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I'm Michael Sokolov.
I'm an author and I've been a contributing writer for the New York Times magazine for more than two decades.
So in 2009, this film comes out, and it's based on a book by Michael Lewis, the same guy who wrote the big short and moneyball.
The film is called the blind side.
It tells the real life story of a black teenager named Michael Orr, who grew up poor and shuttling between couches without a regular home, and how he was taken in by this very wealthy white family during his high school football career in Memphis.
This family, Sean and Leanne Toohey, do all kinds of things for Michael.
They give him a new truck and new clothes, and they get him tutoring to raise his grades and make him eligible to play college football.
The twoies call him their adopted son.
Michael goes on to become a football star at the University of Mississippi, and then he has an eight year career in the NFL.
It's really this kind of american fairy tale.
The movie was nominated for best picture at the Academy Awards, and it became one of the most beloved sports movies of all time.
It touched people on an emotional level.
But as we all know, it's common for movies to embellish real life.