• last month
America’s public school system is in crisis. Enrollment has plummeted since the pandemic, with one million families opting for private schools or homeschooling. The result? School closures across the country, have a disproportionate impact on Black and Latino communities. ProPublica reporter Alec MacGillis joins Hari to discuss his latest article for The New Yorker: “The Death of School 10.”

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00:00Hello, everyone, and welcome to Amman Foreign Company. Here's what's coming up.
00:09Israel strikes a safe zone in Gaza, killing dozens. The IDF says they were targeting Hamas.
00:16We bring you the latest from the region.
00:18And with no end in sight to this war and hostages still in Gaza, I'm joined by Israeli opposition
00:25leader Yair Golan.
00:27Then.
00:28Their deal is simple. Fight, survive, and become free men.
00:32Convicts fighting for their country. A front-line report on the Ukrainian prisoner battalion
00:37in Pokrovsk.
00:38Plus.
00:39It all feels a little traumatic for an accidental drowning.
00:43A murder mystery in high society America. Christiane's conversation with Oscar-winning
00:48filmmaker Suzanne Beer. On her new show, The Perfect Couple, starring Nicole Kidman.
00:55Also ahead.
00:56We've had this really unprecedented drop nationwide, about one million kids off the public school
01:01rolls.
01:02The death of school 10. Reporter Alec McGillis tells Hari Sreenivasan about how declining
01:07enrollment is threatening American public education.
01:26Amenpour & Company is made possible by the Anderson Family Endowment. Jim Atwood and
01:36Leslie Williams. Candace King Weir. The Sylvia A. and Simon B. Poyta Programming Endowment
01:43to Fight Anti-Semitism. The Family Foundation of Layla and Mickey Strauss. Mark J. Bleschner.
01:50The Philemon M. D'Agostino Foundation. Seton J. Melvin. The Peter G. Peterson and Joan
01:57Gantz Cooney Fund. Charles Rosenblum. Ku and Patricia Ewen. Committed to bridging cultural
02:04differences in our communities. Barbara Hope Zuckerberg. Jeffrey Katz and Beth Rogers.
02:11And by contributions to your PBS station from viewers like you. Thank you.
02:18Welcome to the program, everyone. I'm Bianna Golodryga in New York sitting in for Christiane
02:22Amenpour. Well, it's been more than 11 months since the brutal attack on Israel by Hamas
02:27on October 7th, and still the war grinds on. Health officials are counting the many dead
02:33after an Israeli strike on a designated humanitarian zone in southern Gaza. The Israeli military
02:38claims that it struck significant Hamas terrorists in a command and control center. Hamas denies
02:44placing fighters in the area. Meantime, living conditions within the enclave are intolerable.
02:50Communicable diseases spreading, including polio, as sanitary conditions collapse. Reports
02:55of wounds infested by maggots in Gaza hospitals are becoming almost routine. And still, more
03:02than 100 hostages remain in captivity. We begin our coverage of all of this with correspondent
03:08Matthew Chance for more on the Israeli strike on Gaza.
03:15As rescue workers scramble for survivors, eyewitnesses say the Israeli strikes targeted
03:20what was meant to be a safe zone in the southern Gaza Strip, ripping through tents and makeshift
03:26shelters, leaving deep craters. And dozens have killed and injured.
03:32They told us this area was safe, says this man. I swear the people here were just normal,
03:39he says, not fighters. By daylight, you can see the extent of the destruction. Israel's
03:46military says it conducted a precise strike on Hamas terrorists operating a command and
03:53control center inside this humanitarian zone. An IDF statement says prior to the strike,
04:00numerous steps were taken to mitigate the risk of harming civilians.
04:07But this was a heavily populated area, and civilians were caught up in the powerful blasts.
04:16This man says his two daughters were completely buried under the sand. Only one survived,
04:22he says. He says he found the body parts of his neighbors strewn around. This 12-year-old
04:28girl is nursing a broken shoulder, suffered when her tent collapsed, she says, trapping
04:34her and her mother inside. I was scared because the strikes were so close, she says.
04:44Israel accuses Hamas of using civilians as human shields and insists the Israeli military
04:50takes extensive measures to enable civilians in Gaza to avoid combat zones. But there's
04:57little real security in this brutal war. Matthew Chance reporting there from Tel Aviv.
05:06Also today, U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken called on Israeli security forces
05:10to make fundamental changes. His strongest statement yet in response to the killing of
05:15an American Turkish citizen on the West Bank. Meantime, inside Israel, the political situation
05:20is in turmoil. On October 7th, Eir Golan, a former major general in the IDF, saw a vacuum
05:27in leadership and took action. He put on his old army uniform and drove south to defend
05:32people there. Well now, as leader of a new center-left coalition party called the Democrats,
05:38he's trying to fill another vacuum. As war continues in Gaza and as tension ratchets
05:43up on the northern border and on the West Bank, he's working to unite the opposition
05:48to present a viable alternative to Netanyahu's government. Eir Golan, welcome to the program.
05:55As we've noted, that you are the chairman of the Democrats. That is a merger between
05:58Labor and Moretz. And this week, you called on leaders of the opposition to come together
06:04for, quote, immediate coordination on what you've called five burning issues. They include
06:09a hostage and ceasefire deal, an updated report on the IDF's ability to face an all-encompassing
06:15regional conflict into which you say Netanyahu is leading the country, and pushing for an
06:20inquiry into the October 7th attacks. How is that coming along?
