Kenneth Jackson, who owned the Dew Drop Inn at the time of filming, is shown walking inside and outside the shuttered Dew Drop Inn, as well as opening the club’s padlocked doors. He discusses his renovation attempts on the building, and explains the locations of where various aspects of the club, such as the kitchen, bar, hotel, dressing room, barber shop, and club, would have been located in the interior and how they operated. He mentions his attempts to run the club briefly, circa early 2000s. He discusses photos on the wall of Clayton “Peg Leg” Bates, B.B. King, Adam Clayton Powell, Lloyd Price, and Big Joe Turner, and the artists’ relationship to the club and Jackson’s family. He discusses how, as a child, he interacted with the club’s snake dancers and ventriloquists. He discusses his plans at that time to redevelop and revitalize the club, and his memories of his grandfather, Frank Painia, who founded the Dew Drop Inn.