My favorite interview ever. You can literally see how his song changed everyone’s demeanor and viewing of him. Love it so damn much. (I pretty much said what the creator said lol but it’s just such an amazing example of allowing your music to speak for you)
I think it's also good to acknowledge what this show was to TV at the time as well. This show was relatively unknown as well and would have probably revolutionized the dull, boring, EXTREMELY put together, well scripted, make sure your shirt's tucked in, no mistakes, completely stationary morning shows of the time. They weren't just mindless, run of the mill tv personalities. They openly celebrated and relished in the chaos of a live production, one time even, they jokingly started celebrating that they were 10 minutes behind and that segments are start "dropping like flies". Everyone here was actually truly trying to do something really special (and if you watch some of the clips of this show, they really were doing something special). They tried to start your day with comedy and laughter rather than boring news that you put on in the background as you brew some coffee (a sentence I'm plagiarizing from the Connor Higgins video TvT (now that I think about it, this whole paragraph is plagiarized from that video)). I feel this actually DOES add another level of beauty to the performance. While they were trying to be revolutionary in trying to make you smile and laugh in the morning by being over the top and wacky, here came in Elliott to remind people of the quieter, contemplative moments of beauty in life. They couldn't really mix well at first, hence Tom's admittedly awkward jokes (which I feel like if I were in his shoes, they'd probably keep me up at night in retrospect), but then it's like these 2 energies sort of merge and come to understanding with each other almost. Just wanted to write this to give the guys a little credit bc sometimes I do see comments where it feels like (let’s say hypothetically monty python was a forgotten show) Nick Drake all of a a sudden showed up on Monty Python and the gang awkwardly started joking around Nick, and then the comments to that video would be filled with people really being hard on Monty Python without realizing what exactly Monty Python was. Sorry if that analogy doesn’t make sense or is very flawed. I couldn’t find another way to describe it :’(( But yeah, what happened that day truly was really beautiful. Also I feel like this version of Clementine is just as good as the original (sometimes, I feel it's even better).
@@Lanooski I’m glad this comment is doin somethin :’{ I just don’t want this clip to be their legacy. They were treated horribly enough. (by that I mean how the network treated them)
Great comment. I totally remember this show - and to peel another layer of the onion back, you can't really understand this show and what it was unless you understand the full context of the the new channel FX and the slew of bizarre DIY-flavored shows it launched into the world. This was not the prestige TV FX we currently recognize - the one with shows like Atlanta, Reservation Dogs, The Americans, The Shield, etc. This was a bunch of seemingly super low-budget shows where people randomly hung out in "the FX Apartment" and tried to entertain people in various ways. There was: SoundFX - the cool music show focused mostly on Alternative Rock and Grunge; PersonalFX, a show about collectibles; Pet Department, the show where people received tips for taking care of their pets; some type of news show; Backchat, where they would read viewers letters; and, of course, Breakfast Time. I loved these shows, especially SoundFX (I was 14 when it premiered in 1994 and obsessed with music), because they barely seemed more produced than cable access. I loved the lo-fi energy of it, which perfectly suited that early-mid 90s vibe and aesthetic. Sadly, the network abandoned the "FX apartment" shows within a couple of years. Breakfast time definitely seemed like the biggest production of all of them and I see how it could be interpreted as kind of cheesy, but really in context it had more of this zany, bizzarro aesthetic and you could tell they were trying to do something interesting and different. Also, the mid-90s was a strange time where TV producers didn't really know what to do. Alternative, lo-fi culture had upended the mainstream in the early 90s beginning with Nirvana's Smells Like Teen Spirit (and we had yet to transition to the glossier, more Baroque late 90s) and so things that were seen as wacky and out there were really cool - TV executives didn't really know how to commodify that and in my mind the FX apartment shows were a great example of an attempt to do so. Despite it all feeling a bit misguided, I actually think they had some pretty entertaining programming and there's no doubt the people involved were trying to do something cool beyond what the TV suits had in mind. I'm sure they hired a bunch of "alternative" people to book their guests and so it actually makes perfect sense that they would bring someone like Elliott Smith on. Even though the specific (read: loud) personalities of Breakfast Time and Elliott Smith were obviously not the best match. He probably would have been a better fit for the personalities on SoundFX, who had more of that Gen X "whatever" vibe. Either way, this is a brilliant time capsule that absolutely captures a much more interesting and complex dynamic than the misinformed "cool introspective singer guy goes on cheesy morning show" take that I've seen so many people have about this.
