Wendell pierce, welcome. Thank you so nice to meet you, an honor to meet you. The honor is mine. And i must say, i love this book, and what i loved about it, i love many things about it, but i loved about it the most, was that it read like fiction even though its nonfiction. Its such a literary, memoir. Youve written books before, or not . No, this is my first book. What a debut, then thank you, thank you. Im from new orleans, so the characters of my life and my family and my community, you couldnt even find them in fiction, so right, not credible as fiction, not believable not credible as fiction it was, something that was, very special to me, in a shapshot [evan] intensely personal. Intensely personal. More personal than anything ive ever done before. People say that film lasts forever, but i feel as though to actually put it down on paper in a book is something thats going to be even more lasting. Now, you have an event that is the catalyst for this book, the katrina hurricane, which we all outside of new orleans, and outside of the area that was impacted, think we understand, we think we know what happened, and we think we know what the aftermath was. But one thing thats totally clear to me is, reading this book, we dont know anything. Well, you know, you actually do. Because what connects us youre letting me off the hook yeah, im letting you off the hook. Okay, good. Because across time, across space, as disparate as we may be in life, we have a common humanity that we, once you are truthful about, and once you are very authentic in expressing, people understand, its the thing that connects us. Its the reason im an artist, its the reason im an actor. It is the forum in which we, apply our craft. Because our humaity, is classic, is something that will, it speaks to us from the past. We read shakespeare 400 years, and see it 400 years, since its writing and it still speaks to us. And why something will last long after were gone. And thats what the play waiting for godot is, by samuel beckett, this existential play about two men in this desolate land who dont know who they are, dont know where theyve come from, and looking for this entity, godot, outside of themselves. Then they learn in the course of the play, that they have to find it within themselves, their true meaning, and what their purpose in life is. And i did that play, because it resonated about what we were going through in new orleans. So you went into that Creative Process, and that does figure into, obviously the story that is told here. Absolutely you went into that Creative Process saying, i need to somehow align my perspective on art, or that particular piece of art with the reality of what im seeing. A totally deliberate decision. What happened in new orleans with the great flood of katrina, i would not wish on my worst enemy. I think about whats happening, to people now, whenever i see a disaster, like the windswept fires in Central Texas happening right now, the mudslides happening in california. I immediately identify with it. It is a painful, painful episode in anyones life, and i would hope that no one has to go through it. Its like a death of a Family Member, its like a death of a part of you, and i realize that years from now some kid was gonna walk up to me and say, mr. Pierce, in new orleans darkest hour, what did you do . And i knew that i had to have a response, im an actor, so thats what i wanted my response to be. You gravitate to your and i said this is what i want to respond to, so we did waiting for godot right in the heart of the lower ninth ward where it was our ground zero [evan] most devastated it was sacred ground. It was sacred ground. Thousands of people had died. Hundreds of people had died, and, i knew that i wanted to respect them. And in the middle of that play, there was the most cathartic moment of my life. When my character stands there, in the midst of the desolation, and he says, at this place, in this moment in time, all mankind is us, let us do something while we have the chance. It was as if i was stepping out of character, as if i was talking to my Family Members of the community of new orleans who had come from all different places, in the midst of this disaster, we knew that to honor the people that had lost their lives through no fault of their own. And to really give purpose to what we were going to do with our lives, we have to rebuild our city. We have to rebuild our lives. We have to rebuild our community. So it was an awakening, and it was an epiphany for me, to act. Because the art is the form where we reflect on who we are, where weve been, where weve failed, where weve triumphed. Where we reflect on who we want to be. We declare our values and then we act on them. And then thats was the awakening of what the purpose of art is in my life, and in the community of new orleans. But of course in the middle of some, tragedy, whether its katrina or any other tragedy before or after we could name, there is often an irrational anger, but an anger. [wendell] yes. Why me . Why has this tragedy befallen me . And there was an additional element to this which was the political complications related to katrina. How do you see past that anger, the irrational, and candidly, the rational anger. To get to a place where you can connect art to the reality of the situation on the ground, and move on . The tools to handle those things, i realized also had been given to me through generations in my family. My family africanamericans in louisiana in the south, from slavery through civil rights evolution of this country, gave a blueprint. This moses generation gave my joshua generation the blueprint. And i think of just a couple of mantras that came from my family in particular. Cant died three days before the creation of the world, dont ever tell me you cant do something. My grandfather told me that. [evan] is that right . I applied that across the board especially when it comes to those who dont have, the other mantra comes to mind, though there are people out there who do not have your best interests at heart. There are people that do not have your best interests at heart. Now, it didnt say, evil white people, racists, white supremacists. They didnt say, black folk, they didnt say tall people, short people its not specific. Its not specific. Be vigilant