they gave, i think, 39 city-owned parcels of land that were valued at $3 million, sold to the ilitcheslar. billionaires are being given public assets in order to do things that are just going to enrich them further. how does that make sense? watkins: they keep on saying, "bringing detroit back." it's very similar to the phrase of "taking america back" in a lot of ways. this whole idea of what's back? back to what? there's thousands of people that never left detroit, a lot of them because they felt stranded here. when they say "come back, detroit," they ain't talking to them. so what does that mean for the new detroit? putnam: i hear the whole who's a detroiter, who's not a detroiter debates that go on. and i hear suburbanites, and there seems to be so much pain of, like, you know, my grandmother had to move because she was broken into. and... as if, like, this city was taken away from us... - taken from them, yeah. - ...and we're gonna take it back, you know? - yes. - and that's what midtown is about. midtown is about, like, "how can we create spaces and pockets of this city for us to