A trailer has been released for a new Netflix documentary that follows Barack Obama’s experiences with ordinary Americans — along with an accompanying description that says the series will touch on issues of race and civil rights.
The four-part series, called Working: What We Do All Day, looks at the lives of American workers through the lens of the former president — and will also “address issues of race and democracy and civil rights,” according to the streaming service. employ.
In the trailer – which the former head of state partially narrates – Obama can be seen chatting with several workers in their respective fields and accompanying a working-class mother to a supermarket.
The first look was shared by the ex-president on Thursday and comes as the politician has made a career out of speaking engagements and several book deals.
However, this is the multimillionaire’s first film production and will focus on the plight of the quintessential American. It will launch in May, though it remains unclear how much the Progressive, which is worth about $70 million, will earn from it.
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The four-part series, called Working: What We Do All Day, looks at the lives of American workers through the lens of the former president — and will also “address issues of race and democracy and civil rights,” according to the streaming service. employ
In the trailer – which the former head of state partially narrates – Obama is seen chatting with several workers in their respective fields and accompanying a working-class mother and her child to a supermarket.
“I’m excited to share the Working trailer,” Obama, who was worth just over $3.5 million in 2008, wrote in a tweet sharing the two-minute clip for the first time.
He added, “In this series, I talk to American workers in a variety of industries — from hospitality and technology to home care — to understand their jobs and hopes for the future.
“I hope you check.”
He added in a statement of the work’s premise: “If we make sure everyone feels that their work is respected, that everyone’s contribution is honored, and that everyone is paid enough to really participate in the lives of our communities, we strengthen the trust between us that makes everything possible in our lives’.
As for the newly released clip, it begins with the 61-year-old Chicago resident speaking about everyday people in the workforce across a range of industries – from service to the C-Suite – and how they are all inherently connected.
“We may not think about it, but we are all part of something bigger than any of us,” Obama says in the ad.
“Our work is one of the forces that connects us,” he continues, while fragments of his meeting with restaurant workers, housekeepers and techies play in the background.
Less than a month after its release, production comes from the Obamas’ private studio Higher Ground, which has an overall deal with Netflix and Concordia Studio, which was founded by An Inconvenient Truth director Davis Guggenheim.
It’s now known how much the Obamas made from the partnership, though it’s likely valued by similar deals in the margins of $100 million.
As for the newly released clip, it begins with the 61-year-old Chicago native speaking about everyday people in the workforce across a range of industries – from service to the C-Suite – and how they are all inherently connected.
The first look was shared by the ex-president on Thursday and comes as the politician has made a career out of speaking engagements and several book deals
It will launch in May, though it remains unclear how much the Progressive, which is worth around $70 million, is set to make with it
Netflix chief content officer Ted Sarandos and his wife Nicole Avant raised thousands for Barack Obama’s presidential campaign and she served as ambassador to the Bahamas.
The commercial comes about five years after Obama and his wife Michelle entered into a multi-year production partnership with the online streaming service, led by CEO Ted Sarandos, who is a longtime friend of the Obamas.
In 2009, in one of Obama’s first acts as president, he named Sarandos’ wife, Nicole Avant, ambassador to the Bahamas.
When Obama successfully ran for a second term, Sarandos and Avant both pooled nearly $600,000 in contributions to Obama during the 2012 presidential campaign, the New York Post reported.
Avant served as ambassador to the Bahamas from 2009 to 2011. It is common for presidents of both parties to appoint major donors to ambassadorial positions.
When announcing the partnership in 2018, Obamas planned to deliver a “diverse mix of content” ranging from scripted and unscripted series to documentaries and feature films as part of their package.
Their content is not exclusive to US subscribers. Netflix has promised that their projects will be available to all 125 million members in 190 countries.