Peter Berg spent almost five years in the Twin Cities at the start of the 1980s, getting a degree from Macalester in theater arts and history.
He headed to Los Angeles in 1985 to see where that degree might take him. He found a fair level of success as an actor, most notably as the young man used for personal gratification by the conniving Linda Fiorentino in "The Last Seduction" (1994).
"She was great in that role, wasn't she," Berg said in a phone conversation last week.
Berg's career took a turn to directing and producing in the late '90s. It was in those roles that he spent much time back in the Twin Cities starting in the summer of 2021.
"George Floyd had died in May [25th] 2020, and we all saw it on video," Berg said. "His murder did more than lead to parts of Minneapolis being burned. It led to international outrage and protests."
As the complete chaos subsided after a few days, there came the national news narrative of the violent atmosphere in Minneapolis that existed before George Floyd's death and would become extreme afterward.
"I couldn't put aside this thought: 'It wasn't like that when I was there. What has been going on?' " Berg said. "I wanted to do something, but I didn't know what.
"Then I read about 'OA' and the North High football team in the New York Times, and I said, 'There's something here for a documentary.' "