Night Fight: A Filmmaker’s Raw Look at Race and Art

 


Hey Family,

Marcus Hart here—your vet-turned-truth-teller. Last week, I sat down with Khary Saeed Jones, the mind behind Night Fight, a film that’s got my soul stirred. If the podcast slipped under your radar (views were low, but the fire was high), here’s the juice: this ain’t just a movie—it’s a man’s life poured onto the screen.


Khary grew up where fists flew faster than words. “I saw racial tension before I could name it,” he told me. Night Fight channels that—a night of violence through a Black man’s eyes, raw and unfiltered. “I didn’t make it to explain race—I made it to feel it,” he said. And man, you feel it.

Me? I saw Iraq’s chaos—convoy blown apart, PTSD gnawing. Khary’s story hit me hard. “Pain’s a teacher; faith’s the anchor,” I told him. He nodded—his film’s his fight, his redemption. Behind the scenes? He battled doubt and dollars, but every frame screams truth.


Exclusive Drop: Khary shared this off-mic: “One scene—guy running from a mob—I shot that where it happened to me. Felt like ghosts were watching.” That’s the grit you won’t find in the video piece (https://youtu.be/b_90_OvkL9k).


Your Move: Hit transformumedia.com to subscribe—get more raw talks like this. Share this with your crew—let’s wake folks up.


Blessings,

Marcus

“Join for a free Night Fight discussion guide—unpack race and art with us.”

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