

A 59-minute masterclass in why your traffic ticket hearing is actually cosmic theater.
Anthropologist Laura Nader's first field trip to a Zapotec Indian village in Oaxaca, Mexico, in the late 1950s, led her to study problem-solving in the local courts. There, "little injustices" were the meat of everyday courtroom life.
Direction
Rockefeller lets Zapotec court breathe—no narration panic, just observation.
Writing
Nader's 1958 field notes become unexpectedly hilarious commentary.
Director
Terry Kay Rockefeller
Trivia, insights & behind the scenes
Nader's brother Ralph wrote 'Unsafe at Any Speed' the same decade; the Nader family basically invented 'annoying the powerful as career.'
This 1981 PBS documentary helped launch visual anthropology as teaching tool—professors still screen it when students think 'law' means 'Law & Order.'
No ratings yet
Sign in to join the discussion — comments are spoiler-gated to your watch progress.
Discussion starters