WTF with Marc Maron Podcast - Episode 1250 - A.O. Scott
Episode Date: August 5, 2021Marc is concerned about the erosion of critical thinking as a broad part of American society. So who better to talk criticism than a person who makes his living doing just that? A.O. Scott brings his ...expertise as the film and culture critic for the New York Times to this conversation about how we need to be in dialogue with culture and art amidst increasing polarization and the oppressive power of the algorithm. They talk about movies, books, comedy, comic books and all the things we benefit from looking at with a critical eye. Sign up here for WTF+ to get the full show archives and weekly bonus material! https://plus.acast.com/s/wtf-with-marc-maron-podcast. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Be honest. When was the last time you thought about your current business insurance policy?
If your existing business insurance policy is renewing on autopilot each year without checking out Zensurance,
you're probably spending more than you need.
That's why you need to switch to low-cost coverage from Zensurance before your policy renews this year.
Zensurance does all the heavy lifting to find a policy, covering only what you need,
and policies start at only $19 per month.
So if your policy is renewing soon,
go to Zensurance and fill out a quote. Zensurance, mind your business.
Death is in our air. This year's most anticipated series, FX's Shogun, only on Disney+.
We live and we die. We control nothing beyond that.
An epic saga based on the global bestselling novel by James Clavel.
To show your true heart is to risk your life.
When I die here, you'll never leave Japan alive.
FX's Shogun, a new original series,
streaming February 27th exclusively on Disney+.
18 plus subscription required. T's and C's apply.
Lock the gates! all right let's do this how are you what the fuckers what the fuck buddies what the fuck nicks
what's happening what's what's going on how are we doing i am I'm OK. I just got three boxes of covid tests and I don't know why that's so exciting to me.
I got three boxes of covid tests to have so I can test myself before I go to a on the road before I go to a club.
So I could know if I'm the one who's not safe and I could cop to it.
I could just not test and just be like, well, what if I am one of those people who has it and may symptomatic but still spread it?
Well, I don't want to be that guy.
So I bought a few boxes online.
I guess there's sort of a run on these tests right now, but I got a few for the at-home antigen test which seemed
they seemed pretty effective uh certainly with the negative result uh so i just did that today
because i'm going to denver today and um negative and i've actually asked the club in denver to only
allow and i'm probably going to do this with with my other shows as well, if possible, I can't confirm that, but I do know that tonight, tomorrow and Saturday at the Comedy Works in Denver are proof of that shows.
I feel better with that.
It's really a concern for public health.
Massive vaccinations have saved thousands, millions of lives Since vaccinations were created
Almost everybody alive
Was vaccinated for polio
Measles, tuberculosis
Chicken pox
I recently got a shingles vaccine
I'll get all the vaccines
I'm more afraid of stevia
To be honest, where's the paperwork on stevia
But again
You're free to fight for your right to die
like a moron and remain unvaccinated but i think businesses and people who want to get back to life
need some confidence in the safety of the situation and if you want to be the guy that's like
fuck you well it seems that you know personal safety and money seem more important than your
state your statement just because you're nihilistic and don't care about your personal safety and money seem more important than your state your statement just because
you're nihilistic and don't care about your personal safety or believe that you are above
and beyond it uh all right fight your fight you just won't i can't let you in the show i'm sorry
okay okay a.o scott is on the show today a.O. Scott is the film critic at the New York Times. But I just recently started reading a book that he wrote years ago called Better Living Through Criticism, How to Think About Art, Pleasure, Beauty and Truth. And I'm like, why can't I talk to this guy? I want to see if I can hold my own with A.O. Scott. It's weird. I don't read a lot of film criticism. I don't read a lot of criticism in
general because I don't know. I guess I have finally gotten comfortable with the way I see
things based on what I know and making certain connections. You know, I do read some criticism
after the fact, or I do talk to people who I trust and respect their intelligence about
things to sort of move the ideas forward and see new things that I didn't see. But at some point,
I had to become comfortable and confident with my own brain. Because to be honest with you,
when I was in high school, one of my heroes was a guy named Gus Blaisdell, who owned a bookstore across from the university. And I worked at a bagel place along the Central Avenue on Route 66 across from
UNM. And Gus Blaisdell was a sort of a mentor hero of mine. I annoyed him, but he made time for me.
And he was like a real intellectual, you know, well-sourced, you know, intellectuals, real
intellectuals, not faux intellectuals, are usually,
you know, fairly well read. They've built a firm bedrock of reference to engage their opinions and
to move forward through life as an intellectual. You know, it's all about the point of reference
and not just the word or the title, but the understanding of movements in history.
History is another thing. But I always felt I was sort of a faux intellectual, but I always aspired
to it. But I didn't have the discipline really to become to do the reading necessarily. But I knew
I was relatively smart. So I studied film criticism as a minor in college. But but I never I never
really could wrap my brain around criticism. Yeah, I'm getting better at critical thinking.
I'm not by nature a critical thinker.
I have to apply it.
I'm a reactionary thinker.
I react emotionally.
But a lot of times I can kind of nail it for myself and sometimes for others.
I don't know.
You hear me talking.
But I've always been jealous of the idea that someone is a thorough intellectual and a a bona fide critic
not reviewer a cultural critic the film critic they have to be well sourced you know a critic's
job is to see something and then to to kind of break it down put it into a context and maybe
even move the understanding of what they're criticizing further along. Now, I wanted to understand cultural criticism.
I've tried to read Northrop Frye.
I've tried to read Walter Benjamin.
Is that how you say it?
I've tried to.
There are people that I can read and that are readable.
H.L. Mencken comes to mind as well, who was definitely readable.
Hunter S. Thompson to a certain degree.
But I never, was always felt insecure
in these conversations that i just never know enough and i still kind of feel like that but
lately as an old man who's been through a lot of stuff and seen a lot of stuff and read a lot of
things but maybe not studied enough i do all right and you know sometimes i nail it sometimes i say
and think things and then i see a someone I respect writing about it in a similar way.
I'm like, I got it.
I got it.
Nonetheless, having gotten into this book of A.O. Scott's, it's almost like a primer on how to engage with art.
since I saw the movie Pig and watched every episode of Underground Railroad and have been spending a lot of time with the work of Sterling Harjo, a Native American, it's very easy to start
thinking like, what power does art have? And there's something about expression, about vulnerability,
about the connection to the human heart and the community heart through art that means something.
And oddly, I didn't think I was really this guy. I think I'd gotten cynical, but I believe that's about the connection to the human heart and the community heart through art. That means something.
And oddly, I didn't think I was really this guy.
I think I'd gotten cynical, but I believe that's the key to us moving forward is respecting the creative voices and voices in general of people that are not usually heard through
their creativity and through their expression and their communities.
