

John Lennon threw him a freedom concert and changed the law. Who IS this guy?
John Sinclair first emerged out of his small-town Michigan background to forge a legendary course through the 1960s as a cultural activist, manager of the MC5, and Chairman of the White Panther Party. An early victim of the War on Drugs who faced 20 years to life in prison for giving two joints to an undercover policewoman, Sinclair served 29 months of a 9-1/2-to-10-year sentence before his legal victory on appeal changed the law for good. The long campaign waged by Sinclair culminated in a massive John Sinclair Freedom Rally headlined by John Lennon & Yoko Ono, Stevie Wonder, Bob Seger, Phil Ochs, Allen Ginsberg and Bobby Seale that resulted in Sinclair's release from prison on December 13, 1971-just three days after the event (Clint Weiler)
Production
Rare archival footage of the legendary 1971 Freedom Rally
Writing
Sinclair's own unapologetic, poetic narration
Editing
Seamless weaving of personal saga with political history
Director
Steve Gebhardt
Trivia, insights & behind the scenes
John Lennon wrote 'John Sinclair' specifically for the rally after reading about the case in Ramparts magazine—it's one of the rare times he performed a protest song he didn't write years earlier.
Sinclair's case directly led to Michigan reducing marijuana penalties in 1972, making this documentary ground zero for understanding how celebrity activism could actually dismantle drug laws.
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