ebonie martin: i can't hear you. children: game room! ebonie martin: i can't hear you. children: game room! ebonie martin: with me being there, i think it helps, because i am black, i am a female, and i do come from the urban neighborhoods. so i am very informed, very in tune with these kids. y'all just lost your turn. bill: ebonie martin is outstanding. the two of us work together very effectively. ebonie martin: i don't look at him as the white savior. and i don't think he looks at it as, oh, i'm helping these black kids out. but i'm helping these kids that, in any other situation, couldn't afford the opportunity. [playful yelling] >> let's go. bill: what we do at wilderness works here, we want you to have fun. but my job is to give you ideas. do you understand me? so let me give you an example. how many people here can say i have a lot of absentee father in my life? raise your hand. i know i can. it's a lot of people. [music playing] clifford: i think he can connect with us, because, you know, bill also grew up as an orphan. and he didn't have his real parents in his