Im a Social worker for the homeless in Skid Row / SPA 4. Its a hard fight to assist this community. Thank you for shedding some light on the subject its really something people ignore.
@bobsbrain3973 жыл бұрын
I'm sure the people you're helping are very grateful, you're doing god's work, thank you.
@MuneebBhat3 жыл бұрын
I’m totally shocked to know about these policies. What kind of a human would see another, less privileged and needy person as an unwanted element. These administrators are not only heartless but have a blatant disregard for humanity.
@johnsmiths2563 жыл бұрын
Hi hi hi my little droogy
@KRYMauL3 жыл бұрын
One solution would be to develop a massive housing project there similar to cyberpunk blocks where it's basically it's own city. Then you put in gyms, central market, schools, medical clinics, etc. There are some elements of Cyberpunk that I think would be beneficial and mega-commie blocks is one of them, they could even have a drug clinic and courtyard to make sure everyone's mental health is all right. EDIT: changed restaurants and cafeteria to central market because there’s no reason to separate the two as you could have a market that sells both prepared and unprepared food. This is something the US has seemingly forgotten.
@seraphik3 жыл бұрын
@@KRYMauL ok, but how are you gonna pay for that?
@muldersimp20523 жыл бұрын
This is actually way more terrifying than any story about dark powers or elevator games.
@itsmederek13 жыл бұрын
Congrats you got the entire point of the video
@kornkernel22323 жыл бұрын
True, knowing the local government policy for Skid Row. That is way more horrific and simply worse than ghost stories.
@peterhsueh52143 жыл бұрын
Because human are the dark energy/power they described in that documentary
@thoticcusprime93093 жыл бұрын
@@peterhsueh5214 False
@удивительный-б8х3 жыл бұрын
the whole point of this video is saying America has homelessness and drug abuse problems, like every other country in the whole world lmfao, this youtuber always demonizes the US as if its the worst place on earth or something, reality is its one of the best places to live in worldwide, and if you can't make it in the US you probably can't make it anywhere else.
@NathanielChristopher3 жыл бұрын
Elisa Lam's parents have a restaurant in my neighbourhood and I remember seeing her there on a routine basis throughout her childhood. Her loss was a devastating blow to this community but the morbid fascination with the unusual manner of her death has, in a way, dehumanized her memory. Thank you so much for this dignified and sober approach to the setting of her death . In doing this you've taken the wind out of the sails of those prurient snake oil salespeople.
@Chuked3 жыл бұрын
Thats creepy
@summerhunny3 жыл бұрын
@@Chuked ?!$::! how
@summerhunny3 жыл бұрын
I know it’s been a while now but I’m sorry for your loss. she seemed like a very kind woman and I would’ve loved to meet her (i’m in canada too)
@Chuked3 жыл бұрын
@@summerhunny that he knew how elisa lam looked her entire life, its very creepy seeing them die like that after so many years
@ElisonJackson3 жыл бұрын
@@Chuked more sad than creepy
@Graybeard_2 жыл бұрын
The term "skid row" came from Skidders Row. Skidders were loggers, specifically the loggers tasked with skidding (getting) the logs out of the woods in The Pacific Northwest. They were on the lowest rung on the ladder in the logging camps. When they got paid, they would head to the most decrepit and cheapest section of the nearby towns, the sections of towns with the cheapest bars, hotels and brothels. Soon these areas of towns took on the identity of the patrons that frequented there, skidders row. From there the term "skid row" (now shortened) was applied to the seedy, poor, decrepit sections of all towns/cities. Unfortunately, terms like these almost always become a label to create separation between the haves and the have-nots, the educated and the uneducated, the poor and everyone who is not as poor.
@tommack86502 жыл бұрын
Some skidders were also called grease monkeys (to make the ground easier to skid on).
@rustyshackleford38682 жыл бұрын
In the show Malcolm in the middle, was the older brother a skidder logger? I remember him going away and always being in a decrepit bar while living in Alaska
@alexanderfretheim57202 жыл бұрын
Well those loggers weren't really poor, but I would say, as they visited the brothels, that they were exploiting the poor.
@robchang44102 жыл бұрын
thank you for the factual clarification. This guy doing this documentary is so disingenous in nature is unreal. He represent nick name term as factual labels. I don't know where this guy gets his facts. But its obvious this guy has never been to los angeles (and if he has, he sleep walked his visit) Maybe his other videos are spot on - but NOT this one
@markmcgoveran68112 жыл бұрын
Yes we have a lot of geographic influences in America. On every scale. If you want to go to a better place to live you have to behave yourself better and work hard and have enough money to go. If I go to Chicago the police are not very nice to me. If I go to Lincoln Nebraska the police are a lot nicer. The murder rate in Lincoln is very low. Everybody who comes to Lincoln gets treated better than the police in Chicago treat people.
@rofl.connoisseur3 жыл бұрын
You cannot even predict what Jonny is gonna upload that is how good he is
@zac27803 жыл бұрын
Ummmm isnt that everyone on KZbin barr Phil DeFranco?
@rtcabangwonosari49643 жыл бұрын
Your mommmmmm
@selvynjohn.a41653 жыл бұрын
You spelled his name wrong
@khaled_mufc26383 жыл бұрын
Or when....
@TheBeakersDream3 жыл бұрын
He's a pleasure to watch
@janakakumara38363 жыл бұрын
I went to a food kitchen to volunteer one day at Skid Row. It was one of the most abusive experiences of my life. All the homeless try to do a one up power move on you, even though you are serving them. Somebody explained that these people have such a sense of powerlessness and feel looked down by everybody, that they try to assert dominance whenever they get a chance, even if it is in a dysfunctional situation as abusing the person giving you food.
@funnymonkie4112 жыл бұрын
I’m sorry you had that experience :( I volunteered at a soup kitchen in Skid Row and all the homeless people were really nice. Don’t want to invalidate your experience at all, just wanted to provide a different experience. This was almost 10 years ago so idk if anything has changed since then.
@yesitsdenise75252 жыл бұрын
Let’s get something straight, even the homeless are entitled narcissists in Southern California. They feel entitled to get anything that they want, and they are obnoxious and dangerous.
@xXluisbestXx2 жыл бұрын
@@lucho_1980 chill out
@yesitsdenise75252 жыл бұрын
@@lucho_1980 Do you live in LA?
@scikick2 жыл бұрын
@@lucho_1980 When you have a choice to be kind vs mean, why do you choose to be mean?
@adamigo10003 жыл бұрын
How cites in America usually solve social poblems: 1. Identify the problem 2. Find the most dehumanising solution 3. Forget about the whole thing
@LoveScreamTrue3 жыл бұрын
5. Profit
@benfelps3 жыл бұрын
6. Put a line around it and blame the people dumped there
@alonelyz19813 жыл бұрын
7. Capitalism
@PHlophe3 жыл бұрын
@@benfelps this is what happens to Black people across most of america. typically the next step is gentrification if people refuse to leave the area of their own. if that fails within a "reasonable" time frame , well Breeona Taylor case illustrates how to get rid of black people when all houses around have been bought.
@chillmint17263 жыл бұрын
9. Trivago
@samblackside2 жыл бұрын
As a LA resident, I just want to say thank you for approaching this topic with the empathy and sensitivity it deserves while also criticizing the city and it’s history. I feel like I see a lot of bad faith documentaries that demonize the city and the residents of skid row and I was a little hesitant to see this video. But seeing how you approached it, made me appreciate your approach and I love the awareness and truth you’ve brought to this topic. Thank you so much!
@MichaelColeman2 Жыл бұрын
The Scumbags that live in Skid Row are not decent people, these are drug addicts and gangs run the streets by selling drugs to mental cases with drug addictions... The other name of this hell hole is "The BOX" #Pollyanna #ignorant
@Revan-eb1wb Жыл бұрын
the problem are not the residents in itself. THe problem are the politicans that do nothing against homelesness
@p.nkaboo28 күн бұрын
@@Revan-eb1wb precisely
@microjigging3 жыл бұрын
As always, it's not a Johnny Harris video without a map.
@faizanalvi39323 жыл бұрын
there wont be a johnny harris video without a map because thats his forte hes done motion graphics
@thangarajmj58143 жыл бұрын
This guy makes videos on topics you can never expect. It's so random and yet crafted so well. #BORDERs
@mrcocoloco72003 жыл бұрын
Indeed
@luisMedina366-993 жыл бұрын
Borders
@thangarajmj58143 жыл бұрын
@@luisMedina366-99 Vox can Fire him, but he ain't stopping the BORDER's Show.
@lucasxathy98483 жыл бұрын
Agreed
@joeljamtig61993 жыл бұрын
actually this channel kinda reminds me of nerdwriter due its wide range of topics and the way he explores them
@madhujaashtaputre81173 жыл бұрын
mind blown everytime he uploads a new video. Every topic is so unique, random and he just know how to tell a story.
@congratulationsmerry63863 жыл бұрын
i mean he was a vox joirnalist for a reason
@gabrielchan44203 жыл бұрын
Actually he is clueless. Taking a fictional documentary and make it a story
@thedude29203 жыл бұрын
His material has me hooked. So original!
@nochatter71343 жыл бұрын
@Eagle Johnny Harris is very biased & he tries to be woke. Why is his anti-colonization viewpoints always anti-american? He never talks about european colonization which is by far the worst!
@nochatter71343 жыл бұрын
@Eagle I’m 5th generation CANADIAN not American & Johnny Harris is an attention seeker. People like Johnny Harris are nothing but virtual signallers they don’t even believe what they say. Since when is ‘youtube journalism’ journalism? Hmm. As with your own anti-American views thread carefully cuz America is what dragged Europe from jaws of Hitlers defeat in WW2. America is who saved europe through Lend Lease program & then the Marshall Plan to re-stimulate europe’s failing economy after WW2. You live off the fruits of American capitalism so don’t bite the hand that feeds you!! Simply put if it wasn’t for America you had be speaking German by now.
