Station 19 (2018) s04e12 Episode Script

Get Up, Stand Up

1
I know it's been a long night, team,
and we have a long shift ahead of us,
- but I want you all to know that
- Diane.
Jack. Don't worry.
I got a rapid test this morning,
so I'm clean as a whistle.
Uh, what are y What is she
I asked her to come.
There's been a death,
and you are all grieving,
so I asked her to come.
I'm sorr You me
- You talking about George Floyd?
- You brought in a therapist
to help us process the death
of George Floyd?
I did.
I feel powerless to help,
and this felt like something I could do.
There are not many fire captains
who would treat a moment
of national crisis
like an internal tragedy,
and your captain is.
I respect it,
so I'm honored to be here
to help however I can.
I don't need you
to talk about Mr. Floyd.
I'm not gonna make you
talk to me at all.
This isn't mandatory.
I'm just here if you need me.
You're bold, and you're trying.
Right or wrong,
you tried something today.
You tried something to help.
Thank you.
I love you.
How do you do it? I mean, how do you
I-I-I know you have to be
as shaken up as I am,
so how do you
- How do I do my job?
- Well, yeah.
You fought a fire this morning.
How did you do it?
I pushed my pain aside
and did what had to be done.
Same.
I saw what happened to Dean Miller.
He's suing the police department,
and he's right to do it.
But?
But, uh uh, it
It makes me uncomfortable.
Because he's a firefighter
and we're supposed to shut up
and look pretty?
No, because when the police
made me lie down on the street
like an animal
during a routine traffic stop
You didn't sue.
I didn't do much of anything at all.
I did yell, you know,
whi which was
I feel like a hypocrite.
- A hypocrite?
- Yeah. I have two kids.
I have a new son since we last spoke.
- Congratulations.
- Thanks.
- You get any sleep?
- Well, he's 18, so, you know
Oh.
While I'm not losing sleep
because of him
You're losing sleep over him.
Yeah.
Anyway, m-my wife and I, we
We gave "the talk"
and explained that young Black men
don't get to behave
any old way they want
when dealing with the police.
We told them to do whatever
it took to get home safe.
But when I had a run-in
with the police myself,
I I-I yelled at that officer
as he got into his car.
I mean, if my boys had yelled
at a cop like that, I
You'd be upset with them?
Well, hell, yes, I'd be upset!
I'd
But I'd also be proud.
U Because they'd be right.
You know, I was right.
Miller was right.
But y-you can't do that.
You can't yell at a cop
because, you know, w
Because they've got a gun, you know?
They're given authority.
They have the power t
D-Do you have kids?
Three teenagers.
Oh, wow. Okay, so, you get
just how frustrating
and infuriating it is
to pour every ounce
of energy and brain power you have
into them to To try and mold them
into confident young men
To make them honestly believe
that they can accomplish anything,
to to work so hard
to get them to s-stand tall
and feel good in their own skin
Only to then have to tell them that
because of the color of that skin,
they have to shrink
when in the presence
of a police officer.
Do you tell them that?
Do you tell them to shrink?
No.
No, I I don't tell them to shrink.
I
I tell them to stand with dignity,
and I tell them to de-escalate.
I-I tell them that in any
confrontational situation,
their job is to de-escalate.
But it should be the cop's job.
You're right. It should.
So, let me just make sure
I have this straight.
You're mad at yourself
that you didn't do more
after that cop treated you that way,
and you're mad at yourself
that you didn't do less
after that cop treated you that way.
Because Miller's doing more,
and because you want your boys
to do less.
Look
I'm exhausted, you know?
I'm exhausted by navigating
a a w a world
that sees me and
And my kids as a threat.
I mean, it's it's this
It's this constant nagging worry
that That never goes away.
And i-if I do manage to forget
and just
You know, just exist
a comment or a look
or the news that a man
has been killed in the street
reminds me that I have to be careful.
And And it steals all of
my mental and emotional energy
that I should be giving to my wife
and my kids and my health.
Is something going on with your health?
Being Black in America is
a life-threatening condition.
Other than that
Seattle protests continued late
into the evening last night
with police presence on the scene.
Should we go?
Can we?
I mean, after shift.
- No, still can we?
- Oh, you mean
Because we're FD.
I mean, is that an official policy?
