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The Fields of Immokalee| Swing State Florida |Documentary 

Bertelsmann Foundation
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Documentary film dives inside the experiences of migrant and undocumented farmworkers in Florida.
Winner of the Impact Docs Award of Excellence
The fields of Immokalee lie two hours’ drive due west of Miami, down a sparse state highway that cuts through the swamplands of southern Florida. Crocodiles lurk just off to the side of the road. Street signs warn the driver to be alert for panthers.
For decades, migrant laborers have worked the fields of Immokalee harvesting tomatoes, green peppers, eggplants, oranges, and other produce that is then shipped across the United States of America. The backbreaking workday begins well before the sun rises and ends as it sets.
Many of the field workers are undocumented, and they are hoping to keep their jobs as federal immigration crackdowns hover over the town. “You can leave in the morning,” says Florencia, “but you just don’t know if you will be coming back in the evening.”
The Fields of Immokalee documentary explores the daily lives of tomato pickers, from the 5:00 am trips to the parking lot in hopes of finding day labor, to work shifts in the scorching mid-day heat, to child detention centers for migrant youth that have been separated from their families.
Via these vignettes, the film offers insight into one of the most volatile
political issues of recent elections.
Learn more at www.swingstateflorida.com
A Bertelsmann Foundation Film
Filmed & Directed by Samuel George
Edited by Jeff Cook
Executive Produced by Irene Braam
Topics: Migrant farm labor, migrant child detention, labor exploitation, community services, family separation, tomato pickers, produce, Florida Democrats, Florida Republicans, 2020 Election, Swing State, Florida, DACA, documentary film, Latinos in the United States, immigration, short term visa, essential workers
ABOUT THE BERTELSMANN FOUNDATION
The Bertelsmann Foundation (North America), Inc., established in 2008, was created to promote and strengthen the transatlantic relationship. Through research, analysis, forums, and audiovisual and multimedia content, we seek to educate and engage our audience on the most pressing economic, political, and social challenges facing the United States and Europe.
FAIR USE DISCLAIMER
The copyright laws of the United States permit the “fair use” of copyrighted content. Section 107 of the U.S. Copyright Act provides that “the fair use of a copyrighted work . . for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching (including multiple copies for classroom use), scholarship, or research is not an infringement of copyright.”
This film may contain copyrighted content that is not specifically authorized by the copyright holder. Pursuant to Section 107 of the U.S. Copyright Act, we believe in good faith that the use of copyrighted material in this film is protected by the fair use doctrine as any such use is for educational purposes only, designed to foster issue-awareness and constructive debate.
If you have any concerns about the use of copyrighted material in this film and/or our fair use defense, please contact us at info@bfna.org. Thank you.

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4 июн 2020

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Комментарии : 14   
@markblocker4969
@markblocker4969 3 года назад
I love Immokalee born and raised here I wouldn’t change nothing the migrant workers bring life to this area ❤️
@raulmorales7313
@raulmorales7313 3 года назад
Mixture of feelings. This Documentary inspires!!
@ivybennett9820
@ivybennett9820 3 года назад
Great job, Sam. This is a reminder for me to be more mindful of how I get the food that I eat.
@FWAFApopka
@FWAFApopka 3 года назад
Thank you Sam!
@Michael-ps7ji
@Michael-ps7ji 4 года назад
Fantastic documentary. I drive through Immokalee. Eye opening to see the lives they live. Hoping for good solutions for everyone. It is so complicated.
@valentinoz7059
@valentinoz7059 3 года назад
Was that way in the 80s when I grew up there too!
@MrHurricaneFloyd
@MrHurricaneFloyd 3 года назад
My family lived exactly the same way in Immokalee from the mid 1960s until around 1991. My grandparents, parents and siblings worked those fields. My father drove one of the buses for a while. We lived in trailer parks and run down little houses. Oddly enough though my family is white and are all legal citizens.
@ak65432
@ak65432 4 года назад
Amazing, Sam!
@MrsTLomax
@MrsTLomax 4 года назад
Thank you for this. This is my hometown. I will be sharing.
@streetvlogs3544
@streetvlogs3544 3 года назад
i know the guy who shows at the end
@kotd009
@kotd009 3 года назад
i used to live here..and i know how thats like. i remember going their with my mom to pick up a friend from work..and my mom told me that this is where she would wait to get on the bus
@fredgarcia9617
@fredgarcia9617 3 года назад
beautiful
@lovetrumpshate7968
@lovetrumpshate7968 3 года назад
TRUTH Trumps ........lies .... REAL Trumps .............fake
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