Why You Need To See This VR Documentary 'Traveling While Black'?
Ben's Chill House in Washington, DC was one of the 'safe places" in the mid-century travel guide for African Americans and is the location for VR documentary, Traveling While Black. Image credit: Felix & Paul Studios.

Why You Need To See This VR Documentary 'Traveling While Black'

At the Sundance Film Festival in January 2019, Roger Ross Williams, the first African American director to win an Oscar for his short subject film Music by Prudencepremiered his first virtual reality (VR) documentary called Traveling While Black

The 19-minute VR film takes the viewer on a journey to the segregationist environment of the 1950s right up to the current police violence in an emotional 3D/360-degree experience. The VR documentary was based on a 2010 play called The Green Book which put a spotlight on America during the time of the Jim Crow laws. The play was based on a real-life road trip survival handbook published in 1936 by the same name that provided travel tips to help African-Americans avoid racist and potentially life-threatening establishments along their journey. The VR documentary is set in one of those 'safe establishments' listed in the Green Book, Ben’s Chili Bowl, in Washington D.C.

Ross Williams said that VR allowed him to fully immerse the viewers in Traveling While Black in a way that traditional film making simply cannot do.

"When you experience this documentary in VR it's all around you, and you can't escape it," said Ross Williams. "Once the headset goes on, there are no external distractions. In the same way, we can't escape our blackness or the reality of being black in America, I didn't want people to be able to escape the experience they have when watching Traveling While Black and this immersive feeling could only be achieved through VR."

Ross Williams says that the project started as a way to talk about this forgotten period in history.

"But, the more I began to think about the past, I realized that not a lot has changed today. I thought of Henry Louis Gates being harrassed standing on his front porch; Ving Rhames being held at gunpoint in the doorway to his home and Tamir Rice, a child, who was shot and killed in a playground in his own neighbourhood," said Ross Williams.

"These and countless other incidents remind me that the risk we face just leaving our homes and our need for safe spaces are just as prevalent as they were during the days of The Green Book," said Ross Williams.

"As a black person you feel a sense of relief when you enter a safe space, and you don’t have to be on guard," Ross Williams said. "We're often always on guard. When I walk down the street, especially if I see a police officer, I tense up. If I'm driving somewhere and a cop car starts to follow me, I get nervous. There's a violent history that comes with traveling while black in America, and as a black person you carry that history with you."

Neel Patel, a freelance journalist who writes about technology, can relate to this fear.

Patel wrote the essay, What It's Like to Fly When the TSA Profiles You for Thrillist after he noticed an increase in his stress and anxiety when he passed through airports shortly after Trump was elected.

"I was actually in Thailand during the election and came back a few days later, and even before he was inaugurated I could sense things shifting in a particular direction," said Patel. "TSA was stopping me more, pulling me aside more frequently for “additional screening,” checking my bags more frequently."

Patel, who is of Indian descent, says he wrote the piece because he wanted to give a glimpse into what it's like for him when he travels to people who aren’t minorities and haven't been on the receiving end of racial profiling.

Finish reading the full article and view the video teaser of the VR film on Forbes.com.


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