Famous Writers on the Power & Beauty of Reading (JK Rowling, George RR Martin, Stephen King, more)

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  • Опубликовано: 16 фев 2019
  • 00:00 George R.R. Martin (Game of Thrones: A Song of Ice & Fire)
    00:43 Maurice Sendak (Where the Wild Things Are)
    01:13 Carl Sagan (Cosmos)
    02:01 David Foster Wallace (Infinite Jest)
    04:04 JK Rowling (Harry Potter)
    04:31 Stephen King
    06:50 Christopher Hitchens (Hitch-22; journalist)
    08:08 James Ellroy (L.A. Confidential)
    09:12 JK Rowling again
    09:41 Sir Ken Robinson (Creative Schools; lecturer)
    10:34 George Saunders (Lincoln in the Bardo)
    12:18 A questionable overuse of JK Rowling
    13:02 Christopher Hitchens again
    14:13 An unquestionable overuse of JK Rowling
    14:51 Maurice Sendak again (feat. Stephen Colbert)

Комментарии • 47

  • @bestofhumans4715
    @bestofhumans4715  5 лет назад +30

    00:00 George R.R. Martin (Game of Thrones: A Song of Ice & Fire)
    00:43 Maurice Sendak (Where the Wild Things Are)
    01:13 Carl Sagan (Cosmos)
    02:01 David Foster Wallace (Infinite Jest)
    04:04 JK Rowling (Harry Potter)
    04:31 Stephen King
    06:50 Christopher Hitchens (Hitch-22; journalist)
    08:08 James Ellroy (L.A. Confidential)
    09:12 JK Rowling again
    09:41 Sir Ken Robinson (Creative Schools; lecturer)
    10:34 George Saunders (Lincoln in the Bardo)
    12:18 A questionable overuse of JK Rowling
    13:02 Christopher Hitchens again
    14:13 An unquestionable overuse of JK Rowling
    14:51 Maurice Sendak again (feat. Stephen Colbert)

    • @bestofhumans4715
      @bestofhumans4715  5 лет назад +1

      @@sameenhassan4121 Charlie Rose

    • @shanenolan85
      @shanenolan85 4 года назад +1

      Thanks a million!

    • @tlightning8383
      @tlightning8383 3 года назад +2

      Will you please do a short documentary on Ken Robinson? He was an incredible, inspiring, great man who passed away recently. He was a hero of mine, and to many others.

  • @MyDeadAlbatross
    @MyDeadAlbatross 5 лет назад +15

    LOL that deadpan delivery by Ellroy was perfect

  • @thirdwave--hardunderground9085
    @thirdwave--hardunderground9085 5 лет назад +23

    Wow....David Foster's opinion was true and very inspiring at the same time.
    I think my next book will be Infinite Jest ^^

  • @Wiizardii
    @Wiizardii 6 месяцев назад +1

    Man, David Foster Wallace was damn ahead of his time - I had this video in the background and at first I thought it was some random writer from 2018 talking, describing our current social media cuture -- then I looked at the computer and saw it was David Foster Wallace and that clip was from an interview in like 2003. He perfectly described our current day and age. Short-term gratification, zero focus, IG/TikTok feeding your bias and spread of mis-information.

  • @ishita4215
    @ishita4215 4 года назад +9

    This video is terribly underrated. It should have way more views.

    • @sabrinac8453
      @sabrinac8453 3 года назад +2

      Well people don't even want to know why reading is important

  • @sharjeelahmed341
    @sharjeelahmed341 4 года назад +2

    Thanks for the video, brilliant ending 😉

  • @klarastern5597
    @klarastern5597 5 лет назад +4

    thank you for this! 😘

  • @thelaurels13
    @thelaurels13 3 года назад +11

    James Ellroy was pissed! 😂😂 JK Rowling is absolutely right, if you waited for motivation and inspiration to write you’d never write anything, because put simply motivation never comes, just do it!

  • @RahulSingh-rk5dz
    @RahulSingh-rk5dz 5 лет назад +14

    Granny you really rubbed James in a wrong way

  • @benjaminburt4285
    @benjaminburt4285 5 лет назад +5

    Beautiful

  • @watts3995
    @watts3995 5 лет назад +15

    Just wish Tolkien could finish writing the world he created

    • @bughead5615
      @bughead5615 4 года назад +4

      What is a world that's finished?

    • @bughead5615
      @bughead5615 4 года назад +1

      What's a world that's finished?

  • @gian87lep3
    @gian87lep3 2 года назад +1

    Martin at the beginning is not Martin but Umberto Eco

  • @m.rosariomartinez9492
    @m.rosariomartinez9492 3 года назад +1

    "Softening borders between people (...) In a world that is kinda dominated by (...) a fairly shallow and very pervasive mode of social media, in which you come to think of the other person as an invisible and anonymous other, who is sort of in opposition to you. Literature turns that around, says the person you think is your enemy, regarded with enough affection, with enough time and care and love will be seen to be very similar to you, even if they are quite different in the world, we emanate from the same root (...) a cultural tendency to minimize art or treat it as a kind of indulgence (...) Art is actually the way people think best about the world, we think most deeply about the world when we're engaged in a work of art (...) We're not helpless, we're not alone and through literature (...) we can actually hold each other up in a difficult time. Literature is a force for communication and compassion and at a time like this is when we need it the most." How lovely 🧡

  • @crumblecrunchable
    @crumblecrunchable 5 лет назад +9

    I don't really like to read. I don't really even want to like to read. As someone who is passionate about the visual arts, I feel that film is just more useful to me. However, this video is very convincing and there are some good points being presented.