So I don't know what it is, but something's happening
in terms of how my hope is defining itself. And I didn't have much of it. And I wouldn't say I'm
optimistic, but I think people are generally pretty decent. I went to a block party yesterday
around here and I'd never met my neighbors and I didn't think I was going to be in town, but it
was happening right on this corner. I went out and met all my neighbors and some I've already met before, a few I know. And it was just,
you know, maybe 30, 40, maybe 50 people from the neighborhood I had never seen before. But it was
like, it was people coming together of all different types, just, you know, having a piece
of pizza, you know, watching kids play, talking, getting to know each other, enjoying the, you
know, there was a little booth about the historical
neighborhood we live in. But people being people, not being in their phones, not living
in relation to information that they've dumped in their head and that has no bearing on their life.
Just people, how you doing, Joe? Thank you for the tomatoes. Joe brought me some tomatoes the other day. He's like, I got more. You know, that means a lot. That's a lot more enriching. Even just that moment, that exchange is, it's not, it doesn't feel as immediately satisfying to the monkey brain as clickbait, but to the heart makes a big difference.
as quick bait but to the heart makes a big difference but i was excited to talk to a.o scott and a little intimidated but uh but i read this piece he wrote a few weeks ago uh called the
movies are back but what are movies now that was in the new york times and it was very insightful
and provocative and i kind of read that and that sort of got me excited to talk to him as well.
So I referenced that a lot during the conversation because there's a lot in there and there's a lot
in the book. I just wanted to mix it up, man. I wanted to mix it up a little bit.
He goes by the name Tony. You can read him regularly, regularly, regularly in the New York
Times and his book, Better Living Through Criticism, How to Think About Art, Pleasure, Beauty and Truth is available wherever you
get books.
And this is me talking.
You can get anything you need with Uber Eats.
Well, almost, almost anything.
So no, you can't get snowballs on Uber Eats, but meatballs and mozzarella balls.
Yes, we can deliver that.
Uber Eats.
Get almost, almost anything.
Order now. Product availability may vary by region. See app for details.
Be honest. When was the last time you thought about your current business insurance policy?
If your existing business insurance policy is renewing on autopilot each year without checking out Zensurance,
you're probably spending more than you need.
That's why you need to switch to low-cost coverage from Zensurance before your policy renews this year.
Zensurance does all the heavy lifting to find a policy, covering only what you need to switch to low-cost coverage from Zensurance before your policy renews this year.
Zensurance does all the heavy lifting to find a policy, covering only what you need.
And policies start at only $19 per month.
So if your policy is renewing soon, go to Zensurance and fill out a quote.
Zensurance. Mind your business. to them. So I guess you're wondering why I called you here today. Yeah, it's great to hear from you.
I mean, it's always been kind of one of these fantasies you have. Maybe I'll do the mark maron podcast one day really yeah yeah you've
been thinking about it well it's well it's weird because as we enter you know the end of times
you know i'm i'm trying to uh you know kind of wrap my brain around certain things and i don't
like i've been reading the book i started the book the better living through criticism
but i have to be honest with you this is a battle I've had my entire fucking life with the notion of criticism.
And in this book, you're sort of putting it in a way that I can wrap my brain around.
Because you don't know how long I've been looking at Northrop Frye's book on my bookshelf.
I mean, for decades.
You know, when an intellectual dude that I looked up to said, well, you want to know about criticism? You have to read The Anatomy of Criticism by Northrop Frye. And I've got, you know, heavily underlined first three or four pages, and then I'm out, Tony. I'm out.
that that book also on my shelf sort of you know um looking at me and every once in a while i sort of steal a glance at it and feel a little embarrassed and ashamed that what i'm doing is
is so far from that um ideal and i mean i think i love that book but it is a book by someone who has
who seems to have read absolutely everything and just has it all at his fingertips you know um
yeah from the ancient greeks to to to modern poetry and he just like he
synthesized it in this amazing way but that's you know that's not the only thing criticism is i don't
think no but then okay so then i've got uh walter ben amin that's how you say it right yeah i got
i've got those books and same thing i'll get in them i'll read them for about 10 pages and i'm
like this has no bearing on my life.
This isn't helping me at all.
And then I got to put that away.
So those are the two things that I've been judging my entire intellectual adult life against.
And I can't get through them.
I can't get through them.
And I guess this is just by way of thanks for you to sort of breaking it down in an emotional and personal way in your book.
to sort of breaking it down in an emotional and personal way in your book.
So I guess on some level, poetically, you know, you would see, you know,
maybe Sontag and Benjamin as the sort of modern,
the definers of modern cultural criticism?
Certainly for me, just kind of growing up, Sontag was a big one.
I just found the power of her mind.
And this is what I think the key for me to criticism is and what attracts me to it as a reader
and maybe also as a writer
is to be in the presence of someone else thinking.
So you feel like when you're reading a Susan Sontag essay,
the thing that's most
kind of galvanizing and magnetic about it is watching her mind work, watching her sort of
take a difficult writer or a difficult text or a problem of human existence or human consciousness
or the ethics of photography and try to think it through, try to wrestle with it
in an active and open-minded way. I never feel like she's just applying a set of principles
that she already thought of. She's actually, you're watching her work, you're watching her
think. And in that way, that like in the way you kind of construct your book and the way you sort of advise people or what I get out of it, that that active engagement with a text, a film, a piece of art or even, you know, and feel connected is really the human activity of thought and moving the ideas forward.
Exactly.
Right?
Yes.
No, that – you said it really – I think you said it better just then maybe than I did in the book.
But it is – it's to be actively engaged with our own experience and our own progress through the world.
Right, on all levels like
today every day like today like you know it's just the on you know the ongoing problem with
avocados and tomatoes now is that a big problem no but like are there any more good avocados left
rarely tomatoes that's over right and how many cashews can one person eat in a day? But the issue of avocados and
tomatoes speaks directly to the idea of Disney and corporate occupation of every part of our life,
right? So are there ever going to be good tomatoes again? I think we've let that go.
Don't you, Tony? You know, I go back and forth. I always try to be optimistic.
And I wrote this about tomatoes, about avocados, about go back and forth. I always try to be optimistic. About tomatoes?
I wrote this about tomatoes, about avocados, about movies, about Disney, about the human future and the future of the human imagination.
It's a challenge.
And since I wrote this book, it's been more and more of a challenge.
I published this book in, I think, February of 2016. And it was very much
kind of trying to strike a note of optimism and hope and a sort of idea that, well, if we can all
just, you know, think and talk about what we see and experience and devote ourselves to the work
of figuring out individually and collectively the
meaning of our of our lives and the meaning of the things that we make to explain the world to
ourselves everything will be great well you're put you're you're you have high expectations
that if i don't know how many people you're expecting to get on board with this but if it's
well it's but if it's if it's most people i you're going to be disappointed. Yeah. No, I mean, it's it's, you know, judging from the from the royalty statements, it's maybe, you know, 20 or 30 people at this point. But that's, you know, that's it ever any more than that. That's the question I have. Because, look, I just I read your piece that you wrote a couple of weeks ago about the movies are back, but what are movies now in the New York Times?