@Megadextrious Жыл бұрын
My dad was homeless on the streets of San Diego for the last 15 years of his life (since I was about 17). We had been out of contact for years until when I was 29/30 he finally reached out and we made peace. I met up with him to help him take care of some things, and I stayed a night on the street with him to see what his life was like. It was so heartbreaking, people treat you like literal garbage, nobody cares about anyone but themselves. I’m not making an excuse for my dad, but he was bi-polar, had major depression issues, and was a closeted homosexual. He broke his heel when he fell off a roof in his 30s(he was a roofer and later on a roofing supply salesman) and his leg had to be in a cast up to his hip; my mom said he was never the same after that.. He had diabetes and hepatitis, and was blind in one eye. He had been an alcoholic my entire life, and started using meth around the time I was 14. He was a college graduate, a successful man with a nice house and a big car for my sister and I, but he had too many demons and was too ashamed to admit his problems and seek help. To make a long story short, he jumped off a bridge in February 2019, just months after we had started a relationship again. It was his only way out from all the pain he endured for decades, both physically and emotionally. I had to pick up the pieces of his shattered life in the aftermath and it all was just… Traumatizing. One of the things that really struck a nerve in myself and the rest of the homeless community, was the fact that there was **ONE** public bathroom in all of downtown San Diego, and yet, the city was spending millions to build a new stadium that it did not f*cking need.
@labased25397 ай бұрын
Thanks for sharing, very tragic circumstances. Wish you well.
@VelvetandGinger7 ай бұрын
God Bless you. I’m from San Diego and it just seems to keep getting worse.
@mason22567 ай бұрын
Undesirable population element
@SinaAla7 ай бұрын
Oh wow, thank you for sharing. Very sorry for your loss.
@Lerikaa167 ай бұрын
I’m so so sorry, my father was also bi polar so I kind off understand the situation a little bit. Thank you for sharing his and your story
@damondominique3 жыл бұрын
the downtown LA bar and brunch scene is inching further and further into the “containment zone”...curious to see what happens in the next 5-10 years
@karatechopster1553 жыл бұрын
It’s comforting to know that I have the same taste in content as Damon and his 1 wrinkle
@benmontes70623 жыл бұрын
HEY GUYS COME TO the Salton Sea California’s Largest Lake ....3
@nicko16573 жыл бұрын
I love seeing you comment to videos I also watch
@Anonarchist3 жыл бұрын
Class warfare.
@jont25763 жыл бұрын
gentrification. like california and san francisco. skid row will finally die when they open up a starbucks there and turn cecil hotel into a hippie 1980s style we work loft office ala casey neistat.
@thememeestfilmbuff3 жыл бұрын
_It is haunted._ *Instead by the hauntings of systemic poverty.*
@johnnyharris3 жыл бұрын
yes indeed, one title i was considering for this was "The Cecil Hotel is Haunted (by bad urban policy)" I like your's better!
@belkYT3 жыл бұрын
@@memelyshorts643 your mom is a male?
@calholli3 жыл бұрын
@@johnnyharris Its not really systemic poverty: its blatant neglect and refusal to address the insanely prevalent volcano of mental illness that continues to flow its lava out onto the streets of our country. Instead of spending 6 million per day just to operate an Aircraft carrier strike group, by which we have 19 of them.. At 128 billion, The new 12-ship Columbia-class submarine is the Navy’s highest-priority program, ranking third in cost behind the $406 billion F-35 jet program and the $153 billion missile defense program that includes Army, Navy and Missile Defense Agency programs. The military has 71 submarines in active service.. We have nearly 5k military bases on US soil, over 600 bases over seas. Think of all the money it takes just to operate this stuff, not to mention the Trillions of dollars it took to build it all. We have more military spending than the next 10 countries below us, COMBINED.. its pure insanity. Even if we cut our military spending in half, we would still dominate that spending chart. Johnny, please do an in depth video on military overspending-- its so important. I don't think people understand: Congress and the Trump administration agreed to spend $746 billion on wars and the military for the fiscal year running through September 2020. That is nearly three-quarters of a trillion dollars. More than $2 billion every day. So did clinton, bush even more, so did obama... and Biden started moving troops in syria in his first couple of days, it would not surprise me if he gets us into yet another war; he's been in office for 2 months and he's already spent 2 trillion dollars-- Why are we allowing this overspending to continue.. it baffles me.
@Student0Toucher3 жыл бұрын
Its the forgieners obsessed with America for me
@Student0Toucher3 жыл бұрын
@@calholli All we need to do is raise taxes and thats billions more to invest into our society
@harishthethird3 жыл бұрын
The Cecil Hotel Ghost: *doesn't exist* Johnny: I'm still 'bout to end this man's whole career
@AttaBek14223 жыл бұрын
@@memelyshorts643 your mom’s a he?
@snyr3 жыл бұрын
@@memelyshorts643 davinci resolve is a great FREE editing software
@thelookofdisapproval82343 жыл бұрын
@@memelyshorts643 use kdenlive its free opensource premiere alternative. you can watch videos of "my linux experiment" he makes all his videos in kdenlive to get a demo how powerful that software is
@MommaH14199 ай бұрын
My grandpa was found dead on skid row in 1977. He lived in the Hotel Cecil and it does have dark energy. It’s full of sadness, addiction and poverty.
@SNEHIT_SHARMAАй бұрын
on that a netlfix series is made
@washingtonotters781615 күн бұрын
It doesn’t have dark energy! It’s not the supernatural! The whole point of the video is the criminalization of poverty and dehumanizing policy. There is a real problem with the cicil and it’s not ghosts
@SauceBoss3233 жыл бұрын
As an East LA native, I appreciate you taking the time to educate others on an otherwise “forgotten” part of the city!
@whatevergina94013 жыл бұрын
Not too late to bulldoze it
@AllRightsss3 жыл бұрын
@@whatevergina9401 Seriously, some people don't want help and don't have the capacity to follow societal rules,, getting them out of society and into a institution where they can be cared for is the only way forward.
@Seri-Katil3 жыл бұрын
@@AllRightsss or bulldozing the human trash that ruins that part of the city.
@psycofire933 жыл бұрын
You should check out soft white underbelly then if you haven’t already..
@racquelr.32893 жыл бұрын
not forgotten but ignored
@emmi-san3 жыл бұрын
My take-away from that entire series is how these fake internet "detectives" wrongfully accused and web-bullied a man to near suicide and weren't held accountable.
@omarhasanothman3 жыл бұрын
However, it did work out right in the case of "don't F**k with cats"
@JamesMoreauDrew3 жыл бұрын
@@omarhasanothman Well, after they actually did bully another person to suicide first.
@omarhasanothman3 жыл бұрын
@@JamesMoreauDrew true, the bad exceeds the good in this case. I believe these internet deticives are the same people advocating flat earth. 🤣
@KSJAFN3 жыл бұрын
@@omarhasanothmanOn Don't F*ck with Cats, the question was openly raised as to whether the attention received from these internet sleuths had goaded Magnotta into committing murder. Maybe without that it would have remained a cat-only thing and a man might still be alive - although I admit I wanted to believe the opposite at the end of the documentary.
@namenl22053 жыл бұрын
@@KSJAFN 100% why I was pissed the internet crazies were portrayed as “ heroes “
@positivelyisabella3 жыл бұрын
LA native here and I really just wanted to let you know that I appreciate this look into our cities history. so many people want to focus on the glitz of LA but not the parts that are "scary".
@namenl22053 жыл бұрын
🇺🇸 Americuh 3rd world cUntry with a gucci belt 🇺🇸
@diamondmax51412 жыл бұрын
I disagree, I think people are currently focusing on the horrors of L.A. Everytime you search up L.A, you will see videos showing the darkside of L.A only. I think we should focus more on the golden side of L.A and why its such a great city. I'm glad these sides of L.A are getting talked about, but I wish that was not the only thing being discussed . Its always the smog, homelessness and not the sunshine, diversity, Good paying jobs, and the adventures.
@pobbybortis61612 жыл бұрын
Not really. Everyone thinks LA is a shithole
@ashleylewis27832 жыл бұрын
LA is a terrible place. The Dodgers are the only good thing about it.
@kap15262 жыл бұрын
@@diamondmax5141 whoosh
@kibble242 жыл бұрын
I work in DTLA, and on the few days that I drive in, I generally drive in through Skid Row. Early in the morning, as the city is waking up, I often see the folks who live there in tents taking care of their home. Sweeping the sidewalk, cleaning up the trash. It's a large population of people in a small space, and they're not a monolith. It's easy to write them off as drug addicts and criminals who want to live like that, but the issue is SO much more complex. These are real people. It's interesting to know the history.
@thinadlamini46712 жыл бұрын
Thats just sad. 😥
@ienan59634 ай бұрын
this is true, one day i passed by there with my girlfriend within skid row theres a not perfect but happy community. i literally saw these kids with no home playing football with each other
@kylebanks14843 жыл бұрын
As a train operator in my city I deal with the homeless quite a bit and it’s a lot harder to help some of them than you think. We have plenty of organizations and homeless outreach programs that move around the city offering housing, health care, and etc. I’ve come to find that a lot of them either don’t want the help, only want a portion of the help, or are too far gone mentally to accept it. People tend to want to split these people into a few simple categories like drug addiction, laziness, or mental illness and it’s a far more complex problem considering many have a combination of the above mentioned issues or some additional ones. We have to remember that a lot of those people have “RIGHTS” meaning they have the right to refuse or accept assistance as they please........ even if they don’t possess the mental capacity to make the right decision themselves.
@TheRocketbabydoll2 жыл бұрын
This is the most balanced view and deserves more likes, you can’t use a one size fits all approach to homelessness, likewise people have the right to make unwise decisions. It not as simple, even to have free healthcare, access to housing and education it’s far more complex in many cases.
@lmchankins2 жыл бұрын
It doesn't help that a lot of those homeless "services" require you to give up your dignity and self worth to obtain health, ie claiming to be suicidal so you can get access to said services. Otherwise they could care less and only want the "easy" cases; ie single moms or veterans
@RogersMgmtGroup2 жыл бұрын
Not true. Much of the population does not want the help. They prefer crime and drugs to doing anything to move up.
