. she 7 ladies have pledged solidarity with ukraine at for as long as it tanks. they say they'll continue their financial, military and diplomatic support of cave and they planning to impose more sanctions on russia. ladies happy meeting in germany for 3 days, summit. well then, had to madrid to attend a nato summit, and bolstering troops along the alliances, east and flank will be top of the agenda. that meeting starts on wednesday, nato secretary general again stoughton berg laid out the meetings priorities. all night will summit in not madrid. this week will be a transformative with many important decisions, including on a new strategic concept for a new security reality. for the mountain shift in naples, the turns on the fence and support to crane now on for the future or a new concept. will guard those in an era all strategic competition. i expect it to roll, make clear that allies consider russia, asked the most significant and biting threat to our security. it will address china for the 1st time and the challenges that begging pulses to our security interests and values. it also cover all revolving approach to a number of other fits and challenges, including terrorism, cyber and hybrid. at the summit, we will strengthen our forward the fences, hula hans or butter groups in the eastern part will be alliance. optic brigade levels shall anchor is sending government ministers to both russia and cut hard to negotiate for fuel. as petro pumps run dry, a few stations left with petrol and now selling the last of their supplies shall anchor is facing a serious lack of foreign reserves leading to shortages of food, fuel, and medicine. men al fernandez has more from a petrol station in the capital. colombo people are milling about, obviously the shed in itself is close. there are a ticket tape across so that you can't have acres, but these are all motorists who have been waiting for days and days in queues. there was one taxi driver who told me that he had been parked for 3 days. if you just look right across in the far corner of the frame towards the back, or you will see the beginning of q is for diesel. now that particular boss is a boss, is an out station bus of 4 to 5 hours applying for to 5 hours outside colombo. but obviously has come to the capital run out of fuel and needs to queue. at least 4 people have been killed and dozens injured in columbia after part of an arena collapse during a bull fight, a witness film the moment the standard fell apart in the town of ella, a spin yell, some bulls ran through the streets, enjoying several people. relatives of at least 21 young people who died in a bar in a south african township. a waiting for answers about the cause of the debts. samples from the bodies have been taken to toxicology lamps. they died in the city of east london in the east in cape province, clay say there were no obvious signs of injury. ecuador president has promised to cut fuel prices by $0.10 a gallon in response to a nationwide strike. that's now in its 3rd wake strike as want a 40 cent cut. the national assembly is debating whether to remove him from office in height, he hundreds of support. the former president, jean bertrand aristide, had gathered in the capital to demand his return. they say he's the only one who can put an end to worsening crime and political instability. and a 26 people have been killed in an attack by an armed group in southwest cameroon. local sources say the attack was linked to an ethnic dispute over land. aggravated by separate his fight is they want greater representation for the english speaking minorities. and i've been fighting the military since 2017 environmental activists from the group of ocean rebellion have been demonstrating in lisbon during the united nations ocean conference. the meeting is focused on reducing plastic waste over fishing and spaces extinction. those are the headlines. i'm emily angland. witness is up next. ah ah ah, ah, this is already been really? no, you're really good. and we do they raise money for our fran off? i don't know what a student with this is where we're owning our hillbilly. we're taking pride in the way we look down to leave the really nice lane. they help the program with what is a heal billy? let me know you with modern time. this is what we're calling arguably, or i think i can better leg. oh hi job. well, you're left a live one. i'm not those last not manage dictum bag. whack, whack my interview, go talk about the bus and i was going on on their side to amber. yo cool. so brian doing about with her to marry. you was math. it the biology male, you're going to get to know me a lot better to all of these are represent the buildings that we fear. is america a did this that and that is have but he don't have wow. i grew up in appalachia watching my grandfather is like he ha, oh, in the beverly hillbillies. ah, he does. he shows growing up. i'm gonna go with granite. you can't shoot our man. oh much there's a long history of stereotyping that has plagued the appalachian region. yeah. now the dumb trav voters really or the dumb trombone. she is the certainly all sound hockey and as stupid as mind blowing li, ignorant as he does, i in the run up to the 2016 presidential election. i was making a film about portrayals of appalachian people and pop culture news coverage about the region exploded, and suddenly every one was talking