Leadership Lessons From The Great Books #118 – A Midsummer Night’s Dream by William Shakespeare w/Libby Unger
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00:00 Famous play mixes fairies, comedy, and symbolism.
07:27 Shakespeare’s play sets up a 16th-century dynamic.
13:36 Shakespeare draws from myths, and has double meanings.
16:17 Father-daughter relationship, marriage, and love’s impact.
24:13 Courtship’s comparison to drug use historical acceptance.
29:38 Introducing fairies in “A Midsummer Night’s Dream.”
33:28 Oberon confronts Titania about her behavior.
40:48 Comedians are truth-tellers, forcing new perspectives.
46:29 Bill Maher cornered, no room to maneuver.
53:48 Overcoming ego is important for constructive conversations.
01:00:14 Titania’s speech cleverly ties in seasonal shifts.
01:03:04 Oberon wants the changeling boy, but Titania refuses.
01:10:27 Looney Tunes transmits culture through cartoons.
01:14:11 Looney Tunes cartoons from 1930s to 1970s.
01:18:09 Daffy Duck avoids getting shot in Looney Tunes.
01:23:39 TV news developed in 1950s and 1960s.
01:28:44 Internet content slowed down can be impactful.
01:38:11 Rude mechanicals rehearse the play, and chaos ensues.
01:39:54 Shenanigans undo and love as motivators.
01:45:17 Embracing tough love for a productive environment.
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1. Hello. My
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name is Jesan Sorrells, and this is the Leadership Lessons from the Great
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Books podcast, episode number 118
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with our book today. Well, it’s not really a book. It’s our play
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today that continues, our
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journey through the works of Shakespeare
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in August. Now, you know,
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Shakespeare being Shakespeare, most folks reading
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Shakespeare in high school struggle
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with Shakespeare’s plays, and we’ve mentioned this previously on other podcasts,
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struggle because of the language, struggle because of the themes. But
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Shakespeare’s ideas are eternal and are almost
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universal, and they sit, along with the
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Bible, along with, Greek and Roman myths,
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at the basis of Western civilization. They are indeed,
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I would say, one of the building blocks of western
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civilization. And there is no greater
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a play, or maybe no more famous a
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play, than the one we are going to read today.
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This play, mixes,
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fairies. It mixes dream imagery. It mixes
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symbolism, but it also mixes good
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jokes, and it mixes, sort of slapsticky
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humor with higher
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ideals. And it sets as a template or it stands as a
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template for the furtherance of
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entertainment, in a well,
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and and not only entertainment, but also cultural transmission of
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knowledge, for individuals from generation to generation.
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Just like all of Shakespeare’s plays, they’ll still be performing this
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one long after we are all gone.
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Today we are going to look at,
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well, what do you do with a newly captured
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Amazon? How do you get people to fall in love
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and get married? And what happens when
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you, well, when you fall asleep or chance, to
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dream? Today, we are going to read
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A Midsummer Night’s Dream by, of course,
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William Shakespeare. And we are joined today on
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the podcast by our, I guess,
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I could say semi regular guest cohost now. Well,
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there we go. Semi regular. Libby Unger. How are you doing,
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Libby? I’m terrific. Great to see you, Hassan.
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Awesome. Coming off of our last episode that we did
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together where, you know, we looked at,
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we looked at some really, really hard stuff, right, with, with
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totalitarianism and with language. Then we’re gonna move to the
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movie something lighter with with this
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way, something not as not as heavy. And so,
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we’re hoping to, pull some critical analysis out of this. And
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of course, you know, we’re going to read it in the hopefully in the original,
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not hopefully in the original language. And and the version that I have, and you
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can get this online, is the Folger,
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the Folger sorry not Folger Folger Shakespeare Library
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version. Oh it is the same version that Libby has right there there you
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go of A Midsummer Night’s Dream.
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Now one of the interesting things about this
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particular play, and I would of course recommend this to
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anyone reading or trying to consume Shakespeare,
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is you can get an audio version of this as well
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on Audible. And so, I would recommend both
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reading and listening to A Midsummer Night’s Dream,
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in concert with each other. This will help you as a reader
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understand what’s actually going on in the play and understand characters and it’ll feel more
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cinematic. And this play does indeed feel cinematic when you
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read it. But I want to open up with act 1, scene
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1 of A Midsummer Night’s Dream by
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William Shakespeare. Enter Theseus, Hippolyta,
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and Phylo straight with others. Theseus. Now fair
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Hippolyta, our nuptial hour draws on a pace. 4 happy days bring in
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another moon. But, oh me thinks, how slow this moon wanes.
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She lingers my desires like a step dame or a dowager, long withering
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out a young man’s revenue. Hippolyta. 4 days will
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quickly steep themselves in night. 4 nights will quickly dream away the time. And then
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the moon, like to a silver bow, new bent in heaven, shall
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behold the night of our solemnities. Theseus. Go,
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Phylo, straight. Stir up the Athenian youth to merriments. Awake the pert and
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nimble spirit of mirth. Turn melancholy forth to funerals. The
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pale companion is not for our palm. Philostrain, of
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course, exits. Hippolyta, I wooed thee with my sword, and I
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won thy love during doing the injuries. But I will
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wed thee in another key with palm, with triumph, and with
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reveling. Enter Aegias and his daughter Hermaia
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and Lysander and Demetrius. Aegias, happy B
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Theseus, our renowned duke. Theseus, thanks, good Aegias.
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What’s the news with thee? Aegias, full of vexation come I with
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complaint against my child, my daughter Hamia. Stand forth,
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Demetrius, my noble lord. This man hath my consent to marry her. Stand
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forth Lysander and be my and my gracious duke. This man
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hath bewitched the bosom of my child. Thou, thou,
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Alexander, thou hast given her runs and interchange love tokens with my
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child. Thou hast by moonlight at her window sung with
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feigning voice versus of feigning love and stolen the impression of
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her fantasy with bracelets of thy hair, rings, gods,
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conceits, knacks, trifles, nose gaze, sweet meets,
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messengers of strong, prevailment, and unheartened youth. With cunning hast thou
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filched my daughter’s heart, turned her obedience, which is due to
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me to stubborn harshness. And my gracious
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duke be it so she will not hear before your grace consent to Mary was
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Demetrius. I beg the ancient privilege of Athens as she
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is mine. I may dispose of her, which shall be either to this
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gentleman or to her death according to our law immediately provided in
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that case. Theseus, what say you,
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Hermaiah? Be advised fair may to you your father should be as a
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god, one that composed your beauties, yea, and one
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to whom you are, but as form and wax by him
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and printed and within his power to leave the figure or disfigure it.
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Demetrius is a worthy gentleman.
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I’m gonna pause right there because that sort
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of sets up the ideas that begin
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to really drive A Midsummer Night’s Dream
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where Theseus, the Duke of Athens, is planning the festivities of his
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upcoming wedding to the newly captured Amazon Hippolyta.
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And Aegis arrives with his daughter Hermaia and her 2 suitors,
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Lysander, the man she wants to marry, and Demetrius, the man her father wants her
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to marry. Aegis demands that Theseus enforce Athenian
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law upon Hermaia and execute her if she refuses to marry
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Demetrius. Now this
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is an interesting dynamic that is being set up right at the beginning
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of Shakespeare’s play here because it
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is a it is a well, it is a
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16th century dynamic. That’s number 1. Number 2, it’s a
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dynamic that reads that may ring a little bit false to us, considering
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that we live in the 21st century and we live in
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a world where women can choose who they marry.
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We can even have women run for president, in our country.
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And so the challenges that are immediately
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beset that immediately beset us or set before us
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in wrapping our arms around this play are
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challenges partially of culture, but also partially of the
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passage of about 500 years in between the
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writing of this play and, of course, the
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times in which we live now.
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All of this is very interesting because we are in August in an election year
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in the United States of America and a woman is running for president on a
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major, presidential platform ticket.
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And, and so issues or maybe not
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issues, but the concerns
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and the, challenges that women face
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are ones that we have consumed ourselves within our culture,
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I would say over the last 50 or 60 years,
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with increasing urgency and increasing pitch.
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Now I don’t know if that’s a good or bad thing, and that’s not what
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we’re going to discuss here today. But my question for Libby, just to open up
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the door here is, first off, what did you think
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of A Midsummer Night’s Dream when you read it? What’s your initial
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impression of the story of the play? And
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then, this first act that sort of sets up this dichotomy between the
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father and the daughter and this challenge of power,
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what do you think about that between as it’s framed up between men and
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women?
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Well, first of all, I loved I loved the play.
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I actually remember it fondly from grade school.
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We did we did 3 Shakespeare plays, and I don’t remember if it was
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1 a year, from or to 5th grade,
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but Taming of the Shrew, Macbeth, and finally, A Midsummer
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Night’s Dream. And I was I think I was
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Puck, or maybe I wanted to be Puck. You know, it was way too
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long ago, but I love the Puck character and how, like,
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mischievous he was. But just the, you know, the
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silliness of bottom name you know, the
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ass, you know, named bottom. Mhmm.
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But but it was a it was fun, and
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you kick this podcast off with reference to some
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of our prior conversations with which, you know,
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The Road to Serfdom and King King Lear, and
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we we’ve had some heavy,
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conversations that seem very relevant.
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You know, they rhyme with our time. Mhmm.
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But, I it was just delightful to read something light.
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Mhmm. But, also, your final question was about the father and
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daughter dynamics. I mean, you know, the the
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culture, let’s not be let’s be unburdened by
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what has been. You know?
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I can think of right now. It’s like, dad, I
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don’t wanna do what you want me to do. Let’s be unburdened by what
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has been. And so there’s
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always gonna be, you know, that fight or the
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tension between, like, parent and child and
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father and daughter, especially, you know,
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500 plus years ago. Now I obviously say something that
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it’s probably blasphemous by many, but
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I’ve all I’ve I’ve seen marriage
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predominantly being an economic occurring for economic
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reasons. And for many, for many generations
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and cycles, it was. Mhmm. I
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do, as I get older, see that it’s about much more than that.
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But, you know, there was a necessity
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around preserving and carrying forward, you know, familial,
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safety that comes with, you know, economics and prosperity.
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Mhmm. But the crime
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for not doing what one’s father says and death?
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Holy cow. That’s a little extreme.
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You’ve, but, you know, it just goes to show how
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we evolve over time from a societal perspective.
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Mhmm. I’m of a big believer that we’re always moving up and to the
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right Mhmm. Meaning that we’re always progressing towards
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thriving, a civilization that’s, you know, thriving
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across all classes and genders and type.
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But, you know, that tension between, you
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know, the current generation and the previous generation is
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timeless. It just manifests differently, and the consequences
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were a bit more extreme back then. But if you think about it
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being an economic relationship, you know, and
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you choose to marry someone other than who
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I’m supportive of Mhmm. You
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you don’t trust them with your prosperity. That could be the end
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of a family and a line. Mhmm. So
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can I maybe rationalize it, you know, for a
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different time? Perhaps. Do I support it? Oh, but
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yeah. Well, it seems as though and and this is one of the
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challenges with Shakespeare. Right? So
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he’s pulling from previous
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references to myths and previous myths even that people
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of his time would have known. So,
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pulling from the, the
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western medieval slash
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getting into the renaissance understanding of,
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Greek and Roman myth. Right? What is an Amazon? What does that word
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even mean? Right? What is who is Demetrius,
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who was Hermia, who is Lysander?
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What do these mean? Because everything has a double meaning in Shakespeare or sometimes even
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a triple meaning. We talked about this even with even with,
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when we talked about, not Macbeth, but, Angler.
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Right? These double and triple meanings,
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you know, and and the character of Theseus from Greek mythology and sort of what
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everybody would have known what those meant. And this is this is the hot house
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of Shakespeare. This is by Shakespeare. This is why people in modern times struggle with
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reading Shakespeare sometimes because those references to those things
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everybody would have known in the 15th century. Or sorry. No. It’s
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16th century. Would have just known. We don’t know those references
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anymore. They’ve dropped out of our culture. Right? And it’s not that
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we don’t know who the Greek and Roman gods were. It’s the depth of
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that knowledge just isn’t and isn’t there, and the depth of that connection isn’t
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there. So Shakespeare’s writing or writing A
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Midsummer Night’s Dream is a light poetic
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comedy. I believe, an early critic
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of of, of Shakespeare’s play in
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the, in the 17th century.
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Samuel Pepis found the play to be quote unquote the
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most insipid ridiculous play that I ever saw in my life,
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quote, even though he did admit that it had,
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quote, some good dancing, some handsome women, which was all to my pleasure.
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Okay. This is
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this is because it was a piece of popular entertainment. It wasn’t meant
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to be sort of like Hamlet where it’s a really a
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sort of a cultural commentary on power or even Macbeth.
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Right? Or even Richard the third where he’s doing historical, you know,
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his historical genre. Here he’s doing comedy. And so comedy is supposed to
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be light. It’s supposed to have references. It’s supposed to have double entendres.
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It’s supposed to have all these different kinds of meanings. We lose all of
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that. I forget it later because he just lost the references. They just dropped out
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of our culture. And so we do, we hear
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we we take the raw thing, right, that raw relationship
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between a father and a daughter or that raw fact of a
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decision, and we pull that forward because that resonates across
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time. But the other context around that, we sort of struggle
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with.
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Which? You talked about marriage being a
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contractual act. I believe it was CS Lewis
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who, infamously said or might have been GK Chesterton. This
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is one of those theologians, writing in the,
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writing in the 20th century said that, you know,
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everything was fine. I might be paraphrasing this poorly. Everything was fine with
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marriage until love entered into entered into the fray. Like,
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the 9th century. Completely. Right? Yeah.
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You know, everything was working out working out really well.
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But marriage as a economic arrangement, we still don’t even really
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like to talk about that in our culture. Even in even
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in modern times. I mean, yeah, we live in an era
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where and the
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myth of the 50% divorce rate is truly a myth. Like, if people
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or not, I shouldn’t say myth. You can question that number. Right?
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Is there a 50% divorce rate among people who are of a certain economic
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strata and who don’t have ideals that bind them together,
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for sure. Absolutely. They go beyond love, absolutely. Divorce rate’s above
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50%. But when people have ideals that bind them together, in
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particular religion, or are or have
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some other external commitment that binds them together that’s not
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material. Divorce rates are not 50%.
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Divorce rates are way the hell lower than that. It’s more like 10%,
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15%. It’s way down. But we don’t talk
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about the stuff that binds people together in marriage.
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And this play is a little bit about that. Talk a little bit about that
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if you if you wanna grab grasp onto some of that. Because they they are
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trying to bind each other together. They’re trying to get married.
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And it’s not just and and there’s 5 interlocking sort of sort of
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ideas going on here. We’re gonna be talking to you. Yeah.
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There’s so many different themes, or
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plots and subplots that all, you know, come into
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play with with that.
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Well and even and even when EGS is talking about,
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how Lysander has sort of,
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interchanged love tokens with his child. Right?
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You know, he says, thou hast by moonlight at her window
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sung, right, with feigning voice versus feigning of
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love that stolen the impression of her fantasy with, and then this is
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objects that he brought to his to his daughter. Right? Bracelets of your hair,
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rings, gods, conceits, all of that. Knacks, trifles,
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nosegates. Nosegates were flowers. Sweetmeats, by
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the way. If you don’t know what sweetmeats are, go look them up. I’m not
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gonna tell you on the podcast. Just go. I don’t wanna ruin the surprise.
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Message is a strong prevailment.
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And that’s how he he sums it up. The father, messengers of strong
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prevailment and unhardened youth. Look. I have 2
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daughters. If some dude sniffing around
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doing all that, I’m going to have an opinion.
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Mhmm. I just I just I I am.
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And my daughter one of my daughters is 19. The other one is 14.
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I’m gonna have an opinion if the 19 year old has a boyfriend’s living around.
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I’m going to have an opinion about that kid.
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Now back in the day, my opinion would have probably held
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more weight than it does currently. Right. But my opinion
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still does hold weight. And so
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there’s there’s these kinds of dynamics that are happening here
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where Shakespeare is setting the setting the the table for
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what will happen later on. But I kinda derailed you on that whole, like,
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marriage is a multiple layered thing sort of a little Yeah. No.
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No. It’s okay. And we can talk about courtship too. I think we’re I think
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we’re I think we’re I go with more of this is the,
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the whole play is about kind of balancing the
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rational and the irrational Yeah.
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Or, you know, the dream state with the, you know, grounded
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present state. Mhmm. And, you
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know, the at an extreme, you can be
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told to love something, and you’ll you’ll love the next
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thing that you’ll see. You know? So I I
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bring that forth to modern day.
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You know, and I can’t help but bring it forth to modern day when we’re
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told you know, you you’re told over and over again
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what right should be Mhmm.
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By all different institutions. And so then you
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see what right is and bad is without
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questioning what is right and
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bad. Yeah. So when I think of, you know,
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you’re in the forest and, you know, and, you know, the sleeping
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yeah. The sleeping woman is, has the flowers
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dappled all over her, and the first person she looks at, she falls in love
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with. And, you know, regardless of the fact that he’s a pompous
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literally a pompous ASS, you know, it’s a
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actor with a donkey head. You know, it like, it it
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it’s this deeper meaning around, you know, we’re told to
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love what we see next Mhmm. Without questioning
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it. Mhmm. You know? And I’m probably putting more depth
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into this play and meaning, but it is really interesting. You know? What you know,
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do we really love what we think You know, what you know, do we really
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love what we think we’re seeing? You you know, to the yeah. At the beginning
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with your her Maya loving Lysander. You know, I
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I is that love or lust?
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Is it real? You know, we saw Romeo and Juliet, kind
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of kind of these same themes around, you know, love
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and willing to die for your love. But, you know, what
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is just lust of of youth? I
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mean, being told what you should love
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versus, like, something that’s gonna be grounding
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and, you you know, your way that makes
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sense on a rational basis through the rest of your
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life. And since on a rational basis doesn’t need mean money.
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It could mean that you have similar values. It could mean that you have similar
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values around children, around how to have a Yeah.
365
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I would agree.
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And subjective being
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with dreams. Right. Right.
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Which Yeah. I would agree with that. Objective being with dreams. Thank you.
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Right. Which we’re gonna talk about here in a little bit. I wanna talk about
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the faith. Yeah. The the well, I’m gonna talk about the fairies. I wanna go
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to Oberon and Titania and
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the fairies and and and the the the the pygmies and the and
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the ass and puck and all of yeah. I wanna I wanna get into all
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of this.