Do they have to say anything? We know.
Well, it's a free country, so
In theory.
But the Department's a public entity.
And the protests
are considered anti-police.
'Cause asking for our right to live
is inherently anti-police,
and nobody seems to
realize that's the problem.
Any takers?
Just one, so far.
- And you.
- What?
- Sit.
- No, I'm not
You're what? You're You're
You're not grieving?
You had a happy little firehouse
where everyone was best friends
and racial disparity
was not a hot topic.
- And now?
- Everything has changed.
Everything and nothing.
I know fire.
I mean, I'm the person
that studies them for fun.
But this fire
This fire is beneath our feet.
It's built into every foundation
Our history, language, n-news coverage.
It's everywhere. I mean, we vent fires
to let out the hot smoke and gasses
so that we can contain the fire,
but I don't see how we can contain this,
let alone put it out.
And growing up, we were taught about
Black history
and the Civil Rights movement.
We were taught to believe
that they had beat it.
And I think, on some level,
that belief was still inside of me,
because I didn't listen to Dean,
and I didn't listen
to the mothers of those kidnapped girls,
and I am so embarrassed
saying that to you.
Well, you were taught that in school
and probably also at home.
And that teaching,
it's the coal that keeps the fire hot.
When I was a child
and I learned about
the Native American genocide,
I pictured one small village
One small village of men
with feathers in their hair
who gave the white people turkey
and then got mad
that they wouldn't leave.
Now, I pictured it because
those were the literal pictures
in my history books.
And even though I knew
that my people
had been stolen from their homes
and brought here chained up on ships,
somehow, I believed that textbook.
I was 35 years old
when I learned that in 1492,
Columbus sailed the ocean blue,
and in the wake of that,
millions upon millions of people
who had been living here
for 15,000 years
were extinguished.
And the ones who survived
were fighting every day
against a culture
that still wants to pretend
they don't exist.
We learn when we learn.
And the shame we feel
at having taken so long to learn,
well, that can be useful
as long as we use it well.
Once we know better,
we have to do better.
When I was 13,
I ran cross country and track,
and during the off-season,
my dad would train
a group of us girls who ran both.
And he would push us too hard,
and when I didn't hit a drill
the way he wanted me to
he'd make me do it
over and over and over
until I would collapse on the ground.
And my dad would leave me there,
and one by one,
my team members
would lie down next to me.
Face to the concrete,
eyes on me, silent.
Giving me space, but
also making sure I wasn't alone.
And my instinct is that
that is what I have to do
for the Black members of my team
To quietly show up
and let them know that I support them.
But I think that instinct is wrong,
because when my friends and I were 13,
we didn't have the capacity
to stand up against an abusive power.
And now I do.
I I have the power to stand up
and say when something is wrong.
I mean, I have the power
to call out injustices when I see them.
I have
the power to make sure
that everyone can breathe.
- Hey.
- Hey.
The protests have really grown.
Yeah, I saw.
What happened to you?
You get into a bar fight?
Yeah, with an SCBA.
- You okay?
- Nope.
You gonna talk to Diane?
I doubt it.
Yep.
God, look at that.
It's just getting bigger and bigger,
hmm?
- Mm-hmm.
- It's all over the world.
Almost makes you
hopeful?
Take this.
Turn to channel 17.
And let me get that.
- What?
- So you don't throw it across the room.
the news in Minneapolis.
We stand in support of our communities,
no matter their color.
Oh, God. Give me that coffee cup back.
This little play-act
has been on loop for half an hour now,
and these stations are eating it up.
Like he's some shining example
of PD valor.
Oh, God, I just threw up
in my mouth a little bit,
- I think.
- Well, get ready to throw up some more.
As far as any question about
where this department stands
on the issue of Black Lives
I know this little earthworm
is not gon
Mm.
- Oh. What?!
- Yeah.
- Oh, come on.
- That.
That is why every time I wonder
whether to continue with the lawsuit,
whether it's too much
too little, too fast, too slow.
It's It's something, at least.
Some way to fight against this
This performative, uh
Uh, hypocritical, destructive
Yeah.
Yeah.
Travis.
Diane.
You know, the Department
pays me no matter what,
but, uh, there's only
so many crossword puzzles
I can do, so
- You want to talk?
- Oh, no.