about the great divide, blue versus red, urban versus rural in one region, my hometown region was singled out as the reason for trump's rise, my hometown is kemper kentucky right in the heart of the appalachian coalfields. though when most people hear my accent, they assume i'm from the south. appalachian in the region where the history and culture that is complicated and all sound the term hillbilly was born here. and more recently, the idea of the heart of trump country ah, ah ah, ah, this is me. during the election. this was my facebook page. ah, this is my granny shelby ah, around the time of the election. this was her facebook page. ah, donald trump grabbing me, i just can't believe my grandmother posted this on my wall. i may be the only person from kemper kentucky and los angeles. almost every one i know here despises tromp. back home. the perspective is quite different. the 2016 election may painfully clear the disdain that urban liberals have towards so much of rural america, particularly appalachian i relate to both worlds. as a progressive feminist and filmmaker, i was curious to visit my hometown during his device of political moment. her we are on our way to meet house holler, which is where i grew up, and where i lived until i was 18 years old. when i was accepted to the university of kentucky. and i packed up u haul and moved out in. this is me when i was 9, i won the spelling bee that year. i was a member of the speech and drama team. i was on the homecoming court. i graduated at the head of my class. there is a photograph from the day i moved out. i had no idea when i was standing in that driveway. what i was about to experience moving from rural kentucky to urban kentucky was the greatest culture shock of my life. people identified me as someone from the mountains, the reactions to the way i talked or insulting and made me feel silent. i moved to los angeles years later and to this day, people fill out. where'd you get that accent? where are you from? oh my goodness gracious, this is me taller and my childhood home right before us we moved out of that house in 1998. is that a rebel flag right there in the middle? yeah, this was my bedroom up here. my dad did all this brick work for the record. this flagpole was not here when we lived here and there certainly was no confederate flag flying high on our property. my mom was a nurse and my dad worked in the coal mines until he got laid off. he became a brick mason. he once said to me that people would look at him and my mom as embodying the american dream. they went from living in a single wide trailer to building their dream home. i felt fortunate as a child for most people in my hometown at that time, there were basically 2 job opportunities. cole and wal mart. i work at walmart. ah, it gets hard times out here and it gets breath better during the winter when the snow and none of them you know me and the best way you can just try to make me back in the hills of floyd county, kentucky. you will find some of the forest places in america. one road out, lloyd county, i'm going that's right. next door to pike county where i education is the only way out. when i was 9 years old, i saw this 48 hours news program which made sweeping generalizations about people from my region. like we were all to be pitied. so this is your room. i was a little crowded near that show made me feel shame for being from eastern kentucky during the war on poverty in the 60s. the federal government spent more than $3000000.00 to build highways, connecting the appalachian hills to the rest of america. but a university of kentucky study found that many residents can't even afford the gas . it would take to get away every day. that's probably struggle for the things many people take for granted that tv news program had a lasting impact on me. it was the 1st time i saw my community for trade and poor white trash, a legacy that goes way back ration to they here and now declares and there's no war on poverty in america. ms. johnson took to the roots of appalachian property, the morgan county kentucky. the war on poverty is complicated, while it helps some people by establishing social welfare programs like food stamps and medicaid. it led to an influx of volunteers and journalists from around the world and their efforts were confusing and troubling to some like my dad and his 2 sisters who were children at the time living in eastern kentucky was one day a school somebody came in with a truck and gave a every student, they are a pair of shoes. just half the gym was full of ugly. and that's what the government, i guess, thought we needed. and it was an interesting to have people coming in to look at this area. but it became very evident that it's, it was critical and we did that on the porch and we went barefoot. that was just what we did. so when i say the film and there is a depiction of suppor up a watch and mountain people. and it really irritates me because i didn't see us is that the where my grand shelby live fairly new and good. i'm just putting this my me and then i'm going to give you had hi. good. good. you granny this, let's click that on your bell. so that it sounds i don't if bill ashley hi. hi. hello, i'm gonna greet you get right to let you keep my her brian. all right, granting so see perfect. because otherwise is roosters are competing rooster here, bird. so this 11 