1:38:00
...intermittent entertainment
between intermittent showers.
1:38:04
Somebody was saying this is the
second largest city in New York.
1:38:07
There's been no police.
There's been no trouble.
1:38:11
If you check the statistics out...
1:38:12
...you'll find that...
1:38:13
...these people have lived,
over three hundred thousand people...
1:38:16
...have lived together peacefully,
loving each other...
1:38:21
...feeling for each other, want,
needing for each other...
1:38:25
...and wanting to make
this the experience it is.
1:38:36
What are they doing?
1:38:37
They're dropping dry, they're
dropping flowers and dry clothes.
1:38:41
Out of that helicopter?
1:38:44
You said a moment ago that
this wasn't the end of this festival...
1:38:47
...that this was a beginning.
1:38:49
What do you mean, a beginning?
1:38:51
Well, well, look at it!
1:38:53
This is the beginning
of this kind of thing.
1:38:59
This culture and generation, away from
the old culture and the older generation.
1:39:05
And you see how they
function on their own.
1:39:07
Without cops, without guns,
without clubs, without hassle.
1:39:10
Everybody pulls together and everybody
helps each other and it works.
1:39:13
It's been working since we got here.
1:39:16
And it's going to continue working.
1:39:17
And no matter what happens when they
go back to the city, this thing happened.
1:39:20
And it proves that it can happen.
1:39:24
That's what it's all about, you know.
That's the whole thing right there.
1:39:31
Mr. Kornfeld, was, was this
a suc... , a financial success?
1:39:34
From the point of view of
the fellows that put it on?
1:39:37
It was a financial disaster!
1:39:40
Why do you say that?
1:39:41
Well, we just opened the gates and let
everybody in. It's a free festival...
1:39:46
...paid for by the people
who put up the money...
1:39:48
...or the people that are
going to have to pay it back?
1:39:53
Uh, paid for by the people
who bought the tickets.
1:39:55
The two hundred thousand, of which I
don't know how many of them got here.