@jamesj33952 жыл бұрын
💯 truth. Johnny, bless his heart, one can tell he is terribly naive in his assessment in both cause and solution. As a native whom has done a wealth of social work in L.A., I concur many do not want help. For most, this is their community and lifestyle. Throwing money at the problem does not fix anything. If the person does not willingly want to participate in their rescue, there is little that can be done, unfortunately. I’ve seen it happen countless times.
@Fuzzysea6932 жыл бұрын
@@jamesj3395 this is such a bullshit take. People with mental illness and no insurance, no job, no house, etc KNOW they cannot afford to take medication. Giving them a minimum wage job in one of the most expensive states in the country does nothing. Giving them a temporary home does nothing. Giving them temporary healthcare does nothing. I would probably choose drugs and community over slaving at 2-3 jobs to try to afford a place to live, food, healthcare and my medication too if I knew that these things weren’t free or permanent.
@tylero85953 жыл бұрын
The term skid row originated in Vancouver, BC Canada and Seattle. It referred to an area back in the 1800s where the logs were shot down a skid through the east side of the cities. It was referred to as skid row. It was also the area where drunks and poor people would be. Skid row.
@ellie86003 жыл бұрын
I was gonna say this, I live in Seattle and I went on the Seattle underground tour and heard about skid row, and when I clicked on this video I was confused to hear skid row was in LA
@nectarshrub3 жыл бұрын
They're still there in Vancouver.
@RobynStephens3 жыл бұрын
@@nectarshrub yep. I went there for vacation and that was the first time I saw a "skid row"
@nulian3 жыл бұрын
@@nectarshrub Yep isn't it like hasting street in vancouver was there accidentally when I was on holiday that a country can get such a mess with homelessness.
@DarkpawTheWolf3 жыл бұрын
Glad I'm not the only one that caught this. This came from Vancouver, not LA.
@Ducanralf3 жыл бұрын
The most valuable storyteller in KZbin, Johnny you are such a gem pal👌
@gw88133 жыл бұрын
I wish Johnny was my high-school teacher.
@ewanturnbull6453 жыл бұрын
2nd that
@tgldr_tugi3 жыл бұрын
3rd that
@vashful3383 жыл бұрын
So valuable that he can tell a story you already knew before like it's first time.
@DavidCarmonaUX3 жыл бұрын
Totally agree, always happy to see a new upload
@Nikimouse3112 жыл бұрын
So this is really spot on. My best friend works for a homeless shelter in the heart of skid row, and I have volunteer a few times there. The policies you talk about are exactly what she and her colleagues talk about. It’s so shitty that LA let it fester cause homeless has exploded throughout the city. It’s now only a “problem” bc it’s spreading into West LA where all the rich people, and of course their solution is more cops and sweeps, which famously don’t get at the systemic issues of homeless. I am in the west LA area and we have a local homeless couple on our corner. Once the wife mentioned that while all the “soup kitchen” are in skid row and they could get food, it would be a death sentence to her. Lots of homeless people do not want to be locked into kid row bc they know it’s dangerous and hard to get out. She and her husband actually have jobs as well so they can afford food, but housing is too expensive, which it is. The median rent for in our area 1B/1B is $2633. My bf and I got lucky and found a rent controlled apartment.
@thestudentofficial54833 жыл бұрын
Johnny is staying at home like us, yet his contents still go everywhere.
@markn45043 жыл бұрын
You may find a lot of people are not staying home, even further, people are travelling and living like pre Covid ☺️
@Frasweiler3 жыл бұрын
@@markn4504 u
@markn45043 жыл бұрын
@@Frasweiler well yea I am one of those people but just saying there is a large part of the States and other countries that are all living 99% like before - a mask in a shop is as far as limits on my life have been 🤷🏼♂️
@ltakethefatlplease.33803 жыл бұрын
Yeah as soon as June rolled around I was traveling like normal.
@markn45043 жыл бұрын
@@ltakethefatlplease.3380 same. I’ve been on many holidays abroad during the pandemic. No point sitting around waiting for it to be “over” because I have 1 life to live and throwing years away is just pointless.
@marty10763 жыл бұрын
I lived in Los Angeles for three years in the Harbor Gateway neighborhood and I worked for about a year and a half in a business located in the Fashion District so I spent a lot of time around Skid Row. The first time I was on Skid Row it was scary. I personally had never witness that level of poverty or desperation in person and I grew up in rural Mexico. Truly one of the most disheartening things I have ever seen in my life.
@henrycolestage42493 жыл бұрын
I spent 20 years overseas on military service and, justifiably (IMHO), proud of my country. When I finally repatriated I came to LA. As a retiree, I took up driving for Uber to keep busy and put a little pocket change towards my hobbies. I cannot describe the horror, the shock, the existential crisis I faced when I first drove across Skid Row. My heart ached and my world axis changed. How in any just universe could this...this, travesty of the human condition, be happening in MY country? MY country is (was?) the "Greatest Nation On Earth", right? We defend the freedom of the oppressed, our belief is in life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness, yes? We are a kind and generous people, aren't we? Then how in the holy F$@K could this be allowed to exist in direct contravention of the myths we tell ourselves about ourselves? I saw better treatment of the poorest and most helpless in some of the poorest regions on the face of the planet. It made me deeply ashamed. Here I was, doing what I believe was helping and defending others (which is true) when in reality, that effort should have started at home. We have no right to tell anyone how to run their world when we have this festering sore of human misery in our midst that we not only tolerate but actively enforce. Now when somebody tells me "thank you for your service," I tell them they can keep their thanks and they can show their gratitude by actively helping others; the homeless, the helpless, the needy, that desperately need it. Peace, out.
@brianliew45463 жыл бұрын
Preach
@asrr623 жыл бұрын
20 years lol thats long. how
@jamesmoore22233 жыл бұрын
YOUR perspective is what America needs. Thank you for your insight
@tomitiustritus66723 жыл бұрын
A positive effect of americans finally taking care of their own shit would be that the rest of the world gets a well needed break from getting "generously defended" back into the stone age.
@jungkooks_microwavephobia3 жыл бұрын
As a non-American I always thought the practice of „thank you for your service“ was weird. No other job gets the same treatment, not even medical personnel for keeping everyone alive or farmers giving people food. I mean everyone knows that while in US military you do defend your own country, but also attack others occasionally. So its like „thank you for…being in this organization that caries out a war that everyone lost track about what its even about?“
@debbiedean3165 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for explaining the history of Skid Row. I had no idea about the deliberate boundaries ostracizing these people and deliberately keeping them from receiving the services of the rest of the city. It’s absolutely despicable and inhumane.
@jennifermarie3158 Жыл бұрын
@@ReliableGuy-sb8fb Containment is necessary, but it also fosters a culture that just encourages other drug addicts/homeless to migrate there too. Also, don't you think it would be better to actually solve the problem? Most developed countries in Europe don't have so many homeless per capita, so it's not inevitable
@anthonysanchez74857 ай бұрын
@@jennifermarie3158 maybe the problem is people neqed to stop becoming drug addicts. The problem is the people and their decisions. Not some skid row policy. You can’t force these people to not do drugs/ alcohol. People who don’t want to contribute to society and only care about being high or themselves. I work in skid row 3 days a week and I work in low income affordable residences in Skid Row. These people were homeless and have been able to find shelter and jobs. Some even keep their units/home clean and care. For the other 75% you can see why they are in this predicament. They don’t care. Everyone has a chance at life it just depends how you want to use it and how hard you are willing to work to get out of a shitty situation. I would like handouts too why should they deserve it even though I had to work my ass off to not be homeless. But because they mad bad decisions they are entitled to a fix. They need to fix themselves. We can’t do it for them. Other countries aren’t as big it’s easy to help your population of people 5-30 million we have 10 million 1/3 the Canadian population living in LA county alone.
@JackhammerJesus3 жыл бұрын
In my opinion the documentary actually made it quite clear that the "bad energy" stems from the Cecil Hotel being a cheap place in a neighborhood with a troubled past combined with a national mental health crisis.
@sourgreendolly76853 жыл бұрын
Agreed. I was worried they’d take the spoopy haunted route but they did steer the conversation towards facts.
@nagendragpu3 жыл бұрын
I agree
@Ira__L3 жыл бұрын
yep, his title is really clickbaity and misleading.
@lingzhang43193 жыл бұрын
yes,it did explain that
@jcwintal3 жыл бұрын
Came here to say this. Fan of this channel but seemed like the whole series wasn’t watched. Not saying the series is great or anything but they drop the “dark energy” thing throughout all the episodes
@GOODEUSMAXIMUS3 жыл бұрын
My parents used to threaten us “ do you want to go live on skid row. I’m going to drop you off on skid row if you keep on”
@cafe88racer533 жыл бұрын
tough love lol
@tchrisou8123 жыл бұрын
Did it work?
@swallowedinthesea113 жыл бұрын
That's child abuse. I hope they aren't like that now.
@anon24273 жыл бұрын
@@swallowedinthesea11 not abuse just bad parenting
@ronfranklin19403 жыл бұрын
@@swallowedinthesea11 if THAT'S child abuse 99.5% of all asian parents would be in jail now
@badfish5447link3 жыл бұрын
I knew skid row was an area of LA but I didn't know it was entire city district. Amazing video
@greyeaglem3 жыл бұрын
I always thought Hollywood was some posh place but my friend lived there in the '70s and told me it was a seedy area with lower income housing. He worked for the railroad, which pays pretty good, but I guess not good enough. He did eventually buy a house in another area of LA. He moved to the mid west in the late '70s and a few years ago saw that house on the news being devoured by a forest fire. Said he was glad he wasn't living in it. LOL
@inside12833 жыл бұрын
I thought it was one street!
@AwokenEntertainment2 жыл бұрын
You honestly need to go to Skid Row to really gain a proper perspective of it..