I mean, I I want to let
the Black firefighters go first.
O Do you see a line
outside this door?
I-I know the past couple months
can't have been easy for you, either.
Hate crimes are hate crimes,
no matter the race.
My mom got, uh
Well, she was spit on
at the grocery store
Mm.
the same day that George Floyd
My, uh My mom was leaving,
and a crazy maskless woman was like
"If this Kung Flu is real,
it's because of people like her."
The woman both
didn't believe COVID was real
and was blaming my mom for it.
When my mom told me,
it actually felt like
my organs were melting.
I was so hot with rage, you know,
remembering the times when I was a kid,
and, you know,
people would say stuff to us.
And then, we would just go home.
Never to be discussed again.
And I And I didn't say
anything to anyone here about it
because, you know,
it didn't feel appropriate.
This giant, massive thing
was happening
A hate crime.
An atrocity so much more brutal
and egregious.
You know, other people
were hurting so much more.
I'm sorry.
I don't know why
I'm talking to you about this.
I don't know why I'm doing that.
Because I'm a Black woman,
and my racist stuff is "bigger"?
Something like that.
That doesn't work.
It doesn't not work.
I know that since COVID,
hate crimes against Asian Americans
have spiked like crazy.
And yet, no one is talking about it
No one but us.
Not the media.
Not the
I mean, grandmas and grandpas
Halmoni and haraboji.
People being shoved into walls
and off subway platforms.
You have Filipina nurses
who say goodbye to their families
in their own country to come here
to work the front lines of a pandemic
being attacked in the streets.
A 2-year-old and a 6-year-old
stabbed at a big-box store.
I mean, who stabs a 2-year-old?
And why is that not news?
Why are we so
invisible?
I don't know.
I
I don't know.
I don't know either!
But how can we even make a fuss
when this is all it is
relative to how horrifically
this country treats Black people?
I mean, I watched that whole video,
and in addition to the
absolute horror that I felt
And feel I also thought
"What do we have
to even complain about?"
Travis, it's all bad.
I know you're trying to be generous,
but it is all bad.
There are no winners
in the Oppression Olympics.
Okay?
And it's gaslighting if anyone tells you
or if you tell yourself
to be okay with the brutalities
being inflicted on your community
because worse things
are happening to another.
She's just trying to help.
Okay.
- Robert
- Look, I'm not gonna do it, okay?
I'm not gonna just sit there
- and and perform my pain
- It's not
so that Bishop
can feel better, alright?
- That's not
- I'm not gonna do it.
Andy, I just need a minute.
Okay.
I need a minute.
Okay. Okay.
You know, it's always bothered me
when men would suddenly
see the world differently
after they had a daughter.
Like, I always wondered
why it took them having a daughter
in order to open their eyes.
But I guess
that's how it feels for me now.
I'm that guy.
The world changed for me
because I fell in love with a Black man,
and now I see what he sees.
You know, I I worry
for him every day.
I-I've taken on the fear
that he doesn't allow himself to feel.
I You know, I've always seen it
and felt it growing up.
I saw my dad go through it.
People would call him awful names,
and he would He would just walk by,
hold his head up high.
A-As a kid, people would look at
my last name,
and they would ask me,
"Where are you really from?"
I even had teachers
who would look really surprised
once they realized that I was smart.
But, you know, mostly
- It's okay to say it.
- Mostly, I got treated okay
because my skin is light.
I pass for white.
And you feel guilty about that?
I
You know
I swear to God,
I don't even know how I feel.
Uh, can we walk?
This year has been so much so much.
It's been just one thing
after another a
With no time to recover.
And that video?
I feel
I feel betrayed.
I mean, j I know
it's always been this way,
but I needed to love a Black man
I needed to be married to a Black man
In order to see the whole picture?
Why? Why? Where was my call for justice?
Like, why didn't I see this before?
W Why am I just waking up now?
A lot of people are waking up now,
and they're asking themselves
the same questions.
And you You're the daughter
of a fire captain.
Police have been a part of your life
since you were a little girl.
Cops and firefighters were your family.
They would call me Pruitita.
It means Little Pruitt.
And there was this sort of
mental gymnastics going on
where, a-as I got older,
I thought I knew
that police brutality was rampant.
But at the same time,
I didn't count the cops
that I knew personally
into that issue.
