The Killing Of Kenneth Chamberlain – When Comfort Gets Checked: A Night at NYU’s Vanderbilt Hall

Date:

Let me be clear.

Last night, I didn’t “pull up” to an event.

I pulled up to accountability.

At New York University, inside Vanderbilt Hall, I wasn’t just sitting in a seat, I was sitting in the middle of America’s unresolved issues with Black life, Black death, and Black dignity.

And no, this wasn’t a “cute little screening.”

This was a confrontation.

With history.

With systems.

With ourselves.

And a lot of people do not like confrontation unless it’s happening on reality TV.


A “Wellness Check” That Was Anything But

The Killing of Kenneth Chamberlain tells the true story of a Black elder, a veteran, a father, who was killed in his own home after what was labeled a “wellness check.”

Let me say that again.

A wellness check.

Ended in death.

Now if that doesn’t immediately sound absurd to you, congratulations, you’ve been insulated from a reality a lot of us know too well.

Because in many Black households, “the police are coming” has never meant “help is on the way.”

It has meant: stay alert.

It has meant: stay alive.

It has meant: brace yourself.


This Wasn’t Entertainment. This Was Evidence.

This film didn’t try to make you comfortable.

It wasn’t interested in your emotional convenience.

It wasn’t here to hold your hand.

It was here to hold up a mirror.

Every scene was intentional.

Every pause was heavy.

Every moment reminded us that this wasn’t fiction, it was policy meeting prejudice meeting unchecked authority.

Frankie Faison, who portrayed Kenneth Chamberlain Sr., didn’t just act.

He testified.

He embodied every Black elder who has ever had to justify their existence to people with badges and bias.

Watching this wasn’t “movie night.”

It was emotional labor.

Unpaid.

But necessary.


When the Panel Took the Stage

After the screening, the conversation didn’t get softened.

It got sharper.

It got more honest.

It got more uncomfortable, in the best way.

The panel was moderated by Max Markham of the Policing Project.

On stage were Vincent Southerland of the Center on Race, Inequality, and the Law, Attorneys Mayo Bartlett and Earl Ward, Lori McCreary of Revelations Entertainment, the film’s director David Midell, and Kenneth Chamberlain Jr.

This wasn’t vague “expert talk.”

This wasn’t surface-level commentary.

This was lived experience, meeting legal knowledge, meeting storytelling, meeting accountability.

All in one room.

With microphones.

And no filters.


When Kenneth Chamberlain Jr. Spoke, the Room Shifted

Let’s be real.

The energy in that room changed when Kenneth Chamberlain Jr. spoke.

He didn’t perform pain.

He didn’t monetize grief.

He didn’t sensationalize loss.

He spoke with clarity.

With discipline.

With truth.

He spoke as a son who lost his father to a system that never had to answer for it.

And when he spoke, you could feel it.

You could feel Kenneth Chamberlain Sr. holding him up.

You could feel a father’s spirit steadying his son.

You could feel generations of love, loss, and resilience standing behind every word.

It wasn’t just a man talking.

It was a legacy speaking.

It was a bond that death could not break.

And somehow, without raising his voice, he raised the stakes.

By the time he finished speaking, watching this film was no longer optional.

It was a civic duty.

It was moral homework.

It was something you don’t get to skip and still claim you care about justice.

His words didn’t ask for our attention.

They demanded it.

Because they were earned.


“Based on a True Story” Is Not a Get-Out-of-Jail-Free Card

We love that phrase.

“Based on a true story.”

It lets people emotionally clock out.

It makes tragedy feel like a Netflix category.

Like something you can scroll past when it gets uncomfortable.

But this story isn’t archived.

It’s active.

It’s recurring.

It’s happening in different ZIP codes with the same results.

New uniforms.

Same outcomes.

New policies.

Same excuses.


Why This Night Actually Mattered

What made this night at Vanderbilt Hall important wasn’t just the film.

It was the intention.

This wasn’t performative.

This wasn’t about posting selfies in front of a poster and calling it activism.

This was about education.

About confrontation.

About community.

About sitting in discomfort long enough to actually learn something.

It was about saying:

We see the problem.

We understand the problem.

And we are not pretending it doesn’t exist.


If You Left Unchanged, That Was a Choice

When I walked out, I didn’t feel “inspired.”

I felt activated.

Because inspiration is cute.

Action is necessary.

If you watched that and stayed the same, that’s on you.

If you learned something and did nothing with it, that’s on you.

If you felt uncomfortable and chose denial over growth, that’s on you.

In 2026, ignorance is optional.

Silence is intentional.


Don’t Just Feel It. Do Something.

Now listen.

If you made it through this article and thought, “Wow, that was powerful,” and then kept scrolling?

We missed the point.

The Killing of Kenneth Chamberlain is streaming right now on Amazon Prime Video.

Which means access is not the issue.

Convenience is not the issue.

Awareness is not the issue anymore.

Will is.

Go watch it.

With your family.

With your friends.

With your book club.

With your church group.

With your coworkers.

With anybody who claims they care about justice.

And then talk about it.

Out loud.

In real life.

Not just in comment sections.

Not just in reposts.

Have the uncomfortable conversations.

Ask the hard questions.

Challenge the easy excuses.

Because this story doesn’t change by being buried in algorithms.

It changes when people refuse to let it be forgotten.

So stream it.

Share it.

Discuss it.

Amplify it.

And don’t treat this like “content.”

Treat it like what it is:

A warning.

A record.

A responsibility.


Final Word

The Killing of Kenneth Chamberlain is not just a film.

It’s documentation.

It’s a demand.

It’s a mirror.

It reminds us that justice doesn’t happen because people are “nice.”

It happens because people are persistent.

Because people are informed.

Because people refuse to be pacified by convenience.

So, salute to everyone who showed up.

Who listened.

Who stayed present.

Who didn’t run from discomfort.

That’s where transformation happens.

Not on timelines.

Not in think pieces nobody reads.

In rooms like that.

At NYU’s Vanderbilt Hall.

With conversations rooted in truth.

Led by people who refuse to forget.

And yes.

I’m one of them unapologetically.

Always and Forevermore.

Larnez Kinsey
Larnez Kinsey
Larnez Kinsey is a writer for Black Westchester Magazine, a public-health advocate, and a seasoned New York State civil servant with two decades of service, including the last ten years as a Security Hospital Treatment Assistant in a maximum-security forensic psychiatric facility. With deep expertise in crisis management inside one of the state’s most demanding environments, she brings unmatched frontline insight into trauma, safety, human behavior, and the systemic gaps that influence community outcomes. A lifelong supercreative, Larnez is also the Co-Founder and CEO of BlackGate Consulting Group, where she uses her multidisciplinary skill set to drive transformative change for businesses, nonprofits, and community-based organizations. Her work bridges policy, protection, and healing, grounded in a clear understanding of cybernetic ecology, New York’s cultural landscape, and the interplay between mental health and community resilience. Larnez is additionally a co-host on Black Westchester Magazine’s flagship shows, People Before Politics and The Sunday Rundown, where she elevates community voices and engages in conversations that challenge systems and amplify truth. She also serves as the Economic Development Chair for the Yonkers NAACP and is a Reiki Master Teacher, integrating holistic wellness with strategic advocacy. Through every role, Larnez remains committed to empowering individuals, strengthening communities, and moving resources to the places where they can create the greatest impact.

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