@chrisg96152 жыл бұрын
No thanks
@thedevils55992 жыл бұрын
I think I'll pass, I'd rather stay in MN and freeze to death than go there.
@Aaditya24.2 жыл бұрын
@@thedevils5599 😂😭 fr 🗣️
@Aaditya24.2 жыл бұрын
No thanks bro 😭😂😂
@peter07022 жыл бұрын
Sorry but no, no, no
@Temuulente3 жыл бұрын
you were liking talking about how big is Russia last week and now investigating some hotel from Netflix series.
@juchan_tyt3 жыл бұрын
💀
@seanbrummfield4483 жыл бұрын
Well, when you're a reporter, investigator, historian etc. You have to jump around a bit. Who knows what next week might be about.
@wbadventures20253 жыл бұрын
Leave Johnny alone, he’s freaking awesome!
@loulouloucindy3 жыл бұрын
Maybe you should watch the video. He's talking about skid row.
@Temuulente3 жыл бұрын
@@loulouloucindy Come on people, I was just referring to how fast he can jump into different subjects, and it’s awesome. P.S I’ve watched all the videos from the beginning🙏🙏🙏
@aarontse1833 жыл бұрын
I've volunteered at a skid row food bank/homeless shelter multiple times and a piece of advice they say that you should never go out on your own and distribute food on the streets. The homeless have nowhere to throw away the containers, so they litter. There is then a huge influx of rats that come and fill the streets. The food banks have more than enough food for everyone on skid row.
@JackPeloquin3 жыл бұрын
They litter if they have dumpsters. Happens in WA. No excuses. Fucking up "protected" wetlands and making it difficult for emergency vehicles...
@mimiwimi79173 жыл бұрын
@@JackPeloquin my interpretation of what ur saying could possibly be different from your intentions, but there can’t be a black and white thinking to this; no simple explanation. there are more then five thousand homeless people who live in condensed areas where there are more amount of people then there is space that can be provided for those people. nowhere in washington is there an overpopulation problem as great as los angeles, so that’s why you can’t just simply compare and use the same reasoning for the littering issues. the waste management people can’t just pick up trash there 24/7, and trash piles up fast. it’s not about individual responsibility, or a community responsibility, as many people are trying to live. they have the mentality of trying to survive.
@KiLLJoYYouTube3 жыл бұрын
They should have chutes that feed into an underground dumpster. it would make the place much cleaner.
@namenl22053 жыл бұрын
🇺🇸 Americuh 3rd world cUntry with a gucci belt 🇺🇸
@rodneykastelan22823 жыл бұрын
Did we watch the same documentary? The way they showed it is the ultimate way to teach us that weird things almost everytime have a very simple explanation. The part of skidrow got more explanation than was needed for the story.
@HaikoEitzen3 жыл бұрын
Agreed. I thought the Netflix docu made it very clear by the end that the Cecil is in fact not haunted.
@gianfernandez38783 жыл бұрын
Exactly! The docu series even had a whole episode diving into the neighborhood of skid row and how it played a big part in the history of the hotel.
@21Kyzix123 жыл бұрын
I thought the same thing.
@MrWhitewigga3 жыл бұрын
@@HaikoEitzen Dude... they saw Richard Ramirez walking by in underwear covered with blood and they never react... Don’t expect them to see a ghost, they’ll think it’s a albinos.
@SalihSabir3 жыл бұрын
I thought the same. And then I thought if he could have just said he was adding more info it would’ve been better than simply bashing Netflix for saying it was simply haunted. Anyone who has watched the documentary knows this was mentioned. In detail.
@AlisterTate2 жыл бұрын
It’s really great that you’re shedding some light on this situation. Living in LA, the segregation issue can be pretty apparent, but it definitely seems like people who don’t live there or have never visited are completely unaware as to how deep this sort of thing goes in the city.
@bobcharlotte87243 жыл бұрын
You earned my sub. I felt betrayed by the Netflix doco. There was so much information they hid until they wanted to reveal it. “She’s a perfect, innocent young girl who no troubles at all.”. “Oh wait... didn’t we tell you she was bipolar and off her medication?... whoops.”. “This death metal guy killed her because he was staying there too!” “Oh wait... he stayed there a YEAR before she did... whoops.” Etc etc...
@joxysurge96313 жыл бұрын
There is a great piece on the Cecil Hotel and the people that stayed there , by Biographics
@locturallylocs90973 жыл бұрын
This is why i hate Netflix real crime docs. So many creators on KZbin do a far better job telling these stories in 20 minute videos.
@TheMeepPlay3 жыл бұрын
idk, even if it seems like they did that on purpose to waste time or whatever, i really think it was good, more like showing what the people thought at the moment and why it was such a boom on the internet
@iitsJustFlo3 жыл бұрын
They do it that way to tell the story in chronological order. Not all information is known from the beginning. Certain things aren’t found out until later. This is how some crime podcast stories are told too. It makes you feel like you’re living though it as it was happening.
@jasonbolding34813 жыл бұрын
Everyone does that with her cases; conspiracy theories about it are ghoulish and so ridiculous
@Realitycheck183 жыл бұрын
I'm from India, where there are slums (the skid row equivalents) in every city. I can see a lot of parallels here, the only major difference is the lack of policing within the slums in India. Every state has something called "slum clearance board". The responsibility of this board is to build free/subsidized housing to the slum dwellers so that once everyone moves out, the area can be developed. The major problem is slums do not disappear but relocate. There are many who would rent out the free apartment and move back to the same or different slum. Creating job, providing education will make the slum dwellers move out. But, at least in my state slums are seen as vote banks. All they need is something "free" from the political party in return to vote. Politicians make sure the slums remain intact so that the voting cow can be milked every 5 years. If by a miracle some govt decides to take radical steps on this, every other political party will make sure to stop it. At the end making people believe that living in unlivable conditions (without access to clean water / electricity etc.) is their rights and they fight to remain in the slums. People feel victorious and that political party would have gained votes too, all the people in the slums have lost generations to poverty.
@nelanvsart655 Жыл бұрын
Not all cities have slums. Northern European cities solved it with their combination of affordable housing, mental help enforcement and whatever else but they don’t have this hell
@heyhey-se1wv3 жыл бұрын
Um... I think the conclusion the Netflix doc makes is exactly what you've explained in this video. It makes the conclusion that the Cecil Hotel ISN'T haunted and that internet conspiracies (about Elisa Lam's death) were the main reason why the hotel was believed to be haunted. The documentary actually discusses Skid Row and systemic poverty, and how Cecil Hotel's history of violence was a result of that. [Also, I saw the whole "haunted" thing as simply a set-up for the show which was then subverted by the end of it.]
@ShashaStudios3 жыл бұрын
Sounds like he didn’t finish the documentary or he used a click bait title to get more people to watch his video
@markusbisma50153 жыл бұрын
It seems like he just watched the first episode.
@FrostySumo3 жыл бұрын
This is just really lazy on his part. Does he just bash Netflix for no reason? Some of that stuff is bad but they make some good things too. It's almost like he has a grudge against them. I could see him watching the first episode and just ignoring the rest of the show because it confirmed his bias. I expect him to put some sort of clarification in this or are we dealing with someone who has no ethics?
@evannibbe93753 жыл бұрын
@@FrostySumo So you are saying that not watching Netflix is laziness?
@timothygallagher14163 жыл бұрын
Exactly
@brittanylynn327873 жыл бұрын
I was so disappointed by the Netflix doc. Thank you for this eye opening account on the surrounding area. My heart breaks for the people that society wants to forget. Something needs to be done to help those people.
@texasgirl441443 жыл бұрын
I used to live in the financial district of DTLA.. it’s so crazy how easily they were able to “hide” and ignore the fact that skid row was just blocks away. It was so interesting and disheartening to see all of the homeless around the area.
@GP-wu1eu3 жыл бұрын
I stayed in DTLA for a week and i thought the exact same thing
@KiLLJoYYouTube3 жыл бұрын
Why didn't they bulldoze the entire area, set up a new one on the outskirts and set up a high speed rail underneath the city? It would have made so much more sense.
@cleverusernamecl55323 жыл бұрын
Homeless are all over DTLA, skid row is not hidden, it is easier to not be harassed and shoot dope there. That is why all the homeless are there.
@hanna.ciszewska3 жыл бұрын
@Bilbo Buttplugins ah, Bilbo Buttplugins, the moral authority we should all listen to. Telling us how some people deserve to suffer and die because they got addicted to meth. Sublime.
@namenl22053 жыл бұрын
🇺🇸 Americuh 3rd world cUntry with a gucci belt 🇺🇸
@emilyvargo3 жыл бұрын
I was in Skid Row at the time this video was posted. Honestly, some of the things I saw in the few hours of night I was there were sights I will never be able to forget. It was extremely sad and humbling. It's experiences like that that make me thankful for what I have. We must help these people, everyone deserves better than that.
@steevieg3 жыл бұрын
the saddest part is that some of them don't want to be helped and would rather live that way.
@Vlfkfnejisjejrjtjrie3 жыл бұрын
California politicians actually make money from poverty in California by continuously funding programs to aid them that don't work. I remember seeing a man building tiny houses for homeless and was told to shut it down in a video. In another vid a rights advocacy attorney was trying to fight the corrupt government assistance programs designed to enrich the pockets of political cronies with failed gov programs.
@thrawn0r3 жыл бұрын
@@steevieg that is for sure NOT the saddest part. Did you hear the part about dehumanizing the poor and people in need?
@Mike_Dubayou3 жыл бұрын
Humble police stopping be here! What you experienced was more the opposite of humbling. To be humbled means to feel lowered in importance or significance. Living on skid row would be a humbling experience certainly.
@sirfitz81253 жыл бұрын
Got an extra bedroom?
