Let them Eat Cupcakes [Q&A with Priced Out Director Cornelius Swart]

rent control, gentrification, oregon, portland, displacement, landlords, rent

[ The following is a reposting of a Q&A that Real Estate Investment Agent Ru Budhi did in the middle of 2018. The interview was intended for a yearly publication that goes out every year to Oregon’s biggest landlords. Not surprisingly, the editors took a pass. The interview was recently posted on Budhi’s LinkedIn page. More on Budhi and what he does on the Dec 14 Priced Out Podcast.]

By Ru Budhi

“Landlords were feeling pretty good right up until the French Revolution.” –Cornelius Swart, filmmaker

On a glaring afternoon in 2018, during the first week of summer, I was at a yacht party in Hardtack lagoon, Ross Island. One of the young local apartment brokers acquired the luxury boat after an exceptionally strong prior year, perhaps as a testament to his bullish outlook for the market, despite being in year ten, of a ten-year recession cycle. The dream of the ‘90s might be alive in Portland, but on this nautical symbol of power, it was back to the excesses of the ‘80s. Reminiscent of the movie “Wall Street,” one vignette I distinctly recall was when a Talking Heads song played as manicured young women in bikinis stood around holding cocktails, seemingly blasé about their surroundings. They were apparently used to such lavishness, in a liberal city where Ivanka avant-garde is trumped by gently used clothing and flannel.

Of course, I was impressed not only since I have never been to a yacht party before, but also because its owner was optimistic enough to buy such a potential liability. Double anchored and secured, everyone onboard were, at least at that moment, ignorant of the many Portlanders who have a hard time keeping their heads above water. More importantly, those unfortunate people were unaware of our blessings, since we did not want to incite another activist hosted, Ira Virden spoof awards ceremony. Because of the increasing wealth gap in our country, the current American zeitgeist is that greed is bad, and anyone who wants to maximize profits does so at the expense of others. To many Portlanders, a rising tide sinks tethered boats.

The latest census shows that although Stumptown’s growth from July 2017 to July 2018 slowed to approximately 578 new residents per week from 769 just a year prior, the population is still expanding and concentrating its wealthier citizens closer toward downtown. As supply of the most desirable properties become scarce, formerly blighted neighborhoods near the urban core begin attracting those with greater means, and subsequently displacing those who cannot afford the rising rents. This process is called gentrification, where the renovating of a deteriorated urban neighborhood occurs because of the influx of more affluent residents.

To multifamily real estate investors, an area becoming wealthier means higher net operating incomes and increased property values. To longtime residents, however, rising costs mean many of them being uprooted from ancestral homes, churches, schools, and social networks; the dissolution of their community. The answer to whether gentrification is a good thing should seem obvious, since how can lowering the crime rate, improving services, and providing greater access to nutritious food ever be considered negative? It depends on the lens it is viewed through, of course, since to residents who distrust the police, and to those who cannot afford high-end groceries from New Seasons, yoga sessions from Namaste, tidbits from Tasty n Sons, and expensive treats from Saint Cupcake, there is seemingly no benefit to having such bourgeoisie elements nearby. To them, the installation of a Trader Joe’s and designated bike lanes only spell imminent rent increases that they will not be able to afford.

To better understand how more and more Portlanders feel about gentrification, and how multifamily investors can further avoid rent stabilization statutes, we turn to local filmmaker Cornelius Swart, who recently released the movie “Priced Out.” It focuses largely on the city’s north and northeast Black community that is experiencing a modern-day diaspora to the east and beyond, due to the outpacing of their incomes by rising costs in their historically minority neighborhood. Because African-Americans in Portland tend to occupy the lowest socioeconomic level, they are the canary in the mine of our housing market; experiencing the negative effects of price increases long before the majority even notices. Consequently, it is important to see how their community behaves, since their actions in pushing back against the housing industry are leading indicators for how many of the renters may also react.

After watching a screening of his new documentary, Cornelius met me for tea at the New Seasons Market on the former food desert, North Williams Avenue, to discuss how we can help landlords see that what is displacing Albina’s Black community, can ultimately also displace a significant percentage of the majority population. Once that occurs, more and more pressure will be put on politicians to institute rent control. In our modern age, social media and activism are the pitchforks and torches of the villagers, and we can see from recent guillotinings of landlord rights, that the proletariat housing revolution has begun.

