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مسلسل Mixed-ish الموسم الاول الحلقة 1 مترجمة - توب سينما
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00:00Oh, oh, right there. Let's watch Break-In.
00:05Uh, Break-In?
00:07Mm-hmm.
00:08No G?
00:08Nope.
00:09Not for me, Playboy.
00:10I've been out of the in-apostrophe game ever since I got burned on Trippin'.
00:14This movie has a white girl with a leotard?
00:17Let me guess.
00:19She finds strength to save breakdancing.
00:21No!
00:22She actually saves the Radiotron.
00:25Push it to pop it, rock it to lock it, break it to make...
00:29Yo, what is this?
00:30Shut up and sit down.
00:32All of you are heathens, and don't you dare talk about Break-In.
00:35It is a classic, and it features the dance stylings of Jean-Claude Van Damme.
00:42Bo, help me out, babe, please.
00:44They're talking about Break-In.
00:46Well, I haven't seen it.
00:48What did you just say?
00:49I haven't seen it.
00:50That's what I thought you just said.
00:51Yeah.
00:52It's Breaking, Bo.
00:53Breaking!
00:54The precursor to Breaking 2, Electric Boogaloo?
00:57I haven't, I'm sorry.
00:59You don't have to be sorry about this, Mom.
01:01Shut up!
01:02She does need to be sorry.
01:03Unbelievable.
01:04I swear to God, it's gonna be me and you, ma'am.
01:08Soon.
01:09I feel it.
01:10I do, too.
01:12I do, too.
01:14Okay, okay, okay, okay.
01:15Hey, enough, guys.
01:16What's the big deal?
01:16You know I didn't have movies on the commune?
01:18That totally makes sense.
01:19That's right.
01:20No, Sean, nothing makes sense.
01:21Yes, it does.
01:22Nothing you ever say about your childhood makes sense.
01:25You grew up in a cult.
01:28It's amazing I ever met you.
01:29Well, we actually wouldn't have ever met if the elders hadn't gotten arrested.
01:34Hold up.
01:34Wait, what?
01:35Well, they didn't get arrested.
01:37They got detained for three to five years.
01:41What?
01:42What?
01:42You know what?
01:43The documentary explains it a lot better.
01:45Just came out on Netflix.
01:47You can see it.
01:49How did you ever survive your childhood?
01:52Although my husband had bad taste in movies, flattering gene cuts and steak temperatures,
01:58and although I'd never admit this out loud, his question was fair.
02:05My childhood was anything but normal.
02:09But as not normal as it was, I wouldn't take it back for anything, because it made me the
02:15woman I am today.
02:18In the summer of 1985, I was 12 years old, and my life changed forever.
02:26I, Ronald Reagan, do solemnly swear.
02:29You see, while the rest of the world was inaugurating Reagan into his second term and worrying about
02:34AIDS, famine, and the crack epidemic, I was living with my family on a commune.
02:39The problems of the outside world seemed to be like a million miles away from our hippie,
02:44judgment-free utopia where love ruled all.
02:48We ate together, prayed together, and even slept together.
02:54There was no racism, no sexism, and everyone was truly equal.
02:59If you would have asked me at the time, I would have told you it was perfect.
03:04But the government would have told you we were a radicalized cult in violation of over
03:0947 ATF regulations.
03:16I'm not supposed to have three wives.
03:18In the summer of 1985, I was 12 years old, and my life changed forever.
03:33In what seemed like overnight, my peaceful little world had been taken away.
03:37My parents said we were moving to a new community, but from what I could see, there was nothing
03:42communal about it.
03:43All I remember seeing was rotund people hidden behind curtains, locked away in their own little
03:49brown boxes.
03:51I didn't know what anyone else's house looked like, but I remember walking into my grandpa's
03:55rental house for the first time, feeling like I was on a whole other planet.
03:59And I wasn't the only one.
04:02I think my little brother, Johan, who looked at everything like one great big magical adventure,
04:07slept next to the toilet for the first three months we lived there.
04:10Whoa, where does it all go?
04:11Bet you it's a portal to another dimension.
04:15Well, guess that's settled.
04:17Never using that thing.