06:26Well, unfortunately, up to now, we didn't manage to unify all our efforts in order to
06:36convince the public and convince the government and the coalition at the same time that this
06:42is the right time for new elections. I truly believe that in order to move in any positive
06:50direction concerning the future and the destiny of Israel, we need new elections as soon as
06:57possible.
06:59But new elections aren't set, as you know, until October 2026. You said in June on this
07:04very program that what would trigger new elections, what is required, is mass protests on a scale
07:11of one million people every single day. Since then, tragically, we have seen the brutal
07:17murder of six Israeli hostages really cripple the nation there, and a lot of more outrage
07:23specifically against this government, against Prime Minister Netanyahu, who many, including
07:28those in his defense establishment, have accused of trying to sabotage a hostage deal.
07:33We've seen a turnout of a few hundred thousand protesters, the largest we've seen since October
07:397th, but nowhere near the one million you say is required on a daily basis. So what
07:45is it that will get Israelis to that point, in your view?
07:52What we need to protest every day, all day. It's not enough to protest during weekends.
07:57It's not enough, you know, to do it here and there. It should be a constant pressure on
08:03the government. The government should be convinced that the best solution for them, the best
08:09political solution for them, is to conduct new elections as soon as possible.
08:15And yet they're not moving in that direction. In fact, it appears the Prime Minister has
08:21really-
08:22It's a struggle.
08:23It is a struggle, and I know it's one that you disagree on other opposition leaders with
08:29in terms of how to address. For example, Yair Lapid has even offered to give Prime Minister
08:34Netanyahu a lifeline in order to seal a hostage deal, if in case you do have far-right coalition
08:41members like Ben-Gvir and Smotrich leave, as they're threatening to do. You say that
08:47is counterproductive for Lapid to be offering a lifeline. What do you say to those who think
08:55that approach suggests you care more about getting Prime Minister Netanyahu out of office
09:01than by solidifying or coming much closer to a ceasefire deal?
09:07Well, I would say the following. We should not take any political consideration right
09:13now. It's much more about national considerations and moral considerations. We need to free
09:19all the hostages as soon as possible, because freeing the hostages, this is the, I would
09:27say, the beginning of a process of reaching a ceasefire in the south. By reaching a ceasefire
09:34in the south, we will be able to reach a ceasefire in the north. And by ending the
09:39war, we could start the most desirable process, the recovery of Israel. And therefore, I think
09:47that all opposition leaders need to understand that we need to unify all our efforts together
09:55and we need to work together and we need to coordinate all our measures in order to convince
10:03the public and convince the government that without new elections, we cannot save Israel
10:08out of this miserable situation we experience right now.
10:15As you know, early polling suggests that your party could win approximately 10 or 11 of
10:21the 120 Knesset seats. How do you explain that per this polling, Netanyahu would still
10:27be able to bring in about 22 seats, granted that's less than the 32 they have, but that's
10:33much more than you're expected or projected to bring in? After everything that the country
10:39has gone through this year, after the mass protests that we've seen, after the fact that
10:44100 Israelis still remain held hostage in Gaza, why is he able to hold such a high number
10:51of seats?
10:55I would say the following. First, the most important issue are the clusters, the clusters
11:01of parties, the one of the opposition and the one of the coalition, and no doubt, according
11:07to all polls since the war erupted, that the coalition has a very low number of seats in
11:18the next Knesset, according to the polls. So we need to change this government because
11:24this government has no legitimacy to keep its rule over Israel. The other part is the
11:32trauma. The Israeli public is under terrible trauma. Think about it. The scale of the Hamas
11:42attack on October 7, comparing to the Israeli people, you know, comparing to the event of
11:49the September 11th, is much, much bigger. So it's a different scale. So Israel is under
11:56terrible trauma, and people in time of trauma tend to adopt more, I would say, vigorous
12:05stance. And this is not exactly what we need right now. Right now, we need to keep thinking
12:13from our minds and our brains rather than from our stomach. And no doubt that the most
12:21desirable situation for Israel is to free all the hostages, because freeing all the
12:27hostages, that symbolizes the ability of the Israeli people to keep a sense of solidarity.
12:36And I think about the days after the war. And in order to recover, we need solidarity,
12:44a strong sense of solidarity. And there is no other thing, no other issue, like the hostages
12:51question, which symbolizes the importance of solidarity.
12:56That I have to tell you. I've been to Israel a number of times now since October 7. I've
13:01interviewed and gotten to know many of these families quite well. And that is the one constant
13:06I hear, that the country cannot properly heal until these hostages are all brought home.
13:13That is something that the majority of Israelis appear to be an alliance on.
13:17On the issue, though, on the issue, though, of change, where you seem to differ from at
13:22least the majority of Israelis is while they are open and perhaps most now would like to
13:29see a change at the top in leadership, the country, you know more than anyone, has shifted
13:36further to the right. You continue to remain steadfast in your view that the best way to
13:42Israel's security and the Palestinians is a separation, a divorce between the two, as
13:48many describe it, and a two-state solution.
13:51What do you say to Israelis who argue that leaving Gaza is what got Israel in this place
13:58to begin with on October 7th? And when you look at anybody that is likely seen as a replacement
14:05for Benjamin Netanyahu, it's not anyone on the center left. It's those who perhaps could
14:10be even further to the right than he is politically, namely Naftali Bennett.