And, you know, whatever you were hoping for in the book, it seems to be diminishing, Tony.
It seems. Yes. I feel like the light is going out.
Well, that's that's been the hard the hard lesson and the challenge, you know, because you don't I I don't want to, I don't want to give up.
And I don't want to become nostalgic. I don't want to become one of these people. And there are many
critics who are sort of take the stance of like, all the great stuff is behind us. You know,
all the great movies have been made, all the good songs have been written, you know, everything that
human beings can achieve in growing, maybe also in growing avocados and tomatoes, it's over
and we're just sort of going to play out the string.
And yeah, you can't, that can't be the case.
And like, it's very hard for me, you're about the same age as me to distinguish that way
of thinking from, is that, can you rely on your perception or are you just becoming an
old fuck?
You know what I mean?
Well, right.
Can you rely on your perception or are you just becoming an old fuck?
You know what I mean?
Well, right. And I think people of our generation, you know, grew up coming after these old, you know, younger old fucks.
And I was really sick of hearing about how, you know, oh, well, you weren't there, right?
If, you know, you weren't at Woodstock or you didn't, you know, you didn't go see.
We just missed it.
That was the worst, right? You just missed, oh, you didn't, you know, you weren't at the
Newport Folk Festival when Bob Dylan plugged in or you didn't see, you know,
La Ventura on its opening weekend or, I mean, all of this stuff. And
you know, I grew up with a chip on my shoulder about that
in the later 70s and 80s and 90s. Oh, geez. So you must have been the
fun guy at the parties, huh?
Well, I was just sort of like,
I think like a lot of Generation X people,
you know, I was just like, wait a minute.
We could, you know, why can't we do something to,
or as, you know, to quote Emerson,
why can't we have an original relationship to the universe?
But like, it's interesting that what built us intellectually
was all stuff that that wave had crashed, you know, from the 50s to 60s.
And then, you know, I imagine coming into your own mind in the 70s, like even those films.
I mean, that was all nostalgia already.
Yeah.
It was all behind us and it was defining the future.
But we come up in a time of, know the you know the end of this death of
disco beginning of punk rock new wave and then whatever the hell was going on in movies in the
80s in the late 70s which was good stuff there was there was good stuff i mean the 80s the 80s were
was was was was not a was not a golden age of uh of cinema and and you're right. I mean, all of the great movies of the 70s I saw late.
You know, I saw either on VHS.
Yeah, I saw them like a month ago.
Yeah.
Well, now you can see them on the Criterion Channel.
But, like, I would see them, you know, at, like, the Campus Film Society or at the repertory house in my hometown.
So, you know, whether it was Nashville or Mean Streets or Chinatown,
all of those movies definitely came late to them.
It wasn't while that wave was breaking.
But one of the things that I tried to talk about in the book
and tried to kind of get challenged a little bit,
but also to say is part of the human experience of living in history and living
in relation to culture and art is that you very often feel it's very rare, very few generations
and very few people don't feel like they came too late.
You know, that...
They always feel like they did.
I think they always...
I mean, there's that, you know, that Woody Allen movie, Midnight in Paris, where he keeps
going back in time.
And in every, you know, he goes back to 20s, and everyone in the 20s is talking about the 1890s, and he goes back to the 1890s.
It's an infinite regress.
It was always just a little bit better.
Well, that enforces your argument, really, in the book, that if that's the position you're in, that it all happened before, the pressure is on you to continue the conversation either creatively or critically yeah uh to move things forward that it's going to
be your reaction so if you don't surrender to nostalgia and you're aggravated you there's a
good chance you'll move the the the the pin forward right i i think that's right and i and i
think that that's how you know often how artists work. And it's sort of how artists function as critics, so that you think at any point in history, if you're a poet or a musician or a filmmaker or a writer any moment, it is complete. Like there's no room for you until you make that room, until you sort of work through
your relationship to the earlier stuff and do your own thing.
Right.
And then sadly, when you make that room, that doesn't guarantee anyone's going to visit
the room.
But at least you know that like I've cut out this port.
I have my place. Right. And you're all welcome to come. And, you know, I I've cut out this poor. I have my place.
Right.
And you're all welcome to come.
And, you know, I hope a few of you do.
Right.
And then hopefully one person will come that'll go out and go like, this guy is doing something and then bring a few more people.
Exactly.
I think that's that's a that's a very I mean, obviously, there are there are artists with with.
Yeah.
With their artists with with more grandiose ambitions than that. But fundamentally, that's sort very, I mean, obviously there are, there are artists with, with, yeah, with their artists
with, with more grandiose ambitions than that, but fundamentally that's sort of it. It's like
somebody, you know, notices what you did and thinks it's interesting. Um, and, and yeah,
and maybe tell someone else about it. And, uh, I guess like, you know, I'm, what I'm coming up
against and I, and maybe I, you know, the conversation that I wanted to have or that
we're having, which is good,
is just that it's hard to decipher relevance, because a lot of the models that you and I came up with and that did define those things, and I think you speak about this in the book,
they don't seem to have it as much. And this gets back to the argument around,
is it because we're older and that the language has changed or the paradigm has shifted or what?
And that, you know, that us talking about, you know, film or books or art, you know, is something dated and that we're just not fluid enough in the ways of the way the youth culture works.
But I don't know that's really true.
I was I dated a painter for years and it's like when you look at that world and then you realize all of a sudden that the
the world of painting and the world of that kind of art has always been this sort of you know hobby
landscape for the wealthy and that you know its relevance in terms of really kind of having any
social implications that matter is almost zero uh it was really heartbreaking to me to see how the
art world worked. And so that to me is sort of like, there's no painting that's going to save
us now. And then in your piece from a couple of weeks ago, when you really talk about what I
thought was interesting and I've gotten myself in trouble about, like you have, the authoritarian
nature of the Marvel universe, You literally say in so many
words that that business of motion pictures has infected malignantly everything else to the point
where people like you have to reckon with it critically. Well, right. And the thing that
frustrates me, and it's very easy to be misunderstood, I think, when you make that
kind of argument, because you get cast in the position of, you know, you just hate these things
that everybody likes. You're, you know, or you're a snob. Yeah, about the Marvel. Like, you don't,
you know, I hate comic books, or I hate superheroes, or I, you know, I'm a snob about
popular culture. But how about you're, what about you're a grown-up you see this is like when you go back to like how have we accepted this was like done over the last decade
the almost complete infantilization of of of grown-ass men yeah you know that like i i enjoyed
your piece about you know when you were having marital problems and you were playing poker
because like that you know that that your assessment of you know who am i as a man and what defines that so and which is the other problem
with the generation we're from and where we're at now is like you know we don't even know how to
dress like fucking grown-ups so you that there just seemed to be a time where grown-ups had a
lot more grace in the world so if we're walking around with a sort of nebulous identity of what
it means to be a mature person in the culture we
live in, how are we not just going to be ripe to be filled with this justification of comic books
as being passive? Well, yeah, I think you put your finger on it. And because it is about
kind of passivity and obedience and assent as models of participation.
So it's like, I'm a fan.
I mean, I don't know what that means.
I don't know what kind of, as you say, grown-up identity that is.
It's not passive.
I'll tell you that.
It's not passive.
That's true.
But it is kind of disciplined.
Right.
It's subservient.
And subservient and obedient.
kind of disciplined and and right it's subservient and subservient and obedient and i feel like the model both of the production and consumption and marketing of these movies which is brilliant you
have to say this is this is quite an achievement that that disney and marvel have done because
they went from going from making sort of sequels so here's a movie and then next year there'll be
this movie and then and then they started knitting them together. So you have to stay all the way to the end of the credits to see, you know, if Scarlett
Johansson or Samuel L. Jackson or someone else is going to show up because that's the
Easter egg.
So you're and you won't fully appreciate this movie unless you get that and get to that,
which means you're committed to watching all of the other movies, which means that a lot of your mind and your consciousness and your intelligence is going to be devoted to the
trivia of this imaginary universe. And your duty, your job as a fan will be to consume
as much of it as they give you. And they'll keep giving you more of it on their different platforms.
So now there will be series on Disney Plus, and there will be feature films, and it will just kind of grow and metastasize.
And I just worry that it takes up so much of the ecosystem and so much of the time.
I mean, look, we're talking about it now, right?
That it's a sort of total domination.
But you're talking about it
and i'm sitting here i've not seen any of them you know i i don't i don't know how but i can't
even force myself to do it you know and i've been critical of it and certainly in my last special i
i i likened it to a belief system yeah yeah which it is you know because when you like you know one
of the defining uh uh writers of my particular you know, perception of reality is Ernest Becker, you know, and, you know, the denial of death and, you know, and the idea of what belief means, you know, that resonates with me that people need to feel part of something in order to have a sense of self.
You know, but most people are willingly shallow enough to just go on feeling and reaction as opposed to sort of a kind of global libertarian ideal.
So you have these super empowered elite, which is where all the drama takes place.
And their job is to save or to help the actual public, the population of the universe or of the world in any of these movies is either, you know, is in a role of potential victims to be
saved. They have no, there's no agency, there is no democracy. It's about what the Avengers,
it's about what this sort of, you know, Davos class group of superheroes, many of whom are either,
you know, deities or billionaires or everyone's fantasy, every sort of like Elon Musk fantasy of sort of what it is to be like,
you know, an intergalactic hotshot.
And so these are the people who we're supposed to care about
and we're supposed to be rooting for and who we just assume
that their interests are our interests.
But like in speaking about this last piece you wrote,
my concern, the idea I've been trying to explore around this,
and you do it in the piece in The Times,
the movies are back piece,
is that we've all been sort of pimped out by the algorithm.
We're all algorithm whores.
And it becomes not just critical thinking but you have to be
you know actively protect yourself from uh you have to mind your mind right uh in an active way
because there's this weird thing happening to even smart people and i don't know if you've
noticed it maybe i'm wrong but maybe you can you can inform me that that even some smart people
have become painfully shallow in terms of their lack
of engagement and their irresponsibility around thinking their own thoughts and i don't know what
you do about that because like if you just allow your brain to be a recording device of bits and
pieces you pick up here and there that are just floating around in your brain because uh your
ability to think is so shattered by your engagement with your device, you know, what do you got to do to sort of ground yourself? And that's sort of, I
guess, you know, you wonder if the tomatoes are ever coming back or is it just the, you know,
is it the jam and soylent green? You know what I mean? Well, yeah. And it's very scary. I mean,
because I don't in that piece, you know, really engage with,
because it's not what I'm supposed to be writing about,
the really scary and sinister aspects
of what you're talking about,
which is how, you know,
and there are so many stories of this anecdotally,
and everybody, I think, knows somebody
who kind of went off the deep end
or went into the rabbit hole, right?
Who started watching you do-
Of one kind or another. the deep end or went into the rabbit hole, right? Who started watching YouTube.
Of one kind or another.
Of one kind or another.
And, you know, surrendered their critical thinking or had their critical thinking overwhelmed by, you know, by disinformation and conspiracy theories and all kinds of stuff that's out there.
And then it becomes like critical thinking.
Like if you're not careful with that switch in your brain, it becomes the false equivocating switch. Well, that's what it is. Yeah.
It's, it's, it's, and it, and it's, it's like a sort of a virus, so to speak, that, that,
that replicates critical thinking. So, you know, people will say, you know, I know this because I
did my own research, right? I did my own research. So I know that, that, you know, the vaccine will
magnetize my blood and my keys will stick to my forehead because I did my own research, right? I did my own research. So I know that, that, you know, the vaccine will magnetize my blood and my keys will stick to my forehead because I did my own
research, which is a sort of a weird, perverse, upside down version of critical thinking. Because
while I'm being skeptical, I'm not believing what everyone tells me. I'm, I'm thinking for myself.
And that is what really, what, what I find, you know, so overwhelming and just flat out
terrifying as someone who kind of
sets a certain amount of stock in and maybe too much stock in people's rational abilities,
the sort of the intellectual capacities that we all have as something that can, you know,
can protect us and can save us and can improve things.
And to see it, to see that almost reversing itself is um is chilling but but but
how could it i mean it's like what you did write about in the piece is that you know are we able to
is there any way we can defend ourselves against this you know tidal wave or tsunami or or or
your sandblasting right of the entertainment industrial complex, right? So, but what I've started to notice
is that the brain is very soft
and people are very lost.
And, you know, a lot of times
if it feels like thinking, they'll take it.
And it turns out that most people aren't,
we're never really capable of critical thinking.
And the idea that it's an epistemic problem
because if you don't have any barometer
for the integrity of truth, I mean, where the fuck does this go?
Right.
And it just makes everybody very easily led.
And it's not going to be great, you know, like because the broader problem around what you're talking about, it seems to me, is that there's an active, you know, anti-intellectual push going on, you know, on the fascistic level, which is a reality in this
country now, but also with, you know, smart people who are dismissive because they're doing their own
research. I mean, that really troubles me quite a lot because I'd always thought, you know, that,
I mean, I was never fully optimistic or, you know, sort of utopian that that thinking or or or criticism
or whatever we're talking about or whatever we're calling it would be strong enough to withstand the
forces of um demagoguery and ignorance and and stupidity but i always thought my kind of idea
of history was that you know from from from era to era from to decade, from century to century, it's a draw.
You can fight it to a draw.
So there will be just enough of reason and good sense and intellectual possibility to kind of keep it going.
That the forces of ignorance wouldn't entirely take over everything.
And now I still want to believe that.
That's still sort of
the bedrock of my faith in a way as a, as a, as a, as a thinking person, but I just don't know.
I can't, you know, I don't know why I, I, I have that faith in a way, um, or, or, or, or, you know,
what else? Well, I mean, well then, well, you have it because, you know, you're, you're you're uh a believer in the the progress of you know creativity art you know
intellectual revelation you know the the the the higher good of humanity i mean you know if you if
if that goes away you know i don't know what you're going to do in that attic you know what
i mean it's like you know but but i am i deal with this shit day to day because, you know, we allow ourselves, our brains to be blown out by it.
But I mean, there are, but even the weird things, these signals of hope, and I think you've, I think you've sort of, you addressed it a bit in this piece as well.
The signals of hope are sort of devastating.
of hope are are sort of devastating like i think that one of the things coming out of this pandemic that we might see again is that you know it might have killed the happy ending for most practical
purposes for a little while right you know because i'm in the middle of watching uh underground
railroad yeah uh you know which is relentless but but seemingly necessary. Yeah. But the only thing that carries that is the finesse
and the filmic intelligence of Jenkins.
Yeah.
Because it would be torture if it wasn't handled
like he's handling it and sort of really exploring
these allegories founded in these grotesque realities.
But also with a movie
like like still water i mean that that's a morally ambiguous bit of business at the end of that
but it's like that's a new thing i haven't seen a mainstream movie do that in a while have you
yeah no i i think that's a good example those are both good examples and I think that there are definitely narratives and films and novels and stories that are doing it very much in the way that you say. and a need for beauty and tenderness.
You know, we can't just confront the terribleness of everything all the time head on, you know.
And I think Underground Railroad is a great example because the story, the material,
the historical material and the way that it's distilled, both in Colson Whitehead's novel and in Barry Jenkins'
adaptation of it, is so harsh and so terrible and so almost, you know, overwhelming to an idea you
would have of sort of the goodness of humanity. And yet there is, and I think this is so true of
how Barry Jenkins approaches his stories and approaches film and approaches the
medium of visual storytelling.
There's such tenderness. There's such
kind of love for his characters
and between his characters.
And he's so attentive to
beauty and to just kind of
quiet moments that happen between
people in a way that
it's not comforting you. It's not
sentimentalizing or softening anything. But it's not comforting you. It's not sentimentalizing or softening anything,
but it's just reminding you that that's part of it too.
That, that, that, that,
that part of the history and part of the story and part of who we are as,
as a, as a species, as a civilization, whatever is that it lives in those
impulses too, in those impulses toward,
toward kindness or empathy or beauty.
And that's right. and that's what's
at stake yes yes that yeah you know that that that's a good point yeah at the core of all this
grotesque horror you know and and complete you know uh you know ignorant violence is yeah are
those moments but but the fragility of it and there's something that the heart wants but you
know the heart wants it to you know like i i'm only halfway through and i hope she gets a break
but i don't i'm not but you know but in the long in the big picture no one does right and that the
only thing that you you know you have to go on is is what you're talking about is that belief that
that matters and and the tenderness and and and i am i imagine that the reason why you have hope is
because you know you you you deal in movies that you know like you're outside of the industry and
outside of of of you know what it implies uh for the future of of of thinking and and and culture
uh that you know you know movies engage your empathy they engage your hope they
even if they're manipulative even if they hope, even if they're manipulative, even if they're cartoons,
even if they're superhero movies,
they're moving you through something that feels human.
Yes, and they're most of the time getting you to care about something
and getting you to care about people who aren't real,
who you maybe have no reason to care about.
But movies, and I think narrative generally,
I think it's true of novels too.
And it's even true of TV shows and sitcoms.
I mean, my son, when he was a teenager,
he would watch the same shows.
He would watch his favorite shows, like Scrubs,
again and again and again.
He would just watch it. It was when you were starting to be able to get them on DVD he would watch the same shows. You'd watch his favorite shows like scrubs again and again and again, you know,
he would just watch it.
It was,
you could,
it was when you would,
we're starting to be able to get them like on DVD and,
and you don't have to wait around for reruns or syndicate syndication.
And,
and,
and my wife and I were like,
what do you do?
Like,
haven't you seen that,
you know,
five times already?
Why are you watching again?
And he said,
well,
this is like,
these are people I like who I want to hang out with.
And this is how I,
you know,
I,
I,
I go and visit them and spend time with them.
And narrative and representation and art does that too.
It gives us imaginary friends.
It gives us people who are different from us, whose lives we otherwise couldn't imagine that we can relate to and understand and care about.
So we're happy when they're happy.
We're sad when they're hurt. We're, we're, we're sad when they're hurt.
We don't want anything bad to happen to them. Um, yeah, it's extraordinarily powerful. And, um, and, and I think you're right.
That just because every, you know, often enough to, um, to,
to keep me from, you know, quitting, quitting my job and, and,
and moving up to the woods full time, I'll see something, I'll see a story that, that reminds me of that. It's like, oh yes, you,
this, whatever else is going on at the corporate level and at the technological level, this is,
um, uh, an, an, an art form that can tell these stories in this, in this way that's so,
so immediate and so intense and so interesting and so beautiful.
Well, I thought that like, you know, it was a pretty, for me, there was something, you know,
kind of impressive about the best picture category of the last Oscars, you know, and not so much the
Oscars presentation, but nonetheless, that those stories were unique, human, diverse, and encouraging.
Yeah.
You know, for the most part.
Yeah.
Which was an amazing thing is that, you know, and I've tried to deal with this on stage,
is that there's been a real impact, I think, in the sort of integration and embracing of diversity within the fictional realm.
Yeah.
I don't know if it's going to cross over.
Right.
No, but it has, and it's exciting,
and it gives you stories also that,
I think this crop of Oscar movies,
they also felt very kind of honest in a way,
just thinking of the father and Anthony Hopkins
and how this is like,
this is an honest look at this,
this very,
very painful situation that so many families,
so many people have,
have gone through and it's being presented in a way that is,
is painful and devastating and,
but also honest.
And it's the honesty that,
that keeps it from being utterly kind of,
you know,
making you despair.
And I think there's something similar going on in Nomadland.
I mean, objectively, this is about just a really harsh, terrible reality
of people, you know, who have lost their retirement
and who are living on the road and, you know, working minimum wage jobs
when they should be just taking it easy after,
after a lifetime of hard work. And the movie is, is,
does take a hard look at all of that, but also holds onto this,
this kind of idea of, of a human possibility within that.
Oh yeah. And also like, you know, the,
the adaptive nature of human beings and the seemingly, I think what gets lost a lot in just
when we live in the information and not in the life that we have is that, you know, that people
do like people. And, you know, instinctively, you know, like I always used to notice that about
living in New York City, that no matter how bad the information was on how people treat each other, if somebody went down on the street in New York, people were there.
Yeah.
Like, you know, somebody was taking charge.
People were concerned.
Someone was clearing the way.
It was almost like a sort of a ballet of reaction that everybody found their place to find the space to give the person the
help they need in that moment. Yeah. Yeah. No. And I think, I mean, I felt that way being,
being in New York, you know, the worst part of, of, of COVID in the spring of 2020, you know,
I was, I was very glad to be there. I was, I felt, you know, vulnerable and terrified,
obviously because of the virus, but also protected by exactly that
sort of that civic fabric that's there, that people are, you know, in a way don't have a
choice if you have that many people, you know, sort of that densely packed. But I mostly found
it and still find it just in terms of conscientiousness about, you know,
about how to behave and about sort of what you owe to the people around you.
You know, that it's not all about you and your freedom and your comfort and your immediate needs,
but you're part of some kind of collective civic grouping
and you have some obligations and responsibilities.
And I don't want to overstate it.
I mean, obviously people in New York
are just as kind of selfish or clueless
or inconsiderate as anybody else,
but there is nonetheless a kind of a civic fabric
in that place that held, you know?
And it held at 9-11, it held at Hurricane Sandy, you know, and it held in COVID.
And that's, you know exactly what's at risk culturally. their desires being mined by the algorithm and their reality and perception being guided by choices that ultimately are consumeristic,
is that any sort of civic interaction, I think, is even rare.
And that when you see people like Matt Gaetz or the other one, Green, running around,
these are elected people who were designated to represent something that the community might have wanted and you look at them going like that what is then what is this
clown show so so it strikes me that people don't have don't understand civic responsibility in an
intellectual way or in a governmental way there's no understanding of it and they're the ones that
are are are criticizing the cities like you know the elites in the cities where we live among people.
We're not cornered in our suburban cul-de-sacs or living, you know, in a way that the only community you have is a mega church you go to because you feel like you have to.
I don't know, man.
to because you feel like you have to? I don't know, man. It's just like, I don't know how to wrap my brain around what's happening culturally because that's what is being lost. And you
address it in this piece is that by these cloistering of people because of how they're
guided by algorithms, like, I don't know where we, how do we get community again? I don't know.
Well, that's a really important question.
And it's one that I don't think I quite addressed in that piece,
maybe as fully as I could have or will.
At another point,
because there is this idea that,
and it's a complicated idea.
It's an idea with a and it's a complicated idea.
It's an idea with a history that has a lot of twists and turns and detours.
But there is this idea, I think, I hope, that culture is this sort of participatory thing, right? And I've often believed this about American popular culture in particular.
about American popular culture in particular.
One of the great strengths of it is that it does seem to have this ability
to cross other kinds of tribal and identity
and ideological and political lines.
So that, you know, in a way-
It did, it did.
It did.
No, I mean, I think one thing
that I worry about very much now
is that it also is being polarized.
So that it's like, we're going to go see, you know, red movies and blue movies and listen to to red music and blue music.
I see it in comedy, you know, and I'm trying you try to push back.
But there is this sort of like woke versus unwoke business going on in terms.
And that's and that's at the core of the cultural dialogue and a lot of the people who consider themselves you know pushing back you know against this wokeness you know are easily turned
out by uh right-wing ideologues yeah yeah so like even the the the sort of premise of like look we
should have you know the right to say anything without being you know socially crucified you
know i agree that that's true.
And I also agree that, you know, sometimes language evolves and you have to do that out of respect for, you know, the what you're talking about, the collective.
But that, you know, to to sort of weaponize this stuff, you know, and kind of hold ground is part of something that, you know, I don't know why we
don't speak about it more, but, you know, we're up against a fairly organized fascistic movement
that has, you know, momentum. And I don't know, you know, how you speak of it properly, but that
seems to be what's happening. Yeah. I mean, and I'm curious what you said about comedy,
because I've felt, I mean, I'm very much an outsider in that world, but I'm sort of fascinated by it and have wondered kind of at least since the 60s, is that, you know, the comedians are sort of the truth tellers
and that your job is to attack the pieties and break the taboos
and to sort of to go to the places.
You're almost sort of the unconscious, almost the id of the culture.
And so the people sitting there can laugh at you saying things
that they would never say, say themselves. But it,
it,
it is interesting how that idea has taken this very,
um,
kind of harsh political turn in,
in,
uh,
just,
just,
just recently.
it's a threat of cancel culture.
So,
so what's happened is,
is that,
you know,
how comedy functioned before there's also also something going on around the model of fandom
that you're talking about within comedy
where you're getting a lot of people gravitating
towards the sort of free-thinking zone
that we talked about earlier
that are really anything but that.
They don't really know what that means,
but they're fundamentally not necessarily comedy fans they're they're mobilized by you know a sort of like this new
kind of um you know lifestyle approach of you know alpha maleness right but nonetheless there
is a front that and the problem with it is is that they're uncancellable because the people there's enough of them to sustain their
their universe right so like they don't have to answer to cultural appropriateness or even be
sensitive or or sympathetic to people struggling who are who are marginalized because it's like
you know we don't fucking need them right you're We've got our people. Right. And I think also that any criticism, I think, or any attempt to sort of, I mean, and we saw this with the 45th president, any attempt to sort of call them out or criticize them fuels the resentment and is more kind of evidence of you see, you know, who's out to get me, who's against me.
And that sort of defensiveness and resentment is what is kind of empowering and exciting to those figures and their fans.
Well, that's what they think comedy is.
Right.
You know, so there's not only is there no nuance to it, but it might not even be comedy.
It is, you know, jingoism. Right. And when there's a fine line between a rally and a comedy show, something has gone askew.
But, you know, but but but buffoonery in fascism, it's like I was thinking about this recently.
Almost all of them are fucking buffoons. I mean, like when you look at them, you know, contemporary ones of oh yeah mussolini hitler uh you know uh the guy what's his name belessandro in brazil the guy uh the uh
the whatever his name is the guy in turkey the guy in the philippines they're they're little men
and trump they're they're clowns they're they're literally like they look like comedic archetypes
yet these are the people that mobilize now i can't can't. That's one of my recent problems is like, why do they all fit that?
How are they the leaders?
Because they're physically, mentally, behaviorally buffoons.
Yet they're speaking for the grievance.
It's the grievance.
Yes, yes.
Yeah.
No, and I think that's right.
And that that is part of their charisma.
I mean, I was, a few months ago when I was working on another piece, I rewatched Face in the Crowd.
You know, the Kazan movie.
And that's a great example of that.
Because that guy is who Andy Griffith plays so brilliantly, Lonesome Rhodes, is exactly what you're describing.
He's a clown, and everybody knows he's a clown.
And the Patricia Neal and Walter Matthau characters
who are the elite intellectuals
who put him on the radio and then on TV
and like, oh, we can control this guy
and the people love him.
And then he turns out to be this monster
precisely because you know they
think they understand the joke um right but which is that he is a joke but his understanding of the
joke of the way he is a joke is that i'm tying myself in knots here is that he's not a joke at
all or that it's exactly the exactly the line between there there may be humor there may be
comedy but there's no irony in it.
But the core of that guy is he knew it was a hustle.
From the get-go, he was like,
I'm going to get what I need with this sick charm I have.
And I'm going to make me as big as possible
because I'll take all of it.
But even with that dumb device in that movie
of the audience simulator
that it looks so stupid as
a machine, him sitting there playing
with that thing was menacing.
Yes.
And where that movie
kind of doesn't go far enough
or can't see all the way
to the end of its presence
is of course the way that he's destroyed, the way that
he's brought down, which is the way that McCarthy was brought down.
That in the end, when the people discover what contempt he has for them, when the audience
hears him saying that he thinks they're stupid and he's taking advantage of him, they're
going to turn on him and reject him and that'll be it.
But that's actually not how it turns out.
That's not applicable now.
That's actually not how it turns out to happen. Well, you have to account for religiosity, Christian eschatology, how that sort of weaves into QAnon and just some sort of strange nihilism that the core of patriotism now is having the right to die like an idiot.
So I'm not taking it.
Right. But but with comedy and I think it speaks to some of the stuff you were speaking to is that
like, you know, as somebody who's in the business and I've had this problem before, but not not in
a political way like, you know, that the business has become so integrated through all the outlets
that you sort of talk about. There's a there's one paragraph in in the in the piece where you're talking about uh how how it extended into you know news everything
you know that everything becomes sort of not not transparent but but there there there's no
boundaries to anything so so as somebody as a comic if i make some fun of like say a joe rogan
or an adam sandler that somehow or another it's being interpreted as a personal problem with my contemporaries based on my bitterness or my whatever.
Whereas, like, you know, all of a sudden it's like you're neutered in your ability to be a cultural critic because it's like, but you know that guy.
Everyone's in on the the behind the scenes
thing i you know i remember being viscerally upset when they had sort of like uh when the first uh
sort of you know hollywood news shows started happening it's like why are they they they're
gonna ruin the the mystery you know if we you know if if tabloidism becomes mainstream the cultural
dialogue is all tabloidism.
It's like there's no mystery to anything.
And if everyone can sort of be sold a kind of a fantasy of insiderdom, you know, which I think that social media also allows and encourages.
So everybody is everybody is already all all wised up and cynical and knows what's going on and sort of, you know, in on the con in a way.
I think that's how people get get really deeply conned, you know, is by thinking that they're not the Marx.
Totally right. Exactly. It's that it's it's it's an informed shallowness.
Really, what happens is that they don't realize they're being suckered. All the free thinkers, it's just like what scares me about their particular markdom is that what they're being suckered into is the complete objectification of the other, which never leads anywhere good.
No, no, right.
And that line is too porous for me at this point in time like you
know i was talking to um to that guy that writer baity the guy who wrote the sellout oh paul baity
yeah yeah yeah and i'm i was just sort of like you know i i just hope i know when it's time to go
you know what i mean like you know you don't want to be the Jew who's like, Hitler's going to work with us. You know what I mean?
So I don't know.
But, you know, there's something about federalism that provides some weird sense of protection.
Like, who cares if the Midwest balkanizes?
I don't go there anyways, you know.
So I don't know.
I don't know what happens, but, but, but what spoke to me about what you're doing and certainly
in this piece recently was just that, you know, we, we aren't a collective anymore. Culturally,
there is nothing holding the culture together. And, you know, when something like, you know,
what's happening in comedy happens, the comedian that you were talking about from the sixties,
who is the truth teller, that guy, like he got co-opted so there you know
you can't tell that other truth like he when in my last special i i kind of dropped a throwaway
line about the monoculture of free thinkers right so that that's what that is right yeah so if you
call it out like that they're just going to act like marvel fans is what you're saying about it's
not absorbing the criticism right they're clearly an army of people.
Yeah.
Who are myopic in their worship of a particular way of thinking that is anything but funny.
Mm hmm.
Mm hmm.
But you have to push back.
You have to push back.
I think you do.
I mean, I think as frustrating and demoralizing as it is, you have to sort of soldier on and,
you know, keep doing what you're doing. I think as frustrating and demoralizing as it is, you, you, you have to sort of soldier on and,
you know, um, keep doing what you're doing. I'm certainly going to keep doing what I'm doing and just sort of like write as if, and talk as if there is a reasonable person on the other end who
is, who is kind of, um, interested in, um, having a conversation and exchange of ideas who doesn't
necessarily agree. You know, I, I, I don't agree. You know, I don't ever really particularly care about being agreed with.
But you want to think that there are other thinking people.
You don't, I mean, the true craziness is to think that you're the last,
you know, the last sane man on earth, right?
Why did you do this for a life?
I mean, yeah, it just kind of happened in a way as as as you
know i mean i was always interested in writing and i was always interested in in reading i really was
always interested in criticism i mean it it people don't necessarily believe it starting in college
well you know even before that like i i kind of what you hip to it? When I grew up, just reading magazines and newspapers.
You know, like I think my parents subscribed to The New Yorker
and had The New York Times around.
But then I think for me what really the breakthrough was
I started reading Rolling Stone in the late 70s.
Yeah.
Because I was really into music.
Yeah.
A hundred times, but also like Greal Marcus and, you know,
Ellen Willis and Robert Criscow.
They were like a lot of really great writers.
And they were also, they were older and their tastes were not mine.
Like I was really into punk rock and new wave,
which Rolling Stone hated. were not mine like i was really into to punk rock and and and new wave and and all which which
rolling stone hated rolling stone was sort of programmatically anti anti-punk rock for a very
long time um but i think when i was maybe like 10 or 11 my parents got me for christmas i remember
it very vividly like the rolling stone illustrated history of rock and roll which was an anthology of critical essays on and i read it cover to cover i think more than i've ever read any other book
and i like looked at the discographies and i went and and and and bought the records and i
and i argued like i had big problems with a lot of what they said about, you know, about the Velvet Underground or about David Bowie or about punk.
And that just sort of got, but that sort of stimulated this idea that, oh, you can care about something and want to argue about something.
And a way to live is to be, you know, surrounded by other people who care about those things and want to argue with you about them.
And that was just sort of an ideal.
And I think that all of my reading and my kind of fantasy life after that was sort of
about that idea, that whether it was like those rock critics or, you know, the New York
intellectuals in the 50s or whoever it was, a bunch of people sitting around arguing passionately with their friends
about stuff that maybe everybody outside of the room thought was trivial or was garbage.
That seemed to me like the ideal.
Right.