04:19I think my little sister Santa Monica was around five at the time, but even then, she complained
04:23like a woman with no kids on her third divorce, which interestingly enough, she would eventually
04:28become.
04:29Relax, Santee.
04:30It's safe.
04:31Then you use it.
04:32I'm going back to diapers.
04:33My gut tells me we're gonna die here.
04:36Calm down.
04:36Nobody's dying anywhere.
04:38Oh, so now you know when and where we're all gonna die?
04:42Come on, kids.
04:43This move was stressing us out.
04:45We were hoping our parents had some answers.
04:48So, kids, no biggie, but your mother and I, we just wanted to have a little informal rap
04:51session.
04:52If it's so informal, then why do you have the talking stick?
04:54Very good question, but unfortunately, I can't answer it because you did not have the talking
05:02stick when you asked.
05:03Dad was the coolest guy I knew.
05:06He met mom at Berkeley Law, but he dropped out as a protest against the glass ceiling of
05:10classism.
05:11Okay, I'm gonna jump in here.
05:13Guys, I know this place might seem different, but it's gonna be great.
05:17You'll see.
05:18Your mother is correct, even though she's not setting the best example for stick law.
05:22Mom actually graduated law school because, hippie or not, black people still needed a
05:27backup plan, especially when you fell in love with a free spirit like my dad.
05:31So, when are we going back home?
05:33You know...
05:35Why, thank you, Paul.
05:39Sweetie, we've actually been doing some thinking, and this is our new home.
05:44For now.
05:45What?
05:45Whoa, sorry.
05:47For now.
05:48Guys, we'd love to be able to go back home, but everything we've ever loved is burned.
05:51We can rebuild!
05:52I can't use the bathroom here!
05:54Oh, guys, guys, come on!
05:55What kind of people will interrupt?
05:57Fascists.
05:58Exactly.
05:59Now, I know things might seem scary, but we're gonna be fine.
06:02And just because we're in a new home, we're not gonna let that change who we are.
06:06And we're definitely not gonna let this idiot box contaminate us with the worst of America,
06:11CBS.
06:13And...
06:13We'll keep all the best parts of our old home.
06:16Love, sharing, pescatarianism.
06:19I do like shrimp.
06:20See?
06:21If we stay true to who we are, we'll never even notice we left.
06:24Love, sir.
06:25Growing up on the commune, my parents' hippie values and their optimism were contagious.
06:31But in the real world, no one cares about any of those things.
06:34And when we got to school, we got introduced to the real world real quick.
06:39What's going on?
06:40I don't know.
06:41Just try to keep up.
06:42I'm too little to die!
06:44Back home, the real world was hitting my parents as well.
06:48Hey, hippies!
06:49Harrison Jackson III was my grandfather, but he was also one of the main reasons my dad moved to the commune.
06:55He was an ambulance-chasing, multimillionaire owner of a personal injury law firm.
06:59He might have voted for Reagan, but he loved his brown grandkids.
07:04Also, we were living in his fully furnished rental house.
07:06Brought the kids lacrosse sticks.
07:08Oh, did you also bring yacht club applications?
07:11Well, look, I don't make the rules, but yacht clubs are for people who came here on the top of a ship.
07:16I miss this.
07:17I'm trying to say, welcome home, you two.
07:20I knew that hippie thing was just a 15-year phase.
07:23Oh, we get it.
07:24You think our time on the commune was silly?
07:26Oh, no, I don't think it was silly. I think it was stupid. Very, very stupid.
07:31Mm-hmm.
07:32Help me understand.
07:34Is it fun to be poor?
07:36Like when people tell you how much something costs and you don't have the money?
07:41Is it a rush?
07:42You know, we chose to live off the grid.
07:44And now you chose to live rent-free in my fully furnished rental.
07:48What a rush that must be.
07:50Tell you what, why don't you come work at my firm?
07:53Alicia doesn't need to take a job at your stye.
07:56No, she's going to look for a firm where she can try meaningful cases.
07:59Yeah.
07:59Yeah.
08:00And I'm going to use that greenhouse to grow food we can sell.
08:03Great plan.
08:04That's exactly how Rockefeller started.
08:07Oh, I need to get back to the stye.