14:15Well, I have to admit that I'm here and I'm ready to lead Israel if it's needed. And hopefully
14:23it will be needed. So there is an alternative. There is always an alternative. And I think
14:30what we need right now is to combine together, on the one hand, a strong sense of security
14:39and the willingness to implement all the military measures in order to keep the security of
14:47Israel. This is something we don't do right now in the north, for example. So concerning
14:53that, I'm much more aggressive comparing to the policy of this government. But on the
14:59other hand, we need to understand that without having some sort of international and regional
15:06measures in order to secure Israel, and especially concerning the rising threat from Iran, well,
15:14we cannot do it alone. So Israel needs to work with other forces in the region. Israel
15:22truly needs the backing of the West and especially the backing of the United States of America.
15:29And we cannot move forward in order to have these alliances without ending the war, without
15:37promising some sort of a positive future to our troubled region. And therefore, we need
15:46to work hand in hand with the Americans at least.
15:50You mentioned needing that alliance with the United States. And it is notable that you
15:54said you've had a much more hawkish view on the situation in the north. You served as
15:58commander of Israel's northern command. And you said this in an interview, quote, when
16:03it comes to the north, Israel should take a risk of having a much wider confrontation
16:07with Hezbollah. We have tens of thousands of Israelis living like refugees in their
16:10own country. This is the most devastating blow the Zionist project ever got. You know
16:15that that is not the position, at least not right now, of the U.S. government. I do want
16:20to ask you, though, where you are in agreement with the U.S. government, more so than the
16:25current administration under Prime Minister Netanyahu. And that is what the day after
16:30in Gaza will look like, because you said, yes, you do need to fight all militants there
16:35and build an alternative that includes working with the Palestinian Authority. That is something
16:41that Prime Minister Netanyahu has not signed off on. Why do you think that is vital?
16:49Because look at the Palestinian society. There are two basic elements, Hamas and the other
16:56organizations that are not willing to have any concession with Israel and want to destroy
17:03Israel, and the Palestinian Authority that in, well, at least formally support this two-state
17:10solution and practically work with Israel hand in hand for many, many years. So what
17:17is better for Israel, working with the one who want to kill us or working with some sort
17:24of separate element, although not Zionist in the Palestinian society? So I think the
17:31answer is quite clear. So therefore, in our region, you need to work with the people who
17:38are willing to work with you. And no doubt, from any perspective, national perspective,
17:46regional perspective and international perspective, we need to work hand in hand with the
17:52Palestinian Authority in order to stabilizing the situation and in order to secure the lives
17:58of Israeli citizens.
18:00We have about 30 seconds left. I do want to ask you whether or not you think the Secretary
18:04of State Blinken's criticism of how the IDF acted in shooting and killing a Turkish American
18:11citizen in the West Bank last week, he called it unacceptable. The IDF said that it's highly
18:17likely that this hit was indirect and unintentional. Your response?
18:23Well, I take the stand of the IDF and it's a very unfortunate event. And I feel, you
18:31know, much sorrow about events like that. But, you know, we are in a very complicated
18:37situation and therefore there is no other way but to fight terrorism inside the Gaza
18:43Strip and inside the Judea and Samaria. No other way.
18:47No doubt in a very complicated situation. I would bet that you would agree that 11
18:53months ago when you bravely went to go rescue your fellow Israeli citizens there after the
18:58worst attack on the country and its history, you didn't imagine that 11 months later we'd
19:04still be in this place.
19:07Pierre Golan, thank you so much for your time and for joining the program.
19:12Thank you. Thank you so much.
19:15Well, we turn now to another conflict that feels never-ending, and that is Russia's war
19:20on Ukraine. Overnight, Kiev carried out its biggest drone attack on Russia's capital to
19:25date, killing at least one woman, wrecking dozens of homes and forcing about 50 flights
19:30to be diverted from airports around Moscow. Russia says that its air defenses thwarted
19:35the attack, shooting down scores of drones. Meantime, Zelensky's troops remain under immense
19:40pressure around the eastern city of Pokrovsk. Correspondent Fred Pleitgen has a report from
19:45the front line where former prisoners are seizing their chance to become Ukrainian heroes.
19:51Ukrainian troops sweeping into a village on the eastern front. But these aren't career
19:56soldiers. They're ex-convicts who volunteered from prison, got some basic training and were
20:02thrust into battle.
20:04Vitaly, 41 years old, 10 years in jail for theft and violent assault, now assaulting
20:10Vladimir Putin's army.
20:26The ex-convicts are part of Ukraine's 59th Brigade. They're camped near the front line,
20:32more rudimentary, but a lot better than jail. Our conversations remain basic about survival
20:38or death.
20:46Many are dying here on both sides. The 59th Brigade gave us this video showing Russians
20:52fleeing a burning house as the ex-convicts attack. But Vitaly admits they are suffering
20:58casualties as well.
21:03Their deal is simple. Fight, survive and become free men.
21:25Company commander Alexander says his men performed some of the most dangerous assaults around
21:31here. Alexander was a jail warden and many of those here his inmates. He recruited them
21:38and says the traits that put them in jail now keep them alive.
21:52This unit is part of Ukraine's force defending the key logistic hub, Pokrovsk.
21:58Pokrovsk is now one of the main front line towns in the war in Ukraine. As you can see
22:02the streets here are virtually deserted. At the same time, the Russians are hitting this
22:06place with really heavy munitions. Everything from artillery shells to large rockets.