So, who is Cornelius Swart, and why should we listen to him? Well, as Sun Tzu wrote in the Art of War, if you know the enemy and know yourself, you need not fear the result of a hundred battles. Those seeking to slow or reverse rent control, therefore, must understand the perspective of those fighting for it. With that said, it is important to know that Cornelius is not simply a Westcoast version of Michael Moore. For one, while Michael is largely a self-taught filmmaker, Cornelius was formally instructed at NYU’s Tisch School. Cornelius also seems more pragmatic than socialistic, but with his dark beard, black nylon glasses and hipster style, it is easy to dismiss him as just another SJW, a Social Justice Warrior who by virtue of a relatively privileged upbringing, blindly promotes socially progressive views, including feminism, civil rights, multiculturalism, and identity politics. But looks are often deceiving, especially in Portland, where rich guys sometimes drive old VW Bugs with smiley faces. Beyond driving an unpretentious vehicle (in his case, a 2002 pickup), he has more in common with Joe Weston than with Chloe Eudaly, since Cornelius also currently owns rental properties, including a commercial space leased by Wells Fargo. Originally from New Jersey, he got his start in commercial real estate when his property manager father taught him how to turn over apartment units, collect rents and serve evictions. They would later become business partners on a 26-unit Hackensack multifamily building, since Cornelius believes in profiting from real estate. Politically, he even calls himself a centrist, which is PDX vernacular for de facto Republican.

He would later become a Portlander, much like how many east coast guys do… boy meets local girl, boy loses local girl, boy stays for the craft beer. In 1995, he and his partner at the time, have a daughter in Northeast Portland, which planted his roots in the area as deeply as Willamette Valley grapes do. Two years after that, he collaborates with a fellow filmmaker after noticing the rapid gentrification occurring on Alberta Street. They make a feature film about the topic called “Northeast Passage: The Inner City and the American Dream,” which will eventually serve as the prequel to Cornelius’s current movie, “Priced Out” (www.pricedoutmovie.com). He has been reporting on gentrification for over 20 years through various outlets including two documentaries, the Oregonian, KGW News, and his own newspaper, the Portland Sentinel. The questions below pertain to his new movie, as well as our conversation. After each response, I provide a takeaway message for those investing in multifamily properties.

What do you mean by “communities are not commodities”?

Cornelius Swart: They are not numbers. They are social entities and need to be accorded some respect and forbearance. They cannot be reduced entirely to numbers. The film is about the pain people feel from losing their community to gentrification. Communities are not made up of widgets, they are made of human souls. How much do you want for your grandmother, I will pay you cash? She’s worth about $80 in chemicals. That sort of mindset applied to whole communities has its limits. To make decisions considering nothing but the numbers on your spreadsheet is a net harmful practice when markets become as overheated as they are now. We need to operate in a mindset of reasonable returns rather than maximizing profits. If we do the latter, there are no social benefits that trickle down to a community. And if there is no consideration to the negative impact landlords might have on a community, then there is no reason communities should not band together and consider landlords a social ill, rather than a social good. Ultimately, you reap what you sow. If you sow nihilism against a community, you will get it back in spades.

Message #1: If tenants believe that a landlord only cares about making money, then they will ultimately get together and see that landlord as their enemy. Treat tenants like valued customers, and not simply replaceable parts of a money-making machine.

Your movie focuses mainly on the fate of African-Americans. So why would Portland landlords, who are predominantly White, and a lesser degree Asian, care about preserving the historic north and northeast Black community?

Cornelius: I am not sure that anyone can make decisions on behalf of an ethnic community that they are not members of. I think it’s more about just acknowledging if a given area has a history and ethnic tradition that should be factored into one’s decisions. In our actions, we always have rights and responsibilities. Rights exercised without forbearance is exploitation. So, we exercise our rights and uphold the burden of our responsibilities at the same time. What responsibilities we have to a given community is determined largely by what the community is- what is its history, who lives in it, what are its tradition. Not all communities have such distinct histories and traditions, but some do.

I bought a house and live in a traditionally Black community. I financed this film largely through my own income and borrowing power. People who see the film, sometimes they are mad that I am a gentrifier making a film about the Black community, but most people who come up and talk to me, of the

Black folks, they say, they appreciate that I’m at least being honest, putting out that I am self-interested, but at the same time, I’m at least putting some skin in the game of trying to acknowledge that the real estate system was rigged against people of color, and the film is one small way of trying to set the record straight. Most people appreciate it. That’s what I’m talking about. We all need to operate in a give and take relationship with a community, not just use them to extract money.