08:10So I guess I'm going to go jump in my real-world Ferrari
08:13and go make some more real-world money
08:15to pay for this real-world house
08:17that your entire family's survival is dependent upon.
08:21Boom! Boom!
08:23Boom!
08:23It was a hard day for all of us.
08:25And that is why I hate guns.
08:28But the hardest part about that day
08:30was the first time we were asked a question
08:33that would follow us for the rest of our lives.
08:35What are you weirdos mixed with?
08:39What's mixed?
08:40You guys think you had a bad day?
08:51Since leaving the commune,
08:53my world had been turned upside down.
08:55But after my first day of school,
08:57I felt like that upside-down world got lit on fire.
09:00What is mixed?
09:01We need to know.
09:03Is it what kills me?
09:04My parents had sent us out into the world
09:06with absolutely no warning
09:08that being mixed was even a thing.
09:10Let alone how hard it would be to fit in.
09:12Everyone was laughing at us!
09:14I know the idea of not understanding
09:16what it meant to be mixed sounds crazy.
09:19But you have to understand,
09:21growing up on the commune,
09:22race wasn't a thing.
09:24And also, at the time,
09:25there weren't many of us.
09:26Today's mixed kids can look up to rappers,
09:29ballerinas, athletes,
09:30a president, and a princess.
09:32The only heroes we had were DeBarge.
09:35And do you have any idea
09:36how many more mixed babies there are today?
09:39Probably because interracial marriage
09:41was illegal until the Loving Act of 1967.
09:44So since my parents were one of the first mixed marriages,
09:48me, Johan, and Santa Monica
09:51were basically the beta testers for biraciality,
09:54as if it wasn't hard enough
09:56being a 12-year-old kid going to school for the first time.
09:59Imagine being the new kid
10:01when no one in the world is like you.
10:03Not even your parents.
10:05So after Mom and Dad finally explained to us
10:08that having a white dad and a black mom
10:09wasn't necessarily the norm,
10:11it was shocking.
10:13So, wait.
10:14You're saying being mixed makes us weirdos?
10:17Looks that way.
10:18Definitely feels that way.
10:20No, no, no.
10:20You don't need to worry about what those kids think.
10:23They're idiots.
10:24That's right.
10:25You weren't weirdos on the commune,
10:27and you're not weirdos here.
10:29You need to stop lying to these children.
10:33Aunt Dee Dee was our favorite aunt.
10:36She had the personality of a TSA worker
10:38before they realized what their personalities were going to be.
10:41Don't worry, baby.
10:42Auntie Denise is here to fix all your problems
10:44with new clothes, hot cones, and hair grease.
10:48Please tell me you're kidding.
10:49No, you please tell me
10:50you didn't send these babies to school looking like this.
10:54You know this is child abuse.
10:56What's wrong with how we look?
10:58Sweetie, you know Auntie Dee Dee loves you very much,
11:00but you look like a runaway house slave.
11:02No.
11:03Don't fill my baby's heads with that nonsense.
11:05Them being black is nonsense.
11:07They're black and white.
11:08Don't try to make them choose sides.
11:10America already chose.
11:12Especially this little one.
11:13She has edges.
11:16You can try to get away with that
11:17we are the world kumbaya foolishness
11:20back at your little Jonestown commune,
11:22but the real world is going to smack them in the face.
11:26It probably already did.
11:28The world smacked you in the face today, didn't it?
11:31You can tell me.
11:32It did.
11:33It really did.
11:35Okay.
11:36Say goodbye to Aunt Denise.
11:37I got it!
11:39Uh-huh.
11:40Go on.
11:41Bye, kids.
11:43Let's see.
11:44Bye.
11:44Bye.
11:47What did I do?
11:49Look, we know you don't like interracial marriages.
11:51You made that very clear
11:52when you tried to hook my wife up
11:54during your wedding toast.
11:57Okay, I was wrong for that.
11:58That was Diddy's bad.
11:59All I'm saying is,
12:01you guys are on a different level of whiteness.
12:03And don't you think that maybe we're above race?
12:07Hmm?
12:08See?
12:09That couldn't be a whiter thing to say.
12:11Hey, I'm just trying to help.
12:13I'll leave this stuff here for the kids
12:15in case you change your mind.
12:22Leave these people charged for manure.