@@garysimonson1135 Great comment, to you too TvT. I had known about FX’s origins, but only truly knew about Breakfast Time. SoundFX sounds like a really cool show. That and the channel had some lovely and fun lil bumpers. Really jealous you got to experience this first hand TvT. Waking up to this must’ve been absolutely incredible, I’m sure.
I have beenwriting a book about ES for the last two and half years, so I am of course immersed in all things ES and have seen this astonishing performance a hundred times. You absolutely nail it! Great essay!
Fantastic reading of this event, Jasmine. Sort of thrown to the wolves, we've seen artists deliver a belligerent response in similar circumstances. But Smith cut through the pretense all so briefly and beautifully with his vulnerability and the purity and honesty of his delivery. It was such a jarring contrast to the manufactured nature of the rest of the show (I've tracked down clips of the same episode it out of interest). He's so nervous, you can see his hands shaking. For me, this performance exceeds any other that Elliot has delivered of Clementine.
The dichotomy between Elliott's shy and tepid interview and the sheer power and beauty of his art is what's incredible about this segment. When he started playing, everyone froze.
what I love about this video is that it almost feels like a music video like everything around seems like they wanna make fun of him and then with the performance he makes everyone around him blow their mind
very cool breakdown of a blink-and-you'll-miss-it moment of broadcast TV. it's good to have reminders of the artifice of pop programming as well as their vulnerability to the truth and authentic art.
I love Elliotts uncanny ability to make corporate clowns uncomfortable in their own environment it's like he forced them to experience humanity if only for a moment
I love Elliott so much and had the exact same thoughts about this TV appearance as you when I first saw it. I really loved this essay so much because it's so true and exactly what o saw as well, plus I really admire your writing! You captured the scene perfectly I thought! It's funny because i started making my own video about Elliott, including about this TV appearance like five days ago. The world works in strange ways, haha. Great job! :))
Its an amazing strange look at what was swirling around then in the American psyche E.S. just played it ..they tried to play him . but he just played them
A man of substance lost in world of superficiality. Most artists have this way about them, they are shy because they cannot relate to most of the world, their art, in whatever form it manifests, is how they speak. Today true art seems to have been taken away, and the trendy music glorifies the superficial, to make money, to further their superficial life. One last thing.... it seems overall humanity was more authentic back in those days. The high technology of the modern era has changed the world that everything seems scripted and people are less original and more conditioned. Well, if you read all this, hope you have a great day!!
seeing the puppet behind the sofa and im imagining elliot on beyond vaudeville. if popularity as an artist only lead to the most idealized version of a general audience would things be different for him and others. someone like bourdain who's fate is so often tied to his relation to the mainstream. i think a lot of us can relate to that broken thing that probably existed before all of this for elliot smith. is this just watchin the beating of a dead horse or is it a part of a living decline. watching footage of 90s music figure suicide cases makes me want to watch a gregg araki movie
Or maybe people were just critiquing him in there heads an zoning out thinking about sex and money like they always do. An he was lost in his own song regardless what they thought an they all saw that one key fact
pls stop why does everyone have to create caricatures of such sacred and intimate moments. you clearly saw the comments and just mindlessly created a video. there was no need for this cringe vid.
but also, shout out to the camera person who picked up on this and zoomed in on the faces of the crew showing how much their vibe changed
I love that performance of clementine so much.
and the faces of the people, that was becoming so serious, when he began sing
“It’s as if everyone freezes, then melts.” I love that
My favorite interview ever. You can literally see how his song changed everyone’s demeanor and viewing of him. Love it so damn much. (I pretty much said what the creator said lol but it’s just such an amazing example of allowing your music to speak for you)
I think it's also good to acknowledge what this show was to TV at the time as well. This show was relatively unknown as well and would have probably revolutionized the dull, boring, EXTREMELY put together, well scripted, make sure your shirt's tucked in, no mistakes, completely stationary morning shows of the time. They weren't just mindless, run of the mill tv personalities. They openly celebrated and relished in the chaos of a live production, one time even, they jokingly started celebrating that they were 10 minutes behind and that segments are start "dropping like flies". Everyone here was actually truly trying to do something really special (and if you watch some of the clips of this show, they really were doing something special). They tried to start your day with comedy and laughter rather than boring news that you put on in the background as you brew some coffee (a sentence I'm plagiarizing from the Connor Higgins video TvT (now that I think about it, this whole paragraph is plagiarized from that video)).