22:12After major advances, the Russians are knocking on the door here. Shells and rockets constantly
22:17impacting, especially in the evenings. And that's when the medics from the 68th Mountaineer
22:23Brigade start receiving most of the heavy casualties.
22:27They show us this video of a US-supplied Max Pro armor vehicle hit by a Russian drone.
22:33Two killed, four severely injured. Casualties Ukraine's military, already badly outmanned,
22:39cannot afford, the medic who goes by the call sign Barbarian tells me.
22:54And Russian drones are also lethal at night, so we leave Pokrovsk as darkness falls, Ukrainian
23:00troops heading towards the front, hoping to keep Putin's army away from this key city.
23:07Thanks to Fred for that report.
23:09We'll be back in a minute with more on the situation in Pokrovsk.
23:23We turn now to the not-so-perfect couple. Oscar-winning filmmaker Suzanne Beer is already
23:28known for directing hits like The Undoing, The Night Manager, and Bird Box. And now she's
23:33teamed up again with Nicole Kidman for a new Netflix series, The Perfect Couple.
23:42Is there something that you want to tell me?
23:44Tell me.
23:49This all feels a little traumatic for an accidental drowning.
23:54Why do you ask people to sign NDAs?
23:57Pardon?
23:58They're rich. Kill someone and get away with it, rich.
24:08Hello?
24:12I see you, bitch.
24:15Stop! Enough! Talk! This is vintage!
24:20Suzanne Beer joined Christiane on set in London just before the series dropped.
24:26Suzanne Beer, welcome to the program.
24:29So here is a really gripping murder mystery set in a high society, high class beach house,
24:36Nantucket, you know, the epitome of American upper class vacation. First of all, it's called
24:42A Perfect Couple. Why did you call it A Perfect Couple? What makes A Perfect Couple?
24:46Well, I think it's, this is kind of obviously not a perfect couple. It's very ironic and
24:55it's a kind of, it is a murder mystery and it is who did it, but it's also, it's got
25:01clear comedic aspects, which is also a little bit what drew me to it because all the characters,
25:08every single one of them is sort of a little bit of wonderful, but a little bit nothing
25:18isn't quite what it seems.
25:20Exactly. And honestly, I have, like many of the reviewers, seen a certain number, most
25:26of them, but you haven't dropped the last one to us. And it's actually edge of your
25:30seat stuff. And I'm probably stupid, but I can't figure it out. Or maybe it's a willing
25:35suspension of disbelief. I don't know. But it's fun as well, right? It's dark, but it's
25:41light and fun.
25:42It's sort of dark and it's undercurrent because it does have a, it does sort of suggest that
25:49maybe the upper class are not, the sort of entitlement is not all sympathetic and it's
25:55not all likable and is at times incredibly disrespectful to other people.
26:01But also not so good for them. You see some of the characters kind of dissatisfied, unmoored,
26:07unmotivated because of their privilege.
26:10Oh, because of the expectations they have because of their privilege. But essentially
26:18it is fun. I mean, essentially you are kind of enjoying that they are all at various times
26:26are frying a little bit. And I think at various times you do think maybe he or she did it.
26:33Yeah, yeah, yeah. I'm constantly thinking, I know, but let's go to almost one of the
26:37first scenes, if not the first scene in the first episode, and that is the wedding photo.
26:42It's the pre-wedding dinner and they're doing this video. So we're going to play it.
26:48We are so, so thrilled for both of you.
26:52To Benji and his beautiful bride.
26:55Mr. and Mrs. Winfrey, any words of wisdom for the bride and groom?
26:58Oh, come on. Yes.
26:59If you are half as lucky as your mother and I have been, you will have a very long and a very,
27:04very happy marriage. Cheers, we love you.
27:07We love you. We love you.
27:09The bride and groom. Happy wedding Eve.
27:12Hi! Happy wedding Eve.
27:14Happy wedding Eve. I love this woman to death.
27:18To death.
27:21To death, not such a subtle piece of dialogue.
27:25I want to ask you, because this is based on a series by the novelist Ellen Hildenbrand,
27:33bestselling author. For those who haven't read the book, first of all,
27:36do you think people need to read the book or do you think you'd like to give a little bit
27:40of a précis as to what the story is about?
27:43So here's the thing. I didn't purposely not read the book until a couple of weeks
27:48before we started shooting because I was so involved in the scripts.
27:52And I did assume that a lot of people who would be watching the show had not read the book.
27:58So I thought I better stay in that position.
28:01So I have those glasses on where I can assess whether things works without having read the book or not.
28:09And then I read the book.
28:11And what Ellen Hildenbrand does magnificently is that she's got so much texture into a society.
28:21She's got so much sort of that beachy, sort of presumably laid back, upper-classy American thing.
28:31I understood so much about that texture when I read the book.
28:35But I was also pleased that I not read it because the series are very different,
28:40although the soul of the book is very loyal to the actual core soul of the book.
28:47But the structure and storyline is very different.
28:52So we see they're the perfect couple because Nicole Kidman playing the author, wife, mother,
28:58married to Liev Schreiber, you think that they are the perfect couple until, well,
29:03sometimes you don't, but nonetheless, well, maybe they are.
29:08It's a mystery within a mystery.
29:10But I want to ask you, what was it like working with her again?
29:13And how come you keep choosing her to play these kind of murder mystery kind of roles?
29:18The last time was with The Undoing that you directed with Hugh Grant, which was hugely successful.
29:26Well, she's very enigmatic.
