Day at Night: Ray Bradbury

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  • Опубликовано: 26 сен 2024

Комментарии • 206

  • @saintcruzin
    @saintcruzin 11 лет назад +80

    During this time period he came to our college and gave one of the BEST lectures ever. I was soo lucky and talked to him for a 1/2 hour with just one other student. He was inspirational!!

  • @timmymeredith7499
    @timmymeredith7499 4 года назад +18

    Can you imagine a world without Ray Bradbury no Martian Chronicles no dandelion wine no Something Wicked This Way Comes he is a gift from God

    • @dougimmel
      @dougimmel 2 года назад +2

      Just finishing Dandelion Wine. Grew up on Martian Chronicles, Illustrated Man as a child in the 50's and 60's.

    • @jasonjmarchi
      @jasonjmarchi 3 месяца назад +1

      You are so right. And, I cannot imagine a world without having known and been close friends with Ray Bradbury, as I was so blessed with, during the last decade of Ray's life. That's me and Ray in the photo attached to this comment, circa 2002.

    • @timmymeredith7499
      @timmymeredith7499 3 месяца назад +1

      I envy you

  • @MrBGB2012
    @MrBGB2012 9 лет назад +134

    Now,I ask myself,after watching this show..."Why can't these other,so-called talk shows on the more popular networks,be as deep and insightful,as this thought-provoking old talk show from the '70's?" Food for thought!

    • @kyle-style
      @kyle-style 8 лет назад +11

      Because Bradbury was a thinker, a dreamer

    • @phoebecatgirl9968
      @phoebecatgirl9968 7 лет назад +19

      Because there are no talk shows now interviewing people of any intellect.

    • @Funz2022
      @Funz2022 7 лет назад +3

      Because all you people read Harry Potter & not science fiction

    • @RETROGEMS
      @RETROGEMS 7 лет назад +5

      *Because there are no talk shows now interviewing people of any intellect.*
      Bingo! You said it.

    • @tonywalton1052
      @tonywalton1052 6 лет назад +5

      Cuz we are dumb, dumb and getting dumber. our technology has exceeded our human capability (hell, our humanity) a loooong time ago

  • @ks.turgon369
    @ks.turgon369 3 месяца назад +2

    Ray Bradbury makes me a storyteller not a writer too.Thank you Master and Rest in Peace. Love from London.

  • @gaozhi2007
    @gaozhi2007 10 лет назад +70

    I could listen to him all day. I feel like my brain is exploding with wisdom after listening to this short segment.

  • @CollinZaffke
    @CollinZaffke 2 года назад +6

    One of my great sorrows in life is that I never will get the opportunity to meet or at least see Ray Bradbury speak somewhere. All I can do now is watch these old interviews. His stories are unforgettable and irreplaceable.

  • @sebeller
    @sebeller 12 лет назад +37

    Thank you, Mr. Bradbury. You've been my inspiration as a writer. Raising a glass of Dandelion Wine to the heavens in your honor - may you rest in peace and your works endure for tomorrow and tomorrow and tomorrow.

  • @patrickkihn
    @patrickkihn 2 месяца назад +2

    Love this guy. Saw him speak once in person in the early 80s. I should have been listening to him from then for as long as he lived. His creative advice is pure gold.

    • @Painedmusician9
      @Painedmusician9 Месяц назад

      He’s a very intelligent and unique person he will be missed.

  • @octopibingo
    @octopibingo 12 лет назад +14

    I saw this interview on tv when it aired, taping it with my cassette recorder with a White Front tape. I still have the tape and have played it endlessly for years. This interview and Ray's words changed the direction of my life. I met him in San Diego not long after this, and two more times over the years. Except for family, he has had the most impact in my life than anyone. His words are as timeless as his writing.
    If you want to be a writer, listen, listen, and then listen again.

  • @kayashima3290
    @kayashima3290 10 лет назад +45

    his philosophy just validated my life

    • @geniusmchaggis
      @geniusmchaggis 6 лет назад

      yuck.