about recognizing those that dont have your best interests at heart. Seven days after the levees broke, and new orleans was flooded and destroyed, those people raised their ugly heads. I will say their names james reese and Ashton Odwyer on the front page of the wall street journal said, this is an opportunity to change this city forever. We will get rid of the people we dont want. E are going to change it demographically, politally aaplly, and if it nt change, we are out of here. That was on september 8th. There were literally people still drowning in the water. Where people are saying were gonna take this advantage were going to take advantage of this and change this city. So, as the saying goes, when evil people plot, good people plan. So thats when i put out a call to action to my community and said, listen, we work too hard to build this community, to let someone else do it, lets exercise our right of selfdetermination and bring back our own community. We owe it to my parents generation who fought so long and hard to cate my community. Pontchartrain park, where i grew up, came out of the advocacy where black folks could only go to a park one day out of the week in new orleans, on wednesday, during jim crow, in segregation. And that advocacy fought led by a. P. Tureaud, a great civil rights lawyer in new orleans, and we forced the City Government to actually get to a point of appeasement, it was separate but equal but, it was 200 acres, a thousand homes, it was the only place where my father coming back from world war ii after fighting in saipan could purchase a home in the postworld war ii suburbia. And that was pontchartrain park. Golf course right in the middle, a thousand homes around it, and that golf course designed by joseph bartholomew, who designed most of the courses in new orleans, but couldnt play on them, because he was a black man. So. They fought. And so, its an american aesthetic to exercise your right of selfdeterminiation. And so that was the calling that i heard. So in the midst of that political action, it really comes back to art, because art is freedom and individuality within form. Its the infinite amount of notes that can be put together in an improvized jazz solo, but it comes from a finite number of notes. Thats an american aesthetic, and that is demonstrated in our art. High art is a demonstration of the american aesthetic. You mention your father. [weldell] yes. He is a consequential character in the telling of this story. I was just completely, he appealed to me. I just completely gravitated to your father. Amos pierce. Will you talk about him a little bit please . My father grew up, uptown, in the calliope projects, and in gert town, new orleans. And lived with his mother, and was one of three guys drafted to go to world war ii. And he always remembers, he always talks about when he was leaving, and being shipped out from San Francisco to fight in the pacific theater. And how quiet it was, thousands of men on the back of that boat. Looking at the American Flag hanging from the golden gate. And the silence, knowing that some of them would not see their home again. Not come back. He said thats what he thought about all the time while he was over there. And so when he came back, like so many soldiers, black men at that time, that were fighting the double v campaign, victory abroad and victory at home. We fight for equality and democracy, and American Values abroad, and they will be on display when we return because theyre not being adhered to at home. So to come back to that, he had a fierce love, has a fierce love for his country, almost like a drunken parent says, i love you, but you gotta stop drinking. I love you, but you have to change. Im gonna challenge you. Do you think that the second v, victory at home has been achieved now . I understand that it would be a terrible exaggeration to say the world has not changed, but we are in the middle of a major thing, on race in this country. Absolutely not just race and policing, not just race and incarceration. For all the progress weve made in the year that is the 50th anniversary of the Voting Rights act, there is still an extraordinary amount that we dont have resolved. But you have to understand, people are trying to resolve something thats never going to be resolved, because its a part really . Its the ugly part thats the spoiler, is that were never gonna no, its not a spoiler theres an ugly part of human nature. You know, if every, i remember that star trek episode, i really dont live my life by the declarations of what pop art tells us to. But remember one guy was black on one side of his face, and white on the other side, and he was fighting this other guy who looked just like him. And then at the end of the episode you realize, everyone said, why are you guys fighting . He goes, what are you talking about . Im black on the right side, hes black on the left side. Like, what . People will find a distinction to have issues with. I personally believe because its a part, sorry sound. [evan] thats okay. laughs i personally believe because that a ugly part of human nature. What happens every once in awhile is the veil is lifted and we see it, even more clearly. It has to be, an awakening and an epiphany for people when they see it for the first time. And what happens in the journey of life is were always trying to evolve to get better. Thats why we go and have these moments of trying to understand the human spirit. Thats what art is about, where reflect on who we are, where weve been. So the issues that were having with race now is understand that, this amorphic dysfunction in our human spirit is something that we always have to be vigilant about, to catch. Make it a teachable moment for people understanding it for the first time or seeing it for the first time. And changing the game when it comes to attacking it. Like right now, there are people saying, the most important voices in american discussion of racial politics right now are the folks who are saying, oh, these black guys are not making it up, i saw it on film for the first time. Oh, i see actually we had an incident just last week where it happened to a white kid in michigan which i think is going to be even more evident of what those who disgrace the badge, very important, disgrace the badge, do in moments