To me, this does not sound very brilliant. 'Playing the game' sounds great, but is very unfair to those who were not so lucky at the start of the game.
You ever notice how people who been successful in life are always philosophers at heart. They always gain this wisdom along their journey. Maybe thats the real gift of sucess, Not the money or the fame but the wisdom and life lessons.
Yeah cept his understanding of the narrative in the prodigal son story is not even in the general zip code of what the story is about. Seriously like WTF ? Supposed to be writter and story teller.
That's not a gift of success, it's an essential component of it. Self-awareness, introspection & reflection... most truly successful people have that in common.
In one and half years listening to Joe and his guests I’ve learned more useful and interesting things that are relevant to my life-than I ever learned in 12 years of schooling and 3 years at university.
Right?!? Same thing with Evan Carmichael's channel: funny how doing your own research has a greater impact on your life than that of the cookie-cutter design of formal-education
Dimension 9 education and enlightenment are 2 different things all though they go hand in hand. Listening to all the podcasts in the world will motivate you but education will enable you. It’s up to you to take steps.
The way Guy broke down the story of The Prodigal Son just hit me so hard that I literally had to sit down in the middle of working and process it within myself.
If you properly absorb what he's saying here - you can disregard every 'self help' book ever written for the rest of your life. This is all the advice you'll ever need. Beautifully articulated.
All this used to be common sense 3-4 generations ago. Now it's not and people have to pay to have this knowledge. I wonder what current common sense will be missing from our great grandkids' lives and being sold to them for their hard earned money instead.
@@manwiththeredface7821 Whenever I have spoke with people 3 generations older than me I unfortunately never ran into anyone who meant this by common sense.
I had tears in my eyes when he was talking about the part of what the essence of a story is and the meaning of the sword in the stone and pulling it out, every man is a king of his own inner kingdom , he puts it so beautifully into words and so fluently so amazing man, this guy is great.
Same here. I always come back to this video & first time i heard it, it was like i was in shock & tears just came flooding out. Unbelievable gift he shared with us. I hope he understands what he did for us.
This is probably the most important interview on personal development Joe has ever put out. Save this to a playlist and watch it regularly to keep your mind on the right track. You have to be master of the own dominion you’re given for your dominion to experience expansion. To contrast the emphasis of the narrative, how are you supposed to help others become the masters of their own dominions, if you can’t discipline yourself?
This is why I got out of working in social care, most of the people who work in that field have more issues than the people they support, but being in that role makes them go into denial about their own sh**!
@@frostedlambs Similar to how "I have never met a man so ignorant that I couldn't learn something from him", I think you're right, however perhaps one should still maintain a need to always strive for these concepts in order to get better over time.
I come back to this clip often. Like Guy said, we drift on this point. There's a world out there trying to tell you who you are, and they need to make you feel bad so you can buy shit. Very well delivered.
As a Joseph Campbell student… Guy Ritchie does the tribal way of personal development. Intead of telling you how to be a master, he shows you through storytelling and symbolism. King Arthur spoke to me. After the movie I ended up cleaning my room 😅
"Misplaced hate makes disgrace to races We under, I wonder what it takes to make this One better place, let's erase the wasted Take the evil out the people, they'll be actin' right ‘Cause both black and white are smokin' crack tonight" -Also tupac shakur😅
"Deal the cards that were given to you, and you will be rewarded by new cards, shuffle the deck and you will change your cards, shuffle the deck twice new cards will be in your hands, cancel the deck completely and cards will be everywhere" Connor McGregor
Posting this here for myself for further reference: "If you don't own something, you're not the boss. You have to take full responsibility for everything that you do. Why be subservient? You must be the master of your own kingdom. You've got to own things - you can't just walk into things with your eyes half open, you've got to walk into things with your eyes fully open. You've got to know what you're getting into: you have to take possession of your own life. "There's a world out there trying to tell you who you are, and there's a world in here that's trying to tell you who you are. Now where do you want to put your eggs? - because the world outside is very noisy and very tempting, and it has all the razzmatazz and all the glitter; its got all the toys, but that's because you don't think you're enough in the first place. If you don't think you're enough in the first place, the whole idea of the world in order to sell you stuff is first of all they have to make you feel bad about yourself. "The expression 'don't hate the player, hate the game', well don't hate the game, love the game because you're in it mate. So, own the game, accept the rules and move on into the rules. "So the world will try and tell you who you are, and you have to tell yourself who you are."
JRE and some of the take-aways that occur on his show are priceless. If you want content that is specifically designed around thoughts of self-determinism and actualization, check out my content at: soundcloud.com/bobby-littman/push-past-the-quit
I dont really get what hes saying..if you dont own something youre not the boss....ok im an employee at a bank. How does this apply to me? what do i need to own? ''the world outside is very noisy and very tempting, its got all the toys, but that's because you don't think you're enough in the first place''.what does that mean?
@@tentimetex It's got entirely to do with a person's mentality in my view. What I think he's trying to say is take control over your decision making, and make sure that the big decisions you make in life are informed by your internal character rather than external forces and desires. Own everything that you do by knowing that you're doing it exclusively for yourself, and not allowing yourself to become mindlessly subservient and conformist to external factors in life that aren't fulfilling you as you might be fulfilling it - if that makes any sense. Be true to yourself.
This is Joe Rogan at his very best. Challenging, in a playful way, engaged.... and then a genuine fascination in his guest with an ability to laugh at himself.........I love his "I've never really thought about that until this conversation......"
He's a director, so it's his business to explain things to a lot of people, from agents to studio executives to grips on set. He gets his point across no matter what. Just brilliant. And the way he gets Joe about his tee-shirt at 45, so good. Very bright and articulate.
I've watched Guy Ritchie Movies my whole life - first time watching an interview with him and just realized he is the character from every movie - this guy is a legend haha
Makes sense tho when you think about it. Everything he wrote and all the characters he’s penned stem from his psyche and how he’s perceived other humans.
lol "wisdom" says the guy who walked into a marriage with madonna and then wanted a divorce. don;t forget he also was like i wont need a prenup because if this ends i wont take her money and fun fact hired a lawyer and took what he could. hes vile.
This guy’s literally my favorite movie director ever and yet I never really wanted to watch his interviews cause, you know, sometimes our favorite people disappoint..but not this one, such a deep conversation..so much to unpack
Like others, I come back to this every year and recommend this clip to people around me. Modern life is constant comparison which leads to anxiety about where you are and who you should be. This clip strips that away every single time. Pure gold.
That losing yourself aspect hit home. Definitely lost myself during parts of college and a year afterwards. Finally came back to base, with a lot more experience and respect for myself
Watching & actually "hearing" Guy speak, is like a really good sermon at your hometown church. You leave it feeling light on your feet, refreshed, & cannot stop thinking about that which you've heard. This episode is GOLD for the soul!
