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Documentary following the police department in Flint, Michigan as they struggle with dwindling resources and crumbling infrastructure in a community crippled by violence and a contaminated w... Read allDocumentary following the police department in Flint, Michigan as they struggle with dwindling resources and crumbling infrastructure in a community crippled by violence and a contaminated water crisis.Documentary following the police department in Flint, Michigan as they struggle with dwindling resources and crumbling infrastructure in a community crippled by violence and a contaminated water crisis.
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Flint Town examines...
..... a decimated and demoralized Flint Michigan Police force struggling to cope with violent crime after the city's downward spiral into an epidemic of record-high murder rates.
The opening shows scenes of Flint as it was during the boom years and which began to crumble in the late 70's following the closing of the Chevrolet and Buick factories, two of GM's biggest plants.
At one time, Flint had the highest per capita income of blue collar workers in America. I know, because I lived and worked there for a while during its boom years. Businesses flourished and the nightlife scene, a sure indicator of disposable income, was New Year's Eve virtually every night.
The factory closings led to massive unemployment which in turn bred the violent and virtually uncontrollable crime rate. Neither City Hall nor the State Government succeeded in finding secondary industries to replace GM's closed plants. The drug industry boomed.
Due to the economic crash, the Police force shrunk from a high of over five hundred officers down to one hundred or so due to City Hall mismanagement, graft, incompetence and the misappropriation of the city finances.
The documentary reveals the problems and frustrations of the skeleton police force through the eyes of its Chief and various police officers who patrol streets of boarded up, condemned houses in poverty stricken, drug infested neighborhoods whose poorly educated residents seem condemned to never escape their toxic environment.
It's well done and worth watching.
The opening shows scenes of Flint as it was during the boom years and which began to crumble in the late 70's following the closing of the Chevrolet and Buick factories, two of GM's biggest plants.
At one time, Flint had the highest per capita income of blue collar workers in America. I know, because I lived and worked there for a while during its boom years. Businesses flourished and the nightlife scene, a sure indicator of disposable income, was New Year's Eve virtually every night.
The factory closings led to massive unemployment which in turn bred the violent and virtually uncontrollable crime rate. Neither City Hall nor the State Government succeeded in finding secondary industries to replace GM's closed plants. The drug industry boomed.
Due to the economic crash, the Police force shrunk from a high of over five hundred officers down to one hundred or so due to City Hall mismanagement, graft, incompetence and the misappropriation of the city finances.
The documentary reveals the problems and frustrations of the skeleton police force through the eyes of its Chief and various police officers who patrol streets of boarded up, condemned houses in poverty stricken, drug infested neighborhoods whose poorly educated residents seem condemned to never escape their toxic environment.
It's well done and worth watching.
Excellent! Thank you, Netflix
This is an excellent Netflix docuseries. I found it on Monday and finished it today. While it focuses on the problems in the Flint PD, it does a great job of showing both the police and residents points of view.
(I'm sure it may be more interesting to me than most since this is 40 min north of me and was saturated in the news and everyone down here in Detroit trying to get as much water up there as possible.)
It's very well done and it humanizes everyone involved in trying to keep that city barely above water. I did not feel I wasted one second watching this.
Thank you, Netflix!
Nobody else was getting to the heart of this.
There's "Reality," Then There's "Real"
Being a Flint PD officer and a factory worker in the town where I grew up, this program had special meeting for me. That cat-walk into the entrance of the Flint Police Department was exactly the same in the early 60's. Only far fewer travel there now.
Fate had me leaving a generation before everybody else. Going back now, visually, is frightening and enraging.
Flint is a 3rd World city in a First World Country. As was shown again and again, from the local perspective, nobody else even cares about their suffering. Maybe, this raw and accurate depiction of Flint could finally become a wake-up call.