12:25Is this a bad time?
12:26A little bit, yeah.
12:27Can I get a couple minutes, please?
12:29Of course.
12:30Of course.
12:34Hmm?
12:35You're not going to give me a couple minutes, are you?
12:39Did we make a mistake
12:40by never talking to the kids about race?
12:42Maybe.
12:43You're the one who said
12:44we need to teach them how to love
12:45and that would overcome anything.
12:46So that's what we did.
12:48That was when we were in a bubble on the commune.
12:50This is the real world.
12:52Look at this greenhouse.
12:54I'm going to make sure it's set up
12:55to give these plants everything they need.
12:57Just like our house and our kids.
12:59We'll give them everything they need
13:00to take on that world outside
13:01without changing who we are.
13:03Okay?
13:05Okay.
13:06Commune or not,
13:07our values are what got us here.
13:09So if the kids can survive scabies
13:11and a little bit of famine,
13:13they can survive the suburbs.
13:17Yes.
13:18You're right.
13:20I love you.
13:22Our world was spinning.
13:24Mom and Dad didn't have any clear answers.
13:27And Aunt Didi freaked us out even more.
13:30I had no idea what to think.
13:32But Johan and Santa Monica sure did.
13:34You heard Aunt Denise.
13:36We need to pick a side.
13:37And soon.
13:38What are you guys talking about?
13:40We're not picking sides.
13:41You heard Dad.
13:42Those kids are idiots.
13:44You're right.
13:44They are idiots.
13:45And I want to be one of them.
13:47I want to be an idiot so bad.
13:49Well, there's the idiot box.
13:52Guys, stop.
13:53You don't have to do this just to fit in.
13:55I have a...
13:57Shea Guevara book and a jump rope.
13:59I will loan you either.
14:00My dad may have called it the idiot box,
14:17but to my siblings,
14:18it felt like they were eating fruit
14:20from the tree of knowledge.
14:22Idiot fruit.
14:23While my siblings were rotting their minds
14:25trying to find a new way of life,
14:27my father was planting seeds
14:29trying to preserve our old one.
14:32And my mom was somewhere in between.
14:35I did some soul searching
14:36and the universe guided me here.
14:38Well, that and the light bill.
14:40But I looked at other firms
14:41and I know this is going to be
14:43the best place for me
14:44to do the meaningful work.
14:45What are you wearing?
14:47Excuse me?
14:48Do you think those clothes
14:49are appropriate for this office?
14:52It's clear you don't think so.
14:53I wouldn't go into your sweat lodge
14:55and put on deodorant.
14:57So I expect the same respect here.
15:00It's terrifying that you're the sensible one.
15:03Look, Alicia,
15:05Paul is like a son to me.
15:06He is your son.
15:07And I love him like one.
15:08But he doesn't get it.
15:09Now you,
15:10you have the legal chops
15:12to become the son I never had.
15:13Even though you went to that commie law school.
15:16Berkeley is a top school.
15:17For commies.
15:18Bottom line,
15:19if you want to be able to take care of your family,
15:21you're going to have to make some changes.
15:23You feel that?
15:28This is why I don't do cocaine.
15:30I am cocaine.
15:34I do cocaine.
15:38Back at the commune,
15:39meals were a time of harmony and fellowship.
15:42I felt like myself.
15:44I knew who I was
15:45and where I belonged.
15:47But I was a long way from the commune.
15:50And I just couldn't bring myself
15:52to go in there
15:53and pretend to be someone I wasn't.
15:55Hey!
15:56Hey, hey, hey!
15:58What's happening?
15:59What's wrong with you guys?
16:00You chose races?
16:02What you talking about, Rainbow?
16:03I'm talking about what you're wearing.
16:05You watch TV for one night
16:07and you're dressed like someone else?
16:09What?
16:09You're crazy.
16:11This is who I am.
16:12I'm a B-boy.
16:14Yeah, and we are living in a material world
16:16and I am a material girl.
16:19And just like that,
16:21Johan and Santa Monica had cracked the code.
16:24And I knew my problems could be over too
16:26if I had just picked a side,
16:28but I couldn't.
16:30Seriously, what's wrong with you two?
16:35Race isn't just a costume.
16:37You put on and take off.