You know, it was double-think.
Like, I never stopped and questioned
why the good cops weren't
calling out the bad ones.
You know, not a single one
of my dad's old police friends
have stepped forward
to denounce the actions
of the officers
that murdered George Floyd?
Not a single one.
It is my instinct
as a therapist to comfort you,
but your comfort
And everyone else's comfort
Has been such a big part of this problem
for so long.
You're beautiful, and you're brave,
- and you are
- Okay, no, just listen.
I want to tell everyone
that I support them
attending the protests.
I want to go.
I don't want
to silently support anymore.
I want to scream in the streets.
Wonderful. I'll join you.
You don't understand.
It's Things are bad enough
right now between 19 and PD.
The Department won't like it.
Okay, but they cannot
officially discipline you
for it, though, right?
No, no.
But
I'm on a track,
and if I support this publicly
Which everything in me wants to do
It'll take me off that track.
Because people are setting
fires to police stations.
Yes, and because firefighters
work with the police, okay?
They're our brothers, too,
and there are some bad apples, bu
Okay, they keep saying that on the news.
The "one bad apple," "one bad apple."
And I didn't understand what it meant,
so I looked it up,
and one bad apple
ruins the whole barrel.
That's the saying.
So, after we all saw the horrific video,
why aren't all the brothers
Why aren't all the friends
Why isn't
every member of the police force
in the streets
demanding systemic change?
Why?
Because it'll take them
off of the track.
Can I ask you a question?
Of course.
How do you become a therapist?
I'm sorry. I'm not, uh,
often taken off-guard.
Are you considering a career change?
Oh, no. No, no, no. I mean, not now.
I just It would be nice
to have a back-up plan
that's better than
waiting tables at my parents' restaurant
in case I get injured or
Or what?
Or if I give myself permission
to throw a brick at a police station
and it gets me kicked out of FD.
It's, uh, four years of undergrad
plus two years of grad school.
I'm only like eight credits shy
of my undergrad degree, so
In what?
Uh, it'll be a Bachelor of Fine Arts.
A Bachelor of of Fine Arts?
Yeah, I studied musical theater.
Wow.
What are the classes when you get
a Bachelor of Fine Arts
in musical theater?
Well, let's see.
Uh, there's voice and speech,
and acting, singing, ballet,
and also circus skills
like walking a tightrope or juggling.
And they give you a degree for that?
Well, they would have,
but the theater burned down,
and my favorite teacher
didn't make it out.
And I did make it out,
but I couldn't go back.
I couldn't finish, so
So ?
Uh, why are we talking about this?
I don't know, but if I had to guess,
I'd say it's because
you are desperate to talk
and think about literally anything
besides that video.
Can you think of anything
No.
I like to fix things.
I see a fire and I put it out.
But we have been having
this same fight for so long
For so long.
I mean, my grandma used to
tell me about the sit-ins
and boycotts she used to do in the '60s.
And we're how many moments
and movements and marches later,
and what do we have to show for it?
And to see so many people
act like this is news
Like this is just
some brand-new information
they're just now waking up to.
Do you know how many white friends
texted me or emailed me
just out of the blue?
Right? And everything under this guise
of just checking in
and just asking how I was doing.
"How are you feeling?" You know?
I I knew they meant well,
but I also knew
what was behind it guilt.
So, I Pbht.
I don't know, how am I feeling?
How are you feeling?
'Cause that Like
'Cause as much
as I couldn't fix this problem,
at least I knew it was there.
And for a better reason than I was just
stuck inside my house this time
and I couldn't look away.
Yeah.
And the way they're
talking about him already.
- Yeah.
- T-T-The spin already afoot
by usual suspects in the media
trying to vilify him
rather than the murder of him.
You kn You know what's almost
equally as enraging to me, too?
It's the people patting
themselves on the back
trying to humanize him.
It's like, you're trying
to humanize a person.
Do you really have to look for proof
that we're people, too?
Really?
We should care more about him
because he was a A good father
or a loving brother
or a high-school athlete
or he's fun at a party?
No, we we should care about him
because he was a person.
George Floyd shouldn't have been
treated this way because he's a person.
A cop
should not have had his knee
on his neck
until the last gasp of life
was choked out of him,
because he is a person.
So, do you think I could
get into grad school, or ?
