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May 11, 2010 6:20 PM

Recession Seen Through The Lens Of Youth

By
Anthony Mason
(CBS)  As part of the special series CBS REPORTS: Children of the Recession, Sunday Morning followed five young filmmakers who've made short documentaries - each with a different story to tell about the impact of the current economic crisis on their lives.
They're five kids, each with five short films. And all of them capture how the recession is affecting their lives.

For 12-year-old Lenaisha Small, you can hear it in her every sigh.

"I don't know how to say it," she told CBS News correspondent Anthony Mason. "I really didn't know what the recession really was."

But she can tell you the exact month and day she found out - Nov. 10, the day her mother lost her job. Eviction was not far behind.

Lenaisha and the four other young directors - Sarah Alli, Ky Oseasha Thomas, Derek Garcia and Rana Ayhan - are all filmmaking students who came to us through the youth programs of New York City's Tribeca Film Institute.

And each one said it was important to make these films.

"This is a really big moment for our generation. I think it's important for us to show that and let other people know what we're going through," Derek said.

"A lot of kids will take advice from their friends before they'll take it from a grown-up. And it's like if my friend's talking about it, maybe I should start getting into it," added Lenaisha.

"Yeah I don't think adults can tell us how we feel about the recession," Rana said to the agreement of her fellow filmmakers. "We have to tell them"

Over the past three weeks, with the help of their school, teachers and the institute's staff, they put together their films.

The topics, which they chose themselves - touch on common childhood concerns that have suddenly become more complicated.

Read bios of the filmmakers here
Watch their documentaries here
"The stress of everyone else is contagious," Sarah said. "It's like they need to let it out and sometimes they put it on us."

Sarah Alli's mom, who works in real estate, is cutting back on anything that isn't a basic necessity. And that includes something 14-year-old Sarah sees as a cherished essential - her summer sleepaway camp.

"My mother can't afford to send me so this time I have to get a job to help her," Sarah said.

That's a pretty big change for her.

"It's like being a kid to being an adult in about two months," she said.

Ky Oseasha Thomas can relate.

The 18-year-old high school senior started working after school when her father was laid off. He's since found a new job but, she says, it pays about $20,000 less than his old one so Ky Oseasha still pitches in.

Ky Oseasha's film touches on how the recession has affected her family.

"Me, my mother, my father, we all work. And the schedules vary. It's like it's really not a chance that we all sit in one same room and like talk," she said.

But she considers herself lucky.

"There's adults like 35 and 25 [years old] trying to do the same thing we are. Simple jobs like cashier or sales associate, so it's been really competitive," she said.

But she can't afford to have too much sympathy.

"I mean I feel sorry, but it's like everybody's in the same situation, so it's I don't feel sorry ... It's … that competitive edge."

Her work schedule has her feeling older than her years.

"I feel like an old lady. I'm tired. I wanna take a nap. I'll be like 'What? Look at yourself. You're only 18,'" she said.

For Rana Ayhan, who's 17, even her upcoming prom creates anxiety. Is the experience worth the expense?

Her mother wants her to go, but Rana still worries.

"Just seeing my parents, you know trying to make ends meet. I feel like every decision I make with money I have to keep them in mind because they're the ones working hard for every dollar that I could spend in like a blink of an eye," she said.

"And it's like now, me and my friends we make this joke every time," Ky Oseasha said. "You wanna go to this place or, you know, you wanna go see a movie? It's a recession, man."

The recession has made it socially acceptable for kids to admit they can't spend.

Now everyone's comfortable talking about, 'Listen, I can't afford this school.' Or asking a teacher for a fee waiver," said Rana. "Before, you'd probably ask to see the teacher in private, but now everyone's just like 'I need one.'"

"Has anything good come out of the recession?" asked Mason.

"A lot of good sales going on," Rana said, to the laughter of her peers.

"Back to the prom, actually I got, like, a really good deal on my suit at Macy's," Derek said.

