Charles Bukowski discusses his views on death and why most writers are boring to him. Subscribe to see more Bukowski poetry!
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'If you do dull shit, it doesn't matter what you die from.' Simply brilliant.
@kablouielouie Жыл бұрын
Well he died of bone cancer not liver disease or alcohol related illness anyone can get leukemia and lots of alcoholics live a long time some are better writers than others some don't write at all was his point. Think if he were young and nice looking instead he could have been an alcoholic like Jim Morrison and been too exciting harassed by cops at his own shows charged with being lewd overdosed at 27 just not his fate.
@annalisavajda252 Жыл бұрын
he said, "if you write dull shit, it doesn't do any good what you die from"
@Chicanery_Artifice Жыл бұрын
not brilliant at all. his own shit is so boring. but maybe not to him. the most important thing is that he has fun writing, I guess. and of course it sells.
@nikolausgerszewski2086 Жыл бұрын
@@nikolausgerszewski2086 we do not care what you think
@godloveszaza Жыл бұрын
@@godloveszaza who the fuck is 'we'? are you demanding the Pluralis Majestatis, Sir?
@nikolausgerszewski2086 Жыл бұрын
We should call Bukowski's approach to writing the "The Bim Principle."
@elichilton7031 Жыл бұрын
lol
@Southsayer. Жыл бұрын
More like "The Bim-Bim-Bim Principle."
@Mooseman327 Жыл бұрын
@@Mooseman327 Bimcubedski's principle :)
@scepticalchymist Жыл бұрын
Bim bim bim ... bim bim bim ... in this atomic age , for juicy flavour and not yawning yourself to shit 😅
@cioran1754 Жыл бұрын
Why not? 😁😁😁
@SuperMrBlaze Жыл бұрын
"I yawned myself to shit!" Loved that.
@TheArtofGuitar10 ай бұрын
For Bukowski to say he likes someone as a person seems, from his writing, to be a high compliment indeed.
@jonquilcat7945 Жыл бұрын
He likes his lines juicy.
@kevinoshea557 Жыл бұрын
and so what does that mean? Nothing. The man's entire career was built off nothing.
@billyb4790 Жыл бұрын
what
@lovrboi Жыл бұрын
maybe he just said it to make the situation less tense
@crackbaby4444 Жыл бұрын
He is strong in his "get off my lawn" energy.
@commandercaptain4664 Жыл бұрын
"He wasn't even a professional drunk" ..proceeds to describe how to get wasted without swallowing vomit. This completely cracked me up hahaha
@Alter_Ego247 Жыл бұрын
Ага не был ..цвет лица...
@_MityaАй бұрын
Yes, he was a real low class act.
@Lili-Benovent6 күн бұрын
He's right about seeing patterns and 'repeats' in life. It happens early too; you hear the exact same things, see the exact same scenarios play out.
@vilentman111 Жыл бұрын
Yep, I really started noticing it at the age of 28.
@JustGresh Жыл бұрын
So frikkin depressing to talk about. I love it 😂
@noodle845 Жыл бұрын
Yes, people have been saying that forever.
@posteroonie Жыл бұрын
@@posteroonie Ironic... When you think about it
@vilentman111 Жыл бұрын
@@noodle845 It's not depressing I don't think.
@vilentman111 Жыл бұрын
As someone who takes particular interest in Fantasy and Sci-Fi, both genres suffer from a severe dearth of decent poetry - not _poetry_ as in verse, but poetry as a practical method and an exercise in creative flow. I can't tell you how many celebrated authors have bored the total shit out of me over such a lack. Don't describe your world, make me live in it. Don't write your characters, make me know them.
@_Jay_Maker_11 ай бұрын
That's the truth!
@farshimelt11 ай бұрын
Read Gene Wolfe
@discipline-my5hi11 ай бұрын
Ursula K. Le Guin is one of very few authors who redeem the otherwise poor reputation of sci-fi, an amazing author in her own right
@ximono11 ай бұрын
"Don't describe your world, make me live in it", exactly. I'll probably steal that. 😁
@MrBandini2711 ай бұрын
@@MrBandini27 but the question is how?
@StrongScholar11 ай бұрын
I no longer care for Bukowski's nihilism, but he's totally right about exciting writing
@flutebasket4294 Жыл бұрын
I actually don't think he was a nihilist, but a self-loathing romantic that is misunderstood. It comes through a lot more in his poetry.
@kreg2711 ай бұрын
@@kreg27 Well, that explains it: When it comes to poetry, I'M a nihilist!
@flutebasket429411 ай бұрын
I love this guy. He is so real yet ultimately subjective and full of shit. His words bring me to tears, and his interviews make me grin or drop my jaw. Very wise of him to welcome death, btw, as it is very natural.
@TheodoreDorado Жыл бұрын
If he's full of shit, he's in a world full of shit.
@unfortunatebeam Жыл бұрын
what do you mean by “ultimately subjective and full of shit”
@natesvibin3937 Жыл бұрын
Everyone's "ultimately subjective".
@eternity8811 Жыл бұрын
indeed but what comes after death
@logia7 Жыл бұрын
@@logia7 life
@dragonfly6347 Жыл бұрын
Bukowskis genius is in his honesty and simplicity. A clear son of John Fante but completely original himself.
@HenryChinaski614 Жыл бұрын
Regardless of his life philosophy Bukowski makes good points about writing. He definitely had a gift to go mining for the right words instead of talking around a subject. He showed fortitude persevering in shitty jobs and situations then writing at night. No wonder he hit the booze.
@johnanthonycafe2993 Жыл бұрын
Poets do that
@cindyo6298 Жыл бұрын
Same lol.
@nicholaskearney678 Жыл бұрын
he most likely was a boozer and a writer for the same reason(s). most great creative minds are all troubled in some way.
@Noway-sg8md11 ай бұрын
@@Noway-sg8md I'm a genius and I don't even drink. Do you have any idea what I'm going through ?
@johnanthonycafe299311 ай бұрын
@@johnanthonycafe2993 Who even started talking about you? 💀
@Joaquim-nz9vp11 ай бұрын
Bukowski occupied an interesting position among writers. If you surveyed 10 American English professors, seven have never heard of him, two think he's a pornographer, and one thinks he is the greatest literary genius since Shakespeare. I even like his poetry. His poems are his stories written vertically, and his stories are poems written horizontally. He is the best at what he does, but nobody else is in the exact same category; he's kinda like the Keith Richards of literature.
@ronniechilds2002 Жыл бұрын
Beautiful
@Honestly__now Жыл бұрын
"If you surveyed 10 American English professors, seven have never heard of him" : really ?? Professors ? He's pretty famous over here in France, I'm sure every litterature professor knows him.
@croulantroulant3082 Жыл бұрын
I provoked two housewifes on a local train in Italy, and they tried to disrespect me by comparing my looks to Bukowski. So he’s no hidden gem anymore over here.
@torgeirgimmingsrud2439 Жыл бұрын
@@croulantroulant3082 You'd be surprised. Thankfully his popularity had a resurgence in the 90s and 2000s, but academia doesn't pay him much mind.
@ryanlynch29011 ай бұрын
I'd say he's a lot like Picasso. He's able to take things down to their most essential elements, and make them fun and bright while still retaining depth and definitely a good punch.
@ryanlynch29011 ай бұрын
That's why the book thief is my favourite of all time. It's not about the punchline being set up but each line stands on its own
@boity-fromthemilkygalaxy2504 Жыл бұрын
is The Book Thief by Bukowski?...I can't seem to find it
@kools67 Жыл бұрын
@@kools67 no no. It's by Markus Zusak
@boity-fromthemilkygalaxy2504 Жыл бұрын
Try "The Shadow of the wind" you ll have better results.
@deathfeel Жыл бұрын
@@deathfeel The Shadow of the Wind Carlos Ruiz Zafón?
@kools67 Жыл бұрын
@@deathfeel Thanks for the recommendation. Just reserved it from the library.
@GinaGreenlee Жыл бұрын
Love his writing. I finished Factotum last week. All six of his novels are great. His writing style is so much fun and his stories capture a different era, bringing to life the streets of LA from a poor man's perspective. 🍺🥃😏
@kevinkelley4376 Жыл бұрын
They are all as good as Ham on Rye you reckon? I tore through that book, short as it is. But really good I thought.
@oinkooink Жыл бұрын
@@oinkooink, I agree, Ham on Rye is a good one because he opens up about his childhood. The others I would recommend are Post Office, Factotum & Women..
@kevinkelley4376 Жыл бұрын
personally my favorite is love is a dog from hell
@lovrboi Жыл бұрын
@@kevinkelley4376they're all pretty funny, but perhaps repetitive. A legend nonetheless
@noodle845 Жыл бұрын
I loved Ham on Rye. Need to get to the others. The stories and characters are so vivid, alive. And I love his humor.
@gordeevious11 ай бұрын
Such a beautiful broken man... Bless his hearth. A unique voice.
@victorhuizar227911 ай бұрын
Feels almost like a crime now not to have read a single thing written by this guy at my age.
@1manorgy Жыл бұрын
Yer breakin the law, get thee to a Library, I hooked up w/a librarian once after she confessed to me she had stolen the Bukowski book I was lookin for.
@stevevitka7442 Жыл бұрын
read 'Tales of Ordinary Madness'
@jamesbrough6805 Жыл бұрын
You're honestly better off reading literally anything else or hell watching a movie
@rocketbun541311 ай бұрын
not missing much tbh
@alleygh0st11 ай бұрын
@@alleygh0st I deserve a taste of bim bim bim in my life at least on one occasion
@mrpussinboots425211 ай бұрын
Everyday should be like this, love this guys energy and perspective
@Avalonanon Жыл бұрын
Nah, the world would be shit with snobbish people like this.
@lampad4549 Жыл бұрын
....So you haven't seen the domestic violence then? Bukowski wrote some very good stuff but he wasn't a good human being it seems.
@gonufc Жыл бұрын
@@gonufc I dont think anyone on earth would say he was a good human being. Why would you even think he should be? He's a famous writer, not a famous "good human"
@sunkintree Жыл бұрын
@@gonufc good juman/ bad juman, he’s allowed to have a good thought or frame of thinking come out of his mouth I don’t know much about him but based off my life experiences obviously not relating to domestic violence it resonated with me. It’s hard to move through life getting stuck on that shit learn to appreciate
@Avalonanon Жыл бұрын
@@gonufc You haven't seen the domestic violence his dad gave him either. Shit happens and then it keeps on happening.
@godflow2854 Жыл бұрын
agree 100%. so many modern writers just seem to try to wrack up pages, like if it's not a 1000 page book, you did something wrong.
@RWSCOTT Жыл бұрын
And who's gonna read a 1000 page book these days except the kind of sophistic snobs who write them in the first place.
@unfortunatebeam Жыл бұрын
agree
@BriantWebster Жыл бұрын
Old timey writers were arguably worse with writing filler. Even the great Tolkien, you can cut entire sentences out of a page without changing any information passed on to the reader.
@bigape5502 Жыл бұрын
@@bigape5502 I'd say you can cut entire pages...
@kilianlang331611 ай бұрын
Genre authors who write fantasy and sci-fi are bad with that. They complain about not being taken seriously by the literary establishment but bloat their books with so much meaningless drivel and pointless world building. A lot of them should just stick to playing D&D instead of writing novels.
@silversnail14132 ай бұрын
Orwell talked about this on his rules for good writing. Do not embelish excessively a sentence to say something or it will lose its power. If you can say something in 4 words instead of 10, go for the first option.
@hittomanstudio7056 Жыл бұрын
He stole that from Aristotle a few thousand years before.
@greyeyed123 Жыл бұрын
@@greyeyed123 He borrowed that from Aristotle, and it deserves to be said, over and over.
@farshimelt11 ай бұрын
@@farshimelt The best writers steal. (I stole that from you-know-who.)
@greyeyed12311 ай бұрын
Wouldn't an expanded vocabulary aid in conciseness?
@mrpussinboots425211 ай бұрын
@@mrpussinboots4252 No one said it wouldn't, least of all Orwell.
@greyeyed12311 ай бұрын
So this is why I like Bukowski's style, I've been trying to figure it out. I summed it up as its simplicity but now I'm seeing this I understand. The juice. He has it in his sentences. Its direct. Sometimes there's no need for all the extra things.
@ochubacollins31817 ай бұрын
The answer is simple. You just didn't realize it at first. So now you do!
@Shagamaw-1009 күн бұрын
The thing about Bukowski though is that his writing reflects that repetition that he complains about it this interview. If you read more than a few of his stories or novels they all kinda blend together, it's all Henry Chinaski drinking and screwing or drinking and getting in fights. Factotum and Post Office are basically indistinguishable in my memory except for the fact the in one of them he's working as a mailman. Then there are some short stories of him going to the racetrack to place bets and those are some of the dullest things I've ever read, even when I was reading a bunch of Bukowski a few years ago those racetrack stories would make my eyes glaze over. That being said, I've always appreciated his novel Ham On Rye
@michaelegan3522 Жыл бұрын
It's his poetry that is significant. He keeps it terse and to the point.
@farshimelt11 ай бұрын
The essence of American writing
@inveteratecrusader4882 Жыл бұрын
the essence of chatting shite
@engery213 Жыл бұрын
Yes: not very great.
@pedromorais682611 ай бұрын
I keep seeing this clip over and over again
@yushamush9849 Жыл бұрын
Hank had a calm psychosis about him. His words more so. A great writer of poetry and prose.
@OneHundredPercent-100 Жыл бұрын
Tom Waits music at the end was a nice touch.
@scottwebster695 Жыл бұрын
What song is it?
@freakingevilgenius Жыл бұрын
@@freakingevilgenius The song is called Tom Traubert's Blues by Tom Waits
@Southsayer. Жыл бұрын
@@Southsayer. Thanks, mate. I've only recently started getting into Tom Waits and I'm now a fan.
@freakingevilgenius Жыл бұрын
@@freakingevilgenius You're welcome!
@Southsayer. Жыл бұрын
"If you write dull shit, it doesn't matter what you die from." This is infinitely wise.
@eugeneslaven9291 Жыл бұрын
If you write good shit, it doesn’t matter what you die from. He was just being a disrespectful jackass.
@danstella6996 Жыл бұрын
you are infinitely gullible. that is a profoundly stupid thing to say. for Gods sake just think about it.
@terrysmith4889 Жыл бұрын
Great ending to a great video. Man was real and very very cool.
@Natedawg38 Жыл бұрын
'We're tough men together, through the horrors of life.' [Clink] 🍻
@ronmackinnon9374 Жыл бұрын
He really lit up when he started talking about the process of writing bless him.. i like how he got fed up with the analytical but dead host
@CastleHassall Жыл бұрын
Reading Bukowski made me understand what true writing is. Difficult to put it in words but when you read it you know it's the thing. And art appart, his stories are so fun and so bright, great guy
@giuseppebonsignore4397 Жыл бұрын
Hemingway got it.
@Graanvlok Жыл бұрын
I doubt that - you understand what 'true writing' is. this is just phony. there is no honesty in it.
@nikolausgerszewski2086 Жыл бұрын
@@nikolausgerszewski2086 Ach there's honesty even in the Ach I wrote through text Everything is honesty, even if linked and chained by lies and whatnot, it conducts to the same person, to the same mind. Fuck all and have a beer is what I think, that could cheer people up. Introduce more syncopation in our mainstream music.
@Samuel-oq8gn Жыл бұрын
@@nikolausgerszewski2086 what do you mean genius? What are you talking about?
@giuseppebonsignore4397 Жыл бұрын
@@giuseppebonsignore4397 this is all just bragging and boasting and judging without any basis. Lowry is obviously a way better writer, or as I would rather say: a writer at all. Bukowsky is just boulevard.
@nikolausgerszewski2086 Жыл бұрын
So real and authentic. Love this guy would pay to have a beer with him.
@duanekilgore913011 ай бұрын
Absolutely priceless! Thanks!❤
@eternaldoorman5228 Жыл бұрын
I agree a hundred percent. I find myself being bored to death when the writers spend time beating about the bush with exaggerated phrases to describe a simple thing to sound more profound.
@WastingTime1878 Жыл бұрын
@Nazara R That's not what Mukul said though.
@ryanlynch29011 ай бұрын
There's this idea of being a writer-- it's a certain pretentiousness that goes with it, grand entrances and gestures. Vocabulary words to create a mirage of intellect. It's pompous and ever so boring. Write like you've lived.
@ryanlynch29011 ай бұрын
@@ryanlynch290 💯 nothing but facts
@Hashpotato11 ай бұрын
I highly recommand Paul Auster. Though I think most of you probaby know him. His writing is, at least to me, the way Bukowski describes the "Bim-Bim-Bim effect". Sure, he doesn't write about the stuff Buk did. But that doesn't matter. It's simply great writing.
@MrBandini2711 ай бұрын
@@MrBandini27 bim bim bim 😂😂😂
@mrpussinboots425211 ай бұрын
"There is nothing new under the sun, its all been done before" -King Solomon
@eoinbrennan3949 Жыл бұрын
Not in the same way, once you choose to pursue ceativity, you join a fraternity of similar creators. They influence us as we will the ones who come after.
@redsol3629 Жыл бұрын
@@redsol3629 I think create is a misnomer. What we term create is just us assembling and re-arranging preexisting ideas that are we taught. As someone said before, there is no original or unique idea.
@metsrus Жыл бұрын
@Abe McGee Just because something is built on the foundation of history does not mean it is not unique. You speak like someone who has never created anything. There is something intangible the new apprentice brings to the craft. His own spirit and sovereignty as an individual.
@redsol3629 Жыл бұрын
@@redsol3629 "There is something intangible the new apprentice brings to the craft. His own spirit and sovereignty as an individual." That intangible is still not unique, for the individual has long been shaped by the ideas of his environment. stick an individual in a room devoid of any knowledge or experience from birth, the first idea he comes up would be more original than anything the so called creators you speak of, can come up with.
@metsrus Жыл бұрын
@Abe McGee Ah yes the empty room argument, your point collapses on itself with that perspective. You argue that artists move things around, yet you put your example in a room with no pieces. Are you a creator?
@redsol3629 Жыл бұрын
He's a tired old drunk but he's right. If you're doing everything to set up a climax, no one will even care about it if you've bored them along the way to get there.
@BookClubDisaster11 ай бұрын
still love your work!!
@udomatthiasdrums532211 ай бұрын
If you are unfamiliar with Bukowski's work. He wrote several novels and several collections of poems. One of my favorite poems is The Man With The Beautiful Eyes. There's a great narration/animation of it on KZhead
@Tarantula3322211 ай бұрын
Thanks for the recommendation, I'll check that one out.
@LinkEX11 ай бұрын
Most celebrities emerge from Borat interviews looking ridiculous. Not Charles. CLASS act ❤
@ricardovosse384111 ай бұрын
We couldn't hear to Dostoevsky, but Bukowski is there to fill that gap
@kumarparth28289 ай бұрын
0:08 "Why, you have have a nice wife?" Wow, I didn't know Borat Sagdiyev actually got to interview Bukowski
@IosifDrovin Жыл бұрын
Be nice if the interviewer had the presence of mind to ask Bukowski who he thought were good or even great writers (present company excepted)!
@Zebred2001 Жыл бұрын
i love the story he tells about the guy who pulled a gun on him at that apartment party
@benified6920 Жыл бұрын
Great interview.
@crazyandcurious2585 Жыл бұрын
His writing is lively all right. Really easy to read. Quite like Hemmingway. Short punchy sentences. Sterling Hayden's autobiography was similar.
@davy_K Жыл бұрын
I always click on Charles' interviews. He doesnt hold back on his opinions like most are afraid to do, especially in the entertainment world.
@jonvia8 ай бұрын
the end of this video is so awesome
@MaxShoham11 ай бұрын
Love him roasting this man’s death hahaha
@alanna4858 Жыл бұрын
I must be living on a different level because life continues to surprise me even in late middle age. I learn and grow every month, sometimes even in the space of a week! But times are different.
@sarahs5340 Жыл бұрын
I'm 84 and feel the same. I sit down to play music, and something different comes out every time. It's not all worthy, but the search is worth the effort.
@farshimelt11 ай бұрын
@@farshimelt I agree. I love Bukowski and his writing played a major role in my life, but there is more too it than described in this one perspective.
@honban11 ай бұрын
pace, life, sunlight, flavor, , delicious, juice such direct wisdom
@carlofiorletta11 ай бұрын
I fully agree with Charles about every line needing its own life.
@johnisaacdavey Жыл бұрын
'Under the Volcano' is a dull read, but Hank's a poet applying poetic judgment to literary prose. He sounds like a poet looking for like effects in all the prose he tried to read. There's a place for rapid-fire, rat-a-tat-tat writing, but that's what '40s detective noir novels were for (and some others, of course). 'Dull' doesn't equate to 'bed' if by 'dull' the critic means 'It didn't snap and crackle like a poem.'
@wolfwilliams Жыл бұрын
well in this comment every line holds its own so if you can apply it to youtube comments, writers can apply it to southern porch verandas.
@kallenijs Жыл бұрын
Equate to "bed" who even said that? And as if the style of prose he's describing is exclusive to 40s noir novels. Hes 100% correct about literary fiction being (mostly) boring.
@unfortunatebeam Жыл бұрын
Dostoyevsky was wordy and highly detailed but boy his books are damn good reads. They don't exactly bim bim bim. Crime and Punishment was a ripper book.
@oinkooink Жыл бұрын
@@oedipamaas2067 It's really only boring for people with defective brains. It's like people who think classical music is suppose to relax you or help you fall asleep
@sunkintree Жыл бұрын
That's the insight I was waiting to read. My first thought was he was applying poetry to novels, but I didn't have the rest of it. Thank you.
@farshimelt11 ай бұрын
For anyone wondering, the song at the end is "Waltzing Matilda" performed by Tom Waits.
@CounterNerd Жыл бұрын
This is so cool. Honestly I thought there was something wrong with me that I couldn’t get with the kinds of writing that he was criticizing and that I could only keep my interest with writers who do bim bim bim. Nathaniel West comes to mind as one of my favorites who totally exudes that style in Miss Lonelyhearts. So glad I came across this!!
@ttakamiorama11 ай бұрын
Misused exudes.. pick up a dictionary
@mrpussinboots425211 ай бұрын
"" Enjoy this man. Forget this interview. "" ❤❤
@sudeshkiriella-sc4wq11 ай бұрын
This is fantastic.
@PerfectHandProductions Жыл бұрын
Thanks.Check out my channel and subscribe for more
@Southsayer. Жыл бұрын
The professional drunk line is my favourite and most savage and hysterical comment ever made on this planet. You died choking on your own vomit? Amatuer! What you do after a big drink is position your head over the bed so you vomit on the floor, fucking idiot!. What a glorious person and i like his wit as it feels half serious. If you are going to be a fuck up in life and do stupid things like drugs or alcohol abuse, you better have some sort of plan in place on how to deal with that stuff and not just go into it willy nilly.
@krel3358 Жыл бұрын
Until you experience the experience you don't know what plan you need.
@farshimelt11 ай бұрын
is totally true what he says, i feel it in my own writings and lyrics, i see and feel the difference when you put the juice on it
@crypthor2008 Жыл бұрын
"sir how do i write" "bimbimbim" "cool but sir how do i write" "i throw up on the floor!" "mr. bim how the fuck do i write"
@jessestinkman Жыл бұрын
Holy Bukowski…reading his books its like talking with him…lucky interviewer.
@Trainee_vandal Жыл бұрын
love his voice
@mdtys Жыл бұрын
Thanks for the Tom Waits at the end.
@Voodoochil111111 Жыл бұрын
Waltzing matilda
@Dpunxxx Жыл бұрын
There was a bar in Boston named after this genius. One of the best burgers I’ve ever had. Wonder if it’s still there?
@WowJustWow37 Жыл бұрын
The man was a genius RIP 🙏
@eltoneagle8136 Жыл бұрын
Thanks friend
@scottbebe231011 ай бұрын
It seems "Mr. McGillicuddy" is translated as "Meneer Huppeldepup" a 2:54
@hermanhandbrush4402 Жыл бұрын
I love this man
@howlinberry16452 ай бұрын
Well said, well said, well said.
@buddhalochanna Жыл бұрын
Tough men together, through the horrors of Life
@cervgiovanni Жыл бұрын
Ham on Rye was a seriously page turning book. Really good reading.
@oinkooink Жыл бұрын
It is. I read it a few times a long time ago.
@buschovski1 Жыл бұрын
Post Office is amazing, too.
@Steven-uh7lx Жыл бұрын
As an english major I have such mixed feelings about what I'm hearing.. But I'm dropping out so I guess in the end he must have some kind of point lol This killed me 3:55 💀💀
@tcrijwanachoudhury Жыл бұрын
as a person who dropped out of english masters, I approve.
@TheManodeep Жыл бұрын
Same thoughts and feelings
@mirouu13 Жыл бұрын
@@TheManodeep sending hugs ♡
@tcrijwanachoudhury Жыл бұрын
Dropping out of post secondary isn’t a bad thing. Just keep busy work or volunteering. Bim bim bim
@bobpowers9637 Жыл бұрын
@@bobpowers9637 ty ♡
@tcrijwanachoudhury Жыл бұрын
Great clip/ thx
@Hottub111 Жыл бұрын
You're welcome!
@Southsayer. Жыл бұрын
In the movie “Barfly”, Mickey Roarke had a blast playing this character
@infinitejest441 Жыл бұрын
His approach to writing can and should be applied to any creative medium.
@Dreamcorp.Inc. Жыл бұрын
not really. that'd make things just as dull. you can pick up art you like that follows other structures, because art is about your own expression. even dull art can be called art because it came from a dull person expressing their dull feelings on a canvas.
@b_delta972511 ай бұрын
@@b_delta9725 It's not the "approach" that would be dull, it's the result that may be dull. That depends on the insight and skill of the artist. Artist as in all forms of artistic expression.
@farshimelt11 ай бұрын
I love you, Henry
@brevenbell4 ай бұрын
Bucky youre the best man!
