn't hug my children... yeah, it was, it was horrible. hm. what was incredible, everybody just did it. when we were meant to finish
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work, often we just hung around in the wellness of chatting, because we didn't really want to go home, because a lot of us were going home to empty houses. we've finished work and we've decided to have a dance! whoo! (cheerful music playing) (laughter) >> ♪ come on, baby let's get it on ♪ like a... ♪ i got a whole lotta lovin' ♪ ♪ ooh yeah! ♪ ♪ ♪ (laughs) oh, god... we laughed, we cried, and it just brought us together, and it was, it was magical. we even had disco lights. you know, we really made it a big thing. (laughs) um...
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you know, everybody was dancing. >> the latest figures show that there have been 177 deaths. >> cases are now accelerating rapidly. >> 335 people have died from coronavirus, that's six times more than last wk. (coughing) >> 5,373eople have died in hospital. the u.k. could become the worst- affected country in europe. ♪ ♪ >> burbridge: nobody should have to die alone. no one that is not dignified, that is not humane. yet, that's what was happening
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every single day. you've got some incredible people who've done incredible things, have incredible lives, and then they pass away, and they've got me there. and it seems so unfair on them and their family-- it's cruel. it's a bloody cruel disease. um... it's... 's just crap. it's horrible, and... (sighs) and, um... i... yeah. mm. (sniffles)
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developments around the world today. the prime minister is spending a second night in intensive care being treated for coronavirus. the u.s. state of new york is on the verge of overtaking italy for confirmed cases. the chinese city where covid-19 first emerged, the city of wuhan, has allowed people to leave the area for the first time since it went into lockdown in late january. >> after its initial faltering steps, china eventually hit this virus hard, shutting its whole economy down, and while there is some doubt about the detail of the official figures, it's clear the government believes the trend is going in the right direction, which is why today we've seen the re-opening of the city where this whole thing began. ♪ ♪
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it's made us all equal in many ways. and what's wonderful about it is that it's made us all equal in many ways. >> girl, bye. like what? i knew madonna was out there already, but she's... no, girl. it's not the great equalizer. yeah. i mean, and then folks are like shocked when other folks say, "eat the rich." i mean it's stuff like that, that makes them look pretty yummy. so... (laughs) ♪ ♪ >> we can beat the virus only through solidarity. it is time to leave no one behind. (overlapping reporter chatter) >> ...more draconian measures acss the globe... >> we are all in this together.
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♪ ♪ >> all right, guys, come on, let's get back into it. and one, two, three... so my name is tanya denise fields. come on, one, two... founder and executive director of the black feminist project, bronx-based activist and, um... yeah. do you want more than that or... five! turn! i have an 18-year-old and a 16-year-old. turn! and then i have a 12-year-old and an 11-year-old. and then i have a six-year-old and a five-year-old. thomas, you see where everybody's going? get on beat. hop! come on, come on! by the third week of march i had pulled my children out of school, and then three days later, the whole country shut down.
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♪ ♪ >> actually, i... the first six weeks i loved the lockdown. i was enjoying the streets of beirut empty. it was amazing, actually. you could hear, you know, the birds. you could see cats all over. it was, you know, a city for cats all over beirut. (cat meowing) i remember i would sit on the balcony at night and i would say, "carol, maybe this is the last time you hear the silence."
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it was fantastic. ♪ ♪ (whispering, speaking french): >> my name is veronique de viguerie. i've got two daughters-- lou, who is now eight years old, and ella, who is six years old. they hate my job. >> why do they hate your job? >> because i'm away too much. my little one will say when we are having a big cuddle before bedtime like, "do you prefer me and lou or do you prefer all of these kids that you're taking pictures of?" you know i try to involve them a bit too, but it's not working
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very well really. u have a lot of people who will say, "yeah, you know, conflict photographer. you are just, you know, looking for your adrenaline dose, d you are just completely hooked with it." and, um... yeah, maybe... yeah, part of it is true. some people are scared of death. me, i'm more, like my biggest fear is not to live my life. ♪ ♪ >> valerie (in french): >> valeria: we eer a lockdown in all of france. and there is a bit of a panic. benoit, the father of my kids, is the kind of guy who always think about the worst.