29:30And she has a kind of, you know, and I think Nicole, she's so enigmatic,
29:36and I think she probably has a secret she doesn't know herself.
29:39In real life?
29:41You know what I mean?
29:42She has this kind of, you know, she's got so many layers.
29:45But also, she's totally fearless.
29:48And she weirdly is devoid of vanity.
29:53You know, you have this amazingly, I mean, amazingly, stunningly beautiful woman
29:57where you kind of, you literally, you know, when I stand next to her, you know,
30:01I kind of reach her mid-waist.
30:04I kind of feel like I'm looking up to this sort of beautiful giraffe-like creature.
30:10But she doesn't care.
30:12She's much more of a tomboy than she is somebody who really cares about her looks.
30:19And I find that really interesting.
30:21And I find that kind of mix really fascinating.
30:25And so it doesn't, you don't, you don't kind of run out of interesting facets to her
30:32because it just seems endless.
30:34Now, all the women are actually interesting.
30:36The men are more kind of funny and a little bit weak, a little bit, I think, most of them.
30:43Some of them are quite funny.
30:45Some of them are angry.
30:46Some of them are wounded.
30:47But the women are really quite strong.
30:50And that's not an accident.
30:52The writer Jenna Lamere, she said the theme that emerged there was that powerful females
30:57don't have to be rivals.
30:59Powerful females can be allies.
31:01And as I say, you've got Nicole Kidman.
31:03You've got Eve Hewson.
31:05And you've got Dakota Fanning.
31:07And you've got a bunch of really important and beautiful young established women.
31:12Do you think they're allies, though, in this?
31:14When I watched the first, you know, the first five segments,
31:17they seem to be much more butting heads.
31:19A little bit towards the end, there was a little bit of sympathies shown between some of them.
31:25Look, I don't consider them allies in this.
31:28But I do think that they're very strong.
31:30And I do think that the men, I mean, part of what I thought was fun about this was that
31:35there is a kind of sense that the men are way weaker and the female are much stronger.
31:43And, you know, I'm going to be forever cancelled if I ask the question whether that possibly reflects real life.
31:52You're going to get cancelled.
31:54I will get cancelled, yeah.
31:56But...
31:58But does that interest you, the balance of power generally between the...
32:03Yes.
32:04Yes.
32:05I also think that part of the...
32:07I think part of that conflict is somehow an artificial conflict.
32:12And I think potentially these women could be allies.
32:16But you better finish the show.
32:18It's true.
32:19Potentially they could be.
32:20That's why I say it.
32:21You sort of creep up to a point where you think there's going to be some revelation
32:25or some sort of empathy, sympathy shown.
32:28And then they all sort of plunge back into their roles there.
32:32You said once, I do think moviemaking is about seduction.
32:38And I do think seduction will then allow me to emphasise things that I personally think are important.
32:43So what, in this case, were the important matters for you in this story?
32:49I think by doing something really sexy and delicious and fun and not homework-like at all,
32:58I do think that you could kind of sneak in, you know,
33:03a political commentary might be a bit pretentious to say in this context,
33:07but there is a sort of moral, social commentary in terms of the world of wealth,
33:16the sort of entitlement, the conceit that the rules don't apply to you
33:25just because you are wealthy and privileged.
33:28That whole thing I found important, interesting and worthwhile describing.
33:36And I'm more keen to describe it in a sort of lightweight manner than I am in a heavyweight
33:43because I actually think it works better.
33:45Can I ask you whether that may come from perhaps your own life, your own history?
33:52I mean, this is obviously all about WASP-y America, right? Couldn't be more WASP-y.
33:56You grew up an observant Jew in Denmark.
34:01What was your family's story before the war, during the war?
34:05Do you think that may have, you know,
34:08may influence some of what you find interesting in moviemaking today?
34:12For sure. For sure, my background and for sure, you know, I'm a second generation.
34:20You know, my father was stateless a big part of his life.
34:24For sure, that history has impacted what I want to tell.
34:29But I think also, also recognising that you don't necessarily tell important stuff
34:35by signalling this is important has also been really crucial to me
34:43because I do feel that a lot of the signalling this is important gets lost.
34:48And people think you're sort of bashing them over the head with some kind of cudgel.
34:52Yes, yes.
34:53Look, you've had incredibly successful movies.
34:55In 2011, A Better World won the Oscar and you came close to it another time, right?
35:02Before that.
35:03Before that, yeah.
35:04After the wedding.
35:05Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
35:06But Bird Box, which was hugely, hugely successful,
35:09deals with a mother trying to protect her children from a really calamitous external threat.
35:15Again, was that from your family experience?
35:17Did you draw upon anything in your own life for that?
35:20You know, I want to say everything I've done have dealt with families in one way or the other.
35:26Yeah.
35:27And for some reason, I always feel that families are who we are.
35:31Even if we, you know, even for people who have no contact with their families,
35:37it still defines them.
35:39And it has always interested me.
35:42And as you mentioned earlier, I think it has to do with my history.
35:46It has to do with my family history.
35:48And it has to do with, quite frankly, having an incredibly close relationship with my family.
35:54And so it's always on my mind and I think it's always part of who I am and what I want to do.
36:00So you must have been, I mean, chortling inside if you have such a close relationship
36:04and the perfect couple cast, the story, the family there is dysfunctional.
36:10That must have been interesting.
36:12It's a lot of fun.
36:13It's a lot of fun.
