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COMING SOON:
Fire Through Dry Grass
Watch it on your local PBS station
Monday, October 30th at 10 p.m. or stream online.
Wearing snapback caps and Air Jordans, the Reality Poets don’t look like typical nursing home residents. In Fire Through Dry Grass, these Black and brown disabled artists document their lives on lockdown during Covid, using their poetry and art to underscore the danger and imprisonment they feel. In the face of institutional neglect, they refuse to be abused, confined, and erased.

Don't miss the broadcast premiere of Fire Through Dry Grass presented by the critically acclaimed television series POV on Monday, October 30th at 10 p.m. ET. Watch it on PBS (check your local listings) or stream it on pbs.org or the PBS App.
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IN THE NEWS
 
Select press coverage, interviews and related stories
  • “An intimate and raw film that gives a real sense of the confinement faced by the residents. It’s a powerful reminder of how defining and devastating the pandemic was, and gives space to those whose voices were long ignored.” - Review in The New York Times
     
  • Fire Through Dry Grass reveals neglect at Coler Specialty Hospital during the pandemic. Initiated as art, it became a call for action, leading to the Nursing Home Lives Matter movement.” - Interview in The Moveable Feast
     
  • “I resisted delving into COVID tales until now. Memories of sirens and fear needed to settle. But the film reawakened one thing in me: absolute rage. Despite moving on, this pandemic looms in our future.” - Review in The Brooklyn Rail
5 Questions for Fire Through Dry Grass Filmmakers Alexis Neophytides and Andres “Jay” Molina
“There’s a lot of talk in the disability community about moving out of long-term care into independent living, but you can’t always do it and there are plenty of folks who don’t have any other choice, so it’s not just about moving somewhere else. It’s really about making nursing homes and long-term care facilities as homes rather than institutions like Jay is saying. But we would also would never want for someone to [leave the film] with this idea that they want Coler to be closed. Roosevelt Island is an amazing place to live, and there are a lot of great things about it. It’s about demanding respect and having a voice and a seat at the table — essentially, the Nursing Home Lives Matter Bill of Rights, where it’s all laid out there..” - Alexis Neophytides, Filmmaker
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Major funding for POV is provided by PBS, The John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, the Wyncote Foundation, Reva & David Logan Foundation, Open Society Foundations and the National Endowment for the Arts. Additional funding comes from Nancy Blachman and David desJardins, Bertha Foundation, The Hollywood Foreign Press Association's Charitable Trust, Park Foundation, Sage Foundation, New York State Council on the Arts, New York City Department of Cultural Affairs in partnership with the City Council, Chris and Nancy Plaut, Abby Pucker, Ann Tenenbaum and Thomas H. Lee and public television viewers. POV is presented by a consortium of public television stations, including KQED San Francisco, WGBH Boston and THIRTEEN in association with WNET.ORG.

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