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so he's telling me, "it's going to be kind of civil war," and i'm like, "come on, calm down." and then, we had these friends and she said, you know, "that's it for me, i'm taking my two daughters, and i'm moving to my parents' house, which is one hour away from paris. do you want to come with me?" and i'm like, well, i didn't think really of that. and benoit is like, you know, "we should go. i think we should go. we havto go, but we have to go now. i'm leaving tonight with the girls. what do you want to do? are you with us or do you stay here?" and this is a big question. if i don't go with them, i am a bad mother, and if i go with them, i am a bad reporter. so... yeah, i chose to be a good reporter. ♪ ♪
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i went to say goodbye and i took the picture. it was helpful for me to have this camera to keep my tears up, because i didn't want my daughter to see me crying. i didn't want them to... see me... yeah, crying or fragile. ♪ ♪ at the beginning of lockdown, i was just doing, yeah, this kind of symbolic places to show the emptiness. ♪ ♪ then, i started to go more in the suburb of paris, where people are a lot poorer.
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♪ ♪ i went to a flat where like there were like nine kids and two parents, the six sister sleeping in the same bedroom right on bunk beds. they are going to be locked down, like 11 of them in this small flat. ♪ ♪ >> what is the password to this? what is that again? raising a family in the bronx i imagine is not any different than raising a family anywhere else, and then it's a crap ton different. >> one more set. one more set. >> there would be days that my children would not go outside. >> take up plenty of space. >> like i'm homeschooling now,
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you know, i'm on my laura ingalls (bleep). (laughs) you know, like, like some urban pandemic version of "little house on the prairie." i'll let your teachers know that i'm going to let you take a nap for about two hours, okay? i'm going to leave tt running so that i can hear what they're working on. >> if you want i can text you the, the information? >> yes, that'd be helpful. hunter come in the room and she be like, "mom." i be like, "yeah." she be like, "is the coronavirus still out there? when the coronavirus gonna leave?" like the coronavirus to her is a person. like it's a burglar on the loose. like... (laughs) (sirens blaring) ♪ ♪ >> new york, new york. the worst affected city in what's now the worst affected country.
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>> statistics show the poorest neighborhoods haveeen hit hardest. (siren blaring) ♪ ♪ >> how is it? >> hell. biblical. i kid you not. people come in, they get intubated, they die, the cycle repeats. ♪ ♪ (siren blaring) >> when we talk about essential workers, it was like people in doctor's coats. but essential workers also look like the people who clean up behind doctors, right? essential workers are the folks who serve you your food at the mcdonalds and the burger kings. those never closed. who's doing that work? ♪ ♪
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those are folks who are classified as lower on the socio-economic ladder and those people live in the bronx, those people live in very specific communities in brooklyn, those people live in jamaica queens. irens blaring) yeah, lockdown looked different. ♪ ♪ >> i've been wating that for the last week on television-- body bags all over, in hallways. i've been watching them bring in trailer trucks, freezer trucks, freezer trucks. because they can't handle the bodies, there's so many of them. this is in my... essentially in my community, in queens. queens, new york. i've seen things that i've never seen before. i mean i've seen them, but i've seen them on television in
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just pass, pass. you have to excuse her to pass. just pass, pass. we were not ready to face the reality. just saw death. we just saw death coming. ♪ ♪ (horn honking) >> there will be a daily curfew from 7:00 p.m. to 5:00 a.m. in the morning. these additional measures have been taken as a clear result of kenyans failing to heed to advice. ♪ ♪
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♪ ♪ >> the curfew, it didn't work for us, people livg in the slums. (man shouting in swahili) think all slum dwellers, the way the police look at us, is like we are associated with crime, with gangs. (shouting in swahili) when four policemen beat you up, you know, it's so painful. (shoing inwahili) (sirens blaring) and the police deal with us ruthlessly. (shouting, gunshots) people lost so much, people lost so much. (whistle blowing)
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♪ ♪ >> a quarter of the world's population is now living under some form of lockdown due to coronavirus. more than three billion people in almost 70 countries. >> the world health organization warns countries across the globe not to end the coronavirus lockdown too sn. >> make no mistake. we have a long way to go. this virus will be with us for a a long time. >> man (on phone, in italian): >> matteo derai: >> fosca ballardini: >> man (on phone): ♪ ♪ >> in spain, children aren't allowed to leave the house at all. and concerns are mounting about
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annoyed. basically at the beginning he was like, "please don't come, you know, you might be contaminated," and all that. but at some point he called me and he told me, you know, "i don't care if you are contaminated, but just come now, because i cannot take it anymore!" ♪ ♪ >> benoit: ♪ ♪ suddenly, you know, suddenly life is taking another rhythm. (girl shouting in french) now i am in the countryside and the only thing we have to do is homeschooling and getting the meal ready.
