12:43: “I think writing helped me understand that although you can technically be a victim-you can be a victim of war; you can be a victim of domestic violence, child abuse-but whether you live in victim_hood_ or not is up to you. We can’t change what happens to us; (but) we can change how we live in order to have a successful life.” Ocean Vuong is so articulate; most people speak in sentences; the best, like President Obama, speak in paragraphs; but Ocean somehow speaks in expository essay form
He’s BEAUTIFUL! Heartbreakingly Gorgeous. It’s as though he has managed to crack the hard shell of totemic trauma and grief, soul warping shame and illiteracy to wield a yolk of deep love and authentic beauty! His novel reads like a prayer animating the spirit through the dark and the lonely.
I felt that. do you tweet? do you write? you are so articulate, Mac and I will like to follow your thoughts and ideas? I miss being around men of colour who are able to create a world they want.
@@fatoubah7472 That's incredibly kind of you to mention. I don't have any social media, nor have i posted anything aside from the few comments posted throughout the youtube universe. I do have a degree in creative writing and an abiding respect for the well written word, and yet i have been caught in a decade long hesitation and insecurity to bring my written thoughts to the page long form. But I will say, Ocean and a few other writers who get the magic right help in the spell breaking.
@@macphallic I do not know why but I will like to read whatever you write, you create so easily and you do it with grace and humility. Don't fear success or opinions, start somewhere, write something, just start, but share it somewhere, a blog or something, someone like me will read it and love it. if you want to voluntarily share your writings at anypoint here is my email: fsalmanabah@gmail.com - Write. Write Now. Share it. Don't be afraid, you have all it takes, and people far less qualified are already doing it. Start small, start today, create a routine and stick to it, innovate in the process. I am sending you the courage to write and create a world of your own. do it today! please !
To me, great storytellers have this compelling aura about them, even when they're talking in person and not through carefully thought out words on paper. They have such a magical way with words that just pulls you in and makes you want to listen, really listen
I saw him live at a book festival last year and it was one of the few moments of my life to see a room so captivated and waiting on the edge of their seats for the next words from his mouth
So pleased to hear this wonderful soul, Ocean, speak and write with such honesty. Brutal, truthful, enlightening, raw, human and deeply authentic. What a gift he is to this world...if only more people would listen and read
I’m only half way through the interview and not sure my heart can take this anymore. His storytelling power has had me overwhelmed with vigorous emotions. As a Vietnamese as old as Ocean, living within this wild world, I understand what it’s like to go out to just disappear. That doesn’t mean we’re not resilient nor brave. That is just something instilled in our mindset by the elders. And I think fewer can find words that are true and potent to describe how small, colorless and powerless a person can feel, more than Ocean.
At ~6:30 he describes listening to a recording of MLK's "I have a dream" speech. The white noise in the recording's background becomes snow, and the setting of the speech is now strange and wonderful and it is his. This is why I like Ocean Vuong.
Wow, every interview of his so far has left me with a lot to process. I never thought deeply about differences in the 'immigrant experience' between a first generation Japanese-American and a Vietnamese-American. This is why Asian-Americans shouldn't be lumped together in a nutshell, people have different stories to tell that are unique to their country and culture
his soft, warm voice, beauty and genius enthrall and sooth me simultaneously, I find myself lost in his dialogue, startled by his thoughts and completely delighted
It's hard to know precisely what to say about this incredibly wise young person. Let's just leave it that every once in awhile along comes a human "being" who is truly living up to the true meaning of that term. "Being" human is at best a very trying and difficult task and many are there of examples of people failing at it. It is more than heartwarming and uplifting to watch and listen to this young author who has so deftly managed the difficulties he has endured and turned that experience into something incredibly beautiful and inspiring. By the end of this interview I felt a very strong sense of thankfulness and hope. What wonderful things people are capable of if they can rise above the cruelness and stupidity of a dysfunctional human society!
WOW !!! He is right. Use words that help, don't use words that hurt. Yes, we can not change the past, but, we can change the future. We can not change the elderly, but, we can build a better young generation. He is the next younger generation to make the better America.
“this life gave me my imagination.” and these lives unheard deserved to be imagined and lived by others. ocean vuong’s mind and heart shine so brilliantly. i’m in awe
WOW! This is such an inspiring and touching conversation between the host and Ocean Vuong! I was listening to you two swallowing each words in such admiration and compassion! Feel so proud of you my fellow Vietnamese American, Ocean Vuong! On Earth We Are Briefly Gorgeous!
His mind, his art is so incredible. I just want to hug him, his writing hits me right in the gut. I just started reading On Earth We're Briefly Gorgeous and it immediately had my heart in its grip. As a Mother of a little boy, I am taken by his point of view. Not only of his own pain, but also his Mothers. His writing is so heartbreaking and profound. ❤
Just finished his novel, which has been translated to my language and released recently in Taiwan. It's beautiful and powerful. I had the pleasure to re-read the paragraph where he read here. Thank you Ocean Vuong and your books have certainly found readers overseas!
I just bought two books for my two young Vietnamese step children, now grown-up adults. I hope the book finds traction and meaning to them. It is a heartfelt and courageous work.
This interview is so indescribably beautiful. I just heard Ocean on a piece put out by my local public radio station and was absolutely captivated by his thoughts and the way he presents them.
OCEAN Vuong I know I always say this in my comments but this was one of the best interviews that I have heard Michelle just pulled all the thinking out of him/ocean is so prolific with words it is 5 o'clock in the morning in Guadalajara Mexico where I am living and I just could not turn away from this interview it was wonderful and when he mentioned James Baldwin I like well over great great interview
Sir, thank you for sharing your ptsd, you are beautiful person. I understand exactly in America; a young mind can get horrid life's views, the scars never leave. My learning hard started at 4 yrs til 20 They can and will make you wise and stronger for some. To be sucessful is another level of being a chameleon in this world. Peace to you all. Adonai Ori is my counselor He has blessed me.
Oh my god I didn't know that when I clicked on this video I would be wrecked, goddangit!! As a third generation child with grandparents who had to indure the war in the Philippines, I felt seen!
I didn't care for the interviewer's tone at all. She comes across as accusatory and cold. I didn't appreciate her insistence that Ocean (or any other artist creating out of difficulty) must be angry. There's a difference between being angry and being passionate, or observant, or merely wanting to present hard truths. Do we ask satirists if they're angry? Or comedians? Why is she being so prescriptive?
@Ume AliAt first I thought the same thing - only that she was pushing too hard (her manner was kind yet straightforward and direct) - then I stepped back and thought about it for a bit and realized that, part of a journalist's work/charge *is* to facilitate revelation, and her very intimate relationship with anger was spot on. She recognized the impact of violence and hate and has likely had her share of experience navigating anger, and understood the *value* of what Ocean Vuong might be able to impart to viewers who could be having similar experiences as he had, but not knowing how to process. His *response* to her was *golden* and if she hadn't coaxed the question, we may not have heard him say: "I'm angry. But I don't write with rage. I can't. I think rage and anger are energies; they're raw energies, ready to be recycled and re-used. But if we use them...[A]nger is a force that distinguishes the wielder as well as the world. I'm more interested in using the energy of compassion and understanding. I'm at my best when I say this: 'I'm angry about this, but I need to know why you're doing this to me.' That is such *medicine* for the evolution of humanity. He offered an instructive balm to so many of us who might not know where or how to use [our] anger as an opportunity to *heal*. I also trust that if he had not wanted to give a response and being in complete command of his ability to respond, he would have declined the question. I appreciate your comment @Ume Ali - it gifted me the opportunity to contemplate.
I thought she was just okay. But she didn't have to ask him twice if he were angry. He answered it the first time, yes he feels anger, but he feels he's more useful when he moves past that. This was an honest conversation between two people that we're just here to listen to, so one has to understand her perspective as well.
Unfortunately, to me, it seems--based on viewing dozens of interviews conducted by Michelle Martin--that that is a given. Consistently, no matter the interviewee or subject, Ms. Martin falls into the hard-hitting, inquisitorial investigative reporter mode. She does appear to have trouble shifting in tone. And this can, for me, lead to the thought that I have witnessed a quasi-interrogation.
When an educated group of literary friends are chatting and asking opinions, and someone casually asks, “who is your favorite poet?” I now know to say “Ocean Vuong”.
Very interesting. My thinking about this is really if more people would just sit down and have conversations with each other and learn from each other what a wonderful world this could be. Not so quick to judge and have tolerance toward each other and just accept them as they are we would have more of a chance to have peace.
It's so easy for a small yellow child to vanish that the hard work the real work of innovation is to be known. And one of the best and the most perennially powerful ways to be known is to an artist.
I've watched only two interviews of this poet, both from PBS. In the one four years earlier, he didn't talk like this at all. His style of talking and responses in this interview feel... unnatural compared to the interview years ago. Nevertheless, I'm inspired to check out his writing.
"You sure you're not angry?