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So courtship. Okay. Last question. So courtship here. That’s
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also a key theme in A Midsummer Night’s Dream.
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So you can court somebody either
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by, you know, knocking them out and
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making them love you, which apparently
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is I mean Extreme. Well, you know, these days, we
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would call it slipping or making, and we would say that’s not, appropriate,
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and we’re going to send you to jail.
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Back in the day, apparently, however,
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you know, the use of the use of flour juice, like, that was that was
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kind of that was kind of fine. Like, nobody nobody really really objected to that
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apparently. And it is there there is an
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idea in here that is floating through
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A Midsummer Night’s Dream. And we again, one of those things we don’t talk
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about, that courtship the act of courtship itself at
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a psychological level is a
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drug that that that converts, like you
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said, lust to to to love. Right? But there’s
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also a sub idea in here that
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if you can’t do the courtship
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thing well, well, you know, we’ve kind of got these
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other it’s kind of got these other things we can kind of give
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you. And that just goes to prove an assertion that
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I’ve made even to my kids, as they have grown up that,
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you know, drugs have existed. And my my 7 year old was asking me about
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this the other day. Drugs have existed for I me. This is
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what human beings do. We find things that make us feel good, and we put
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them in our bodies. And some of them have terrible actually, most all of
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00:25:37,350 –> 00:25:41,190
them have terrible damage. And if we
404
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and particularly if you misuse them, or don’t use them in the in the correct
405
00:25:44,875 –> 00:25:48,715
way. And I think that’s an a sub idea, a second
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order idea that’s sort of running through this play that I
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think people of that time watching it would have would
408
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have connected into immediately. And it’s kind of interesting to me.
409
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I know Midsummer Night’s Dream has been adapted in many different sorts of sorts of
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ways, but I don’t know how heavily,
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in adaptation, that
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has been referenced or even,
413
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sort of leaned on. I know that
414
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there’s a, oh, gosh.
415
00:26:23,090 –> 00:26:26,850
There’s a UK production of A Midsummer Night’s Dream. It’s like set in
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an alternative future. That was, that was shot a
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few years ago. And I know that variations of this
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story, most recently in 2016 on BBC 1,
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have done, like, TV and film adaptations of this. I’ve never
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I got to admit, I’ve never seen a TV adaptation of the
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midsummer night’s dream, nor have I ever seen any of the film once, which is
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sort of a blind spot in my, like, like, reality.
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And so I don’t know how much, you know, reference I’ve seen
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cartoon versions, and we’ll talk about cartoons here in a minute. I’ve seen cartoon versions
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of this, but I’ve never seen a live action version of of it. So,
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I don’t know. I think Shakespeare would lean in on something here that’s also another
427
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human universal. It’s that idea of courtship as a drug.
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You know? Because you know how good you feel when, like, somebody who you really
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like and someone who really likes you is, like, chasing you around
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the block. Everybody knows how good that feels.
431
00:27:23,670 –> 00:27:27,510
Yeah. I mean, love is I I just wrote down. Love is a
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dangerous drug when sought
433
00:27:31,095 –> 00:27:34,615
in its extreme. Mhmm. So when you think yeah.
434
00:27:34,615 –> 00:27:38,375
When love at is the end state or
435
00:27:38,375 –> 00:27:41,895
what you’re what you’re articulating as love, which is just
436
00:27:41,895 –> 00:27:45,035
oxytocin, you know, when sought in the extreme,
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00:27:46,720 –> 00:27:50,400
can be dangerous. And that’s when we see infidelity and, you know, and all
438
00:27:50,400 –> 00:27:53,860
those kind of, things come through or unhealthy
439
00:27:54,880 –> 00:27:58,575
relationships when when the when you’re the
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one you’re you’re you’re seeking is no longer interested in
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you. Right? Mhmm. So that’s that’s an inch
442
00:28:06,174 –> 00:28:09,775
that’s an interesting concept around it being a a
443
00:28:09,775 –> 00:28:13,560
drug, and kind of why you need to
444
00:28:13,560 –> 00:28:16,060
balance, you know, balance it with other
445
00:28:17,880 –> 00:28:20,460
balance the oxytocin lust thing,
446
00:28:21,800 –> 00:28:25,645
you know, with the other values that really matter Right. In,
447
00:28:25,645 –> 00:28:28,865
you know, in life, you know, that have long sustained
448
00:28:30,045 –> 00:28:33,825
positive impact on your life versus just momentarily
449
00:28:35,645 –> 00:28:39,245
momentarily pops. Momentarily pops. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
450
00:28:39,245 –> 00:28:42,980
Alright. Okay. Let’s talk about sleep and
451
00:28:42,980 –> 00:28:45,780
trickery because the we we we’ve referenced this a couple of times. Let’s talk about
452
00:28:45,780 –> 00:28:49,220
the we we talked about the drugs piece, but I wanna talk about
453
00:28:49,220 –> 00:28:52,980
these, let’s talk about these fairies. So I
454
00:28:52,980 –> 00:28:56,679
wanna skip here, a little bit. I’m gonna go to act 2,
455
00:28:57,914 –> 00:29:01,215
scene 1, and I’m gonna move
456
00:29:01,755 –> 00:29:04,815
through this, a little bit quickly. And,
457
00:29:05,515 –> 00:29:08,495
there’s so, you know, there’s there’s there’s
458
00:29:09,210 –> 00:29:12,970
there’s interlocking ideas in A Midsummer Night’s Dream because
459
00:29:12,970 –> 00:29:16,809
it’s not just enough to sort of do a play. It
460
00:29:16,809 –> 00:29:20,350
wasn’t enough for Shakespeare. Write a play
461
00:29:20,809 –> 00:29:23,855
that was merely about,
462
00:29:24,635 –> 00:29:28,155
courtship and romance and marriage. He’d already kinda done that with,
463
00:29:28,475 –> 00:29:31,775
with Romeo and Juliet, which was a tragedy.
464
00:29:32,155 –> 00:29:35,770
And so so he
465
00:29:35,770 –> 00:29:39,370
was he was looking to do something different here with comedy. And and
466
00:29:39,370 –> 00:29:42,970
the challenge, of course, of a writer, which is also something that we talk about
467
00:29:42,970 –> 00:29:46,590
on this podcast, the critical challenge of writing is how do you
468
00:29:46,865 –> 00:29:50,245
how do you introduce, a new element,
469
00:29:51,425 –> 00:29:54,885
to a piece of writing without it being jarring for the audience?
470
00:29:55,505 –> 00:29:57,765
And so he decided he was going to introduce,
471
00:29:58,945 –> 00:30:02,530
fairies and specifically, Oberon and
472
00:30:02,530 –> 00:30:05,350
Titania, king and queen of the fairies.
473
00:30:06,049 –> 00:30:09,270
So we’re gonna look at act 2 scene
474
00:30:09,890 –> 00:30:13,409
1. We’re gonna read through through, sort of some
475
00:30:13,409 –> 00:30:15,250
dialogue here around
476
00:30:18,605 –> 00:30:22,145
well, around how do you make somebody fall in love? All right,
477
00:30:22,765 –> 00:30:26,125
Robin, I’m sorry, act 2 scene 1 of A
478
00:30:26,125 –> 00:30:29,580
Midsummer Night’s Dream. Enter a fairy at one
479
00:30:29,580 –> 00:30:33,420
door and Robin Goodfellow at another. Robin, how
480
00:30:33,420 –> 00:30:37,100
now, spirit, wither wander you? Fairy, over hill over
481
00:30:37,100 –> 00:30:40,460
dale, through bush through briar, over park over pail, through flood through
482
00:30:40,460 –> 00:30:44,245
fire. I do wander everywhere, swifter than the moon’s sphere. And
483
00:30:44,245 –> 00:30:47,865
I serve the fairy queen to do her orbs upon the green. The cowslips
484
00:30:47,924 –> 00:30:51,385
tall her pensioners be in their gold coats spots you see.
485
00:30:51,845 –> 00:30:55,684
These be those be rubies fairy favors in those
486
00:30:55,684 –> 00:30:59,429
freckles live their savors. I must go seek
487
00:30:59,429 –> 00:31:02,809
some dewdrops here and hang up her on every cowl slip’s ear.
488
00:31:03,030 –> 00:31:06,789
Farewell, thou love of spirits. I’ll be gone. Our queen and all her
489
00:31:06,789 –> 00:31:10,549
elves come here and on. Robin, the king doth keep his
490
00:31:10,549 –> 00:31:14,075
rebels here tonight. Take heed the queen. Go not within his
491
00:31:14,075 –> 00:31:17,675
sight. For Oberon, his passing fell in wrath because that
492
00:31:17,675 –> 00:31:21,435
she, as her attendant, hath a lovely boy stolen
493
00:31:21,435 –> 00:31:24,735
from an Indian king. She never had so sweet a changeling.
494
00:31:25,115 –> 00:31:28,799
And jealous Oberon would have the child, knight of his train to
495
00:31:28,799 –> 00:31:32,240
trace the forest’s wild. But she, for force, withholds the loved
496
00:31:32,240 –> 00:31:36,000
boy, crowns him with flowers, and makes him all her joy. And
497
00:31:36,000 –> 00:31:39,775
now they never meet in grove or green by fountain clear or
498
00:31:39,775 –> 00:31:43,455
spangled starlight sheen, but they do square that all their elves
499
00:31:43,455 –> 00:31:46,755
for fear creep into acorn cups and hide them there.
500
00:31:48,495 –> 00:31:52,110
Very. Either I mistake your shape and making quiet or else you are
501
00:31:52,270 –> 00:31:55,870
that shrewd and knavish sprite called Robin Goodfellow. Are
502
00:31:55,870 –> 00:31:59,710
not you he that frights the maidens of the villagerie, skim milk and
503
00:31:59,710 –> 00:32:03,490
sometimes labor in the queered, and bootless make the breathless huswife
504
00:32:03,630 –> 00:32:07,225
churn, and sometime make the drink to bear no barm, mislead
505
00:32:07,225 –> 00:32:10,605
night wanderers laughing at their harm. Those that hobgoblin
506
00:32:10,904 –> 00:32:14,585
call you and sweet talk. You do their work and they shall have
507
00:32:14,585 –> 00:32:18,424
good luck. Are you not he? Robin, thou speakest
508
00:32:18,424 –> 00:32:22,150
to write. I am that merry wanderer of the night. I jest you over
509
00:32:22,150 –> 00:32:25,590
on and make him smile when I affect and being fed horse
510
00:32:25,590 –> 00:32:29,350
beguiled, neighing in likeness of a filly foal. And sometimes I
511
00:32:29,350 –> 00:32:32,790
lurk I in a gossip’s bowl in very likeness of a roast
512
00:32:32,790 –> 00:32:36,285
crab. And when she drinks against her lips, I bob and on her
513
00:32:36,365 –> 00:32:39,885
withered doo lap or the ale. The wisest aunt telling the
514
00:32:39,885 –> 00:32:43,585
saddest tale. Sometimes her 3 foot stool mistakeeth me,
515
00:32:43,965 –> 00:32:47,645
then slip by from her bum, down topple she, and Taylor
516
00:32:47,645 –> 00:32:51,480
cries and falls into a cough. And then the whole choir hold their hips
517
00:32:51,480 –> 00:32:55,320
and laugh and waxen in their mirth and knees and swear and merry our
518
00:32:55,320 –> 00:32:58,760
hour was never wasted there. My room fairy, here comes
519
00:32:58,760 –> 00:33:02,520
Oberon. Fairy, and hear my mistress. Would that
520
00:33:02,520 –> 00:33:06,245
he gone. Enter Oberon, king of the fairies, at one door
521
00:33:06,245 –> 00:33:09,925
with his train, and Titania, the queen at another with
522
00:33:09,925 –> 00:33:13,385
hers. Or Titania, not Titania. Titania,
523
00:33:13,605 –> 00:33:17,365
the queen and another with hers. Oberon. Ill met
524
00:33:17,365 –> 00:33:21,110
by moonlight, proud Titania. Titania. What? Jealous Oberon?
525
00:33:21,170 –> 00:33:24,310
Fairy Skip Hintz. I have forsworn his bed and company.
526
00:33:24,690 –> 00:33:27,990
Oberon. Tarry rash woman. Am not I, thy lord.
527
00:33:28,690 –> 00:33:32,465
Titania. Then I must be thy lady, but I know when thou
528
00:33:32,465 –> 00:33:35,905
hast stolen away from fairy land and in the shape of corn sat all day
529
00:33:35,905 –> 00:33:39,205
playing on pipes of corn, inversing love to amorous Phylida.
530
00:33:39,745 –> 00:33:43,425
Why art thou here? Come from the farthest steep of India, but
531
00:33:43,425 –> 00:33:47,040
that forsooth the bouncing Amazon, your buskinned mistress, and
532
00:33:47,040 –> 00:33:50,800
your warrior love, to Theseus must be wedded, and you come to give
533
00:33:50,800 –> 00:33:53,060
her their bed joy and prosperity?
534
00:33:54,400 –> 00:33:57,860
Oberon. How canst thou, thus for shame, Titania,
535
00:33:58,240 –> 00:34:01,620
glance at my credit with Hippolyta, knowing that I,
536
00:34:01,795 –> 00:34:05,475
knowing I know thy love to Theseus, didst thou not lead
537
00:34:05,475 –> 00:34:08,835
him through the glimmering night from Paragonu, whom he
538
00:34:08,835 –> 00:34:12,435
ravished, and make him with fair Augeleus break his faith with
539
00:34:12,435 –> 00:34:16,280
Adriaan and Anteopa? Natania, these are forgeries
540
00:34:16,280 –> 00:34:19,960
of jealousy. And never since the middle summer spring met we on hill and
541
00:34:19,960 –> 00:34:23,719
dale or forest or me by paved fountain or by rushy brook or in the
542
00:34:23,719 –> 00:34:27,400
beached margant of the sea to dance our ringlets to the whistling
543
00:34:27,400 –> 00:34:31,245
wind. But with thy brawls thou hast disturbed our sport. Therefore the
544
00:34:31,245 –> 00:34:34,764
winds, piping to us in vain and is in revenge, have sucked up from the
545
00:34:34,764 –> 00:34:38,284
sea contagious fogs, which, falling in the land, hath every pelting
546
00:34:38,284 –> 00:34:41,264
river made so proud that they have overborne their continents.
547
00:34:42,440 –> 00:34:45,960
The ox hath therefore stretched his yoke in vain. The plowman lost his
548
00:34:45,960 –> 00:34:49,480
sweat, and the green corn hath rotted. Ears youth attained a
549
00:34:49,480 –> 00:34:53,080
beard. The fold stands empty in the drowned field and crowds are
550
00:34:53,080 –> 00:34:56,924
fatted with murrain flock. The 9 men’s morse is filled with mud, and the
551
00:34:56,924 –> 00:34:59,904
quaint mazes in the wanton green for lack of tread are undistinguishable.
552
00:35:00,684 –> 00:35:04,525
Human mortals want their winter here. No night is now with him
553
00:35:04,525 –> 00:35:08,065
or Carol blessed. Therefore the moon, the governess of floods,
554
00:35:08,125 –> 00:35:11,720
pale in her anger, washes all the air that romantic
555
00:35:11,780 –> 00:35:15,460
diseases do abound. As thorough this distemperature we see the seasons
556
00:35:15,460 –> 00:35:19,060
alter, hoary headed frost, swollen fresh lap of the crimson
557
00:35:19,060 –> 00:35:22,820
rose, and old hymns, then an icy crown, an odorous chaplet
558
00:35:22,820 –> 00:35:26,119
of sweet summer buds, is, as in mockery, set.
559
00:35:26,565 –> 00:35:30,405
Spring this summer, the chilling autumn, angry winter, change their
560
00:35:30,405 –> 00:35:33,785
wanted liveries, and the amazed world by their increase
561
00:35:34,325 –> 00:35:38,085
now knows not which is which. And the same progeny of
562
00:35:38,085 –> 00:35:40,825
evils comes from our debate, from our dissension.
563
00:35:41,850 –> 00:35:45,070
We are their parents and original.
564
00:35:54,105 –> 00:35:57,165
Titania has become unburdened by what has been.
565
00:36:06,830 –> 00:36:10,510
It’s so hard to resist. It’s it’s just it’s just right
566
00:36:10,510 –> 00:36:12,850
there. It’s it’s so right there.
567
00:36:17,310 –> 00:36:21,135
So let’s see. In act 2, scene 1,
568
00:36:21,135 –> 00:36:24,115
what do we got here? What are we working with? So,
569
00:36:26,815 –> 00:36:30,515
sort of a subplot, right, in A Bidsummer Night’s Dream between,
570
00:36:31,055 –> 00:36:33,875
between these two fairies, the king and queen of fairies,
571
00:36:34,869 –> 00:36:38,330
orally over the possession of, as was stated at the beginning
572
00:36:38,790 –> 00:36:42,010
of act, of scene 1, a young Indian boy.
573
00:36:43,510 –> 00:36:47,030
Oberon of course orders Puck, in this scene
574
00:36:47,030 –> 00:36:50,765
later on to obtain a special flower that makes people fall in
575
00:36:50,765 –> 00:36:54,444
love with the next creature they see. Now
576
00:36:54,444 –> 00:36:58,204
Oberon wants to use this, of course, to make Titania fall in love with
577
00:36:58,204 –> 00:37:01,905
the beast and use her infatuation to get the Indian boy away from her.
578
00:37:02,349 –> 00:37:05,950
Demetrius, of course, comes in to the play at this
579
00:37:05,950 –> 00:37:09,470
point, pursued by Helena. And then when Robin
580
00:37:09,470 –> 00:37:13,150
returns Oberon, who sympathizes with Helena’s love, orders him to
581
00:37:13,150 –> 00:37:16,655
find the Athenian man, Demetrius, and apply some of the flower’s
582
00:37:16,655 –> 00:37:18,435
magic nectar to his eyes.
