they get better. when we met him, viers was hard at work on his most elaborate piece yet. a robin pulling a worm out of the ground. he even had a live model to work with. i ve got a worm in here. see? he s alive. i ve had him for three weeks. so i can get the color and everything right when i make it. viers is hardly alone when it comes to finding creative ways to kill time. at first our crew thought indiana state prison inmate donte kidd s stack of toilet paper with a mirror on it was abstract art. but he had a far more practical reason for pushing his corridor into the hall outside. for those who don t have tvs, they try to watch it on the range, catch the reflection of another individual s tv in the next cell and sit back and watch some tv. kidd is serving time for drug
duck s getting a little bit better. i have another bird here. they get better. when we met him, viers was hard at work on his most elaborate piece yet. a robin pulling a worm out of the ground. he even had a live model to work with. i ve got a worm in here. see? he s alive. i ve had him for three weeks. so i can get the color and everything right when i make it. viers is hardly alone when it comes to finding creative ways to kill time. at first our crew thought indiana state prison inmate donte kidd s stack of toilet paper with a mirror on it was abstract art. but he had a far more practical reason for pushing his corridor into the hall outside. for those who don t have tvs, they try to watch it on the range, catch the reflection of another individual s tv in the next cell and sit back and watch some tv.
i really like birds. they re pretty neat. lockup crews have met hundreds of inmates facing long-term sentences. for some like dale veers at iowa state penitentiary, that means the chance to pick up a new skill or two. you start out with a block. then cut it down. and then i keep grinding and shaping it until i get it where it s supposed to be. a life sentence for kidnapping has given viers a chance to master bird carving. i kept the very first bird i ever carved because i just knew that i would get better. that is the first one i carved. that s my duck head. duck s getting a little bit better. i have another bird here.
i really like birds. they re pretty neat. lockup crews have met hundreds of inmates facing long-term sentences. for some like dale veers at iowa state penitentiary, that means the chance to pick up a new skill or two. you start out with a block. then cut it down. and then i keep grinding and shaping it until i get it where it s supposed to be. a life sentence for kidnapping has given viers a chance to master bird carving. i kept the very first bird i ever carved because i just knew that i would get better. that is the first one i carved. that s my duck head. duck s getting a little bit better. i have another bird here.
they get better. when we met him, viers was hard at work on his most elaborate piece yet. a robin pulling a worm out of the ground. he even had a live model to work with. i ve got a worm in here. see? he s alive. i ve had him for three weeks. so i can get the color and everything right when i make it. viers is hardly alone when it comes to finding creative ways to kill time. at first our crew thought indiana state prison inmate donte kidd s stack of toilet paper with a mirror on it was abstract art. but he had a far more practical reason for pushing his corridor into the hall outside. for those who don t have tvs, they try to watch it on the range, catch the reflection of another individual s tv in the next cell and sit back and watch some tv. kidd is serving time for drug sales dreamt up his creation when his own tv stopped working.