anthony: what can you do? drema: pray for them. that s all we can do. oh, eliza oh, eliza little liza jane don t just put on a light show be the light show. make your nights anything but silent. and ride in a sleigh that really slays. because in a cadillac, tradition is yours to define. so visit a cadillac showroom, and start celebrating today.
time, like 30 years ago? miner: my personal opinion? every time a republican is in there it goes up. anthony: right. [ laughter ] this used to be a solidly democratic state. what do you think made trump attractive? hilary shows up here and she openly said she s going to put a lot of coal miners out of work. wrong answer. anthony: how many kids you got? miner: i got three. patrick: six. anthony: if you saw your kids had other options, would you recommend that they join the family business? group: no sir. anthony: you would say no. richard: i d about guarantee that everybody here, their dad who worked in the coal mines, probably told their son, don t go into the coal mines. miner 2: that s what i was told. and that s what i told mine. anthony: yeah. richard: you re going to tell them, no, don t do it. but you know, if they do, you re going to be proud. i m proud. from the stickers we put on our buckets, from the stickers we put on our hats, to my coffee mug th
negativity surrounding this place that no one ever focuses on the positive. they see us as ignorant or hillbillies. daniel whitt: overdose capital of the east coast. quentin: but there s more here than just poverty and illiteracy and drugs. there s a lot of good people here. coach: when you walk on this field, you better have tunnel vision. don t look left, don t look right. you look at that scoreboard, and that should burn in your heart. do you understand me? we got some ground to make up. and once we make that ground up, we ll take off. let s go. i took a walk through this beautiful world felt the cool rain on my shoulder found something good in this beautiful world i felt the rain getting colder sha, la, la, la, la, sha, la, la, la, la, la, sha, la, la, la, la,
to the glory days of coal and better times. linda mckinney: i drank coffee from the time i could walk. they put coffee in your bottle. coffee or wine. [ laughter ] anthony: linda mckinney is a true daughter of appalachia. she raised her children here. linda s husband, bob mckinney, is a long-time mine safety inspector. anthony: now your family is originally from naples, is that right? linda: yes. anthony: naples area? linda: came here in 1923 trying to strike it rich in the coalmines. my mother died when i was five, so we went to live with my nonna, and the first day i was there she pulled me up to a cook stove. anthony: dinner is a not untypical expression of hard scrabble appalachian practicality linda: now i don t measure anything, so nothing has a recipe here. anthony: and neapolitan roots. linda: basil. linda: these my dad would call pisellis, it s peas. mm, making mama dance. [ laughter ] now, this is what i m famous for in these parts. have you ever had