583
00:37:20,095 –> 00:37:23,395
Magic nectar, sleeping, dreams, memory,
584
00:37:23,455 –> 00:37:26,995
trickery. Mostly trickery is what’s on display
585
00:37:27,215 –> 00:37:30,900
here. And of course we see this in the character of
586
00:37:30,900 –> 00:37:34,440
Robin Goodfellow, a puckish fellow such as it were,
587
00:37:34,740 –> 00:37:38,579
who is the one who obtains the
588
00:37:38,579 –> 00:37:42,420
special flower, right, and delivers it. Because as he stated
589
00:37:42,420 –> 00:37:45,944
when he was speaking to the fairy, right at the beginning of,
590
00:37:46,424 –> 00:37:48,285
act 2 scene 1,
591
00:37:50,664 –> 00:37:54,365
he is the one who is the merry wanderer
592
00:37:54,424 –> 00:37:58,025
of the night. He jests over on and makes
593
00:37:58,025 –> 00:38:01,820
him smile. He’s the
594
00:38:01,820 –> 00:38:05,340
one who lurks, in a gossip’s bowl,
595
00:38:05,340 –> 00:38:08,380
right, and causes her to to,
596
00:38:09,020 –> 00:38:12,734
to, spill her ale. Right? And, of
597
00:38:12,734 –> 00:38:15,795
course, to spill information from her lips.
598
00:38:17,375 –> 00:38:21,214
You know, he’s the one who, when the wisest aunt is telling
599
00:38:21,214 –> 00:38:24,894
the saddest tale, is mistaken for a 3 foot stool and
600
00:38:24,894 –> 00:38:28,619
then causes her to fall down, which, by the way, everybody was watching this play
601
00:38:28,619 –> 00:38:32,460
live back in the, back in 16th
602
00:38:32,460 –> 00:38:35,420
century would have laughed when they when they would have seen this because they would
603
00:38:35,420 –> 00:38:39,180
have gotten the reference immediately. And then, so
604
00:38:39,180 –> 00:38:42,605
so he’s a he’s a he’s a court jester,
605
00:38:42,745 –> 00:38:45,725
such as it were. He’s a he’s a comedian.
606
00:38:47,065 –> 00:38:50,285
He’s weaving humor into
607
00:38:51,065 –> 00:38:54,905
his approach to the world, but he’s also a
608
00:38:54,905 –> 00:38:58,710
servant of the king, which is something else that we that we don’t
609
00:38:58,710 –> 00:39:02,170
talk about too much. And so let’s kick off with that. So
610
00:39:03,670 –> 00:39:07,110
comedy. Right? Like, we talked a little bit on this podcast, in particular,
611
00:39:07,110 –> 00:39:10,875
Libby, a little bit about comedy. And I’m a
612
00:39:10,875 –> 00:39:14,715
big fan of folks like Dave Chappelle and Chris Rock and Jerry
613
00:39:14,715 –> 00:39:18,255
Seinfeld, and I’m a big fan of stand up comedy in general,
614
00:39:18,395 –> 00:39:22,095
Marc Maron, because I think stand up comedy is really hard.
615
00:39:22,155 –> 00:39:25,770
But I also think it’s a form of trickery. It’s
616
00:39:26,390 –> 00:39:30,230
it’s it’s taking something that we know is either
617
00:39:30,230 –> 00:39:33,850
tragic or heroic or dramatic and and
618
00:39:33,990 –> 00:39:37,770
finding the funny twist in it. I I remember infamously
619
00:39:37,910 –> 00:39:41,675
that Steve the comedian Steve Harvey back in the day, was
620
00:39:41,675 –> 00:39:45,515
being interviewed. And the interviewer asked him, you know, how does he come
621
00:39:45,515 –> 00:39:49,195
up with his jokes? And Steve said, you have to understand, every
622
00:39:49,195 –> 00:39:52,975
single time a tragedy happens, every comedian on the planet
623
00:39:53,670 –> 00:39:57,050
already has the joke. We just can’t say it.
624
00:39:59,670 –> 00:40:02,730
Yeah. And humor
625
00:40:03,910 –> 00:40:07,675
is a means of trickery. Humor is
626
00:40:07,675 –> 00:40:11,115
a means of getting across an
627
00:40:11,115 –> 00:40:14,795
idea, in a in a
628
00:40:14,795 –> 00:40:18,335
package that people will laugh and immediately
629
00:40:18,795 –> 00:40:22,430
accept. So, Olivia, I know you like you said you like the role of Puck
630
00:40:22,430 –> 00:40:25,790
and you like Puck there. What do what do you like about Puck? How is
631
00:40:25,790 –> 00:40:27,970
Puck a court jester? And,
632
00:40:29,390 –> 00:40:33,170
here’s a leadership question for you. Do leaders need a court jester?
633
00:40:37,375 –> 00:40:41,135
Yes. Yes. Yes.
634
00:40:41,135 –> 00:40:43,875
Leaders need court gestures. They need the truth tellers.
635
00:40:47,880 –> 00:40:50,220
It you know, and that’s what comedians are.
636
00:40:51,480 –> 00:40:55,240
Yeah. That’s what, the gestures are. They’re the truth
637
00:40:55,240 –> 00:40:58,920
tellers, and
638
00:40:58,920 –> 00:41:02,519
they aren’t always the most popular, you
639
00:41:02,519 –> 00:41:06,015
know, when you you turn they turn the light
640
00:41:06,015 –> 00:41:08,915
on that which does not want the light turned on them.
641
00:41:10,015 –> 00:41:13,475
But when I think about
642
00:41:13,855 –> 00:41:17,615
what they’re doing, you know, is they’re essentially knocking you out of your
643
00:41:17,615 –> 00:41:21,020
thought process and your thought patterns. And so they’re forcing you to
644
00:41:21,020 –> 00:41:24,620
think differently, about what you’re
645
00:41:24,620 –> 00:41:28,380
observing than you currently are. And by
646
00:41:28,380 –> 00:41:31,820
breaking that thought pattern, you know, and especially, like, in
647
00:41:31,820 –> 00:41:35,415
tragedies, You know, you can have people who are on that hamster
648
00:41:35,474 –> 00:41:39,234
wheel of, pain and victimology and,
649
00:41:39,234 –> 00:41:42,675
you know, and sadness. And just that moment of
650
00:41:42,675 –> 00:41:45,575
light can break you out of that to laugh
651
00:41:46,195 –> 00:41:50,010
and, you know, it is over
652
00:41:50,250 –> 00:41:53,770
it’s overset in its tripe, but, you know, but light is
653
00:41:53,770 –> 00:41:54,890
what, you know
654
00:41:57,290 –> 00:42:00,670
well, light is what makes the, you know, the roaches
655
00:42:00,810 –> 00:42:04,510
scatter, but it does actually make the darkness go away.
656
00:42:04,944 –> 00:42:08,405
Mhmm. And, but what I like about
657
00:42:08,545 –> 00:42:11,845
Puck, you know, is he’s he’s not necessarily
658
00:42:12,145 –> 00:42:14,325
light. Mhmm. But the mischievousness,
659
00:42:16,224 –> 00:42:19,850
the playfulness, that’s and bringing in the fun and
660
00:42:19,850 –> 00:42:23,550
levity into moments. That’s what, you know,
661
00:42:23,850 –> 00:42:27,530
that’s what helps keep us all lighter is
662
00:42:27,530 –> 00:42:31,130
bringing, like, levity into moments, you know, and not taking life
663
00:42:31,130 –> 00:42:34,855
so seriously. I I
664
00:42:34,855 –> 00:42:38,694
often say that life is too short to take seriously, and the older I
665
00:42:38,694 –> 00:42:42,454
get, the more I mean that. You know? Like, life
666
00:42:42,454 –> 00:42:46,075
will go on. Have some fun. So a good little trickery.
667
00:42:46,214 –> 00:42:49,680
But Well, there’s also a little bit
668
00:42:49,680 –> 00:42:53,120
of is it interesting you mentioned he’s
669
00:42:53,120 –> 00:42:56,900
he’s thought of as being funny, but he’s actually mischievous.
670
00:42:57,120 –> 00:43:00,575
Right? The the Puck character, or the character of
671
00:43:00,575 –> 00:43:02,595
Puck, Robin Goodfellow.
672
00:43:05,494 –> 00:43:05,994
The
673
00:43:09,134 –> 00:43:12,960
one of the the the things that’s interesting. So the the comedian, Bill Burr,
674
00:43:12,960 –> 00:43:16,640
was actually being interviewed by Jerry Seinfeld on a comedian that’s in cars getting
675
00:43:16,640 –> 00:43:20,080
coffee, right, one time. And and this this stuff sticks out to
676
00:43:20,080 –> 00:43:23,599
me. Bill Burr goes he says to to Bill he says
677
00:43:23,599 –> 00:43:27,325
to Jerry, You’re actually
678
00:43:27,325 –> 00:43:31,165
very angry. But, like, you hide it because
679
00:43:31,165 –> 00:43:33,645
you have, like, this lilt that goes up in your voice at the end of
680
00:43:33,645 –> 00:43:37,405
every joke. And so people forget how angry you actually are and
681
00:43:37,405 –> 00:43:40,810
you’re irritated about everything. But I hear it.
682
00:43:40,810 –> 00:43:44,569
Ew. Right. I hear it. But you, like, you hide it
683
00:43:44,569 –> 00:43:48,410
so well. And Jerry goes, oh, no. Yeah. You’re exactly you’re completely correct. I’m
684
00:43:48,410 –> 00:43:52,170
angry about everything all the time. And then he of course, he
685
00:43:52,170 –> 00:43:55,605
laughs, and then Bill laughs. And Bill’s like, you made an entire career off of
686
00:43:55,605 –> 00:43:59,145
people not understanding that you’re actually irritable about all of this.
687
00:43:59,445 –> 00:44:02,025
And this is this is the the cut underneath
688
00:44:02,965 –> 00:44:06,725
Right? Because it’s not just the joke on
689
00:44:06,725 –> 00:44:10,140
top. It’s the the negative things
690
00:44:10,140 –> 00:44:13,980
underneath. So you got a little bit of this with, with with folks like,
691
00:44:14,060 –> 00:44:17,900
what’s his name? Oh, gosh.
692
00:44:17,900 –> 00:44:21,705
Daniel Convenience back in the eighties. Bill Hicks.
693
00:44:21,705 –> 00:44:25,545
Yes. So Bill Hicks. Right? Bill Hicks, Mark Marron, those kinds of guys
694
00:44:25,545 –> 00:44:28,365
where like, I watched Mark Marron come out one time.
695
00:44:29,225 –> 00:44:32,985
But you know he’s angry. Oh, yeah. Oh, but oh, please. Oh,
696
00:44:32,985 –> 00:44:36,340
please. Yes. He’s give me a break. Break. And he comes out with this pile
697
00:44:36,340 –> 00:44:39,860
of, like, notebook papers and just puts them down and he just
698
00:44:39,860 –> 00:44:42,740
starts talking. And, you know, and,
699
00:44:43,540 –> 00:44:46,360
so there’s how does how does the jokester
700
00:44:48,340 –> 00:44:51,265
and I don’t want to pull it apart because it’s it’s comedy and it’s gossamer
701
00:44:51,265 –> 00:44:55,105
and all that. I don’t want to pull it too much apart. But is it
702
00:44:55,105 –> 00:44:58,405
okay to be angry? Not okay.
703
00:44:58,865 –> 00:45:02,540
Is it if you’re the court jester and you’re
704
00:45:02,540 –> 00:45:06,260
supposed to be pointing out that the emperor has no clothes, I’m mixing
705
00:45:06,260 –> 00:45:09,900
a bunch of metaphors here. Yeah. Is it okay to be angry about
706
00:45:09,900 –> 00:45:13,660
that? Is that fine? No. That is actually
707
00:45:13,660 –> 00:45:16,645
kinda laughing at the truth. Right? Like, that’s what
708
00:45:17,505 –> 00:45:21,105
I think is is so important is, you know, is that sometimes we wake up
709
00:45:21,105 –> 00:45:24,945
to our own truths. Right? And, yes, I’m I’m angry,
710
00:45:24,945 –> 00:45:28,545
but I don’t wanna be, or, like, I wanna bring levity to it. Like, I
711
00:45:28,545 –> 00:45:31,910
wanna find the humor in that which I’m, like, getting
712
00:45:31,970 –> 00:45:35,569
irritated about. And that’s what Seinfeld is always doing
713
00:45:35,569 –> 00:45:39,010
is, yeah, he gets irritated, but he’s finding levity in it.
714
00:45:39,010 –> 00:45:42,770
Right. I actually thought you were gonna bring up Bill Burr and Bill
715
00:45:42,770 –> 00:45:46,155
Maher. Oh, well yeah. I knew. That
716
00:45:46,475 –> 00:45:50,235
was the best. Like, Bill Burr was going after Bill Maher
717
00:45:50,235 –> 00:45:53,935
for his haughty elite intellectualism. And it was
718
00:45:54,155 –> 00:45:57,835
awesome. Right? Like, because, you know, Bill
719
00:45:57,835 –> 00:46:01,570
was Mar was not apologizing, and he thought, you
720
00:46:01,570 –> 00:46:05,410
know, he wasn’t finding any levity at all in his intellectualism. He’s
721
00:46:05,410 –> 00:46:09,250
like, I actually am superior to you. It was the
722
00:46:09,250 –> 00:46:12,515
most it was the most uncomfortable. So the what we’re referencing It was. If you
723
00:46:12,515 –> 00:46:15,235
go back and listen to, oh gosh. I don’t know. It’s been released in the
724
00:46:15,235 –> 00:46:18,115
last 2 or 3 months. You can go find it on the Internet. Yeah. Bill
725
00:46:18,115 –> 00:46:19,895
Maher’s episode of Club Random where he interviewed Bill Burr.
726
00:46:23,420 –> 00:46:27,200
And you’re right. I was listening to this while I was mowing my front lawn,
727
00:46:27,580 –> 00:46:31,260
and I was like, oh my god. He didn’t give him
728
00:46:31,260 –> 00:46:34,460
any room to breathe at all. And I don’t think
729
00:46:34,620 –> 00:46:38,380
None. None. And I don’t think Bill Maher’s ever been dealt with like
730
00:46:38,380 –> 00:46:42,135
that before. It was and it was kind of and but where’s Bill gonna
731
00:46:42,135 –> 00:46:44,535
go? It’s his own shell. Like, are you gonna walk off your own shell? Like,
732
00:46:44,535 –> 00:46:48,375
what are you gonna do? So you’re stuck there getting pushed
733
00:46:48,375 –> 00:46:51,035
into a corner by a guy who
734
00:46:52,240 –> 00:46:55,360
is not giving you any daylight. It kind of reminded me a little bit and,
735
00:46:55,360 –> 00:46:58,880
again, every episode, I have to bring this up. It kind of reminded
736
00:46:58,880 –> 00:47:02,560
me of rolling with a really good jujitsu practitioner where you’re just
737
00:47:02,560 –> 00:47:05,760
trying stuff and it’s just not working, and you’re like, what the hell? I can’t
738
00:47:05,760 –> 00:47:07,620
figure out this Rubik’s cube. Yeah. Yeah.
739
00:47:09,494 –> 00:47:13,335
Yeah. What I loved about it, though, is a few weeks later, because
740
00:47:13,335 –> 00:47:17,095
as you said, it was really uncomfortable. I was watching it going, oh, boy. Where
741
00:47:17,095 –> 00:47:20,790
is this one go? Oh, boy. This is
742
00:47:20,790 –> 00:47:24,630
rough because Burr is not letting up, but he’s brought
743
00:47:24,630 –> 00:47:28,170
on, and he’s having fun with it. Yeah. But later,
744
00:47:28,550 –> 00:47:32,390
Mars said, I was just playing with it, and I’ve called BS
745
00:47:32,390 –> 00:47:35,995
on that. In the moment, I don’t think he was playing with
746
00:47:35,995 –> 00:47:39,755
it, but later, I think he actually saw, like, I was
747
00:47:39,755 –> 00:47:43,595
wearing no clothes. Right? Like Right. He could step away
748
00:47:43,595 –> 00:47:47,220
from it later and see, like, oh, actually, Burr he has
749
00:47:47,220 –> 00:47:50,119
probably a few points. I’m not gonna admit to which ones,
750
00:47:50,740 –> 00:47:54,040
but I was rolling with it. And that’s why
751
00:47:54,580 –> 00:47:58,420
like, you may not be what comedy will good comedy will do. Like,
752
00:47:58,420 –> 00:48:02,224
you like, often will laugh. Mhmm. We don’t always know why.
753
00:48:02,444 –> 00:48:06,285
Right. But, you know, at like, the discomfort and, you know, and, you know,
754
00:48:06,285 –> 00:48:09,964
and those, awful things that are said right after you know, those funny
755
00:48:09,964 –> 00:48:13,645
things that are maybe very bleak when you say them, but
756
00:48:13,645 –> 00:48:17,440
they’re they make you think after a sad moment. Right.
757
00:48:18,619 –> 00:48:22,140
It makes you think. And so bringing it
758
00:48:22,140 –> 00:48:25,359
back to, like, Oberon and and
759
00:48:25,820 –> 00:48:29,465
Titania, like, maybe he didn’t want her to
760
00:48:29,465 –> 00:48:33,225
love the beast so he could control, yeah, the Indian boy.
761
00:48:33,225 –> 00:48:37,065
Maybe he just wanted to be loved again. Well You know? And that’s what
762
00:48:37,065 –> 00:48:40,685
happens. Well, in Titania. So let’s
763
00:48:40,910 –> 00:48:44,350
let’s not let Titania off the hook a little bit. She’s
764
00:48:44,350 –> 00:48:47,330
like, listen. You’re just jealous.
765
00:48:49,390 –> 00:48:52,430
I’m a do what I want. I can’t be told. I’m a do what I
766
00:48:52,430 –> 00:48:56,275
want. And I I when I when
767
00:48:56,275 –> 00:48:59,875
I read to Tanya’s character. I’m
768
00:48:59,875 –> 00:49:02,855
reminded of the line from,
769
00:49:04,115 –> 00:49:07,795
the Billy Joel song. She’s
770
00:49:07,795 –> 00:49:11,450
always a woman. Right? Okay. She can’t be convicted.
771
00:49:11,830 –> 00:49:13,290
She’s earned her degree.
772
00:49:16,710 –> 00:49:19,590
So, like, that we we don’t
773
00:49:20,630 –> 00:49:24,285
we struggle in our western culture currently, and I
774
00:49:24,285 –> 00:49:28,125
think probably we always have. But I think the
775
00:49:28,125 –> 00:49:31,885
struggle was less in previous times than it is now.