For example, realtors seem to take an interest in our film Priced Out. We do screenings for realtors here in Portland all the time. Some of them, at least, seem to acknowledge the issue, and want to know how to navigate it. Realtors must deal with real humans. There’s no way around it. So, some of them get it. Most people I talk to, don’t mind people buying homes or being landlords, but they just don’t want to be treated like objects, to be used or cast off at the convenience of the moment. Or to have their presence ignored, or their community erased from memory. That’s the most common complaint.

Message #2: Those who own rentals in an area that was once predominantly occupied by a minority ethnic community, should at least attempt to celebrate the contributions of that past community. Perhaps install artwork that pays homage to African-American culture, if the property is on North Williams Avenue. It can be a small investment that brings a large return in terms of public perception.

Multifamily investing is competitive and cyclical. Landlords, therefore, try to maximize profits during strong markets to compensate for leaner periods. With that said, what do you mean by “landlords should strive for reasonable returns versus maximizing profits”?

Cornelius: Exercising reasonable restraint is just like- don’t shoot the last buffalo, don’t kill the goose that laid the golden egg. Exploitation of the market- the full exercise of rights without a sense for social responsibility leads to a social push back that will be detrimental to landlords. If you abuse your freedoms, they will be taken away. That’s not a liberal or a conservative thing. That’s just reaping what you sow. I’m a parent, so when my kid broke her toys or abused her freedoms, they were taken away. Simple. My father, he’s been in real estate all my life, he is not a liberal guy or anything. Not a jerk, but not one to spare someone’s feelings. He said of the rising rents in Portland, that rent control would come, that it was a natural reaction to landlords jacking rents up to whatever they could get away with. He said, there are more tenants than landlords. That’s just real life, big boy stuff. I think most landlords are good actors, but everyone needs to think whether my actions will poison the well. I think most landlords are good actors, but I also think it’s up to us to create a culture of responsibility and forbearance in the industry.

Message #3: Tenants must not perceive a landlord as only being concerned with maximizing rents, since they will unite and punish that landlord. Incrementalism is the best strategy for raising a property’s net operating income, since small increases in rent are as imperceptible as inflation.

Farmers raise grass fed organic beef since they can charge more for it. The same goes for craft beer makers, car manufactures and just about every business that offers premium products. There is market incentive to sell better products, since one can charge more for them. So, what is the impetus for landlords to simply stop maximizing rents, especially if they have already renovated units using higher end finishes?

Cornelius: My friend Stephen Green, he is an entrepreneur, a black guy, a very smart well-educated guy. Middle class, and an economist. Grew up on the Westside then moved to NE Portland with his family. He told me this story. He was taking his daughter to do playdates with her friend in Peninsula Park. And after about six of these playdates, he realized that thisbkid’s family was living in the park. There is a problem with the housing market. I’m not blaming people for anything specific. I don’t know your business. I won’t pretend to. But I think this is a larger social issue. I think this applies to all aspects of our American society, which is in tatters right now. I think if we all just looked in the mirror and rather than saying “it’s not my fault” or “it’s that other guy’s fault,” we asked, “what am I doing to contribute to the problem and what can I do to help?” I cannot convince anyone who does not have ears to hear. Rent stabilization is coming.

Already rents are flat. Relocation fees are in Portland. Inclusionary zoning is here. These things are products of the massive rent spikes of the last few years. A lot of landlords had a field day during that period and so, the party is sort of over. The toys are being taken away. How can landlords, property managers and their power brokers work with housing advocates to prevent this sort of boom and backlash cycle again? Star Management used to encourage 30% rent hikes on renewals in 2015. On an existing building with no improvements? Is there wonder there’s talk of rent control in Salem?

Message #4: A landlord should not raise rents above inflation, simply because they can. They must show that tenants are getting something extra for the increase. If tenants feel they are being taken advantage of, they will demand more governmental regulations.

You want landlords to keep their rents low. One landlord doing so, however, puts that landlord at a disadvantage if competitors do not also do the same. Meanwhile, all landlords getting together and establishing lower rent increases can be considered price fixing. How do you see landlords keeping their rents increases low?