teeny, tell you 1st are you to actually sell me on you to n l a for song. oh, what you find me right? the invalid. you sent all stager some token. i'm now kidding worship trump camp. he's been wearing trump shirt. trump cap, which we all have a, a, a, so he went with us to the rally. you're going to look back at this election. i'd say this is by far the most important vote that you've ever chose for any one at any time because it was unfathomable to me, the trunk could be hillary. i just could not understand why my family, who voted for barack obama supported him. what is it about donald trump that makes he want him to be the 45th president of the states? well, the man knows how to make money. no, he wrote, this has got over $10000000.00. he has know how to make money. so i believe you could actually bring the jobs back and create jobs. i'm not saying trumpeted to say some stopped. it shouldn't have been said the locker room talk, but i'll be honest with you. i'm not, may anybody who hasn't done something similar to that and they just blow it out of proportion. did you all expect to be this enthusiastic about the election because it's been very intriguing to see some of these posts that had been going around. i was a democrat all mala and then primary. i went and changed to republican just so i could go for trump during the caucus here. able from a mountainous about that like for i'm from really had no one to have her back before. isn't just the same old thing, empty promises. yeah. now, you know, they're just too much stuff on hillary, just all the investigations and stuff like that. so we had to loose folk trump. did you before i voted for hillary clinton. oh shane. oh you gosh. i did you all i thought was water was getting him sour. looks i know i did full disclosure. i did a vote by mail application. i did the ballot. i must do not know that. bert shoot, you girls just rap. i should healed you upside them headed dionte bit and they to bert and you'd be lot lot smarter. but okay. i appreciate you. are we still? yeah, he did that. i even if it did lead to me becoming a radical progressive, we still love you. no matter what, oh yeah. we did. i mean you need me. god about that. ah, this is interesting. this is a story that the city paper did in like saying 10. i think the question wise, where do you see yourself in 10 years? i would have been 18 here. and i said, angela. and that's what happened. my family has lived in eastern kentucky for 6 generations. he was a co minor. my grandparents on both sides worked in the coal industry. you were probably 6 right months old. my whole life i was told to get out. i never questioned why. i went to serve our country, but people just it rode. de leon talked over me and like i wasn't even there, they sang just because i grew up in the city and they talk with more pronounced words. especially when i know fans went after southern california. that was the worst i was looking for. the the brotherhood under pre up ah, do you think that was all somehow related to their stereotypes of mountain people or to yes, yes, will they? they still think northerners always did that. they'd always like that they're above you. bailey hillary said that we were all deplorable. according to her. we're all nursing. we're a bunch of back woods, people that are scum under her feet. you could put half of trump supporters into what i call the basket of deplorable z. right? people in california and all these other sites look at the hillbillies like lot me . they have certain perception above what i was, whatever they see on t, they. well, bobby, i empathize when i was that youngster at 18 years old going from the holler to the big city, lexington kentucky. that's how i felt, you know, them, i was a journalism student. you know, journalists are supposed to speak with a midwestern accent, which is meant to be no accent, so that you can pick up and move. and it basically just like sterilized as any kind of culture or regional uniqueness. that might be an i was told you've got to speak correctly on which man i was b incorrectly. and of course, i believed it like, well, the teachers, the professionals, you know, i was working for the n p r affiliate i worked at the city newspaper of the editor student paper. i was the edwards t v. stay wondering, change for you were from what you were. all right. ah, i would have never hurt him any more than i'd heard it june, bug. nice accent is that like ours got you got this kind of like florida panhandle . thing going, where's what you really want is more of a savannah actually, i don't, i don't book on, don't ever go, yeah. arkansas kind of live. it pulls back into the constant market. south, alabama. yep. you mailed that real while they had a have same time. and again from these media portrayals is that it produces shame and self hatred. i mean our, with a lot of young people who don't want people to know where they're from. they want to change the way they speak, they want to escape the region as soon as possible because they're ashamed of it. as somebody who grew up in the region, i have always felt several layers of being. the other. always discouraged is feel like a perpetual immigrant because we've been here so long. i'm in my family has been an avalanche of for 8 generations. to some extent were still treated like immigrants were treated like we're from another