776
00:49:31,885 –> 00:49:35,724
Your optionality. Right. Exactly. Well, as you increase your optionality,
777
00:49:35,724 –> 00:49:39,420
the struggle increases. Right? But we
778
00:49:39,420 –> 00:49:43,099
don’t we don’t we are not comfortable talking about
779
00:49:43,099 –> 00:49:46,859
women’s egos. We’re just not. We’re not comfortable talking
780
00:49:46,859 –> 00:49:50,619
about that. Because it’s always the men. The women and Right. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
781
00:49:50,619 –> 00:49:54,275
Yeah. I’m not saying that, like men. Well,
782
00:49:54,275 –> 00:49:58,035
I’m not saying that, like, that that that men are as clean and pure
783
00:49:58,035 –> 00:50:01,414
as the wind driven snow. Give me a break. Let’s be real here.
784
00:50:01,714 –> 00:50:05,350
Neither neither is. We’re both human. Right. We’re both humans.
785
00:50:05,810 –> 00:50:09,490
And how that ego is going to we talk a
786
00:50:09,490 –> 00:50:12,950
lot I’ll draw a parallel here. We will talk a lot about
787
00:50:13,570 –> 00:50:17,315
the problem or the challenge that it is a problem of men and violence, Like,
788
00:50:17,315 –> 00:50:20,675
how men manifest anger through violence. That is a problem for
789
00:50:20,675 –> 00:50:24,515
sure. Partially, it has to do with how men are in culture,
790
00:50:24,515 –> 00:50:28,355
but also partially, it has to do with testosterone and biological factors and
791
00:50:28,355 –> 00:50:31,715
a whole bunch of other things. Right? I I’ve raised 2
792
00:50:31,715 –> 00:50:35,350
sons. Trust me. And I’ve raised 2
793
00:50:35,350 –> 00:50:39,030
daughters. Trust me. Men and women are biologically different, in case the Olympic Committee is
794
00:50:39,030 –> 00:50:42,570
paying attention. Just just want to point that out.
795
00:50:43,270 –> 00:50:47,110
Okay. So men will manifest anger through we
796
00:50:47,110 –> 00:50:49,395
will talk about that all day. All day.
797
00:50:52,015 –> 00:50:53,715
But we will not address
798
00:50:55,535 –> 00:50:59,215
how women manifest their egos, particularly in
799
00:50:59,215 –> 00:51:02,590
leadership positions, and sort of where that winds up
800
00:51:02,590 –> 00:51:05,730
bad because we’re caught in this current
801
00:51:06,110 –> 00:51:08,130
moment of,
802
00:51:10,270 –> 00:51:13,890
well, to paraphrase her again, go back to the Billy Joel. Right?
803
00:51:14,030 –> 00:51:17,805
She can’t be convicted. She can’t. You’re done. You
804
00:51:17,805 –> 00:51:21,425
can’t say anything. You just gotta let her go. Well,
805
00:51:22,045 –> 00:51:25,485
maybe I’d be okay with that if she weren’t in a position of
806
00:51:25,485 –> 00:51:29,230
power. We’re just letting her go could have
807
00:51:29,230 –> 00:51:32,990
some back Very Right. Deleterious consequences for
808
00:51:32,990 –> 00:51:36,690
me. Yeah. You know? Exactly. I don’t wanna have her mouth
809
00:51:37,070 –> 00:51:40,430
writing a check that I have to cash with my
810
00:51:40,430 –> 00:51:42,704
actions. Exactly.
811
00:51:43,964 –> 00:51:46,944
Yep. That’s a great way to put it. That’s where we are.
812
00:51:48,365 –> 00:51:51,645
And so Titania has got an ego. You know? She wants to
813
00:51:52,204 –> 00:51:55,405
and and, of course, she wants to manipulate over on a little bit, which which
814
00:51:55,405 –> 00:51:58,340
we’re we’re we’re we’re seeing that sort of dynamic tension as well.
815
00:51:59,360 –> 00:52:02,880
And, overall, wants to manipulate her, and that’s that’s the manipulation that’s
816
00:52:02,880 –> 00:52:06,640
happening between both of them. Again, just as
817
00:52:06,640 –> 00:52:10,355
in a love relationship or in a marriage, I’m
818
00:52:10,355 –> 00:52:13,895
not saying manipulation happens in marriage, although we would be fools.
819
00:52:14,275 –> 00:52:17,734
We still believe that it does not make in any relationship.
820
00:52:18,755 –> 00:52:22,454
You know? I mean, politics is everywhere.
821
00:52:22,914 –> 00:52:26,500
You know? Right. Poli not politics
822
00:52:26,560 –> 00:52:30,340
as in, like, governmental politics, but we’re always positioning
823
00:52:30,560 –> 00:52:34,320
and influencing. Mhmm. You know? And, you know, and whether it
824
00:52:34,320 –> 00:52:37,965
be with your sibling, whether it be with your child, whether it be with your,
825
00:52:38,205 –> 00:52:41,805
you know, your wife or your husband or boyfriend, girlfriend, like, you’re
826
00:52:41,805 –> 00:52:45,645
always positioning and posturing. Mhmm. It’s just about what is
827
00:52:45,645 –> 00:52:49,485
the intent Mhmm. And what is that what is the
828
00:52:49,485 –> 00:52:53,325
outcome. You know, the stronger relationships are when we you know, is
829
00:52:53,325 –> 00:52:56,510
when, you know, we understand our impulses,
830
00:52:57,130 –> 00:53:00,650
but we don’t act on them because some of our limbic
831
00:53:00,650 –> 00:53:04,350
brain impulses are limbic brain driven
832
00:53:04,730 –> 00:53:08,445
and about status and control and ego. Right. But
833
00:53:08,445 –> 00:53:12,125
once we understand that, then we don’t give into it, and we can, you
834
00:53:12,125 –> 00:53:15,725
know, have a healthier discussion and relationship. Well, what happened what
835
00:53:15,725 –> 00:53:19,405
happened to the idea of us overcoming our ego? Like, there seems to be
836
00:53:19,405 –> 00:53:23,150
absolutely no talk of that. That’s a it’s a really good
837
00:53:23,150 –> 00:53:26,450
question. I think there’s a role for ego, but I think,
838
00:53:28,990 –> 00:53:32,829
it me it’s just tempered. You know? Narcissism is all
839
00:53:32,829 –> 00:53:36,369
about ego. Right? Oh, yeah. Narcissism is all about
840
00:53:36,845 –> 00:53:40,145
being seen and validated no mat or what.
841
00:53:40,444 –> 00:53:44,285
Right. Because I’m, you know, because I’m worthy and I’m better you know,
842
00:53:44,285 –> 00:53:46,704
all all of those things. But Yeah.
843
00:53:48,365 –> 00:53:50,845
Yeah. Overcoming ego, I don’t know
844
00:53:52,550 –> 00:53:56,150
I could play I could play devil’s advocate that we don’t wanna overcome it
845
00:53:56,150 –> 00:53:59,990
because then it’s the reverse just passivity and
846
00:53:59,990 –> 00:54:03,369
not having positions and not wanting to, you know, debate
847
00:54:03,510 –> 00:54:07,275
or counter or come to the you know, have critical
848
00:54:07,415 –> 00:54:10,855
conversations that help us come to a good solution. You know,
849
00:54:10,855 –> 00:54:13,835
what this is probably gonna be heretical,
850
00:54:14,615 –> 00:54:18,155
but I’ve seen in too many marriages and in too many relationships
851
00:54:18,375 –> 00:54:21,275
where it’s a lot easier for the man to just
852
00:54:22,510 –> 00:54:26,190
not say anything than to deal with the
853
00:54:26,190 –> 00:54:30,029
woman who’s controlling the housing relation
854
00:54:30,269 –> 00:54:33,869
yeah, the household relationship. Mhmm. And, you
855
00:54:33,869 –> 00:54:37,685
know, you’d be like I hope you still let me
856
00:54:37,765 –> 00:54:41,525
I’ve observed. I don’t want I don’t wanna debate that either. Right. It
857
00:54:41,525 –> 00:54:45,285
is a lot easier not to, but the maybe aren’t so great.
858
00:54:45,285 –> 00:54:49,045
Right? Like, you know, as you said, the consequence of that is
859
00:54:49,045 –> 00:54:52,859
I don’t have I don’t I don’t there’s no checks that she’s making me
860
00:54:52,859 –> 00:54:56,480
write, you know, figuratively as a result of some of that.
861
00:54:56,700 –> 00:55:00,299
Right. Well, I think also it’s so let me let me say this. I I
862
00:55:00,299 –> 00:55:03,520
do think there is a lot of in marriages. I’ll be I mean,
863
00:55:03,995 –> 00:55:07,035
I’m married. I’ve I’ve hang around other married people. I spend a lot of my
864
00:55:07,035 –> 00:55:09,855
time hanging around other married people. I see a lot of other people’s marriages.
865
00:55:14,395 –> 00:55:18,180
There’s a time to advance, and there’s a time to retreat. It’s it’s a
866
00:55:18,180 –> 00:55:22,020
dance right now. If you’re always retreating, that’s
867
00:55:22,020 –> 00:55:25,780
a problem. If you’re always advancing, that’s also a
868
00:55:25,780 –> 00:55:29,460
problem. The the the challenge is
869
00:55:29,460 –> 00:55:32,885
figuring out here’s the biggest challenge, at least in in
870
00:55:33,985 –> 00:55:37,525
in my marriage and in other people’s marriages that I’ve seen. The biggest challenge
871
00:55:37,585 –> 00:55:41,265
is because is it the biggest challenge is figuring out where the
872
00:55:41,265 –> 00:55:45,090
advance and where the retreat is, where the boundaries are on that.
873
00:55:45,650 –> 00:55:49,410
Right? So Yeah. I act I actually think this is yeah. There’s a bigger
874
00:55:49,410 –> 00:55:52,950
cultural thing here is that we’ve had the you know, it it’s not feminism
875
00:55:53,730 –> 00:55:57,410
in a, in the marriage. It’s more what you’re
876
00:55:57,410 –> 00:56:01,194
talking about in leadership in business and in leadership in politics in the
877
00:56:01,194 –> 00:56:04,555
country Yeah. Is that we’ve gotten to a place where
878
00:56:04,555 –> 00:56:08,395
everyone’s retreated Right. To allow that
879
00:56:08,395 –> 00:56:12,075
voice to be, you know, to allow the
880
00:56:12,075 –> 00:56:15,674
feminine voice to be dominant. Mhmm. And it’s
881
00:56:15,674 –> 00:56:18,820
now causing a lot of problems
882
00:56:19,060 –> 00:56:21,960
Problems. Yep. That could be lives and livelihood
883
00:56:22,420 –> 00:56:25,720
because, you know, we haven’t counterbalanced
884
00:56:26,420 –> 00:56:29,960
it with more masculine yeah, necessary
885
00:56:30,100 –> 00:56:33,785
masculine voices and tones. And that’s the balance
886
00:56:33,785 –> 00:56:37,165
between, like, ego and empathy, are those the right
887
00:56:37,385 –> 00:56:40,525
things to care? But we do need the balance
888
00:56:41,145 –> 00:56:43,405
for the ecosystem and for
889
00:56:44,950 –> 00:56:48,170
society to survive. And so what yeah. The
890
00:56:48,630 –> 00:56:51,770
so, anyway No. I think you’re right. Here
891
00:56:52,470 –> 00:56:56,010
was over indexing on ego, right, and not being challenged.
892
00:56:56,630 –> 00:56:59,915
And over on, you know, challenges are in a mischievous
893
00:57:00,135 –> 00:57:03,975
way. Right? Right. Exactly. Right. And he’s not going to go at her Yeah. And
894
00:57:03,975 –> 00:57:07,275
it brings back but it brings back order. Right.
895
00:57:07,975 –> 00:57:11,790
Right. Exactly. That’s it. Find their love again. Right? Yes.
896
00:57:11,790 –> 00:57:15,550
That’s it. Right. No. No. I think that’s no. I think that’s that’s so in
897
00:57:15,550 –> 00:57:18,930
a Midsummer Night’s Dream, that there’s there’s
898
00:57:19,790 –> 00:57:23,295
love brings chaos. Right? Because it’s a strong emotion.
899
00:57:23,535 –> 00:57:27,214
Right? Or we can even say, let’s just let’s frame it. Let’s frame it in
900
00:57:27,214 –> 00:57:31,055
monotone. Lust brings chaos because it’s a strong feeling. It’s a strong
901
00:57:31,055 –> 00:57:34,895
emotion. Lust and love bring chaos. Okay. So how do you and this
902
00:57:34,895 –> 00:57:38,335
is the problem maybe that Shakespeare is seeking to solve with A Midsummer Night’s
903
00:57:38,335 –> 00:57:41,960
Dream. How do you counterbalance that? What are
904
00:57:41,960 –> 00:57:44,380
the forces that pull that back? And,
905
00:57:45,720 –> 00:57:46,220
look,
906
00:57:49,320 –> 00:57:53,125
civilization is the price we pay for having
907
00:57:53,125 –> 00:57:55,785
a little bit of a reduction in our in our appetites.
908
00:58:00,085 –> 00:58:03,845
And if we don’t have I mean, this is what I I’ll sometimes send this
909
00:58:03,845 –> 00:58:07,559
to my kids. I’ll say, listen. Particularly, if I’m having a conversation with another
910
00:58:07,559 –> 00:58:11,240
adult that they’re bored by, particularly when they were younger, angry, and they’d be
911
00:58:11,240 –> 00:58:14,200
upset, and they’d be like, whatever. And they’d throw a fit or whatever, and then
912
00:58:14,200 –> 00:58:16,839
I’d correct them, and then they’d be all mad or whatever. And I keep running
913
00:58:16,839 –> 00:58:19,935
and having the conversation with the adult. And then when I’m done with the conversation
914
00:58:19,935 –> 00:58:23,695
with the adult, then we can, you know, leave the venue. Right? And the
915
00:58:23,695 –> 00:58:27,055
other adult, of course, looks at me. Usually, that
916
00:58:27,055 –> 00:58:30,815
situation looks me and go and kind of is appreciative of the fact,
917
00:58:30,815 –> 00:58:34,500
and you can see it behind their eyes, that I’m just gonna keep the adult
918
00:58:34,500 –> 00:58:38,180
interaction going Yeah. And finish it when we get to our
919
00:58:38,180 –> 00:58:42,020
natural conclusion. And then they right. Because there’s an order for things.
920
00:58:42,020 –> 00:58:45,300
Right? That’s bringing order to chaos. Right? But then I’ll tell turn around and tell
921
00:58:45,300 –> 00:58:48,995
my kids. I always tell them with feedback. And my oldest daughter in particular
922
00:58:48,995 –> 00:58:52,675
will tell you this. I’m building a civilization here. That’s why I’m
923
00:58:52,675 –> 00:58:56,435
having the conversation. This is called civilization building. That’s what you
924
00:58:56,435 –> 00:59:00,115
need to be participating in, and I’m role modeling this for you
925
00:59:00,115 –> 00:59:03,359
right now in this particular interaction. Now
926
00:59:04,060 –> 00:59:06,400
my kids don’t buy that until they’re in their twenties.
927
00:59:07,579 –> 00:59:11,119
Right. But that’s okay. Are probably, like, thirties.
928
00:59:11,420 –> 00:59:14,560
Thirties. Yeah. It’s it’s fine. Yeah. But that’s okay
929
00:59:14,780 –> 00:59:18,375
because we
930
00:59:18,455 –> 00:59:21,655
if you don’t role model it like like, what we have what we’re role modeling
931
00:59:21,655 –> 00:59:25,095
right now, and I see this in a lot of families. What we’re role
932
00:59:25,095 –> 00:59:28,855
modeling is the adults, the Oberons, and the
933
00:59:28,855 –> 00:59:32,680
Titanias subsuming or retreating themselves to
934
00:59:32,680 –> 00:59:36,440
the kids. And that’s a disorder too. And kids are great.
935
00:59:36,440 –> 00:59:40,200
Kids are wonderful. But quite frankly, kids need to be civilized. They
936
00:59:40,200 –> 00:59:43,905
just they they do. Right? So that they can be around others. Primarily, they can
937
00:59:43,905 –> 00:59:47,505
be around other kids without being sociopaths and narcissistic little
938
00:59:47,505 –> 00:59:51,265
knuckleheads. But also so that eventually they
939
00:59:51,265 –> 00:59:54,865
can grow up to be, adults that can continue to
940
00:59:54,865 –> 00:59:58,540
advance the society, which used to be
941
00:59:58,540 –> 01:00:02,380
something again that we know and that Shakespeare is just dropping into the
942
01:00:02,380 –> 01:00:06,060
play because he knows that this is the thing that we’re doing. You don’t have
943
01:00:06,060 –> 01:00:09,339
to actually say it, but now we’ve reached a point in our culture where we
944
01:00:09,339 –> 01:00:13,065
have to say it out loud and encourage people to do it. And I
945
01:00:13,065 –> 01:00:15,385
find that to be I find that to be fascinating. I find that to be
946
01:00:15,385 –> 01:00:18,984
very interesting. It’s sort of that cultural evolution thing that’s that’s
947
01:00:18,984 –> 01:00:21,165
going on in, in real time.
948
01:00:24,265 –> 01:00:25,645
One other point about Titania’s
949
01:00:27,660 –> 01:00:31,099
speech here in act 2 scene 1 that I find very
950
01:00:31,099 –> 01:00:34,799
interesting. She’s she’s comparing Oberon’s
951
01:00:35,180 –> 01:00:38,780
moods to season, and
952
01:00:38,780 –> 01:00:42,299
to seasonality and to seasonal shifts. So basically she’s saying, you
953
01:00:42,299 –> 01:00:44,825
know, you’re a stubborn moron,
954
01:00:46,405 –> 01:00:49,785
basically, you know, whether it’s spring, summer, winter, or fall.
955
01:00:52,405 –> 01:00:56,130
And and this is this is
956
01:00:56,130 –> 01:00:59,490
very clever of Shakespeare to kind of tie this in because it
957
01:00:59,490 –> 01:01:02,789
grabs this idea that or it reinforces
958
01:01:03,170 –> 01:01:06,690
the idea of seasonality in the play, but it also reinforces the
959
01:01:06,690 –> 01:01:10,309
idea that goes back to, of course, the name of the play, a midsummer
960
01:01:12,065 –> 01:01:15,845
night’s dream. Not a fall, not a winter, not a spring.
961
01:01:15,984 –> 01:01:19,825
And this, of course, would have been one other
962
01:01:19,825 –> 01:01:23,505
area that would have resonated very strongly with his, with
963
01:01:23,505 –> 01:01:26,644
his watchers, with his viewers of this play
964
01:01:27,039 –> 01:01:30,720
because they were, I mean, they were what we would call now
965
01:01:30,720 –> 01:01:34,480
organic farm to table, agricultural, you know,
966
01:01:34,480 –> 01:01:38,000
generations farm to table agricultural lifestyle. No
967
01:01:38,000 –> 01:01:41,645
industrialization, threshing with wooden tools,
968
01:01:42,505 –> 01:01:46,265
eating what they grew and what they could kill. You know, they
969
01:01:46,265 –> 01:01:48,845
they understood something that we’ve lost in our industrialized
970
01:01:49,625 –> 01:01:53,220
modern world. And and now our our service industry
971
01:01:53,220 –> 01:01:56,500
modern world where we don’t even touch our food. It’s just we go to the
972
01:01:56,500 –> 01:02:00,340
grocery store and get it or it’s delivered to us via via DoorDash. You
973
01:02:00,340 –> 01:02:04,100
know? But he understood something that they also
974
01:02:04,100 –> 01:02:07,905
understood as this is sometimes another reference that we or perhaps another reference that we
975
01:02:07,905 –> 01:02:10,785
miss here in, in A Midsummer Night’s Dream. Okay. Cool.
976
01:02:13,025 –> 01:02:16,565
I wanna turn the corner a little bit. I wanna talk about
977
01:02:17,025 –> 01:02:18,005
cultural transmission
978
01:02:20,990 –> 01:02:23,730
via the most unlikely vehicle of all,
979
01:02:25,790 –> 01:02:29,310
Looney Tunes. Yes. I did say that
980
01:02:29,310 –> 01:02:32,510
correctly. I’ve only talked about Looney Tunes on this podcast for a little while. I
981
01:02:32,510 –> 01:02:36,185
can’t think of a better person to talk about it with then,
982
01:02:36,805 –> 01:02:40,325
then, Libby here. I’m a huge fan of,
983
01:02:40,525 –> 01:02:44,085
of Looney Tunes, and I’m going
984
01:02:44,085 –> 01:02:46,985
to actually sort of put
985
01:02:50,430 –> 01:02:54,110
the weight of that, on,
986
01:02:55,230 –> 01:02:58,770
well, on the remainder of, of act 2
987
01:02:58,910 –> 01:03:02,595
scene 1. So we’re gonna go we’re gonna go back to the
988
01:03:02,595 –> 01:03:06,435
book. We’re back to the play. Back 2, A Midsummer Night’s
989
01:03:06,435 –> 01:03:09,955
Dream, act 2, scene 1. We’re gonna pick up where Oberon
990
01:03:09,955 –> 01:03:12,055
responds to Titania.
991
01:03:13,569 –> 01:03:17,410
So, Oberon, do you amend it then? It lies in you. Why should
992
01:03:17,410 –> 01:03:21,109
Titania cross for Oberon? But I do but beg a little changeling
993
01:03:21,170 –> 01:03:24,930
boy to be my henchman. Titania, set your heart at
994
01:03:24,930 –> 01:03:28,625
rest. The fairyland buys not a child of me. His
995
01:03:28,625 –> 01:03:32,464
mother was not a beveaucherous of my order and in the spiced Indian air by
996
01:03:32,464 –> 01:03:36,305
night full often after she gossiped by my side and sat with me on
997
01:03:36,305 –> 01:03:39,744
Neptune’s yellow sands. Mark them, mark traders on the
998
01:03:39,744 –> 01:03:43,530
flood when we have laughed to see the sails conceive and grow big
999
01:03:43,530 –> 01:03:46,970
bellied with the wanton wind which she with pretty and swimming
1000
01:03:46,970 –> 01:03:50,650
gait following her womb was enriched with my young swire would
1001
01:03:50,650 –> 01:03:54,190
imitate and sail upon the land to fetch me trifles and return again
1002
01:03:54,490 –> 01:03:58,265
as from a voyage rich with merchandise But she being mortal of
1003
01:03:58,265 –> 01:04:02,105
that boy did die and for her sake do I rear up her boy and
1004
01:04:02,105 –> 01:04:04,685
for her sake I will not part with him.
1005
01:04:05,705 –> 01:04:08,765
Oberon, how long within this would intend you stay?
1006
01:04:09,480 –> 01:04:13,000
Titania, perchance slept at Theseus’s wedding day. If you will
1007
01:04:13,000 –> 01:04:16,520
patiently dance in our round and see our moonlight revels, go with
1008
01:04:16,520 –> 01:04:20,220
us. If not, shun me, and I will spare your haunts.
1009
01:04:20,920 –> 01:04:24,060
Oberon, give me that boy and I will go with thee,
1010
01:04:24,385 –> 01:04:27,685
Titania. Not for thy fairy kingdom.
1011
01:04:28,305 –> 01:04:31,525
Fairies away. We shall chide downright if I longer stay.
1012
01:04:32,225 –> 01:04:35,985
Titania and her fairies exit. Oberon, well,
1013
01:04:35,985 –> 01:04:39,800
go thy way. Thou shalt not from this grove like torment
1014
01:04:39,800 –> 01:04:43,640
thee for this injury. My gentle puck, come hither. Thou remember
1015
01:04:43,640 –> 01:04:47,160
since once I sat upon a promontory and heard a mermaid on a dolphin’s
1016
01:04:47,160 –> 01:04:50,920
back, uttering such a dulcet and harmonious breath, that the rude sea grew
1017
01:04:50,920 –> 01:04:54,655
civil at her song and certain stars shot madly from their spheres to
1018
01:04:54,655 –> 01:04:58,355
hear the sea maid’s music. Robin, I remember
1019
01:04:58,734 –> 01:05:02,494
Oberon, that very time I saw, but thou couldst not flying between the
1020
01:05:02,494 –> 01:05:06,230
cold moon and the earth, Cupid all armed. A certain aim he took at a
1021
01:05:06,230 –> 01:05:09,990
fair vessel thrown by the vest and loosed his
1022
01:05:09,990 –> 01:05:13,369
love shaft smartly from his bow as it should pierce a 100000
1023
01:05:13,430 –> 01:05:17,270
hearts. But I might see a young cupid’s fiery shaft quenched in the
1024
01:05:17,270 –> 01:05:20,954
chased beams of the watery moon and the imperial fortress passed on in
1025
01:05:20,954 –> 01:05:24,555
maiden meditation fancy free. Yet marked I where the vault of
1026
01:05:24,555 –> 01:05:28,395
Cupid fell. It fell upon a little western flower before milk white
1027
01:05:28,395 –> 01:05:32,175
now purple with love’s wound and maidens call it a love and idleness.
1028
01:05:32,730 –> 01:05:36,410
Fetch me that flower, the herb I showed thee once, the juice of it on
1029
01:05:36,410 –> 01:05:40,250
sleeping eyelids laid will make man or woman madly dote upon the next live creature
1030
01:05:40,250 –> 01:05:43,869
that it sees. Fetch me this herb and be thou here again
1031
01:05:44,090 –> 01:05:46,510
ere the Leviathan can swim a league.
1032
01:05:47,835 –> 01:05:51,615
Robin, I’ll put on a girdle round about the earth in 40 minutes.
1033
01:05:51,994 –> 01:05:55,835
He exits. Oberon, having once this juice I’ll
1034
01:05:55,835 –> 01:05:59,355
watch Titania when she is asleep and drop the liquor of it in her
1035
01:05:59,355 –> 01:06:03,050
eyes. Next thing then she, waking, looks upon, be it
1036
01:06:03,050 –> 01:06:06,810
on lion, bear, or wolf, or bull, on meddling monkey, or on busy
1037
01:06:06,810 –> 01:06:10,570
ape, she shall pursue it with the soul of love. And ere I
1038
01:06:10,570 –> 01:06:14,415
take this charm off from her by sight as I can take it with another
1039
01:06:14,954 –> 01:06:18,635
I’ll make her render up her page to me. Who comes
1040
01:06:18,635 –> 01:06:22,095
here? I am invisible. I will overhear their conference.
1041
01:06:23,835 –> 01:06:27,674
The Demetrius Center is followed by Helena. I’m gonna leave that there for just a
1042
01:06:27,674 –> 01:06:31,190
moment. When
1043
01:06:31,190 –> 01:06:34,950
you read Shakespeare, you have to
1044
01:06:34,950 –> 01:06:36,250
read it like this.
1045
01:06:40,150 –> 01:06:43,955
Whether it’s Macbeth or Hamlet or The Tempest or
1046
01:06:43,955 –> 01:06:47,395
A Midsummer Night’s Dream, you have to meet it in sort
1047
01:06:47,395 –> 01:06:51,175
of a sort of a lilt with a with a low
1048
01:06:51,235 –> 01:06:54,775
and, and even when you hear it performed, it sounds
1049
01:06:54,995 –> 01:06:58,750
like well, it sounds like a John Barrymore performance from back in the
1050
01:06:58,750 –> 01:07:02,589
day or maybe a Gil Good performance or these days because no
1051
01:07:02,589 –> 01:07:06,369
one knows those references. Patrick Stewart, right, or Ian McKellen.
1052
01:07:06,510 –> 01:07:09,869
There you go. I mean imagine Patrick Stewart during Shakespeare, which by the way he
1053
01:07:09,869 –> 01:07:13,690
did, by the way he was a Shakespearean
1054
01:07:13,691 –> 01:07:17,196
actor. So was Kelsey Grammer, he
1055
01:07:17,197 –> 01:07:20,703
of Frasier Crane fame, began his career
1056
01:07:20,703 –> 01:07:24,209
performing Macbeth and Hamlet. And of course
1057
01:07:24,290 –> 01:07:28,050
when they read these lines, they read these words, they put
1058
01:07:28,050 –> 01:07:31,589
on this this vaulted voice.
1059
01:07:33,250 –> 01:07:37,010
And this is how we think about Shakespeare. We even read it in
1060
01:07:37,010 –> 01:07:38,470
the voice in our heads.
1061
01:07:41,385 –> 01:07:45,065
This is weird cultural transmission. I have no idea where it came
1062
01:07:45,065 –> 01:07:48,745
from, that that was the voice or that was the the willk you had to
1063
01:07:48,745 –> 01:07:52,345
put on the words. But it the cultural transmission of this is so
1064
01:07:52,345 –> 01:07:56,030
good that in 1949, there was a
1065
01:07:56,030 –> 01:07:59,870
Warner Brothers Looney Tunes short starring the goofy gophers along
1066
01:07:59,870 –> 01:08:03,470
with an unnamed dog that was based on the stage and
1067
01:08:03,470 –> 01:08:07,170
film actor John Barrymore, Patrick Stewart of his day.
1068
01:08:07,725 –> 01:08:11,345
The title of this cartoon, if you’re looking for it on Warner Brothers Max,
1069
01:08:12,365 –> 01:08:14,705
is a ham in a roll.
1070
01:08:17,965 –> 01:08:21,569
And, the dog is tired of appearing in
1071
01:08:21,569 –> 01:08:25,109
cartoons. It opens up with him tired of appearing in cartoons,
1072
01:08:25,489 –> 01:08:28,550
and he goes home to study the words of Shakespeare.
1073
01:08:29,969 –> 01:08:33,475
And, of course, upon
1074
01:08:33,475 –> 01:08:37,255
arriving back at home, the dog finds that his home has been invaded by,
1075
01:08:37,875 –> 01:08:41,635
the 2 goofy gophers who talk a little bit like
1076
01:08:41,635 –> 01:08:45,314
this, and they talk very politely. And yes, dear, and yes, dear, and yes,
1077
01:08:45,314 –> 01:08:49,149
dear. And so while he’s reading Shakespeare, he’s trying to
1078
01:08:49,149 –> 01:08:52,830
improve himself. There’s various gags that
1079
01:08:52,830 –> 01:08:56,590
occur in this Looney Tunes cartoon, this
1080
01:08:56,590 –> 01:09:00,189
Looney Tunes short, as he reads through A Midsummer Night’s
1081
01:09:00,189 –> 01:09:03,935
Dream, Hamlet, Julius Caesar, Richard the third, and, of course,
1082
01:09:03,935 –> 01:09:07,635
Romeo and Juliet. And the gags in the cartoon
1083
01:09:07,774 –> 01:09:11,475
rely on literal interpretations of lines from those
1084
01:09:11,694 –> 01:09:15,429
plays. By the way, the running time of this cartoon,
1085
01:09:15,810 –> 01:09:19,410
6 minutes and 47 seconds. In case some of you are of short attention
1086
01:09:19,410 –> 01:09:23,170
span theater and think that TikTok began all
1087
01:09:23,170 –> 01:09:26,735
of that, it really didn’t. This cartoon
1088
01:09:27,035 –> 01:09:30,475
was directed by Robert McKimson and, of course,
1089
01:09:30,475 –> 01:09:34,015
the the the great voice actor Mel Blanc,
1090
01:09:34,475 –> 01:09:38,255
voice of the dog, the gophers, and, of course, red Hamlet,
1091
01:09:38,719 –> 01:09:42,479
read Julius Caesar, read Richard the Third, and read Romeo and Juliet, all
1092
01:09:42,479 –> 01:09:46,020
with the Shakespearean lilt like John Barrymore,
1093
01:09:48,159 –> 01:09:51,534
by the way. This is the
1094
01:09:51,534 –> 01:09:54,355
brilliance of the cartoon Looney Tunes.
1095
01:09:55,855 –> 01:09:59,215
Cultural transmission of high art via low
1096
01:09:59,215 –> 01:10:03,054
comedy is something that is being goofed on in this
1097
01:10:03,054 –> 01:10:06,770
in this episode, season 14 episode
1098
01:10:06,770 –> 01:10:10,290
number 5, with the dog. And the
1099
01:10:10,290 –> 01:10:14,070
dog himself even looks like John Barrymore,
1100
01:10:15,570 –> 01:10:16,790
which is great.
1101
01:10:22,035 –> 01:10:25,795
Shakespeare was trying to transmit culture as well, and so are we. We
1102
01:10:25,795 –> 01:10:29,635
are in a cultural transmit. We’re always trying to transmit culture. We’re always trying to
1103
01:10:29,635 –> 01:10:32,455
transmit civilization to each other.
1104
01:10:33,580 –> 01:10:37,100
And whether it’s a dog in a looney tune short or a couple of
1105
01:10:37,100 –> 01:10:40,940
gophers, by the way, he winds up at the end
1106
01:10:40,940 –> 01:10:43,840
of the cartoon. The gophers defeat him, of course,
1107
01:10:45,375 –> 01:10:49,074
And the gophers use a horse to kick the dog out of his house,
1108
01:10:49,215 –> 01:10:52,974
after which the dog says, a horse, a horse, my kingdom
1109
01:10:52,974 –> 01:10:56,815
for a horse, and goes back to the studio where he decided he
1110
01:10:56,815 –> 01:10:59,635
was going to go back to being a comedic actor.
1111
01:11:00,620 –> 01:11:04,160
All in 6 minutes, all around the world,
1112
01:11:04,940 –> 01:11:08,540
all 5 Shakespeare plays. Oh, and by the way, a little bit of classical
1113
01:11:08,540 –> 01:11:12,345
music in there as well. And it
1114
01:11:12,345 –> 01:11:15,705
is a cartoon that works so well as a method of cultural
1115
01:11:15,705 –> 01:11:19,545
transmission that my 7 year old who knows
1116
01:11:19,545 –> 01:11:23,385
nothing about Shakespeare at all just got his
1117
01:11:23,385 –> 01:11:26,445
dose of Shakespeare in about 6 minutes.
1118
01:11:28,950 –> 01:11:32,090
I don’t know what your familiarity is with Looney Tunes, Libby.
1119
01:11:32,870 –> 01:11:36,710
I can all have no idea. But I watched a lot of Looney
1120
01:11:36,710 –> 01:11:40,390
Tunes when I was a kid, and that’s actually how I got into,
1121
01:11:40,390 –> 01:11:44,125
like, opera, like Pagliacci. Yes. Oh,
1122
01:11:44,125 –> 01:11:47,745
yeah. From Bugs Bunny. I I got into freaking pagliacci from Bugs Bunny,
1123
01:11:48,364 –> 01:11:52,125
because I was so curious as to what the music was and what the references
1124
01:11:52,125 –> 01:11:54,764
were that I went back and researched it and tried to find it and figured
1125
01:11:54,925 –> 01:11:57,770
this is how I got introduced to high art. One of the ways I got
1126
01:11:57,770 –> 01:12:01,610
introduced to high art was through was through Warner Brothers
1127
01:12:01,610 –> 01:12:04,510
efforts and amusing me for 5 to 6 minutes.
1128
01:12:05,930 –> 01:12:09,690
Interesting. Just bang bang bang bang bang bang. And the gags
1129
01:12:09,690 –> 01:12:11,870
go so fast. Yeah.
1130
01:12:13,665 –> 01:12:15,945
I I again, I have no idea what you’re experiencing. What is your experience with
1131
01:12:15,945 –> 01:12:18,465
the ludi tunes? Do you have the experience with the ludi tunes at all? It’s
1132
01:12:18,465 –> 01:12:22,065
on. That’s all, folks. That’s it.
1133
01:12:22,065 –> 01:12:25,690
That’s it. That’s it. That’s it. Yeah. I was actually just looking it up as
1134
01:12:25,690 –> 01:12:29,449
you were speaking about it to look at it. But yeah. No. I
1135
01:12:29,449 –> 01:12:33,050
don’t, I don’t have a lot of memory. My, my
1136
01:12:33,050 –> 01:12:36,349
memory of cartoons on Saturday or Saturday
1137
01:12:36,969 –> 01:12:40,505
entertainment was, like, Bill Cosby. Okay. Yeah. And
1138
01:12:40,505 –> 01:12:42,845
Scott Albert or Scott Albert. Yes.
1139
01:12:43,865 –> 01:12:44,365
Yeah.
1140
01:12:51,510 –> 01:12:54,570
I I’m interested in watching it. I was reading the,
1141
01:12:55,429 –> 01:12:58,650
yeah, the overview. But tell me more. This is fascinating.
1142
01:12:59,030 –> 01:13:02,469
Yeah. So I am Is this Saturday morning cartoons for
1143
01:13:02,469 –> 01:13:05,449
you? Yes. So Okay.