Cornelius: Yes, I am not suggesting collusion or cartelism. I am arguing for a cultural shift away from maximizing profits to one of reasonable return and social responsibility. I think it’s an individual mentality thing, but landlords could take collective action. For example, you might have landlords sign an ethics pledge. Lots of industries do that. Or there might be a ratings system, like restaurants have in LA. That could be an industry enforced standard. Or you could have a consolidated system of disclosures available to the public on each building like patterns of rent increases, maintenance records, financial solvency, number of no cause evictions. It’s funny to think that that is not already a requirement, given that housing is a basic need. Can you imagine if landlords were regulated as much as other industries, like health insurance? It could happen. As far as competitive disadvantage, I don’t know. That seems speculative. I know plenty of landlords who keep rents low and they are fine.

Message #5: Landlords in a particular market should consider getting together and sign an ethics agreement, and perhaps establish industry standards that do not involve price fixing. The reason is because housing is a basic human need, so if multifamily investors do not self-police now, the government will ultimately step in and create more regulations like it did with health care, the food industry, and other businesses that people rely on to live.

What do you think would happen if rents continue to climb unchecked?

Cornelius: What will happen is that people will see investment in their communities as a threat rather than as a benefit. That’s what gentrification is. It’s a toxic by-product of real estate investment. Communities are pushing back right now against development. You are seeing large protests, for example in Brooklyn and Queens that are keeping the city from upzoning their neighborhoods. In Miami’s Little Haiti, residents are pushing back hard against five mega developments. Some protests are getting increasingly belligerent. Art galleries that moved into Boyle Heights in LA, got systematically vandalized and harassed, and the galleries are picking up and leaving. Rent strikes are on the rise around the country. The city of DC is being sued in federal court for gentrifying its neighborhoods.

Well, we are seeing rent control coming up in even suburban areas now. Recent polls show support for rent control in Orange County as high as 59%. Portland already has de facto rent control. The relocation fee obviously, kicks in if you raise Multnomah county rents 10% or more, and the tenant can’t pay. So, that’s rent stabilization of a kind and other cities, lots of other cities, that have state bans on rent control, those cities are looking at that relocation fee very carefully.

Message #6: A landlord must show empathy towards tenants to prevent uprisings. Those being evicted will not care about the laws of economics governing supply and demand. Violent protests occur when communication ends, so it is important that tenants are made to feel they are being heard.

Do you think there should be rent control or rent stabilization in Portland?

Cornelius: I don’t think anyone is for actual rent control. Rent control used to freeze rents and you could hand down a rent-controlled apartment like an inheritance. People are talking about rent stabilization, which largely means there is a maximum rent increase per year. Vacant apartments can reset to market rates. It’s more of a slowing of rent increases so that you don’t get the market spikes. I’ve certainly talked to landlords who have said, “why would you even want to increase rent more than 10 percent a year That’s a lot. People don’t get 10 percent pay raises each year.”

I would think, and this is my speculation, that if standing rents are stabilized at a time of high demand, it would just put more pressure on building new units. That would be a good thing. Supply matters. I just don’t think you can deal with a housing crisis like the one Portland saw with just a supply side approach. Co-Star is saying Portland rents are cooling off because there are more new units in the market, and because of new stabilization regulations.

Message #7: Despite near consensus among economists that capping rent below market pricing will lower short and long-term housing supplies, Portland renters are demanding rent control. Their advocates may call it “rent stabilization,” but the result is governmental control of rent pricing. Because there are many more voters who rent than own, the will of the people will ultimately erode landlord rights. Owners should prepare for the inevitable by consulting with a multifamily advisor to assess whether their properties are aligned with their investment goals.

In conclusion, rent control is coming to Portland. Its negative effects can be mitigated by investors, but the process cannot be stopped because housing is a basic human need. Those who are adversely affected by rent increases will fight back against landlords using local politicians and tenant advocacy groups. Although Cornelius Swart’s documentary focuses on the gentrification of the north and northeast’s historically African-American neighborhoods, his message about Black people being priced out of their community rings true for the majority population who are also experiencing displacement from close-in Portland by more affluent residents. With our world-class wine region, countless small restaurants, and liberal social attitude, in many ways, Portland is Paris-- and a proletariat revolution has already begun. Despite the lack of proof that she ever uttered such words, public perception of her “let them eat cake” attitude, ultimately sent Marie Antoinette to the guillotine. Landlords wishing to avoid metaphorically losing their heads, must be in touch with the sentiments of their tenants.

References

Costar, “The knowledge Market” 2018.

Barker, Nancy N., Let Them Eat Cake: The Mythical Marie Antoinette and the French

Revolution, Historian, Summer 1993, 55:4:709.