@tsukikotsutsukakushi93393 жыл бұрын
I remember visiting Skid Row once when I was still in high school to perform for a shelter as part of a choral group. I had no idea at the time that it was a district for homeless people and stepping out of the bus carrying my group was to see the area was pretty shocking to me. Everything was boarded up and all the shutter gates were rusted with tents lined up on the streets. However, the people that I met there were some of the nicest and funniest people I would ever encounter. I always wondered from time to time if Skid Row ever had a point in time when it didn't have a huge homeless problem. Thanks for the insightful video!
@clineezwood79422 жыл бұрын
Skid row is originally a term coined in Seattle Washington. In the 1850's 60's, it was a big logging town full of hills that went down to the Puget Sound. The loggers built long shoots (skids or slides) to transport logs on top of the hills and skid them into the water. There were rows of skids. Many homeless or undesirables lived or camped in these areas. The term became synonymous with homelessness.
@banchoshawty2 жыл бұрын
The term "skid row" came from Skidders Row. Skidders were loggers, specifically the loggers tasked with skidding (getting) the logs out of the woods in The Pacific Northwest. They were on the lowest rung on the ladder in the logging camps. When they got paid, they would head to the most decrepit and cheapest section of the nearby towns, the sections of towns with the cheapest bars, hotels and brothels. Soon these areas of towns took on the identity of the patrons that frequented there, skidders row. From there the term "skid row" (now shortened) was applied to the seedy, poor, decrepit sections of all towns/cities. Unfortunately, terms like these almost always become a label to create separation between the haves and the have-nots, the educated and the uneducated, the poor and everyone who is not as poor.
@clineezwood79422 жыл бұрын
@@banchoshawty, nicely done. 👌
@OBIIIIIIIII3 жыл бұрын
Can you call it a true crime documentary when: a) no crime was committed b) they hid facts from the viewer to manipulate the story that they had concocted c) entertained theories of the supernatural and conspiracy? EDIT: I wrote this before I watched the video. Thankfully, I’m not alone in my views
@cinnamonthecat96613 жыл бұрын
wait so there deadass was just a woman cracked out, acting tweaky in the hallways and they just said it was paranormal activity? wtfff
@OBIIIIIIIII3 жыл бұрын
@@cinnamonthecat9661 yup. They suggested that she was possessed and the hotel was haunted because a serial killer stayed there once
@OBIIIIIIIII3 жыл бұрын
@@cinnamonthecat9661 they did say what happened in the end. But it was a waste of time getting to that point. But then again, knowing that she was bi-polar and hadn’t been taking her medication from the beginning would have taken away the story
@cinnamonthecat96613 жыл бұрын
@KG Sniper oh ? i have no idea tbh, i never watched it
@cinnamonthecat96613 жыл бұрын
@@OBIIIIIIIII 😧 bruh
@mommachupacabra3 жыл бұрын
According to friends in the area, well, the "Containment" isn't working so much anymore. Excellent little doc on a problem that's not going away. I don't have any answers either.
@caitlingee6423 жыл бұрын
the area is getting smaller and it’s population is growing
@YouAdii3 жыл бұрын
Those edges are about to be snatched.
@lordofchaosiori3 жыл бұрын
Yeah homeless are usually out at least 5 blocks outside the area and are grouping in other parts of LA as well.
@ifiwantyoutofeel3 жыл бұрын
@@lordofchaosiori yup, but it's "contained" as the vast majority of homeless stay there but skid row has only expanded even further.
@aliensoup24203 жыл бұрын
Vagrancy has spilled over into the San Fernando Valley. Encampments now occupy freeway overpasses, and parking lots. LA just cleared out Echo Park and has closed it off for renovation. Venice Beach is becoming a disaster area, but the city is beginning to clear that out too.
@chrish79753 жыл бұрын
Dude.. your videos have taught me so much.. I never realised Skid Row was an actual place, I always thought it was just a figure of speech for somewhere populated with down and outs.
@hivaladeen48922 жыл бұрын
Me too, I thought it was a term coined from a mixture of death row and skidders as in sh*t on the side of a toilet. And now that I’ve said that, it’s starting to sound a lot more real lol. What a shame though. To have a staunchly democratic state/city with higher than average tax rates to “fund public goods/services” and yet still blindly refuses to deal with this issue straight on like they’re supposed. What a sh*t show, or should I say Skid Row.
@GratitudeDay2 жыл бұрын
“Lost Angels: Skid Row is My Home” was my introduction to what Skid Row is about. A very thoughtful and empathetic presentation.
@thereseember28003 жыл бұрын
I never realized that the train stopped there-that it literally was attracting people w/ dreams yet no plan to navigate them once they arrived.
@angelintraining81993 жыл бұрын
That was the American Dream sold to people in and out of America. Come here, work hard, and you can succeed. This idea that anyone could just show up somewhere, put in some elbow grease, and eventually become successful is still being peddled to people around the world.
@TheChickenRiceBowl3 жыл бұрын
@@angelintraining8199 Not just to people around the world, there is still an entire political wing that believes and perpetuates this childish nonsense to all of America.
@thereseember28003 жыл бұрын
@@angelintraining8199: 😢
@fatviscount65623 жыл бұрын
The Greyhound station compound is still in there
@CJ_Bell3 жыл бұрын
Werner Herzog put it best. "Documentary is simply a word. There is no oath to be broken. No filmmaker's license to be revoked. The only crime in Hollywood is not selling enough tickets. Making a documentary is the most efficient way to make a movie based on a true story."
@jayantimodi73363 жыл бұрын
☁️. ADITYA RATHORE ALSO MAKES GOOD JOURNALIST CONTENT LIKE JOHNNY, GO SEE☁️
@FirstLast-uz6eq3 жыл бұрын
herzog was shot by an air rifle in LA he continued filming
@giniwelle3 жыл бұрын
Chickens wont stop dancing.
@embrosia62193 жыл бұрын
absolutely
@CJ_Bell2 жыл бұрын
@David Wang Aww thanks dude. I'm flattered by your assumption. But I am not a home owner. I think that my acceptance that owning a home is a catastrophic life-goal, and finding other things that make life worthwhile as a renter, contributes to that "good grip" on life you picked up on. Cheers!
@ayushjain73843 жыл бұрын
I just fell in love with the graphics and those contrast shots of skyscrapers and skid row. Combined with your explainer, it becomes so much powerful. That's really strong compelling storytelling.
@kelxox552 жыл бұрын
This is my first Johnny Harris video. I am very impressed with the compassion, empathy and understanding expressed in this video. I guess I was just expecting a matter of fact approach. But the people over profit vibe had me subscribe immediately! ❤
@gabrielaaaaa763 жыл бұрын
I was born and raised in the San Fernando Valley (suburb of Los Angeles). This was such an amazing explanation, it’s heartbreaking. I always knew about Skid Row, but never knew of how it started and why it continues to stay like that. Thank you so much for educating me, absolutely love your channel.
@ZsoltWilhelm3 жыл бұрын
„The Cecil Hotel isn‘t haunted“ Well that’s exactly what the Netflix documentary show concludes to..
@larsstougaard70973 жыл бұрын
👻👻👻👻👻👻👻👻👻💩
@reubenmatthews56153 жыл бұрын
This video missed the point of the documentary. It wasn't saying that the Cecil Hotel in itself is haunted, trying to overshadow the history of Skid Row, but rather focus more on Elisa Lam and her unusual disappearance.
@larsstougaard70973 жыл бұрын
@@DylanRomanov totally agree, low and bad energy will be there for sure.
@hwhaht3 жыл бұрын
@@DylanRomanov "dark energy" doesn't exist, well not in the context you want it to. the definition of it is "a theoretical repulsive force that counteracts gravity and causes the universe to expand at an accelerating rate." not some thing that makes it scawwy and spoooooookyyy
@hwhaht3 жыл бұрын
@@DylanRomanov "negative residual energy" i'm not even gonna get started on that stupid shite. also, There*
@belizealeyna88563 жыл бұрын
as a future urban planner who’s been studying demographics and urban planning for the past three years, places like skid row is the perfect example of how easily these problems can be “swept under the rug” it’s horrible 🙃
@PhoenixtheII3 жыл бұрын
Being taught how to be a psychopath, Do you still want to continue or looking for another direction to go?
@safe-keeper10423 жыл бұрын
It's also the same kind of mentality that gets us hostile architecture and laws against begging and prostitution. Make sure the citizens don't see the homeless and other people in need of help, and they won't nag you so much about doing something about them.
@GRAITOM3 жыл бұрын
@Geo Leo maybe it's the only thought she felt like sharing, Why so much hate?
@mickeybubzx333 жыл бұрын
I hope this doesn’t come off as rude but how do urban planners get jobs when most urban areas are already pretty established and many people just keep moving to these cities? I understand sometimes some other cities pop up here and there but I’m sure there’s way more urban planners than how much that happens.
@gracezb13 жыл бұрын
@Geo Leo shut up and stop being an elitist
@will420high42 жыл бұрын
No ghosts necessary, just an old case of structural violence! Great video as always!
@holdenweese95893 жыл бұрын
I love how he immediately turns it into a boarders episode 1:30 in haha
@theworldneedsmorehippies3 жыл бұрын
Hey Johnny, this is actually exactly what I took away from the Netflix show. I was already familiar with Elisa Lam's tradgedy. Skid row is an egregious act against vulnerable members of society. I do not think of LA the same way anymore. Y'all have a reckoning.
@jnels20073 жыл бұрын
I live in LA. The Cecil isn’t in Skid Row. It’s close to it but Skid Row is a few blocks away. However, this was an OUTSTANDING piece about our city’s issues. I’d say mental illness and drugs are the biggest issues in that part of town, which in turn creates other crime. And that prison lighting thing is REAL. I never noticed until it was pointed out here
@TheElizondo883 жыл бұрын
I think it is officially in what the city considers The Skid Row Neighborhood... (at least Google Maps marks it as so). But outside “the homeless city” of Skid Row. I used to live on the Arts District, which is on the otherside of Skid Row than the Cecil and the boundaries do tend to shift. Development in Little Tokyo and the Arts District eaten a block or two from what you can see marked on Google Maps (which I assume was the original boundary).