of conflict. You know, i personally believe that that young man didnt have to die because he was being so disruptive. Easy to dismiss it when its happening to somebody who you dont recognize. Right and all of a sudden i recognized that kid because he looks like my son, hes, you know this blondhaired, blueeyed kid that you know, maybe, they were overreaching, maybe they were being exaggerated. So its a constant vigilance that we have to have. What i love about this, mr. Pierce is that you are at once realistic about the fact that this is going to be a very hard problem to resolve ever, but at the same time hopeful that we can take positive things from these incidents that periodically rise up. Because im an artist. Im an artist, and when you, what happens with art, is the conversation of the human existence, that we reflect on it together in a forum. What thoughts are to the individual as they twist and turn at night i always say, and reflect on what kind of man have i been, how am i going to be a better father . What do i want to do in the future . What those thoughts are to the individual, art is the forum where we reflect on it for the community as a whole. Now art, that existence of the technical proficiency with creative and expressive thought, can be in all disciplines. There is high art in politics. Yep, there is, right. Thats true. Theres a man who can move populations of people by saying, theres mourning in america. Theres a poet in poland, lech walesa, who can move a totalitarian government change history a poet. A poet. People here remember, when in the midst of hopelessness, Woody Guthrie said, this land is your land, this land is my land, from california, to the New York Island that gave people an aspirational hope, because it tapped into a humanity. It is not just trivial entertainment, it is actually tapping into our consciousness as a community to reflect, and in that moment, being most like our creator. Briefly as mortals, being immortal. Tapping into something that actually may speak to another human being, in a place and time long after im gone. A piece of art that can change it. Politics may change persons behavior, art within politics can actually maybe change someones mind. Perfect example, here in texas, justice black, for the first time saw genius in the form of a black man when he heard Louis Armstrong in a little roadhouse bar playing back in the 20s. You cant tell me that didnt impact him when he sat on the Supreme Court in the middle of the 20th century, and said, okay, we have some citizens whos saying theyre being treated like second class citizens. We have to look at our constitution and make some amendments. Art has a long tail in that case. It has a long tail. So speaking of art, we have a certain number of minutes left. I want to pivot away from all this very important and highminded talk, and ask you a question directly. Why is bunk moreland the best character in the history of television . laughter and applause mr. Pierce, i dont know if that was your creation, or that you and david simon worked on the contours of that character together, or if the words were already on the page, but goodness gracious, amazing. It was a combination i have to tip my hat to david simon, he is the creator of the character, but there is a real bunk in baltimore. [evan] please tell the story. Oscar requer, and i did my walkalongs with him because at this point of his career he was just in the courthouse. And he regaled me with tales, and hey, bunk, and oh hed introduce me, i want you to meet, hes gonna play me in an hbo series, laughter oh, he was very gregarious out there, so i picked that up. There were other detectives that i walked with, davids writing and all. But ill never forget one moment, my first day of shooting, bunk, the real bunk, drove up in his caddie with his cigar going, and he got out in the distance, and he got out the car, and he saw me working and went, mumbles put his cigar back in mouth, got in his car and drove off and i never called him again. laughter i was terrified. I shot the show for five years, going, oh my god, this man is so embarrassed, by what im doing on television. Was the character based on him in the sense that the mannerisms and the pattern of speech, and the way that he approached his job . Or was there a mcnulty character, similarly based on somebody who worked with bunk . How did this all go . It was an amalgam, because first of all, i brought that to the character. laughter oh, of course, most, right. Anything that was awesome about it, i get it. The sleight of hand, the gestures, the voice, um, mcnulty was really based on ed burns our cocreator with david simon, who was a police officer, turned teacher so that pryzbylewski was a part of him also. So bunk was an amalgam, david, some of other detectives that i researched and oscar requer himself and then at the end of the series, in the last season, someone saw me at a barber shop and said, you know, bunk is retiring, you better be there. I went, oh my goodness. So im terrified, i go, and i see him across the room, looking at me the same way. laughter and so, i walk there, sheepishly. Ready for my comeuppance. He looks at me and goes, hey , come here, you made me a star it was like the prodigal son coming home. See, thats the guy, this is t. V. Bunk, im the real bunk. laughter could have gone the other way. I was actually on the dais there, i had to speak at the retirement, ive known bunk for three days, five years ago. laughter does it concern you at all, maybe concern is the wrong word. You know, its sort of like being a musician, you had a hit 30 years ago oh, no, not at all. People walk down the street, they yell alison to elvis costello. Yeah, right. Do they yell bunk all the time at you . Absolutely bunk bunk bunk but listen, its gonna be the first line of my obituary, Wendell Pierce, who played bunk moreland on hbo is that right . Yes. Died at 110 today. laughter hopefully, oh, my god so i have no problem with it. You know, if it was gilligan, it would be a different. laughter i feel for mr. Denver. High art , high art so pick your choices wisely. Bunk is not gilligan the lesson of this is that bunk is not gilligan. Im not going around with a little sailor hat at conventions at 75. Signing autographs signing autographs did you all know w