I feel this actually DOES add another level of beauty to the performance. While they were trying to be revolutionary in trying to make you smile and laugh in the morning by being over the top and wacky, here came in Elliott to remind people of the quieter, contemplative moments of beauty in life. They couldn't really mix well at first, hence Tom's admittedly awkward jokes (which I feel like if I were in his shoes, they'd probably keep me up at night in retrospect), but then it's like these 2 energies sort of merge and come to understanding with each other almost. Just wanted to write this to give the guys a little credit bc sometimes I do see comments where it feels like (let’s say hypothetically monty python was a forgotten show) Nick Drake all of a a sudden showed up on Monty Python and the gang awkwardly started joking around Nick, and then the comments to that video would be filled with people really being hard on Monty Python without realizing what exactly Monty Python was. Sorry if that analogy doesn’t make sense or is very flawed. I couldn’t find another way to describe it :’((
But yeah, what happened that day truly was really beautiful.
Also I feel like this version of Clementine is just as good as the original (sometimes, I feel it's even better).
i appreciate this video even more now having read this. thanks for the context!
@@Lanooski I’m glad this comment is doin somethin :’{ I just don’t want this clip to be their legacy. They were treated horribly enough.
(by that I mean how the network treated them)
Great comment. I totally remember this show - and to peel another layer of the onion back, you can't really understand this show and what it was unless you understand the full context of the the new channel FX and the slew of bizarre DIY-flavored shows it launched into the world. This was not the prestige TV FX we currently recognize - the one with shows like Atlanta, Reservation Dogs, The Americans, The Shield, etc. This was a bunch of seemingly super low-budget shows where people randomly hung out in "the FX Apartment" and tried to entertain people in various ways.
There was: SoundFX - the cool music show focused mostly on Alternative Rock and Grunge; PersonalFX, a show about collectibles; Pet Department, the show where people received tips for taking care of their pets; some type of news show; Backchat, where they would read viewers letters; and, of course, Breakfast Time. I loved these shows, especially SoundFX (I was 14 when it premiered in 1994 and obsessed with music), because they barely seemed more produced than cable access.
I loved the lo-fi energy of it, which perfectly suited that early-mid 90s vibe and aesthetic. Sadly, the network abandoned the "FX apartment" shows within a couple of years. Breakfast time definitely seemed like the biggest production of all of them and I see how it could be interpreted as kind of cheesy, but really in context it had more of this zany, bizzarro aesthetic and you could tell they were trying to do something interesting and different.
Also, the mid-90s was a strange time where TV producers didn't really know what to do. Alternative, lo-fi culture had upended the mainstream in the early 90s beginning with Nirvana's Smells Like Teen Spirit (and we had yet to transition to the glossier, more Baroque late 90s) and so things that were seen as wacky and out there were really cool - TV executives didn't really know how to commodify that and in my mind the FX apartment shows were a great example of an attempt to do so.
Despite it all feeling a bit misguided, I actually think they had some pretty entertaining programming and there's no doubt the people involved were trying to do something cool beyond what the TV suits had in mind. I'm sure they hired a bunch of "alternative" people to book their guests and so it actually makes perfect sense that they would bring someone like Elliott Smith on. Even though the specific (read: loud) personalities of Breakfast Time and Elliott Smith were obviously not the best match. He probably would have been a better fit for the personalities on SoundFX, who had more of that Gen X "whatever" vibe.
Either way, this is a brilliant time capsule that absolutely captures a much more interesting and complex dynamic than the misinformed "cool introspective singer guy goes on cheesy morning show" take that I've seen so many people have about this.
@@garysimonson1135 Great comment, to you too TvT. I had known about FX’s origins, but only truly knew about Breakfast Time. SoundFX sounds like a really cool show. That and the channel had some lovely and fun lil bumpers. Really jealous you got to experience this first hand TvT. Waking up to this must’ve been absolutely incredible, I’m sure.
thanks for this context... really humanizes the whole thing more and enhances the connection humanity is losing
I have beenwriting a book about ES for the last two and half years, so I am of course immersed in all things ES and have seen this astonishing performance a hundred times. You absolutely nail it! Great essay!
@@careyelliotteckert I’d love to read it! I love ES literature ….thank you sm!!
What will you call it?
Fantastic reading of this event, Jasmine. Sort of thrown to the wolves, we've seen artists deliver a belligerent response in similar circumstances. But Smith cut through the pretense all so briefly and beautifully with his vulnerability and the purity and honesty of his delivery. It was such a jarring contrast to the manufactured nature of the rest of the show (I've tracked down clips of the same episode it out of interest). He's so nervous, you can see his hands shaking. For me, this performance exceeds any other that Elliot has delivered of Clementine.
The dichotomy between Elliott's shy and tepid interview and the sheer power and beauty of his art is what's incredible about this segment. When he started playing, everyone froze.
what I love about this video is that it almost feels like a music video like everything around seems like they wanna make fun of him and then with the performance he makes everyone around him blow their mind
This guys music is just magic
The number of times I've watched that interview is criminal
That woman looking in awe was in breaking bad 😮
Really??
@@SuperFoxGamingxyea she played Gretchen
I love Elliott smith he was one of the greatest song writers ever ! Only love bro ,..... See you soon..❤
very cool breakdown of a blink-and-you'll-miss-it moment of broadcast TV. it's good to have reminders of the artifice of pop programming as well as their vulnerability to the truth and authentic art.
I love Elliotts uncanny ability to make corporate clowns uncomfortable in their own environment it's like he forced them to experience humanity if only for a moment
Corporate Clowns ..good . its like he played these fools
I love Elliott so much and had the exact same thoughts about this TV appearance as you when I first saw it. I really loved this essay so much because it's so true and exactly what o saw as well, plus I really admire your writing! You captured the scene perfectly I thought! It's funny because i started making my own video about Elliott, including about this TV appearance like five days ago. The world works in strange ways, haha. Great job! :))
I did not expect to see this today. Love how people actually stopped and listened to him tho, even if just for a moment.
Fantastic essay, thank you!!
Nice! I always come back to this performance. Theres alot going on !
I have always marveled at how strange this appearance was. I like the way you talked about it. Thanks for sharing.
Isnt the woman from 2:13 Gretchen from Breaking Bad??????
Yes Jessica Heicht used to be on breakfast time and yes she played Gretchen
Yes and she played in Friends a few episodes
the internet needs more videos like this. i wish this was the internet. they voice over video essay.
Hope you make more of these!!:)
.....this was so impactful for such a short video, thank you
video paragraph*
thank you for this :)
You’re gonna have to live with my error >:0
Lady hear me tonight, your voice calms my anxiety wtf
amazing video!
Thank you Jasmine!
i really liked this video 👍
the thing that annoyed me the most about the host is when he asked elliott if they should be worried he was going to get violent on them. like...why
wonderful vid
by "video essay" do you mean "describes everything that is happening in the video, over the video"? because if that's the case, well done
@@kp1657 yes
Its an amazing strange look at what was swirling around then in the American psyche
E.S. just played it ..they tried to play him . but he just played them
the best performance
This is great! made me go and watch the performance and it's exactly like you described
Please make more videos in this vein they’d be great 🙏
A man of substance lost in world of superficiality. Most artists have this way about them, they are shy because they cannot relate to most of the world, their art, in whatever form it manifests, is how they speak. Today true art seems to have been taken away, and the trendy music glorifies the superficial, to make money, to further their superficial life.
One last thing.... it seems overall humanity was more authentic back in those days. The high technology of the modern era has changed the world that everything seems scripted and people are less original and more conditioned. Well, if you read all this, hope you have a great day!!
Great video, and i always loved that video. Really is like a movie scene
seeing the puppet behind the sofa and im imagining elliot on beyond vaudeville. if popularity as an artist only lead to the most idealized version of a general audience would things be different for him and others. someone like bourdain who's fate is so often tied to his relation to the mainstream. i think a lot of us can relate to that broken thing that probably existed before all of this for elliot smith. is this just watchin the beating of a dead horse or is it a part of a living decline. watching footage of 90s music figure suicide cases makes me want to watch a gregg araki movie
you called the puppet a bird?
Elliott was old friend's with Bob the puppet and visited as a favor for him.
EXCELLENT!
I loved this 👏❤️
He came to NY to see the Dakota lol
Lovely 😎
for real
yes yes yes
They couldn’t handle the fastball.
accurate
they didnt expect him, and they didnt deserve him either.
Really liked this bite-sized video, keep it up.
How awkward would that have felt for u (i mean me) it's everything he wrote about :/
Or maybe people were just critiquing him in there heads an zoning out thinking about sex and money like they always do. An he was lost in his own song regardless what they thought an they all saw that one key fact
Th.
I hate this interview, the interviewer is so mean to him
Good job
what’s your snap?
pls stop why does everyone have to create caricatures of such sacred and intimate moments. you clearly saw the comments and just mindlessly created a video. there was no need for this cringe vid.