The Jordan B. Peterson Podcast - Gregg Hurwitz
Episode Date: February 2, 2017A conversation with Author Gregg Hurwitz covering a variety of topics, including Gregg's recent work, writing practices, perfection vs. wholeness, superheroes & archetypal heroes, how to balance intim...acy and work, limits of comedy, free speech, and more. Gregg Hurwitz is the critically acclaimed, New York Times and internationally bestselling author of 17 novels, most recently, THE NOWHERE MAN. His books have been nominated for numerous awards, shortlisted twice for best novel of the year by Int
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Welcome to the Jordan B. Peterson Podcast.
This is episode 7, a conversation with author Greg Herwitz.
Greg has written 17 novels, including his most recent work The No Were Man.
He has written screenplays for many of the major studios, and written, developed, and
produced television for various networks.
He is a New York Times bestselling comic book writer, having pen stories for both Marvel
and DC.
He has also published numerous academic articles on Shakespeare, taught fiction writing in
the USC English Department, and guest lectured for UCLA, and for Harvard in the United States
and internationally.
You can support this podcast by donating to Dr. Jordan B. Peterson's Patreon account
by searching Jordan Peterson Patreon.
Dr. Peterson's self-development programs, self-authoring, are available self-authoring.com.
All right, it's looking good.
Excellent.
Here today with Greg Herwitz, who's a novelist and a screenwriter and a comic book writer and a variety of other things as well.
And we're going to talk a little bit about his latest book, The Know Where Man,
and then we're going to talk to him about writing more generally.
And that's the plan anyways.
So how are you doing, Greg?
I'm doing well, thank you.
So why don't you start by telling us a little bit about your new book and then about who
you are?
Well, my new book, I started a new series with my last book, and usually I write standalone
for others, but my last book was based on, I've sort of
done a lot of really dumb things in the name of research over the years. So I've gone
undercover. In my control cults, I've gone up and done airplanes. I've snuck on a demolition
range of maybe seals and blown up cars. And one of the things that kept coming up when I
dealt with a lot of the spec ops guys were how these off-the-books programs were implemented over the years. The sort of history
beneath the history that we're all aware of. And I got really interested in this
and I thought about a character who was taken out of foster homes at the age of
12, this is a program called the orphan program, and basically raised up to
be assassins,
to be, that's their full training, it's their full life.
And that's orphan acts, that's the first book in the series.
And so in the second book, the one that's just come out
called the Noir Man, this assassin is taken
by somebody who doesn't know who he is,
but wants something from him.
And he's taken off and spirited off,
kidnap to this remote chateau. He doesn't know where it is and the people don't know have no idea what
his real identity is or who he is and they think that he's trapped in there
with them and in fact they're trapped in there with him and they're soon gonna
realize that they have a major problem on their hands and so it's the second
in the folding out of this new character his name is Evan Smoke. So this is the first time that you've written a series, I know it's the second time you've
written a series, is that right, or what?
Yeah, I wrote a series early in my career and then I went, I went about nine books with
Thistle Loans and then I returned to it.
And part of that is it takes so long, I mean the majority of my waking hours I'm spending
inside a manuscript and with a character. Like I spend more time with my characters who are fictional
than I do with my wife and kids. And so it took me a lot of years to find
better the characters. They're less complicated, which is actually one of the
themes of the books, where the ways in which the complications that arise from intimacy,
because my character was raised with the veil of perfection. A lot of the notions that I play
with with him, I came to when I was writing on Batman. I wrote Batman comments for a couple of
years, and there were some notions that interested me. One of them was the balance between perfection
and intimacy.
That was my main focus with Batman.
Because part of the reason why I like Batman so much
is he doesn't have a magic ring-like ring lantern.
He can't fly like Superman.
He's just a human who represents the pinnacle
of what can be accomplished through sheer discipline.
But part of why that works is his parents are dead.
He's not married.
He has no kids. He lives up in way manner
And he's completely undisturbed by everyone and everything so he can hone at and the more that you've let people into your life and the more that you allow intimacy in your life
The more complications come that sort of detract from this previous notion of perfection
Okay, I've got a question about that so
of perfection. Okay, so I've got a question about that. So that seems to me to reflect in some sense the problem, maybe the different problems or maybe the
different orientation of men and women. So it's possible for men to, and I think
many men can do this too, is to sacrifice everything, including intimacy,
to become really good at one thing, whereas women, as far as I can tell, and of course,
this is a broad generalization, and one that will undoubtedly get me in trouble.
We never get in trouble, though.
No, no, no, I know.
Women are, I think, more concerned with intimacy and with relationship.
And that's an interesting dichotomy that you established
between those two.
And so what why you said that intimacy detracts
from perfection because it sort of
it spreads you out in the world.
Why did you come across that particular paradox?
Why do you think that one fast needs you?
Well, I think the part of it is, I'm type of disaffluent. And one of the things that I noticed is that I think that's the thing, when you find a character who you need to
live with more than you do with your family, you have to find something at the heart of
them that's uniquely compelling. And for me, I think I have a strong perfectionist drive.
And as I've got, when I was younger, it served me well.
A lot of the traits that we have,
or negative traits that might be survival instincts,
they got us through a key period of our life,
they're easy to discard when they're not helpful.
So like if you can have a bit of a temper,
it's easy to get rid of it.
The ones that are really hard are adaptive qualities
that we have that have gotten us very,
very far, but now are starting to interfere with our lives.
So one of the things that I notice is that my drive for severe, disciplined, and perfection
is tough when you're married, when you have a wife, when you have two kids, when you have
a dog, if you're singularly focused.
But it's also not something that the answer is to just give up completely.
You know, so it's trying to find a balance of maintaining the value in the drive and the
discipline that's necessary to be a novelist and screenwriter and complicate writer and
also to exhibit discipline in others in my life while also, you know, allowing for
sort of the complications that come with intimacy.
And so with Evan Smoked with my main character, for me, the whole series coalesce around a certain
exchange that he has, which is, you know, one of the things that I did when I first was thinking about him being pulled out,
he's this brop foster kid, he's pulled out of the projects of these Baltimore at the age of 12,
and he's raised only by handler. No one even knows who he is and his co-dames are finaxed.
And I thought instead of making this the usual sobby backstory, what if that handler was a really
fundamentally good man and became like a father figure and actually loved him. And at one point,
Jack John, who's his handler, tells him the heart when he's a kid, he says the hard part is not
going to be making you a killer.
The hard part is going to be keeping you human.
And for Evan, the thing that stuck on my head was, it would be so much easier if he was
just purely an assassin.
If his moral compass was never broken.
But because of the way that he was raised, he, at a certain point, the ambiguities of
committing these assassinations in different territories
where we're not supposed to be, he has limited information, the moral ambiguities become too
much and he leaves and becomes sort of a pro bono assassin for people in desperate need.
That's where we meet him in the series.
It's only because Jack gave him a human connection that opened up the complexities that make
this complicated for him.
When I was writing the Punisher, he's a Marvel character, that's not hard.
The Punisher's family is all that, he just wants to kill everybody, he wants to punish everybody.
With Evan, there's this thing at the heart of it that like he still has to function with this humanity
that was given to him from his father, freaking around.
Yeah, I was thinking that of the Batman movie with Heath Ledger and one of the things that
happens in that movie is that the Joker accuses Batman of being exactly the same as he is,
fundamentally, like that there, you could say opposite sides of the same coin or maybe
even closer than that.
And it seems to me that there's something in what you're saying that mitigates against that deadly danger,
or maybe even what you call a psychopathic intensity of single-mindedness.
Because one question you might ask yourself is that if intimacy interferes with perfection,
then why bother with it?
Probably not.
Right.
And well, and also, how do we widen out the definition of perfection?
It's like, okay, so if you take Bruce Wayne to his logical end and he's killed a lot of
bad guys and maintained physical perfection and dies alone in his manner, is that actually
perfection?
You have to broaden out the definition of what you apply perfection to.
Well, I didn't do as good a job of laying out that dichotomy in my earlier question as I might have,
but one of the things you mentioned was that it was his pre-supposition that men were after perfection
and women were after wholeness.
Right.
That's a more inclusive, the issue with perfection is that it's single-minded, right?
And it only focuses on, let's say, one thing,
whereas wholeness seems to be something more like the balance
between a variety of positive and valuable things.
And you can't be perfect at a variety of useful and balanced
or valuable and balanced things.
You have to settle for maybe B plus at a variety of them, but the question is is the
totality then more valuable than perfection along one axis. And I suppose it depends on the situation, but
but obviously that's something that you're continually toying with. And you said it's because it reflects a similar situation in your own life and with your own character.
So you've managed to integrate intimacy into your life and so what's being the advantage
to that?
Well, the advantage is it's, I mean, a lot of the things that give, that ultimately give,
I think, pleasure, meaning to life come from intimacy.
You know, it's, I think, it's like there's the old song that people say, when people die, it's rare that they're gonna say, gosh, I wish I worked more.
You know what I also put the work is,
versus spending time with your family and with your friends.
And it's like, I've noticed increasingly
as I get older, there's a shift in priorities and values.
But it's still one that's, it's hard for me at times
because I get, I can get single-minded.
I mean, I can get a hypomanic when I'm writing.
I write generally 10 times. I get I can get single money
I mean I can get a hypomanic when I'm writing I write generally 10 hours a day
But I've written as much as 23 hours straight, you know when I was on a TV show that was a risk of shutting down and
We need to script and there's just not a choice for it
So I can get incredibly focused
But the more focused that you that I get with writing one of the things that you're doing with writing when you're in
a venture that's difficult is you have a very high error recognition alarm
system, right? That's cliche, that's not gonna work, that's been seen before. You
want to do something that's new. And if you're in a field that's hard, that's
turned up really high. Well that can make living with you really difficult or
interacting with other people. It's very effective for work to say how do I make everything better, what's everything that's
wrong with this? It's sort of an approach to a mania script. But it doesn't work as well if you have
a two year old or a five year old at home where you're trying to deal with something else and you
can also lose perspective. So there's a there's a single mindedness to the range of perfection that you
can lose things at the periphery.
So like having some B pluses and other arenas, I think, are better.
I mean, that's one of the things what relationships are good for is literally providing perspective.
Like, we always say that.
You know, my friend gave me good perspective, but it's like, there's somebody literally
outside you looking at you aware of what your blind spots are, aware of the things that
you're doing wrong, but we just can't see. And that's one of the right, and intimacy is mentally useful. It's like,
you can be on perfection and just tell off in the wilderness and be gone. If you know other people
looking at you and keeping you human. Yeah, and so it's right. Right, well, that's actually one of the
arguments that I've been making up here, as you know, for the necessity of freedom of speech is that it isn't so much that you get to say what
you think and be right.
It's that you get to say what you think and be exposed to the corrective views of other
people.
And they have the same responsibility and right with regards to their own speech.
They have to say what they think, but they have to be open to
corrective
input from other people
So hand and it's it's impossible like if we want to evolve into a society where if you miss speak
Like for instance, there was a the Saturnat live
writer who made a tweet that was denigrating Baron Trump, right?
And she ultimately regretted it, right?
And so she apologized.
It doesn't matter.
Saturnat Live kind of suspended, or either suspended her or let her go.
Suspended her indefinitely.
And so there's this interesting question of like, if you're a comedian and your job is
to be funny, being funny revolves on being a reverent
and on being surprising.
You're the court jester in a certain way.
You have to go too far sometimes in order to do your job properly.
And maybe that's three times out of ten.
So she said something that she believed that she went too far and she apologized for
us.
And we've gotten in this place that people don't accept apologies anymore.
It's not good enough.
I think it's worse actually.
I think it looks to me like we've got to a place where if you make an apology, people
regard that as a final proof of your guilt.
Right.
Right.
And then it encourages the lack of insight and apology from people who increasingly
rise in power.
But the thing for me that's so interesting is it's like, when I write, I give myself permission
to write a vomit draft of a book.
I talk to so many aspiring writers who say,
I sit down and I just lock up.
I write a paragraph and then I don't know what to do.
I've conversation after conversation with people.
And I say, don't be afraid to make mistakes and fail.
You cannot fix a blank page.
Get something down, I call it the vomit draft, and then you can fix it.
And if we're losing that ability in speech, like everyone has to speak like Winston Churchill
upon first pass, everyone has a perfectly constructed sentences, perfectly regard and thought,
we're going to lose our ability to interact in ways that are meaningful.
And to stop and pause and say, you're right, that did go too far, let me back off.
Yeah, well, I told my students, my graduate students,
and my undergraduates as well,
to write a really bad first draft.
And I also tell them you can't play around with that.
Like you can't pretend that you're going to write
a really bad first draft.
And then break the rules of that game and try to write
something good anyways because that doesn't work, it doesn't free you up.
And I tell them at the same time, if they're trying to write a 2000 word essay to write a
really bad 3000 word essay or 4000 word essay so that they can feel comfortable in throwing
away 50% of it.
Well, it's also amazing how you get to good through that.
Like a lot of times I sit down, you know,
and if you're not feeling it,
and if I just start writing at a certain point,
it's sort of like if you set,
I always tell, you know,
it's younger writers,
set time that you make sacrosan,
you know, that is above all else,
that you have to write. So even if it's an hour twice a week at a certain point
You're gonna hit the hour mark and realize that you're at an hour and a half you're at an hour and 45 minutes
It leads to more and so if you're willing to write into
Mistakes and errors and not be overly concerned with you know if everything is in impactably detailed
You will get to stuff that's better a At a certain point, you'll start doing real writing.
The language will start to actually be alive, as opposed to dead.
It's a way to access it.
It's like a warm-up.
It's jogging a warm-up on a track before you're just friends.
Then we need to be able to have that.
You also say that you have to push yourself out to the place where you're actually making
errors.
You were talking about comedians and it seems to me that that's if you're exploring a set
of new ideas instead of just writing down what you already know, which would sort of be
like imitating yourself or parodying yourself, you have to push yourself past what you already
know.
And if you're not doing that, if you're doing that, you're going to make mistakes.
And if you're not doing that, then you're not going to be doing something that's creative
and interesting.
And so there is some kind of, excuse me, there is some kind of optimal ratio of error to
creative thought.
I remember that there was a good study done about relationships and their longevity. And one question might be, how many positive
interactions compared to negative interactions do you have to have in order for a relationship
to maintain itself stably across time? And you'd think, well, the higher the positive to
the negative, the better. But that isn't how it turned out. It turned out that
five positive to one negative interactions, roughly speaking, was the lower bound.
If the negative, if the ratio got lower than that, then people got unhappy and the relationship
degenerated. But if it got above 11 positive interactions to one negative interaction. It also became unstable. And I think the reason for that is that there's no corrective information. You talk about that.
And contentment is definitely.
Yeah, that's a tough one for people to grasp because they often don't get to contentment. But
is it contentment exactly or is it stasis or or it's also there's something
horrific about only seeing the positive reflected back to you it's it's I think you
just started to take things for granted and I mean look I always I always say about books
it's like when I'm writing any project if there's not a certain point that I'm scared
that I can't pull it off I haven't chosen the right project. I mean, I don't know, 18 novels in.
I mean, I've written 10 scripts.
I've written 80 comics.
And part of that is how to change things up.
And this whole notion that we're talking about
with this character, with them in smoke, started with that.
I was thinking about writing this ultra badass assassin
character.
It's just the real or it deals with other themes,
some of which we can get into.
But part of what I thought about was,
you know, we never see James Bond go home.
We never see Jason Borden and a badass mission.
He's bleeding in his arm and he gets in an elevator
with a single mom who is an elderly woman who's a neighbor
and they're nagging him to go to his homeowner's
association meeting because he haven't done it yet.
So it's like if I can create a character who represents these archetypal ideals but
cross them in the world with me and you, no one's done that.
And the whole time I was writing that, I was thinking, is this going to just fail miserably?
Is this not going to interest people or my birth?
Because we're using anyone who's writing genre, we're using a previous mold, which I don't mean in a way that's denigrating. I mean, that's what
Shakespeare did, you know, some of the the structure and containment and traditions of a form
can be enormously useful, but I'm always trying to tap it and break it at the edges. I did
that a lot when I was writing Batman.
So, so let's talk about the comics a bit. You wrote Batman for how long?
Two years. I started writing six months of the Penguin.
And I had this really funny thing. I was writing for Marvler, a Wolverine and Punisher,
or two of my favorite characters.
And DC came along and told me I could do whatever I wanted and you know, pay the character.
And I said, what I really want to do is write a graphic novel of the penguin.
And he sort of looked at me with a alarm because of all the choices that I had that was
totally bizarre.
But one of my big inspirations and comics is the killing joke by one more that's the
essential origin story of the Joker.
And I thought the penguin had always been kind of a joke.
And furthermore, I thought how interesting,
because if you're the penguin, then Batman is the enemy,
and Batman is a bully.
Right.
And so I wanted to do this alternate thing.
And so he was like, you know, the publisher of DC,
let me do it.
But I still remember there was an online poll that said,
that listed 10 upcoming comics, M mind him on it and asked how much
readers were anticipating them and I got .013% of the vote.
I still remember one of my favorite denigrating comments of all time is one guy just wrote
I'm so glad her rates is mom voted for him.
Which was great.
And so it came out to like the interest of no one, but what happened
is, is that the critics really sparked to us and then readers really sparked to it. And
people all of a sudden said, we've never looked at the pain in this way. And it was this
very interesting object lesson that like, had I gone for the obvious and said, let me write
Batman right away or let me write Superman right away, I chose something that was super
bizarre that I had to write and that I knew that I really wanted to write and could do well.
And from the most unlikely position, it led to me having, it sort of led you all to face
in my career, you know, that I found myself, you know, all of a sudden working on Batman
for two years with the best artists in the world.
But how did you do that?
So that's interesting.
You took a, you took a lowly approach and and an approach to something that people actually found contemptible
Yes, so and and and through that you got what you want
So what what in the world wasn't about the penguin and the story that you wrote that when why in the world did the penguin
Grick you like that? Do you have any idea and and tell us again tell us what you made of it as well
Well, I I had a strong
Affinity like I, for the killing joke.
I always thought the penguin was so interesting because of all of Batman's rivals, he's
the only one who's sane, right, of all of the Nemesis.
And the other thing that just really struck me was this whole weight of view, Batman, they're completely different prison.
I mean, like you can look at the Joker who's insane
and then he looks at Batman,
but Batman's semi insane too, like there's craziness.
And such an interesting prison.
So with the pain when I wrote about his upbringing
and he's this unappealing overweight kid,
his brothers were athletic and robust,
he was always
bullied growing up, and it's like, well guess what Batman is?
Batman's like this paragon of a physical specimen.
So he's always appearing in the background, but I was like, if I can get people to empathize
with the penguin and view Batman as a villain, or not as a villain necessarily, but just to
really, if we can really relate to the penguin and what his position is in that universe,
I just thought that would be cool.
But also a lot of it was, and this a lot of what happens
is like, I don't have a conscious thought about it.
You know, I was literally driving to the meeting
with the publisher DC, and I just was thinking,
I know this story.
I know how to write it.
I know how I want to sort of direct it on the page.
I know what I want to say with this. And it's only in hindsight I can look back and untangle it and realize that, you know, oh, well, part of what I was interested in was the aspect that he's
actually saying. And there's a bullying way. And it's a way to look at Batman through a new
angle. Yeah, well, there's an interesting idea lurking in there as well, which is if you think of Batman as an as an ideal
Now he's kind of a one-dimensional ideal and ideal is also a judge
Because it's something that you can't attain to exactly or that if you look at it
makes you acutely aware of your of your lack and
so on the one hand an ideal is something that is positive and worth striving for, but
on the other hand it's necessarily something that's got this, it's not exactly a bullying
element, but it's something similar to that because you're insufficient in its presence.
Right.
That might say as well to the degree that the ideal is one-dimensional, the fact that
you're insufficient in its presence is actually a bit unjust or unfair, because there may
be other dimensions of comparison along which you're doing fine.
It's actually a claim that's quite similar to the postmodernist idea, you know, that if
you erect a hierarchy of values, then by necessity
you exclude people from that hierarchy, and that that is in some sense, it's oppressive
and it's wrong. Of course, the issue they don't address is that if there's no hierarchy
of values, there's nowhere to go and there's nothing to do. But there is a point there
that if you're the exemplar of something, you make everyone else feel insufficient
in your presence.
And you could also imagine it would be easy for that
to take on a bullying aspect.
You know, well, that's something I've played with,
you know, so then you know when I was doing that, man,
I still focused a lot on the villains
and their perspective.
So I did a rum with David Finch on the scale
of my revenge for the new 52.
And then I did one of the mad hat with Ethan Van Skye, or somebody's amazing artist.
But one of the things that I put in one of the comics is one of the thugs who Batman comes along.
And the thug says, you don't remember me, do you?
The Batman says no. And you guys, you can't fly through the window.
And you know, the typical Batman scene and kicked me with your, you know, your, your beard sling on my jaw. Here's what that
surgery was. Here's what I'm living with. And he goes down this very detail, you know,
because so often it's Batman swings through window and smashes and bad guy and we all move
on. And I took these pauses sometimes to kind of look at things from a different angle.
And it was like horrific and fractured a skull and his, you know, his sinus was out and
like, it was, it's this horrific injury that took, you know, 15 screws.
And I sort of detailed the whole thing as he throws it back to Batman to be like, you
know, I'm, I'm kind of cannon fodder in your mission.
Maybe what I was doing is wrong.
Here's the level of pain that you inflicted on me, nonetheless. And it was this interesting pause. And I'd say, the
things that, there's always a type of act when you're writing, you know, a comic book
character, because they're sort of in a public trust. You know, I don't own them. DC does
it fully own them though they own them legally. But like, there's stuff that you know that
you can't do. You can't have Batman kill a bust load of nuns. I mean, there's the obvious.
But part of what they hire me is it's like,
I need to bring something new to this character,
but also I need to honor the traditions
that have come before.
So it's like, I've been entrusted with this thing
where I have to play with it
and I have to navigate that type rope very, very meticulously
to do something that makes it worth them bringing me on, to
give readers something new, and to make myself feel like I've put my own stamp on the character,
but not straight too far.
So it's a real exercise in being the sort of holding the flame of this tradition.
One of the ways I did that a lot too, was I would make fun of the tradition itself.
I got slightly mad out with it, for instance.
So I give you one example,
is I did a scene where Jim Gordon,
the police commissioner's talking,
it's late at night, Batman appears in his office,
they're having a conversation, it's darkly lit,
and Jim starts to muse on something
and he walks, you know, so the frame is just with him,
he's looking out the window,
and he talks for two panels, and then he says,
oh, this is the part where he turned around and you're no longer there, right?
And there's a blank, and then Batman says, nope. And then they turn around and regard each other
very awkwardly for a panel, and then they go, all right, then. And then they go, walk away awkwardly.
So it's like, it's knowing that we all live in a world of Batman comics, and maybe Batman himself even does also. And some of those little nuances are a way to kind of massage it into something in a
culture that's increasingly pop culture aware.
So I was thinking about this perfection issue again, and the issue of monstrousness.
So I read this, I think it was a billion wicked thoughts,
which is a very interesting book.
The Google engineers were looking at Google searches
and trying to do psychology as a consequence.
And because their engineers, they'll
think anything they want to think.
And they don't care much about how politically correct
it is, for example.
And one of the things they noted was that they were looking
at pornography use. And it's no things they noted was that they were looking at pornography
use. And it's no surprise to anyone, of course, that men use images for pornography, fundamentally,
and everyone knows what the images are like. It's usually young women who are symmetrical
and so forth, and youthful from a sociobiological perspective because that's associated with fruitfulness and fecundity
and that sort of thing.
And, and, and, and,
That's actually my favorite website
is youngwomenwhoersymetrical.com.
Yeah.
The average, the average size,
it has to be slightly different,
but nonetheless point is taken.
Yes, exactly, exactly.
Well, they also looked at female pornography use
and that, surprisingly enough, and it
was almost all literary.
It was written, and it was stories.
And they pointed out that the basic story, and this is something that I found extremely
useful because in some ways I've always been looking for the fundamental female myth.
Because it's not exactly the same as the hero archetype, which is perhaps the fundamental
male myth, but anyways, the female myth was essentially beauty in the beast.
So the guy was beastly, obviously.
And he would entice him into a relationship that would tame him in some sense, and he would become humanized, but under her
tutelage and devote himself to her. And they named the five most common beasts in
this kind of literature, the soft-core pornography, or maybe even hardcore
photographic literature. I know that even
Harlequin, the big purveyor of romance novels, has a pretty hardcore
side imprint.
Anyways, the five most popular beasts were surgeon, billionaire, pirate, vampire, and war wolf,
which is really quite comical as far as I'm concerned, but it made me think, well, you were talking about perfection,
that there is a kind of monstrousness in perfection as well.
And so, again, the research evidence seems to suggest
that women made a cross and up dominance hierarchies
where men made a cross and down socioeconomic dominance hierarchies.
And so the women are in some sense attracted to guys who are unidimensionally monstrous
enough to climb to the top of a given dominance hierarchy.
But then, so that begs the question, which is that in that drive for perfection, if there
isn't something intrinsically monstrous.
And that has something
to do with the willingness to sacrifice everything else to that single-minded pursuit. So, I
wonder if those things are even, if you can even take them apart, because Batman, who's
obviously a creature of the night, I would say he's probably the superhero that has the
most self-evident integration of pathology
associated with his character, something like that, because he's this dark guy and he definitely
operates outside of the parameters of the law, quite clearly, and he is motivated to know small
end by vengeance. I would say, like, and the borderline between vengeance and justice is of course
very murky. So then you talked about the requirement or the utility of intimacy in buffering
against that perfection, but that makes you wonder too if it also provides a necessary
buffer against monstr business. Yes. Well, that's the line to get back to with Jack,
to have him smoke when he says the hard part
is entering into a killer and the hard part is keeping you
human.
And that's the flaw that he deals with.
But I can say, you know, with Orphanacs.
I mean, this is a book that connected with readers.
It's been translated and published in 20 languages.
The vast majority of emails that I get are about his relationship trying to navigate
his way through the normal world.
That's the stuff that people love with it.
So there's the mission, there's the spy stuff.
I'd say there's two parts.
One of them is that he is a trained assassin who now has become a proody with assassin. His moral compass was never broken
because it was uproaring with Jack. He now helps only the truly desperate. He said
Moral to Charmin. He said Moral to Charmin. He's an evil capitalist. Exactly. Well, he has
money stash in the bank accounts everywhere for when he was operating off the book. So
there's a good capitalist string still going on.
But the other thing is these interactions,
like, you know, there's a single mother who's been widowed
with a young boy who lives downstairs from him,
who he's enamored of, but has no,
he doesn't speak the language of intimacy.
So there's this like distant, flirtatious relationship
with her, the boy's very enamored of Evan.
He doesn't quite know what to do with her.
To complicate matters further, she's a district attorney, so she actually knew anything about him
that's legitimate. She'd have to prosecute him. And those moments of him trying to figure out,
I'm carrying out this mission that requires comprehensive discipline and focus. And yet here's this draw to this woman and her kid
and the kind of warmth of a house
that's an immense draw for him.
And I think at the heart of him,
there's this conflict where like,
I always, I view it that he's kind of got his face up
to the glass and he's looking in at all these people
leading ordinary lives that he himself can never lead.
Like he can never live those lives.
But so what he can do is to protect people
when those ordinary lives are disrupted and when they're put upon by horrible men, right, or horrible,
unfixable solutions. The cops can't help you. Nobody can help you. You're powerless. You've been bullied
nearly into oblivion. And there's a huge risk to yourself. They can call him and he can fix it.
So he can constantly reestablish and protect the lives of other people, but he can't ever have it.
And so that's for me what's really interesting.
And that takes a twist in the nowhere, man, as we discuss, which deals more with kind of different thematics
since he's the one who's captured about aging versus, you know, about trying to be everything versus trying to be one thing.
Yeah, you play that out differently in the nowhere man with different
That's it. Yeah, that's a slightly different theme, right? That's there's a Peter Pan theme there
The yeah, I mean Mike Mike go ahead. No, no, go ahead
You know the thing well, so I mean so again in the nowhere man
I mean for the second book it's always tricky to follow up a book that that
that So the second book, it's always tricky to follow up a book that connects with a readership
in a certain way, but I really wanted to turn reader expectations on their head.
So I thought, well, what if instead of Evan going and doing another mission that were
used to, he gets the anonymous phone call and goes and helps someone, what if he finds
himself an exactly the kind of predicament that other people usually call him before?
So the newer man opens with him, finishing up the end of an operation.
Somehow manages to get kidnapped, as I mentioned, he comes to in this distant
chateau where he's being overseen by a guy called Renee Peter Caseroi.
And we're not quite sure why he's there.
They don't know who he is yet.
Things are going to get really bad.
There's dozens of armed guards.
But Evan now is the one who he would normally call and has to free himself. So it's about
his own liberation to get back to finishing the mission that he wants to do and to protect
all the people who are at the Chateau. But what was interesting to me is that conversation
that we seem to always have in thrillers and mysteries and comics, you're just like me.
Renee has a similar thing to Evan, and says like me, you don't obey any rules.
He knows he's a vigilante, he doesn't quite know what he does,
but he thinks he might be a drug dealer or an arm's dealer.
He's ambiguous.
He's really just after a particular bake account
that Evan has attached to,
it hasn't yet learned who he is.
And Evan says, no, you want to be everything?
I want to be one thing well.
And it occurred to me when I was doing that.
So Peter, I'm sorry, Renee Peter, casseroid,
casseroids to play on the French word for pan.
So sort of Renee Peter pan.
He's obsessed with luxury, with being all things,
with not making choices, with turning back
the clock on aging.
He takes a regimen of pills.
He's obsessed with aging process.
And it occurred to me again after I wrote it, because I don't go in charting these things
out like an engineer.
I go in writing a story that I want to write, but it occurred to me that Evan's statement
to say, where is different is can be. You want to be everything I want to be one thing well,
that being one thing well is our only antidote really to aging.
So it's the exact opposite of what Renee is trying to do,
who's also the antidote to remaining that,
it's the antidote to becoming an old child too,
which is of course the heat of hand story,
right?
There's this idea that you have to give up everything to become one thing.
And but if you don't give it up, then you become no thing eventually.
Because the aging drives, and maybe that's also why your character, Casaroy, has to fight
off aging because aging is forcing him to become
well, if not to become one thing, at least to lose his capacity to become anything or
everything. Exactly. And that's the only thing that that's your
bulwark. I mean, that's the other argument to perfection versus intimacy. It's some
person at some point, the toll of aging takes perfection away from us.
In every way, if you're a sharp shooter, if you're an athlete, if you're young Paul
Newman and look like young Paul Newman, who is probably the best-looking human of either
gender and history, at some point no matter what you are a perfect ass, you're a great
surgeon, perfection will be taken from you.
So what's the antidote to that? The
antidote to that is doing something, doing something else well and making choices. Are you a good
husband or you a good father? Do you have a good community around you? Do you have friendships
around you so that when aging comes in search to kick out those stilts, you have enough under you
that you don't just topple over. Yeah, right. Well, so that's interesting because
under you that you just topple over? Yeah, right.
Well, so that's interesting because you talked about
the necessity for perfection as an antidote, say,
to the Peter Pan problem.
But what the case you're making now
is more of that even perfection as an antidote
to the Peter Pan syndrome has its problems,
but maybe those aren't
echoed with intimacy. And you know, because you talked about getting older and the fact that your family and friends become more important to you, which is definitely something that I've noticed.
And I guess on your deathbed, let's say one of the things that's going to matter is who's
around there with you.
And as you get older and you get robbed of things, I wonder if it's the intimate relationships
that you have that provide solace with regards to that.
I mean, one of the things that distressresses me about the way that our world, the modern Western world is unfolding is that we act as if we're never going to be any older than 35.
Jung talked about that, Carl Jung talked about that. He thought it was a flaw in our founding myth because if you think about Western culture as predicated on Christianity, of course Christ died when he was about 32. That's the theory.
And so there's not necessarily any model there for moving into the latter half of life.
And there is this obsession in Western culture with youthfulness and with the possibilities of youth.
And people, people act, I would say, as if they're never going to get old.
And so what is the dangers
there is that you don't establish the kind of relationships that are going to buttress
you in your old age. You end up saying what you're saying, in your 40s or whatever. And
it starts to get pretty ugly. Your load's.
Well, in LA, in LA, you see it in space, because LA is the land of the perpetual adolescent.
Right. So everyone comes out here off their proverbial bus from Des Moines or Northern Alberta
and they want to make it.
They're the best-looking person from their hometown, who's starting their hometown play.
And it's squeezing the universe through a funnel for people who are actually going to be
a movie star or actually going to make it as a singer.
But it's sort of this intermittent reinforcement thing that happens is it's like they'll go two or three
years working on jobs because they need to keep their schedule open for auditions and then
they'll get cast as an extra one thing. And then they go three or four more years because
at any point you could hit the lottery and everyone has the story of that, you know, the guy who is, you know, our cultures also
built around, never give up, right? And, you know, follow your dreams. There's a pervasive
notion that you never settle. And I'm not denigrating those things. I'm saying that's part of
how our culture is built. But you see a ton of people here in their 40s, 50s,
who never sort of moved on to a job or a skill that's
gratifying, their whole life has been spent waiting for
another break.
And it's heartbreaking because they had some success
for a period that never recaptured it and didn't reinvent
themselves.
I noticed something really interesting when I went to
Australia for Bookthor,
and I'm going back there in a couple of weeks,
which was amazing, which is I did a lot of events
with really famous Australians who didn't cross over
to the US.
So like you have your ACDC that came over here
and just blew up or you know, Nicole can't mean
film the blind clue.
But there was people who were like big movie stars
who didn't make it here.
A big like an enormous rock band there that just didn't make it to the US. And the one thing that was amazing with is for some reason I came into contact with them either
for festivals or you know we had reading ago, is they all had meaningful second slash third acts.
So this guy who's a big, huge movie star there
was now a big crime fiction reviewer.
So I met him because you just don't make
the sort of money and fame here
and have the kind of blown out exposure
that you linger and capture catch after it.
The guy who is a songwriter for one of the biggest rock bands
in all of Australia, wrote this amazing memoir, was like incredible, I was working on that.
And it's sort of like if you don't achieve a sort of astronomical level of exposure fame
and money, you still have to make a living. And making a living is a really good motivation
to continue to search for and find meaning.
Great, yeah, well that's why, yeah, that's one of the problems with having wealth, I think,
with regards to children is that if you're wealthy, your children can be deprived of necessity.
Right, and also, usually by the time one has attained wealth, you've sort of baked in
the discipline of your, and the love for your field that
led to us. I mean, I guess we can exclude people with your job that they hate forever, but
usually people who really make a lot of money sort of love what they're doing at some
level. I find and by the time you get to a point you know after work, you love the work
so much and you start to realize that the money once people stop chasing you for bills isn't what brings you with the happiness.
Yeah, well because you could take all the shortcuts when you're younger like trust fun kids can.
Yeah, well the empirical evidence on that is pretty clear.
This could be one sec here.
There is a relationship between material well-being and happiness, roughly speaking, or let's
say, wealth and happiness, up to the point where you're basically in the lower middle
class, I would say.
And that's basically the point where they'll collect
your stop chasing you around.
There's definitely pain in privation, but there isn't a tremendous amount of advantage
by the evidence in moving far up the economic ladder beyond that.
And I think it's because money solves a certain set of problems, but the ones it doesn't solve, it doesn't solve at all.
Right.
It doesn't solve love, it doesn't solve
ensuring that your children are doing well.
It doesn't solve health in any final sense
that the problem of ill health.
I was also thinking with regards to perfection and intimacy,
there's another kind of opposition between them,
which is that if you're after perfection, you can't have intimacy because you have to,
you mentioned that we have this idea that you shouldn't settle, and people often say that in
relationship to their relationships, but they forget that the person that you're having a relationship with has settled for you and
That means that they've settled for imperfection in every sense of the word and
you
If you're after perfection in your relationship, then first of all you have impossible standards
Second, you're impossible to live with.
And third, if you meet someone that triggers that ideal, then you're going to feel so inferior
in relationship to them that you're going to make a fool of yourself.
That's the classical anima or animus possession from the union perspective.
You know, you find someone who meets your ideal of perfection and then you're so tongue-tied
in their presence that you can't help but act like a complete
Deer and headlights or something equally pathological
So to get into the scene you have to give up that
You have to give up that demand at least for immediate perfection Maybe you can work towards it within the confines of the relationship, but that's a whole different thing
Yeah, well, and from a thriller perspective. I mean, for me, what was so interesting in building
this with Evan is it's like he's trained as a lone wolf, right?
There's an orphan program that kicked out orphans, but none of them know who each other
is.
They operate alone.
But he's chosen to live in the middle of this residential tower in the Wilshire quarter
or kind of hiding among people.
But so he's constantly among people.
But if he sticks to his normal routine,
which is just training, he's got like a hidden vault
that's like his operations comm center,
the titan in the back of his, you know,
super modern penthouse,
there's all these sort of fantasy elements to it,
which I think I undercut enough to not turn it into
like sort of, you know, weapons porn or spy porn.
Like there's an awareness
that I erroneed at that, even as I revel in some of these archetypes. But if he just sticks
to his routine, there's no one there to tell him or point out his imperfections, right?
When he's on a mission, it doesn't matter. He's operating solo, he's kicking ass, he has
the righteousness and the moral, the legitimate moral superiority
of doing what is the right thing
in the protection of other people.
That's all fine.
There's no one to literally gaze on him
or even look at him and notice where his imperfections are.
Notice where his tongue tied, notice what skills
that there are that he's lacking
if his life stays in that narrow lane.
But he doesn't want his life to just be in that lane.
But every time he widens it out, there's all these complications where it's like, what do you do with an unruly, eight-year-old who's asking you in appropriate questions?
These are things that his training wasn't for, and there's a real interest in that.
And one of the things I wanted to add is you talked about the female or erotic or the women tend to read in the types of
monsters, which I love that a surgeon is included in them.
And I'm sure a lot of them can, we can start combining them so you get like a werewolf
surgeon.
You can really start up in the empty.
But I think one of the things that's really interesting in terms of what constitutes a
successful balance, to me, it's not also the full teaming of the monstrous
of perfectionism, whether like in this instance, we're talking about that being
from the male side of it. It's also like I had a question that was, I didn't interview yesterday
and somebody asked me, who knows me and my wife pretty well. So just your wife get,
does she get upset when you're like, okay honey, I'm off to like the Mexican jungles
to go down Class 4, like water routes to do research.
I'm gonna go, you know, like I just was on a range
in Vegas shooting a lot of insane weaponry,
or you know, when I'm doing these sort of more dangerous
elements that are for research.
And it was interesting,
because I hadn't been asked that specifically, but I was like well I was a writer when I met my wife and
she liked that and knew that and one of the primary aims is if that's
something that she liked in me she that's the last thing she wants to eroded me
now like we also have a relationship where like obviously there's things like
if there are things about me that are annoying to my perfectionism or need to
be rained in that's a good discussion but it are things about me that are annoying to my perfectionism or need to be rained in, that's a good discussion. But it also
doesn't mean that you want to hollow out the aspect of the of the perfectionist
drive or the aspects that involve sort of dangerous with danger having one
foot and one straw study from your spouse or partner in either direction.
It's like, you know, my wife and I just genuinely like each other.
We don't want to erode in each other those things that cause the initial attraction.
And it's interesting because I think that's something you see a lot in marriages,
I don't know if it's particularly in America, where you get the sort of domineering,
controlling wife, and then the husband is like the little boy getting away with things,
and you know, trying to get things things done and there's this imbalance that
happens really quickly as they push each other into these roles and forget the
very things that were attractive to begin with. Yeah well you see that you see that
operating in the other direction all the way I would say in a different way because
you can see husbands who punish or fail to reward their wives for being
attractive even though yeah the the dominant husband you said something once who punish or fail to reward their wives for being attractive. Even though...
Yeah, the the domineering husband, you said something once that stuck with me,
where I think someone was bragging about how they never cleaned the house or something,
some such thing.
Yeah.
And you said, well, if you turn your wife into a maid, then you'll be married to a maid.
Yes, yes. I think it was toilets, actually.
I'm not the sort of guy who cleans the toilets, I think I said,
yeah, you're the sort of guy who makes your wife clean the toilets.
Right. Yeah. Well, that's the thing is that it's also very difficult within a relationship to continually reward your partner for the traits that make them attractive because that also makes them attractive to other people.
And so if you're concerned in any way about your fainting attractiveness or if you're jealous or resentful, then you may come to punish your partner for what makes them attractive.
And of course, that's that's dashed because you'll also have contempt for them and for you if you get away with that.
But it happens a lot.
Yeah.
Well, you know, it goes down to the, we've had this conversation before that it
ended the day.
There are no decisions that aren't fundamentally moral.
There's no good decisions when you're looking at something of like, well, this is 90% moral,
but 10% shady, but I can repute financial rewards.
I don't think you'll get away with that.
And likewise, you know, within a marriage, you know, if you have a spouse who you're
denigrating or you're concerned about their
attractiveness because of your own insecurity
and you haven't put that to rest and you're
unwilling to look at that, that will cost you.
You know, I think about them a lot as
pertains to writing because I think a lot
that the qualities for me at least that make me a better writer or the
same ones that make me a better man and a better human.
And it's not something that people talk a lot about, but a lot of it is, you know, if
I'm in a conversation, it's like, can I acknowledge what my shortcomings are or what
my flaws are?
Can I acknowledge an argument what's going on?
Can I pay attention to people enough to recognize small moments of vulnerabilities and to try to honor or respect those?
Those are all the things in writing that make people connect to character. Those are all the things in writing that you need to round out a character.
And I remember when I was, look, I started really young and had a lot of luck early. I started my first book. I was 19. I sold it. I think it was 22-23. And you know, there's stuff in there that's awful. Like no one should ever be accountable for
anything that they thought when they were 19. But you know, I have a line in there where it's like,
he was the best of the best, you know, about an FBI agent. And it's like, those are the people we
don't like. You know, so like as I get older, a lot of this trust I put in characters are
the times where you
say something out of a more base instinct and then you feel like shit about it.
Like that's something that makes you relate to a character.
Like I did this thing and I said something, I reacted in anger, I have a petty jealousy,
but that I'm aware of and I acted badly and I feel badly for it.
I wish I could have acted better. But you need to have the
... you need to ... IRIS pretty wide open to take that input in if you want to be talented
artist because you're trying to capture all of those things, which means you have to look
at them in yourself, not just in other people. It's funny, it's really good.
It's something you see in good comedians and I was watching Louis CK recently and like he definitely goes too far quite often and one of the things about Louis CK that's and I also see this is Sarah Silverman, I think where either of them, you know, something will come into their hand and they'll say it and they know perfectly well that they've gone too far,
but they're not going to not say it and then they have the good graces to be like
self-disgusted I would say. Yeah. They actually said it. You know, and Louis said it. It's a mix of
like self-disgusted and he had to pry. Yeah, exactly. I don't know at the same time, but I mean
Louis K has the good graces to be embarrassed at least 20% of the time
Performing and for good reason too. Yeah, like the synabund in the airport. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. No, he's yeah
But I mean, it's a big part of it is like if you want to shut down self-awareness
Everything shuts down and we're talking about with aging. We're talking about with marriage and relationship
But I'm also talking about if you wanted if you actually want to engage in an endeavor
that is interesting, whether that's writing or teaching or being a psychologist or being,
you know, I mean, fell in the blank for anything that you want to engage in in a way that's
new and unique, you better reflect, you better think on yourself, you better not armor yourself
solely in ideology, right? You better be able
to maintain a sort of openness to the world even as you're learning. You better not get
to arrogant. Like if you go down that checklist, I find a lot of them really apply to my writing
in ways that are more direct than I ever would have thought would be the case. I didn't
start kind of thinking about this till I was in my 30s, which is also probably around the time that I started becoming a better human.
But you know, to really think about like getting caught short at times or engaging in something
where I'm so adamant that I'm right about it and then reflecting on it afterwards and realizing
that I'm wrong, it's like there's so much fodder. That's where all the gold is in writing.
That's where all those pieces are and really paying attention to people and
not overlooking their own
quiet everyday tragedies and
Recognizing their everyday triumphs because that's what rounds out a character if you can capture that all of a sudden
You feel like you're reading something that's alive and if you don't you're reading something that you feel like is filling the blanks
You know and especially especially with a form like a thriller crime fiction, which I'm far from denigrating, I think it's an incredible form. Yeah, well that's something
that's interesting too, is that you, that's a form that you've stuck with in many ways throughout your writing career. And that's been about 20, 20, you have 23 books now? I have 17 or 18 out maybe and three more in the
pipe. Yeah. Okay. So, and you've been basically putting out something like a book a year. Yeah.
So there's, there's two places we could go with that. One is that I'd like to talk with
you a little bit about how you've actually managed to have a successful career as a writer,
because that's a very difficult thing to pull off.
And the other issue is why you've inserted yourself in this very limited form, genre form.
And I'm curious about why that one, and also what it is about the genre and the fact that
it's very, very commercial and very attractive in a sort of, I wouldn't say, easy way, but
a very accessible way. It's very accessible to people. And so what's the attraction?
Why not something that's arguably more literary?
Why not something that's arguably more literary? Well, I don't, I mean, the first thing is it's like it's not selected.
Like, I can only write stuff that I feel in my gut that I need to write.
And fortunately, for me, from a financial perspective, that tends to be stuff that's highly commercial.
But you know, one of the things I think about, like for me, the gold standard is always hitch-calling.
Like, no one's like, oh, is he commercial?
Was he a critical success?
And what's interesting is, you know,
you talk about all the stuff that we only see in hindsight.
Like, you follow only the things that are of interest.
And then in hindsight, they all make sense.
So in college, I studied English and psychology,
as you know, you were there.
And I got really fascinated with Shakespeare and tragedy in particular.
And it's like, okay, so I'm studying the youngian analysis of Shakespeare and tragedy.
All that is about narrative.
All of us is narrative.
I only chose it because I was interested.
I was very into Freud.
You know, those case studies read like short stories.
But so it's like, let's take Shakespeare.
Okay. you know, those case studies read like short stories. But so it's like, let's take Shakespeare. Okay, so why would Shakespeare choose this form
that is limited, right?
Everything's got five acts.
He basically wrote a highly convention bound,
highly structured, narrative driven form.
Sometimes tipping into propaganda
that deals with lust, intrigue, and murder.
Designed to sell out the most, you know,
these, the most seats in the Globe Theater
to put asses and chairs.
He had no interest in enduring literary value.
You know, a lot of people have interest
in enduring literary value, don't tend to endure
as another discussion, but you cut that Globe Theater out.
You can do it.
Yeah, but you cut the Globe Theater in half,
and it's a perfect cross-section of
Elizabethan society. So I'll have a joke from all the tomato morphicists and then I'll make a
dick joke for the groundlings. He's trying to appeal everywhere and within the constraints of
the form there's a liberation. So he takes the Jew of Malta in terms of an in-market of anus a very few original plots
right and so
There's this reworking of trying to do something that's great within a form that's recognizable
But I think it's recognizable because it's pleasingly archetypal and people forget you know
Look this can't move is the stranger was bit was inspired by
James M. Keynes the The Postman Always Room twice.
These forms are, you know, you want to talk about existentialism?
But you serve them?
These have enchandler.
Oh, yeah.
So there's an enormous amount, and it's been said quite often that Noir is modern tragedy,
but instead of falling from the throne, you're falling from the
curb into the gutter, right? You're just starting lower. It's also been said that crime fiction
has replaced the social model. And if you look at, you know, you look at like Mystic River
from Dennis Lahane. It's like that's such an interesting story, right? You know, I wrote
a book called Town of the Lies, Takes Place in San Francisco, that is built around the thriller, but is all about class and society and ethics in San Francisco.
And in a weird way for me, when I'm playing with these notions of intimacy versus perfection,
when I'm playing with this notion of aging versus focus, the themes around humanity
about being better, if I can wrap them in what I
hope is an enormously entertaining page-turning story that's propulsive, that
people want to read, that's the kind of thing that I most enjoy and engage in.
That for me is sort of the ultimate win. I'm going to get to write about everything
that I want to write about in as exciting and compelling fashion that I can
manage within the restraints of my skill.
And I don't view that as having a ceiling.
You know, I don't think anyone's going to come along and go, you know, look, Macbeth,
you know, pretty lacking on the quality scale.
You know, you look at, and so there's always an aim for it.
And also I just love thrillers, you know, it's at a right thriller with more meat on the bones
where I'm really stretching, and there's a number of people
who do in the form, it's like I'm the only one.
It's just a great, it's a great focus.
And, you know, again, if you don't focus on something,
where do you like that?
Yeah, I like that.
And also, look, this goes back to narrative,
to archetypal narrative too.
Like I believe that there are fundamental, at least fundamental story structures, and that
are as selective for as opposable thumbs and islands, you know, and I think, you know,
you find it tried that's been, you know, in the middle of the Amazon, the Ted no exposure
and they'll have islands opposable thumbs and a hero archetype.
This is the archetype.
Gilgamesh is a thriller, you know, Bayo Wolf is a kick-ass thriller.
That's what those things are.
And that's the form that just appeals to me, you know?
Yeah, most is the exodus is the thriller.
Yeah, I collect Faulkner paperbacks from the 50s,
and they're insane.
Like, they have these harlequin type covers, you know,
like another from America's leading purveyor of,
you know, murder and lust, William Fockner.
I mean, there were packings as such.
But you read sanctuary with the courtroom case and the corncombe.
I mean, good God.
There's, you know, he's up to his elbows in certain genre conventions.
As a reason he went to Hollywood and adapted chamber novels.
Great, great, great.
You know, so for me, it's all about, I'm a story.
He's largely. Yes. Yeah, well, he also did the big sleep, I want to say.
