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Can You Bring It: Bill T. Jones and D-Man in the Waters

Summary: Can You Bring It: Bill T. Jones and D-Man in the Waters is a feature documentary that traces the history and legacy of one of the most important works of art to come out of the age of AIDS - Bill T. Jones' tour de force ballet "D-...
Runtime: 1 h 34 min

Production: Dancing/On Air
Distributor: Kino Lorber
Country: United States
Language: English
Movie budget: $ 805,565
Domestic: $ 9,723

Box office:

Budget:$805.6KDomestic:$9.7KWorldwide:$9.7K
N/A
100%

50%8%
White91.67%Asian8.33%
N/A

LGBTQ content included:

gay

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RaceWhiteLatinoBlackAsianTotalVisualsInfo
Forebears1222117
Familysearch11
Total1232118
Cast Percentages66.67%16.67%11.11%5.56%100%
U.S. Population (2020) Percentage57.84%18.73%12.4%6%
Source:
US Census
(Note: Racial and ethnic categories overlap so the sum will not equal 100%.)
U.S. Population (2020) Representation+8.83-2.06-1.29-0.44
U.S. Buying Power (2018) Percentage74.35%9.42%7.96%6.2%
U.S. Buying Power (2018) Representation-7.68+7.25+3.15-0.64
U.S. Average Individual Income (2018) Percentage65.34%9.51%9.43%7.52%
U.S. Average Individual Income (2018) Representation+1.33+7.16+1.68-1.96
World population (2019) Percentage14.24%5.62%14.47%31.25%
NOTE: ZR is the first organization to ever create a global buying power divided by race. Essentially we just took data from CIA.gov FactBook, UN Population Estimates, and The World Bank's Population Estimates / Purchasing Power Parity Per Capita.
World population (2019) Representation+52.43+11.05-3.36-25.69
World Buying Power Percentage36.48%9.35%6.38%29.46%
NOTE: ZR is the first organization to ever create a global buying power divided by race. Essentially we just took data from CIA.gov FactBook, UN Population Estimates, and The World Bank's Population Estimates / Purchasing Power Parity Per Capita.
World Buying Power Representation+30.19+7.32+4.73-23.9
Notes
Many Latinos check "White" or "Other" on the Census. So this overlaps with "Mixed" race and "White."

Also, when there was a discrepancy with the percentage listed on the Wikipedia table and our calculated numbers, the Wiki table's numbers were used. Likewise, when the population total was missing from the Census pdf, the estimate was calculated using the percentage from the Wiki table.


NOTE: It turns out that the reason America doesn't have a separate "Latino" race is because the League of Latin American Citizens protested against discrimination towards Mexicans and got themselves to legally be considered "White."

Check the research links in our Google Doc for more info.
The US Census considers Pakistani, Sri Lankan, Indian, and Bangladeshi as Asians. At ZR we group Pakistanis with the Arab world. And we group Sri Lankan and Bangladeshi with India because 1.) they are all genetically similar as "South Asians and 2.) there are only a handful of actors from those regions in our database.

However, you are viewing the "Asian Alone" category from the US Census when comparing it with Domestic representation. Also note that the 2000 and 2010 estimates include MultiRacial Asians not just "Asian Alone" estimates, and in some categories they include Native Hawaiians as "Asian."

So there is a margin of error less than 1% and some inconsistencies with the grouping.

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