[Transcript of, "Don't Block the Box", produced by Rooted in Rights] [NARRATOR]: The following trailer contains a montage of documentary style interviews. The interview subjects' names do not appear in the trailer. Brief descriptions of each speaker are included in this audio description when they appear for the first time. [AUDIO DESCRIPTION]: A man cleans a vending machine. A young woman pulls a cart through a hallway. A man drives his wheelchair through an office. [Slow electronic music] Another man pushes shopping carts in a parking lot. An older man is interviewed while sitting on his couch at home. SPEAKER 1: People with disabilities are not capable of working. That's the biggest lie ever heard. [fast electronic music] [AUDIO DESCRIPTION]: Rooted in Rights tree logo and slogan, Disability Rights are Human Rights. Shots of protesters holding signs with slogans like "person with dignity," "subminimum equals subhuman," "disabled does not equal incompetent," "fair wages." A man in a suit with a white cane is interviewed in a law library. SPEAKER 2: The minimum wage is offered to everybody, except for people with disabilities. [AUDIO DESCRIPTION]: A young man is interviewed while sitting in his power wheelchair. SPEAKER 3: People with disabilities are being paid less than minimum wage. [AUDIO DESCRIPTION]: A woman is interviewed in a conference room. SPEAKER 4: On average, under two dollars an hour across the country. [AUDIO DESCRIPTION: Split shot of grainy film. One side is a shot of hands moving drill bits around. On the other side, a list of hourly wages, all around fifty cents. A subminimum wage worker is interviewed. SPEAKER 5: How would you like to work for two weeks and come out with a six dollar check? SPEAKER 4: It's all based on the assumption that they're less capable than other individuals. [AUDIO DESCRIPTION]: A deaf woman is interviewed in an office. SPEAKER 6: No, it's not fair. [AUDIO DESCRIPTION]: An attorney is interviewed in her office. SPEAKER 7: It could be perfectly legal. SPEAKER 2: The management is making very very significant six-figure salaries. SPEAKER 4: Companies have told us that if they had to pay half of minimum wage that they would probably go bankrupt. [AUDIO DESCRIPTION]: An older man wearing a button down shirt is interviewed in his office. SPEAKER 8: They're just building this own business for themselves don't you think? SPEAKER 3: I'm a person with a disability and I've been able to, you know, find jobs that pay me what I deserve. [AUDIO DESCRIPTION]: A young man is interviewed in a coffee shop. SPEAKER 9: I may have a disability but I can still work. [AUDIO DESCRIPTION]: Shots of him at his computer at work. SPEAKER 9: I oversee the Bob Boyte Honda Facebook page. It's great. I interact with customers, I talk to the workers, I get paid. I love it. [AUDIO DESCRIPTION]: A young man speaks using a tablet while sitting in his wheelchair at his home. SPEAKER 10: I work at Powell's Book Store. I use assistive technology to help me do what I cannot do physically. [AUDIO DESCRIPTION]: Shots of him at work, next to a conveyor belt with books on it. A young woman is interviewed in her home. SPEAKER 11: I am super proud of my job. I'm in the shipping and receiving at the Boston Children's Hospital. [AUDIO DESCRIPTION]: Shots of her using a hand-held computer and delivering packages at work. A young man with a mohawk pours ingredients into a popcorn popper. He is interviewed in his home, using a tablet to speak. SPEAKER 12: Here I am today, a business owner. I own Poppin' Joe's Kettle Corn. You know the greatest disability there is? it is low expectation. [AUDIO DESCRIPTION]: The young man plays basketball and scores a basket. Back to the protest from earlier, a protester speaks to camera. SPEAKER 13: People with disabilities can be paid sub-minimum wage. We don't feel that's right. SPEAKER 1: There's no reason to pay us less than the minimum wage. [AUDIO DESCRIPTION]: A woman stands by herself beside a highway on a gray and stormy day. SPEAKER 14: When I'm working I felt I should be paid as a equal person. [AUDIO DESCRIPTION]: Title screens. Rooted in Rights presents an original documentary, Bottom Dollars. For the full film, go to BottomDollarsMovie.com. [MUSIC]: The sun will come out tomorrow. Bet your bottom dollar that tomorrow there'll be sun. [AUDIO DESCRIPTION]: "Tomorrow" music by Charles Strouse, lyrics by Martin Charnin, performed by Catrina Melograna. [End of transcript]