I watched this directly after the Russel Brand clip with Rogan. Fascinating they both talk about the outside world trying to make you feel bad about yourself. That leads to distraction and consumerism. Be the Master of your own Kingdom. Love it.
Every time I watch this clip my eyes start to water, tears of realization. "You must be the master of your own kingdom" words every young man need to hear growing up, so that they know they are enough.
Wow, Guy Richie is a real man. So refreshing to see a film director who sees the importance of self-ownership. Ritchie gets it, life is worthless without self-responsibility and self-determination. Real men and women don't let LIFE tell them who they are. They personally determine their life values. They do not look to the media, nor the government, to guide their life principles. It's refreshing, to see him use a biblical parable to make his point. The father, like Jesus, loves His children regardless of their mistakes. He loves them because they are human, and worthy of love just because they exist, not because of what they DO. Like the father of the prodigal son, a self-determining person loves him or herself because he or she is worthy of self-love. They don't need the media or the government to give them a sense of worth, or acceptance. If they look within and accept themselves, they will be rich. Like Jesus, who prizes us as His treasures just because we ARE, the father forgives his son everything because the son has learned that looking outside for validation is a dead-end journey. The father, like Jesus, loved his son despite what his son did. Just because he was human. What Richie is getting at is that WE HAVE free will, and it is priceless when we use it responsibly - that is, to look within for our sense of worth. We throw our self-worth away when we, as Richie says, "pander" ourselves to others, when we look to others for our self-worth. For example, when we believe that if we align ourselves with "identity politics" we will have a sense of self. But this is self-delusional. When we look to "they" - the media, government - for approval and acceptance we lose. We lose because we give ownership away, we depend on "them" to give us a sense of worth. And they know it. That's how nice, honest young people end up being talked into setting fires to buildings and beating others, because they believe they will be accepted and approved by committing these acts. They fail to see that they are depending on others for approval when the only real acceptance of a person can come from within. When you trust and turn to yourself for approval and acceptance, YOU wear the big boy suit. The problem comes when, like the prodigal son, we look to others and to vices to provide it for us. But looking outside of ourselves for approval is a losing game. THAT'S what Guy Richie is talking about. We "win" the game only when WE play it. We "lose" the game when we look to others to tell us HOW to play it. Great clip, thank you for sharing it! 😀
Damn just turned 30 this year and I'm realizing that throughout my 20s I wasn't the master of my kingdom I would walk into situations with my eyes halfway open... Definitely awakening now glad I'm on the right track
You might think you wasted your time but you probably had experiences, learned about friendships (good & bad), taken life lessons and made smaller mistakes which hopefuly you learned from to prevent bigger ones. I don't believe that period of time is wasted. You will have experienced some of the most fun during those times. Think of yourself like Guy describes, the prodigal son returning to himself.
@@dfnffc just because you can spin a positive out if it doesnt mean there aren't bad ways to spend your time 1. Experiences that provide the same or worse value in more time 2. Time spent maintaining skill at not rewarding activities (sports over 22 years old) 3. Time spent experiencing the same things (rewatching shows, having sex)
Same, turned 30 and I feel I wasted a lot of time even if it doesn't seem like that to other people. At the end of the day, you have to decide to either burn out and be bitter about it or turn it into the fuel you will use to make your life... yours. Don't blame yourself for your 20s. It took my a while to understand that there is no perfect life, we just need to be open and try our best man. I hate all that pseudo-spiritual mumbo jumbo, but let go of that and forgive yourself and start a new day. It's still hard, but at least you have some idea what to do now. Good luck
One of the most important lessons anyone can learn. Finding out about yourself, learning from it, and then coming to the realisation that you were always good enough (but you just had to go out into the world and find out) is the greatest thing that can ever happen to anyone. Its the control of ego, and the ownership and acceptance of who you really are.
I truly love the story of the Prodigal Son, because I'll never forget when I was a young child (~10yrs old) I could never ever wrap my head around its moral. Even though I've heard multiple priests explain it multiple times, I couldn't even come close to accepting why the hell the father chose to celebrate the delinquent son over the one who worked hard and followed the rules. Now, after growing up, falling victim to hedonism and fighting to find responsibility and my own purpose, it is clear as day to me and amazes me how your perspective can change from black to white as you grow up. Keep growing everyone :)
His interpretation is cool and all but its completely off the mark. If you read in the context of the time and also along side the other 2 parables beside it theres a different meaning
Guy Ritchie has no idea the true meaning of the parable of the Prodigal Son, don't listen to his BS. He's making up what HE THINKS it means, but he's wrong. People want their ears to be tickled, as the Bible states, how true that is. All these people commenting here, thinking they're hearing Truth, little do they know it's all to make them feel better about themselves (thus, tickling of the ears as Scripture puts it.) Don't be deceived.
@themightywhitey I agree. So many people have no idea what is actually in the Scriptures, yet spout off about it, (what their interpretation is about it).
I think they understand the complexities that even an arsehole can give great advice and great advice can be spoiled by an arsehole but that doesn't mean you have to take the whole from the arse.
Rogan low key insulted Guy's suit and pocket square. Then guy points out how Rogan dresses like a toddler. Rogan had it coming. much respect to Guy for being one of the few guest who stands his ground when Joe feels like being petty.
I think Joe is talking out the pretentiousness. Pomp and circumstance. Aren't I special with these $500 shoes attitude! Oh, I notice your $5,000 Armani? So what. Don't care if he is naked unless you are trined to believe that the clothes make the man. No the man is the man! True colors did not like his aristocratic mindset being challenged! The truly enlightened don't care about fame, money, possessions but the character of soul!
I picked up on that indirect "I'm better than you" comment by Rogan, but it was beautiful how Ritchie placed it towards the end of his conversation kind of like a punchline.
Suits are for peaccocks, they don't "make the man." CEOs, Politicians, Mafioso all wear suits. Why? Because pricks have to dress up to overcompensate for the opportunistic, phony, douchey a-holes they really are.
@@Andre-si4to i guess. you have a point. but a grown man walking around with t-shirts, showing off his arms and his tats is very high school. why is joe still trying to convince the world outside how much of a tough guy he is? can you answer that question?
I was always blown away with Guy Richie's movies but never heard a word from him personally. Now it all makes sense, this man understands life deeply, and dearly.
For someone who left school at 15, Guy is a very intelligent man. He went into the world and found himself you could say. The world taught him what no text books at school could ever teach.
In other words, the secret to being happy is to get yourself to a point where whatever you are forced to do, instead becomes something you have chosen to do. I´ve said this before. People would be happy with the exact same job they currently have... if they thought they had an option to easily leave it.
The struggle I have with that is that I now know that on some level, I'm fooling myself. I'm convincing myself to think a certain way instead of solving the objective problem that bothered me in the first place. How would I get past that?
peter sedesse -- holy shit I'm in that transitional phase right now and you nailed it. That could be an entire book, that subject. So much of it is perspective.
The parable concludes with the father explaining that while the older son has always been present, and everything the father owns also belongs to the older son, because the younger son had returned, in a sense, from the dead, celebration was necessary.