Oh, that's great. I need someone to check out to make sure I have that one right.
But you know, I do. I do. I think that's true. Yeah. At the end of the day though, I am a structure slot.
I think structure is essential.
I don't think you can see a structure slot.
Watch me.
Watch me.
Yeah.
Structure slot.
Yeah.
And that'll be my website instead of young women who are symmetrically perfect and represent
a particular young and ideal.
But I feel like I like to know where I am within a story.
I like to know where the terms are.
I like to play with them, lies with Batman we talked about.
Once you have the conventions, you can start to play with them.
You can start to find more elbow room within them.
Yeah, well, the strange thing too is that people often think about
creative freedom as the freedom from any structural impositions whatsoever. That's that's the Peter Pan thing or that what did you call your character castle?
Oh, casseroid
Casseroid, yeah, it's a
Ericcaseroid
It without structuring and without limits. You have freedom. It's like you don't just have chaos
Well, and I have like you know having written all these novels in the Noir Man, there's one
novel that something really, I'm sorry, there's one chapter that's something really bad happens
to Evan.
And each chapter in the orphan accent in the Noir Man has a title that's taken from something
in the chapter, usually a sort of humorous way that it can be double-run.
But it's a phrase from the chapter of the chapter having.
And so one of the chapters after this horrific thing happened to Evan is just cold.
And the whole chapter is just the word cold.
That's the whole chapter. It's a one-word chapter, and then you move on.
So that's not conventional writing. I'm not, you know, there's ways that you can start to play once you're within it.
But, you know, I don't want to write a whole book in Haiku, like the mass experimentation.
I wrote a book called The Crime Rider, where I literally, it's a crime writer who lands
on something that's in the middle of seemingly one of his own stories, a disastrous situation,
and he realizes that in order to understand what happened he has to write it down.
So then I introduce a typewriter font that's the first sentence of the book that we
read or the first paragraph of the book and then a certain point is editor comes in and
as handwritten edits in the margins of the typewriter so that we see the development process
of the writing which mirrors the process of his own writing which is the story of what
happened to him which has been all that we're reading.
So there's all these ways that you can play within the form to make it interesting, but
at the end of the day, I want to know where I am in a story.
That's what always appeals to me.
All right, so look, I'd like you to talk a little bit about your career from a practical
sets, too, because you've been able to maintain it for a long time.
So I think people would be interested to know how you learn to write and what your typical
day looks like, or has looked like across the last 20 years because one of the strange things
about being an independent artist is that you don't have those
external constraints precisely driving you the same way that you do if you have
to go to work every day if you have to be up at nine for someone else and it's
very easy for people to drift in a situation like that because you can always
put off what you have to do until tomorrow or you can always substitute the medium or longer term ambition for something short term that needs to be done
right now.
So let's start out by how you learn to write.
I never get a writing course or read a book on writing.
I mean, how you learn to write a novel is you read, you know, 2000 novels
and then you try and write one and screw it up. Like, that's it. Same with screenplays.
You know, watch a million movies. Love the thing itself. My first book I wrote a disastrous
first draft. I mean, the end of each chapter was better than the beginning, literally
from what I've learned while writing the chapter. But again, don't be afraid.
I've had two things that have benefited me a lot.
One is I'm not afraid to fail.
I'm not afraid to embarrass myself.
And I also don't have any delay between wanting to try something and trying it.
Like I don't hold back and wait and think about it.
And I just was like, I want to write a novel.
I'm 19.
I think I know more than I do.
I'm just going to jump in and do it. I wrote it. I had really write a novel, I'm 19. I think I know more than I do, I'm just gonna jump in and do it.
I wrote it, I had a really shitty first draft,
the vomit draft.
I sat down and took it apart like an engine block.
And then I looked at it all and reconstructed it.
And built it in something.
So what do you mean exactly?
Tell us.
Just kind of chapter by chapter.
And like this plot is working,
and this is too long a stretch without action, and this character isn't developed enough. You know
I took the chapters out and it felt like I did it you know my first draft was
half the length of the final model. It wasn't till my third novel that I wrote a
rough draft that could constitute a novel on a tone that functioned. Yeah so part
of what you were doing was separating the production end of the process
from the editing end.
I mean, that's what a bad first draft does is you allow yourself to...
Yeah, and then as I get further along, it's like my first draft now is what my tenth
draft used to be, right?
It keeps sort of evolving, but then you know I'll try something new like
or for next I did more rewriting on than any of my previous six books. It still
wasn't anywhere close to my first you know three novels, but I really was doing
something. I was building an entire character and entire mythology and
launching this big new franchise into the world.
And so in some ways I overrode it and pulled stuff back that I saved for future books.
I mean, I'd say that's one part of it.
The other is, I think it might have been advice you gave me when I was, I don't know, 18,
but you said, when it comes to writing, and if you didn't say it, we can just pretend
that you did.
We'll give you credit for it.
I'll wait until I hear whether or not it's worth it. Okay.
I'll just go,
I'll stab way up to you.
Credit for it.
Yeah, then you leave me.
If it's not wise,
then I'll be like,
widely coyote out over the cliff.
Okay.
Just watch me fall.
Yeah.
But you said there's always going to be
a dozen things that are more pressing to do than right.
Always.
And if you don't decide to make that time
sort of wholly and protected, nobody else will do
that for you. And that's essential. And I was already kind of into my first book and doing it. And I
thought that's exactly right. Like it's always more prassing to clean the house or pick up your dry cleaning
or you know pick up one of your kids for it. If you don't just carve it out. It's not like I'm a
surgeon that I'm in an office, one of those monstrous surgeons where I'm in an office and no one
can reach me and my day is set. I mean at any time right now I could be disturbed all
the time by anyone. My phone can ring. So unless I say this, my writing schedule, I'm unplugged,
you know, kids leave me alone unless someone is on fire or the house is on fire and it
is thus. I need the same amount of space that I would have where I am accountant or a psychologist
or, you know, a doctor or a lawyer.
You know, and so I had to make that time kind of holy or sacrosanct.
And then I would say the other thing is that matter a lot is I realize early on that the
one thing, I'll say there's two other pieces that I'll say, the one thing that I can control absolutely was discipline. That's
the only controllable thing, and it's such an impossible field. And so you have to wait
for luck, and I had a lot of luck early, which I don't say with false humility or fishing
for compliments. Like my first book was good, and I think it was sellable, and there's
a lot of first books that are good and sellable. You never know when that looks going to come. And I
thought in sort of work ethics, if I flat my wings as hard as I
could, that I'm just bumping along, misceiling all the time,
the one moment that that hatch opens, that the lucky break
comes, I was going to be right there to fly through it. And so
from day one, I was like, I'm going full speed all the way no matter what. And I still do. I mean, I still feel like the one thing I can control
is I've never been laid out in a deadline, you know, and I write all day every day. I built
it up like a muscle. So how much time do you spend writing in a day now? At minimum, I write
from six to four, thirty or five on longer days if I'm on deadline, or if I'm on my right from 6 to 4.30 or 5 on longer days if I'm on deadline or if I'm near the
end of a book and I can smell it, it'll be 13, 14, 15, sometimes 16 hours and I've had
spells of, like I said, I once wrote a script for TV show in 123 hour sitting because there
was a risk of a micro-economy in Vancouver when shut down if I did it.
If it was a shut down the show, it's problematic.
So I can go when I go,
but in the middle of my writing all day, everyday,
with a break to work out in the middle.
And the other thing I'd say is really interesting is like,
you know, it's funny seeing which values get,
so people look up my kind of resume
and I went to all these fancy schools.
And people always ask me,
like they ask me about Shakespeare, they ask me about my educational background. Okay you study English inside here
you went to the masters in England I think in some ways one of the biggest values for me was being
was came from being an athlete because I was a polevolter in college right I played soccer
during uppercut I played a little bit of soccer in England. And writing is like training. It's like working out.
It's building a muscle.
And as with pole vaulting, when I was training day 27,
when the Heptagonal Championships were in day 275,
I have 100 things more important to do
than training on day 27.
And know that I have to go that far.
That's like day 27 or writing a novel.
And so there's a lot of things.
I think people under value,
they value sports now for health and for, you know,
being active and being well-rounded, but we don't tend to talk about the values that they instill.
And a lot of it is like discipline, long-term planning.
You know, like, when I was in high school, I sucked at pole balding.
I mean, my whole first year, I was too small to bend the pole.
Software year was awful.
And we're talking to you, is it three-year process to build up to start jumping at a high
level and eventually, you know, at a national level and then in college, but it takes a lot
of discipline.
And so the discipline aspect of writing, I think, is really important.
And then, you know, for people starting out, one of the things I say is like, pick a certain
amount of time that you do no matter what.
And force yourself to get stuff on the page.
And if you say all I find is an hour day or two hours a day,
or I'm sorry, two hours twice a week,
that will soon turn into two hours and 15 minutes
or two hours and two and a half hours.
It will expand itself as your discipline goes on.
It's like running.
And the other thing I say is that, look,
I mean, a lot of people who want to be writers,
and I mean very few who actually want to write.
Right, right.
I love writing.
I actually love the writing process.
If you don't, don't do this.
There's a million other things you can do
and make more money and it's easier and you can be happier.
So when you say you love it, what do you mean exactly? I mean, that doesn't mean it's easy
by any stretch of the imagination.
No.
What is it you love about it?
And exactly what do you mean by that?
Well, it's the one place I really clearly lose time.
You know, and things are going well an hour and a half to our result pass.
That happens to me when I'm on the soccer field too. It's like I
just, I feel fully inhabited in something else aside for me in a manner that
is productive. And I feel like I'm not one for getting precious about writing
with beckoning the mues and whatnot, but like there's an ask, there's a part of
pleasure. I have these really loud keyboards that I hammer on.
I have a whole broken slew of keyboards that I've gone through.
I feel like a carpenter.
I feel like I'm pounding and hammering and cutting and pasting.
And I like the keyboard to be really loud
so that it's a muscular action.
And I just feel utterly engaged and fascinated
in this world that I'm in control.
But there's endless opportunities,
and my job is to be open to opportunity,
while also making sure that I'm kind of staring the shape.
And there's an enormous amount of responsibility.