You really gonna throw that brick?
I just want a back-up plan.
Little ditty ♪
About Jack and Diane ♪
I'm sorry.
I'm sure I'm not the one
you're here to talk to.
I'm here to talk to anyone who needs it.
I'm afraid to talk to anyone right now.
Not just you T-to anyone.
I'm afraid to talk to my best friend.
Ah, Miller.
I'm afraid I'm gonna get
every word wrong,
or even one word.
Yeah, I know I'm not a racist.
- Ohh.
- I-I know that.
You do realize that
"I'm not racist" is kind of
the the club slogan of racists?
And that's because we live in a culture
built on white supremacy,
so the racism is baked in.
And we can't begin to undo it
until we name it and own it.
Okay, see, this is exactly my point.
You know, I'm damned if I do,
and I'm damned if I don't.
Cops take a knee, join the protests,
they're called hypocrites.
And Dixon? He is a hypocrite.
He is a racist.
But it can't be that across the board.
Jack, you come to see me twice a month,
so I have to assume
that you like me, right?
You like that I give you tough love
and tell it like it is
and don't pull punches?
And you came in here today
looking for some clarity.
So, here it is.
I know what you mean
when you say you aren't racist,
and I believe
that you do not have hatred
in your heart.
But you also aren't damned.
Not even in the least bit.
You're blessed as hell.
I know you grew up
on the streets in the system,
and I'm not diminishing your hardship,
but you are
Yeah, I'm privileged because I'm white.
I get it.
When I was a kid
When I was squatting
After that last foster home,
there were a few of us
who would hunker down
to make a place for ourselves.
You know, to stay out of the system.
Eventually, the cops would find us,
and we'd run.
And it was scary.
But when I was being chased,
not once did I think that,
"If he catches me, he might kill me."
I never feared for my life.
But I know some of my friends did.
I know I'm privileged, Diane.
I watched what those cops did to Miller,
I watched that video,
and I want to blow up the world.
And?
And
we're firefighters.
We need the cops, and they need us.
And we can't all of a sudden
overnight decide
that the whole institution is evil.
Some good guys stayed silent,
and that makes them bad.
Except, they're not actually all bad.
They're individuals.
And I feel like
I'm not allowed to say that.
I'm afraid to say anything.
Mm.
I was a firefighter, too.
I have cop buddies, too.
Our cop buddies are not the point.
Do you know what the 13th Amendment did?
Abolished slavery.
Except as a punishment for a crime.
Yeah, but that was like
That's still the law.
It is still legal to enslave Americans
as a punishment for a crime.
And do you know the statistics
of incarcerated Black folks in America?
34%.
We are 34% of the prison population,
but we only make up 13%
of this country's population.
That seem right to you?
And you're thinking,
"Well, that's because
more Black people are poor,
so they have to resort to crime.
So they get arrested more.
Sucks for them, but, hey, you do
the crime, you do the time."
But how many crimes
did you commit, Jack,
when you were out there on the streets?
Did you, uh, steal to eat?
Did you run from police?
Did you get drunk sometimes and
make a mess with your friends?
Yeah, all of that.
But you never went to prison.
Never went to jail.
Never had a gun pointed at you.
Never have a knee put on your neck.
When you make mistakes,
you get to learn from them.
When people who look like me
make any kind of mistake,
we go to prison or worse.
And way too often, no mistake is needed.
We can laugh too loud
and they'll arrest us.
We can put our hands in the air,
and they'll shoot us.
It's not in the past.
It's now. It's still.
And I know you don't have
hatred in your heart, Jack.
But that's not enough anymore.
You have to dig deeper.
When you're too uncomfortable to talk
and you don't know what to say?
That's okay.
Listen instead.
I know.
You want me to talk to her.
No, I want you to do
whatever you need to do.
Hey, there. Yeah?
Is it alright if we come in?
You guys okay?
You need medical attention or anything?
Oh, no. I was just hoping
someone could show my boys
around the station.
Can we slide down the pole?
Sorry, but the station tours
are cancelled because of COVID.
- I'm sorry.
- Aww!
Can we go now?
Hey, guys, um Just, um, wait for me
- out there on the bench for me, okay?
- Ugh, fine.
I'll be right out.
Uh, look, u sir,
I'm I'm sorry, but I
My kids saw the video.