country. when we go out into the rest of the united states, such a strange phenomenon, people speak slowly to us and expect that we're not gonna, you know, get common references, a woman what's asked me if i knew johnny carson was, you know, because i was from appalachian she didn't like we had phoebe's or nobody was literate. apalachee was a construction, it was a social and cultural invention. for example, iowa is a construction to the difference between iowa and apalachee is you know, when you're in iowa because there's a sign there that says, welcome to iowa. there is no such sign with appalachian everywhere in the world. there are half a latches and therefore everywhere you go, there are hillbillies. if we think of the hillbilly as sort of an outcast group, this your 1st trip to new york, i collected an article in which the official chinese news agency criticized a group of chinese people living far away from big gain. as the equivalent of hillbillies. everybody has an appalachian everybody has somebody that they can feel superior to. we all do that. why the hillbilly is the image of a guy with a corn cob pi remote ignorant, barefoot lazy, and so has really been a way of legitimated the dispossession of the mountains. it's a region of people who are praised, not part of the american dream. they don't really deserve the kind of resources. and welf lie beneath the land of appalachian particularly coal. it's only a region of trash, so why not trash it? and the flooded valleys are the appalachians. about 20 people are dead. $20000.00 have been moved out and helicopters, robots to blame for the flash. planning is being placed on extreme erosion upside cooperation. strip mining, enlarge tree clearing that allow the water to cascade in rivers with great speed. there were immediate promises of temporary housing from the federal government, but no trailers have arrived yet. nobody gave us anything we weren't. but now we do need help initially when we do need help. why do we need to go like if we can't get the coal industry created the towns we grew up in, it was the centerpiece of life and the livelihood and identity of so many folks in my home town, while it sustained their families, it ravaged the land without you have very little if anything in our area like this area should be very happy, let corporation such as ours, us steel and others are here. for decades, all companies came to where we grew up and took out truck load after truckload of coal, mining cars, floods and destroyed home and left our creeks orange and lifeless. hey, brenda, you got anything to play. you know, you may have got any news media, my granny, i remember he's massive plus, you know, plus 70 floods took home floods that, you know, people had to raise their houses and they suffered deeply from that and didn't get support from the government. like migrating i remember her whole life was fighting for support and stuff. this is a flood plain here. what we want is for fema the come in and help us. i mean people, this is, this is showing it's more than i don't care about people that live down here in these areas. feel water is real support. it was around, but i would call the newspaper and get them to come over and take pictures. the government is supposed to be of for bad people, but that is the way the politicians when they get an office, they know who's take care of because they're the ones take care of them. i certainly didn't agree with my grand politics, but i knew she had a long list of resentments against the government, which helped me understand her point of view. you know the miners to a certain you're so down and they've been treated so badly that they haven't been boating. they haven't been going out and voting like they can and that includes members of their family that have left the mining business. let members of the family they've left home. i think at that time, if somebody would have asked her, would you ever bow for someone who would make a comment that he freely would grab one on a. i think she'll have a very different answer at that time. in her life and this edition just will take you on a journey with diverse wildlife will be joined by a marine environmentalist and also a conservationist and will be discussing the impact the potential uncontrolled development. good have on these diverse what like to be sitting here. if unprotected, july on al jazeera, home cold march 25 years since it's handled from british to chinese rule, but with time is correct on, on the closing voices and texted us citizens. what does the future hold from the headlines to the unreported. people empower, investigates the use an abusive power around the world to refuse vote in a referendum on a new constitution. could it spell the end for the only democracy to have emerged from the out of spring uprising as india stuff as unprecedented heat wave, one or 18th goes to the fiery ha, if the crisis center goal head to the polls with the main opposition parties united can be reco powder away from the ruling party. july on al jazeera, lose a a wherever you go in the world. well, no line goes to make it for you except cut are i always going places to go? ah, hello, i'm emily. ang, when in anto headquarters is the top stories on al jazeera. she's 7 ladies have pledged solidarity with ukraine for as long as it tanks. they say they'll continue their financial military and