I come back every to this video then and there, I got goosebumps the first time I heard it, I really could relate. After feeling I understood the message, I find myself now suddenly grasping a new tiny part of it, makes me realize how rich the message is.
What Guy here is “owning” is his aristocratic heritage. He does so in a rebellious way, which gives it an edge. It’s rebellious because lots of people from Guy’s background would try and hide from their roots, see Prince Harry for instance. In Guy’s case instead of being ashamed of his aristocratic family background he decided to “own” it and be proud of it. Wearing suits constantly allows him to play this character that he’s embraced. It’s partly him playing the hand he was dealt, and partly him creating a character that is a reflection of how he feels, and sees himself. I’d say good on Guy for being himself and going against the grain. I would say that Joe has his own sense of style...his own armor that he’s created for himself, and he has also done so successfully. Ironically Guy here is more of a rebel for wearing a suit than Joe is for being covered in tattoos...but I think that simply speaks to the current cultural trends more so than Joe’s character.
The overtures to being aristocratic are metaphorical. Wearing a suit can be empowering if you have conquered wearing the metaphorical suit which is being master of your own domain. Rebelliousness is merely a crutch in the outside world of energy.
I have watched this for years. Would of love Richie as a father, i feel. I love looking at myself in the world within this way! Thanks Richie. Much love brother
Guy Ritchie is inspirational, watching his movie Revolver back in 2012 changed my whole life and mindset. It's a good movie if you've never watched it.
The story of the prodigal son is not about ignoring the intellect and indulging in the physical… sorry, I’ve poorly summarised Guy’s application. The original hearers of the story knew that Jesus was telling a story about different types of Israelites. The leaders of the day (the older son) were devout and would look down on the ‘sinful’ Israelites who would run off and chase after fun times & temporary pleasures. But Jesus makes the point with the Father (ie God), that he heartily welcomes the repentant sinner with undeserved generosity. The stuff that the prodigal son did was culturally shocking to the Jewish listeners so it was a challenging lesson for them to learn.
@@adventuresofloz9552 if u don't understand the concepts of parables and metaphors I feel sorry for you. Your attempt at intelligence is your display of ignorance.
@@LubulaChikwekwe My 1st response to your comment was snarky, but I realised I don't wanna be a jerk in person or online. So, sincerely, thank you for your concern/pity. We ought to be more compassionate online. I do want to point out though, that I don't think your concern is needed. Context = English 101. We've all seen plenty of snippets on tv where people's words are twisted to mean something else entirely. You can look up Luke 15 (where the parable is found in the Bible) and see that Jesus is responding to Pharisees who are questioning why Jesus associates with the "undesirables". His replies with 3 parables about how the lost are found and this is celebrated. Guy's allegorising of the parable is how many people approached the parables in the Middle Ages (& earlier). However, I still enjoyed listening to this interview. I apologise if I sound like I'm talking down to others & elevating my own intelligence. I merely thought some may want to understand this part better & I have researched some of this stuff for myself.
I hadn't heard that parable since I was a kid, and never understood it. Now that he explains it as an example of storytelling, it makes perfect sense to me.
"It's what the essence of narrative storytelling is only about this dynamic there is: nothing else in a story other than this dynamic" I just love this!
British people don't seem to understand that we've left their cultural system of social classes and imperialism behind when we dumped their tea in the harbor a few hundread years ago. This is America bud, we judge you on your accomplishments and not your handkerchief. (I've experienced this many times before with the English. It actually stems back about a thousand years and ties in with the French and their appeal to the art of wit, its like a deep rooted cultural inferiority complex. I had a boss once who thought that pronouncing Apoptosis "Apo-tosis" demonstrated a certain level of, and i quote, "pedigree." I realized then and there that certain Brits really need to get over themselves)
@@GKTDesigns true, but in regards to strictly attire, attire (along with its interpretation) is subjective. There's an old saying that goes "a man in a suit looks impressive, until you discover he works for the man in a t-shirt and jeans." I just see the world differently than he does, and that's OK. Neither of us are either right or wrong.
I read many self help books and this video is much more helpful and more direct than the books I've read... and so easy to understand... "You are enough." I felt that deep in my soul... "in a world where everything wants make you feel bad, you must think you are enough"....
Lucas, I think Guy is far far away higher then Statham. May be I am wrong to judge the last one by his intern Tula maturity by his characters, that he portrayed in the movies. But I think it is reflects who he played, especially in hollywood, and I intentionally not capitalized the name of the place, where those movies has been made due to luck of ideas and pointless violence in any picture that has been produce with some pleasant and very rear exceptions.
Guy Ritchie have so much verbal game, that he married Maddona being a poor man, and got millions for divorcing her..... he is a real life jedi master friends hope we get to listen to him again on JRE, this guy is a MASTER Mason.
Poor man might be a bit of a stretch, sure she brought him up a level, but he was a muti-millionaire with or without her. And still saves his money buying straight off the rack with a few tweaks, because Brunello knows what he's doing!
@@thepro08 Mate there's nothing there to understand or misunderstand - Guy ends up sounding eloquent because Joe is super dense, he just chooses a long-winded way to talk about ownership.
I've been looking for someone who understands Revolver at this level. I'm glad to have found you. That film taught me so much about myself and life in general. It's a bottomless well of wisdom and enlightenment, and so carefully crafted. It is arguably the best film I've ever watched and as a fan of film and filmmaker myself, I've watched a lot of films. Few come close, if any.
DAMN!!!!!🤯🤯🤯 I always loved Guy Ritchie movies. This just took me to a whole new level off appreciation for him. Thank you for sharing your words of insight and wisdom🙏🙏
What an awesome message and wonderful reminder. Also, I love the fact he doesn't speak using "like" and "um" and all the other filler words that a lot of people use. His speaking has a great cadence - it's well thought out.
Wow. I had never heard anybody decipher these allegories to such depth. I've only recently begun coming into this type of understanding and that's only because of my age and learning appreciate my own value. His command of these depths is impressive.
Guy Ritchie has no idea the true meaning of the parable of the Prodigal Son, don't listen to his BS. He's making up what HE THINKS it means, but he's wrong. People want their ears to be tickled, as the Bible states, how true that is. All these people commenting here, thinking they're hearing Truth, little do they know it's all to make them feel better about themselves (thus, tickling of the ears as Scripture puts it.) Don't be deceived.
@@desertflower13, so since his interpretation of it is wrong in your eyes, you think it's BS? People derive different meanings, but you think it's deception since it doesn't fit your narrative. How ironic. It's like me saying your wrong, and then we brawl about who is right. Maybe, people are open to interpreting what they want. Have you ever thought of that, you idiot? Deception, how cute. Truth is subjective, and people derive different facts from the evidence given. Not everyone listens to religious scriptures to come to their own conclusions, moron.