@user-nb2ui1fx1z11 ай бұрын
jesus I'm 25 and it's been like this since forever. idk how did this come up to me?????
@sivazona44 Жыл бұрын
Thank God for Bukowski. But I must differ. Not all writers are boring just the boring ones!
@patriciahart30408 ай бұрын
as I get older this unfortunately speaks to me in a very profound way
@kickliquid Жыл бұрын
Incredible
@RoyMustang. Жыл бұрын
In perceived many here at coment session never read Charles Bukowski because they're talking non-sense shit. bukowlski was very famous even from his time, and an excellent writer who catch you in every line of his books. Read the book first folks and comment later, trust me it will be worthy
@thesecret111 Жыл бұрын
Repeatition in itself does not make life tiresome. This morning, I had my 7000th coffee. Not less delightful than my 100th. But if Im tired of life, if doesnt matter if it was my first ever sip, I wouldnt appreciate it enough. Repeatition is life, and if you enjoy life, you will look forward to repeating what makes it worthwhile.
@heyyo162Ай бұрын
Charles Bukowski was all about the harsh truth most of the time, but he had a Poet's heart and sometimes a flower bloomed out of that mire. What he is talking about here is a good contrast between poetry and prose really, but there are boring poets too of course.
@TByronK Жыл бұрын
The music that comes through at the end when Bukowski gives up the axe is almost comical.
@readmelancholystrumpetmaster3 ай бұрын
Bukowski, hahaha. This was great, explaining how to vomit properly as a 'professional drunk'. Can't help but smile at that
@colingram8785 Жыл бұрын
Flavor and Power baby!
@DreamDosage Жыл бұрын
Refreshing
@roddyboethius1722 Жыл бұрын
0:22 I like how the interviewers must think he's asking if the filming has ended or ssomething while he's just making his point
@geoffroymb11 ай бұрын
"Things repeating" = "Tired of myself"
@andreasvedeler80 Жыл бұрын
Legend ❤
@thepolymathmafia. Жыл бұрын
The way he talks man, it's just something else. "Oh that's ookaaaay..."
@Dexiray6 ай бұрын
Words of truth
@georgevidovich8881 Жыл бұрын
We're tough men TOGETHER through the HORRORS of LIFE
@geedee7463 Жыл бұрын
I believe you Charles!
@endtimestcg5146 Жыл бұрын
i dont man died before he could get his vape juice that he wanted since it wasnt out then lol
@engery213 Жыл бұрын
I'm not a fan of Bukowski, but truly, most good novels would make great novellas! There's an unnecessary 25% that assures the consumer they are getting good value for the money. I had to laugh when he described how authors create anticipation for moments they never deliver; this is more and more the norm. Luckily the market is transparent: "important"-issues-based fiction rarely has a story that is new, and the writing is mostly boilerplate. The best I can do is tread the Best Of lists and read the first few paragraphs of books. Great writing or an interesting twist is immediately apparent. I also read recommendations on forums, and I go through the canon and read The Great Books.
@kilgoretrout32111 ай бұрын
Буковски - это автор для особого настроения, но я бы не назвал его слишком "грязным", потому что в его описаниях есть своеобразная поэтичность
@depotemkin Жыл бұрын
Cheers to that.
@hlahla947911 ай бұрын
Jack Kerouac also thought the same about writing. Every line must full of life
@teodelnorte Жыл бұрын
Sometimes there's a gap between what should be and what is.
@farshimelt11 ай бұрын
The Belgian reporter interviewing Charles, was Fernand Auwera (1929-2015), this interview was taken in 1980, my year of birth by the way. Fernand was a brilliant, yet troubled mind. Same goes for Bukowski, probably why Charles liked Fernand so much.
@Brad_Pittstop Жыл бұрын
This doesn't apply only to writers/ If you're not enthused, then it's not your vocation in life and you will be bored and boring/ You motivate yourself to work a job and the motivations are always fear and greed/ Hence, we are handicapped by the complications or complexities of conventional economics/ Job and opportunity do not belong in the same sentence/ A job is not a profession/
@perrytornado28 күн бұрын
I definitely relate to his sentiment on things taking on a repeat. I'm already tired of life in my 40's.
@kendrickjahn1261 Жыл бұрын
I like the Alan Watts quote "The meaning of life is just to be alive."
@posteroonie Жыл бұрын
Feeling like this in my mid 20s as well.
@blaccomnia7680 Жыл бұрын
I follow Ezra Pounds dictum; "Make it new." No matter how many times I play a piece of music, I'm always listening for the one phrase that will lead me somewhere different, or a "mistake" that will send me in a different direction.
@farshimelt11 ай бұрын
@George Neidorf Yeah, that's good. I am trying to do that myself. I realize that even in the mundane existence of repetition, there are some gems within it if I pay attention enough.
@kendrickjahn126111 ай бұрын
Get a dirt bike.
@mikehemens935911 ай бұрын
Once upon a time, Mrs. McGullicutty finally met her match: Mevrouw Huddeldepup.
'If you do dull shit, it doesn't matter what you die from.' Simply brilliant.
Well he died of bone cancer not liver disease or alcohol related illness anyone can get leukemia and lots of alcoholics live a long time some are better writers than others some don't write at all was his point. Think if he were young and nice looking instead he could have been an alcoholic like Jim Morrison and been too exciting harassed by cops at his own shows charged with being lewd overdosed at 27 just not his fate.
he said, "if you write dull shit, it doesn't do any good what you die from"
not brilliant at all. his own shit is so boring. but maybe not to him. the most important thing is that he has fun writing, I guess. and of course it sells.
@@nikolausgerszewski2086 we do not care what you think
@@godloveszaza who the fuck is 'we'? are you demanding the Pluralis Majestatis, Sir?
We should call Bukowski's approach to writing the "The Bim Principle."
lol
More like "The Bim-Bim-Bim Principle."
@@Mooseman327 Bimcubedski's principle :)
Bim bim bim ... bim bim bim ... in this atomic age , for juicy flavour and not yawning yourself to shit 😅
Why not? 😁😁😁
"I yawned myself to shit!" Loved that.
For Bukowski to say he likes someone as a person seems, from his writing, to be a high compliment indeed.
He likes his lines juicy.
and so what does that mean? Nothing. The man's entire career was built off nothing.
what
maybe he just said it to make the situation less tense
He is strong in his "get off my lawn" energy.
"He wasn't even a professional drunk" ..proceeds to describe how to get wasted without swallowing vomit. This completely cracked me up hahaha
Ага не был ..цвет лица...
Yes, he was a real low class act.
He's right about seeing patterns and 'repeats' in life. It happens early too; you hear the exact same things, see the exact same scenarios play out.
Yep, I really started noticing it at the age of 28.
So frikkin depressing to talk about. I love it 😂
Yes, people have been saying that forever.
@@posteroonie Ironic... When you think about it
@@noodle845 It's not depressing I don't think.
As someone who takes particular interest in Fantasy and Sci-Fi, both genres suffer from a severe dearth of decent poetry - not _poetry_ as in verse, but poetry as a practical method and an exercise in creative flow. I can't tell you how many celebrated authors have bored the total shit out of me over such a lack. Don't describe your world, make me live in it. Don't write your characters, make me know them.
That's the truth!
Read Gene Wolfe
Ursula K. Le Guin is one of very few authors who redeem the otherwise poor reputation of sci-fi, an amazing author in her own right
"Don't describe your world, make me live in it", exactly. I'll probably steal that. 😁
@@MrBandini27 but the question is how?
I no longer care for Bukowski's nihilism, but he's totally right about exciting writing
I actually don't think he was a nihilist, but a self-loathing romantic that is misunderstood. It comes through a lot more in his poetry.
@@kreg27 Well, that explains it: When it comes to poetry, I'M a nihilist!
I love this guy. He is so real yet ultimately subjective and full of shit. His words bring me to tears, and his interviews make me grin or drop my jaw. Very wise of him to welcome death, btw, as it is very natural.
If he's full of shit, he's in a world full of shit.
what do you mean by “ultimately subjective and full of shit”
Everyone's "ultimately subjective".
indeed but what comes after death
@@logia7 life
Bukowskis genius is in his honesty and simplicity. A clear son of John Fante but completely original himself.
Regardless of his life philosophy Bukowski makes good points about writing. He definitely had a gift to go mining for the right words instead of talking around a subject. He showed fortitude persevering in shitty jobs and situations then writing at night. No wonder he hit the booze.
Poets do that
Same lol.
he most likely was a boozer and a writer for the same reason(s). most great creative minds are all troubled in some way.
@@Noway-sg8md I'm a genius and I don't even drink. Do you have any idea what I'm going through ?
@@johnanthonycafe2993 Who even started talking about you? 💀
Bukowski occupied an interesting position among writers. If you surveyed 10 American English professors, seven have never heard of him, two think he's a pornographer, and one thinks he is the greatest literary genius since Shakespeare. I even like his poetry. His poems are his stories written vertically, and his stories are poems written horizontally. He is the best at what he does, but nobody else is in the exact same category; he's kinda like the Keith Richards of literature.
Beautiful
"If you surveyed 10 American English professors, seven have never heard of him" : really ?? Professors ? He's pretty famous over here in France, I'm sure every litterature professor knows him.
I provoked two housewifes on a local train in Italy, and they tried to disrespect me by comparing my looks to Bukowski. So he’s no hidden gem anymore over here.
@@croulantroulant3082 You'd be surprised. Thankfully his popularity had a resurgence in the 90s and 2000s, but academia doesn't pay him much mind.
I'd say he's a lot like Picasso. He's able to take things down to their most essential elements, and make them fun and bright while still retaining depth and definitely a good punch.
That's why the book thief is my favourite of all time. It's not about the punchline being set up but each line stands on its own
is The Book Thief by Bukowski?...I can't seem to find it
@@kools67 no no. It's by Markus Zusak
Try "The Shadow of the wind" you ll have better results.
@@deathfeel The Shadow of the Wind Carlos Ruiz Zafón?
@@deathfeel Thanks for the recommendation. Just reserved it from the library.
Love his writing. I finished Factotum last week. All six of his novels are great. His writing style is so much fun and his stories capture a different era, bringing to life the streets of LA from a poor man's perspective. 🍺🥃😏
They are all as good as Ham on Rye you reckon? I tore through that book, short as it is. But really good I thought.
@@oinkooink, I agree, Ham on Rye is a good one because he opens up about his childhood. The others I would recommend are Post Office, Factotum & Women..
personally my favorite is love is a dog from hell
@@kevinkelley4376they're all pretty funny, but perhaps repetitive. A legend nonetheless
I loved Ham on Rye. Need to get to the others. The stories and characters are so vivid, alive. And I love his humor.
Such a beautiful broken man... Bless his hearth. A unique voice.
Feels almost like a crime now not to have read a single thing written by this guy at my age.
Yer breakin the law, get thee to a Library, I hooked up w/a librarian once after she confessed to me she had stolen the Bukowski book I was lookin for.
read 'Tales of Ordinary Madness'
You're honestly better off reading literally anything else or hell watching a movie
not missing much tbh
@@alleygh0st I deserve a taste of bim bim bim in my life at least on one occasion
Everyday should be like this, love this guys energy and perspective
Nah, the world would be shit with snobbish people like this.
....So you haven't seen the domestic violence then? Bukowski wrote some very good stuff but he wasn't a good human being it seems.
@@gonufc I dont think anyone on earth would say he was a good human being. Why would you even think he should be? He's a famous writer, not a famous "good human"
@@gonufc good juman/ bad juman, he’s allowed to have a good thought or frame of thinking come out of his mouth I don’t know much about him but based off my life experiences obviously not relating to domestic violence it resonated with me. It’s hard to move through life getting stuck on that shit learn to appreciate
@@gonufc You haven't seen the domestic violence his dad gave him either. Shit happens and then it keeps on happening.
agree 100%. so many modern writers just seem to try to wrack up pages, like if it's not a 1000 page book, you did something wrong.
And who's gonna read a 1000 page book these days except the kind of sophistic snobs who write them in the first place.
agree
Old timey writers were arguably worse with writing filler. Even the great Tolkien, you can cut entire sentences out of a page without changing any information passed on to the reader.
@@bigape5502 I'd say you can cut entire pages...
Genre authors who write fantasy and sci-fi are bad with that. They complain about not being taken seriously by the literary establishment but bloat their books with so much meaningless drivel and pointless world building. A lot of them should just stick to playing D&D instead of writing novels.
Orwell talked about this on his rules for good writing. Do not embelish excessively a sentence to say something or it will lose its power. If you can say something in 4 words instead of 10, go for the first option.
He stole that from Aristotle a few thousand years before.
@@greyeyed123 He borrowed that from Aristotle, and it deserves to be said, over and over.
@@farshimelt The best writers steal. (I stole that from you-know-who.)
Wouldn't an expanded vocabulary aid in conciseness?
@@mrpussinboots4252 No one said it wouldn't, least of all Orwell.
So this is why I like Bukowski's style, I've been trying to figure it out. I summed it up as its simplicity but now I'm seeing this I understand. The juice. He has it in his sentences. Its direct. Sometimes there's no need for all the extra things.
The answer is simple. You just didn't realize it at first. So now you do!