diplomatic supportive cave. and they're planning to impose more sanctions on russia. they did have a meeting in germany for a 3 day summit. they'll then head to madrid to attend a nato summit on wednesday, bolstering troops along the alliances, east and flank will be top of the agenda. at the summit, we will strengthen our forward the fences. we will harness or both groups in the eastern part of the alliance, up to brigade levels. we will transform the nato response force and increase the number of our high read this forces to well over 300000. we'll also boost our ability to reinforce in crisis and conflict, shall anchor is sending government ministers to both russia and cut hard to negotiate for fuel. as petro pumps run dry, the few stations left with petula now selling the last of their supplies shall anchor is facing a serious lack of foreign reserves leading to shortages of food, fuel and medicine. and al fernandez has more from a petrol station in the capital. colombo people are milling about, obviously the shed in itself is close. there are a ticket tape across so that you can't have acres. but these are all voters who have been waiting for days and days in queues. there was one taxi driver who told me that he had been parked for 3 days. if you just look right across in the far corner of the frame towards the back, or you will see the beginning of ques for diesel. now that particular boss is a boss, is an out station bus of 4 to 5 hours applying for to 5 hours outside colombo. but obviously has come to the capital run out of fuel and needs to queue. at least 4 people have been killed and dozens injured in columbia after part of an arena collapse during a bull fight, a witness filmed the moment the stand fell apart. symbols ran through the streets, injuring several people, and relatives of at least 21 young people who died in a by, in a south african township. a waiting for answers about the course of their debts. please say there were no obvious signs of injuries. okay, those are the headlines i am emily anguish. the news continues here on out jazeera after witness stay with us. ah, you oh, every b and listen to a story that are a laid to the, this is harland county usa. i saw this movie when i was 19 era guy to go out on the picket lab and we'll wender contract. if they'll, i'll stand it. it was the 1st time i remember seeing the people of eastern kentucky represented dignity on film. oh, this film inspired me to make documentaries. that was like an aha moment. i mean, i grew up in a rural place in public education and it wasn't, you know, a space of like radical thought or ideas. and i think that that very much set the tone for me and for the direction of my life. and i was interested in telling stories of marginalized and vulnerable people because i grew up in a place where a lot of people are marginalized and a lot of people are vulnerable. i mean, it's really incredible the way that media works and how the stories can get told in the immediate aftermath of the civil war. the local color writing presented appalachia as a sort of quirky and quaint peoples. but as industrialists become interested in the region for minerals, for lumber, for coal, the people that were living there could also be seen as a kind of potential threat or at least a interference with their economic plants. and so a new conception emerges of them as a dangerous and threatening people who might threaten civilization itself or not just talking about hillbillies i. e. people who live in the mountains. we're talking about poor people who live in the mountains. they're the ones who are gonna cut your throat regional and national newspapers promote them out and people as dangerous and threatening if they stand in the way of progress. oh no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no. you can still hear that. that piece of music. and so you'll lock the car doors just in case the car were to break down. hey john leo, for the layout lane. in the liver answer there is this horrifying rain. oh, yeah. now, if you hear that lick on the banjo, it brings up this image of right ah, in deliverance, there is an acknowledgement at the beginning, the film with the images mountain being blown up. an acknowledgment of the cities exploitation of the rural rape this god damn landscaper. oh louis my extreme point of view agreements. are you nervous the a little bit? are you nervous? programmed a lot. i've always been that way. this is used to be my classroom. we had to direct look for extra and somehow i come in our class got to look and it pulls out. i wasn't the same, the same person that i was when i put that mike up head mark that and it, and it kind of, ah, i think one of the things that makes deliverance work on lots of levels is that billy's character and my character we're able to sort of connect, ah, having that seen work really put this film on a different level, which was the break of my life. i guess that's probably one of the great moments ever problems. great. is there anyone out there who hasn't seen the motion picture delivers? i've seen a large number of times, but there is a moment there when he plays the banjo with a retarded boy, and they suddenly discover each other. and ronnie plays a guitar and they do dueling banjos. and i guess probably one of the most electric moments on the screen, i get goose pimples. just thinking