News

VIDEO EXCLUSIVE: Directors Jesse Moss & Amanda McBain Explain The Meaning Behind Their Documentary ‘Girls State’

Directors Jesse Moss and Amanda McBain sat down to deep-dive into the political meaning of their new documentary Girls State in their new uInterview.

A follow-up to Moss and McBain’s Boys State, a documentary about an experiment in which 1,100 teenage boys from Texas came together to build a representative government, Girls State features 500 teenage girls as they work to build a democracy together. The film follows a diverse team of young female leaders from a vast variety of backgrounds as they construct a government from the ground up.

Moss explained what drove them to produce a sequel to their 2020 film. “[We] call Girls State a sibling to Boys State, not a sequel, which was a little bit of a way to give ourselves permission to make the film,” he told uInterview founder Erik Meers. “Boys State worked out so well, but we felt like there was unfinished business. We’re the parents of two teenage girls. We think a lot about teenage girls in this political moment, so we decided to leave Texas, go to Missouri, and really let the film become its own story and not try to impose some kind of artificial structure on it. It’s a different kind of story I think.”

McBain reflected on her experience watching the women work together. “What I found inspiring about these young women is that they are realists. They’re optimists. They’re politically engaged. They love America. They want to make it better. They want there to be more female representation in government on its highest levels and they’re game to do that. I found that inspiring, the level of energy and determination. I did also see in Girls State, the challenges that girls face beyond institutional problematic challenges. They were internal.”

McBain added, “And I know this from parenting teenage girls, there’s a level of perfectionism, and girls are hard on themselves in a way that boys are not. That was a very stark difference from what we’d seen in Boys State. Yet a lot of it is very similar to Boys State.”

Moss expanded on the female take on the documentary, “I think it mirrors the inequalities in our society and explains why there are not more women in higher political office. These young women, they don’t hold back, they are not shy, and I love that they call out these differences in the program…here they were showing us what the story was that was hiding in plain sight.”

Girls State can be streamed now on Apple TV+.

Baila Eve Zisman

Recent Posts

‘Gossip Girl’ Star Chanel Banks Found After Mysterious 2-Week Disappearance, Says She ‘Does Not Want To Be Found’

Singh reported that Banks’ husband of one year has relayed a message from Banks to…

41 mins ago

VIDEO: Fireboat Sprays Water On Brush Fire in Manhattan’s Inwood Hill Park

https://youtu.be/p_puCXS-eTM Emergency services battled a brush fire that broke out in Manhatan’s Inwood Hill Park…

1 hour ago

Rudy Giuliani’s Lawyers Quit His $148 Million Defamation Case Over ‘Fundamental Disagreement’ With Ex-NYC Mayor

Former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani's lawyers, Kenneth Caruso and David Labkowski, have quit his $148 million defamation case.…

3 hours ago

VIDEO: Volcano Spews Ash & Lava Into The Skies In Indonesia Killing 9 People

https://youtu.be/UNys12tpKT0 Indonesia’s Mount Lewotobi Laki-Laki was seen spewing ash into the sky in East Flores…

5 hours ago

VIDEO: New Zealand Parliament Suspended As MPs Perform Haka In Protest Over Bill To Limit Maori Rights

https://youtu.be/OvmpPK1Ay-s New Zealand’s parliament was disrupted by a haka on Nov. 14, during the reading…

7 hours ago

Celebrities Are Paying Victims To Stay Silent About Their Relationships With Sean Comb, Ray J Claims

Ray J declined to reveal any names. He did not reveal whether or not he…

7 hours ago