i'm joined right now by mick richards, the director of a new documentary, "creating woodstock" about 69 festival. thank you, mick, for coming on. i really want you'd on the show tonight, because i grew up with a lot of people who said woodstock nation is still here. they still feel a part of it years later. what's going on with this effort to revive it, relive it? and how is that compared to the way it was putting it together in the first place? >> well, putting it together in the first place compared to what's going on today, the similarities are striking. the battle for walkill. the organizers actually set up in walkill, new york, and the town walkill board passed a law evicting them from walkill. so they literally had 28 days to find a new site and build it. now michael lange is going through the same thing, being evicted from 21 site to another to another. it's very interesting that the similarities are so striking. >> what happened? event they were charging $6.50 a day, $18 for three days and somehow became like a free fest? how did that happen? how did it become a sort of free p