One of my favourite interviews, very intriguing, he is a stoic I’d say with his views and his perception and the thought process is the opposite on the usual narrative, brilliant interview
Guy Ritchie is like a character in a Guy Ritchie movie.
do you like dags??
He looks like Russel Crowe's brother. These two should make a film together.
I like caravans more
Brandon Wells
Man creates reality in view of self due to limited perspective
Or perhaps every Guy Ritchie movie character is a vehicle for Guy Ritchie?
"Don't hate the game, love the game because you're in it, mate." This is awesome.
this is brilliant. absolutely brilliant
yup
A mentality that guarantees no one ever tries to improve society.
@@spockskynet that makes zero sense at all, literally zero
To me, this does not sound very brilliant. 'Playing the game' sounds great, but is very unfair to those who were not so lucky at the start of the game.
This changed my life. H addict. 5 yrs sober. THIS SAVED ME. Everyone has their path. This is part of mine.
How are you doing, mate?
How specifically did it change it?
still strong?
I’m a Haribo addict too brother. Feel your pain x
Lol I'm not laughing at you so much as the fact that guy Ritchie is being taken seriously
This is the only skit from JRE I return back to year after year, the best piece of philosophy I’ve ever come across.
Same here. I think I've listened to this chunk at least 100 times.
Guy is great. One of the best guests he’s had on.
1000%
@@ws6206 Right along side you brother.
me too.
You ever notice how people who been successful in life are always philosophers at heart. They always gain this wisdom along their journey. Maybe thats the real gift of sucess, Not the money or the fame but the wisdom and life lessons.
Eoin Brennan Maybe their success allows them the luxury to play the philosopher and explain their success as a product of their profundity.
Sokrabiades I dont think thats true. That would be more ego than anything else and these guys seem to be pretty humble human beings
What you said is so true. "WINNING!! I have tiger blood! Oops. I have AIDS. Nevermind!"
Yeah cept his understanding of the narrative in the prodigal son story is not even in the general zip code of what the story is about. Seriously like WTF ? Supposed to be writter and story teller.
That's not a gift of success, it's an essential component of it. Self-awareness, introspection & reflection... most truly successful people have that in common.
Lesson learned:
Own everything
Even my mistakes
Dont pretend
#Update:
OMG 3K likes?!
Thanks 🙏🏾
I am YT-comment famous!!!
😂
you forgot something: wear a suit like an armour.
There you go. Easier said than done
@@biocykle it aint easy
@@arvi2010 no, it isn't
Real talk
In one and half years listening to Joe and his guests I’ve learned more useful and interesting things that are relevant to my life-than I ever learned in 12 years of schooling and 3 years at university.
Holy fucking idiot shit.
thats bcuz u picked teh wrong major
Right?!? Same thing with Evan Carmichael's channel: funny how doing your own research has a greater impact on your life than that of the cookie-cutter design of formal-education
Dimension 9 education and enlightenment are 2 different things all though they go hand in hand. Listening to all the podcasts in the world will motivate you but education will enable you. It’s up to you to take steps.
Good god you've underachieved
The way Guy broke down the story of The Prodigal Son just hit me so hard that I literally had to sit down in the middle of working and process it within myself.
Yeah man you gotta process that shit
I have listened to this story so many times and would never assume that we are the fathers! Wow
That story is in the Bible, he told it terribly if I’m being honest
@kmkingdom_0345 I agree. His context, or theology, wasn't quite right, but I'm glad he used it anyway, it's a very powerful story.
The good son needs to snort some coke too. He won't know his value until he does to.
If you properly absorb what he's saying here - you can disregard every 'self help' book ever written for the rest of your life. This is all the advice you'll ever need. Beautifully articulated.
All this used to be common sense 3-4 generations ago. Now it's not and people have to pay to have this knowledge. I wonder what current common sense will be missing from our great grandkids' lives and being sold to them for their hard earned money instead.
I think your right bro ✊🏿💪🏿
@@manwiththeredface7821yes! Exactly! Common sense!
@@manwiththeredface7821
Whenever I have spoke with people 3 generations older than me I unfortunately never ran into anyone who meant this by common sense.
Brilliant.
I had tears in my eyes when he was talking about the part of what the essence of a story is and the meaning of the sword in the stone and pulling it out, every man is a king of his own inner kingdom , he puts it so beautifully into words and so fluently so amazing man, this guy is great.
It’s true wisdom. More importantly it’s truth
That you Jordan?
Same here. I always come back to this video & first time i heard it, it was like i was in shock & tears just came flooding out. Unbelievable gift he shared with us. I hope he understands what he did for us.
This is probably the most important interview on personal development Joe has ever put out. Save this to a playlist and watch it regularly to keep your mind on the right track.
You have to be master of the own dominion you’re given for your dominion to experience expansion. To contrast the emphasis of the narrative, how are you supposed to help others become the masters of their own dominions, if you can’t discipline yourself?
You don’t need to be the master, many teachers are extremely troubled yet have a lot to give
Guy nailed this!
This is why I got out of working in social care, most of the people who work in that field have more issues than the people they support, but being in that role makes them go into denial about their own sh**!
@@frostedlambs Similar to how "I have never met a man so ignorant that I couldn't learn something from him", I think you're right, however perhaps one should still maintain a need to always strive for these concepts in order to get better over time.
I come back to this clip often. Like Guy said, we drift on this point. There's a world out there trying to tell you who you are, and they need to make you feel bad so you can buy shit. Very well delivered.
Guy is very deep and insightful but practical at the same time. He's a thinker and a doer. Not easy to come by.
I really wish Joe would get Guy back on.. this podcast was fantastic
Great pod, shit movie.
@C P me too !
This is my goto best you tube clip. You gotta own the suit!
no thank you
Channelling his inner Brent:
'Don't hate the player hate the game? Don't hate the game, because you're in it mate... love the game.'
what are YOU doing here
Guy Richie is refreshingly laid back for a man with such responsibility
Ritchie mused...
Unorthodox.
Goddamnit you are on point! Guy Richie is like a spiritual David Brent
This guy has crazy verbal fluency
I guess he owns a dictionary.
In the olden days, before texting, people talked reel gud
King’s men Script but On a podcast
Well he speaks British English. They speak like this. It's brilliant.
He sounds like he's from London
As a Joseph Campbell student… Guy Ritchie does the tribal way of personal development. Intead of telling you how to be a master, he shows you through storytelling and symbolism. King Arthur spoke to me. After the movie I ended up cleaning my room 😅
This guy reminds me of a how a knight would be in modern times
I always find it interesting when Americans and Englishmen interact in a conversation.
Realtalk
The Englishman often likes to criticize the American for how they dress, too.
One sees a villager and other see a regretful. That until they had a few drink and the roles reverse
@@nebulousisgod that part of dressing like a 19 year old, that's deep and also true.
@@nebulousisgod American men do dress like kids still wearing sneakers and t shirts nshit
"Play the game. Never let the game play you." -Tupac Shakur.
