Runaway Slave (film) explained

Runaway Slave
Director:Pritchett Cotten
Producer:Luke Livingston, Beverly Zaslow
Editing:Matthew Perdie
Pritchett Cotten
Studio:Ground Floor Video
Distributor:Rocky Mountain Pictures
Runtime:108 minutes
Country:United States
Language:English

Runaway Slave is an American independent political documentary hosted by Baptist minister C.L. Bryant, who hosts a nightly talk show over KEEL radio in his native Shreveport, Louisiana. The film premiered in Los Angeles on January 13, 2012. The film expresses Rev. Bryant's belief that the African-American community, "has traded one form of tyranny for another" by "buying into the entitlement mindset of Progressives."[1]

The film, directed by Pritchett Cotten, is backed by the FreedomWorks Foundation.

Premise

The film follows Rev. C.L. Bryant as he travels across the United States and speaks with members of the African-American community, various conservative leaders, and different public faces about the belief that the African-American community is immersed in a welfare state and prevented from being successful on their own.[1] Andrew Breitbart, Glenn Beck, Herman Cain and Rep. Allen West are among the notable figures featured in the film who offer their insight and opinion into the topic.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: About Runaway Slave. runawayslavemovie.com. 2012-07-07.