tavis: when we think it vandyke, we think comedian, showman -- when we think of dick van dyke, we thinkand showman. i am not sure how many people think of you as civil rights. how did you get involved as a white male? the courage it took at the time -- how did you end up speaking so courageously about civil rights? >> i was deeply affected. i moved to atlanta, georgia, in 1950 or so, had never been south, so i did not believe what i was seeing. i did not know what the conditions were, that everything was separated -- everything. i was working at a nightclub. we had a little act, and i bought all home and lived there for about five years. we used to go to a restaurant called a picnic, and that turned out to be a baseball bat who would -- the man with a baseball about who would run people out turned out to be the governor of georgia, but it happened that that man could be elected to the governorship, and it made me so angry once the movement got started, i thought, now is the time to move, and what a time in american history. you go back to atlanta and now, and it is so different. tavis: