Hollywood producers gather at the Waldorf Hotel to plot strategy. They push back against allegations of subversive content. The Motion Picture Association of America president makes the case that movies are a force for moral good. He also calls for a hardline: he pushes studios to purge communists and sympathizers from their payrolls. This marks the beginning of the so-called “blacklist” era in Hollywood. Screenwriter Norma Barzman recalls this as a repressive period when creative people were self censoring their political beliefs.