1144
01:13:06,165 –> 01:13:09,465
Yeah. So I was when I watched
1145
01:13:10,565 –> 01:13:12,965
so I watched Looney Tunes at 2 there are 2 different times you could watch
1146
01:13:12,965 –> 01:13:16,025
Looney Tunes. So one time, you could watch Looney Tunes on,
1147
01:13:17,125 –> 01:13:19,465
Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, or Thursday afternoons,
1148
01:13:20,920 –> 01:13:23,980
between, like, 2 and, like,
1149
01:13:25,720 –> 01:13:29,160
4, on the old WB
1150
01:13:29,160 –> 01:13:33,000
network before it turned into, like, the UPN, and then it turned into something
1151
01:13:33,000 –> 01:13:36,785
else, or whatever. But the old WB network. So you
1152
01:13:36,785 –> 01:13:39,844
can watch it then. But then you could also watch it on Saturday. You’re right.
1153
01:13:40,465 –> 01:13:43,364
And I watched it on Saturday on
1154
01:13:44,465 –> 01:13:47,930
like ABC or something when I was living in the states that I was living
1155
01:13:47,930 –> 01:13:50,330
in when I was a kid. I can’t remember what the it doesn’t matter. All
1156
01:13:50,330 –> 01:13:53,950
I know is I would get up like 8, 9 o’clock in the morning,
1157
01:13:54,410 –> 01:13:58,010
click it on, and you could watch Looney Tunes for like an hour. And so
1158
01:13:58,010 –> 01:14:01,335
I’d watch all these cartoons. Right? And I’d watch them in order. Right? Oh, I
1159
01:14:01,335 –> 01:14:04,135
didn’t know it was ordered at the time, but I’d watch all these cartoons. And
1160
01:14:04,135 –> 01:14:07,255
then you watch them repeatedly over and over and over again and that’s sort of
1161
01:14:07,255 –> 01:14:09,755
how it kind of gets into your gets into your system.
1162
01:14:11,015 –> 01:14:14,775
So, you know, when the
1163
01:14:14,775 –> 01:14:18,510
second generation of Looney Tunes cartoons, which came about
1164
01:14:18,510 –> 01:14:22,050
in the seventies. So Looney Tunes was on, gosh, from the thirties
1165
01:14:22,190 –> 01:14:25,950
until the sixties until the late sixties. And at first,
1166
01:14:25,950 –> 01:14:29,630
it was Looney Tunes and then it transitioned into merry melodies, which is a whole
1167
01:14:29,630 –> 01:14:33,355
other different kind of thing. And, of course, there
1168
01:14:33,355 –> 01:14:37,054
are, Looney Tunes cartoons that are racially
1169
01:14:37,435 –> 01:14:40,875
and ethnically insensitive because a lot of them were made during World War
1170
01:14:40,875 –> 01:14:44,554
2. But people were people were a lot more
1171
01:14:44,554 –> 01:14:48,270
direct. Like, there’s even things I see in some of the cartoons now that
1172
01:14:48,270 –> 01:14:51,949
they show that were that are sort of not now, but that were
1173
01:14:51,949 –> 01:14:55,630
made between the thirties and the sixties that you
1174
01:14:55,630 –> 01:14:58,989
couldn’t make the gags they make today. Like, you couldn’t
1175
01:14:58,989 –> 01:15:02,445
have you I’ll give you an example. You couldn’t
1176
01:15:02,445 –> 01:15:05,885
have Bugs Bunny running around with thick lips
1177
01:15:05,885 –> 01:15:09,725
kissing, like, people and then, like, doing sort of the, like,
1178
01:15:09,725 –> 01:15:13,344
African American, like, exaggerated
1179
01:15:13,940 –> 01:15:17,380
sort of caricature, you couldn’t you couldn’t have that as as like a sight gag.
1180
01:15:17,380 –> 01:15:21,219
Right? And it’s a quick sight gag. And the
1181
01:15:21,219 –> 01:15:24,900
way Looney Tunes is structured is there’s an exciting event that occurs literally
1182
01:15:24,900 –> 01:15:28,295
within the first minute. So you get the inciting event, you get the
1183
01:15:28,295 –> 01:15:31,755
introduction. Usually, with Looney Tunes,
1184
01:15:32,054 –> 01:15:35,815
it’ll it’ll tell you what the inciting event is going to be
1185
01:15:35,815 –> 01:15:39,195
in the title. So for instance, for this one, a ham and a roll,
1186
01:15:39,450 –> 01:15:42,670
Like, that works on so many different levels because,
1187
01:15:43,930 –> 01:15:47,610
you know, a ham is an overactor. A roll, r o l e,
1188
01:15:47,610 –> 01:15:51,450
not r o l l. Right? So, you know, you’ve got, like, some you got,
1189
01:15:51,450 –> 01:15:54,410
like, some messing around there. And that’s the the brilliant thing with the guys on
1190
01:15:54,410 –> 01:15:58,085
Looney Tunes, particularly, the ones that were directed
1191
01:15:58,085 –> 01:16:01,225
by, oh, what’s his name? By,
1192
01:16:02,645 –> 01:16:06,405
Robert McKimson. So Robert McKimson directed a whole bunch of
1193
01:16:06,405 –> 01:16:09,940
Looney Tunes. He was born in 1910, and he died in
1194
01:16:09,940 –> 01:16:13,400
1977. And he
1195
01:16:13,699 –> 01:16:16,520
wrote and directed shorts with,
1196
01:16:17,540 –> 01:16:19,480
oh gosh, Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck,
1197
01:16:35,180 –> 01:16:38,860
and a brilliant illustrator. And so the animators and the illustrators and the
1198
01:16:38,860 –> 01:16:41,980
directors have all worked together. And if they want to throw a gag in, they
1199
01:16:41,980 –> 01:16:45,660
just would. And so all these guys were highly literate. So, like, they knew everything
1200
01:16:45,660 –> 01:16:49,280
from, like, Shakespeare Yeah. All the way down to, like, vaudeville.
1201
01:16:49,595 –> 01:16:53,355
And so they would put all of this in Looney Tunes, but they’re not gonna
1202
01:16:53,915 –> 01:16:57,675
obviously, because they’re doing it for children, they’re not going to just
1203
01:16:57,675 –> 01:17:01,355
cram everything in all at once. They’re gonna pace it really well. So you’re gonna
1204
01:17:01,355 –> 01:17:05,080
have your inciting incident in the first minute, usually led in by your title
1205
01:17:05,080 –> 01:17:08,680
sequence. Then you’re gonna have your music and your music’s going to run
1206
01:17:08,680 –> 01:17:12,380
through the entire, like, the remaining 5 minutes of the of the cartoon.
1207
01:17:13,000 –> 01:17:16,840
And it’s going to be musical cues. So sometimes the sight gags will
1208
01:17:16,840 –> 01:17:20,625
go off of musical cues, like the Pagliacci one. The sight gags go off
1209
01:17:20,625 –> 01:17:24,304
of the musical cues, but the music also plays in the background while Bugs
1210
01:17:24,304 –> 01:17:27,905
Bunny is also playing the music game in the thing. And so it’s working on,
1211
01:17:27,905 –> 01:17:31,665
like, multiple levels. But you’re sitting there as a kid and all
1212
01:17:31,665 –> 01:17:35,300
you know is your brain is just exploding with, like, sugar cereal.
1213
01:17:35,760 –> 01:17:39,600
Yeah. And you’re watching this. It’s insane. And it’s it’s insane that you
1214
01:17:39,600 –> 01:17:40,659
get to watch this.
1215
01:17:43,679 –> 01:17:47,395
Then in the second minute or the 3rd the second the second minute through the
1216
01:17:47,395 –> 01:17:50,995
3rd minute into the into the 4th minute, you’re going to have your gags. You’re
1217
01:17:50,995 –> 01:17:54,755
going to have your plot. We’re gonna have a bunch of money your daffy duck
1218
01:17:54,755 –> 01:17:58,515
is getting into, like the one of the episodes we watched, one of the
1219
01:17:58,515 –> 01:18:02,170
weekend’s episodes my son and I watched the other day. Oh,
1220
01:18:02,170 –> 01:18:05,449
gosh. I can’t remember what the song was, but it’s, I can’t I don’t remember
1221
01:18:05,449 –> 01:18:08,650
the name of the song is, but, Daffy Duck is avoiding Porky Pig is the
1222
01:18:08,650 –> 01:18:12,409
hunter. And Porky Pig tries to shoot him. And so, of course, he
1223
01:18:12,409 –> 01:18:15,825
turns his butt around, and he’s got a target on his butt with, like, his
1224
01:18:15,825 –> 01:18:19,365
dress that comes up. So, you know, cross dressing Daffy Duck,
1225
01:18:19,825 –> 01:18:20,645
and he’s going,
1226
01:18:23,905 –> 01:18:26,965
and he, like, waves the dress around and, of course, wear a big missus.
1227
01:18:27,360 –> 01:18:31,119
And the bullet goes, like, a whole bunch of different places, and then Davy
1228
01:18:31,119 –> 01:18:34,960
Duck goes from having the bull’s eye on his butt with
1229
01:18:34,960 –> 01:18:38,560
the dress to going back to another site gag. Like,
1230
01:18:38,560 –> 01:18:42,100
literally, it will happen like that. And so it goes so
1231
01:18:42,320 –> 01:18:45,895
fast. And you watch Looney Tunes, you watch the
1232
01:18:45,895 –> 01:18:49,575
setup and the structure of it, and you watch the structure of the
1233
01:18:49,575 –> 01:18:53,335
comedy, and you watch the kind of trickery he they’re they’re pulling
1234
01:18:53,335 –> 01:18:56,875
in particular, like I said, McKimson along with Mel Blanc, and Mel Blanc would suggest,
1235
01:18:57,335 –> 01:19:00,760
would suggest gags because he could do anything verbally,
1236
01:19:01,140 –> 01:19:04,980
and could do anything with sound. And then, of course, you you
1237
01:19:04,980 –> 01:19:07,640
only because you only have, like I said, you only have 6 to 7 minutes.
1238
01:19:08,420 –> 01:19:11,940
So they would do all these verbal layerings, and they come to a conclusion by
1239
01:19:11,940 –> 01:19:15,675
the end, and then it goes, and you’re done. Yeah. And
1240
01:19:15,675 –> 01:19:19,114
you and it’s almost when you’re, like, a 9 year old kid and you’ve never
1241
01:19:19,114 –> 01:19:22,494
seen anything like that before, it’s almost like you’re getting hit by a freight train.
1242
01:19:22,554 –> 01:19:26,395
Yeah. It’s kind of insane. I
1243
01:19:26,395 –> 01:19:29,614
I love loony tunes. It’s That’s so I like fascinating
1244
01:19:29,994 –> 01:19:33,699
history here, and then the
1245
01:19:33,699 –> 01:19:37,060
structure is really interesting too. Well and they did
1246
01:19:37,860 –> 01:19:41,080
I will say Warner Brothers really allowed those animators
1247
01:19:41,780 –> 01:19:45,465
like McKimson and others. Carl Stalling was another one.
1248
01:19:45,784 –> 01:19:49,385
He did all the music. He was he was a genius with the music, but
1249
01:19:49,385 –> 01:19:52,925
they would allow these guys
1250
01:19:53,705 –> 01:19:57,244
to be the anti Walt Disney.
1251
01:19:58,040 –> 01:20:01,800
They were literally, like, on the other side of Disney. So Disney was considered
1252
01:20:01,800 –> 01:20:05,340
to be corporate and cultured,
1253
01:20:05,640 –> 01:20:09,320
and they’re gonna do full length movies. So this was during Looney Looney
1254
01:20:09,320 –> 01:20:11,980
Tunes was really popular during the time when
1255
01:20:13,615 –> 01:20:17,375
Disney was doing Peter Pan and Snow
1256
01:20:17,375 –> 01:20:21,055
White and Bambi and those Cinderella, you
1257
01:20:21,055 –> 01:20:24,895
know, the big sort of classical films that we think of as
1258
01:20:24,895 –> 01:20:28,035
the Disney classics. On the cinematic end,
1259
01:20:29,460 –> 01:20:32,900
Looney Tunes was owning television, and they were owning movie
1260
01:20:32,900 –> 01:20:36,500
shorts. And so you would see and that’s how they started. You would see shorts
1261
01:20:36,500 –> 01:20:39,860
in front of films first. Yeah. But then after that, they
1262
01:20:39,860 –> 01:20:43,665
transitioned to TV because TV was a much better medium for this. Right.
1263
01:20:43,665 –> 01:20:47,425
Because you could just you could do, like, 4 cartoons in a
1264
01:20:47,425 –> 01:20:51,264
row Yeah. In, like, an hour or in 20 minutes. Actually, in 20
1265
01:20:51,264 –> 01:20:54,645
minutes. You can do 4 cartoons in a row, and everybody could get paid.
1266
01:20:55,520 –> 01:20:58,960
So they were the anti Disney. As a matter of fact, almost to the point
1267
01:20:58,960 –> 01:21:02,719
where they would have gags inside of the Looney
1268
01:21:02,719 –> 01:21:06,480
Tunes cartoons that were anti Disney gags,
1269
01:21:06,480 –> 01:21:09,615
and they eventually had to drop those because he was like, you don’t stop this.
1270
01:21:09,695 –> 01:21:13,455
Gonna sue you. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Because Walt wasn’t
1271
01:21:13,455 –> 01:21:17,215
Walt wasn’t screwing around. But they knew sort of and
1272
01:21:17,215 –> 01:21:20,575
they knew, of course, they knew all the Disney admin animators and all the Disney
1273
01:21:20,575 –> 01:21:24,095
animators do them, and so they would exchange gags. It was a whole it was
1274
01:21:24,095 –> 01:21:27,900
a whole thing. This is fascinating. I had no idea. I thought Looney
1275
01:21:27,900 –> 01:21:31,659
Tunes was, like, part of Disney. No. It was part of the
1276
01:21:31,659 –> 01:21:35,260
it was part of the, what is considered to be the golden age of
1277
01:21:35,260 –> 01:21:38,940
American animation, which, is by by the
1278
01:21:38,940 –> 01:21:42,685
thirties to the seventies in this country, where
1279
01:21:42,945 –> 01:21:44,205
you could
1280
01:21:48,025 –> 01:21:51,465
you could literally build an entire media
1281
01:21:51,465 –> 01:21:55,080
franchise off of cartoons for kids. Because
1282
01:21:55,080 –> 01:21:58,840
there was nothing on TV. Like, this is we and and, of course, we live
1283
01:21:58,840 –> 01:22:02,060
in the backwash of all of this. But
1284
01:22:02,760 –> 01:22:06,520
in in the thirties through the seventies, no one had any clue
1285
01:22:06,520 –> 01:22:10,105
what to do with television. Yeah. Like, okay. You have this bandwidth.
1286
01:22:10,245 –> 01:22:14,005
What do we put on this thing? So shows like, like my mom
1287
01:22:14,005 –> 01:22:17,685
watched because my mom was a classic boomer. All of her generation watched
1288
01:22:17,685 –> 01:22:21,349
Howdy Doody, particularly the older members of her generation. Well, Howdy
1289
01:22:21,349 –> 01:22:25,190
Doody was entirely a creation of some serial
1290
01:22:25,190 –> 01:22:28,869
company. So the serial company came up with
1291
01:22:28,869 –> 01:22:31,130
the show so they could sell cereal.
1292
01:22:34,775 –> 01:22:38,534
Or the Tiffany Network. Right? The reason CBS is called the Tiffany
1293
01:22:38,534 –> 01:22:41,514
Network is because Tiffany Glass
1294
01:22:42,614 –> 01:22:45,435
created CBS to sell more Tiffany Glass.
1295
01:22:47,870 –> 01:22:51,230
It’s sort of an inverse for how we do media today. We don’t do media
1296
01:22:51,230 –> 01:22:54,910
like this today because of the Internet. So no one’s no
1297
01:22:54,910 –> 01:22:58,270
one is confused as to what to do with TikTok. Like, no one no one’s
1298
01:22:58,270 –> 01:23:01,985
confused. They may be putting ridiculous
1299
01:23:02,045 –> 01:23:05,165
stuff on there, but no one’s confused as to what to do once that bandwidth
1300
01:23:05,165 –> 01:23:08,925
opens. Well, back in the day, it was
1301
01:23:08,925 –> 01:23:11,565
different. It was like, okay. What do we do with this bandwidth? So you could
1302
01:23:11,565 –> 01:23:15,360
put on howdy doody. You could put on a man with a puppet and then
1303
01:23:15,360 –> 01:23:18,800
run that next to a bunch of cartoons and then sell some sugary breakfast cereal,
1304
01:23:18,800 –> 01:23:21,380
and now you’re done. And that was all thought of as being kids’ stuff.
1305
01:23:22,640 –> 01:23:26,420
Well, you do have mainstream, like, media
1306
01:23:26,560 –> 01:23:30,285
that’s not wait. 80, 90% funded by
1307
01:23:30,345 –> 01:23:34,185
pharmaceuticals? Right. You do have that. Yes. You do have that.
1308
01:23:34,185 –> 01:23:37,705
But that’s, like, the modern equivalent. Right. Well, in This is
1309
01:23:37,705 –> 01:23:41,065
fascinating. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Well, in news didn’t really come
1310
01:23:41,065 –> 01:23:44,910
along as a function of TV until or not really. I would
1311
01:23:44,910 –> 01:23:48,530
say come along. Didn’t really kick in as a function of television
1312
01:23:49,390 –> 01:23:52,990
until the fifties and the sixties. So you
1313
01:23:52,990 –> 01:23:56,364
had, what was his name? Oh,
1314
01:23:56,824 –> 01:24:00,665
Brinkley and Hunt. Right? Like, those 2 guys, you know, that
1315
01:24:00,665 –> 01:24:04,505
really sort of kicked off the idea that television could
1316
01:24:04,505 –> 01:24:08,185
be a medium for news as well as a medium for
1317
01:24:08,185 –> 01:24:11,980
kids entertainment, as well as a medium for westerns. Like the heyday of
1318
01:24:11,980 –> 01:24:15,340
westerns in the United States, particularly TV westerns, was the 19
1319
01:24:15,340 –> 01:24:18,860
fifties, and the 19 sixties. And so if you were a kid in the
1320
01:24:18,860 –> 01:24:22,700
fifties, you could watch like Rawhide. Like people
1321
01:24:22,700 –> 01:24:26,455
people forget this. Clint Eastwood, his entire career
1322
01:24:26,515 –> 01:24:30,055
started on Rawhide on television in the 19 fifties.
