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INDEPENDENT LENS: Owned: A Tale of Two Americas

Levittown water tower
By David Usui. Courtesy of INDEPENDENT LENS
Levittown water tower. Audiences journey to contrasting neighborhoods in Baltimore, Md., Levittown, N.Y., and Southern Calif. The documentary follows residents, realtors and developers as they share their stories of living and working in their respective urban communities.

Premieres Tuesday, Feb. 8, 2022 at 10 p.m. on KPBS TV + Saturday, Feb. 12 at 9 a.m. on KPBS 2 / On Demand

In an effort to bolster both housing supply and a sluggish post–World War II economy, the U.S. government undertook the most sweeping wealth redistribution project in history, subsidizing home ownership and assisting an emerging middle class in the middle of the 20th century. But ingrained in the government’s postwar housing policies were more calculated efforts to support a white middle class, leading America toward two very stark realities: one of homeownership, wealth and The American Dream, and another of defunded and purposefully segregated communities.

From Emmy® Award-winning “Feels Good Man” filmmaker Giorgio Angelini comes “Owned: A Tale of Two Americas,” which weaves together the history of mid-century housing policy in America and the ramifications of the 2008 housing market collapse.

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Trailer | Owned: A Tale of Two Americas

Audiences journey to contrasting neighborhoods in Baltimore, Maryland; Levittown, New York; and Southern California. The documentary follows residents, realtors and developers as they share their stories of living and working in their respective urban communities. What emerges is the suburban picture of deeply unsustainable housing policies — exemplified in the 2008 housing market collapse — alongside an ongoing state of highly neglected urban neighborhoods, characterized by dangerous living conditions and pockets of concentrated poverty.

Suburbia drone footage
Courtesy of Giorgio Angelini
Suburbia drone footage. From Emmy® Award-winning filmmaker Giorgio Angelini comes “Owned: A Tale of Two Americas,” which weaves together the history of mid-century housing policy in America and the ramifications of the 2008 housing market collapse.

The crash of suburbia and urban unrest are not unrelated phenomena. They are a result of the United States’ racist housing policies, which have created vulnerable subcultures in our build environments. Throughout the film, it becomes clear that society cannot continue in a segregated state. Ultimately, the contrasting communities created by the country’s housing history may have more in common with each other than they expect.

Young man sits on his bike in front of Lanvale grocery in Baltimore, Md.
Courtesy of David Usui
Young man sits on his bike in front of Lanvale grocery in Baltimore, Md. From Emmy® Award-winning filmmaker Giorgio Angelini comes “Owned: A Tale of Two Americas,” which weaves together the history of mid-century housing policy in America and the ramifications of the 2008 housing market collapse.

“We all remember the severity of the 2008 housing crisis and its impact on millions of families,” said director Giorgio Angelini.“What is often overlooked, though, is how the central struggles that America faces right now — from racial equity, education, policing, to climate change — often find their roots in bad housing policy that promised a lot, but ended up serving very few. And as housing has turned, essentially, into a globally traded commodity, it has only served to exacerbate these problems innate to the system. With home prices rising like crazy, and people making less than they did 20 or 30 years ago, we have to ask ourselves, what is the purpose of home ownership in a society? And is the current system actually meeting those needs?”

Featuring interviews with Nikole Hannah-Jones, leader of The New York Times’ “The 1619 Project,” Richard Rothstein, author of "The Color of Law," and Yale economics professor Robert J. Shiller, among others, and utilizing drone and archival footage throughout, Angelini accomplishes an investigative and storytelling feat with “Owned: A Tale of Two Americas.”

Suburbia drone footage
Courtesy of: David Usui and Giorgio Angelini
Suburbia drone footage. From Emmy® Award-winning filmmaker Giorgio Angelini comes “Owned: A Tale of Two Americas,” which weaves together the history of mid-century housing policy in America and the ramifications of the 2008 housing market collapse.

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“Owned: A Tale of Two Americas” will make its U.S. broadcast premiere on PBS’s INDEPENDENT LENS on Feb. 7 2022. The film will also be available on PBS.org and the PBS Video App.

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INDEPENDENT LENS is on Facebook, Instagram + Follow @IndependentLens on Twitter. #IndieLensPBS

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Credits:

Written and Directed by Giorgio Angelinil. Produced by Giorgio Angelini and Maggie Burns Angelini. Executive Producers: Lois Vossen, Sally Jo Fifer and Mark Elmore.