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Texas Filmmaker's Short 'Dear Bruh' Aims To Give Voice To Murdered Black Men

A scene from Ya'Ke Smith's short film, "Dear Bruh."
Andrew Czap
A scene from Ya'Ke Smith's short film, "Dear Bruh."

Less than a week after George Floyd was killed by a Minneapolis police officer, San Antonio-born, Austin-based filmmaker responded with a powerful short film that simultaneously eulogizes Floyd and points the way toward a rebirth. 鈥 鈥 uses original and found footage and its poetic narration to sock the viewer in the jaw with a clear-eyed view of how Black people have been 鈥渙thered,鈥 as Smith explained, but it also offers some measure of hope, all in less than 10 minutes.

The film opens with a solitary Black man running down the street, echoing Ahmaud Arbery鈥檚 fatal jog. It returns to the scene again, interspersed between scenes of young boys playing, families celebrating, protest in the streets, and images of those lost to police violence.

鈥淕eorge Floyd is not new. Trayvon Martin is not new. Eric Garner is not new. Breonna Taylor is not new,鈥 Smith said in an interview by phone from his home in Austin, where he鈥檚 an Associate Professor in the Radio-Television-Film department at the University of Texas-Austin.

鈥溾橠ear Bruh,鈥欌 said Smith, 鈥渋s my way of鈥iving voice to all of these men who have been murdered in this way, and then also, you know, to just rewrite this real negative narrative that you have of Black men in the media. Even though we suffer through a lot of these heinous and atrocious crimes, we still find joy. Joy in our families, joy in our jobs. Joy in having brotherhood with each other.鈥

The juxtaposition of the joyous images in the short with Smith's poetry, narrated by different voices  鈥 鈥淵ou were never allowed to be a boy, were you? You were a threat from conception鈥 鈥 lays bare the way society places Black men and women in a box that鈥檚 all too often labeled 鈥渢hreat鈥 rather than 鈥渙pportunity.鈥 It鈥檚 a situation that Smith found himself in a year ago, as a father.

鈥淲e had an issue with the UT daycare where my son was being profiled,鈥 Smith said, the frustration palpable. 鈥淢y son was being singled out, being accused of being violent. This (was) a 3-year-old! Can you only imagine? We are stamped from the beginning as threats.鈥

This kind of early profiling snowballs into a view of Black people as 鈥渙thers,鈥 said Smith. Referring to the book 鈥淪tamped From the Beginning,鈥 Smith explained, 鈥淎s long as you see me as a threat, as long as you see me as violent, as long as you see me as someone to be feared, you can never fully see me as human. And it is the dehumanization of Black people that allows for them to be murdered. With a knee to their neck, for nine minutes, being video recorded, while people stand by and plea for a cop to get up.鈥

Although 鈥淒ear Bruh鈥 ends with scenes of chaos in the streets following George Floyd鈥檚 death, and an indictment of the United States鈥 racism by James Baldwin, Smith says he has reason for hope.

鈥淧art of me believes this is a transformational moment,鈥 Smith said. 鈥淒onald Trump, Coronavirus, and George Floyd, they all had to happen right now in order for this movement (to happen).鈥

Smith explained the unique combination of rhetoric from the Trump campaign, along with everyone consuming more media than ever during the pandemic, and finally Floyd鈥檚 death, brought things to a head.

鈥淎merica is finally sort of awakening to its original sin,鈥 Smith said. 鈥淭hey are able to admit that Confederate statues should not be there. They are able to admit that there needs to be a rewriting, right? Of literal laws that have in many ways 鈥榦thered鈥 the Black body. We need to see more Black people in places of power. However, the cynical part of me says that if we don鈥檛 keep pushing, if we don鈥檛 keep asking鈥 or really dismantle the system and erect another one in its place, then we will find ourselves right back here next year.鈥

The secondary title of 鈥淒ear Bruh鈥 is 鈥淎 Eulogy. A Baptism. A Call To Action,鈥 and Smith said this time offers an opportunity for white Americans to ask themselves some tough questions, and eventually come out on the other side a more powerful ally.

鈥淚t is not until you baptize yourself and really allow yourself to stick with those images, to sit with your history, to admit that there might have been a KKK Grand Wizard in your family, to accept that there is a slave owner, master, overseer in your lineage, to accept that you have in many ways benefitted from an institution or system that has disenfranchised Black people. That鈥檚 some hard, deep, spiritual work that white America has to do. And I think once we do that work, and we understand how we鈥檝e acted in racist ways, then that鈥檚 when we wake up.鈥

Copyright 2020 Texas Public Radio. To see more, visit .

Nathan has been with TPR since 1995, when he began working on classical music station KPAC 88.3 FM, as host of 鈥淭uesday Night at the Opera.鈥 He soon learned the ropes on KSTX 89.1 FM, and volunteered to work practically any shift that came his way, on either station. He worked in nearly every capacity on the radio before moving into Community Engagement, Marketing, and Digital Media. His reporting and criticism has been honored by the Houston Press Club and Texas Associated Press.