36:14And the weird thing is that you can look at your own family and you can look at ways of talking
36:21and then you can apply it to something which is very different.
36:24And it still has similarities.
36:28It's very, very interesting.
36:30Thank you very much for being with us.
36:32Thank you so much for having me.
36:35And all episodes of The Perfect Couple are now streaming on Netflix.
36:39Well, up next, America's public schools are facing a crisis.
36:42Since the pandemic, enrollment has plummeted,
36:45with around a million families opting for private schools or homeschooling.
36:49The result? Mass closures across the country.
36:52And according to our next guest, it's predominantly impacting Black and Latino communities.
36:57For Publica reporter Alec McGillis joins Hari Sreenivasan
37:01to discuss his latest article for The New Yorker,
37:04the depth of School 10 and the future of American public education.
37:09Thanks, Vianna. Alec McGillis, thanks so much for joining us.
37:11Your story focuses on School 10 in Rochester.
37:15First, for people who might not have read it, why School 10? Why Rochester?
37:19I wanted to look into this problem that I was hearing about,
37:22which is that public school enrollment around the country has plunged since the pandemic,
37:27down by about a million students nationwide.
37:30And this, of course, causes a challenge for cities
37:34that have lots of empty schools or under-enrolled schools.
37:37And I saw that Rochester, New York, was facing an especially stark example of this challenge.
37:44Huge drop in enrollment since the pandemic.
37:47They lost about 10% of their students since 2019.
37:51And as a result, we're having to think about closing a lot of schools
37:54and embarked on that process.
37:56We're basically already into this process that a lot of other cities around the country are going to be facing.
38:02And so I went to Rochester a couple times to report on what they were doing there
38:07and just how wrenching this process was going to be for this city
38:11and for other cities around the country as they face this deep drop in public school enrollment.
38:16So connect those dots for us.
38:18What was it that kind of precipitated the drop in enrollment
38:21and how does that affect the budget for the school closure?
38:26It's pretty straightforward.
38:27I mean, we closed the schools for a really long time in lots of cities,
38:31lots of districts around this country.
38:33And many cities' schools stayed closed for in-person learning for a year and a half
38:39all the way until September of 21.
38:42And so you just had a lot of families that chose to leave the public schools during that period.
38:47They left for private schools, parochial schools, many of which had stayed open for most of the pandemic.
38:54They left for homeschooling.
38:56And then even after schools reopened, many of these districts,
39:01when some families came back, when some kids came back,
39:04they found that things were so unruly.
39:06A lot of schools were really wrestling with very kind of just kind of crazy behaviors in classrooms,
39:13kids coming back after being away for so long, being kind of unsocialized.
39:17So a lot of families made the decision at that point
39:20that they were going to move their kids out of the public schools.
39:23And so we've had this really unprecedented drop nationwide,
39:26about one million kids off of the public school rolls.
39:29And that very naturally leads many cities with more space, more staff, more buildings than they need.
39:37And they're now then having to consider this really, really difficult upheaval
39:42that's involved in closing schools in certain neighborhoods.
39:46So if Rochester is not alone, if this is part of a national trend of public school enrollment decline,
39:53does that mean that we are likely to see in other cities what is happening in Rochester,
39:59this kind of belt tightening where if you've got this building costs and if you've got the teacher costs,
40:05but you don't have the student sort of checks that come in with them, you're going to have to do this?
40:10Absolutely. And my article mentioned some other cities that are also embarking on this.
40:15And it's actually not just cities that we think of as being very heavily sort of disadvantaged cities,
40:21like Rochester, New York, even sort of wealthier cities are going through this,
40:25because really you saw wherever schools stayed closed for a very long time,
40:30you're seeing this challenge being especially acute.
40:33Seattle is facing the closure of many of its elementary schools.
40:37Ann Arbor, Michigan, a quite wealthy city, is facing a huge budget deficit
40:42as a result of having lost about a thousand students there.
40:45Columbus, Ohio, is looking to close a lot of schools.
40:49Santa Clara, California and Silicon Valley, they faced a huge drop in enrollment.
40:54This is happening in lots of places, but especially in the sort of blue cities
41:00and counties that had their schools closed, especially long during the pandemic.
41:07Okay, so if the schools are having to be closed,
41:11is there a pattern about what type of schools get closed more often
41:16or what the student population is of these schools that are most impacted?
41:21Yes, unfortunately there is.
41:23To the extent that the closures were especially long in many cities,
41:28many heavily black and brown and low-income cities, low-income districts,
41:35and it's those districts that are now having to close schools,
41:39you're seeing, because of this enrollment decline,
41:41you're seeing a disproportionate effect in those communities.
41:45And then on top of that, there's research that is showing,
41:48even in prior years, when districts set out to close schools
41:52because of under-enrollment, that seems to fall disproportionately heavily
41:57on black and brown majority schools, even beyond what one would expect
42:02from the enrollment numbers and the school performance numbers.
42:06It just seems to, unfortunately, kind of cut that way.
42:09There seems to be a bias, really, in the way that districts end up closing schools.
42:15And the research also shows, unfortunately, that kids whose schools have been closed
42:19who have to move to other schools, that that has a consequence,
42:22a lasting consequence on their academic performance.
42:26That doesn't mean it's a mistake to close the schools.
42:28In many cases, it's unavoidable.
42:30If your numbers get so low, it's really hard to justify keeping schools open.
42:34But it does have a lasting consequence on the kids whose schools have been closed.
42:40You take the reader through this story with the help of a couple of characters.
