Miami:
Reflections on the River - Premieres Thursday,
October 18 at 10:00pm
The journey begins at the mouth of the Miami River
and travels upstream to what were once the original headwaters at
the edge of the Everglades. From what was a tiny WWI airfield, the
film flies back to the mouth of the river for an aerial view of the
21st Century city the river helped to build. The story of the City
of Miami is the
story of the Miami River.
The river divides Miami’s poorest
neighborhoods from its wealthiest. The river's currents have carried
Seminoles to trading posts and settlers up-stream to explore and
conquer the Everglades, and build Miami. Its waters have carried
the boats of fleeing Cuban refugees and harbored Miami’s fishing,
shrimp and sponge fleets. The freighters that heave-to along its
banks have helped build Miami’s
international commerce. Its coal black waters have floated secret
CIA operatives and drug boats. Its banks have teemed alternately
with the dispossessed and the wealthy. Archeologists studying early
civilizations have found that the water's shores are some of the
most productive in the nation.
Miami: Reflections on the
River is an original
WPBT half-hour documentary that explores the
Miami River as Miami’s benefactor and historian. Through high
definition and archival footage and photos and interviews with the “old
timers,” the program traces the history of the river –
from its mouth at Biscayne Bay upstream to its origins in the Everglades.
The story is told by long-time residents along the river, along
with archaeologists and historians. In a lyrical narrative, the film
shares impressions of the past to uncover imprints remaining today.
The film winds upriver with a tugboat captain to
find a vanishing way of life, and discovers how refugees brought their
fishing lifestyle to Miami to turn the waters into a “working
river.” Huge freighters negotiate the narrow waterway, touching
on the economy of the river as the fourth largest port for goods in
Florida.
Today,
Miami continues to reinvent itself as skyscrapers tower above the
footprints of the original Tequesta Indians and trading posts.
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