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brazil w all over the news being the new epicenter of the epidic. it did look like it was going to be massive in brazil. bolsonaro was completely pretending that it was not happening, making things worse. (crowd cheering) ♪ ♪ >> for the first time, the country's daily death toll reached 1,000 people. >> endless fresh graves for the dead, who also seem to never stop arriving. ♪ ♪ >> i was horrified. everybody presumably died of covid was in a like kind of mass
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grave. ♪ ♪ and they don't start the burial before there are five, you know, otherwise it's not worth making the thing work. so they wait for five coffins, then they put the five coffin in the hole, five coffin... like in two minutes it's done. ♪ ♪ (truck beeping) it was very shocking to me that the digger not even stopping during the five minutes of little ceremony. so it's, you know, it's like really like a factory or
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industrial burial with one after the other. (truck beeping, people singing) and the chaos of, you know, these holes everywhere. and the machine digging, digging, digging, digging, you know. there is no time to... there is no time to die even, yeah. (shouting, horns honking) going to the graveyard, we passed through a protest, pro bolsonaro. which was, they were like, "yeah, we don't want a lockdown. we are with you, bolsonaro." so they were basically, you know, denying completely the... the virus.
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it's like if it is a disease, very dangerous for the poor, and annoying for the not so poor. >> hey, chris! he still safe? >> ...tired of them deciding we're essential or not. we the people! (person cheering) >> let freedom ring! >> there you go! >> open l.a.! (car horns honking) >> these protesters were not interested in social distancing. as activists held their rally outside the state capitol building here, many are openly dismissive of the science, and increasingly seething at the economic costs that they are paying. >> i get tired of the media turning around and saying, "hey, don't you care about... about sick people or whateve" it's like, what are you talking about? everybody is well!
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(crowd cheering, applause) >> thousands descending on michigan's capitol in lansing to protest the governor's current stay-at-home rules. >> these are people expressing their views, i see where they are, and i seehe way they're working-- ey seem to be very responsible people to me. >> let us in! let us in! let us in! let us in! let us in! let us in! (chanting fading) ♪ ♪ (deep exhale) >> um... may 25 becomes another date that will forever mark the spark
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of this incendiary, social... thing that we live in. i don't really always know how to describe it because i feel like as a black person you always know it's there. >> i can't breathe, officer. (george floyd groaning) >> shut up! >> trying to killing me. they're gonna kill me, man. ♪ ♪ >> people all across this country watched a man have the life gleefully-- gleefully-- choked out of him. was it heartbreaking? absolutely. was surprising? no. this happens every day across this country. and finally, in this time, during a pandemic, black folks said enough is enough. >> i can't breathe! >> i can't breathe! >> i can't breathe!
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>> i can't breathe! >> i can't breathe! >> i can't breathe! (crowd chanting "george floyd") >> massive crowds swarming cities across the country are choosing social justice over social distancing. >> i don't think that black lives matter would have had the traction had it not been for corona, they are inextricably linked. >> no justice, no peace! >> the president's tweet, an extraordinary line, "when the looting starts, the shooting starts." >> when this president talks about (bleep) countries, he is talking about us. we are the (bleep) country. "make america great again." great again for who? because it was never great for large groups of people. >> i think i understand some piece of the anger you're feeling. i'm still beseeching you, we are still all in this together. (crowd shouting, siren blaring)
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>> no more tolerance. they have to be off the street. an 8:00 curfew. we gave them until 9:00. this area has been hurt enough, there's businesses here are suffering, the residents here have suffered, we've taken 60 arrests for violating the curfew, we're just not gonna take it. >> in new york city there was like all of these coordinated protests and my daughter wanted to go. and she was going to go with her friends. and i was like, "absolutely not!" that is like ray charles leading stevie wonder. i was like, "girl, no." like because the police had already been bugging, right? a curfew had kicked in. i was not gonna allow my 17-year-old daughter to go out there by herself. and so i went with her and we got our asses kicked! police have us surrounded right now. police got us trapped. and we ain't do nothing wrong.