1323
01:24:33,875 –> 01:24:37,315
With the Spaghetti Western? I thought Spaghetti Westerns were in the
1324
01:24:37,315 –> 01:24:41,000
theaters. Right? Yes. Spaghetti Westerns were in the theaters. Yes. And that was And the
1325
01:24:41,000 –> 01:24:44,840
reason that news wasn’t, that TV wasn’t medium for news
1326
01:24:44,840 –> 01:24:48,520
until fifties sixties was because people didn’t have TV. You
1327
01:24:48,520 –> 01:24:51,880
know, most people didn’t have TVs in their homes, and most of it was through
1328
01:24:51,880 –> 01:24:55,625
radio? Correct. It was it was it was radio Yeah.
1329
01:24:55,784 –> 01:24:59,224
Then print or print and then radio, depending upon which which debit
1330
01:24:59,385 –> 01:25:03,145
which market you were in. But, I mean, you would you would live in
1331
01:25:03,145 –> 01:25:06,920
a media market where you would be able to get, let’s
1332
01:25:06,920 –> 01:25:10,760
say, you had 5 news well, that’s probably extensive. 3
1333
01:25:10,760 –> 01:25:14,600
newspapers, right, in a city, right, like Chicago. You’d have 3
1334
01:25:14,600 –> 01:25:18,440
newspapers printing up news 3 times a day. So you’d have
1335
01:25:18,440 –> 01:25:22,225
a morning edition, a midday edition, and an evening edition. Forgot
1336
01:25:22,225 –> 01:25:26,065
about that. I knew, now that you say that I knew they had morning
1337
01:25:26,065 –> 01:25:27,605
and evening. Yeah.
1338
01:25:29,905 –> 01:25:33,720
How how quickly times change and things change. Like,
1339
01:25:33,720 –> 01:25:37,340
I had some of that in from a high level awareness.
1340
01:25:37,640 –> 01:25:41,480
Mhmm. But it is interesting, like,
1341
01:25:41,480 –> 01:25:44,300
getting into the cultural trans you know, transmission,
1342
01:25:45,640 –> 01:25:49,445
discussion, how quickly the modalities change Oh,
1343
01:25:49,445 –> 01:25:53,065
yeah. Based on the advancements of technology.
1344
01:25:53,605 –> 01:25:56,345
Mhmm. And, yeah, Midsummer Night’s Dream,
1345
01:25:57,685 –> 01:26:01,225
you know, was the ability to use comedy
1346
01:26:01,700 –> 01:26:05,400
to share that with chill yeah. It reached all levels. Right.
1347
01:26:05,460 –> 01:26:08,980
Like, children through, through adults, the
1348
01:26:08,980 –> 01:26:12,520
stories, and we all interpret it differently
1349
01:26:12,820 –> 01:26:16,185
and, you know, based on where we are in our own
1350
01:26:16,185 –> 01:26:19,565
evolution, but it’s fun for everyone. Right? Right.
1351
01:26:19,865 –> 01:26:23,625
And I think of that, like Pixar movie is the same thing.
1352
01:26:23,625 –> 01:26:27,465
Like Mhmm. Like, it’s as much fun to go to a
1353
01:26:27,465 –> 01:26:30,449
Pixar movie as an adult as it is as a kid. Right.
1354
01:26:31,309 –> 01:26:34,929
And do you think that the kids are gonna get, like, some of the innuendos,
1355
01:26:35,070 –> 01:26:38,290
but they don’t. They have their whole a whole another level of understanding.
1356
01:26:38,750 –> 01:26:41,409
Right. Yeah. Well, I think
1357
01:26:45,775 –> 01:26:48,894
I was I was thinking the other day. Well, maybe not the other day, but
1358
01:26:48,894 –> 01:26:52,355
I was thinking, I was thinking a while ago that
1359
01:26:53,295 –> 01:26:57,060
it would be a real hoop. This is a
1360
01:26:57,060 –> 01:27:00,420
business idea that anybody can take us to see this podcast, but it would be
1361
01:27:00,420 –> 01:27:04,260
a real hoot to do 5 to
1362
01:27:04,260 –> 01:27:08,100
7 minute long animated shorts that are layered at
1363
01:27:08,100 –> 01:27:11,625
that level that like Looney Tunes was layered at. But I
1364
01:27:11,625 –> 01:27:15,385
don’t know number 1 that you do it. And I don’t
1365
01:27:15,385 –> 01:27:19,085
mean that the talent isn’t there. And I don’t mean that
1366
01:27:19,225 –> 01:27:22,665
the gags aren’t there. And I don’t even mean that the comedy isn’t
1367
01:27:22,665 –> 01:27:26,470
there. I mean, and and
1368
01:27:26,470 –> 01:27:30,070
probably the only place you’d be able to do it would be maybe Netflix
1369
01:27:30,070 –> 01:27:33,530
or Hulu, maybe. But let’s say let’s say Hulu.
1370
01:27:33,910 –> 01:27:37,735
If you do the half hour no. No. No. Sorry. Not a half hour. If
1371
01:27:37,735 –> 01:27:41,415
you did 6 to 7 minute or 5 to 7 minute
1372
01:27:41,415 –> 01:27:44,955
long animated comedic shorts,
1373
01:27:45,335 –> 01:27:49,095
and you banged out, like, a 100 of those in a
1374
01:27:49,095 –> 01:27:51,435
week and distributed them on Hulu
1375
01:27:53,070 –> 01:27:56,590
that were layered at the level that you got the
1376
01:27:56,590 –> 01:27:59,330
layering back in the day of Looney Tunes with
1377
01:28:00,110 –> 01:28:02,290
verbal gags, visual gags,
1378
01:28:03,550 –> 01:28:07,375
wordplay in your window speed
1379
01:28:07,375 –> 01:28:11,215
of animation music. I’m not saying
1380
01:28:11,215 –> 01:28:14,755
the talent doesn’t exist to do that. I believe the country is overflowing
1381
01:28:14,975 –> 01:28:18,790
with people talented enough to do that. I think
1382
01:28:18,790 –> 01:28:22,230
the thing that kills that idea is the
1383
01:28:22,230 –> 01:28:26,070
subject matter that you would have to cover and the way
1384
01:28:26,070 –> 01:28:29,750
you would have to do it. Because too many feelings would get
1385
01:28:29,750 –> 01:28:33,125
triggered. Oh, and and and by the way,
1386
01:28:33,125 –> 01:28:36,565
triggered triggered so fast that they wouldn’t even know they were
1387
01:28:36,565 –> 01:28:40,345
triggered. Yeah. Because it goes up it goes so quickly.
1388
01:28:40,725 –> 01:28:44,400
But the case but case of No. That’s something about it was upsetting. Right. I
1389
01:28:44,400 –> 01:28:47,360
don’t know what upset me, but something and then you have people go you have
1390
01:28:47,360 –> 01:28:49,920
people cut it and put it on the Internet and slow it down and be
1391
01:28:49,920 –> 01:28:53,440
like, that’s where it is. You know? And you know them trying to the
1392
01:28:53,440 –> 01:28:56,500
closest you will get to something that’s this good,
1393
01:28:58,275 –> 01:29:02,114
As good as Looney Tunes, I think, personally, and it’s not for kids,
1394
01:29:02,114 –> 01:29:05,715
which is really too bad, is robot chicken. The whole robot
1395
01:29:05,715 –> 01:29:09,094
chicken show on, on,
1396
01:29:09,715 –> 01:29:13,520
on, Cartoon Network back in the day. I think that’s
1397
01:29:13,520 –> 01:29:17,280
as close as you get. And that was claymation. And the only reason Seth
1398
01:29:17,280 –> 01:29:20,980
Green was Seth Green and his crazy people were able to get away with that
1399
01:29:21,120 –> 01:29:22,580
was because it was claymation.
1400
01:29:24,845 –> 01:29:27,965
But it hit everything. It did. It hit everything with the verbal gags, the sight
1401
01:29:27,965 –> 01:29:31,725
gags, the visual Well, and so I feel. I’m
1402
01:29:31,725 –> 01:29:35,505
not a big I’m not a big animation, you know, person,
1403
01:29:35,565 –> 01:29:39,320
but I see a lot of clips on South Park. Mhmm. Isn’t that
1404
01:29:39,320 –> 01:29:42,380
kind of in the same realm and, you know, as well as,
1405
01:29:43,560 –> 01:29:47,160
I also am not a you know, who’s the other what’s the other one? The
1406
01:29:47,160 –> 01:29:50,760
Simpsons that everyone loves? Oh, the Simpsons family guy. Yeah.
1407
01:29:50,760 –> 01:29:54,175
So I think this I so here’s here’s my honest that’s a great
1408
01:29:54,175 –> 01:29:57,935
question. And my honest feedback on that or my
1409
01:29:57,935 –> 01:30:00,435
honest answer to that is Stimson’s
1410
01:30:02,255 –> 01:30:05,935
the even the Flintstones Yeah. Of the Jetsons back in
1411
01:30:05,935 –> 01:30:07,795
the sixties, and seventies,
1412
01:30:09,830 –> 01:30:13,130
and then Family Guy in the nineties Yeah.
1413
01:30:13,670 –> 01:30:16,650
And then South Park in the late nineties all the way up to now.
1414
01:30:17,750 –> 01:30:21,590
Those 5 cartoons would not exist without
1415
01:30:21,590 –> 01:30:25,315
Looney Tunes. Right. So what they did was
1416
01:30:25,315 –> 01:30:28,614
all 5 of those cartoons, what they did was they took the the
1417
01:30:29,795 –> 01:30:33,155
the concept, the core concepts that were in Looney
1418
01:30:33,155 –> 01:30:36,435
Tunes, and they did exactly what I just did. Like, they pulled it apart and
1419
01:30:36,435 –> 01:30:40,070
they went, okay, I don’t wanna do this in a short context
1420
01:30:40,210 –> 01:30:43,650
because it’s too hard to sell advertising around this. Yeah. Matt
1421
01:30:43,650 –> 01:30:47,429
Groening. Right? This is why he did The Simpsons as a half hour show.
1422
01:30:48,929 –> 01:30:52,630
And I think it’s re it was really to appeal to the advertiser
1423
01:30:52,929 –> 01:30:56,665
television format. But now you see South Park doing
1424
01:30:56,665 –> 01:31:00,345
movies that they’re releasing on Paramount Plus Yeah. While they’re
1425
01:31:00,345 –> 01:31:03,965
calling them movies. Right? But they’re they’re like 90 minute long cartoons
1426
01:31:04,745 –> 01:31:08,560
with gags and everything else. Well, it’s the same concept as Looney
1427
01:31:08,560 –> 01:31:11,780
Tunes, it’s just we’ve expanded the franchise out
1428
01:31:12,080 –> 01:31:15,840
because streaming requires different things than television based
1429
01:31:15,840 –> 01:31:19,680
advertising required. And so the the metrics of who gets paid
1430
01:31:19,680 –> 01:31:23,315
and how for what work have all shifted around. And I think that’s that’s
1431
01:31:23,315 –> 01:31:26,995
the other challenge other than just the other than just
1432
01:31:26,995 –> 01:31:30,835
the the people might get triggered part. The other challenge is how do you
1433
01:31:30,835 –> 01:31:34,515
pay all those people to produce, you know, basically 5 to 7 minutes or
1434
01:31:34,515 –> 01:31:38,290
short content. Yeah. That that’s the piece. And with AI, you might be able
1435
01:31:38,290 –> 01:31:41,990
to do that. You have the different platforms between, like, YouTube,
1436
01:31:42,690 –> 01:31:46,370
YouTube Shorts and TikTok, neither of which I watch, but
1437
01:31:46,370 –> 01:31:49,910
I know a lot of people, do, and they’re really popular.
1438
01:31:51,105 –> 01:31:54,385
So it’s more kind of the economics because I don’t know that it’s as much
1439
01:31:54,385 –> 01:31:57,985
of the triggering now with the Overton window opening as much as it
1440
01:31:57,985 –> 01:32:01,745
has. And you do see, you know,
1441
01:32:01,745 –> 01:32:05,170
like South Park. Right. You know, being out there.
1442
01:32:06,030 –> 01:32:09,870
But interesting. I I love thank you for sharing all this.
1443
01:32:09,870 –> 01:32:13,250
This is really, really fun. I like learning.
1444
01:32:15,230 –> 01:32:18,995
Well, I’m a I’m a sucker for I am. I’m a sucker for a I’m
1445
01:32:18,995 –> 01:32:22,375
a sucker for a gag. I’m a sucker for a well
1446
01:32:22,435 –> 01:32:25,875
designed gag. And I’m even more of a sucker for a
1447
01:32:25,875 –> 01:32:29,635
gag that’s well designed and operates at multiple levels and is gonna get me to
1448
01:32:29,635 –> 01:32:33,250
think a little bit deeper past just the gag itself. So, You
1449
01:32:33,250 –> 01:32:36,929
know? Like, I’ll watch I’ll watch,
1450
01:32:38,449 –> 01:32:41,250
3 stooges, like, all day. I’ll watch that kind of stuff all day. You know?
1451
01:32:41,250 –> 01:32:45,010
Please. And most men watch You know what I mean? Yeah. I
1452
01:32:45,010 –> 01:32:48,135
was gonna say I think that’s more of a I I don’t like to generalize,
1453
01:32:48,135 –> 01:32:50,535
but I do think that’s more of a male thing. Like, is it,
1454
01:32:52,295 –> 01:32:54,855
what’s his I can’t think of his name right now. The guy who was in
1455
01:32:54,855 –> 01:32:58,615
lethal weapon. Oh, Mel Gibson? Mel Gibson. He
1456
01:32:58,615 –> 01:33:02,320
loves, like, the, you know, the 3 the 3 stooges. Yeah. It’s
1457
01:33:02,320 –> 01:33:06,080
it’s it’s dumb whatever, or, you
1458
01:33:06,080 –> 01:33:09,280
know, a fart gag. Right? Like like, the fart gun in,
1459
01:33:09,600 –> 01:33:13,440
Despicable Me. Like, I I I do think that’s funny. Yeah.
1460
01:33:13,440 –> 01:33:16,105
I find that stuff funny. But clever,
1461
01:33:17,045 –> 01:33:20,885
visually clever. And it’s really the visual visual clever thing that I’m
1462
01:33:20,885 –> 01:33:24,645
looking for. Yeah. Visual cleverness. But then you compile it
1463
01:33:24,645 –> 01:33:28,389
into music and gags and the words, the
1464
01:33:28,389 –> 01:33:31,690
writing itself, when it’s working on all of those levels,
1465
01:33:32,550 –> 01:33:36,309
then you’ve got me. I mean, I’m suckered in. I’m I’m in. I’m
1466
01:33:36,309 –> 01:33:39,670
in there. And and if it’s not Yeah. So tell me how that relates back
1467
01:33:39,670 –> 01:33:43,375
to Midsummer Night’s Dream. So here’s how this relates all back to A Midsummer
1468
01:33:43,375 –> 01:33:47,135
Night’s Dream. The
1469
01:33:47,135 –> 01:33:50,975
Midsummer Night’s In Midsummer Night’s Dream, to
1470
01:33:50,975 –> 01:33:54,770
your point. And actually, you raised the point. Shakespeare was trying
1471
01:33:54,770 –> 01:33:57,830
to transmit culture here. And I think cartoons,
1472
01:33:59,570 –> 01:34:03,110
do transmit culture. They are cultural transmission
1473
01:34:05,010 –> 01:34:08,724
tools. Right? Like memes. And this is why also I
1474
01:34:08,724 –> 01:34:12,565
think you probably it’s the third reason why you probably couldn’t get this to
1475
01:34:12,565 –> 01:34:15,605
happen today, a Looney Tunes kind of thing to happen today, because we all live
1476
01:34:15,605 –> 01:34:18,664
in meme culture now. I can I can transmit
1477
01:34:19,045 –> 01:34:22,160
multiple ideas in a meme
1478
01:34:22,460 –> 01:34:26,140
of I don’t know? Pick your fame
1479
01:34:26,300 –> 01:34:30,080
oh, oh, I’ll pick a famous meme here. The the dog in
1480
01:34:30,300 –> 01:34:34,140
the, in the house that’s on fire and he’s drinking in one
1481
01:34:34,140 –> 01:34:37,074
panel, and then the next panel, it’s like everything’s fine. Right? He goes, oh, everything’s
1482
01:34:37,074 –> 01:34:40,434
fine here. Like, you can you can send that meme to
1483
01:34:40,434 –> 01:34:44,114
somebody these days, and it operates at multiple levels Yeah.
1484
01:34:44,275 –> 01:34:47,954
Inside of their experience. And then they can send it to
1485
01:34:47,954 –> 01:34:51,474
somebody else. They can sit Yeah. So now we’re contextualizing, and that’s what Looney Tunes
1486
01:34:51,474 –> 01:34:55,130
did so brilliantly. And that, of course, when A Midsummer Night’s Dream does,
1487
01:34:55,130 –> 01:34:58,590
it contextualizes it for individuals so they can transmit
1488
01:34:59,050 –> 01:35:02,730
it around. Now in the time of Shakespeare, they were
1489
01:35:02,730 –> 01:35:06,495
transmitting those ideas around via purely language because you couldn’t take
1490
01:35:06,495 –> 01:35:10,175
the actors with you and do the visuals. But in our
1491
01:35:10,175 –> 01:35:13,395
time, we can take the visuals, we can take the words.
1492
01:35:14,335 –> 01:35:18,175
It’s gonna be really interesting when memes can add music musical clips
1493
01:35:18,175 –> 01:35:20,675
to memes. That’s going to be really interesting,
1494
01:35:21,740 –> 01:35:25,500
because there’s gonna be musical gags going on people’s phones, like,
1495
01:35:25,500 –> 01:35:27,980
all of the time. And you already started to see this with GIFs a little
1496
01:35:27,980 –> 01:35:31,420
bit, you know, animated GIFs. But when you can put music on top of that
1497
01:35:31,420 –> 01:35:35,065
thing, I’ll forget it. Like, it’s gonna be ridiculous.
1498
01:35:36,745 –> 01:35:40,425
And it’s that multiple levels that we’ve layered
1499
01:35:40,425 –> 01:35:43,405
in to our culture how we transmit
1500
01:35:43,785 –> 01:35:47,005
ideas. And it’s become global, which is also awesome.
