Up to 30% of not one but two entire generations of Americans have chosen to live a life free from religion. The Nones Are Alright
investigates how and why the exodus from organized religion is
occurring, by telling the personal stories of members of the generation
born in the 60s and 70s, when their Boomer parents severed their own
ties with organized religion, and the stories of those born in the 80s
and 90s, when Fundamentalism was on the rise. By delving into profiles
of individuals, it contrasts the stories of "nones," atheists and
agnostics with the stories of those who took an opposite track: who
defied the trend and found religion as adults, or who experienced a
startling conversion from the religion of their childhood to a
completely new set of beliefs, and those who've remained in the religion
of their childhood, but have re-imagined and redefined what it means to
be religious today.