    • @ColorJoyLynnH
      @ColorJoyLynnH 3 года назад +1

      I love him and his love of life. I don’t enjoy his writing or any other scifi/famtasy, but this man is in love with living. Look for later videos especially as an old man as keynote

  • @ppeev3003
    @ppeev3003 11 лет назад +16

    Obviously, Bradbury was a very open and honest person. I read his books many years ago when my country Bulgaria was behind the iron curtain. He was inspirational to me. Now I learn that he was afraid of flying. Isaac Asimov was afraid of flying also. Nevertheless, Asimov and Bradbury are the writers that created the most amazing stories about space and the future. Let them rest in peace and let us continue their mission by trying to implement some of their sci-fi ideas in real life.

  • @williamseigler3408
    @williamseigler3408 Год назад +4

    I first discovered Ray Bradbury in my high school literature text. The story was “The Wilderness.” I loved it, but the rest of the class and Mrs. Wetblanket hated it. She said it was “sappy.” I had no better sense than to try to explain to them why it was so great. Not my best move.
    Many decades pass and I attend a Space Development conference, I think in Denver. Bradbury was there selling his books. I had the pleasure of telling him this story and having him autograph the first page of “The Wilderness” in a copy I found in a used bookstore. One of my favorite memories. He’s gone now, but not forgotten.

    • @nativevirginian8344
      @nativevirginian8344 Год назад +2

      Bradbury was once told he was a poet. He also came from a generation of people who did not have their psyches scarred by the noise of the Matrix. Also it was a time when churches were full. It was the last generation of wholesomeness. You heard the poetry & wholesomeness, what that idiot teacher called “sappy”. You heard the Good, Beautiful & True. Don’t let morons take that ability away from you. People with talent like Bradbury need people like us out here to appreciate it. That’s what you call civilization.

  • @jessesewell7922
    @jessesewell7922 8 лет назад +83

    "You can only go with loves in this life."
    "Never went to College, I dont believe in College for writers. I think its very dangerous. Too many Professors are too snobbish and intellectual and the intellect is a great danger to creativity."
    "I have had a sign over my typewrite for 25 years now that say, 'Don't Think'."
    "The worst thing you do when you think is lie."

    • @phoebecatgirl9968
      @phoebecatgirl9968 7 лет назад +1

      AMEN!

    • @SuperBartles
      @SuperBartles 7 лет назад +6

      Ted Hughes had this serious problem in Uni (Cambridge) - he had these weird dreams telling him (so he thought) that studying English Literature was killing him as a writer. So he changed to Anthropology.

    • @turtleanton6539
      @turtleanton6539 4 года назад

      ❤❤❤

  • @ParanormalMetalMan
    @ParanormalMetalMan 10 лет назад +38

    I LOVE his books! what an inspiring person!

    • @stacylarge5636
      @stacylarge5636 5 лет назад +2

      I too am lifelong fan

    • @tntramzy12
      @tntramzy12 4 года назад +1

      Which one should I read first?

    • @ParanormalMetalMan
      @ParanormalMetalMan 4 года назад +2

      @@tntramzy12 the illustrated man is a good starting point or Fahrenheit 451

  • @ramans5639
    @ramans5639 5 лет назад +5

    My favourite Author. Still enjoy reading his books.. RIP sir.

  • @mikemohn3379
    @mikemohn3379 10 лет назад +18

    What a great, great thinker and imaginer.

  • @viveviveka2651
    @viveviveka2651 2 года назад +2

    Ray Bradbury was my favorite writer during a period of my life.

  • @octopibingo
    @octopibingo 9 лет назад +11

    This is a clinic on the good interview. Only one interruption from Day, but only to clarify a point Ray made. Of course it helps that Ray loved to talk.

  • @fromthepeanutgallery1084
    @fromthepeanutgallery1084 5 лет назад +4

    Bradbury fell in love with architecture at eight. Always amazes me about people that never went to college, how they always put it down. I went to art school in my 20's and loved it. I'm in my 60's and doing a Masters and love it. We all find love in different places and times. Some at 8 others at 68.

    • @lindsaydoke9308
      @lindsaydoke9308 2 года назад

      @From The Peanut Gallery, 'm sorry your missing his point. Instead of criticism why not accept everyone has alright to an opinion. You have yours and Ray had his .

    • @evolvvartstudio
      @evolvvartstudio 7 месяцев назад

      I mentioned in another comment that Bradbury benefited from his wife’s college education. She studied English at UCLA and edited all his work. So, a bit hypocritical of him to be so harsh in judgment of higher education.

  • @infiniteblueprint7285
    @infiniteblueprint7285 5 лет назад +19

    I read some of his writings when I was quite young. This is the first interview of Ray Bradbury that I have seen and it was sublime viewing.
    I concur with Bryan Briggs this is how talk shows can be.
    It is also a great reminder that we have the 'net for just this very thing. The archiving and sharing of wonderfull ideas, perspectives and inspiration.
    Thank you very much for the video

  • @LenHummelChannel
    @LenHummelChannel 11 лет назад +16

    These are truly GREAT interviews. thank you for uploading them for the world to view and relish.

  • @ibelieveintheone6869
    @ibelieveintheone6869 10 лет назад +11

    He is very inspirational.

  • @TheCrossroads533
    @TheCrossroads533 10 лет назад +15

    The man was a Nafud dust devil, an X-15 sonic boom, an anarchist's explosion in a crowded marketplace! He is gone now yet I still love him and am so proud to have corresponded with him just a bit as a teen. He was a stern taskmaster but he never ignored a fan. While I personally never wrote fiction (not yet anyhow), strangely, reading Bradbury opened locked doors for me to nonfiction and ideas buried deep within me. He is a treasure that will never be lost. And what a magnificent legacy he leaves behind (we, his readers, are his beneficiaries). And while many of his tales were cautionary, his brash optimism rubbed off; his work had a tonic effect, like an injection of a Disney like serum flooding the psyche, infusing the receptive patient with a strength to look past the vapid popular culture of the moment. He was a literary magician who built world's fair pavilions of the mind and myths about our pasts, our futures, and most importantly, our eternal nows.

  • @LenHummelChannel
    @LenHummelChannel 7 лет назад +5

    This man knew how to conduct A REAL interview and inquire further into the person and their thought and art.

  • @Scienceorc
    @Scienceorc 12 лет назад +5

    Rest in peace. See you at mars, my dear friend. You made my childhood.

  • @RayFromLUCKYSHADOW
    @RayFromLUCKYSHADOW 9 лет назад +7

    Great man. I've watched this twice now, and I'm sure I'll come back again.

  • @5809AUJG
    @5809AUJG 9 лет назад +26

    I've had him on my mind whenever I work on a painting...and he's right. Let your love take you in its arms, let it warm you and show you the way...and it works. When I try to think my way through a painting, I end up breaking my dream, and the joy dries up and dies. This is not to say, "Don't think", ever. Because of the style I work in, I've had to learn anatomy and physiology and light and shadow and color and everything else. The world's in hellish, deadly trouble today, because too many people simply don't think, especially beyond the next five minutes. But what this wonderful and very beautiful and much-beloved genius said is, let it happen. Let it come to you, and you go with it, and make something from your heart with it, and it will be good. Let it be born of fire and love and deep passion and excitement, and it will be so. He has been my greatest teacher for many years. I wept when he died. He is irreplaceable, and I miss not having him in the world. But everything he was, and still is, remains with us, if we've got the good sense to listen for him, and let him come to us. I love to listen to the fantastic recording he made of his gorgeous "Christus Apollo", scored by the great Jerry Goldsmith, and read by the wonderful and amazing Sir Anthony Hopkins......and what I make, what I paint, as I listen, is very good. Mr. Bradbury, I love you. I always will.

    • @derycktrahair8108
      @derycktrahair8108 5 лет назад +4

      You are right. It works in Music too. Technique is taken for granted. What you do with it = Art. So many show off, but we enjoy the ones who play with sincerity. Thanks for sharing your ideas, & all the best with your painting.

    • @Ek70R
      @Ek70R 4 года назад +1

      Hey thank you for sharing your experience. I wish you the best with your art. I am so sad I discovered Bradbury just after he died. Ever since I have fallen in love with his teachings and his way of life. His skin exudes passion on his work, truly inspirational.

  • @OdesaFilmStudio
    @OdesaFilmStudio 9 лет назад +20

    Respect Ray Bradbury!!!...

  • @wallacelovecraft8942
    @wallacelovecraft8942 2 года назад +2

    I signed on to say that this is a MUST watch. Even if you have no idea who this man really is or read any of his books, like myself, this is one of the most interesting talks that I've heard. The interviewer seems like he knows radbury life in detail and asks great questions as well. An absolute fascinating interview to listen to. I will try to read one of his books someday.

  • @Pimp-Master
    @Pimp-Master 12 лет назад +4

    I heard his standard lecture to a general audience, (not a bunch of wannabee writers) in '73 and never forgot meeting him. He was a very warm guy with lots of animation. I was just a teen at the time and had read the anthology reissues available at that time. Good thing for him that he usually wrote about the human heart, not whatever techie fads were happening back in the fifties. This means that his stories will never go out of date.

  • @armeeuff1
    @armeeuff1 13 лет назад +9

    There are many really good points Ray makes in this interview, like on feeling vs. thinking, science vs. religion, and I value this segment more so than about anything I have heard before on the subjects. He is so sure of how he feels people should be it is awe inspiring(..' if you're not doing something you love, consider suicide') just takes my day to new levels listening to this. Remarkable speaker. 2 Earth and 3 Martian thumbs up!

  • @johnc.bojemski1757
    @johnc.bojemski1757 3 года назад +2

    Two GENIUSES in conversation with each other. Brilliant! We need MORE videos like this one, even on PBS!

  • @RWSCOTT
    @RWSCOTT Год назад +2

    11:26- absolutely right. Thinking about what you want to write is *not* writing, has *nothing to do* with the act of writing. You're either writing or you're not, and thinking about it while not doing it is a self-absorbed waste of time.

  • @anantmedepalli2139
    @anantmedepalli2139 3 месяца назад

    Oh what a lovely insightful interview . He says so much I deeply believe myself but couldn’t articulate so well. Go with feeling . It creates. And keeps you alive , he says. With such conviction and clarity . The intellect is covered in feeling and it emerges he says. And he is right. I do feel guilty about not writing or reading enough tho, haha when he said a life where you aren’t doing something you love isn’t worth living . And this comment is a feeling.

  • @Astroghouls
    @Astroghouls 8 лет назад +2

    This man gives me energy. One of the greatest.

  • @jaimehudson7623
    @jaimehudson7623 Год назад

    Ray gave a lecture at my college. A later one near my home. Most inspiring speaker ever!
    Imagination does give one a 'Vision'. God, we need more like him and Carl Sagan today...

  • @jamesbowers7531
    @jamesbowers7531 7 месяцев назад

    This man was amazing.

  • @JeffersonDinedAlone
    @JeffersonDinedAlone 9 лет назад +16

    For all of the serious stuff said about Bradbury, he was also just good fun.

  • @raymondhummel5211
    @raymondhummel5211 Год назад

    Ray Bradley is so creative in his thinking transferred to print to his wonderful output of writings. Love the fact that he loves the library, and how it can reveal so many new subjects that can enrichen our lives.

  • @Ek70R
    @Ek70R 4 года назад +1

    Bradbury is surely an inspiration, it is important to find your passion, as cliche as thay may be. No amount of self delusion will make you love something you hate or at least feel indiferent to.

  • @megankyte4389
    @megankyte4389 3 года назад +1

    I love this interview, brilliant American treasure

  • @FlowerCarnival2021
    @FlowerCarnival2021 Год назад

    I am so sad I will never be able to meet Ray Bradbury in person and tell him how much his stories mean to me and helped me make so many new friends and get me out of a really dark place in my life and encouraged me to start writing again :

  • @welchburger
    @welchburger 12 лет назад +1

    thank you Ray Bradbury :)

  • @megansspark
    @megansspark 13 лет назад +3

    i love Bradbury... don't think, feel! great man

  • @davidpalmer5966
    @davidpalmer5966 7 месяцев назад

    A great interview, and not just if you're a fan, and not just if you are a writer or want to be one, but for his attitude and wisdom.

  • @StarWoors
    @StarWoors 12 лет назад +1

    So inspirational.

  • @LenHummelChannel
    @LenHummelChannel 11 лет назад +3

    Thank you for uploading these wonderful interviews. Some of the best and most insightful to be found anywhere.

  • @Wizgoht
    @Wizgoht 10 лет назад +5

    R.I.P. Mr.Bradbury

  • @cyberacers
    @cyberacers 5 лет назад +2

    Who you are
    What you want
    What you want to be
    Surprise yourself, find out who you really are and try not to lie, try to tell the truth, all time.
    And only way to do this is by being very active, and very emotional, and get it out of yourself
    Thinking is to be a corrective in our life, its not supposed to be the center of our lives. Living is supposed to be the center of our lives. BEING is supposed to be the center of our life

  • @pdyvl
    @pdyvl 10 лет назад +2

    Happy Birthday, Mr. Bradbury!

  • @jimr4652
    @jimr4652 7 лет назад +1

    What a brilliant man.

  • @octopibingo
    @octopibingo 8 лет назад +21

    One point: Ray didn't have to ponder the questions because he had in essence practiced this talk for years in front of other groups. When you watch his hour long freestyle talk 'An Evening With...' He can do so because of an even longer time spent espousing his ideas. The three times I saw him he said basically the same things, with small additions and variations. It's the repetition of belief.

    • @geniusmchaggis
      @geniusmchaggis 3 года назад +5

      hes just used to repeating his bio and ideas..he was famous...he did many interviews...
      people wanted to know what he thought..
      he was telling the story of his life and thoughts and experiences...
      those arent going to change a lot...
      its natural that he would repeat himself.

  • @octopibingo
    @octopibingo 10 лет назад +7

    15:40 "Everything in art is an aside."

  • @wiisalute
    @wiisalute 5 лет назад +1

    THIS was the reason I started getting into the sci-fi genre. Ever since I read Fahrenheit I started liking dystopian stuff and got into Star Trek for the first time as well as read Asimov's foundation and currently on the second book in the trilogy

  • @wrexxy49
    @wrexxy49 4 года назад +3

    Bradbury's library is my internet.

  • @phoebecatgirl9968
    @phoebecatgirl9968 7 лет назад +1

    Wonderful post! Really nice to hear Bradbury talk about his life/interests/work!

  • @NeoCoding
    @NeoCoding 9 лет назад +6

    Cool stuff! From Russia with love!

  • @sethflix
    @sethflix Год назад

    WONDERFUL INTERVIEW! THANK YOU SO MUCH FOR POSTING THIS!

  • @SuperBartles
    @SuperBartles 7 лет назад +1

    Bloody. Marvellous.

  • @micaylab1
    @micaylab1 3 года назад

    The whole picture of Books is Incredible.

  • @danmcdaid
    @danmcdaid Год назад

    Close your eyes and it could be late era Norm Macdonald talking. Wonderful interview

  • @DavidBridwellMusic
    @DavidBridwellMusic 5 лет назад +1

    Great outlook! Intellectualizing does seem to take the fun out of things

  • @geniusmchaggis
    @geniusmchaggis 6 лет назад +1

    Bradbury was SO self congratulatory...he knew NO bounds of greatness for which he personally did NOT qualify...
    to HIM.....he was the GREATEST human being that ever existed...what a MAN!

    • @geniusmchaggis
      @geniusmchaggis 3 года назад +3

      @Jake Stockton
      btw...ive just watched this interview again after 3yrs
      and for the life of me i cannot find any reason
      why i made the above comment...RB was great here...

    • @williamseigler3408
      @williamseigler3408 Год назад +1

      @@geniusmchaggis hi, don’t be so hard on yourself. He was someone who lived his life to the fullest. At first glance, a guy like that might come off as some of the things you wrote. Best of fortune to you pal.

    • @geniusmchaggis
      @geniusmchaggis Год назад

      @@williamseigler3408
      why thank you WS!...
      trouble is it wasnt first glance
      i had idolized RB for 50 yrs
      before i wrote that!
      in retrospect i really wasnt insulting him..
      i see self aggrandizement as a virtue
      when applicable.
      see Mel Brooks!
      just read MB's autobio...
      MB LOVES MB!...
      and EYE love him for that.

    • @williamseigler3408
      @williamseigler3408 Год назад

      @@geniusmchaggis hi, your point is well taken.

    • @geniusmchaggis
      @geniusmchaggis Год назад

      @@williamseigler3408
      your response is bland
      to say the most.
      are you Spock?

  • @herglowup.honestlyspeaking
    @herglowup.honestlyspeaking Год назад

    If the thrill is gone you'll never make it as an artist.. Well said. You can perhaps but you must wait on the feeling to give it your all.