And at the same time, I'm living in a world
that I'm making and I'm wholly alone.
So why was that so much money?
So first let's hear your keyboard.
Okay, so why would you call that to me? So first let's hear your keyboard.
Yeah, you just like that 1930s newsroom.
All of my friends joke with me about is that when they're on the phone,
and if I'm rude enough to be writing or finishing a sentence,
there is a, you sound like the asshole travel agent where they can't move your flight.
We're like, okay, so Dolls is shut down, can I go through Chicago? No, I'm terrible, agent where they can't move your flight? Where like, okay, so dolls is shut down,
can I go through Chicago?
No, I'm terrible, sorry, can we get in here?
Can we get in here?
No, I'm sorry, your flight's now been delayed six hours.
I mean, it's the loud old-fashioned
angry travel agent, Keebo.
Right, right, right, it's very funny.
So, so you're talking, yeah,
so you talked about discipline
and you talked about responsibility when you're writing.
What do you mean by that, exactly?
Well, your ego is constantly subservient to the plot.
So to write well, you come up with a basic stat of tenants
that start your story.
It's like, it's so complex.
It's like surfing.
Like there's so many factors.
So when people are like, you know, there's sort of like the
idiot criticism of certain movies like, you know,
passenger 57. Remember where Wesley Snipes is the
super badass speck ops guy on the airplane that gets hijacked?
And some people are like, what are the odds that you'd be on the plane that got hijacked?
And you're like, well, it's 100% because no one wants to write a story about the other 99,999 times
that a plane got hijacked.
And passenger 50 says it wasn't on it.
Like, that's why we're writing this story.
So you have a unique set of circumstances
that can involve coincidence at the outset.
That's first act stuff, right?
So, OK, this is a story about the one time that an orphan who
was taken out of a program at the age of 12 and trained to be in a sassan, you know,
left the program because his moral compass wasn't broken, and that's his story. It's
like, whatever you think the odds of that are, that's the narrative contract, that's what
I'm doing, and I can't introduce him in the third act of a realism-based mystery that's, you
know, a drawing room mystery that takes place in Vermont.
So we set the course of that, right?
Okay, so that's the contract with the narrative contract and the contract with the reader.
You don't get to break that.
You say, look, give me leeway while I set this up.
Yeah, here's the coincidence.
So the coincidence, or here's the unlikely set of circumstances that are why I have decided
to sit down at my typewriter-sounding keyboard and devotee your own life to this.
Okay, so we're all in on that.
Then you round out your characters.
And what you want us to give them freedom, but you're also steering, like I don't believe
all this stuff that, like, you like, oh my gosh, I just
start to channel everything and it's magic. You're controlling it, but when I'm writing well,
I have characters who are way more than I am in real time. Not meaning, what are things that's
great with writing books? I can a year later go back with the perfect comeback to, I have a year
to come up with and polish the dialogue and that's right.
Right, right.
So whenever you've been in a party and someone slits you and you're driving home good,
oh, I should have said that, we get to say that when we're writing, but I've had that
happen in real time.
So there's something that starts to go on with characters as you engage in them that
they're doing stuff that I feel like I'm typing just behind it happening.
Like it's just moving and that's a great feeling.
And there's this really weird thing that you want to get to,
which is by the end of a book,
the conclusion should feel it once inevitable and unpredictable.
So you want to have things happen.
And we've all had that.
I don't know if some people had it with the success,
some people had it with, we've all had that feeling
in a movie or reading a book where you're right on the lip of discovery and then the
thing happens and you're like, oh my god, that makes so much sense and completely caught
me off guard at the same time.
That's the win, right?
And so you need to sort of, you have a responsibility to always make your needs subservient to the
plot.
Like, the story is paramount.
And so as much as you're the creator,
you have to give free will to the story.
You have to give stuff up that you don't
and wouldn't otherwise.
I might have spent weeks doing research on something.
If it doesn't fit the story properly,
I have to, you know, they call it killing your babies.
Right, right.
You have to get rid of it. You got to throw it out.
Yeah.
The other thing that's really useful for, I think, beginning writers to know that we
touched on previously, which is that, yeah, you have to be willing to
throw things away. Lots of things. I mean, what I do to kind of take them
staying out of that to some degree is I, I always have a document open on my
computer called Culls.
Yeah.
And I'll pull out a paragraph that doesn't fit and throw it in there and you know there's
always the possibility that I'll find a place for it later.
But often I do something with it later too.
So the writing is.
Exactly.
But yeah.
Well, and you know, so you're trying to make everything work,
and you're trying to be surprising at the same time,
but also you have to be open to opportunity.
And I had my third book in particular, I learned this,
because I got all the way to the end,
and the ending that I thought was the exact opposite
of the ending of the story that I had created.
And I realized I had a choice.
I could either honor the story that I had created
and make this thing that's better and surprising than unplanned for, or I can write propaganda.
I can see her story to my own means. And look, that's like, that's Anne Rand, right? It's like, there's never going to be a shocking reveal where, you know, in Anne Rand, you know what it is and she's filling it out? You know what all of her thoughts are. So the writing for isn't a process of discovery necessarily, it's a process of furthering
this out of full-conquering. Yeah, well the thing that she does, that's that's
second rate I think, is that all her heroes and all her villains, like all her
heroes are the same hero and all her villains are the same villain and all the
villains are completely villainous and all the heroes are completely heroic.
Well, it's nuts propaganda. Yes, yes, well, it's exactly the opposite of Dostoevsky,
you know, where he makes his his villains are more heroic than his heroes by a substantial margin.
He always makes supermen to to to argue against fundamentally.
So, right. And so, you know, a lot is about being open.
And the other thing I would say with writers is, I see a lot here who are, you know, this
is true for, you know, filling the blank for artistic field.
But a lot of people who are like, you know, I went to Beverly Hills High, I studied screenwriting
undergrad, I got a master's in screenwriting, and here I go and I'm ready to go.
And I want to write, you know, like, what the hell are you going to write about? A lot of people, I think having a broad range
of life experience is important.
There's some of the writers who I admire the most.
James L. Roy was like borderline homeless,
if not homeless for a while, just knocking about
and figuring stuff out and odd jobs
and like living out in the world.
And so if you want to write this or create some sort of
constructed, a malcom of previous things that have been
constructed, go all the way through all the coursework
and do all that.
But it's huge benefits to just pursue anything that
interests you.
Because looking back, it makes sense.
I don't know why it shows young and looking in hindsight.
It's like, well, no shes.
Right? He's talking about anything but storytelling.
Yeah.
But I didn't choose him in some way.
And I remember even in college, so I was English in psychology, but I sort of wanted,
you know, I took a course in opera, and I took a course in classical music, I mean,
which I have zero aptitude for music.
But I really was, you know, in art and all these different arenas
to just have at least a basis of things to write about. And I think the same is true for
life experiences, like do a lot of stuff, do stuff that's dangerous, you know?
So let's, okay, so we should fill in the backstory here for people too, because I imagine
there's somewhat curious. I mean, I've known you for a long time. We met when you were a student at Harvard
when I was teaching there.
And you're actually the only one of the undergraduates
that I knew there that I kept up a relationship
with over this protracted period of time
for a variety of reasons.
But it's not like I didn't meet all sorts
of remarkable undergraduates there.
But do you have any particular memories
of that period of time when we were interacting? I can certainly tell one story, but I'll
see what you come up with first.
Well, I remember you were formal in a way that I respected that because I started
remember we were friends or seeing each other
outside of school for like four years before I finally
was like is it okay if I call you Jordan instead of
Dr. Peterson and I think that the the the I
foremost maybe the wrong word you you you you you had a
certain authority that I think was key to the
teaching process and you didn't broke fools at all.
Like if someone came in with an argument
from either end of the spectrum,
from an ideological perspective,
you had no interest in it.
And so that was really palatable for me.
And then I think what happened with young
was that I just sort of fell in love with all of that.
For like that, it's weird how much our interests aligned along those fronts.
Because I've been very interested, obviously, in storytelling, thrillers and all this stuff.
But dealing with young and dealing with the shadow.
Yeah, we encountered some early political correctness there together, if I remember correctly,
because you were in the English department and you were studying Shakespeare and you wanted to study Shakespeare from a union
perspective and if I remember correctly at that time Shakespeare was exactly popular in the English
department and and you was well they're very... I'm not sure. Yeah exactly the very opposite of popular. So that was also very interesting.
Yeah, I was hitting a lot of that though. I think it wasn't, it didn't feel like it was the pitch that it was now, but it was at a sort of 90s pitch.
Yeah. And it also felt kind of more interesting. We're like, it felt more
conversational in a weird way, like where people, like I had my favorite
feminist, like I was like, I really like Naomi Wolfe, like someone what she says really makes sense to me. Like there
was conversations about stuff in a way that felt different. And there's sort of this
rigidity now with people snapping to both sides of the equation. But I mean I think one
of the things that I, you know, in our courses that I liked a lot was that if somebody
raised something that was clearly just some ideologically based, here's what I'm supposed to be saying in
reiterating, you would never need tolerance for us.
And I always respected that because it was like, and it also wasn't from a perspective
of being shut down to it.
It was like, I love any conversation that you want to have on the merits, but I'm not going
to engage in a conversation with a false bit of scaffolding that you're inhabiting.
It was sort of the vibe.
So that was interesting.
So I remember the thing I remember,
one of the things I remember was, and I'm sure you remember
this too, is that in one of my personality classes,
I had asked the questions for a scale
called the sensation seeking scale, which
was one of the early versions of a big five variant.
And the sensation seeking scale asks people in part about minor juvenile rule breaking, I to put up their hands at each level of increase in scores.
Like, are you in the bottom 10th percentile, the next 10th percentile or whatever.
And if I remember correctly, you are the only person who put up his hand in the highest of the categories.
And if I also remember correctly, I laughed about that quite a bit.
And then if I also remember correctly, I laughed about that quite a bit.
And then if I also remember correctly, you got a day-toward of that.
Yeah, somebody asked me out.
But look, it was either like the top percentile sensation seeking or wearable surgeon.
It was going to be one of the two.
So I pretty much hit it.
But look, we should also keep in mind that this was at Harvard.
