The Fight to Unionize Amazon

Kate Wolf speaks with filmmakers Brett Story and Stephen Maing about their new documentary “Union,” which is out in theaters now.

By LARB Radio HourNovember 1, 2024

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    Kate Wolf speaks with filmmakers Brett Story and Stephen Maing about their new documentary Union, which is out in theaters now. It follows, in real time, the forming of the first ever Amazon union in the country, the ALU, at the JKF8 plant in Staten Island. Later in the conversation Chris Smalls, the president of ALU, joins as well. Smalls began to petition for the Amazon union after he was fired by the company in March of 2020 for walking off the job in protest of the lack of COVID-19 safety precautions at the plant. The film picks up about a year later as Smalls and his fellow organizers are gathering signatures to ratify their petition to formalize the union process. It captures the ensuing months of grueling work by Smalls and other ALU members as they try to convince the 8,000 plus workers at the JFK8 plant that a union is in their best interest. The film is an object lesson in the many tactics needed for political organizing, and the inevitable discord that comes with it, both from the outside—in this case, one of the biggest companies in the world—and from within as well.

    Also, Alexis Pauline Gumbs, author of Survival Is A Promise: the Eternal Life of Audre Lorde, returns to recommend Audre Lorde’s The Black Unicorn.

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    The LARB Radio Hour is hosted by Eric Newman, Medaya Ocher, and Kate Wolf.

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