@saybanana3 жыл бұрын
Skid row is just a nickname. Its like toy district, produce district, seafood district, something else, no? Boundaries change a lot. The past 10 years, homeless were pushed slowly and concentrated in skid row. The library park, Pershing Square, city hall, angels flight, metro stations had a lot, but past few years, only a handful are there. Even drug dealers move spots. Main st. Where Cecil is doesnt have many tents, many now with covid more. Even LA street reduced a lot of homeless on sidewalks. Many are pushed deeper and deeper.
@lacheraqui3 жыл бұрын
I've lived at 6th and Main in DTLA since 2005...two buildings north of the Cecil. Johnny gets some things right (the most important being the dereliction of the city in providing mental healthcare, rehab, work training and employment, and affordable housing) and some things wrong (he gets the city-established borders right, but the actual Skid Row activity is more contained--that is, it *was,* until an assortment of laws and a couple of lawsuits and the pandemic destroyed boundaries) and leaves out some things (LAPD's Central Station is in the middle of Skid Row; and he doesn't mention Skid Row's ACLU-supported activist group, LACAN)...but that's what comes from journalists who don't have a long-standing direct experience of a particular subject but want to stir the pot to expand their audience. It's a good start, Johnny...but you can do better.
@sadia.6793 жыл бұрын
bravo
@ImYenaChoi Жыл бұрын
Los Angeles is my hometown. I lived near skid row nearly all my life. It’s daunting to see the extreme difference with skid row to other areas of DTLA. These invisible boundaries will continue to diminish justice for these people.
@hislas27353 жыл бұрын
As you know the Cecil Hotel is located on Main street. Local, Los Angeles, historians can confirm that Main street was filled with speakeasies during the prohibition era. During the 1920's and 1930's, my grandmother's first husband would often frequent them to gamble and drink alcohol. It's not just the Cecil Hotel, many other hotels and SRO's in the Skid Row area have checkered histories of suicides, deaths, rapes, etc. The negative energy is taken there by folks down on their luck and by folks struggling with the many difficulties in life.
@tiffanyanne77072 жыл бұрын
Also I thought that there was a famous serial killer that stayed at the Cecil back in the day but maybe I'm wrong.
@hislas27352 жыл бұрын
@@tiffanyanne7707 Richard Ramirez, the "Night Stalker", stayed there in the 1980's. In the Google search box I typed "Did serial killer ramirez stay at the cecil hotel?". And it gave several search results. According to Wikipedia he didn't commit any murders there but he was staying there for a few weeks.
@PiterburgCowboy3 жыл бұрын
"Undesirable elements of society", "Containment zone". Just saying. Greetings from Germany.
@coolbeans86473 жыл бұрын
I wondered how in Chicago they managed to corral the homeless in one area. Turns out it can be by design.
@rioriggs35683 жыл бұрын
I was thinking the same thing.
@Canleaf083 жыл бұрын
In Germany, we call this Hartz IV. We hold children hostage to their parents.... We let marginalized people down. Once you are declared unable to work, you can be sure to be trapped in ALG II. Germany could help it's more. But we also have Berlin Kreuzberg. Munich-Hasenbergl.... So many conflict zones.
@PiterburgCowboy3 жыл бұрын
@@Canleaf08 Are you comparing what you've seen in this clip to Harzt IV and aren't our of your mind writing this? These people can only dream of a country that barley gives a crap about them and provides Hartz IV.
@ll46803 жыл бұрын
Not really they can leave whenever they want. They’re not doing hard labor in death camps. Terrible comparison
@KR4Qep3 жыл бұрын
I’m from LA. Born in pico Rivera and raised in Downey/Long Beach. I’ve spent a lot of time in the different shopping districts helping my uncle buying wholesale for his store and I worked at the California plaza building. I also skated in the area constantly. It’s been a tent city for decades, just from my memory, and has been so much longer. Cops patrol really hard and I’ve been stopped so many times that police knew me. They knew I was just hitting skate spots so they didn’t harass me too much but they were insistent that I stayed away from the area. Everyone is like that with skateboarders and were used to ignoring them. A few people have tried robbing me but for the most part it’s fairly safe, for young men that now how to handle themselves anyway. Sometimes homeless people would hang out and watch me skate or ask for money and sometimes my friends and I would bring a backpack of Gatorade and peanut butter and bread for the homeless we ran across. We’d give them weed and cigarettes too. I know I’m rambling but I’m just trying to point out that the area isn’t as bad as the rap it gets. It IS dangerous if you’re not used to areas like, people sense that and drugs make people desperate, or a female, but it’s not like super common place for violent crime and there’s always a cop nearby watching. I have a love hate relationship with skid row and other poverty stricken areas in LA. On one hand it’s home, it’s nostalgia, it’s where I grew up. On the other it’s an example of a wealthy city that cares more about its image than taking care of its people. So many abandoned buildings that could be renovated into shelters and so much harassment from police towards people that take a humanitarian approach
@WholeHeartily2 жыл бұрын
Wow. I remember working for a third party contractor with NYC HRA. My job was to teach job readiness to 18-24yr olds and manage a caseload of up to 100 kids. One day during my workshop a kid told me “you know why they call it ‘the projects’ right Miss? we’re the project”… and I couldn’t help but feel broken beneath the burden of truth in the gravity of what he said. Skid row definitely seems like a project from the 70s and 80s as well. The engineers will be held responsible for all these lives when they face God one day. A man can find harm on his own without encouragement.
@mahima34523 жыл бұрын
Didn't the documentary have a whole episode explaining skid row and how the cecil isn't haunted? this was an interesting video but it basically restated that episode.
@ymsschuler3 жыл бұрын
Yeah... I felt a bit of sensationalist vibes with the title too... not saying that I believe in ghosts, but stating that it isn't haunted, because of Skid Row is clearly a fallacy.
@Vlessgorian3 жыл бұрын
Yeah I have the feeling this guy didn't watch the whole series. The hotel being haunted is more presented as one of the theories surrounding the case, and one which is also debunked in the series itself
@mahima34523 жыл бұрын
@@Vlessgorian yeah the fact that he made this video would make sense if he's only seen the first episode
@Orinslayer3 жыл бұрын
@@Vlessgorian Obviously your right, youtubers love to only read or watch part of something and present that as absolute fact for a couple bucks.
@Alex-lk3jp3 жыл бұрын
I'm glad you addressed this in the right way. You actually explore the subjects that everyone overlooks.
@ELLIOTCHOY3 жыл бұрын
such a great video
@rhyancarrasco38333 жыл бұрын
Hey what’s up
@thesinkingduck25243 жыл бұрын
@@imnotyou1776 lmao
@HonkyTonkWomen3 жыл бұрын
Thank you
@SuperPrem3 жыл бұрын
I wholeheartedly agree. He explained the whole Skid Row situation in great detail.
@harshitjain5753 жыл бұрын
Years of abysmal administration in California has led to a rise of homelessness. Since the 90s poverty has comsistently increased in California. You can find these shabby, temporary establishment all over the state. And it doesn't seem to improve.
@DISGUYROX2 жыл бұрын
I'm from Chicago. Prior to the '70's, west Madison Street was the heart of skid row in Chicago. There were a lot of bars, stores and etc. What there also was was a large population of people who were in the same situation as those in LA. I haven't been back there in years to see what it is like now, other than going to the UC to a Blackhawks game butt, THAT is in before the game and right out afterward. And, this is at night so what is seen in the daytime is not easily seen at night. So, there are DELIBERATE actions taken by these cities to keep these people not only contained butt, IN THE SAME INESCAPABLE SITUATIONS.
@Anon0nline2 жыл бұрын
Chicago's (current) Skid Row is technically Uptown. Chicago had a "plan" to overdiagnose everyone so that the city could gather social security checks and pass people off from one clinic to the other in order for business to make money off the situation. It ruined so many lives that many commited suicide to escape the system's grasp on them. People were just shoveled into human storage closets and treated like dumb pets. If anyone tried to get a job or any kind of training or education, the police would be called and people were threatened with institutionalization. It's still going on. They get around the suicide statistics by fasely claiming people were just addicts that overdosed; they do this without toxicology reports. Most just took entire bottles of the prescriptions they were forced to go on in order to make dozens of sister clinics financially happy. They tried to turn the homeless into a comodity that could be transported around. It wound up greating a sea of death. It's not like it would be hard to just house, educate and employ people... but then social workers wouldn't feel superior to anyone and neither would the general public. People would rather kill or exploit than treat people with dignity and respect. History isn't going to look kindly on anyone during this time period.
@pricklycatsss2 жыл бұрын
"butt" lol
@Diego-zp1mu3 жыл бұрын
I don’t know how Johnny does it, but I find his videos that are in such a specific style that they’re addicting to watch.
@TheZainshah00073 жыл бұрын
Background score is very upbeat progressive never dropping keeps ur subconscious engaged
@TheZainshah00073 жыл бұрын
English not my first language. Pardon
@Vortex19883 жыл бұрын
I don't think anyone came away from the Netflix documentary thinking the Cecil Hotel was haunted or had dark energy. I'm pretty sure the documentary even covered some of this.
@markusbisma50153 жыл бұрын
I think he just watch the first episode before making this video.
@TarikZakariaBenmerar3 жыл бұрын
@@markusbisma5015 i was surprised, in fact this documentary tought me about Skid Row.
@bread39963 жыл бұрын
I agree, I never got the impression that they were implying anything supernatural at all
@SpiritOfTheSeasons3 жыл бұрын
Yeah they dismiss it outright and then talk about skid row for almost a whole episode
@shanebolger78023 жыл бұрын
Yh he didn't do his research or he just didn't understand it? I dunno. He basically did a video on why Netflix is wrong by giving info that Netflix themselves provide... In the documentary.