"Misplaced hate makes disgrace to races
We under, I wonder what it takes to make this
One better place, let's erase the wasted
Take the evil out the people, they'll be actin' right
‘Cause both black and white are smokin' crack tonight"
-Also tupac shakur😅
@devontodetroit ^^^I think that one works for you better.
@devontodetroit😂 No its heroin these days. I'm sure you would be aware of the epidemic if you looked out of you're trailer window skeeter.
@devontodetroit You do that. Bye
"Deal the cards that were given to you, and you will be rewarded by new cards, shuffle the deck and you will change your cards, shuffle the deck twice new cards will be in your hands, cancel the deck completely and cards will be everywhere" Connor McGregor
Posting this here for myself for further reference:
"If you don't own something, you're not the boss. You have to take full responsibility for everything that you do. Why be subservient? You must be the master of your own kingdom. You've got to own things - you can't just walk into things with your eyes half open, you've got to walk into things with your eyes fully open. You've got to know what you're getting into: you have to take possession of your own life.
"There's a world out there trying to tell you who you are, and there's a world in here that's trying to tell you who you are. Now where do you want to put your eggs? - because the world outside is very noisy and very tempting, and it has all the razzmatazz and all the glitter; its got all the toys, but that's because you don't think you're enough in the first place. If you don't think you're enough in the first place, the whole idea of the world in order to sell you stuff is first of all they have to make you feel bad about yourself.
"The expression 'don't hate the player, hate the game', well don't hate the game, love the game because you're in it mate. So, own the game, accept the rules and move on into the rules.
"So the world will try and tell you who you are, and you have to tell yourself who you are."
JRE and some of the take-aways that occur on his show are priceless.
If you want content that is specifically designed around thoughts of self-determinism and actualization, check out my content at:
soundcloud.com/bobby-littman/push-past-the-quit
beautiful
@@bobbylittman3330 good info bobby cheers ...keep going
I dont really get what hes saying..if you dont own something youre not the boss....ok im an employee at a bank. How does this apply to me? what do i need to own? ''the world outside is very noisy and very tempting, its got all the toys, but that's because you don't think you're enough in the first place''.what does that mean?
@@tentimetex It's got entirely to do with a person's mentality in my view. What I think he's trying to say is take control over your decision making, and make sure that the big decisions you make in life are informed by your internal character rather than external forces and desires. Own everything that you do by knowing that you're doing it exclusively for yourself, and not allowing yourself to become mindlessly subservient and conformist to external factors in life that aren't fulfilling you as you might be fulfilling it - if that makes any sense. Be true to yourself.
This is Joe Rogan at his very best. Challenging, in a playful way, engaged.... and then a genuine fascination in his guest with an ability to laugh at himself.........I love his "I've never really thought about that until this conversation......"
He's a director, so it's his business to explain things to a lot of people, from agents to studio executives to grips on set. He gets his point across no matter what. Just brilliant. And the way he gets Joe about his tee-shirt at 45, so good. Very bright and articulate.
Great point Gilles, well said mate.
Fucks me that he actually thought that
Joe was 45.
@@notundermywatch3163 Well he was 48,49 when this was recorded so not far off.
Yup he slapped back really good after Rogan said maybe he’s just lying to the world with his suit and pocketsquare.
Are you the father, or did Jesus talk about the (his and our) Father? Beautifully delivered for the secular audience.
I've watched Guy Ritchie Movies my whole life - first time watching an interview with him and just realized he is the character from every movie - this guy is a legend haha
What starts sweet, ends bitter and what starts bitter ends sweet
same
Revolver is my favorite movie.
Makes sense tho when you think about it. Everything he wrote and all the characters he’s penned stem from his psyche and how he’s perceived other humans.
Would have been absolutely hilarious if Joe came back wearing a suit in the next episode.
😅😅😅😅 I think that would be a great trolling move.
Hahahahahah
"It's actually very comfortable. It really is."
LMAO
🤣🤣🤣
Sometimes I come back to this video to experience Guy's wisdom once again.
She learned a lot from Goddess Madonna.
Same
I'm gonna listen again to the prodigal son thing until it sinks in and repeat it to slightly younger women like I'm some sort of genius
Pay. 4king. Dirt
lol "wisdom"
says the guy who walked into a marriage with madonna and then wanted a divorce. don;t forget he also was like i wont need a prenup because if this ends i wont take her money and fun fact hired a lawyer and took what he could. hes vile.
This guy’s literally my favorite movie director ever and yet I never really wanted to watch his interviews cause, you know, sometimes our favorite people disappoint..but not this one, such a deep conversation..so much to unpack
Like others, I come back to this every year and recommend this clip to people around me. Modern life is constant comparison which leads to anxiety about where you are and who you should be. This clip strips that away every single time. Pure gold.
Brilliant and true. We decide who we are, no one else can make that assessment for us. Understanding this reality is the key to living vs existing.
It's easier to be who you really are if you're more established though. And for those that aren't established you get shaped more.
@@te9591 Or maybe it’s the opposite? Maybe being authentic is the key to success, not the other way around...?
@@NewYorkNadia certain avenues allow for more authenticity.
@@te9591 Again, perhaps it’s the other way around, and authenticity opens up more avenues.
The law attraction starts with Being, Doing then Having. In that order.
That losing yourself aspect hit home. Definitely lost myself during parts of college and a year afterwards. Finally came back to base, with a lot more experience and respect for myself
Are you enjoying the newfound you
@@mercado3024 I am. Lost in life till 28, finally at 32 Life is going good in relationship and a job
Hmmmmmmmm.
"Don't hate the game, because you're in the game." Great point.
The game is rigged, so yes, hate the game.
a hard pill to swallow for the weak minded
TOLSTOI indeed
@@stephenmisso1543 I am afraid you do not know what you are talking about.
If youre playing someone else's game you dont own shit. Do what you want, that's all that matters.
Watching & actually "hearing" Guy speak, is like a really good sermon at your hometown church.
You leave it feeling light on your feet, refreshed, & cannot stop thinking about that which you've heard. This episode is GOLD for the soul!
I watched this directly after the Russel Brand clip with Rogan. Fascinating they both talk about the outside world trying to make you feel bad about yourself. That leads to distraction and consumerism. Be the Master of your own Kingdom. Love it.
Every time I watch this clip my eyes start to water, tears of realization. "You must be the master of your own kingdom" words every young man need to hear growing up, so that they know they are enough.
I was not expecting to get as much out this video as I did. Really good stuff from Guy Ritchie.
Ok last time, I swear, watch revolver or look up the revolver rooftop scene. This guy has figured some shit out.
This was the first time I've seen Joe really in awe of something coming out of his guests mouth. Like he was just absorbing every bit of wisdom
Wow, Guy Richie is a real man. So refreshing to see a film director who sees the importance of self-ownership. Ritchie gets it, life is worthless without self-responsibility and self-determination. Real men and women don't let LIFE tell them who they are. They personally determine their life values. They do not look to the media, nor the government, to guide their life principles.
