my guest tonight is a producer and director by the name of sleep sleep. -- salima koroma, she is here the history of the tulsa race massacre. >> tulsa was a powder keg, needing only something to set the community alight. >> between 100 and 300 people, most of them black, were killed. >> today, we call it a massacre. >> trevor: salima koroma, welcome to "the daily social distancing show." >> thank you, trevor. it's a pleasure to be on. >> trevor: you are one to have the most exciting film-makers working today and your new project is bound to get people talking, "dreamland: the burning of black wall street." i mean, this is a story that shockingly very few people in america and around the world actually know about and, when you look at it, it seems like one to have the most consequential stories in and around black people building black wealth and then having everything taken away from them merely because to have the color of their skin. the question i would have first is why the title "dreamland" whenneth about a massacre that was so painful in america. >> oooh, what a great question,