The thing about Bukowski though is that his writing reflects that repetition that he complains about it this interview. If you read more than a few of his stories or novels they all kinda blend together, it's all Henry Chinaski drinking and screwing or drinking and getting in fights. Factotum and Post Office are basically indistinguishable in my memory except for the fact the in one of them he's working as a mailman. Then there are some short stories of him going to the racetrack to place bets and those are some of the dullest things I've ever read, even when I was reading a bunch of Bukowski a few years ago those racetrack stories would make my eyes glaze over. That being said, I've always appreciated his novel Ham On Rye
It's his poetry that is significant. He keeps it terse and to the point.
The essence of American writing
the essence of chatting shite
Yes: not very great.
I keep seeing this clip over and over again
Hank had a calm psychosis about him. His words more so. A great writer of poetry and prose.
Tom Waits music at the end was a nice touch.
What song is it?
@@freakingevilgenius The song is called Tom Traubert's Blues by Tom Waits
@@Southsayer. Thanks, mate. I've only recently started getting into Tom Waits and I'm now a fan.
@@freakingevilgenius You're welcome!
"If you write dull shit, it doesn't matter what you die from." This is infinitely wise.
If you write good shit, it doesn’t matter what you die from. He was just being a disrespectful jackass.
you are infinitely gullible. that is a profoundly stupid thing to say. for Gods sake just think about it.
Great ending to a great video. Man was real and very very cool.
'We're tough men together, through the horrors of life.' [Clink] 🍻
He really lit up when he started talking about the process of writing bless him.. i like how he got fed up with the analytical but dead host
Reading Bukowski made me understand what true writing is. Difficult to put it in words but when you read it you know it's the thing. And art appart, his stories are so fun and so bright, great guy
Hemingway got it.
I doubt that - you understand what 'true writing' is. this is just phony. there is no honesty in it.
@@nikolausgerszewski2086 Ach there's honesty even in the Ach I wrote through text Everything is honesty, even if linked and chained by lies and whatnot, it conducts to the same person, to the same mind. Fuck all and have a beer is what I think, that could cheer people up. Introduce more syncopation in our mainstream music.
@@nikolausgerszewski2086 what do you mean genius? What are you talking about?
@@giuseppebonsignore4397 this is all just bragging and boasting and judging without any basis. Lowry is obviously a way better writer, or as I would rather say: a writer at all. Bukowsky is just boulevard.
So real and authentic. Love this guy would pay to have a beer with him.
Absolutely priceless! Thanks!❤
I agree a hundred percent. I find myself being bored to death when the writers spend time beating about the bush with exaggerated phrases to describe a simple thing to sound more profound.
@Nazara R That's not what Mukul said though.
There's this idea of being a writer-- it's a certain pretentiousness that goes with it, grand entrances and gestures. Vocabulary words to create a mirage of intellect. It's pompous and ever so boring. Write like you've lived.
@@ryanlynch290 💯 nothing but facts
I highly recommand Paul Auster. Though I think most of you probaby know him. His writing is, at least to me, the way Bukowski describes the "Bim-Bim-Bim effect". Sure, he doesn't write about the stuff Buk did. But that doesn't matter. It's simply great writing.
@@MrBandini27 bim bim bim 😂😂😂
"There is nothing new under the sun, its all been done before" -King Solomon
Not in the same way, once you choose to pursue ceativity, you join a fraternity of similar creators. They influence us as we will the ones who come after.
@@redsol3629 I think create is a misnomer. What we term create is just us assembling and re-arranging preexisting ideas that are we taught. As someone said before, there is no original or unique idea.
@Abe McGee Just because something is built on the foundation of history does not mean it is not unique. You speak like someone who has never created anything. There is something intangible the new apprentice brings to the craft. His own spirit and sovereignty as an individual.
@@redsol3629 "There is something intangible the new apprentice brings to the craft. His own spirit and sovereignty as an individual." That intangible is still not unique, for the individual has long been shaped by the ideas of his environment. stick an individual in a room devoid of any knowledge or experience from birth, the first idea he comes up would be more original than anything the so called creators you speak of, can come up with.
@Abe McGee Ah yes the empty room argument, your point collapses on itself with that perspective. You argue that artists move things around, yet you put your example in a room with no pieces. Are you a creator?
He's a tired old drunk but he's right. If you're doing everything to set up a climax, no one will even care about it if you've bored them along the way to get there.
still love your work!!
If you are unfamiliar with Bukowski's work. He wrote several novels and several collections of poems. One of my favorite poems is The Man With The Beautiful Eyes. There's a great narration/animation of it on KZhead
Thanks for the recommendation, I'll check that one out.
Most celebrities emerge from Borat interviews looking ridiculous. Not Charles. CLASS act ❤
We couldn't hear to Dostoevsky, but Bukowski is there to fill that gap
0:08 "Why, you have have a nice wife?" Wow, I didn't know Borat Sagdiyev actually got to interview Bukowski
Be nice if the interviewer had the presence of mind to ask Bukowski who he thought were good or even great writers (present company excepted)!
i love the story he tells about the guy who pulled a gun on him at that apartment party
Great interview.
His writing is lively all right. Really easy to read. Quite like Hemmingway. Short punchy sentences. Sterling Hayden's autobiography was similar.
I always click on Charles' interviews. He doesnt hold back on his opinions like most are afraid to do, especially in the entertainment world.
the end of this video is so awesome
Love him roasting this man’s death hahaha
I must be living on a different level because life continues to surprise me even in late middle age. I learn and grow every month, sometimes even in the space of a week! But times are different.
I'm 84 and feel the same. I sit down to play music, and something different comes out every time. It's not all worthy, but the search is worth the effort.
@@farshimelt I agree. I love Bukowski and his writing played a major role in my life, but there is more too it than described in this one perspective.
pace, life, sunlight, flavor, , delicious, juice such direct wisdom
I fully agree with Charles about every line needing its own life.
'Under the Volcano' is a dull read, but Hank's a poet applying poetic judgment to literary prose. He sounds like a poet looking for like effects in all the prose he tried to read. There's a place for rapid-fire, rat-a-tat-tat writing, but that's what '40s detective noir novels were for (and some others, of course). 'Dull' doesn't equate to 'bed' if by 'dull' the critic means 'It didn't snap and crackle like a poem.'
well in this comment every line holds its own so if you can apply it to youtube comments, writers can apply it to southern porch verandas.
Equate to "bed" who even said that? And as if the style of prose he's describing is exclusive to 40s noir novels. Hes 100% correct about literary fiction being (mostly) boring.
Dostoyevsky was wordy and highly detailed but boy his books are damn good reads. They don't exactly bim bim bim. Crime and Punishment was a ripper book.
