Interviews

Meet Daryl Davis, the Black Musician Who Makes Klansmen See That Black Lives Matter

Published by
Greg Gilman

He doesn’t like the answers, but resists getting offended or interjecting, because he believes that typical reaction is a non-starter. “That’s what they expect,” he explains. “They’re used to that pushback, so their wall is already up.”

His proven strategy: Listen patiently to ridiculous racial prejudices and stereotypes, and once the racist person is finished speaking, politely counter the logical fallacies with the truth. He’s seen it time and time again. Once he grants people a platform to express themselves — in front of a black man, no less — their walls fall, and the stubborn white supremacists are willing to return the favor of listening.

“That is my opportunity to plant a seed over on their side of the wall,” he says. “And the next time I see them, I water that seed with more nutrients.” Although he’s frequently credited in the media for converting or reforming racists, Davis doesn’t see it that way. “I don’t like to say that I convert people … I am the impetus for over 200 white supremacist to leave that ideology, but they converted themselves. It’s always better when someone comes to their own conclusion.”

In his living room, Daryl Davis holds up a KKK flag from his personal collection of Klan memorabilia that former Klansmen have handed over to him. Photo by Sam Gezari.

Accidental Courtesy director Matthew Ornstein learned of Davis while reading a European publication overseas, and the filmmaker was immediately drawn to his unique process of fighting racial inequality.

“It’s the original sin of America that we’ve never fully copped to,” Ornstein tells MovieMaker. “We’re hundreds of years into this debate, and to see someone going about it in a new way, like, to see a move that I hadn’t seen before, I was just very struck. I wanted to know what motivated him to do this differently than everyone else was doing it.”

“In my mind, it was like, if we don’t get on this, someone else is going to immediately. This is such a great story,” says the white, Jewish, California native. “And I think the tragedy of that is, that is still not necessarily true. I don’t know if anyone else was beating down the door to get it.”

Perhaps not documentary filmmakers. But news media and talk shows have long been fascinated by Davis. His radical approach — extending compassion, love, understanding and friendship to those that would gleefully persecute him — caught the attention of CNN and Geraldo Rivera’s daytime talk show in the ’90s. He has since appeared on New Day, NPR, Real Time with Bill Maher, and The Joe Rogan Experience, and has given an acclaimed TED Talk, with 7.2 million YouTube views to date.

Continue for more on Daryl Davis and the documentary Accidental Courtesy: Daryl Davis, Race & America.

Pages: 1 2 3

Page: 1 2 3

Greg Gilman

View Comments

Recent Posts

  • Movie News

The 11 Best Cocky Blond Guys in ’80s Movies

Cocky blond guys are a staple of '80s movies. Here are 11 of our favorites.

2 days ago
  • Movie News

Kevin Spacey Calls New Spacey Unmasked Doc ‘One-Sided,’ ‘Desperate Attempt for Ratings’

Kevin Spacey says a new documentary featuring previously unseen interviews about his conduct is a…

2 days ago
  • Movie News

Emily the Criminal Series in the Works, Aubrey Plaza to Executive Produce

An Emily the Criminal series is being adapted based on the 2022 movie, with Aubrey…

2 days ago
  • Movie News

Fall Guy Director David Leitch on Why Stunt Performers Make Good Filmmakers

Jackie Chan. Charlie Chaplin. Pierre Étaix. Jerry Lewis. Each actor created a blueprint for filming…

3 days ago
  • Gallery

11 Bad Sequels Nobody Needs to See

These bad sequels were made for no reason except to make money. And some of…

3 days ago
  • Movie News

Study: Movie Sex Down 40% Since 2000

A new study has found that there is a lot less movie sex today than…

3 days ago