On Practicing the Discipline of Hope
An interview with Jia Tolentino.
An interview with Jia Tolentino.
Christopher Bollen, Jia Tolentino Interview Jul 2002 15min Permalink
A conversation between Eminem and Elton John.
Elton John, Eminem Interview Feb 2018 15min Permalink
“There’s always room for another story. There’s always room for another tune.”
Choire Sicha Interview Sep 2015 15min Permalink
“It never really worked for me to have long arguments about motivation. I think looking at your own life, on- and offscreen, you can motivate anything, or you can delude yourself into anything.”
Susan Sarandon, George Saunders Interview Apr 2016 10min Permalink
What it’s like to have your novel filmed by Werner Herzog and Klaus Kinski.
Bruce Chatwin Interview Mar 1988 15min Permalink
“I have a big cock in my living room.”
John Waters Interview Apr 1990 20min Permalink
“I did a few days on Franco’s As I Lay Dying, and the vibe on the set was very heavy and serious. The only thing I can equate it to is tripping with a bunch of your friends.”
Danny McBride, Bill Hader Interview Sep 2014 10min Permalink
“Does your life have a plot? It has characters. There is a narrative. There’s a lot of story, a lot of character. But plot? Eh, no.”
Matthew McConaughey Interview Jul 2014 Permalink
The environmental artist on massive budgets, wrapping the Reichstag, and working alone.
Barbara Rose Interview Mar 2014 Permalink
“When society becomes unhinged, the arts get really good.”
Bryce Dessner, Philip Glass Interview Feb 2014 10min Permalink
Tom Waits interviewed at 38.
Francis Thrumm, Tom Waits Interview Oct 1988 35min Permalink
“How much money do you make? And do you shave your pubic hair?”
Nicole Holofcener Interview Dec 2013 Permalink
Talking with the influential New York gallerist.
Matthew Higgs, Paula Cooper Interview Aug 2012 15min Permalink
BARR: What makes you laugh? BERNHARD: Well, it's really a myriad of things, but usually it's something that's very organic. It's something that happens on the street. BARR: Like fat people falling down? BERNHARD: No, no . . . [laughs] BARR: That really cracks me up. It's terrible.
Roseanne Barr Interview Apr 2012 15min Permalink
A conversation with the 88-year-old abstract painter.
PALTROW: Did you design camouflage while in the army?
KELLY: I did posters. I was in what they called the camouflage secret army. This was in 1943. The people at Fort Meade got the idea to make rubber dummies of tanks, which we inflated on the spot and waited for Germans to see through their night photography or spies. We were in Normandy, for example, pretending to be a big, strong armored division which, in fact, was still in England. That way, even though the tanks were only inflated, the Germans would think there were a lot of them there, a lot of guns, a whole big infantry. We just blew them up and put them in a field.
Ellsworth Kelly, Gwyneth Paltrow Interview Oct 2011 25min Permalink
SHRIVER: Regarding your Playboy exposé, I know you've discussed this a great deal, but I'd like to ask you this: You've said that you were glad you did it. What role do you think that exposé played in your early career and the notoriety you've achieved? Is there a similar exposé that someone could do today--something that would be as shocking? STEINEM: It took me a very long time to be glad. At first, it was such a gigantic mistake from a career point of view that I really regretted it. I'd just begun to be taken seriously as a freelance writer, but after the Playboy article, I mostly got requests to go underground in some other semi-sexual way. It was so bad that I returned an advance to turn the Playboy article into a paperback, even though I had to borrow the money. Even now, people ask why I was a Bunny, Right-Wingers still describe me only as a former Bunny, and you're still asking me about it-almost a half-century later. But feminism did make me realize that I was glad I did it--because I identified with all the women who ended up an underpaid waitress in too-high heels and a costume that was too tight to breathe in. Most were just trying to make a living and had no other way of doing it. I'd made up a background as a secretary, and the woman who interviewed me asked, "Honey, if you can type, why would you want to work here?" In the sense that we're all identified too much by our outsides instead of our insides and are mostly in underpaid service jobs, I realized we're all Bunnies--so yes, I'm glad I did it. If a writer wants to do a similar exposé now, there's no shortage of stories that need telling. For instance, go as a pregnant woman into so-called crisis pregnancy centers and record what you're told to scare or force you not to choose an abortion-including harassing you, calling your family or employer. Or pretend to be a woman with a criminal record and see how difficult it is to get a job. Or use a homeless center as an address and see what happens in your life. Or work at an ordinary service job in the pink-collar ghetto, as Barbara Ehrenreich did in Nickel and Dimed. But be warned that if you're a woman journalist and you choose an underground job that's related to sex or looks, you may find it hard to shake the very thing you were exposing.
Maria Shriver Interview Aug 2011 30min Permalink
When I hear music as a fan, I see fields. I see landscapes. I close my eyes and see an entire universe that that music and the voice, or the narrative, create. A music video-and any other kind of visual reference-is created by someone else. For me, as a music fan, visuals kind of steal away the purity of the song.
Christopher Bollen, Michael Stipe Interview May 2011 25min Permalink
On Sam Cooke, theme parties, and the importance of McDonald’s-related jingles when street performing.
R. Kelly, Will Oldham Interview Feb 2011 25min Permalink