@@oedipamaas2067 It's really only boring for people with defective brains. It's like people who think classical music is suppose to relax you or help you fall asleep
That's the insight I was waiting to read. My first thought was he was applying poetry to novels, but I didn't have the rest of it. Thank you.
For anyone wondering, the song at the end is "Waltzing Matilda" performed by Tom Waits.
This is so cool. Honestly I thought there was something wrong with me that I couldn’t get with the kinds of writing that he was criticizing and that I could only keep my interest with writers who do bim bim bim. Nathaniel West comes to mind as one of my favorites who totally exudes that style in Miss Lonelyhearts. So glad I came across this!!
Misused exudes.. pick up a dictionary
"" Enjoy this man. Forget this interview. "" ❤❤
This is fantastic.
Thanks.Check out my channel and subscribe for more
The professional drunk line is my favourite and most savage and hysterical comment ever made on this planet. You died choking on your own vomit? Amatuer! What you do after a big drink is position your head over the bed so you vomit on the floor, fucking idiot!. What a glorious person and i like his wit as it feels half serious. If you are going to be a fuck up in life and do stupid things like drugs or alcohol abuse, you better have some sort of plan in place on how to deal with that stuff and not just go into it willy nilly.
Until you experience the experience you don't know what plan you need.
is totally true what he says, i feel it in my own writings and lyrics, i see and feel the difference when you put the juice on it
"sir how do i write" "bimbimbim" "cool but sir how do i write" "i throw up on the floor!" "mr. bim how the fuck do i write"
Holy Bukowski…reading his books its like talking with him…lucky interviewer.
love his voice
Thanks for the Tom Waits at the end.
Waltzing matilda
There was a bar in Boston named after this genius. One of the best burgers I’ve ever had. Wonder if it’s still there?
The man was a genius RIP 🙏
Thanks friend
It seems "Mr. McGillicuddy" is translated as "Meneer Huppeldepup" a 2:54
I love this man
Well said, well said, well said.
Tough men together, through the horrors of Life
Ham on Rye was a seriously page turning book. Really good reading.
It is. I read it a few times a long time ago.
Post Office is amazing, too.
As an english major I have such mixed feelings about what I'm hearing.. But I'm dropping out so I guess in the end he must have some kind of point lol This killed me 3:55 💀💀
as a person who dropped out of english masters, I approve.
Same thoughts and feelings
@@TheManodeep sending hugs ♡
Dropping out of post secondary isn’t a bad thing. Just keep busy work or volunteering. Bim bim bim
@@bobpowers9637 ty ♡
Great clip/ thx
You're welcome!
In the movie “Barfly”, Mickey Roarke had a blast playing this character
His approach to writing can and should be applied to any creative medium.
not really. that'd make things just as dull. you can pick up art you like that follows other structures, because art is about your own expression. even dull art can be called art because it came from a dull person expressing their dull feelings on a canvas.
@@b_delta9725 It's not the "approach" that would be dull, it's the result that may be dull. That depends on the insight and skill of the artist. Artist as in all forms of artistic expression.
I love you, Henry
Bucky youre the best man!
jesus I'm 25 and it's been like this since forever. idk how did this come up to me?????
Thank God for Bukowski. But I must differ. Not all writers are boring just the boring ones!
as I get older this unfortunately speaks to me in a very profound way
Incredible
In perceived many here at coment session never read Charles Bukowski because they're talking non-sense shit. bukowlski was very famous even from his time, and an excellent writer who catch you in every line of his books. Read the book first folks and comment later, trust me it will be worthy
Repeatition in itself does not make life tiresome. This morning, I had my 7000th coffee. Not less delightful than my 100th. But if Im tired of life, if doesnt matter if it was my first ever sip, I wouldnt appreciate it enough. Repeatition is life, and if you enjoy life, you will look forward to repeating what makes it worthwhile.
Charles Bukowski was all about the harsh truth most of the time, but he had a Poet's heart and sometimes a flower bloomed out of that mire. What he is talking about here is a good contrast between poetry and prose really, but there are boring poets too of course.
The music that comes through at the end when Bukowski gives up the axe is almost comical.
Bukowski, hahaha. This was great, explaining how to vomit properly as a 'professional drunk'. Can't help but smile at that
Flavor and Power baby!
Refreshing
0:22 I like how the interviewers must think he's asking if the filming has ended or ssomething while he's just making his point
"Things repeating" = "Tired of myself"
Legend ❤
The way he talks man, it's just something else. "Oh that's ookaaaay..."
Words of truth
We're tough men TOGETHER through the HORRORS of LIFE
I believe you Charles!
i dont man died before he could get his vape juice that he wanted since it wasnt out then lol
I'm not a fan of Bukowski, but truly, most good novels would make great novellas! There's an unnecessary 25% that assures the consumer they are getting good value for the money. I had to laugh when he described how authors create anticipation for moments they never deliver; this is more and more the norm. Luckily the market is transparent: "important"-issues-based fiction rarely has a story that is new, and the writing is mostly boilerplate. The best I can do is tread the Best Of lists and read the first few paragraphs of books. Great writing or an interesting twist is immediately apparent. I also read recommendations on forums, and I go through the canon and read The Great Books.
Буковски - это автор для особого настроения, но я бы не назвал его слишком "грязным", потому что в его описаниях есть своеобразная поэтичность
Cheers to that.
Jack Kerouac also thought the same about writing. Every line must full of life
Sometimes there's a gap between what should be and what is.
The Belgian reporter interviewing Charles, was Fernand Auwera (1929-2015), this interview was taken in 1980, my year of birth by the way. Fernand was a brilliant, yet troubled mind. Same goes for Bukowski, probably why Charles liked Fernand so much.
This doesn't apply only to writers/ If you're not enthused, then it's not your vocation in life and you will be bored and boring/ You motivate yourself to work a job and the motivations are always fear and greed/ Hence, we are handicapped by the complications or complexities of conventional economics/ Job and opportunity do not belong in the same sentence/ A job is not a profession/
I definitely relate to his sentiment on things taking on a repeat. I'm already tired of life in my 40's.
I like the Alan Watts quote "The meaning of life is just to be alive."
Feeling like this in my mid 20s as well.
I follow Ezra Pounds dictum; "Make it new." No matter how many times I play a piece of music, I'm always listening for the one phrase that will lead me somewhere different, or a "mistake" that will send me in a different direction.
@George Neidorf Yeah, that's good. I am trying to do that myself. I realize that even in the mundane existence of repetition, there are some gems within it if I pay attention enough.
Get a dirt bike.
Once upon a time, Mrs. McGullicutty finally met her match: Mevrouw Huddeldepup.