42:46One is a mom who just sounds amazing, Janice Kapoor.
42:51Tell us a little bit about her.
42:53Yeah, I decided to focus on Janice because she was just especially committed
42:58to trying to keep her school open.
43:00It's a school called School 10.
43:02It's in a really quite lovely sort of working class, middle class,
43:07majority black neighborhood in southwest Rochester.
43:10The school's been around for a long time.
43:12It's a beautiful old school built way back in 1916.
43:16And the community feels very attached to it.
43:19It seemed to be a very warm, welcoming kind of school.
43:23It has had challenges with test scores like many schools in Rochester,
43:27but it's really quite a beloved school.
43:29So when it ended up on the list to be closed, there was a real uproar.
43:34Janice, who's on the PTA there, leads the PTA there,
43:38became very engaged in trying to save the school.
43:42It was all the more painful in a sense because the school was not,
43:46the building was not going to be closed.
43:48School 10 was going to be shut down and all the kids there were going to be dispersed,
43:52but the building was still going to be used for a public Montessori program
43:56that had somewhat different demographics than School 10.
44:00And so it was very painful, and Janice was engaged for months
44:04in trying to keep the school open and then was not able to.
44:07And she was very eloquent in talking about just how wrenching
44:13this kind of process is for families like hers.
44:16You know, what's interesting is that even if this school that you're writing about
44:20didn't kind of measure up on test scores or whatever it is,
44:24the kind of different thresholds were,
44:26it seems that there was a sense of community here,
44:30that people still, that a school did bring these families together.
44:35Yeah, it really was. It was so clear.
44:37I spent the last couple of days of the school year there in late June
44:42and got to see various end-of-year ceremonies that they were holding,
44:46and it was so poignant and really affecting to see
44:50just how strongly students, kids, and their families
44:54were reacting to the end of this particular school.
44:58They had a big ceremony in the gym auditorium
45:02where the principal was calling up every single educator in school,
45:07every teacher, every aide, every staffer by name.
45:11And you could see the kids just shrieking with joy and gratitude
45:16for their teachers.
45:18You could sort of tell, of course, which ones were the most beloved
45:21by the decibel of the shrieks.
45:23And it was just a reminder that even a school like this
45:26that had by some metrics subpar scores
45:30was still a beloved place and was an important,
45:33very important institution in this community,
45:36and that was now going to be lost,
45:38just as it's going to be lost in so many of the other places
45:42around the country that are going to be having to close doors.
45:45I also wanted to highlight, I think the parent's name was Chrissy Miller,
45:49who is a parent of a special-needs child.
45:52What happens to kids like hers?
45:54Yeah, this is this especially wrenching aspect to this.
45:57You have cities like Rochester that have, over the years,
46:01as their enrollment has declined, even before the pandemic,
46:05enrollment was declining in Rochester,
46:07though not at the same speed as we've seen recently.
46:10In these districts, you see a lot of families leaving for the suburbs,
46:13families leaving for charter schools.
46:16In the district, the kids that remain in the district
46:19are very disproportionately have special-needs designations.
46:24So you just have a very high special-needs population.
46:27And for these kids, these closures were especially painful, difficult,
46:32because they're so used to their routines are so important to them.
46:37The stability, the reliability of both their educators
46:41and their fellow classmates means so much to them.
46:45And so there was this real plea coming out from those parents in Rochester
46:49to as much as possible keep the kids and their educators together
46:53as the school where many of them were going was being shut down.
46:58And it was just very hard for the district to actually do that
47:01when it came time to make assignments.
47:03So, in fact, I think a lot of those parents are just going to leave
47:06for homeschooling or maybe move elsewhere.
47:08And that's simply going to further exacerbate
47:11the falling enrollment in a city like Rochester.
47:14You write about a program that Rochester has,
47:17what, the Urban Suburban Program.
47:19Is that unique?
47:20I mean, and is that contributing to almost kind of urban flight?
47:24Yeah, urban flight.
47:25Rochester has, years ago, they set up this program
47:28that was intended to kind of increase movement between the suburbs
47:32and the city so it's easier to kind of move across lines.
47:36Over the years, not surprisingly, most of the movement has gone to the suburbs
47:41where kids in the city can apply to go to suburban schools
47:45and suburban schools can kind of pick and choose who they want to take.
47:50And that has had predictable effects of kind of pulling
47:54some of the most engaged families out of the city schools.
47:57There are similar programs in some other cities.
48:00And so you've had these dynamics that have been going on for some time now
48:04that have made things tough for urban schools.
48:06The fact is that now the pandemic closures and the consequences of that
48:10and enrollment have just kind of just wildly exacerbated
48:15this preexisting trend.
48:17And it gets to the point in some cities where you really start
48:19to wonder, is this institution going to survive?
48:22Rochester now, well more, fewer than half of kids born in Rochester
48:28are expected to be attending the district schools.
48:32And you just wonder at what point does a system get so small
48:36that it's hard to almost sustain itself?
48:38There's a study out by a group called Learning Council
48:41that predicted public education is set to lose 16 million enrollments by 2030.
48:48I mean, that's just six years away.
48:50And it says by that time, public schooling is predicted to be
48:54at or just above 50% of the market.
48:58Where are the growth rates here?
49:01Is it automatically going from public school to private school?
49:06Or how much is homeschooling increasing?
49:09It's really both of those.
49:10So you've had a huge boom in homeschooling since the start of the pandemic.
