During the evening of Thursday, September 18th, I attended the "No Ordinary Hero: The Superdeafy Movie" showing. It was located at the Elstad Auditorium at Gallaudet University in Washington, DC. My friends Sam and Brittany accompanied me as we made the trip to DC. When we arrived at Gallaudet University, we had a tough time finding the main entrance, so we drove around the whole university until we finally found it. At the gate there was an officer who directed us to the auditorium and where we were supposed to park. The Elstad Auditorium was the very first building we saw when we made a right turn after the main entrance. We drove past it and made another right turn into the parking lot. We kept driving down until we reached the underground parking, parked the car and then walked towards the auditorium. When we arrived at the auditorium, we had to communicate in American Sign Language as we handed in our tickets to the people sitting down on the tables and were directed into the auditorium. The auditorium was not very big, but there was a lower and upper level to sit, so we chose the seats in the lower level. We then sat down and patiently waited for the movie to begin. At around 7:20 PM, the movie finally started playing. It started by introducing the main character, Jacob, who was a deaf student in an elementary school, struggling with being in a regular class. His hearing aid was not working and he could not hear anything the teacher was saying as the class was going on. At the end of the day while he walked home from school, one of the other boys pushed him made fun of him being deaf. However, Jacob didn't say anything back, he just picked up his books from the floor, noticed the bruise on his knee from the fall and continued to walk home. When he arrived home, his mother, Emily, used ASL to communicate with him to ask how his day was and what happened to his knee. Later on, after Jacob's father, Patrick, arrived home, they all s