1501
01:35:47,750 –> 01:35:51,350
And so a meme, or an idea that
1502
01:35:51,350 –> 01:35:55,050
works in a Western context can now work in a global context
1503
01:35:55,110 –> 01:35:58,870
as well. A Midsummer Night’s Dream kicks all of that off. That’s my point
1504
01:35:58,870 –> 01:36:02,324
with bringing up all of this. It kicks all of it off, and Looney Tunes
1505
01:36:03,344 –> 01:36:06,405
and memes all tie into that,
1506
01:36:07,105 –> 01:36:10,165
at a, at a amazing
1507
01:36:10,945 –> 01:36:14,625
layered level. I’m doing it all with, like I
1508
01:36:14,625 –> 01:36:18,219
said, low comedy and wordplay. So
1509
01:36:18,380 –> 01:36:21,120
which, again, I I I appreciate it. Sounds
1510
01:36:22,699 –> 01:36:26,320
good. Appreciate a good meme and a good comedy,
1511
01:36:28,780 –> 01:36:32,565
for sure. Yes. Alright. Back to the book. We’re
1512
01:36:32,644 –> 01:36:36,184
we got around the corner here. We talked to I’ve talked to I’ve rambled coherently
1513
01:36:36,324 –> 01:36:38,905
about the movie twos. We might have to cut some of that.
1514
01:36:40,164 –> 01:36:43,545
No. No. No. Oh, don’t. That’s really it’s really good stuff.
1515
01:36:44,920 –> 01:36:48,140
Back to the play, back to A Midsummer Night’s Dream,
1516
01:36:48,520 –> 01:36:52,060
the Folger Shakespeare Library version
1517
01:36:52,120 –> 01:36:54,460
of A Midsummer Night’s Dream.
1518
01:36:56,440 –> 01:36:59,515
So let me go to act 3.
1519
01:37:00,135 –> 01:37:03,275
And in act 3, scene 2,
1520
01:37:04,375 –> 01:37:06,315
we’re going to pick up with
1521
01:37:08,295 –> 01:37:12,020
well, with the king of the fairies. We’re going to pick up with Oberon
1522
01:37:12,159 –> 01:37:15,760
and Robin Goodfellow, where Hock or
1523
01:37:15,760 –> 01:37:19,360
Robin Goodfellow, reports to Oberon about Titania and
1524
01:37:19,360 –> 01:37:22,420
Bottom, the guy with the ass on his head.
1525
01:37:23,360 –> 01:37:26,995
And then Demetrius is going to enter, and
1526
01:37:26,995 –> 01:37:29,575
Oberon is going to find out that, well,
1527
01:37:32,115 –> 01:37:35,795
well, fuck screwed up. And so we’re going to
1528
01:37:35,795 –> 01:37:39,475
figure out what happens when, well, when you don’t do what
1529
01:37:39,475 –> 01:37:43,210
you are supposed to do. Alright. Back to the book, back to the
1530
01:37:43,210 –> 01:37:46,570
play, back to A Midsummer Night’s Dream. Act
1531
01:37:46,570 –> 01:37:50,170
3, scene 2. Enter Oberon, king of the
1532
01:37:50,170 –> 01:37:53,929
fairies. Oberon. I wonder if Titania be awake. Then what was it that next
1533
01:37:53,929 –> 01:37:57,745
came into her eye, which she must dote on in extremity? Enter
1534
01:37:57,745 –> 01:38:01,344
Robin Goodfellow. Here comes my messenger. How now, mad
1535
01:38:01,344 –> 01:38:04,885
spirit? What night rule about this haunted crow? Robin.
1536
01:38:05,265 –> 01:38:08,945
My mistress was a monster is in love, near to her close and concentrated bower
1537
01:38:08,945 –> 01:38:12,705
while she sleeps in her dull and sleeping hour. A crew of matches rude
1538
01:38:12,705 –> 01:38:13,205
mechanicals,
1539
01:38:16,440 –> 01:38:20,200
that work for bread upon Athenian stalls were met together to rehearse a
1540
01:38:20,200 –> 01:38:23,640
play intended for great Theseus’ nuptial day, the
1541
01:38:23,640 –> 01:38:27,160
shallowest skin of that barren sore who Pyramus presented in their
1542
01:38:27,160 –> 01:38:30,945
sport pursuit had seen and entered in a break. When I did
1543
01:38:30,945 –> 01:38:34,725
him at his advantage take, had asked noll, I fixed on his head,
1544
01:38:34,785 –> 01:38:38,485
anon must be answered, and forth my mimic comes,
1545
01:38:38,785 –> 01:38:42,305
when they him spy as wild geese that creeping fowler eye or
1546
01:38:42,305 –> 01:38:46,000
russet patchychos manian sort, rising and clawing at
1547
01:38:46,000 –> 01:38:49,620
the gun’s report, thither themselves and madly sweep the sky,
1548
01:38:49,840 –> 01:38:53,520
let his sight away his fellows fly. And at our stand up
1549
01:38:53,520 –> 01:38:57,280
here, Orinor, when falls, he murder cries, and help for Athens
1550
01:38:57,280 –> 01:39:01,025
calls, Their senses thus weak, lost with their fears thus
1551
01:39:01,025 –> 01:39:04,405
strong, made senseless things begin do them wrong.
1552
01:39:04,785 –> 01:39:08,545
For briars and thorns at their apparel snatch. Some leaves,
1553
01:39:08,545 –> 01:39:12,245
some hats, some yielders, all things catch. I led them on this distracted
1554
01:39:12,305 –> 01:39:16,090
fear and left sweet Paramus translated there. When in that
1555
01:39:16,090 –> 01:39:19,870
moment, so it came to pass, Titania wake and straightaway loved
1556
01:39:20,410 –> 01:39:24,090
an ass. Oberon, this falls
1557
01:39:24,090 –> 01:39:27,765
out better than I could devise. But has thou yet latched the Athena’s
1558
01:39:27,765 –> 01:39:30,905
eyes with the love juice just as I bid thee do?
1559
01:39:31,925 –> 01:39:35,765
Robin, I took him sleeping. That is finished too. And the Athenian woman
1560
01:39:35,765 –> 01:39:39,285
by his side. That, when he waked, a force she
1561
01:39:39,285 –> 01:39:43,060
must be eyed. Enter Demetrius
1562
01:39:43,200 –> 01:39:46,560
and Hermaiah. Hermia, Oberon, stand
1563
01:39:46,560 –> 01:39:50,260
close. This is the same Athenian. Robin, this is the woman,
1564
01:39:50,560 –> 01:39:54,285
but not this the man. Then
1565
01:39:54,285 –> 01:39:57,745
they step aside and then shenanigan.
1566
01:39:59,485 –> 01:40:03,325
Shenanigans. As
1567
01:40:03,325 –> 01:40:06,385
Puck has to undo what he did.
1568
01:40:09,270 –> 01:40:12,410
When we think about A Midsummer Night’s Dream, when we think about
1569
01:40:12,710 –> 01:40:16,250
Shakespeare’s writing, and when we think about the power of
1570
01:40:17,030 –> 01:40:20,790
how we can learn from this play as a
1571
01:40:20,790 –> 01:40:24,614
leader, One of the big things that we have to take, I think, or several
1572
01:40:24,614 –> 01:40:28,315
of them, one of the big things we have to take from this play
1573
01:40:29,094 –> 01:40:32,855
is the idea that there are things that are floating around
1574
01:40:32,855 –> 01:40:36,550
that we cannot see, like love and lust. And they are
1575
01:40:36,550 –> 01:40:40,150
powerful motivators for us. We’ve talked about
1576
01:40:40,150 –> 01:40:43,830
motivators, with Libby before and how folks can be motivated
1577
01:40:43,830 –> 01:40:47,670
by anger or motivated by pride. But people can
1578
01:40:47,670 –> 01:40:51,405
also be motivated by love, Love of what
1579
01:40:51,405 –> 01:40:55,244
they are doing, love of a show, like I was just talking about Looney
1580
01:40:55,244 –> 01:40:58,385
Tunes, or even love of another
1581
01:40:58,685 –> 01:41:02,205
person. Love is a many splendored thing, to
1582
01:41:02,205 –> 01:41:05,740
paraphrase again from Shakespeare, and it is a thing that motivates
1583
01:41:05,800 –> 01:41:09,400
us. We also need to fall in love with our
1584
01:41:09,400 –> 01:41:13,160
culture. We need to fall in love with the ways in which our culture
1585
01:41:13,160 –> 01:41:16,780
is transmitted, whether that be through words
1586
01:41:17,240 –> 01:41:20,994
or through visual means. And
1587
01:41:21,534 –> 01:41:24,915
culture is one of the another one of those things that we cannot see.
1588
01:41:25,454 –> 01:41:29,135
Culture is the handmaid of civilization. It walks
1589
01:41:29,135 –> 01:41:32,815
hand in hand. If civilization were male culture would be female and they
1590
01:41:32,815 –> 01:41:36,510
walk hand in hand creating all of us
1591
01:41:36,510 –> 01:41:39,170
and turning us all into, well,
1592
01:41:40,030 –> 01:41:43,470
productive human beings. And then of course for
1593
01:41:43,470 –> 01:41:46,830
leaders the last thing that they could take from A Midsummer Night’s Dream is how
1594
01:41:46,830 –> 01:41:50,614
to love a good gag, how how to actually loosen up and, laugh at
1595
01:41:50,614 –> 01:41:54,135
things because there’s more things that are humorous than there are
1596
01:41:54,135 –> 01:41:57,974
things that are un humorous or that are tragic in
1597
01:41:57,974 –> 01:42:01,195
this world. And even tragedy, by the way, can be turned
1598
01:42:01,620 –> 01:42:05,380
sometimes into comedy. Not to dismiss the depth of the
1599
01:42:05,380 –> 01:42:08,980
tragedy, but actually to elevate people around it so that they can
1600
01:42:08,980 –> 01:42:12,420
overcome it. As I round the corner here with
1601
01:42:12,420 –> 01:42:16,199
Libby, what are your final thoughts on what leaders can grab
1602
01:42:16,775 –> 01:42:19,835
from A Midsummer Night’s Dream? One of your favorite
1603
01:42:20,455 –> 01:42:22,075
Shakespeare plays.
1604
01:42:26,135 –> 01:42:29,755
Actually, it’s all about having Levitti in a, like, Levitti
1605
01:42:30,770 –> 01:42:31,750
in in the workplace.
1606
01:42:34,610 –> 01:42:38,370
I I, you know, I remember working very,
1607
01:42:38,370 –> 01:42:41,730
very late nights. I was, you know, a consultant with the big four for many
1608
01:42:41,730 –> 01:42:45,170
years, and there was nothing funnier than Harvey
1609
01:42:45,170 –> 01:42:46,395
Balls at midnight.
1610
01:42:51,014 –> 01:42:54,074
You know, we all had, you know, boyfriends, girlfriends,
1611
01:42:54,375 –> 01:42:58,054
spouses to go home to, but, like, there was nothing
1612
01:42:58,054 –> 01:43:01,290
more funny at midnight than Harvey Balls.
1613
01:43:01,430 –> 01:43:04,010
Mhmm. And, you know, it’s always about,
1614
01:43:05,910 –> 01:43:09,670
bringing in, you know, mischievousness or fun and not taking
1615
01:43:10,150 –> 01:43:12,185
you know, when you’re in the grind,
1616
01:43:14,565 –> 01:43:17,925
when you have tight deadlines and, you know, and you believe
1617
01:43:17,925 –> 01:43:21,685
passionately about what you’re doing for your client and you want your team
1618
01:43:21,685 –> 01:43:24,905
to be successful, never forget to have
1619
01:43:25,590 –> 01:43:29,350
fun. And you see that, like, with the special ops teams. Those
1620
01:43:29,350 –> 01:43:32,870
guys give each other a hard time every single
1621
01:43:32,870 –> 01:43:36,710
day. It’s constant ribbing and riffing, but that’s
1622
01:43:36,950 –> 01:43:39,690
that releases pressure and tension, and it’s
1623
01:43:40,565 –> 01:43:44,325
fun. Don’t forget the art of fun and stop taking
1624
01:43:44,325 –> 01:43:47,465
things. I think results matter.
1625
01:43:48,885 –> 01:43:52,645
Challenge matters. Like, don’t it’s not about passivity and not
1626
01:43:52,645 –> 01:43:56,120
caring, but it’s about being able to have fun in the in the
1627
01:43:56,120 –> 01:43:59,880
moment. Yeah, in all
1628
01:43:59,880 –> 01:44:03,719
of life. And it’s about what it really is always about love. Right? Always
1629
01:44:03,719 –> 01:44:06,760
about love. If you love what you do, you never work a day in your
1630
01:44:06,760 –> 01:44:10,335
life. I believe that that’s that’s probably one of the
1631
01:44:10,335 –> 01:44:14,175
more overused motivational phrases, in entrepreneurship and
1632
01:44:14,175 –> 01:44:18,015
in leadership, but it is true. The
1633
01:44:18,015 –> 01:44:21,635
challenge is, of course, is in a world of option multiple options,
1634
01:44:21,775 –> 01:44:25,560
high optionality, or not even high optionality,
1635
01:44:25,860 –> 01:44:29,620
a lot of options, a lot of choices. How do you find what you love?
1636
01:44:29,620 –> 01:44:33,060
But once you find that thing, then you stick with it. Right? And you gotta
1637
01:44:33,060 –> 01:44:36,420
have humor with it. You gotta have you gotta enjoy what you’re
1638
01:44:36,420 –> 01:44:39,905
doing. Gotta be able to ramble for, like, 20 minutes about Looney Tunes. Not
1639
01:44:39,905 –> 01:44:42,965
enough not enough people like the the challenge.
1640
01:44:43,345 –> 01:44:46,945
Like, find the love of solving new
1641
01:44:46,945 –> 01:44:50,489
problems and the challenge that goes with that. Yeah. You know?
1642
01:44:50,489 –> 01:44:54,270
And that, to me, is really about love because it’s about helping
1643
01:44:54,650 –> 01:44:58,090
wanting to elevate everyone. You know, rise the ocean. Yeah. If you ink
1644
01:44:58,170 –> 01:45:01,389
yeah. Raise the ocean, all boats will rise.
1645
01:45:01,530 –> 01:45:04,989
Mhmm. You know, falling in love with solving problems.
1646
01:45:05,265 –> 01:45:08,945
Right? Yes. Like, that is fun. It’s hard. That’s why a lot of
1647
01:45:08,945 –> 01:45:12,785
people just sit back and and judge how someone, you know,
1648
01:45:12,785 –> 01:45:16,545
solved a problem rather than do it. It’s just like, yeah. Fuck with
1649
01:45:16,545 –> 01:45:19,860
the challenge. Right. It’s hard as he
1650
01:45:20,719 –> 01:45:24,480
heck. But that’s fun, and too many
1651
01:45:24,480 –> 01:45:28,239
people have, you know, I don’t know what I
1652
01:45:28,239 –> 01:45:31,140
think they think love of work,
1653
01:45:31,715 –> 01:45:34,935
means art or, like, you know, soft
1654
01:45:35,475 –> 01:45:39,235
stuff that’s been intellectualized as, things
1655
01:45:39,235 –> 01:45:42,835
that we should love. But Mhmm. Yeah. But what’s the end
1656
01:45:42,835 –> 01:45:46,550
result and being you know, and and loving that whole process
1657
01:45:46,550 –> 01:45:49,610
and making sure that whole process works for everyone?
1658
01:45:52,309 –> 01:45:55,770
We do there’s so many landmines that we always end up tripping on,
1659
01:45:56,710 –> 01:45:59,864
when you wanna say, you know, to let everyone be,
1660
01:46:00,324 –> 01:46:04,005
make sure something works for everyone. It’s you know, there’s gotta be tough love, and
1661
01:46:04,005 –> 01:46:07,445
there’s gotta be we know what our constraints are, and we can’t be everything to
1662
01:46:07,445 –> 01:46:11,045
everyone. But, you know, doing your darndest to
1663
01:46:11,045 –> 01:46:14,550
create an environment for everyone to thrive based on their
1664
01:46:14,550 –> 01:46:18,330
different, yeah, wants and needs and skills, but, you know,
1665
01:46:18,470 –> 01:46:22,310
providing, you know, being able to make tough decisions that
1666
01:46:22,310 –> 01:46:26,070
may be uncomfortable for folks because you know that long
1667
01:46:26,070 –> 01:46:29,775
term result is what matters and where
1668
01:46:29,855 –> 01:46:32,114
you know, and and we’re heading for.
1669
01:46:33,614 –> 01:46:35,875
But too many too many people
1670
01:46:37,375 –> 01:46:40,974
want the, yeah, want the satisfaction today, and they’re not
1671
01:46:40,974 –> 01:46:44,560
willing to do the hard work. Fall in love
1672
01:46:44,560 –> 01:46:47,380
with the outcomes of hard work.
1673
01:46:48,480 –> 01:46:51,900
Yeah. Yeah. No. I I agree with that. How
1674
01:46:52,480 –> 01:46:56,260
do we bring that back to you miss our ice cream?
1675
01:46:58,645 –> 01:47:02,005
I think we’ll leave it there. I think I think it’s a combination for
1676
01:47:02,005 –> 01:47:05,844
me. It’s, not over index. This is where
1677
01:47:05,844 –> 01:47:09,385
balance always comes in and thinking about how ecosystems require,
1678
01:47:09,980 –> 01:47:13,820
you know, dark and light. Yeah. It requires good
1679
01:47:13,820 –> 01:47:17,199
and bad, seriousness and fun.
1680
01:47:17,580 –> 01:47:21,340
Mhmm. But also objective and
1681
01:47:21,340 –> 01:47:25,185
subjective. That’s subjective. You know, so balancing an objective reality with
1682
01:47:25,505 –> 01:47:28,405
an ephemeral one. You know? Allowing the dreams
1683
01:47:29,265 –> 01:47:33,025
to be, but not over indexing too much on the dream world or over
1684
01:47:33,025 –> 01:47:36,645
indexing too much on reality. On reality. No. Yeah.
1685
01:47:36,705 –> 01:47:39,850
No. Yeah. I agree with that. No. Well,
1686
01:47:40,630 –> 01:47:44,230
well, once again, I would like to thank Libby Younger for coming on the podcast
1687
01:47:44,230 –> 01:47:47,370
today. This is always pleasure as usual.
1688
01:47:48,070 –> 01:47:51,850
And please go check out the older Shakespeare library
1689
01:47:51,910 –> 01:47:55,345
version of A Midsummer Night’s Dream and, fall in
1690
01:47:55,345 –> 01:47:57,685
love with well, fall in love with Shakespeare.
1691
01:47:59,265 –> 01:48:03,105
It’s a challenge. It is a challenge. And if but if you’re gonna be as
1692
01:48:03,105 –> 01:48:06,705
challenging as you will, you will fall in love with. And with
1693
01:48:06,705 –> 01:48:09,845
that, well, oh, we’re out.