Flint has always been a blue-collar down. It was the American Dream for all the South. The mass poverty starting with the Depression, found thousands of Southerners migrating to "the shops in Michigan," and the Flint Automobile Industry hired them all, including my dad.
We, whose dads were called "shop rats," had a good life, with much diversity before it became a cultural catch-phrase. Something that probably will never be given enough credit, Flint was partly responsible for Southern blacks and whites being forced to work together on the assembly lines--and out of that, came mutual respect, understanding, and a bit more tolerance and less bigotry.
Now all that's gone, and Flint Town shows how and why. Can it be fixed? A hundred thousand blameless souls sure hope so.
Fate had me leaving a generation before everybody else. Going back now, visually, is frightening and enraging.
Flint is a 3rd World city in a First World Country. As was shown again and again, from the local perspective, nobody else even cares about their suffering. Maybe, this raw and accurate depiction of Flint could finally become a wake-up call.
Flint has always been a blue-collar down. It was the American Dream for all the South. The mass poverty starting with the Depression, found thousands of Southerners migrating to "the shops in Michigan," and the Flint Automobile Industry hired them all, including my dad.
We, whose dads were called "shop rats," had a good life, with much diversity before it became a cultural catch-phrase. Something that probably will never be given enough credit, Flint was partly responsible for Southern blacks and whites being forced to work together on the assembly lines--and out of that, came mutual respect, understanding, and a bit more tolerance and less bigotry.
Now all that's gone, and Flint Town shows how and why. Can it be fixed? A hundred thousand blameless souls sure hope so.
6 Categories - Near Perfect Review.
Rated from a documentary standpoint:
Plot: 10/10 Production: 9.5/10 Storyline: 10/10 Characters: 9/10 Setting: 10/10 Realism: 7.5/10
This is by far the best production I have ever seen. Hands down.
Unbiased, professional, and extremely appealing from a production standpoint (speaking of which, where do they find these people?). It does not immediately investigate the "water crisis" like one would likely expect. Instead, it communicates the real problem at hand, the hostility between a community and its cities officials.
This series does not stop there. It constantly holds your attention, refusing to be anything like similar series' where the same content is repeated episode after episode. The second a certain topic in "Flint Town" begins to sour a completely new position is introduced and examined - exactly how the media should be. This isn't about taking sides. This is about hearing every single voice in the community and determining what the best solution is to improve the level of comfort and safety felt in the community.
In satisfying this mission they complete another objective without any intention, leading viewers to the realization that maybe the government isn't 'really' out to get them - maybe it's really their fellow citizens.
Overall I must give this series a solid 10/10. Phenomenal from nearly all perspectives.
Plot: 10/10 Production: 9.5/10 Storyline: 10/10 Characters: 9/10 Setting: 10/10 Realism: 7.5/10
This is by far the best production I have ever seen. Hands down.
Unbiased, professional, and extremely appealing from a production standpoint (speaking of which, where do they find these people?). It does not immediately investigate the "water crisis" like one would likely expect. Instead, it communicates the real problem at hand, the hostility between a community and its cities officials.
This series does not stop there. It constantly holds your attention, refusing to be anything like similar series' where the same content is repeated episode after episode. The second a certain topic in "Flint Town" begins to sour a completely new position is introduced and examined - exactly how the media should be. This isn't about taking sides. This is about hearing every single voice in the community and determining what the best solution is to improve the level of comfort and safety felt in the community.
In satisfying this mission they complete another objective without any intention, leading viewers to the realization that maybe the government isn't 'really' out to get them - maybe it's really their fellow citizens.
Overall I must give this series a solid 10/10. Phenomenal from nearly all perspectives.
Wow.
Insightful, frightful and balanced. Netflix is offering a documentary everyone should see.
Did you know
- TriviaBridgette Balasko and Robert Frost are now married.
- ConnectionsReferenced in Film Junk Podcast: Episode 657: You Were Never Really Here (2018)
- How many seasons does Flint Town have?Powered by Alexa
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