It's refreshing, to see him use a biblical parable to make his point. The father, like Jesus, loves His children regardless of their mistakes. He loves them because they are human, and worthy of love just because they exist, not because of what they DO. Like the father of the prodigal son, a self-determining person loves him or herself because he or she is worthy of self-love. They don't need the media or the government to give them a sense of worth, or acceptance. If they look within and accept themselves, they will be rich.
Like Jesus, who prizes us as His treasures just because we ARE, the father forgives his son everything because the son has learned that looking outside for validation is a dead-end journey. The father, like Jesus, loved his son despite what his son did. Just because he was human.
What Richie is getting at is that WE HAVE free will, and it is priceless when we use it responsibly - that is, to look within for our sense of worth. We throw our self-worth away when we, as Richie says, "pander" ourselves to others, when we look to others for our self-worth. For example, when we believe that if we align ourselves with "identity politics" we will have a sense of self. But this is self-delusional. When we look to "they" - the media, government - for approval and acceptance we lose. We lose because we give ownership away, we depend on "them" to give us a sense of worth. And they know it. That's how nice, honest young people end up being talked into setting fires to buildings and beating others, because they believe they will be accepted and approved by committing these acts. They fail to see that they are depending on others for approval when the only real acceptance of a person can come from within.
When you trust and turn to yourself for approval and acceptance, YOU wear the big boy suit. The problem comes when, like the prodigal son, we look to others and to vices to provide it for us. But looking outside of ourselves for approval is a losing game. THAT'S what Guy Richie is talking about. We "win" the game only when WE play it. We "lose" the game when we look to others to tell us HOW to play it.
Great clip, thank you for sharing it! 😀
Thank you for articulating it further.
I know it was more for you than for us. Good job though
Beautiful
Very interesting articulation my friend
Beautiful analogy sir thank you, are you a quantum computer?😅
*There is always someone who is ready to control your life, your education, your income, and your thinking.*
Facts
Damn just turned 30 this year and I'm realizing that throughout my 20s I wasn't the master of my kingdom I would walk into situations with my eyes halfway open... Definitely awakening now glad I'm on the right track
And as you age you will realize you wasted a lot of time on stupid shit. At least that's what im figuring out. :)
You might think you wasted your time but you probably had experiences, learned about friendships (good & bad), taken life lessons and made smaller mistakes which hopefuly you learned from to prevent bigger ones. I don't believe that period of time is wasted. You will have experienced some of the most fun during those times.
Think of yourself like Guy describes, the prodigal son returning to himself.
@@dfnffc just because you can spin a positive out if it doesnt mean there aren't bad ways to spend your time
1. Experiences that provide the same or worse value in more time
2. Time spent maintaining skill at not rewarding activities (sports over 22 years old)
3. Time spent experiencing the same things (rewatching shows, having sex)
Then you’re ready to listen to Reality Transurfing. It’s on RUclips. Listen and report back to me. You’ll thank me later 🙏
Same, turned 30 and I feel I wasted a lot of time even if it doesn't seem like that to other people. At the end of the day, you have to decide to either burn out and be bitter about it or turn it into the fuel you will use to make your life... yours. Don't blame yourself for your 20s. It took my a while to understand that there is no perfect life, we just need to be open and try our best man.
I hate all that pseudo-spiritual mumbo jumbo, but let go of that and forgive yourself and start a new day. It's still hard, but at least you have some idea what to do now. Good luck
Guy Ritchie and Naval Ravikant are my favorite guests on the JRE👍🏾💪🏿🙏🏿
"When you rest, you are a king surveying your estate. Look at the woodland, the peacocks on the lawn. Be the king of your own calm kingdom"
Holy fuck, Black Books quote? 😂😂😂
@@_itsnemo_ Great show
Imagine an ocean
@@joebranston6330 Well, what's in it?
Roll up your sleeves, or eat an orange
Guy: Did you read this book Extreme Ownership?
Joe: I had him on podcast
Guy explains
Joe: This is a very solid concept. Is it somewhere written down?
i died laughing at that part. Joe needs to chill with the pot
I heard extreme amounts of shit for some reason and when he said it was written by navy guys I thought it made sense
I think he meant if Guy wrote it down for himself.
T B P P 😂
Carnivore has gotten him sharp lately
This is possibly the most valuable piece of advice I've indirectly received this year, cheers Guy
One of the most important lessons anyone can learn. Finding out about yourself, learning from it, and then coming to the realisation that you were always good enough (but you just had to go out into the world and find out) is the greatest thing that can ever happen to anyone. Its the control of ego, and the ownership and acceptance of who you really are.
I truly love the story of the Prodigal Son, because I'll never forget when I was a young child (~10yrs old) I could never ever wrap my head around its moral. Even though I've heard multiple priests explain it multiple times, I couldn't even come close to accepting why the hell the father chose to celebrate the delinquent son over the one who worked hard and followed the rules. Now, after growing up, falling victim to hedonism and fighting to find responsibility and my own purpose, it is clear as day to me and amazes me how your perspective can change from black to white as you grow up.
Keep growing everyone :)
That was deep, Dr jones. Well said.
That was the dumbest interpretation of the parable that has ever been uttered.
His interpretation is cool and all but its completely off the mark. If you read in the context of the time and also along side the other 2 parables beside it theres a different meaning
Guy Ritchie has no idea the true meaning of the parable of the Prodigal Son, don't listen to his BS. He's making up what HE THINKS it means, but he's wrong. People want their ears to be tickled, as the Bible states, how true that is. All these people commenting here, thinking they're hearing Truth, little do they know it's all to make them feel better about themselves (thus, tickling of the ears as Scripture puts it.) Don't be deceived.
@themightywhitey I agree. So many people have no idea what is actually in the Scriptures, yet spout off about it, (what their interpretation is about it).
Out of the hundreds of snippets from this podcast I’ve watched, this is by far the most significant and enlightening to me. Thank you
What are all these comments talking about? This podcast was fucking class. Guy Ritchie makes a lot of sense
I think they understand the complexities that even an arsehole can give great advice and great advice can be spoiled by an arsehole but that doesn't mean you have to take the whole from the arse.
Damn Guy Ritchie!!! That interpretation of The Prodigal Son, had me in stitches and in deep reflection. Oufff, where can I find me a man like him!?
"You can glean what you can glean, when you're ready to glean what you're ready to glean"
I think I just popped something in my brain! Damnnnn
Rogan low key insulted Guy's suit and pocket square.
Then guy points out how Rogan dresses like a toddler.
Rogan had it coming. much respect to Guy for being one of the few guest who stands his ground when Joe feels like being petty.
YuckyPump Exactly. I see so many comments and can’t believe no one picked up on that dig. That’s what started the whole conversation.