“Priced Out: The Documentary.” www.pricedoutmovie.com.

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https://www.youtube.com/c/pricedouttalesofgentrification

The Language of Gentrification [Part 2]: Priced Out Podcast

Scenes from Priced Out: The Documentary

Scenes from Priced Out: The Documentary

Welcome to Season 2 of the Priced Out Podcast.

People use a lot of different terms when referring to gentrification. What’s the differences between revitalization, gentrification and a housing crisis?  Why can't the government build affordable housing to compensate communities of color for years of housing discrimination?  This is a follow up to our conversation on language and jargon that we did last year.

All this plus Andru shares a big secret and we finally find out what’s under Cornelius’ pants.

Find us at:

https://anchor.fm/priced-out-podcast 
https://www.pricedoutmovie.com
https://www.facebook.com/PricedOutPDX 
https://twitter.com/pricedoutusa
https://www.instagram.com/pricedoutmovie
https://www.youtube.com/c/pricedouttalesofgentrification


How Filmmakers Depict Gentrification [Detroit and Portland]: Priced Out Podcast Repost

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This week on the Priced Out Podcast we discuss how filmmakers portray the character of a gentrifying community. The discussion was at NW Documentary in Portland, Oregon, after the screening of a film about gentrification in Detroit entitled Last Days of Chinatown. https://www.facebook.com/events/58403...

This week on the Priced Out Podcast we discuss how filmmakers portray the character of a gentrifying community. 

The discussion was at NW Documentary in Portland, Oregon, after the screening of a film about gentrification in Detroit entitled Last Days of Chinatown.

The discussion is with Last Days director Nicole MacDonald as well as Sika Stanton, co-director of The Numbers, a short film about East Portland, and Priced Out director Cornelius Swart.

The Numbers

NW Documentary

More on Nicole MacDonald

And the Last Days of Chinatown

Priced Out: The Documentary
Pricedoutmovie.com

FIND US AT:
Pricedoutmovie.com 
Facebook.com/PricedOutPDX 
Twitter.com/pricedoutusa 
Instagram.com/pricedoutmovie 
Anchor.fm/priced-out-podcast 
Youtube.com/c/PricedOutTalesOfGentrification

Skid Row and Downtown LA: Priced Out Podcast Repost

skidrow.podcast.repost.png

Join Cornelius as he has an in-depth discussion with John Malpede about gentrification in and around L.A.'s Skid Row. Malpede is the founding artistic director of the Los Angeles Poverty Department. In recent years downtown LA has made a spectacular comeback. The area is now brimming with new museums, expensive condos, and lavishly restored movie palaces.

Join Cornelius as he has an in-depth discussion with John Malpede about gentrification in and around L.A.'s Skid Row. Malpede is the founding artistic director of the Los Angeles Poverty Department.

In recent years downtown LA has made a spectacular comeback. The area is now brimming with new museums, expensive condos, and lavishly restored movie palaces. But just a few blocks away sits Skid Row, the nation’s largest homeless community. Skid Row often looks like a third world country, and it now sits next to the gleaming street of the newly rebranded #DTLA. Skid Row is littered with outdoor residents and lined with clinics, social services, and SRO hotels that house the ultra poor.

The city is currently advancing a plan to rezone the area and make it more attractive to developers. That move could put many, if not all of the thousands of Skid Row residents who actually have indoor living back onto the streets.

Listen in to this dramatic tale of two cities.

Links referred to in the podcast:

Skid Row the Documentary
Skid Row Museum
Skid Row Housing Plan
Downtown LA 2040 Plan

Where to find us:

Anchor.fm/priced-out-podcast
Pricedoutmovie.com
Facebook.com/PricedOutPDX
Twitter.com/pricedoutusa
Instagram.com/pricedoutmovie
Youtube.com/c/PricedOutTalesOfGentrification

Black Wall Street, Ethnic Cleansing and Gentrification in Tulsa, OK: Priced Out Repost

priced out, gentrification, black wall street, podcast, tulsa, oklahoma, displacement, race, african american, history, justice

[Photo Credit: Greenwood Tulsa Center, Tulsa, Oklahoma]

On this episode of Priced Out: The Podcast we visit Tulsa Oklahoma the former home of co-host Andru Morgan. Tulsa has had a troubled past with race relations and Cornelius and Andru will discuss that history as well as the current community issues including gentrification.