about it. it was nominated for academy award like a awards presentation. and it's nearly always listed in the top 15 or 30 of the best films of all time, ged. ah, in how much money did you make for your role and deliberate and they'd never been. mm. i wish i would, could be an actor. i just left to go to los angeles. that's my doing and hope to now get i just want to happen in billy was only in the 4th grade when the directors came to his school. he had no idea how the movie would be used or that he would become a symbol for the entire region. deliverance for billy, and his hope and his hindrance. me. when i 1st find the movie, i didn't know that partner going to be in there. i thought to myself, the people this going to say that movie is going to fight minette distress arriving county. ah ah, this is a sports bar that has a white trash theme. it's got the rusty bullet auction to me is taking someone else's culture and explaining, you know, and using it for your own profit. there's a lot of ironic redneck she and i think it only bothers me in the same way. the white people pretending they're black through adopting hip hop culture dos. it's not your experience with along with the same day when it's called the white trash party, i thought we just made the biscuit. so in a way this normally fans with where you get your ideas about what, what trash looks like. wow, i, i see a lot of imagery on the internet. i see what are they called memes are means internet means if somebody will put up a picture of like, torn jeans on here with a local white trash. you know, port mainly a char turned into, you know, drinking glass, you know, my trash. and i saw a lot of deliverance when i was kid. ah, if a new hipster like what rest? kelly? no like white trash like white here. yeah, absolutely. yeah. a lot of it's there's that are maybe dressing like this. don't even know where apalachee is or understand any of the issues about it. oh, you poor west virginia and you'll have to like my call to get your electricity. when like 14 percent of the power of new york city comes from west virginia cole, the history, the millennials are going to be the people running our country. and do they know, like that, say, for instance, west virginia has the highest rate of overdose death in the nation, thrown up your use, but they're wearing our clothes and trying to look our look in. can vegetables and drink moonshine? ah, the co option of politicians. there's a long history there. mcconnell in the senate won his 1st election, running a tv ad in which he used hound dogs. he played the hillbilly, switched to mich george w bush and seen them read back. that's actually nice child privilege. totally different. close ones on the shack, one for the country club is a cultural politics to the success of more right wing groups in this country. and it hinges in part depiction of white working class, people from the right you get this depiction as the salt of the earth. you know, the people that we lift up and from the left, you get these stereotypes of vicious. they voted against their own economic interest because of the gun because of gauge and because of god, the 3 cheese their own behavior is precisely what people on the right point to in enlisting white working class folks for very right wing class. that means they have contempt for the core, the country for middle class, for rural america. and they're now admitting it. it's really important that people who consider themselves progressive understand what harm they're doing. i'm the only candidate which has a policy about how to bring economic opportunity using clean renewable energy as the key in the cold country. because we're going to put a lot of coal miners and coal companies out of business. we're making a movie about media representations and appalachian american people. so what do you think is important? 2016. 0 man for warren is a man. i'm saying the jobs around here where the commons is gone. it's got really bad for a lot of folks. i think about the election. oh, anyway, it goes, there's no way, no co mind and is going to lose a lot of kentucky people jobs. and this is for my goal. why do people not be able to like support the family? i really wanted to leave in united states now where i'm donald trump because he is very rude. he to women in this able to people there. well, i can't help the light as they are rice, anne rice's. what do you think about his promise to make america great. again, going to big rush live. do you identify hillbillies or? yeah, i'm here the lean my my keys are you dealing. ready me, i me i why now, but it didn't work well. don't, don't mess with the color temp about after you do it. we can go and make adjustments, but i don't actually think it's at blue. really beautiful. so rare that you see appalachian through the eyes of an appalachian person in like new york city. or like, you know, in the new york times or something. there are storytellers here who are able to critically examine their communities and to tell powerful and honest stories and that you don't necessarily always have to find somebody. and to tell that story in memory of the black coal mine and i want to make sure that they're visually ins down the fact that there is a small black community given in this place that i didn't even know about for all my years of living. crazy law was pretty much completely changed