
John Legend marked Juneteenth 2026 with the premiere of “I GOT MY BROTHER.” The short documentary is about friendship, second chances, and the hard work of turning a painful experience into something meaningful.
The film centers on Legend’s decade-long relationship with Jarrett Harper, a formerly incarcerated advocate who has become a voice for criminal justice reform. Legend first met Harper in prison. That initial visit was more than ten years ago. He’s stood by Harper since – working with others toward his release and eventually witnessing his sentence be commuted.
That kind of sustained commitment doesn’t often make headlines. “I GOT MY BROTHER” is a chance to tell that story in full.
Produced by Breakwater Studios with support from the Schultz Family Foundation, the documentary premieres through the LA Times and is available on YouTube as of today. The release date is deliberate. June 19 is Juneteenth, the federal holiday marking the end of slavery in the United States. It’s also the anniversary of Harper’s commutation. Both milestones land on the same day. That timing gives the film a weight that’s hard to miss.
On Instagram, Legend opened with the story’s beginning. “I met Jarrett Harper more than a decade ago while visiting him in prison,” he wrote. He added that he’s stood by Harper and his family since, alongside many others who worked toward his release.
The film, Legend wrote, “features Jarrett’s story of brotherhood, resilience, and the long road from incarceration to advocacy.”
That phrase – “long road” – deserves attention. Harper’s path from incarceration to public advocacy wasn’t a clean arc. It involved years of invisible effort: legal battles, community organizing, and conversations that never went viral. A short documentary is one of the better formats for honoring that kind of process. It doesn’t need a twist. It just needs to bear witness.
Legend has been working on criminal justice issues for years. He co-founded FREEAMERICA in 2015, a campaign focused on reducing mass incarceration and reshaping the public conversation around people in the justice system. His bond with Harper is part of that same work. This film makes it personal. Broader advocacy campaigns often can’t manage that.
It’s also worth noting how “I GOT MY BROTHER” is being released. The film is free to watch on YouTube and through the LA Times. No paywall, no subscription required. For a film about access and second chances, that approach fits.
Harper is still doing the work. He’s still building the life he began rebuilding inside prison. And Legend, by all appearances, plans to keep showing up.
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