  • @BikiniDeathSquad
    @BikiniDeathSquad 9 лет назад +3

    a wonderful writer

  • @aerowashburns6004
    @aerowashburns6004 Год назад

    I'd love to hear his thoughts on just about anything. He's endlessly interesting.

  • @raeealdwine9370
    @raeealdwine9370 9 лет назад +1

    Lovely!

  • @insidesmusic
    @insidesmusic Год назад

    incredibly insightful

  • @cristians.3008
    @cristians.3008 3 года назад

    Thank you

  • @dougimmel
    @dougimmel 2 года назад

    Funny that Kazantzakis (Saviors of God, Z ) died in 1957, the year of Sputnik. I was born in 1957, have always loved Bradbury (also grew up in Midwest) and love Kazantzakis. hmmm. This was FUN. Loved the counterbalance to 'thinking' (overthinking) as distinct from intellect (Bradbury clearly has a fine intellect, yet it is more typified or shines more brightly because of his visualization, rhythm, fantasy, etc. I appreciate the feeling balancing thought.

  • @siukong
    @siukong 12 лет назад +1

    It's sad when you watch a wonderful interview, then find out the next day that its subject just died.

  • @geoffjoffy
    @geoffjoffy 3 года назад

    Thanks

  • @SanaOvaisKhan
    @SanaOvaisKhan 12 лет назад

    Thank you, Mr. Bradbury. Rest In Peace.

  • @zyderman2050
    @zyderman2050 11 лет назад +1

    Oh man. I've only seen him in the video "A Night with Ray Bradbury" from 2001. I don't know why I'm surprised how he sounds different.

  • @rachelthompson9324
    @rachelthompson9324 4 года назад +1

    His life was much like mine. I'm a writer ,too.

  • @evolvvartstudio
    @evolvvartstudio 7 месяцев назад

    I love Ray Bradbury’s work. That said, for a man who looked down on college education, he sure benefited from his wife’s. She attended UCLA as an English major, spoke four languages, and edited all of his work (besides working an outside job to keep them afloat financially in the early years). He always seemed appreciative of her efforts, but there is a bit of hypocrisy in his harsh judgment of higher education.

    • @kevinrymes7727
      @kevinrymes7727 3 месяца назад

      To be fair, he seemed to specify he didn’t like college for writers specifically and not merely college in a general sense

  • @emmarose4234
    @emmarose4234 3 года назад

    There’s a daylily named Ray Bradbury Memorial. ❤️

  • @DANAMIONLINE
    @DANAMIONLINE 12 лет назад

    Great insight

  • @JohnAnthonyMiller1
    @JohnAnthonyMiller1 13 лет назад

    Just Great! -John Anthony Miller

  • @bluesnagg
    @bluesnagg 12 лет назад +4

    Ray Bradbury was fascinated with space travel, but he didn't like "Star Trek." He was offered a chance to write for Gene Roddenberry, but turned it all down.

  • @charlespeterson3798
    @charlespeterson3798 5 лет назад +3

    My idea of an eternal life would be the ability to change dimensions and elements. Native American mythologies, turning into the wind for a period of time, sun light, moonlightorgasm.

  • @lise4369
    @lise4369 7 лет назад +2

    24:00 I always said this...I said I'd only get my license in my thirties because I'd be mature enough and responsible enough to drive as safely as I possibly could.

    • @lise4369
      @lise4369 7 лет назад +1

      but I went skydiving in my mid twenties though...

  • @Cholostallion
    @Cholostallion 6 лет назад +1

    BRADBURY RULES!

  • @avidian888
    @avidian888 8 лет назад

    Amazing!

  •  5 лет назад

    On 1/22/74 I was in Basic training at Lackland AFB, San Antonio TX. How about that Flight 1595. We were all wanabe hippies from Cleveland and Tampa Bay. What a crew!