Seventeen-year-old Derek Garcia's film looks at the struggles of affording college.

"My friends got into their first choice colleges, but they can't go," he said. "A lot of colleges are very expensive - $40,000 to $50,000 - and they just didn't get enough financial aid."

"It's just one thing on top of another - the recession, the war, new president," said Sarah. "All of this stuff going in, it's really tough."

"There's a lot to think about," said Derek

"A lot to process," Sarah added.

Through the tough times, the kids say their parents have tried to protect them from the recession.

"My mom and dad, they really don't address things [until] they feel that it's really affected us and to the point where we're, like 'Okay, what's going on?'" said Ky Oseasha.

"My mom, she's the type of person [who] doesn't want to sugarcoat anything or kind of hide it from me, so she'll tell me about things," said Lenaisha.

Her mother's candor has given Lenaisha perspective.

They still can't afford their own apartment, but her mom recently started a new job and plans to go back to school.

"How did it feel to interview your mom about this?" Mason asked.

"Well, it felt kind of weird. ... I knew she was going through certain things, but I didn't know how it felt to her and how she really did want to support me," Lenaisha said.

The process of shooting their films made all the kids think about their own situations in new ways.

"It made me realize even more that everybody has a struggle and everybody has something to relate to," said Ky Oseasha. "Even though you might not see that at first, it's affecting everyone."

"Hopefully we could look back on these films in 20 years and be, like, 'What were we thinking? It's fine!'" said Derek.

But for 12-year-old Lenaisha, the recession may have forever altered the way she'll remember growing up.

"Usually adults look at their childhoods as the best time ever. And it's like you wanna have a good childhood because you want to come out, not just a fairy tale book, but a book that when you share it [with] your children, it comes out decent."

But for now, there are no fairy tales.

For more info:
  • Youth Programs at Tribeca Film Institute
  • Academy for Careers in Television and Film
  • Bronx Preparatory Charter School
  • Reel Works Teen Filmmaking
  • Scenarios USA
  • Copyright 2010 CBS. All rights reserved.
    Add a Comment See all 14 Comments
    by hypnotoad72 May 25, 2009 4:02 PM EDT
    1fishndude said: "maybe... people with marketable skills and talent are recession proof. "
    ---

    In theory.

    Whatever is done cheapest is recession-proof. How cheap do you want to get?
    Reply to this comment
    by hypnotoad72 May 25, 2009 3:53 PM EDT
    Accountability from personal responsibility? Today's market leaders don't have that. Many 20-something in college don't have that (I've gone back to college and, sadly, the gloom'n'doom wankers might have a point...)
    Reply to this comment
    by hypnotoad72 May 25, 2009 3:52 PM EDT
    by jacknjudy1 May 24, 2009 7:15 AM PDT
    ---

    You lost me at your first word. It's "Kudos". If you can't do proper research for spelling, why should I believe anything else you've read? Why don't you go back to school?
    Reply to this comment
    by ubrew12 May 25, 2009 3:17 PM EDT
    1fishndude said: "maybe... people with marketable skills and talent are recession proof. "

    Winner: "No Sh*t, Sherlock" Award
    Reply to this comment
    by curse914 May 25, 2009 10:36 AM EDT
    How ironic that right after this story they run one on a bunch of doctors that have TV shows and probably make more money in a year then most Americans make in a lifetime and they follow that story up with one about Green Day who also have more money than most can fathom. So, maybe the recession isn't really that bad or people with marketable skills and talent are recession proof. These mainstream news shows do a great job of feeding the recession hysteria.

    Posted by 1fishndude at 7:14 PM : May 24, 2009

    The shift to a service based economy eventual has you in line to market your skills at a burger joint.
    Reply to this comment
    by curse914 May 25, 2009 10:31 AM EDT
    The one constant about people struggling during this recession is the most demanding burden is finding a place to exist. Homelessness is the primary obstacle those at the bottom rung must overcome.