On this episode of Priced Out: The Podcast we talk about Tulsa, Oklahoma the former home of co-host Andru Morgan. Oklahoma was originally envisioned as a Native and African American “homeland.” After the discovery of oil, Tulsa produced so many wealthy black residents the Greenwood neighborhood was dubbed Black Wall Street. But in 1921 white Tulsa launched an ethnic cleansing campaign against black residents that wiped out the neighborhood in an outright massacre unlike any other in US history. Cornelius and Andru discuss that history as well as the current community issues including gentrification.

They also speak with Kirk Wester the executive director of Growing Together. Kirk gives great insight into the Kendall Whittier neighborhood of Tulsa and how his program is helping lead the charge for “gentrification with justice.” Andru and Cornelius also continues their conversation about The Black Panther movie and give their own review!

FIND US AT:
pricedoutmovie.com
facebook.com/PricedOutPDX 
twitter.com/pricedoutusa 
instagram.com/pricedoutmovie
anchor.fm/priced-out-podcast
youtube.com/c/pricedouttalesofgentrification

Trump as Gentrifier-in-Chief. Holiday Break. Vision for Season 2: Priced Out Podcast

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Happy Holidays from the #PricedOut #podcast. We're wrapping up Season 1 and our first year as a podcast. It's been awesome and thank you for your support. In this conversation between Andru and Cornelius, Andru unwraps a present! Cornelius begs. Andru talks about black comic books.

ABOVE: Donald Trump in his developer days. Will his administrations federalizing of gentrification be a boon for poor communities or will it cut a swath of destruction through them?

Happy Holidays from the #PricedOut #podcast. We're wrapping up Season 1 and our first year as a podcast. It's been awesome and thank you for your support. In this conversation between Andru and Cornelius, Andru unwraps a present! Cornelius begs. Andru talks about black comic books. And we promise we will look/sound less janky next year. 

We also preview our other major podcast goals for 2019. Last but not least, Cornelius goes off on Qualified Opportunity Zones. Next year, Trump will turn the 900 lb gorilla of gentrification into Godzilla, as the Federal Government gets into the gentrification game. That said, some black leaders are optimistic. Listen and find out more. PS- please subscribe to our YouTube channel. Two more subscribers and we can get a custom URL! Or better yet, support the podcast on Anchor.Fm. (see link below)

anchor.fm/priced-out-podcast 
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www.youtube.com/c/pricedouttalesofgentrification

Poor Neighborhoods Make Big Money for Landlords: The Real Estate Game: Priced Out Podcast

gentrification, podcast, housing crisis, displacement, rent,

On Episode 25 we interview multifamily real estate investment broker Ru Budhi. He is a Filipino-American investment agent who worked at firms like Norris Stevens during the Portland's housing crisis. He understands how apartment buildings and condos get financed and why. He's going to explain why we are having a housing crisis from the investor's point of view.

On Episode 25 of the Priced Out Podcast we interview multifamily real estate investment broker Ru Budhi. He is a Filipino-American investment agent who worked at firms like Norris Stevens during the Portland's housing crisis.

He understands how apartment buildings and condos get financed and why. He’s going to explain why we are having a housing crisis from the investor's point of view. Listen in as we talk financing, Glass-Steagall and why it seems to be in the landlord's interest that poor neighborhoods stay poor.

Uncut interview on our YouTube Channel.

Find Us at:

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https://www.instagram.com/pricedoutmovie

https://anchor.fm/priced-out-podcast

https://www.youtube.com/

Got a Library CarD? You Can Now Stream Priced Out!

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Priced Out, the award-winning 2017 documentary on gentrification in the black neighborhoods of Portland, Oregon, is now available on educational streaming platforms Kanopy.

Kanopy works with public and private library systems around the country, including the nation's university systems. If you have a library card with the Multnomah County Library in in Portland, for example, you can live stream the film today.

We're excited that Priced Out will now be available to millions of US students and library cardholders.

Priced Out tells the compelling story of how one woman went from embracing gentrification to cursing it, as her neighborhood slowly transformed from a black-majority to a white-majority community. Along the way, we see the contradictions and complexities that arise when cities improve neighborhoods but leave traditional residents priced out.

The film is currently available on Kanopy and will be available on Hoopla in the coming weeks. Please contact us at pricedoutmovie@gmail.com with any questions.

