The documentary starts off by visualizing a young man who is gay, and who grew up in a predominantly white neighborhood. Although he grew up with the white majority, he decided to attend a university with a black majority. He then brings his new black friends to his hometown to meet his hometown friends as a social experiment. Everything ends up going well and they all hangout in a positive manner, then the producer asks some personal questions between both sides of the friends, like what his hometown friends were taught with they see minorities in their town and how this hangout changed their idea of "black people". Then the producer asks what it means when someone says the word ghetto, then his friends from school explain and start to cry, because the word is offensive. This story is truly saddening, and opens the eyes of the people to understand that stereotyping and being the majority or the minority is not the way things should be, that the world should be equal, not just seeing
The documentary starts off by visualizing a young man who is gay, and who grew up in a predominantly white neighborhood. Although he grew up with the white majority, he decided to attend a university with a black majority. He then brings his new black friends to his hometown to meet his hometown friends as a social experiment. Everything ends up going well and they all hangout in a positive manner, then the producer asks some personal questions between both sides of the friends, like what his hometown friends were taught with they see minorities in their town and how this hangout changed their idea of "black people". Then the producer asks what it means when someone says the word ghetto, then his friends from school explain and start to cry, because the word is offensive. This story is truly saddening, and opens the eyes of the people to understand that stereotyping and being the majority or the minority is not the way things should be, that the world should be equal, not just seeing