So like the skills for like crazy sensation seeking,
daredevil's, you know, was not.
I'm going to step and down one of the things that's
very surprised about when I administered that scale
to the whole class was just how low the overall scores
were.
And we know that conscientiousness is a really good predictor
of academic performance.
And so I would say that the kids there
tended towards hyper conscientiousness more than
towards, say, entrepreneurial,
the entrepreneurial sort of artistic impact.
It's like, if you want the win,
like we're talking about this from the big five,
it's like, obviously, conscientiousness,
better predictor in some ways than I cure, right?
On a straight scale.
But it's like, if you can have the
talent and conscientiousness, that's where you see people killing it. People in like three or four
shows. I mean, like that's just the win. And so, you know, one, two, three, four, four,
have that entrepreneurial artistic creative ability and also to ally that with say,
industriousness, which is part of conscientiousness.
And it's rough, too, because the orderliness part of
conscientiousness seems to constrain creativity.
So there's a real, I mean, one of the things we found, for example,
is that on the political continuum,
imagine that that runs from left liberal to right conservative,
something like that, the fundamental one.
The conservatives are high conscientiousness and low in creativity, but mostly what they're
high in is orderliness, where liberals are high in openness and low in orderliness.
One of the things that comes out of that that's really interesting is that I've been thinking
a lot about lately is I've been trying to figure out why conscientiousness and openness aren't
correlated.
So there's no real reason for them to link together to predict political temperament.
But one of the things that struck me really hard, and I think Trump's discussion of the
wall between the US and Mexico really got this active in my mind, was that as well as
all this stuff I've been involved in recently with regards to what you can say and what you can't say and that kind of political correctness is that I think the fundamental political question boils down
to whether borders should be open or closed and high orderly low creative people like everything to
be in boxes and they don't get much of a kick out of the potential creative interplay that can come from loosening the borders between things.
But they're also willing to suggest themselves to the discipline of order.
So that's one of the things that gives them an advantage, but on the other side of the spectrum with a...
And they're unwilling to recognize tunnels that right beneath.
Well, yeah, there is. They wouldn't think that up.
It's like, oh, look, there's a wall.
I better turn around and go home. Well, we could put a ladder over it. How would that work?
Yes, yes, that's definitely. The underground is a life interest too. Yes, yes, exactly.
Well, and so the liberal types, they like to take advantage of the possibilities that are set forth by breaking the borders
between things, but they're also unwilling to accept the discipline that working within
an orderly structure will provide.
Anyways, I think the border issue is pervasive at every level of analysis, so the conservative
types like the borders around everything to remain
tight sexuality identity, nationality, that the state itself, whereas the more...
Yeah, I've said it was weird as except, I mean, conventionally, right now, with Trump
is not the case, but conventionally conservatives are free-trade, even though Clinton co-op
did it. So it's interesting because like when it comes to money, it's sort of like only rules around maximizing money.
Yeah, because free trade...
I know that it's a funny one. I mean, you never get a pure manifestation of these things.
I mean, conservatives can be protectionist too at times.
Right.
You know, so I guess the political expression depends to some degree on what's happening in the
environment at that particular point
So but surfing all these walls is like I mean, that's the trick right?
It's so much easier to armor yourself and one pure ideology
You know one of the things I think about a lot is like with the skips
I've just gotten back from a two-week tour a two-week leg of the tour
I'm in a different city every day and it's like it's reviews and it's readers
and it's all the stuff.
I've been thinking a lot about how much work it takes
to not to stay open creatively,
but stay focused enough.
I'm pretty high in orderliness.
That's something that can interfere,
but it's weird,
because I've been one of the things I think about
is like to be a writer, you sort of need the sensitivity of a butterfly with the height of a right
loss of us.
Like you need to be so sensitive and attuned to things and also so willing to accept
rejection or negative reviews or all kinds of weird feedback and everything else.
And I'm saying this from someone who's been fortunate enough to be largely successful, but it's still there's a there's a
battering that you take when you try and advance something outside the normal
structure. Careful you're starting to sound like Madonna.
Oh, I watched that speech. She made the other day and I think she's depressed actually.
What was the speech?
What was it that sounded like Madonna?
A woman of the year award or something like that.
I happened to watch a version of it where she was intercut with Milo Yanopolis, which
was actually quite comical.
But she spent a lot of time complaining about how hard it was to be Madonna and to be a woman.
And I was watching it very carefully because she didn't say one positive thing about her life
And I thought and she seemed to be close to tears most of the time and I thought there's something wrong
She she looked she looked at me like she was actually depressed because it was you know
I mean she's had a pretty successful go of it and to only
On the native is is is is kind of rough so
But neither of those things are bad that I'm
that I'm pointing to, meaning like you want to be as sensitive as possible so that you're attuned
to constant sort of like I just can't get this whole butterfly ride-osters image out.
Yeah, it's like yeah, I can see I will adapt to or adapt it what I mean is there's there's a trick to trying to be
To maintain all your openness and also be tough as hell right like that's that's sort of one the ways to do it because you need to blaze
Forward with it with it like and a butterfly rhinoceros blazing forward exactly exactly
Yeah, as as the common refrain. Yeah, you know, look. It's. Exactly. Exactly. Yeah. As the common refrain. Yeah. Look, it's
a Socrates said. Float like a butterfly. Sting like a rhinoceros. But when you're breaking
away from those structures, when you're in a space that's entrepreneurial, that's the
challenge. I mean, look, that's part of the challenge that we're seeing people not resisting with
group think. Like, there's such a need to apparel and armor yourself in set ideologies,
you know, and to have things be a certain way, to just go all the way off an orderliness.
But to try and maintain high discipline, high orderliness, and high openness,
there's a constant tension that's moving.
Yeah, well, I think that's partly why high-level creative performance is so rare.
It's because it's very difficult to bring those things together,
because they actually, they're mutually constraining.
Well, the thing that's interesting for me is that I've worked with a lot of celebrities
who are at a fairly high level.
Well, at the highest level, let's just say, whether it's in acting or singing or household
name people, some of whom carry with it the press reputation of being smart and some who
do not.
The one thing that always amazes me is like anyone at a certain level of fame
has a level of unbelievable sharpness.
Like there's no one who accidentally stumbles
their way all the way up to having a top 10 hit
or a number one movie or something else.
It's very, very rare.
And so even people that we look at and go,
oh, that's some stupid celebrity, that's a dumb actor,
that's this idiot singer, people are running empires.
And they somehow have to do that while keeping
their antenna up and focused and letting
enough in to keep creating in a way that's meaningful.
I've yet to meet someone, there's a lot of people
who are pain in the ass, but I've yet to meet people at that level, I'm not to meet someone. There's a lot of people who are painting the ass, but I've yet to meet people at that level
I'm not impressed with. Yeah, well, one of the things I've learned in recent years is to go
watch famous people when they come to Toronto, no matter whether or not I like them.
So, for example, I went and saw Dolly Parton with my wife about six months ago,
outside at the Moulson amphitheater. And like, I wouldn't
say I'm a great fan of Dolly Parton's music. I mean, she's quite the phenomenon, but
she was absolutely amazing, absolutely amazing. Brilliant, witty, self-denigrating, incredibly
musically talented, really engaging with the audience. She really seemed to like to be
there. It was real treat. And I agree with what you said is that it's a rare person who, especially who manages
to sustain that across any amount of time, who doesn't have something truly remarkable
about them.
Yeah. I mean, I just, I'd also like to point out my magnanimity of not taking the open
revenge shot for your Madonna comment about you going to dolly pardon concert. I just want that. I just want that noted record show that I'm
showing enormous restraint at this point. I definitely and you have to the entire
the entire I'm very happy about that. But yeah, I'm coming out too, right? Yeah,
having a movie coming out in June. You want to talk a little bit about that? Sure. Let's call it the Book of Henry. And it stars Namib Watts. We are Jacob Tremblay,
and it is the boy from Rooms, Sarah Silverman, who we mentioned earlier, Dean Norris,
a terrific cast, Maddie Ziegler, who is amazing. Jayden Lieberer is the boy from St. Vincent,
and Midnight Special. And it's about, I'm constrained,
is we have it very kind of under wraps.
We want it to be a surprise.
It's a very unusual, very special kind of film.
I wrote the rough draft of this,
the first draft 18 years ago.
This script has literally grown up with me.
And it's about a single mom, Naomi Watts, plays the character, who is raising two boys
one of whom's a prodigy, and something very bad is happening next door to them.
And working with her son who's a prodigy, she has to figure out she's a lot like the
child in the relationship and the 12th year old is more like the adult.
And they have to sort of navigate through their way of a solution.
It has very strong thriller solution. It has very
strong thriller elements. It has some humor. I mean, one of the things I said I was thinking
about is that I hope there's a lot of emotions in it that will catch people off guard. And
how it got made, why it took so long to get made is it was so unusual. How it got made
was I found a director off a movie called Safety Not Guaranteed.
It's a wonderful little small independent movie called Colin Travaro.
And we were moving forward toward production. And then he said,
look, I just had a meeting with Spielberg. There's no conceivable way he would give me Jurassic World
off my tiny little movie that cost probably less than the catering budget for Jurassic World,
but I just wanted to give you a heads up. Two weeks later, he called and was like,
dude, I got Jurassic World. And so I lost him. And he said to me, you never know, maybe that
movie will make all this money, we can just come back and get this green last. And so if you
went off and made it, maybe I think $1.7 billion for Universal.
And true to his word, and I have enormous regard for Colin for a variety of reasons, but
this being one of them, you know, he came back and called me and said, well, now I'm doing
one of the next Star Wars movies, and I have a window, and let's shoot this thing and
go.
And so we had this small window.
I did the rewrite in like four or five days,
the production regrettage. And we just, he cast it like that. I mean, at that point, he was so
many of everyone wanted to work with and often went and it was amazing. It was like, you know,
18 years later, an overnight success. Cool. So yeah, I was, that was good, great. We should
probably call it quits. I think it's been about 90 minutes,
which seems to be about the right amount of time. So, thanks very much for talking with me,
and we'll talk soon.
Thank you for listening to episode 7 of The Jordan B Peterson Podcast. For relevant links
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