    • @barkYdarkATFB
      @barkYdarkATFB 5 лет назад +13

      Reading opens your imagination in ways a video never can.

    • @barkYdarkATFB
      @barkYdarkATFB 5 лет назад +12

      ...and then there's the beauty of the words! A particular word, a witty or magical phrase that you can immediately dwell on. That is surely missed when focused on the visual.

    • @barkYdarkATFB
      @barkYdarkATFB 5 лет назад +2

      @greenguy4u
      Nah. It’s more like preferring to look at pictures of stars than look through a telescope and see details on each planet, or watching a sunset on tv than sitting outside for the real thing.

    • @crumblecrunchable
      @crumblecrunchable 5 лет назад

      @@barkYdarkATFB It's like watching a sunset on TV or me describing a sunset I saw to you.

    • @barkYdarkATFB
      @barkYdarkATFB 5 лет назад +6

      @Joe Draws
      Yes. It is in a way.
      The image you get on the tv is fixed. It is what it is. It’s imprinted in your mind a particular way.
      The description, however, activates your imagination. The description has adjectives and emotion, unless the describer sucks at it.
      The difference between, say, a movie or a book. They might convey the same overall story. A movie typically takes between one to three hours to fulfill the action.
      A book, if completed in one sitting, may take seven or more hours. This is because there is nuance, thought processes, vivid descriptions of surroundings or of people. It may take you back in time for a moment to create an understanding for the mindset of a character. It can be narrated from the point of view of a person, literally inside their head. You understand their fears or biases in just a moment of time.
      I like movies. But making a movie based on a book is basically cutting out over half of the original story.
      I actually read about five books a month, so I’m a little biased in my preferences. It’s getting involved with a character or a plot. It’s wondering what will happen next before you can get back to it. It’s thinking about ideas that a writer is presenting.
      This is not an argument as to who is better, a watcher or a reader. They do involve different parts of the brain, for sure. But I feel like what is read will stay with you longer, have more meaning to you in the end.

  • @that_artsy_boy675
    @that_artsy_boy675 4 года назад +2

    Please can anyone tell me what interview is 4:31 Stephen King? I can't find it anywhere

    • @Jets1713
      @Jets1713 4 года назад +1

      charbel khalil nope

    • @Gaurav-kw8xb
      @Gaurav-kw8xb 3 года назад +2

      It is Stephen king on Twilight and 50 shades of grey

  • @barkYdarkATFB
    @barkYdarkATFB 5 лет назад +8

    I prefer *listening to Hitchens, rather than reading him, sometimes. His occasional passion is one thing, but often its what's buried in the mumbling that is the treasure.

    • @barkYdarkATFB
      @barkYdarkATFB 5 лет назад +2

      Its hard seeing him sick. I'm bummed he's gone.

    • @bestofhumans4715
      @bestofhumans4715  Год назад

      @@barkYdarkATFB there is a beautiful irony in his speech. He was talking about Socrates, but to me, every single word spoken, I can apply to him. He rearranged my mental furniture. And I can come on here or open one of his books and meet with him again. It’s not the same, but it’s exactly what he was talking about.

  • @shanenolan85
    @shanenolan85 4 года назад +5

    Shane Black (Lethal Weapon), James Cameron (Terminator), Ernest Hemingway, and Theodore Roosevelt inspired me to become a avid reader 📚📖📚 #thankyou 🙏🏿

    • @sirgalahad1376
      @sirgalahad1376 3 года назад

      Lethal Weapon and Terminator are films not books. Theodore Roosevelt was our 26th President not an author. Please stop pretending to be an avid reader and go back to making hip hop videos on tik tok.

    • @shanenolan085
      @shanenolan085 3 года назад +1

      😂🤣😂🤣 dude you're a dumbass 😂🤣 I don't even like hip hop (I'm not black btw) and the original post went waaay over your head. Enjoy your day.

    • @sirgalahad1376
      @sirgalahad1376 3 года назад

      Shane Nolan Pretty sure that’s you in your profile pic struggling to read Green Eggs and Ham.

    • @shanenolan085
      @shanenolan085 3 года назад +1

      😂🤣😂 enjoy your day

  • @TheJollyJokerDancer
    @TheJollyJokerDancer 2 года назад +1

    Martin: "there is this line I use in Game of Thrones"... proceeds to quote Umberto Eco.

  • @fatima_nadeem
    @fatima_nadeem 4 года назад +5

    JK Rowling🖤🖤🖤

  • @Pbjkitty13
    @Pbjkitty13 5 лет назад +3

    what’s the diff between reading and watching a movie tho can’t i get same benefits

    • @bestofhumans4715
      @bestofhumans4715  5 лет назад +23

      No. Not only does reading improve your vocabulary and understanding of language which helps you communicate better, but reading stretches your imagination. It’s called ‘theater of the mind.’ Movies are already imagined and visualized by someone else. Books give you the tools to do that on your own. Movies have their own benefits, but so do books, and they are different.

    • @LadyMacbeth56
      @LadyMacbeth56 4 года назад +7

      I don't think so. When you are reading, you are removed from your reality into that of a character who's colors are being given life by your imagination. It's not your work, however, you can shape it in your mind the way you feel it is. I truly believe that reading is a much better stimulation for the brain. It gives you quiet time. You time. I feel it is much more relaxing. It makes you see things from a different perspective than that of a movie. Also, with reading, the adventure last longer. It takes you much futher.

    • @futurez12
      @futurez12 4 года назад +4

      A movie will always just be the cliff notes to the novel.

    • @edwardm1326
      @edwardm1326 3 года назад +5

      In a movie you are essentially passive. You just sit back and watch. With a book you’re creating the world as you read.