California City, the third-largest city in California by area, is only home to roughly 14,000 people, making it a fascinating place to visit. Although it was originally envisioned in the 1950s as a rival metropolis to Los Angeles, it is now little more than a sliver of a settlement amid a vast desert ghost town. Filmmaker Jean-Paul LeBlanc, a Quebec-born blue-collar worker, is one of numerous people featured in the film, which examines how the American Dream has evolved since the city's founding in the 1960s.
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California City, the third-largest city in California by area, is only home to roughly 14,000 people, making it a fascinating place to visit. Although it was originally envisioned in the 1950s as a rival metropolis to Los Angeles, it is now little more than a sliver of a settlement amid a vast desert ghost town. Filmmaker Jean-Paul LeBlanc, a Quebec-born blue-collar worker, is one of numerous people featured in the film, which examines how the American Dream has evolved since the city's founding in the 1960s.
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