They watched it.
I didn't tell them that they could,
but it's all over social media.
And before I even got home from work,
they had watched it.
My 11-year-old slept with
his comfort blanket last night.
He dug it out of storage
and he hid it under his pillow.
He thought I didn't see it.
He hasn't slept with that
since he was 8 years old.
They don't understand,
and I cannot find any honest words
to explain it to them.
But I saw your station on the news,
and I knew that there were
Black firefighters here.
And I thought that my boys should see
good people in uniform
People that look like them.
So please.
Stand back, sir. Please.
You all have to sanitize, alright?
Come on. Let's go.
Hey, guys, come on! Come on, boys.
Here you guys go.
Uh Uh
Thanks.
- See that?
- Whoa!
- This is Station 19.
- Oh, this thing is huge!
- Awesome.
- Whoa, it's so
Firefighter, baby! Perfect, yeah.
- Does it look good on me?
- Of course it does, yeah!
- I'm wearing a firefighter helmet!
- Whoa!
Unh!
Yeah, man!
- Hey! Hi!
- Hi!
Oh, hey!
- Bye! Bye!
- Say thank you.
- Come on.
- Thank you!
This one was different.
This wasn't just another video
of an innocent Black man
being shot by police.
This wasn't an officer
making a split-second decision
that resulted in another
Black man losing his life.
This wasn't fight-or-flight
or panic-induced impulse
or unconscious bias
or unnecessary escalation.
This was the murder
of an unarmed, defenseless,
compliant Black man
in the middle of the street
in broad daylight.
Right in front of our eyes
All of our eyes.
And, you know, white people
are finally realizing
that we aren't hysterical
or beating a dead horse.
They saw that white woman
in Central Park
casually use a racist
police system as a weapon,
and they're starting to understand
that all of it renders us
Black people terrorized.
Hunted.
Exhausted by everyday life.
And, you know, I'm tired.
I'm And I'm mad, and I'm sad.
And I'm tired for having to
explain why I'm mad and sad.
I'm mad because
I have to take a magic pause
every time I'm being tracked
by eyeballs in a store.
Or when people who are
in life-threatening danger
choose to take their chances
by themselves
rather than being rescued
by a Black firefighter.
But, you know, mostly, I'm scared.
I'm scared.
Because no matter how tired I am,
how mad I get, how sad I get,
there's nothing I can say
to change their minds.
There's nothing I can do
that will make them see me
as a hardworking professional.
A loving husband.
Or just a man.
There's nothing that prevents
something like this
from happening to me.
Nothing.
I'm scared because
I am eight minutes away
from being another George Floyd.
We're a quiet bunch tonight.
Look, I'm just
I'm just glad to see your faces.
You know, know you're good and safe.
Are you sure we can't go to the protest?
A bunch of my friends are going.
They're all masked and everything.
I'll follow your lead, Ben.
Another Black Trans woman
was killed today.
- Tuck
- I want to march, Aunt Roz.
I want to march for you and for myself.
I want to march.
W-W-Why won't you let us march?
- You sure?
- Hey.
It'll be great.
I was thinking tomorrow after shift,
Captain Bishop has given the all-clear
for us to go to a protest.
Us?
I'd like to go, if you'll have me.
Uh
- Cool.
- Yeah.
Um, but if anybody
comes at us with weapons,
it is your job to put your body
between us and them.
- Got it.
- Yeah, he's not kidding.
I'm not kidding.
I kinda figured, yeah.
Okay.
I was so desperate for a promotion
that I was gonna try and stop
Miller's lawsuit,
which is the best shot we have
at anything changing.
Robert
This demotion has been humbling.
It's been humbling,
and I've had so many dark thoughts.
Sometimes, I doubt my own
my own goodness.
No one is just good.
We We make mistakes,
and we learn from them,
and we do better next time.
That's how goodness works.
It's not about purity.
It's about It's about growth.
- Let's get into the car real quick.
- I
Hopefully this goes without saying,
but although you have the right
to peacefully protest
and my wholehearted support,
I trust that you will not engage
in any activity or action
that will bring discredit
to you, 19, or the SFD.
19!
No justice, no peace!
No justice, no peace!
No justice, no peace!
No justice, no peace!
No justice, no peace!
No justice, no peace!
No justice, no peace!
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