off and it's really got me in touch with my community and just help people don't have to be alone in the world that they live. i day, the girl in college, her parents really races. obviously she is why her parents had a very negative view of black people, lazy and dangerous, all kinds of stuff. and we ended in secret, and we daily, almost for 2 years. and her parents pulled out at the school. once they found out that we were dating and i haven't seen her since 2012000 really heartbreaking thing for me. it's tiring to have to have far as a person, everyone should be able to say who they are. the person was always very big. tom boy went to school and developed a crush on a girl. like i was laying my bed and just crow every night cuz my entire family, they found out they would hate me like just disowning. sometimes people come in and they haven't really had to hear what it's like for a l g b t q used to be discriminated against our for a personal color in the group to be discriminated against. so i think it's creating a bridge of understanding between young people and their own community. there is a guardian article that came out about my home town. they were doing a series about poverty in america. they said something like the average yearly income for a household in lee county. kentucky is something like $13000.00 or $14000.00 a year unless you are over the age of $65.00. and then that drops down to like $6000.00 something dollars a year. not only is this a place where people are so overwhelmingly poor, but also it's a place in america where people are overwhelming, the watt and the vast majority of them always vote republican. i'm not conservative, but i think it's wrong to say, oh you guys are stupid, you're just doing it to your sales republican. so your student to your sale. that's not the case. it just seems like, you know, they're not blaming you for being republican and thereby me for being on greg. if they're not on for that and, and not by me for that than you're lazy. after this article came out, there are all these people who outside the community are saying things like this article is really sad. i feel so sorry for the people who live here. ok, like this person, the brown people get up and move to places opportunities, which is what brought people always do. it's the brain drain. they're telling people to do the same stuff that teachers said to me when i was going to high school and bite, you got to get out. you can't die. you don't need to be here. you've got to get out . there's nothing here. ah, me there's like around to have something else. so yeah, i don't know. i don't know what to tell you to do. why not for you to just have like a big head. yeah. like say, if we were going to do a montage of the you know, gotcha. gotcha. all right. voting has finally begun the race for president head of the whole issue between the 1st woman president and a business man running for his 1st elected office. 2015 has truly been unlike any political race we've ever covered before. trump was eager to out surveys that show him gaining ground. lot of good goals out there. what's still unknown is the outcome on election day. now, i don't know where we are. what's up in america? let's pick a president, y'all been our time ready? nettie. hold on. ah, a new hilary cell or rent, because we don't know where we are just the most important election i've ever participated in it before. i really didn't care who i voted for this time. i know lots of people with i voted stickers on people seem to be voting a guest here, but we'll see they're like moving up in the morning. what kind of hang over really b o is in error for that. well, if you're going to like break it or something went up with. well, i'd like that hillary get a lot more votes and kentucky than people. thank. yeah, she's not a wham, but there are lots of the little blue dots all over this website. so i was for my daughter's, i was for me and jason and all the couples. i know who were able to get married on a lot of laurie a decision in america. donald trump wins west virginia and it's a state where his message deployed. well, it's a whole industry is taking a, beating the map, filling in 19 electoral votes to trump at this early hour. a . it is such a hard question because i love these people because people are amazing people. they have people that built this country. these are amazing people, so i would, i just hope. well ma'am, when i historic all of it, what's unfolding right now, it's not over yet. we're watching every state, every electoral, without a doubt. probably one of the most momentous nights in american political history are in the bank here. secretary, and then you want to pull out, you say, here's the issue. law to red rock, they're smaller, but they're only this only 24 percent of the vote for ah, who all those parcels a hillock, what casanova lay. oh gosh, this you lost and i was happy. i'm happy that i support the and i'm happy that my vote helped him get there. i just really believed that hillary clinton was gonna be the 45th president and the united states. i believed it so much and i wanted it so badly. you had your hopes on being to be able to see the 1st woman president now voted for. then your dream was crushed and i can accept it. you know, i'm not in that camp of like this is a deal breaker. and i want to like in my relationships with people