I'm not sure I understand the purpose of cutting 50 movies if the point is to put on 50 different movies. If someone thinks 50 of the movies aren't top 100 material, then so be it. But just to shake things up or highlight lesser known great movies is something I don't get. You either think it's genuinely one of the 100 greatest movies or you don't (conceding that "greatest" is pretty nebulous a concept). I'm trying to keep my overall criticisms of the list (and probably criticisms of criticisms) until the wrap up episode proper.
I'll make my top 10 a list of personal favorites (in AFI list order, not my personal preference) instead of why I might demand stay on the list. I think a couple movies like Citizen Kane objectively belong on a list of greatest American movies, but it's not something I watch regularly.
The Godfather
Singin' In The Rain
The Wizard Of Oz
Star Wars
2001: A Space Odyssey
It's A Wonderful Life
To Kill A Mockingbird
Jaws
Raiders Of The Lost Ark
Do The Right Thing
Here's my list of 10 that I would be glad to kick off the list no question
Lawrence Of Arabia (not American in my mind)
Bridge On The River Kwai (not American in my mind)
Intolerance
Cabaret
Tootsie
Forrest Gump
Easy Rider
Sophie's Choice
Yankee Doodle Dandy
Ben-Hur
One topic that has come up multiple times and I want to ask again before we get into the actual wrap up is: what movies created by people of color and women belong on the list? We've discussed that the directors are basically all straight white men multiple times, but no one has really put up what movies from women, LGBT+ directors, people of color should be on the list.