49:16And the concern there, of course, is that in so many states,
49:19it's very, very unregulated.
49:21And so in some families, homeschooling can be a very serious,
49:26substantive thing where the family really commits itself,
49:29and they decide that it makes sense for their children.
49:33In other cases, unfortunately, homeschooling can really look
49:38not all that much different than truancy, where there's just not a lot
49:42going on in that home.
49:44And we have very little way of knowing in many states what's actually happening.
49:48Private schools are also seeing a big boom in many states,
49:51partly because of this massive expansion in private school vouchers
49:55that we're seeing in many mostly red and purple states,
49:59where vouchers have now become essentially universal.
50:03It used to be that they were targeted only toward lower-income kids
50:07and disadvantaged school districts.
50:09Now they're available in about a dozen states.
50:11They're available to any family, regardless of income,
50:13regardless of where they are in the state.
50:16How much does politics play into all of this?
50:19I mean, look, we're having this conversation in a heated election cycle,
50:23even though the former president has kind of distanced himself
50:25from Project 2025.
50:27I mean, one of the plans that the Heritage Foundation laid out
50:30was really an evisceration of the Department of Education,
50:33which has been a goal for a lot of conservatives for a long time.
50:37But, I mean, that said, most of the funding for schools
50:42comes at the state and local level, right?
50:45You know, some of the Heritage Foundation plans,
50:47the Project 2025 plans for education could have some real impact.
50:51There's plenty of funding that comes from the feds to schools,
50:55especially money that's intended for lower-income schools.
50:59But most of the education funding and policy setting in this country
51:03happens at the state and local level.
51:06That's why you're seeing what you're seeing around the country now,
51:09where you have the enrollment drops, especially in states
51:13that kept their schools closed a long time.
51:16Meanwhile, you've got the voucher money flowing in states
51:19that haven't suspended those programs.
51:22That's really where the real action is at the state and local level.
51:28And this enrollment decline, to be clear, is happening most of all
51:31in the blue states that kept schools closed for so long.
51:36That's what's happening here with this particular dynamic.
51:40It's not really something that's—
51:42ironically, it's not being driven by the conservative think tanks
51:45who have been hoping to undermine public schools for years.
51:48It really, in some sense, happened at the volition
51:51of the blue states and cities themselves.
51:54So how do you—you know, you've talked to a lot of these parents.
51:57Is there a way to stop this kind of spiral?
52:00Absolutely. This is kind of the spiral, the tipping point
52:04that this article is warning about happening in cities like this
52:08and many others around the country.
52:10And I think to stop that, it's really to arrest that cycle.
52:14It's going to take a real recognition by people who believe in public schools,
52:18who believe they're an important institution,
52:20a foundational institution in our country,
52:22to recognize the extent of the crisis right now,
52:26to recognize what happened coming out of the pandemic,
52:29and to be honest about that and to really somehow just confront it directly
52:36and try to at least slow or even possibly reverse some of these trends
52:43because there really is the chance of that kind of a spiral.
52:48I wonder how much of this is also an issue of public perception.
52:53I mean, there was a study out by Pew that essentially showed
52:59just over half of people don't have as much faith
53:04in the institution of K-12 education,
53:07and it's more on the Republican side than it is on the Democratic side.
53:10But how do you kind of rebuild that trust?
53:13It's really difficult, and it is—you know, it's something that I—
53:19I spoke about this with Randy Weingarten,
53:21the head of the American Federation of Teachers, back in September of 2020
53:26when I was reporting on the school closures
53:28and when it was becoming clear that the schools were not going to be
53:30reopening that fall in many districts around the country,
53:34especially in heavily Democratic areas.
53:36And I just put the question to her, you know,
53:39are you worried as someone who cares a lot about the public schools,
53:43as someone who's—all your—the educators who are in your union,
53:48and their jobs depend on this institution,
53:51are you worried that a lot of families are not going to come back
53:55and that you're also going to lose support from taxpayers
53:59after these extended closures?
54:01And she expressed confidence that that would not happen,
54:05that it was just so clear that public schools are such an important part
54:08of our country, of our communities,
54:12that they would inevitably survive this hiatus.
54:16And I think what we're seeing now is that—
54:20that that may have proved over-optimistic.
54:24Senior reporter for ProPublica, Alec MacGillis,
54:27thanks so much for joining us.
54:29And finally, remembering a giant of the stage and screen.
54:34Everything the light touches is our kingdom.
54:38Wow.
54:40That is the voice of iconic actor James Earl Jones,
54:44who died on Monday at the age of 93.
54:46From Mufasa and the Lion King to Darth Vader and Star Wars movies,
54:50he is known for voicing some legendary characters.
54:53And some audiences might also recognize him
54:56as the man behind these iconic three words.
55:00This is CNN.
55:05Well, now we'll end on a reflection from the actor himself,
55:08just after he had won the Honorary Lifetime Achievement Award
55:12at the 2011 Oscars.
55:14I read something in this morning's paper about someone wishing to—
55:19not being able to change someone's mind in the world,
55:23to change their hearts.
55:24And I think that's the only thing
55:26when an actor looks out over the political landscape
55:29that he can hope for.
55:31But you've got to really focus on that,
55:34not the polemics of stories,
55:36but the heartbeat of the stories, you know.
55:39And hope to connect with the heartbeat of the audience.
55:42Thank you for watching Amman Foreign Company on PBS.
55:45Join us again tomorrow night.

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