@juliettesussexdetective49773 жыл бұрын
Did you watch the Netflix docu ?! Because they talked about skid row and also that the hotel is absolutely not haunted at all
@leticiabellini70533 жыл бұрын
Exactly? The documentary said the same things he said lol
@XoxoxShelbs3 жыл бұрын
But in the beginning they tried to insinuate it was haunted... Towards the end of the doc they kinda just switch gears and don’t say no it’s not haunted. I think that’s what he meant
@sarasalama22123 жыл бұрын
@@XoxoxShelbs he probably didn’t watch the whole thing
@amytribe97623 жыл бұрын
@@XoxoxShelbs I feel like that is the point though, it draws us in with the ghost story we all want and were expecting in a way. And then presents the truth as simple and maybe less exciting/romanticised
@beefy743 жыл бұрын
I didn’t watch it, but the only thing I got from the trailers was “oooooh! haunted hotel and scary mental health crisis caused by ghosts!”.
@MadeOfQuestions8 ай бұрын
Hi, from the future, rent went up even higher after the Covid 19 pandemic, and now the containment is over... even the middle class can't afford rent and food. I make around 80,000 in 2024 and own my home with no morgage. We have 5 kids still at home, but we are also a 2 income household, so that's not even our total income, but I don't live in LA. I live in no where Indiana. It's so bad we struggle to afford food and pay month to month day to day expenses. In the US, we now have homeless people who aren't mentally ill or handicapped, they're working lower middle class people who just can't find an affordable place to live, because of the cost of housing, 1000 a month in Indiana for a 1 or 2 (if you're lucky) bedroom, 1 bath apartment, about 1200 for the same specs in a half double, now you're looking at 15 to 1700 to rent the same spec single family house. It's 6 dollars here for a pound of hamburger. It's insane trying to survive now. These policies failed, infact they were the kindling, keeping the bonfire the politicians lit back in the 70s and 80s raging, only now its out of its "containment" and devouring the whole country. The time to fix it has passed, but we need to start somewhere!
@KSchawacker3 жыл бұрын
Skid Row has been a blight on LA forever and we've not done a damn thing about actually helping the people that end up there. The negligence is sorta maddening.
@RoMayDrako3 жыл бұрын
LAs homeless population is complicated to say the the least. This coming from someone who lives in the LA area that moved from a place with less complicated homless population. Here in LA we got a large portion of homeless that cannot simply be helped with a flick of a finger. Mentally unwell people, mixed in with drug addicts, and you know both at once. Short of forcing back institutionalization and forcing rehab those people are not going to get the help they need. You can give them a house or apt but in the end your ignoring what got them on the street in the first place. Then tack on the people who want to be living on the street. Who choose to be nomadic and feel it's their right to live without a home. Yes, there are homeless that can be helped. Elderly who are down, working homeless, those seeking employment/housing; but those a drop in the bucket. Fixing the problem here is not being bleeding hearts and pitying anyone, it's taking a step back and looking at the layers and understanding the population and deciding logically how to get things improving.
@zeroh76713 жыл бұрын
@@RoMayDrako thank you. Having also spent time around a large population of homeless it’s sometimes infuriating hearing people act like society and city governance are just throwing these people away. There are more than enough resources to get people out of this situation if they truly want to but the reality is that most of them choose and prefer this lifestyle and some people and their politics can’t fathom this.
@ndnrb_3 жыл бұрын
@@zeroh7671 And their free housing are always empty. They’d rather be in the streets
@aespa6903 жыл бұрын
Theyve spent billions on fighting homelessness and poverty. Most of that cash ends up on Democratic politicians pockets and their friends in special interest groups. What does make it to the homeless is wasted because you cant help people who dont want to be helped as they would rather live on the street doing drugs than stay in public housing with sobriety rules and curfews.
@steevieg3 жыл бұрын
@@RoMayDrako Exactly. I understand that majority of us are good people who don't want people living in such terrible situations. But sometimes, that's the life they choose. Sure, drug addicts and mentally ill are part of that population. But you can't force them to go to rehab or send them off to an institution. Many choose to live this life, so what do you do? There are more than enough social programs for these folks to get out of there. They just have to decide for themselves if they want to get out.
@GeorgeBratley3 жыл бұрын
I literally don't know how you make such quality content with such regularity. Most other video essayists take weeks to produce something with half the production value of this!
@victorrosales75653 жыл бұрын
Easy go on Fivver and get some help its not that hard
@sarasalama22123 жыл бұрын
Easy to say the same things the Netflix documentary said. The documentary clearly stated it’s not haunted and offered the same arguments he did. Idk if he only watched the trailer and talked based on that or he watched the documentary and just decided to make a video
@taruncousik10493 жыл бұрын
@Johnny Harris - Did you watch the whole series before posting this video? I distinctly recall Netflix emphasized it wasn't haunted, talked elaborately about skid row's living conditions as well as a lot of facts that you bring up again over here.
@LoyMachedo2 жыл бұрын
Man Johnny, your editing, camera angles & creative storytelling is seriously out of the world! Seriously - wow. LM
@jasoncrout23733 жыл бұрын
skid row is somewhat madening when you look at how its treated, i have spent time there volunteering at one of the missions and its full of real people struggling who have been fucked over by the system in so many ways
@Hhe4482 жыл бұрын
No it’s not. Lol. It’s filled with drug addicts who rotted their brain to the point they have several mental illnesses. Nobody has SO much bad luck in a short period of time that they end up homeless with nobody to help them. If you get to that point, you got yourself there. If your friends and family are even to the point they won’t help you, it’s because you fucked them over too many times for them to give you another chance. I don’t feel bad for any homeless people. None of them fell on hard times. They brought themselves into hard times over a drug instead of going through a week of withdrawals and starting a sober life. That’s the hard truth about it.
@animalswin21052 жыл бұрын
There's one reply to Jason's comment yet KZbin Censors made it invisible.
@scottmead8543 жыл бұрын
To be fair, the documentary does point out problems with the construct of Skid Row and does suggest, at the end, that he death of the Canadian woman was nothing mysterious.
I appreciate the greater detail provided here, but I think it's slightly misleading to imply that the documentary didn't address the issue of "containment" and problematic public policies at all. I felt they did a pretty good job of discussing a multitude of issues that contributed to the mystique of the Cecil. It's important to remember that the doc was intended to take viewers along for the ride with those who were trying to figure out what happened to Elisa Lam, not to expose all of the issues of Skid Row. That would be an entirely different doc, and one I would personally love to see Johnny produce. Love your coverage, as always! Just throwing some thoughts out there. :)
@sadia.6793 жыл бұрын
bravo dear sis
@dvorak8263 жыл бұрын
Found it super boring. In my opinion, of course. I’ve already read about the topic and some videos still manage to entertain me. This ‘documentary’ went so off-topic at times and was somewhat uninteresting. At so many times, they brought up random people that added no backstory to the documentary. Would’ve been fine if they actually interacted with Elisa, but they had nothing to do with her at all. Entertaining for those who know nothing about the actual story, and I would likely rate it a 10/10 if I knew nothing of the story beforehand. I can see why people found it interesting. I also agree with your opinion
@nikki50953 жыл бұрын
@@dvorak826 Yeah, I can totally see that. If you already knew where it was going, then it would be like "get to the point, already!" 😆 I had seen the video and knew she disappeared, but I knew literally nothing else about the story, so it was definitely interesting to me. Cheers!
@ceramicfighterjet2 жыл бұрын
This was such a great and informative watch. Thank you for making such great vids!!
@gerri5773 жыл бұрын
Skid Row: LA's dirty little secret.
@FirstLast-uz6eq3 жыл бұрын
Secret?
@whathell6t3 жыл бұрын
@@FirstLast-uz6eq I agree. What secret? This is an everyday fact, especially among Angelenos. I bet @gerri577 is a transplant.
@stacamara79933 жыл бұрын
@@FirstLast-uz6eq its a secret im just now finding out bout this
@dynasty00193 жыл бұрын
Secret my a--. It's even a tourist attraction for a lot of hop-on/off bus tours in LA.
@stacamara79933 жыл бұрын
@@dynasty0019 never been to LA so obviously its a secret if ppl outside of LA dont know bout it lol
@eriqhenrimadsen79923 жыл бұрын
Much appreciated. I ended up on SR for six months a few years back. It's an experience that changed me. It affirmed a great deal of compassion, for both others and myself. I think your point regarding the dehumanizing approach is spot on. It's only through that lens(justification) that Society is able to somehow excuse itself, from affording others, rights and privileges, they freely enjoy.
@set652 жыл бұрын
It happened to me in SF but they call it The Tenderloin and since then I've changed a lot. I save money now, ever since then. I never realized how much that experience changed me.
@avibratz9418 ай бұрын
How did u get out and have a better life?
@Mr30friends3 жыл бұрын
But the documentary clearly sheds its "haunted" theories pretty early on and instead points the finger on what is actually going on in skid row. So essentially, calling the documentary "an appauling and insensitive abuse of the power of documentary filming" is as sensetionalistic as the documentary itself (if not more so). Also the "the whole series feels like a true crime documentary but there ends up being no crime at all" is a laughable argument... Its like saying "the suspect was ultimately found innocent so there was no point in having a trial at all" Other than that, great research/video on the actual decisions and measures the officials took to create skid row.
@MissHoneyOnline Жыл бұрын
What a great and thoughtful video! I’m glad I found your channel, and look forward to seeing more of your content. 😊
@brandonking17373 жыл бұрын
I never knew that Skid Row was an actual community. I thought it was just a general term for any run down area for poor people.
@kats.59583 жыл бұрын
It's both
@rossbleakney35753 жыл бұрын
@@kats.5958 Yep. Furthermore, it is likely that it originally referred to the path along which timber workers skidded logs, or "Skid Road". Use of the term likely started in Seattle. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Skid_row
@thedirty5303 жыл бұрын
As an American, I appreciate your videos! We like to put band-aids over things without fixing their main causes & fail to do the hard parts. This is very similar to San Francisco's Chinatown!
@Yourmumsrectum2 жыл бұрын
Yeah and then your country mantra spread to every other country. I dislike you yanks for the whole reason your governments like Reagans for example spread utter shit.