“SWART’S POWERFUL DOCUMENTARY SHOULD BE REQUIRED VIEWING.” — WILLAMETTE WEEK 

 

Dec. 9. Show, Support the Podcast in 2019

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[Reporter Thacher Schmid (left) and Cornelius (right) talk about how illegal Airbnbs are worsening Portland’ housing crisis on the Priced Out Podcast] 

Happy Holidays from Team Priced Out
 
If you still have friends, family or lukewarm enemies who haven't yet seen Priced Out on the big screen, there's a free show coming up this Sunday, Dec. 9 at the Oregon Historical Society.
 
This screening will be followed by a promising panel discussion with Karen Gibson of Portland State University.  Gibson was the author of Bleeding Albina: A History of Community Disinvestment, which was one of the many academic sources we used when researching the film Priced Out.
 
Sunday, December 9, 2018,
5 PM – 7 PM
Oregon Historical Society

1200 SW Park Ave.

Portland, Oregon 97205
Free
DETAILS
 
Podcast Hits Benchmark
 
The Priced Out Podcast hit a benchmark this month with the show's 1,000th download.  It's a modest benchmark but everyone has got to start somewhere. We're pleased to have produced 24 episodes so far and to see that most of our listens have migrated over from the YouTube Channel that formerly hosted the show.  Our latest, Root Shock and the Emotional Impact of Gentrification is a compelling interview with Michelle Lewis.  Lewis is featured in the documentary Priced Out, where she tells the story of when she lost her home in the subprime mortgage crisis and how her family was ostracized in East Portland, their new adopted neighborhood.
 
Here are some of our more popular recent shows:
 
EP 23: Fighting Gentrification with Historic Preservation
EP 22: "I gentrified the neighborhood." Interview with Black Realtor [Pt 2]
EP: 20: [Special Edition] Illegal AirBnBs Steal 1,500 Housing Units from Portland

Please subscribe to the podcast on iTunes, Spotify, or wherever you get your pods.
 
If you just can't get enough of these interviews, we do live stream the in-studio interviews when we can. You can find those on Facebook and our YouTube Channel if you are interested in the unedited conversation.
 
We hope we'll get to the point where we will have enough audience to take questions during the live stream. That's something we are looking forward to in the future. 

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[Cornelius and Andru yuk it up on the podcast. We want to keep this act going in 2019.]

Looking forward to 2019
 
Speaking of 2019, in January, we will take a little time off from the podcast to plan Season 2.  As we move into the second year of the film's distribution, the podcast will be the primary way that the film will be promoted.  It will also be our primary vehicle for continuing coverage of gentrification, the most important social issue facing American cities today.
 
As we begin charting our vision for 2019, please consider supporting the podcast. You can do this with a small (or huge) monthly contribution. Just hit the "Support This Podcast" button on the podcast homepage on Anchor.FM. Your support will be crucial as we look at extending the program. 

Our producer Andru Morgan has been a fantastic asset.  We want to keep him on board.  Right now, we have access to audio recording gear through the generous support of NW Documentary. But NW Doc is not set up as a recording studio. It will take a modest investment to keep Andru and upgrade to equipment that will let us do more professional sounding in-studio and phone interviews.
 
We know there are so many worthy things to support out there, but we hope you can contribute.
 
All the best to you for the holidays and we hope you have a prosperous New Year.
 
Team Priced Out

Root Shock: The Psychological Impacts of Gentrification [EP 24] Priced Out Podcast

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ABOVE: Scene with Michelle Lewis in the documentary Priced Out: 15 Years of Gentrification in Portland, Ore.

We talk with Michelle Lewis about the emotional and psychological impacts of gentrification and displacement known as Root Shock. Lewis is a mental health counselor who works specifically with the African American community in Portland, Ore. She was featured in our documentary Priced Out.

We talk with Michelle Lewis about the emotional and psychological impacts of gentrification and displacement known as Root Shock. Lewis is a mental health counselor who works specifically with the African American community in Portland, Ore. She was featured in our documentary Priced Out. In the film, she talked about losing her home in the subprime mortgage crisis and the challenges of living in a far-flung neighborhood that was often hostile to black residents. 

Lewis updates us on her recent experiences with gentrification and talks about how her black clients must often choose their battles carefully when they feel confronted by a racist exchange. The discussion gets personal as our hosts weigh in on their own experiences and thoughts.

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www.pricedoutmovie.com/ 
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twitter.com/pricedoutusa 
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anchor.fm/priced-out-podcast