Note sull'episodio
He was the architect of the most famous political rally in American history, the 1963 March on Washington where Dr. King delivered "I Have a Dream." A quarter million people came because of his spreadsheets, his chartered buses, his boxed lunches, and his Army-grade sound system. And he was told to stay in the shadows, because being openly gay made Bayard Rustin a "liability" to the movement he engineered.
This episode follows the Quaker-raised strategist who tested nonviolence on his own body, refusing a bus seat in 1942 and absorbing a prison beating until his attacker simply gave up, and who convinced an armed, recently bombed Martin Luther King Jr. that the movement had to put down its guns. It traces the political attacks by Strom Thurmond, the late-life contradictions that defy modern labels, the legal adoption that protected the man  ...Â