I think Joe is talking out the pretentiousness. Pomp and circumstance. Aren't I special with these $500 shoes attitude! Oh, I notice your $5,000 Armani? So what. Don't care if he is naked unless you are trined to believe that the clothes make the man. No the man is the man! True colors did not like his aristocratic mindset being challenged! The truly enlightened don't care about fame, money, possessions but the character of soul!
I picked up on that indirect "I'm better than you" comment by Rogan, but it was beautiful how Ritchie placed it towards the end of his conversation kind of like a punchline.
Suits are for peaccocks, they don't "make the man." CEOs, Politicians, Mafioso all wear suits. Why? Because pricks have to dress up to overcompensate for the opportunistic, phony, douchey a-holes they really are.
@@Andre-si4to i guess. you have a point. but a grown man walking around with t-shirts, showing off his arms and his tats is very high school.
why is joe still trying to convince the world outside how much of a tough guy he is? can you answer that question?
"Made by a chap called Brunello, knows what he's doing." - Classic Guy Ritchie dialogue
Jagraj Wasan hahah I thought the same thing., might as well been a line from Snatch
on point my man. lmfao
That was your takeaway?
@@roughhabit9085it is what it is , “you glean what you glean when you’re ready to glean”
Man this guy is brilliant, glad I live in a time where I can tune in and listen to him so easily.
I was always blown away with Guy Richie's movies but never heard a word from him personally. Now it all makes sense, this man understands life deeply, and dearly.
I can't stop listening to this, so many deep layers and sense! Am enough and my own king.
As a writer, I am in awe of Ritchie's story telling
Came here to hear about directing and got a beautiful message from Pastor Guy Ritchie. Dropping jewels!!!
Watching Guy spin his web fascinates me deeply. Always four steps ahead and most don't even realize he's one step ahead. Big fan.
For someone who left school at 15, Guy is a very intelligent man. He went into the world and found himself you could say. The world taught him what no text books at school could ever teach.
Wow, didn't know that. He's so well spoken and smart
“School” doesn’t make you intelligent
He went into the world and married Madonna!
lol 'found himself', good one. He's from an extremely privileged background (for one his step mother is a baroness)
In other words, the secret to being happy is to get yourself to a point where whatever you are forced to do, instead becomes something you have chosen to do. I´ve said this before. People would be happy with the exact same job they currently have... if they thought they had an option to easily leave it.
I don't know about that -existential crises usually come from having too many options and stressing out over whether you've chosen the right one.
The struggle I have with that is that I now know that on some level, I'm fooling myself. I'm convincing myself to think a certain way instead of solving the objective problem that bothered me in the first place. How would I get past that?
JFrame stop lying, Be blunt, people don't like blunt people cause there rude, they don't like them cause there not afraid of the truth
VicInNocal not everyone is ment to do well with choices, this talk isn't for everyone, some people are ment to be stagnant
peter sedesse -- holy shit I'm in that transitional phase right now and you nailed it. That could be an entire book, that subject. So much of it is perspective.
Best interview Joe has ever done, I like how he kept him on his toes though out almost taking control of the interview.
What were the interview type questions? It sounded like a discussion.
This Guy literally summoned up my life; I have been watching this since the beginning, still it’s so new every single time.
Come back and watch this video every couple of months. Absolutely gold content
Jesus this man is an absolute legend!!! I'd love a new film from him especially in these times....
The parable concludes with the father explaining that while the older son has always been present, and everything the father owns also belongs to the older son, because the younger son had returned, in a sense, from the dead, celebration was necessary.
I come back every to this video then and there, I got goosebumps the first time I heard it, I really could relate. After feeling I understood the message, I find myself now suddenly grasping a new tiny part of it, makes me realize how rich the message is.
I’ve never had a piece of media resonate with me the way this 14 minute clip of a podcast has.
I LOVE this guy...no pun intended. He’s just so cool. So brilliant and he’s a badass director who should have gotten an Oscar already
What Guy here is “owning” is his aristocratic heritage. He does so in a rebellious way, which gives it an edge. It’s rebellious because lots of people from Guy’s background would try and hide from their roots, see Prince Harry for instance. In Guy’s case instead of being ashamed of his aristocratic family background he decided to “own” it and be proud of it. Wearing suits constantly allows him to play this character that he’s embraced. It’s partly him playing the hand he was dealt, and partly him creating a character that is a reflection of how he feels, and sees himself. I’d say good on Guy for being himself and going against the grain. I would say that Joe has his own sense of style...his own armor that he’s created for himself, and he has also done so successfully. Ironically Guy here is more of a rebel for wearing a suit than Joe is for being covered in tattoos...but I think that simply speaks to the current cultural trends more so than Joe’s character.
He wasn’t born into it, his mum married it but he was raised as an aristocrat.
Sharp analysis
The overtures to being aristocratic are metaphorical. Wearing a suit can be empowering if you have conquered wearing the metaphorical suit which is being master of your own domain. Rebelliousness is merely a crutch in the outside world of energy.
"That's deep Guy Ritchie" Gonna start saying this anytime someone says something deep.
That’s deep Guy Ritchie
I have watched this for years. Would of love Richie as a father, i feel. I love looking at myself in the world within this way! Thanks Richie. Much love brother
Guy Ritchie is inspirational, watching his movie Revolver back in 2012 changed my whole life and mindset. It's a good movie if you've never watched it.
This video speaks to me on a level I've never felt before.
That’s awesome bro. The answers are all found inside of yourself.
This guy is super awake.
this guy is super gay
Try commenting something that is unique ok good luck buddy.
mralex070 compared to me, he's in the coma.
In general the famous movie directors come across as being on a really elite plane mentally.
Rodrigo Duran 😂😂as awake as someone hit in the head with a skiff/skillet.
This was one of the most impactful clips EVER on JRE
I grew up watching Guy Ritchie films and that is probably one of the best things of my youth.
The twist in story on the prodigal son is deeeply profound
It's interesting😂but not really what the essence of the story is
@@peacheskong2245 what you mean?
The story of the prodigal son is not about ignoring the intellect and indulging in the physical… sorry, I’ve poorly summarised Guy’s application. The original hearers of the story knew that Jesus was telling a story about different types of Israelites. The leaders of the day (the older son) were devout and would look down on the ‘sinful’ Israelites who would run off and chase after fun times & temporary pleasures. But Jesus makes the point with the Father (ie God), that he heartily welcomes the repentant sinner with undeserved generosity. The stuff that the prodigal son did was culturally shocking to the Jewish listeners so it was a challenging lesson for them to learn.
@@adventuresofloz9552 if u don't understand the concepts of parables and metaphors I feel sorry for you. Your attempt at intelligence is your display of ignorance.
@@LubulaChikwekwe My 1st response to your comment was snarky, but I realised I don't wanna be a jerk in person or online. So, sincerely, thank you for your concern/pity. We ought to be more compassionate online.