  • @mangalapalliv
    @mangalapalliv Год назад +3

    I run a reading club for children in the apartment complex I live. We read the following stories of Ray: The Fog Horn, The City, The Last Night of the World, Mexico Calling, The Smile, The Picasso Summer, The Scythe, The Night, The Fox and the Forest, The Long Rain, The Pedestrian, All Summer in a Day, Kaleidoscope, There Will Come Soft Rains, The Poems, A Season of Disbelief, Another Fine Mess, The One Who Waits, The Crowd, The Coffin, Marionettes Inc., Mars is Heaven, The Emissary, The Man Upstairs, The Small Assassin, Skleton, The Far-Away Guitar (Miss Bidwell), The Sea Shell, Hail and Farewell, The Wind, Bless Me, Father for I have Sinned, Zero Hour, The Rocket, A Sound of Thunder, The Veldt, The Golden Kite, The Silver Wind, The Flying Machine, A Story of Love, Fever Dream, Aqueduct, The Wilderness, The Earth Men, A Piece of Wood, The Visitor, The Other Foot, The Man................. Kids love his stories and they have a special place for him in their hearts......

  • @wiisalute
    @wiisalute 5 лет назад +2

    He and Isaac Asimov were great

  • @coopernickerson7470
    @coopernickerson7470 Год назад

    Day at night.,,sounded like Ray wrote Something wicked this way come. Those two boys in the book.

  • @r.b.4611
    @r.b.4611 9 лет назад +11

    Think I can work out where all the murderous cars and speeds in Fahrenheit 451 came from now.

    • @maxwelljacobs8830
      @maxwelljacobs8830 5 лет назад +2

      Alexa text jimmy hi its grandma and i love you. Please call me back today is my birthday and im so alone. Alexa send alexa stop thats all stop alexa stop send it alexa send hit end

  • @quicksilvertongue3248
    @quicksilvertongue3248 Год назад

    Never knew Ray could also draw as well as write. I wonder if he could have made comic books if he cared to.

  • @JEBEmpires
    @JEBEmpires Год назад

    I want the theme song for this show!

  • @TruthSurge
    @TruthSurge 13 лет назад +7

    @RuthSLHare He says that because of the old "nothing new under the sun" and if the plot is never new then you must find your enjoyment in the journey, rather than the destination. It's kind of true. Very hard to write a plot that people can't guess halfway thru. I mean, take the lord of the rings. 3 entire novels to basically say that bad guy gets destroyed by dropping a ring into lava. We kind of KNOW he's going to get it but he strings it out for 3 novels. hahah

    • @corpsefoot758
      @corpsefoot758 3 года назад +1

      To be fair though, there are some narratives where we can’t really see the ending coming (I’d name some famous examples, but I don’t want to spoil any).
      Perhaps that unpredictability is a sign of the times, though, since most of the ones I remember are fairly recent; I’d say we can forgive Tolkien for some “cliche” story structure though, seeing as he wrote Lord of the Rings over 70 years ago :)

  • @turtleanton6539
    @turtleanton6539 4 года назад +2

    🔥

  • @paulzendo6079
    @paulzendo6079 4 года назад +1

    Or Ray could have put it this way :
    ALL YOU NEED IS LOVE 👍

  • @sneezepal
    @sneezepal 12 лет назад +2

    RB was...is an American icon.

  • @HenryCasillas
    @HenryCasillas Год назад

    ☮️

  • @orsorodrigo
    @orsorodrigo 4 месяца назад

    i think " theory " and intellect are neccesary for mastering anything at all, at least you have a unique and rare gift. But the key is that thinking procces and theory have to be at the service of practice ..at the service of art. not vicebersa. theory work for understanding practice.. not vicebersa
    i love bradbury

    • @orsorodrigo
      @orsorodrigo 4 месяца назад

      he said somenthing like " thinking is supposed to ve a corrective to your life , not the center of your life.. living is the center of your life "

  • @timelessrealms
    @timelessrealms Год назад

    👍👍

  • @SoUtHMeMpHis
    @SoUtHMeMpHis 4 года назад

    I really love that intro music 🎶and I loved The Halloween Tree especially the cartoon version. I wish it was a tad more serious tho. I honestly thought as a kid , that the sick kid was going to die/disappear.

  • @MrKeeft1
    @MrKeeft1 6 лет назад +1

    Brilliant forward thinking brain, as have many sci fi writers..so many sci fi prophesies, I keep saying Kirks communicator...DIDNT have a view screen...Treks people hadnt thought that far..warp drive, yes..the Trek Tech Manual is a masterpiece of possibilities...fantasy maybe future fact. The brains..unless they KNEW...