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The Chuck ToddCast

Interview Only w/ Josh Seftel - The Power Of "All The Empty Rooms"

The Chuck ToddCast

iHeartPodcasts

Government, News

4.02.8K Ratings

🗓️ 4 March 2026

⏱️ 56 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Oscar-nominated filmmaker Josh Seftel joins the Chuck Toddcast to discuss All the Empty Rooms, his devastating Netflix documentary short that chronicles the untouched bedrooms of children killed in school shootings since Sandy Hook. Seftel describes a country that has grown numb to over 100 school shootings just this year — where the reporting cycle moves on before victims' stories can truly be told — and explains how the simple, visceral act of standing in a dead child's bedroom forces viewers to feel something that statistics never could. He reveals that many parents have kept these rooms exactly as their children left them, preserving even the smell, creating what amounts to sacred spaces frozen in time.Chuck draws the parallel to the decision to show Emmett Till's open casket, and Seftel argues these painful stories must be told regardless of how uncomfortable they make us, because imagery can be more powerful than the spoken word.

What makes the film's approach so striking — and so strategically effective — is what it leaves out. The word "gun" is never mentioned, a deliberate choice to avoid triggering the political reflexes that shut down conversation before it starts. And it's working: Seftel shares that a Second Amendment enthusiast changed his mind after seeing the photos of empty rooms, and even a Sandy Hook denier reached out after watching. The film's funders didn't want to make money — they wanted to make change — and Netflix's global distribution has given it a massive reach. Seftel says the conversation has to start with one simple question — "How do we keep kids safe at school?" — and that the film intentionally got better as it got shorter, stripping away prescription and polemic to let the silence of those rooms do the work.

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Timeline:

(Timestamps may vary based on advertisements)

00:00 Josh Seftel joins the Chuck ToddCast

01:45 People are surprised by the portrayal in “All the Empty Rooms”

02:15 Public has grown to accept over 100 school shootings a year

03:00 Seeing the empty rooms of victims forces you to feel something

04:30 Why has mass shooting frequency been accelerating?

06:00 Does media coverage of shootings plant the seed for more?

07:15 Says a lot about American psyche that True Crime is so popular

08:30 Focus of the doc is on victims, not the shooters

09:00 Asked parents of every child killed since Sandy Hook to film their room

12:00 Media that means to come back to tell victims stories aren’t able to

13:00 Stories must be told, regardless of how painful. Like Emmit Til 

14:15 Many parents kept their slain children’s rooms untouched

15:15 Parents want to preserve the smell of their children

16:15 How did you compartmentalize when making this doc?

18:15 The hope of the doc is that everyone can feel the weight of the loss

19:30 People with the power to fix this problem need to see this doc

21:00 The word “Gun” is never mentioned, didn’t want to turn off viewers

22:45 Photos of empty rooms led 2A enthusiast to change his mind

23:30 Got an email from a Sandy Hook denier that watched the doc

25:30 The doc paints a 3D image of the victims, that gets missed normally

28:00 Parents choose to grieve & respond in different ways

30:00 Each family & parent has a different relationship with the empty room

31:45 Some families want to move, but can’t bring themselves to pack up room

33:30 Was it hard not to get prescriptive?

36:00 Conversation must start with “How do we keep kids safe at school?”

37:00 The film got better as it got shorter

38:00 Imagery can be more powerful than spoken word

39:15 Streaming on Netflix allows for far wider distribution 

40:30 Funders for the doc didn’t want to make money, they wanted to make change

44:00 The topic wasn’t just powerful, it was visually powerful

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Transcript

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is the uh direct memory that you can see on netflix right now it's called all the empty rooms um and

...

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