    Homelessness started, on a systemic scale, back in the 1880s when all the land in the USA became legally owned.. From this point on a constant class of people were put out on the streets because to exist in the USA one had to pay an inflated price, to exist, to those who owned land. Simply put, all land was bottled up and titled as law-made property in direct violation of natural law and the natural rights we possess as human beings. To compensate, the liberals created Housing Act after Housing Act, Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, Jobs Programs,... etc. redistributing income of those who can afford land. The conservatives see no problem in privatizing land that no human created and say just live in your car or under a bridge if the market price is to high. Both agendas are wrong.

    The solution is to recapture the rental value of land by instituting a fee on the privilege to title land no one created. This can be accomplished by taxing land values. Shift the property tax off property and put the burden on land value. Thomas Paine and Henry George should be required reading if you want to understand homelessness, not Marx and Rush Limbaugh.

    Posted by singletax at 2:55 AM : May 25, 2009

    You are going to have to further elaborate on the concept. Would the tax on property not scale the same as the value of the land given they would appear change in value in parallel?
    Reply to this comment
    by singletax May 25, 2009 5:55 AM EDT
    The one constant about people struggling during this recession is the most demanding burden is finding a place to exist. Homelessness is the primary obstacle those at the bottom rung must overcome.

    Homelessness started, on a systemic scale, back in the 1880s when all the land in the USA became legally owned.. From this point on a constant class of people were put out on the streets because to exist in the USA one had to pay an inflated price, to exist, to those who owned land. Simply put, all land was bottled up and titled as law-made property in direct violation of natural law and the natural rights we possess as human beings. To compensate, the liberals created Housing Act after Housing Act, Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, Jobs Programs,... etc. redistributing income of those who can afford land. The conservatives see no problem in privatizing land that no human created and say just live in your car or under a bridge if the market price is to high. Both agendas are wrong.

    The solution is to recapture the rental value of land by instituting a fee on the privilege to title land no one created. This can be accomplished by taxing land values. Shift the property tax off property and put the burden on land value. Thomas Paine and Henry George should be required reading if you want to understand homelessness, not Marx and Rush Limbaugh.
    Reply to this comment
    by 1fishndude May 24, 2009 10:14 PM EDT
    How ironic that right after this story they run one on a bunch of doctors that have TV shows and probably make more money in a year then most Americans make in a lifetime and they follow that story up with one about Green Day who also have more money than most can fathom. So, maybe the recession isn't really that bad or people with marketable skills and talent are recession proof. These mainstream news shows do a great job of feeding the recession hysteria.
    Reply to this comment
    by ubrew12 May 24, 2009 4:57 PM EDT
    Reading the comments on this page, one would almost think right-wing America WANTED a deep recession, to teach the adults of tomorrow the meaning of responsibility. Right-wing America has always understood the meaning of responsibility: That's why, by cutting their taxes, but NOT their government services via Reagan and Bush Jr they charged their lives to these kids and their generation. Government services, right-wingers, include defense, law n order, education, infrastructure, energy, and clean air n water. Y'all can get along without those cuz y'all can eat steel shavings for breakfast. Its just that, when push comes to shove, y'all never DID do without those. You just put it on the debt, and charged your gov't services to these kids and their generation. Given that record, I can see why you'd feel that you were the PERFECT people to teach 'responsibility' to a younger generation (LOL).
    Reply to this comment
    by mrthinker1 May 24, 2009 4:00 PM EDT
    Some body should have told them that everything they earn is going to pay for elderly Americans Social Security and Medicare and seen what kind of responces they get. These kids wont have money to buy a car or pay rent when the Senior Class is done taxing all their money away with the help of our complisit Government. Some fearless leader will probably just seze all private property and give everyone a place to live. One space per person just like the old Soviet Union. I love the USSA.
    Reply to this comment
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