Starting out in Lebanon, Kansas the geographical centre of America journalist Steve Boggan set free a ten-dollar-bill and accompanied it on an epic journey for thirty days and thirty nights through six states across 3,000 miles armed only with a sense of humour and a small, and increasingly grubby, set of clothes. As he cuts crops with farmers in Kansas, pursues a repo-woman from Colorado, gets wasted with a blues band in Arkansas and hangs out at a quarterbacks mansion in St Louis, Boggan
enters the lives of ordinary people as they receive and pass on the bill. Add to that the missionaries from Missouri, the Amish in Michigan, the banker from Chicago and the deer hunters from Detroit, and what emerges is a chaotic, affectionate and funny portrait
of a modern-day America that tourists rarely see.