@AriS-gg7gw3 жыл бұрын
Appreciate the video, but just wanted to mention that the documentary does talk about the systemic problems of Skid Row (although briefly) and the mental problems of Carrie Lam. It could have been less melodramatic with a greater focus on Skid Row itself, but as an Indian who has never been to California, I did get the sense that Skid Row was at the heart of the problems associated with the hotel.
@LoboMendez13 жыл бұрын
literally only the first episode feeds the audience's need for something supernatural, the rest of the history of the hotel, then the history, ELISA (not Carrie) Lam's own mental health issues, then the end is all about what the autopsy reveals. did YOU watch the show?
@AriS-gg7gw3 жыл бұрын
@@LoboMendez1 I did watch the show. Think about what I said...as somebody who has never been to California (I've only been to the US once in my life, on a business trip), I was able to understand that Skid Row was a problem created by city planning and was responsible for what happened in the Cecil Hotel. Although, I'll say this, as an Indian we have plenty of our own versions of skid row around, so the concept is not new for anyone living in a major city, really.
@starrymoonlitwinternight2 жыл бұрын
I grew up in NY. As I became a teenager, I would walk from my middle class neighborhood and house into the wealthy district. If I went the other way, I'd reach the ghetto areas where people lived on the streets and crime and drugs were rampant. As a young teenager, this affected me deeply. WHY was their such a cutting difference? How could this be when there was so much wealth that could go around? How could you walk from one block to the next and literally find yourself in the deepest of poverty? I longed for a utopia, a place where classes didn't exist and people helped one another. I've not found it. This video has explained so much. To understand there is actual city and government policy in place to CREATE and PERSERVE this situation and suffering blows me away.
@dylanhosborn11 ай бұрын
🙏🏼🧡for real
@napoleoncorneliusscipio51413 жыл бұрын
It's interesting how they used like, harsh yellow lights to give off that disturbing, uncomfortable feeling in order to keep Skid Row residents inside the block.
@Jinkypigs3 жыл бұрын
Dude the harsh light are the bright white prison like spot light...... not the yellow light
@ca-ke94933 жыл бұрын
This is a kind of border which people pass by everyday, reminds us that borders and lines arent just drawn in faraway places with complicated conflict histories but regular people, normal community draw lines against each other all the time, just to so they dont have to see the problems in society.
@mrillis92593 жыл бұрын
I think it's a symptom of tribalism.
@eleganz3 жыл бұрын
Were you not paying attention? The so called leaders of Skid Row drew their own borders so they could get more benefits like affordable housing and welfare. They wanted leftist democrat policies and they got hell on earth.
@GeorgeMonet3 жыл бұрын
There are no borders. The people keep themselves there.
@cloudsombrero3 жыл бұрын
sO dEeP
@ca-ke94933 жыл бұрын
Lol I just noticed similar themes in this video to Johnny's Vox series Borders. This video would have fit right in with that series.
@Elijah3 жыл бұрын
I hope the story of skidrow doesn't get diluted by the Cecil Hotel title and that LA gets it together and figures out how to help the ever-growing homeless population in skidrow. I used to live a few blocks away, and not to mention how poorly the homeless are treated by the rich of the financial district. They are treated like cockroaches instead of humans. Truly heartbreaking. Amazing video, it barely felt like 5 minutes long.
@samanthaamburgey41283 жыл бұрын
@@CombatHD3 They're human beings, and one forced into horrible conditions by circumstance and sheer neglegence. You wouldn't be thinking that if you were there to see them in person, or worse, were homeless yourself, like I was. I'm just lucky I managed to make it out and back into a stable living situation.
@TouringWolf423 жыл бұрын
Because Californians will never elect anyone else. Like, literally, no matter who it is.
@lography69172 жыл бұрын
This is extremely well edited for a KZbin video. Wonderful content - subscribed!
@caiomar3 жыл бұрын
Hi Johnny, I really like the content you create, but sometimes it feels like it's unfinished, you leave us hanging, and that there's more to be explored and said. You introduce us to the story, develop upon it and it just ends. It's just my opinion (obviously), other than that, keep them coming. Good work.
@katkatkat52 жыл бұрын
agreed this is amazing but feels unfinished
@pranavsubash6892 жыл бұрын
Yeah same I love your content johny but a lot of the videos feel unfinished and suddenly ending
@matthewbenthall10742 жыл бұрын
He’s asking you to finish the thought for yourself
@yikes7102 жыл бұрын
The guy is running a VPN ad, what do you expect lmfao
@-..-_ Жыл бұрын
Bro skid row is known for drugs and the cartel she was just High on drugs
@Alexandra8323 жыл бұрын
I think there’s dark energy yes, imagine what goes on peoples minds there, their feelings and emotions for living there and knowingly being kept there like a prisioner...that causes an ambiance of the worst human beings can become. We are a product of environment
@robinhahnsopran3 жыл бұрын
Hi. I went to school with Elisa Lam. We weren't SUPER close, but we did occasionally hang out in the same large groups together, and I knew her. We had some free-period chats and hangouts. When she went missing, I posted a missing persons' alert on my tumblr (which was a thing, at the time) about her, with numbers and resources to call if anyone had any information about her disappearance. Ever since (and even after her body was found), because of this fascination the media has had with her case, I have continued to get random messages from strangers, asking me to divulge every bit of information I have ever had about Elisa, in case it could help them - those random people on the internet - either "solve her murder" or "prove she was possessed". ALL THE TIME. As you would expect, these messages have gotten more frequent now, since Netflix's light-on-facts documentary. No matter how often I say, "I didn't know her well, please don't contact me", they keep coming. I feel like things like this Netflix documentary really dehumanizes the person Elisa was, and in fact, all the people involved in this story, and forgets that these are real humans and not mysteries for us to ponder for our own entertainment. Thank you for shining a human light on this story. Elisa was a person, as is every person in that hotel and on Skid Row. Treating her story not as a mystery, but as a tragic event, is the only way to cover it. And to anyone who IS fascinated by her case: I don't blame you. It's weird, and I understand. As long as you remember she was a human and not a plot of an interesting story, I'm totally okay with this. EDIT: I realize I wasn't clear, so I'm sorry for my morning brain: I've seen the whole thing. My issue is with giving airtime to these theories that do dehumanize, because not everyone DOES watch until the end. The result - that I'm getting more messages about her "mystery" - speaks for itself, in my experience. That's what I'm saying. :)
@FrostySumo3 жыл бұрын
What are you talking about? Have you watched this documentary? The entire final conclusion is that people were irresponsible and did exactly what you said and made her into a ghost story instead of a tragic case of mental illness. It explained the poverty situation and even said we shouldn't forget about the real person and the family and that she was a smart person that tragically died. I have a sneaking suspicion that no one watched more than the first episode.
@robinhahnsopran3 жыл бұрын
@@FrostySumo Sorry! I was unclear in this first comment due to really bad morning brain - edited to clarify. Thanks for pointing it out. I just don't like that Netflix gave so much air to this - people ARE stopping watching before the end and getting entirely the wrong impression.
@geoffreydesena45163 жыл бұрын
Here’s a video idea you’d do well with: how has Europe handled homelessness differently from the US?
@Mike_Dubayou3 жыл бұрын
You could just do this with different states within the US. California (mostly LA) is pretty unique as far as homelessness goes. Most of the country is no where close to the level of LA.
@alexandravalerious32743 жыл бұрын
@@Mike_Dubayou i imagine it also has to do w just the massive population in the state. now i really want to see him cover this topic both from state to state and internationally!
@jamesgrant33433 жыл бұрын
In the UK we just had ‘everybody in’ - where the councils were told to find a safe and suitable place for every rough sleeper in the UK. It didn’t cost a crazy amount and lead to a lot of people who had fallen through the net getting the help and medical treatment they need. Shows that it’s cheaper to solve the problem than kick the can down the road. Time will tell if we can sustain this level of focus on caring for all people in society. Put it this way - it is cheaper to fund ending homeless in the United Kingdom than the cost of the salaries of the top 5 earning soccer players (excluding bonuses and endorsements etc). Sad init
@Debilitator473 жыл бұрын
Started with McD's ice cream machines. That was excellent and depressing and enlightening. I'm 8 minutes into this, and I am sad, enraged, and hopeless. Still watching, because we must do better. i don't even live in California, but we humans need to do better.
@Eden5193 жыл бұрын
SSAAAAMe! subbed after that one. never thought i'd watch an in-depth investigative piece on ice-cream machines. holeee! that vid was the gateway drug
@johnyoung8233 жыл бұрын
Haha me too! Started with McDonald’s but now I’m dozens and dozens in… Amazing content
@LoboMendez13 жыл бұрын
Did he actually watch the whole series? The show made a point to demystify the "evil aura" and went on to mention the impact of Skid Row on the hotel. Yes it began with the legend of Cecil as a haunted hotel, but the show developed the full story of the hotel in the context of the marginalized community living on the streets of Skid Row. And the show never alleged that a strange force attracted her there....she was on a trip, and was suffering mental illness herself. They gave a very complete picture of Elisa Lam. This makes me question the premise of the rest the videos he's published.
@zeroh76713 жыл бұрын
No he just found a pedestal to patronize the powers that be and “shed light” on a very complicated issue from his virtuous high ground.
@lakeman19663 жыл бұрын
@@zeroh7671 "The powers that be" Rich people? Capitalism? He shed light on how fucked up America/Capitalism is! Of course I could be misunderstanding you and you're not trying to deny this fact.
@ems9013 жыл бұрын
Evil attacks itself to people who are labelled mentally unstable because you will be sceptical of them and won’t believe it. And if you don’t believe it’s real, then you won’t try to stop it.
@yeshua72382 жыл бұрын
Glad someone made this video. For those who played Disco Elysium, think of the doomed commercial area - a place so defined by failure people actually believe it’s haunted
@TheBawrs3 жыл бұрын
You literally have changed the way I go about researching: more system-minded and with a wider lens. Well done as always!