Spoiler...?
I'm thankful for being told about Claudette Colvin. I did not know Rosa Parks was not the first woman to refuse to give up her bus seat to a white person in Montgomery. I did not know other Black People shunned Claudette after she was arrested (or that it did a number on her head). And, then, Rosa Parks was chosen to be the shining example, later to be hailed as a hero. No shade on Rosa Parks, but 15 year old Claudette, and all the other young People who challenged the status quo deserve to have their names said as well!
It seems daunting to keep abreast of current events, and keep the names in our mouths of the downtrodden, here and abroad (Mahsa Amini & Armita Geravand in Iran, countless others in Palestine ... 4,104 4,237 14,000 children, 137 journos in Gaza during the current war robotic genocide, refugees drowned fleeing to Europe in the Mediterranean Sea etc.), but, it's the civil duty that at least some of us try, no matter how hard it is to not look away.
Crying & pain are not up my alley -- more comfortable getting mad as a device for concentration ('course it's hard to fault most since they've never gotten a full picture, so that leaves crying and pain).
The show reminded me always on The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel ... but this was a strong episode - with a subject ms Meisel would have not touched.
The protest violence was unpleasant to watch
I think that living a lie will eat you up inside. And whatever hell is... must feel something like that.
Shout by SwissSennaVIP 2BlockedParent2023-11-11T12:21:18Z
That final dialogue between mother and daughter about Daddy: I‘m not crying, YOU are!