I do want to point out though, that I don't think your concern is needed. Context = English 101. We've all seen plenty of snippets on tv where people's words are twisted to mean something else entirely. You can look up Luke 15 (where the parable is found in the Bible) and see that Jesus is responding to Pharisees who are questioning why Jesus associates with the "undesirables". His replies with 3 parables about how the lost are found and this is celebrated.
Guy's allegorising of the parable is how many people approached the parables in the Middle Ages (& earlier). However, I still enjoyed listening to this interview. I apologise if I sound like I'm talking down to others & elevating my own intelligence. I merely thought some may want to understand this part better & I have researched some of this stuff for myself.
My respect for Guy Ritchie increased ten fold
Jesus Christ, Guy Ritchie just made sense of everything for me
I am in a moment of my life in which all he says makes so much sense to me. Real lesson.
Hope your life is going well, and your owning the life you want to live!
yeah yeah thats great Guy but are we ever getting rocka rolla 2
'the real rocknrolla'
Guy Ritchie's The Gentlemen check it out fuck rock and rolla this is the next snatch.
Im not prepared to wait 20 or so years for that...
@@daddylister nothing will top snatch
I hadn't heard that parable since I was a kid, and never understood it.
Now that he explains it as an example of storytelling, it makes perfect sense to me.
"It's what the essence of narrative storytelling is only about this dynamic there is: nothing else in a story other than this dynamic" I just love this!
OMG, I had no idea this man would interview like this. He's so much more than you think. Very impressive Mr @guyritchie1968. indeed
He just called Rogan a geezer for dressing like a teenager and it was just some real shit right there.
LOL Rogan tried mocking him about wearing a suit then Richie turned it around on him.
💀💀💀
British people don't seem to understand that we've left their cultural system of social classes and imperialism behind when we dumped their tea in the harbor a few hundread years ago. This is America bud, we judge you on your accomplishments and not your handkerchief. (I've experienced this many times before with the English. It actually stems back about a thousand years and ties in with the French and their appeal to the art of wit, its like a deep rooted cultural inferiority complex. I had a boss once who thought that pronouncing Apoptosis "Apo-tosis" demonstrated a certain level of, and i quote, "pedigree." I realized then and there that certain Brits really need to get over themselves)
@@StereoSoundAgentIf you think about it, there is a higher quality of outcome when you put a higher standard on everything you do.
@@GKTDesigns true, but in regards to strictly attire, attire (along with its interpretation) is subjective. There's an old saying that goes "a man in a suit looks impressive, until you discover he works for the man in a t-shirt and jeans." I just see the world differently than he does, and that's OK.
Neither of us are either right or wrong.
This is one of the most profound lessons I have ever learned and I just learned that here.
I read many self help books and this video is much more helpful and more direct than the books I've read... and so easy to understand... "You are enough." I felt that deep in my soul... "in a world where everything wants make you feel bad, you must think you are enough"....
Guy Ritchie sounds like an intellectual Jason Statham
Lmao
Lucas, I think Guy is far far away higher then Statham. May be I am wrong to judge the last one by his intern Tula maturity by his characters, that he portrayed in the movies. But I think it is reflects who he played, especially in hollywood, and I intentionally not capitalized the name of the place, where those movies has been made due to luck of ideas and pointless violence in any picture that has been produce with some pleasant and very rear exceptions.
nailed it.
I ordered...a refreshing drink
That's a good one.
Guy Ritchie have so much verbal game, that he married Maddona being a poor man, and got millions for divorcing her..... he is a real life jedi master friends hope we get to listen to him again on JRE, this guy is a MASTER Mason.
He is just a bit verbose, he never really says anything, just tries to sound clever because of some inferiority complex.
@@thert.hon.thelordnicholson7261 he is not responsible for your lack of.... understanding.
@@thert.hon.thelordnicholson7261 you must be a die hard madonna fan
Poor man might be a bit of a stretch, sure she brought him up a level, but he was a muti-millionaire with or without her. And still saves his money buying straight off the rack with a few tweaks, because Brunello knows what he's doing!
@@thepro08 Mate there's nothing there to understand or misunderstand - Guy ends up sounding eloquent because Joe is super dense, he just chooses a long-winded way to talk about ownership.
What a fascinating chap. Love this conversation. His movies are some of the most entertaining pieces of art in existence.
This is the first time I’ve ever seen Guy Ritchie talking! I did not realise he was so wise. But I do love his movies, so…
This is a joy to listen to. Brilliantly articulate.
Mr. Ritchie, your movie "Revolver" changed my life forever. Thank you and everyone who contributed to it.
Michael Riddick how?
Yes, how?
@Michael Riddick
You mean it was what convinced you to stop ever watching movies?
I've been looking for someone who understands Revolver at this level. I'm glad to have found you. That film taught me so much about myself and life in general. It's a bottomless well of wisdom and enlightenment, and so carefully crafted. It is arguably the best film I've ever watched and as a fan of film and filmmaker myself, I've watched a lot of films. Few come close, if any.
@@NqanaweLIVE I may have to watch that again
“There’s a world out there trying tell you who you are and there’s a world IN HERE that’s trying tell you who YOU are”
I watch this maybe twice a year. And I would suggest every man do the same. Live with purpose guys. Do everything with purpose.
DAMN!!!!!🤯🤯🤯 I always loved Guy Ritchie movies. This just took me to a whole new level off appreciation for him. Thank you for sharing your words of insight and wisdom🙏🙏
What an awesome message and wonderful reminder. Also, I love the fact he doesn't speak using "like" and "um" and all the other filler words that a lot of people use. His speaking has a great cadence - it's well thought out.
Wow. I had never heard anybody decipher these allegories to such depth. I've only recently begun coming into this type of understanding and that's only because of my age and learning appreciate my own value. His command of these depths is impressive.
Guy Ritchie has no idea the true meaning of the parable of the Prodigal Son, don't listen to his BS. He's making up what HE THINKS it means, but he's wrong. People want their ears to be tickled, as the Bible states, how true that is. All these people commenting here, thinking they're hearing Truth, little do they know it's all to make them feel better about themselves (thus, tickling of the ears as Scripture puts it.) Don't be deceived.
@@desertflower13, so since his interpretation of it is wrong in your eyes, you think it's BS? People derive different meanings, but you think it's deception since it doesn't fit your narrative. How ironic. It's like me saying your wrong, and then we brawl about who is right. Maybe, people are open to interpreting what they want. Have you ever thought of that, you idiot? Deception, how cute. Truth is subjective, and people derive different facts from the evidence given. Not everyone listens to religious scriptures to come to their own conclusions, moron.
@@desertflower13 Copying and pasting the same response on multiple comments - what's your agenda?
basically he has described what has been on my mind for ages now and he actually made tear up
What an articulate and well spoken man.
One of my favourite interviews, very intriguing, he is a stoic I’d say with his views and his perception and the thought process is the opposite on the usual narrative, brilliant interview
Love.this.clip.
This explanation I have come back to over several years, the deeper my development the more truth shines through it. Thank you.
2nd time I've watched this in 2024. Pure gold.