the "i have a dream" came mid-speech when he started to feel it. if he just went into preacher mode and started to talk about this dream, that is not what he came to do. we've done a lot of interviews with folks who were there. and i actually spoke with a gentleman, a white guy, who was head of the ncaap in miami. and he said what he remembered most was the part about the bad check. and that this notion after slavery had essentially said, we will make it right with the african-american, with the negro, at a time, and hasn't done so. and this march was so much about economic injustice, and so much about the part about jobs, justice, and freedom that the "i have a dream" part is a gauzy remembrance and in a way takes away from the underlying purpose of the march. >> and it didn't i take away from it in that moment, but in our historical willful misremembrance, we want to remember the holding hands and singing, but we don't want to talk about that check that was