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at about 7:45, they intentionally started cornering us, they have us pushed in, in a pin. we peaceful protesting. they are pushing us! they are pushing us. stay tight, stay tight. >> oh my god! oh my god! (screaming, shouting) >> let me through with my daughter! let me through with my daughter! let me through with my daughter! let me through with my daughter! taylor! i got pepper sprayed. i got straight pepper sprayed. my daughter got pepper sprayed, y'all, i done peed on myself. do you understand how rrifying it is? like yo! >> look at that bus! half those people are teenagers. we were doing nothing. >> taylor, you got to calm down, mama. (taylor sobbing) you got to calm down, mama. you got to calm down, mama, it's all right. they're not letting us go that way. here they go, here they go. they're coming.
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look, look, look! go, go, go, go! go! go! go, go, go! go this way. let's go, let's go, let's ! >> look at... look, did you guys see that? did you guys see that? >> taylor, you gotta calm down. you cannot bring attention to yourself. now we over here by ourselves. you gotta shut up. this is terrifying. here, baby drink that water. drink that water. it's terrifying you are able-bodied, armed white people in front of courthouses, threatening law enforcement for their right to be able to get a haircut. the same people that they wanted a haircut from were now in the street, unarmed, asking, demanding that cops and white folks stop killing them. do you see how different it is to be white and black in this country? ♪ ♪
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>> mansour: name is carol mansour. i'm a filmmaker. i like to document anything that's happening around me. not only empty streets, but interactions and things happening. (in arabic): >> hey. >> hey. whoo-hoo! it's important to document. it's important to know what we went through, what you know, people went through. >> girl (in arabic): >> mansour: ♪ ♪
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in lebanon we were at a state where, pandemic or not, it was (bleep). (crowd chatter) before covid, the country was falling apart. (crowd shouting) >> you see the corruption, you know about it, and... it just drives you mad, you know? (crowd chanting) >> the protestors are angry. they see hard lives stretching before them, while political elites keep the power and the money. >> the pandemic accelerated the country going downfall. >> there are financial crises now all over the world. jobs gone, livelihoods lost. but here, in lebanon, it is on a different level.
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>> we have shortage of electricity, we have shortage of water, you know, everything, everything-- we have absolutely nothing. nobody gives a (bleep) about u about the people. and then, to top it all, you know, up we had this explosion on the fourth of august, so. ♪ ♪ (wind howling) (loud explosion) (screaming, glass shattering)
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(screaming, shouting) >> babe?! >> i'm good, i'm good. >> come! what is it? >> i'm here! (shouting) (sirens blaring) (shouting) (sirens blaring continues) (shouting) ♪ ♪ >> the government says the blast was caused by 2,750 tons of ammonium nitrate stored unsafely in a warehouse at the port. >> the governor of the city
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>> mansour: ♪ ♪ >> mansour: right now, honestly, when you walk on the streets here, you don't feel that there is a pandemic. because people are so worried about so many other things. eating, getting money, living, sleeping. so covid is in the back of their minds. covid is almost inexistent. (hammering nearby)
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>> vasiliev: ♪ ♪ >> we cannot continue to exist in the way that we have. but i do believe that it's going to get better. i do believe that at least for my grandchildren that we are going to get through whatever the muck, and the mire, and the foolishness is so that my little grandbabies-- whether i'm here to see it or not-- are gonna be better off than i was in this lifetime. ♪ ♪
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>> (speaking hindi): >> (cheers) >> if this election doesn't go my way then i'm going to spend time behind bars. >> narrator: the conclusion of the virus that shook >> go to pbs.org/frontline to see the pandemic from the perspective of teens around the world. and to see our complete collection of filmabout the pandemic. connect with frontline on facebook, instagram, twitter and tiktok and stream anytime on the pbs app or pbs.org/frontline. >> frontline is made possible by contributions to your pbs station from viewers like you. thank you. and by the corporation for public broadcasting. major support is provided by the ford foundation: working with visionaries on the front lines of social change worldwide.
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at fordfoundation.org. additional support is provided by the abrams foundation, committed to excellence in journalism... the john d. and catherine t. macarthur foundation, committed to building a more just, verdant and peaceful world. more information at macfound.org. park foundation, dedicated to heightening public awareness of critical issues. and by the frontline journalism fund, with major support from jon and jo ann hagler and additional support from laura debonis and scott nathan. corporate support is provided by... captioned by media access group at wgbh access.wgbh.org >> for more on this and other "frontline" programs, visit our website at pbs.org/frontline. ♪ ♪
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