of affirmation. most importantly, he lived on the ground, tied to love, tied to justice, always part of a movement. trying to bring people of all colors, all cultures, all sexual orientations and all religions or agnostic and eighthistic brothers and sisters. that martin luther king knew that he had to connect public interest to the plight of the week and the vulnerable in this society and around the world. >> you went to jail. symbolism? is that what it was? >> symbolic in terms of a gesture. not in terms of the 24 1/2 hours inside the clink with the shackles on my a.s and the handcuffs. it was very real. with 18 others. and we mixed with the brothers and sisters of different colors, disproportionately black in the jail. >> why is this movement aloft? why is it happening? >> i think what's happening,