16:38Okay, but drink because you don't know who we are.
16:40Hey, what's going on?
16:44Why are you guys doing the Mimi Screamies?
16:45Because they're changing who they are
16:47to try to fit in.
16:48Why are you dissing me?
16:49Wait, so hold on.
16:50These outfits aren't for like a play or something?
16:52No.
16:53They watch The Idiot Box
16:54and now this is who they think they are.
16:56Yeah.
16:56Don't we look cool?
16:58No.
16:59You don't look cool.
17:01We're not a family who changes to fit in.
17:04That's conformity.
17:06And who conforms?
17:07Capitalist.
17:09Exactly.
17:09Hey, guys.
17:12Mommy!
17:13Hi, baby.
17:14Mom, are you wearing a bra?
17:17Mm-hmm.
17:19I think she looks fresh.
17:22Mommy decided to take a job with Grandpa.
17:25Wait, what?
17:27Am I the only one not trying to be someone else?
17:29How can you say this family's all about keeping our values
17:32when everyone else is tossing them away?
17:35Go to eat.
17:36Come.
17:37Come with your sister.
17:39It's a great example you're setting, honey.
17:40Well, one of us had to get a job.
17:53What are you so mad about?
17:54Because it's like you completely gave up on our old way of life.
17:58Because this place forces people to be something that they're not.
18:01It's happening to our kids.
18:02It's even happening to you.
18:03Look, we need to support our family, Paul.
18:05If we're going to have any chance of surviving this, we're going to have to adapt.
18:09We had a plan.
18:10For you to grow us food?
18:12I can't wait six months to eat.
18:14So maybe that wasn't the best plan.
18:17But we promised we wouldn't let this place change us.
18:21Thinking of you going to that office in that pantsuit, it's like my biggest fear has come to life.
18:25My wife is becoming my dad.
18:26Look, you don't have to change.
18:29Because you can be how you are anywhere in the world.
18:33I can only be the way that I was on the commune.
18:36Anywhere else, I'm a black woman.
18:38It's different for me.
18:39And it's different for our kids.
18:49What are you doing, sweetheart?
18:50I'm leaving.
18:52Come on, Dad.
18:53Come with me.
18:54I heard there's a commune near Waco.
18:55Tell.
18:56I think I'm holding you back.
18:58What are you talking about?
18:59Well, I've been holding on to a world the way I want it to be instead of the way it is.
19:05That's why I've been putting so much pressure on everyone not to change.
19:10But the truth is that everything has to adapt to its environment.
19:15Even me.
19:16So then why didn't you tell me how hard it was going to be?
19:20I should have.
19:22I mean, if I'm being honest, I knew what this place was like.
19:24You know how many friends your mother and I lost after we got married?
19:27It's why we left.
19:29I guess we just didn't want to burden you with our anger.
19:32Do you know how hard this is?
19:35I feel like if I choose being white, I'm giving up on Mom.
19:38And if I choose being black, I'm giving up on you.
19:40What you're going through is so much harder than anything your mother and I had to deal with.
19:46No one's forcing us to ignore a part of ourselves.
19:50And your father and I would never think that you were giving up on us.
19:56Ever.
19:56But I don't know what I'm supposed to do.
20:01I can't tell you.
20:04All I can say is what not to do.
20:07See, I've been hoping that things were just going to work out, but that's not going to happen.
20:11We have to plan to adapt the best we can.
20:15I know you're going through a lot, but you have always been my strong, fearless warrior, so I know you'll get through this.
20:25You'll find a way.
20:27And we all will.
20:28Dad, when's dinner?
20:36Good food takes time.
20:38Anyone can grill meat.
20:40But to cook a medium or a mushroom, that's talent.
20:44Okay, babies, go wash your hands.
20:46I can help with that.
20:47Guns?
20:48Now, relax, hippie.
20:49Water guns are every child's Second Amendment right.
20:52In the summer of 1985, I was 12 years old, and my life changed forever.
21:02I love the Second Amendment!
21:05Anybody get my hair wet and we fight!
21:08And although I couldn't know it at the time, it would be the best thing that ever happened to me.
21:22The party's just beginning.
21:23Mom!
21:24Shh!
21:24Daddy's working!
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