who voted for donald trump because we all know people who voted for donald trump. and i know another problem that was clearly revealed in this campaign is that hillary was unable to appeal to rural folk. and i think that hurt her. i want to see like what a girl could do, but i don't want hailey no way up when i run prison yet. can all vote me shall be girls, ronnie? i will be a bigger who are don't touch the i won't live that looks like it would get it looks like it might burn a little late bringing your laundry. did you hear my stomach growl? i had i, i've been on about the 500 calorie died if that last 4 days. it's not intentional. i'm just, i'm just in the i haven't eaten whole lot granny. so i am starving. i'm very excited about this fine mill that you are preparing for us. i had to cook, couldn't. when i was growing up, were you responsible for making mills for your siblings and your family were mother and daddy now love them. wow. but mother didn't believe that girls should get medication. she wanted me to stay there and take care of kids and washed dish and sweet mop floors and stuff rather than go school. i just wanted to experience life. that's what my dream was. get no jobs pre enough. we'll make something of myself. i have not heard about you. i've never heard you say that you had a consciousness about leaving. it makes me feel like i am leaving your dream in a way, you know, well, could they that want and desire that you had and didn't get that. that gets transferred to mom and, and amanda and i like as it came to us, we had that opportunity. you know, you know, i'm so grateful for granting i can't tell you the m m just to be able to go to school. it's so meaningful. yes. because everybody doesn't have an opportunity, you know the o apple at the wound and enjoy and a poem and not of complication. but you cannot know a place without loving it and hating there and fill in everything in between. something inside you has to crack to live in the lot. so your eyes and brain and heart can just properly those attempting to portray the region must become immersed in the region and a special kind of way. they must go to the mountains, drive these one in room. they must sit and joe for a while with folk from the front porches, must attend weddings and high school graduation. they must study the history of the place and come to understand them a sin and awake and look at the lands on the faces of the people. the calluses on their hands and not understand the gestational and generational complexities of poverty and culture. i must stand for a while else. smell the air started the gravestones on the hillside that awake inscriptions of name among the people. not, not stereotyped. ah, look in the line. sometimes you have to leave where you came from to find your voice. and other times you have to return to that same place to listen for a deeper understanding. wesley men to places 300 years of danish colonization and international interest in the items results. his grades a younger generation imagine determines to and their future no matter that different meta wrapper and his fiance as students and a politician as they tackle h l t. issues with that powerful forces the fight for greenland and witness documentary on al jazeera. ah ah ha cathy with mocking ideals, the french republic islam proclaim, but just what is modern, france in a 4 part series, but big picture takes an in depth look the trouble with france episode one on al jazeera, the journey has begun the faithful world copies on its way to castle book, your travel package to day you to go. i still called to some degree paraguayan southeast and parts of brazil as well. not excessively so but by day probably about 5 degrees below average in montevideo, overcast weather outbreaks of light. he schraner, it's snow in the andes and it's now all the way up and down the andes. by time you get to monday, but most of argentine is enjoying the sunshine bar. jablonka is warming up to about 13 degrees that most of brazil is fairly dry. now, and the same is true for the west, in fact, you have to pick up its weight of the significant, right, but it's actually bit so the north and west that in costa rica in panama, of the seasonal range. you can see, but we've had frequent and we will get more showers in cuba, jamaica, and the bahamas in florida. and along the pacific coast of mexico's well, looks fairly wet once again. as for the us, the hot sticky stuff is being pushed out of the way and the eastern seaboard by this, which is a cold front really, which could see some big thunderstorms. i think anything too dramatic. my get a bit more dramatic down in texas with attempts she's dropping 5 to 8 degrees is is cloud to move the top and it's very welcome brain. the desert southwest remains hot but not excessively. so now the day though, of quite excessive heat for portland and boise, that'll eventually go away on tuesday. official airline of the journey examining the impact of today's headlines yesterday. oh, it was sort of our life setting the agenda for tomorrow's discussion. if somebody comes to gonna from europe, the never called an immigrant, always known as an x path, international filmmakers and world class journalists bring programs to inform and inspire. we live one people on this one planet and we got to work the solutions together on al jazeera a. this is al jazeera oh.