And it also seems to me like from reading that piece you wrote a few years ago about
poker and just about how you grew grew up that in order to sort of
integrate, because you moved around so much, you had to be able to sort of kind of read the room
of, you know, the maleness you were up against. Yes. Yeah, no, I was like, I, I was, I was always
the new kid. So I was always got, you know, bullied and beaten up and I had to, I had to
learn. I was not, you know, I was never going to be physically imposing. Um, so I, I, I had to learn. I was never going to be physically imposing. So I had to learn to
adapt and to think on my feet and to
figure stuff out. How does this work?
If you use that talent to become a salesman or you use that
talent to continue judging. Yes, to continue judging and say,
okay, I can see through this. This is what, you know, this is what these people think they're doing,
but maybe this is what they're really doing. And, and I did, you know, it was a sort of a,
a long kind of, um, zigzagging route. I went to, um, I went to graduate school and studied that
kind of criticism for a while, you know, I was just the sort of the Northrop Frye, you know, sort of
literary theory kind. Um, I was in a PhD program, uh, in English for very many years, not, you know,
not writing a dissertation. And I started just kind of writing book reviews on the side, um,
just so I could, you know, have a piece of writing that I could finish and that somebody might read. And then just as often happens in journalistic and other careers, it was just sort of a series of accidents that got me to where I am now.
Did you finish your dissertation?
No, I didn't.
I wrote that criticism book instead.
Can you present that to them now?
I might.
If any of them are still alive, maybe I i'll i'll go down and say okay this
is this is it call me doctor you should that was like one of the ways i knew that we were in
trouble actually was you know in referencing punk rock was like you know when when trump became
president there's people going like man the punk rock punk rock now is going to really, I'm like, no, it's not.
No, it's not.
Wait till the punk rock comes out from this.
Right, right.
What are you talking about?
Oh, great.
It's gone.
Also, it's like, and that's not how it works.
It's just not how it works.
It was just like so disturbing.
But you have like, you have kids.
I mean, do you find hope there?
Do you think like we're going to be okay?
Or are you like, they're in trouble?
No, I'm a big fan of my kids.
No, no, no.
I mean, I'm just generation.
Yeah, no, in general.
I mean, they're grown.
They're 25 and 22.
And I teach college students.
I sort of have a side gig.
And I'm very, I like this generation or these generations who get, you know, who get a lot of shit.
But I think that they're, you know, they're very sincere.
They're very, I think they're angry about the right things. I think they are, you know, there's a lot of creativity and sort of intellectual
toughness, even though there's a sort of reputation that young people have for being, you know,
oversensitive and snowflakes and so on. I think there are a lot of them, a lot of the ones that
I know are thinking very hard about some difficult things and are in a situation that our generations, in a way,
have put them in,
that they're facing some very hard and serious choices.
And they're kind of not, I don't know,
there's less bullshit to them maybe than to us.
Right, right.
Yeah, because we were, you know,
that's what got us through was bullshit.
Yes.
They might be like, you know,
given that there's so much bullshit,
maybe this generation is sort of like,
they can see it.
Right, right.
This is a simulacra.
The simulacra is bullshit.
Yes, yes.
Right.
So did you see Pig?
Did you see the movie Pig?
I haven't.
I missed the movie Pig.
I'm dying to see it. Have you seen it?
I did, yeah.
Okay.
And I loved it. It was the first movie I saw out of quarantine, and I don't even know why. I think because just the idea that Nick Cage chose to do a movie about a guy that's got to get his pig back,
I was like, how is that going to be bad you know you know what i mean i'm dying to see it because it's i feel like it's a it's a kind of a year for
um for truffle cinema there's this movie this documentary called the truffle hunters about
these italian that's what i heard about hunting guys yeah which which are sort of like real life
northern italian versions of this nicholas cage character from what i've heard about
pig in that i think you'll like it because i think it's more of a it's it's it's about it's about
what what makes you know a quality life you know in light of profound grief i really think it's
about grief i don't think it has anything to do with truffles, per se.
You know, but like when I watched it,
I had no idea what it was going to be about.
Right, right.
But again, it's not unlike Stillwater that this is a movie that operates
in sort of a filmic and poetic landscape
that is at times reading as reality,
but isn't quite.
poetic landscape that is at times reading as reality, but isn't quite.
And it is sort of about, you know,
about grief and about, you know, what, you know, what,
what makes life worth living, you know, it's good. I think you'll like it.
I just haven't seen anyone read it that way. And the way,
the way these movies are promoted, that's the, the, the, the still water you saw still water right yeah i said to damon i said uh you know
i really was anticipating like you're not gonna this isn't a franchise thing right this guy's not
gonna go on to no that's what you think right you think oh this is this is this is this is he's
doing the liam neeson uh right it's his it's his turn to be the angry dad. Yeah.
And also with Pig,
you're like,
is this deliverance?
I mean,
is it,
you know,
is it like,
what is this weird mountain shit?
It really takes place
outside of contemporary Portland.
Yeah.
You know,
it's not some weird,
you know,
kind of hillbilly movie.
Right,
right,
right.
Yeah,
I think you'll like it.
I'll look forward to that one.
Yeah,
for sure.
It's great talking to you,
man.
It's been a pleasure.
It's been really fun.
I hope we will again.
Yeah, man.
Isn't this what you were talking about people need to do?
I think so.
It certainly keeps me going.
It's great.
It was great meeting you.
Likewise.
And have a good rest of your day.
You too.
Take care.
Hey, yo, Scott. I too. Take care. Ayo Scott.
I thought I did good. I thought I hung
in. I feel
alright. I didn't see this as a competition,
but I just wanted to see if we jived.
You can read
him regularly. Tony Scott.
Ayo Scott. Regularly
in the New York Times. His book
Better Living Through Criticism, How to Think About Art, Pleasure, Beauty,
and Truth is available wherever you get books.
Here we go.
Here we go. Thank you. boomer lives monkey and la Fonda. Cat angels everywhere.
Sammy's balls.
Gone.
R.I.P.
Sammy's balls.
Hi, it's Terry O'Reilly, host of Under the Influence.
Recently, we created an episode on cannabis marketing.
With cannabis legalization, it's a brand new challenging marketing category.
And I want to let you know we've produced a special bonus podcast episode where I talk to an actual cannabis producer.
I wanted to know how a producer becomes licensed, how a cannabis company competes with big corporations, how a cannabis company markets its products in such a highly regulated category, and what the term dignified consumption actually means.
I think you'll find the answers interesting and surprising.
Hear it now on Under the Influence with Terry O'Reilly.
This bonus episode is brought to you by the Ontario Cannabis Store
and ACAS Creative.
It's a night for the whole family.
Be a part of Kids Night when the Toronto Rock take on the Colorado Mammoth
at a special 5 p.m. start time on Saturday, March 9th
at First Ontario Centre in Hamilton.
The first 5,000 fans in attendance
will get a Dan Dawson bobblehead
courtesy of Backley Construction.
Punch your ticket to Kids Night on Saturday, March 9th
at 5 p.m. in Rock City at torontorock.com.