I'm angry, of course, but I don't write with rage." 11:20
He constantly sounds like he wants to cry. I just wanna hug him
12:43: “I think writing helped me understand that although you can technically be a victim-you can be a victim of war; you can be a victim of domestic violence, child abuse-but whether you live in victim_hood_ or not is up to you. We can’t change what happens to us; (but) we can change how we live in order to have a successful life.”
Ocean Vuong is so articulate; most people speak in sentences; the best, like President Obama, speak in paragraphs; but Ocean somehow speaks in expository essay form
This is so true.
He’s BEAUTIFUL! Heartbreakingly Gorgeous. It’s as though he has managed to crack the hard shell of totemic trauma and grief, soul warping shame and illiteracy to wield a yolk of deep love and authentic beauty! His novel reads like a prayer animating the spirit through the dark and the lonely.
Your response, Mac Morris, soars, lifting the reader's soul through your wonderfully eloquent appreciation of Ocean Vuong and his work.
I felt that. do you tweet? do you write? you are so articulate, Mac and I will like to follow your thoughts and ideas? I miss being around men of colour who are able to create a world they want.
@@fatoubah7472 That's incredibly kind of you to mention. I don't have any social media, nor have i posted anything aside from the few comments posted throughout the youtube universe. I do have a degree in creative writing and an abiding respect for the well written word, and yet i have been caught in a decade long hesitation and insecurity to bring my written thoughts to the page long form. But I will say, Ocean and a few other writers who get the magic right help in the spell breaking.
@@macphallic I do not know why but I will like to read whatever you write, you create so easily and you do it with grace and humility. Don't fear success or opinions, start somewhere, write something, just start, but share it somewhere, a blog or something, someone like me will read it and love it. if you want to voluntarily share your writings at anypoint here is my email: fsalmanabah@gmail.com - Write. Write Now. Share it. Don't be afraid, you have all it takes, and people far less qualified are already doing it. Start small, start today, create a routine and stick to it, innovate in the process. I am sending you the courage to write and create a world of your own. do it today! please !
Oh brother
To me, great storytellers have this compelling aura about them, even when they're talking in person and not through carefully thought out words on paper. They have such a magical way with words that just pulls you in and makes you want to listen, really listen
I'm in tears, literally sobbing. Ocean has such a beautiful beautiful way with words, I have cried a lot with his words they mean so much to me.
Rarely has someone moved me to unknown tears before like this young man
Us too, David!
I saw him live at a book festival last year and it was one of the few moments of my life to see a room so captivated and waiting on the edge of their seats for the next words from his mouth
I cried several times watching this interview... wow
me too.
🇻🇳🐂🍺
same i cant stop
corny
So pleased to hear this wonderful soul, Ocean, speak and write with such honesty. Brutal, truthful, enlightening, raw, human and deeply authentic. What a gift he is to this world...if only more people would listen and read
I’m only half way through the interview and not sure my heart can take this anymore. His storytelling power has had me overwhelmed with vigorous emotions. As a Vietnamese as old as Ocean, living within this wild world, I understand what it’s like to go out to just disappear. That doesn’t mean we’re not resilient nor brave. That is just something instilled in our mindset by the elders. And I think fewer can find words that are true and potent to describe how small, colorless and powerless a person can feel, more than Ocean.
The way he speaks and expresses himself is absolutely beautiful. I could listen to him speak for hours
At ~6:30 he describes listening to a recording of MLK's "I have a dream" speech. The white noise in the recording's background becomes snow, and the setting of the speech is now strange and wonderful and it is his. This is why I like Ocean Vuong.
wow. How wonderful to hear a voice like his. He is truly beautiful!
Wow, every interview of his so far has left me with a lot to process. I never thought deeply about differences in the 'immigrant experience' between a first generation Japanese-American and a Vietnamese-American. This is why Asian-Americans shouldn't be lumped together in a nutshell, people have different stories to tell that are unique to their country and culture
Just finished Ocean's gorgeous book. I could listen to Ocean speak all day long. Such Presence and Beauty.
He's such a calm and eloquent speaker.
his soft, warm voice, beauty and genius enthrall and sooth me simultaneously, I find myself lost in his dialogue, startled by his thoughts and completely delighted
I could listen to this beautiful human talk all day long. This person is a gift.
It's hard to know precisely what to say about this incredibly wise young person. Let's just leave it that every once in awhile along comes a human "being" who is truly living up to the true meaning of that term. "Being" human is at best a very trying and difficult task and many are there of examples of people failing at it. It is more than heartwarming and uplifting to watch and listen to this young author who has so deftly managed the difficulties he has endured and turned that experience into something incredibly beautiful and inspiring. By the end of this interview I felt a very strong sense of thankfulness and hope. What wonderful things people are capable of if they can rise above the cruelness and stupidity of a dysfunctional human society!
WOW !!! He is right. Use words that help, don't use words that hurt. Yes, we can not change the past, but, we can change the future. We can not change the elderly, but, we can build a better young generation. He is the next younger generation to make the better America.
It's so different when he reads it than when I read it! I'm just in love with this poet! Even when he talks, he sounds like poetry! He is amazing!
“this life gave me my imagination.” and these lives unheard deserved to be imagined and lived by others. ocean vuong’s mind and heart shine so brilliantly. i’m in awe
WOW! This is such an inspiring and touching conversation between the host and Ocean Vuong! I was listening to you two swallowing each words in such admiration and compassion! Feel so proud of you my fellow Vietnamese American, Ocean Vuong! On Earth We Are Briefly Gorgeous!
His mind, his art is so incredible. I just want to hug him, his writing hits me right in the gut. I just started reading On Earth We're Briefly Gorgeous and it immediately had my heart in its grip. As a Mother of a little boy, I am taken by his point of view. Not only of his own pain, but also his Mothers. His writing is so heartbreaking and profound. ❤
Just finished his novel, which has been translated to my language and released recently in Taiwan. It's beautiful and powerful. I had the pleasure to re-read the paragraph where he read here. Thank you Ocean Vuong and your books have certainly found readers overseas!
I just bought two books for my two young Vietnamese step children, now grown-up adults. I hope the book finds traction and meaning to them. It is a heartfelt and courageous work.
This made me cry, just the amazing thoughtfulness and beautiful way that he speaks.
“your goal is to be invisible”, universal advice from mothers of Black and Brown kids. my mother hated even the loud jingle of her jewelry.
I related to this too.
😢
This interview is so indescribably beautiful. I just heard Ocean on a piece put out by my local public radio station and was absolutely captivated by his thoughts and the way he presents them.
I wish I had a friend like Ocean.
“Who is this man talking about dreams in a snowstorm” 😭😭😭
So powerful, so much love, compassion , and the flow of his voice like a poem . In this story everyone can see themselves in it. Wow.
What an important young voice. A gift!
Just finished reading his book. What a wonderful read and amazingly honest interview!
What an exceptionally bright man.
Thanks for this interview. This person is beautiful.
Wow. I just discovered him. His ability to see connections as he does is just so profound.
why this man on the verge of tears every time he speaks
Hi I’m a big fan trash boat
Spectacularly beautiful! Thanks to Amanpour et al for airing this segment, otherwise I should have never been aware of his work!
Beautiful. He's eloquent and brings a new perspective.
All hail the RUclips algorithm. I'm so glad it lead me to this video. very moving
I adore this person. What a beautiful heart 💜
Wow this was so beautiful, I cried three times watching this interview.
A brilliant interview with a shining light in the literary world. Thank you
i cry every time, he speaks to my soul
OCEAN Vuong I know I always say this in my comments but this was one of the best interviews that I have heard Michelle just pulled all the thinking out of him/ocean is so prolific with words it is 5 o'clock in the morning in Guadalajara Mexico where I am living and I just could not turn away from this interview it was wonderful and when he mentioned James Baldwin I like well over great great interview
He is a beautiful writer but she elicited some very profound comments. Two brilliant minds
Such a deep conversation, though when he spoke at some point I thought he was about to cry. :(
Sir, thank you for sharing your ptsd, you are beautiful person. I understand exactly in America; a young mind can get horrid life's views, the scars never leave. My learning hard started at 4 yrs til 20 They can and will make you wise and stronger for some. To be sucessful is another level of being a chameleon in this world. Peace to you all. Adonai Ori is my counselor He has blessed me.
His writing is stunning, with many layers.
Love his dramatic reading voice.
This interview really touched me!
im so obsessed with him and his words
I love Vuong's voice. Such clarity and depth. However, I do think that anger can be used constructively. It need not be detrimental to creating art.
Such incredible insight and amazing perspective. What a tremendously wise human being.
just started reading his book. what a talent and what a beautiful mind
Heartbreakingly beautiful, I just finished his novel.
“one of the best and most perennially powerful ways to be known is to be an artist”
The audible version is awesome too
I cannot stop crying.
An inspiringly articulate introspective interview
What an amazing wise author describing how we feel☺️
The wounds are understood and sometimes language can't even hash them all out.
Dead.
such a wonderful and eloquent interview
Oh my god I didn't know that when I clicked on this video I would be wrecked, goddangit!! As a third generation child with grandparents who had to indure the war in the Philippines, I felt seen!
He is as eloquent as he is beautiful
Beautiful! Thank you so much for this presentation! They are a miracle!
Ocean Vuong is my idol
Amazing artist and an interesting interview.
Ocean is a great thinker.
I didn't care for the interviewer's tone at all. She comes across as accusatory and cold. I didn't appreciate her insistence that Ocean (or any other artist creating out of difficulty) must be angry. There's a difference between being angry and being passionate, or observant, or merely wanting to present hard truths. Do we ask satirists if they're angry? Or comedians? Why is she being so prescriptive?
Glad that you feel the same way, too. I thought I was being sensitive...
@Ume AliAt first I thought the same thing - only that she was pushing too hard (her manner was kind yet straightforward and direct) - then I stepped back and thought about it for a bit and realized that, part of a journalist's work/charge *is* to facilitate revelation, and her very intimate relationship with anger was spot on. She recognized the impact of violence and hate and has likely had her share of experience navigating anger, and understood the *value* of what Ocean Vuong might be able to impart to viewers who could be having similar experiences as he had, but not knowing how to process. His *response* to her was *golden* and if she hadn't coaxed the question, we may not have heard him say: "I'm angry. But I don't write with rage. I can't. I think rage and anger are energies; they're raw energies, ready to be recycled and re-used. But if we use them...[A]nger is a force that distinguishes the wielder as well as the world. I'm more interested in using the energy of compassion and understanding. I'm at my best when I say this: 'I'm angry about this, but I need to know why you're doing this to me.' That is such *medicine* for the evolution of humanity. He offered an instructive balm to so many of us who might not know where or how to use [our] anger as an opportunity to *heal*. I also trust that if he had not wanted to give a response and being in complete command of his ability to respond, he would have declined the question. I appreciate your comment @Ume Ali - it gifted me the opportunity to contemplate.
I thought she was just okay. But she didn't have to ask him twice if he were angry. He answered it the first time, yes he feels anger, but he feels he's more useful when he moves past that. This was an honest conversation between two people that we're just here to listen to, so one has to understand her perspective as well.
Unfortunately, to me, it seems--based on viewing dozens of interviews conducted by Michelle Martin--that that is a given. Consistently, no matter the interviewee or subject, Ms. Martin falls into the hard-hitting, inquisitorial investigative reporter mode. She does appear to have trouble shifting in tone. And this can, for me, lead to the thought that I have witnessed a quasi-interrogation.
I thought she was very into what he was saying and his story. She respects him.
When an educated group of literary friends are chatting and asking opinions, and someone casually asks, “who is your favorite poet?” I now know to say “Ocean Vuong”.
“The wounds are understood.” Indeed.
Very interesting. My thinking about this is really if more people would just sit down and have conversations with each other and learn from each other what a
wonderful world this could be. Not so quick to judge and have tolerance toward each other and just accept them as they are we would have more of a chance to have peace.
He is so deep!
Such a good speaker!!! I love his poetry, and Amazon just delivered OEWBG.
It's so easy for a small yellow child to vanish that the hard work the real work of innovation is to be known. And one of the best and the most perennially powerful ways to be known is to an artist.
I love himmmm 🥰🥰🥰
beautiful, just beautiful person and their works r emotionally delightful
Beautiful book ! Thank you
this is so beautiful
My hero 🙏
Just found Ocean thru Ethan Baker and I'm grateful. :)
amazing amazing work
8:00 wowwww
I like him a lot but he always sounds like he’s on the verge of tears :/
R - perhaps he is....
He is an artist, a poet.Most artists and poets are well connected with their emotions...
Breathtakingly beautiful.
This is really Hard to watch without crying.
He constantly sounds like he’s on the verge of tears with everything he says. Interesting
This writer is a smart person
Incomparable
Great!
he is so beautiful. oh my god.
Yessss
Asian Rising Concert brought me here. Does he have his own channel?
Thank you hotline lady, this is beautiful:))
beautiful
What's the words in the poem she can't say and why can't she say them?
I had the same question
I’m surprised they answered. “Are you sure?” 😂 I’m sure they know how they feel
I've watched only two interviews of this poet, both from PBS. In the one four years earlier, he didn't talk like this at all. His style of talking and responses in this interview feel... unnatural compared to the interview years ago. Nevertheless, I'm inspired to check out his writing.
@0:52