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Chris Rock: You know whats so sad, man? You know whats wild? Martin Luther King stood for nonviolence. Now whats Martin Luther King? A street. And I dont give a f*** where you at in America, If you on Martin Luther King Boulevard theres some violence going down. Gene: That, of course, is Chris Rocks famous joke about streets named for Martin Luther King Jr., which tend to be in -- lets say distressed areas. And hes not wrong, because if you look at the way housing segregation works in America you can see how things ended up this way. Once you see it, you wont be able to unsee it. OK, lets look at MLK Boulevard in Baltimore. I want to show you how to see housing segregation in schools, in health, in family wealth, in policing. But first, an explanatory comma. Its the 1930s in the wake of the Great Depression. FDR is president. He wants to bring economic relief to millions of Americans through a collection of federal programs and projects called The New Deal. One part of that