Mr. Bradbury wrote some very wierd shorts and very heart-melting poignantly compassionate material. His Dandalion Wine works. Hm. I've much respect for him. I'm esp. impressed by his praise of Rod Steiger as the Finest American actor. Very reassuring of my high opinion of Rod because I've found that man simply Amazing! In the Heat of the Night to Doctor Zhivago to On the Water Front to Al Capone to etc. Incredibly versatile motion picture artist! And I've no formal training to properly access cinema productions. On the Space exploration thing, he'd be badly disappointed on the progress made. I'm disappointed too. We should by now be colonizing the moon and using it as a jump off point to make trips back and forth to the moons of Jupiter and Saturn and further further beyond and all that's been reached is some Goddamned ISS!?!? What the Friggin FUCK!?!? What happened??? Do we have to be so trapped in the rut of competing with each other on who can come up with the ultimate video game?!? Is that what Science is suppose to be at the summit of it?!?!
@@Gweidemann this man is tied to my heart we share a love of the ages expressed in words alone just this side of Byzantium ...this might seem crass but I love that video fuck me Ray Bradbury by Rachel bloom . I ve read all his work even as a young child knew he was taking me somewhere very familiar. Do I have a favorite ? Many but there will always be a special place for dandelion wine ...though my favorite may well be farenheit 451 for the end when the people become the books what book would you choose to be if the necessity arose?
@@stacylarge5636 , you didn't ask me, but I'll tell you my choice: "A Month in the Country," by J.L. Carr. It's not at all of the Bradbury ouevre, but it's a magnificent, immensely moving novel ( in part, about the invaluability of great art ), and if Bradbury read it, I'll bet he loved it.
@@bobtaylor170 thank you Bob you dont know me but I will concider it my mission to read this my bedside at any time is littered with books I am reading and cross referencing and salivating over and reading to others without any provocation or at times appreciation but it is fun for me to share things I know they need but wont do for themself anyway I do appreciate you ❤❤❤
i am more diverse in my reading and recommendations than Ray, but I wrote for pleasure and to take brain dumps from 1957 to this present 2020, which is my 78th year.
I was born in 1968 i couldn't tell you how much he's meant to me when he wrote of holding the chain link fence watching the rockets launch he took me with him if only he had lived long enough to see Elon Musk and SpaceX land those rockets but perhaps he was the inspiration after all he wrote of it and must have seen it in his minds eye...i am the real Clarisse McClelland
Like his works and his ideas, but in some cases his short-sightedness is obvious, however he cannot be blamed it seems like he really believed in peacemakers/enemies and Moon travel... but to praise a bomb it's really weird provided that the ones who launch the war create the weapons. Bradbury must haven't known of this game, he was such a romantic trusting the governmental bs.
I agree about the names in Tolstoy novels. Why not just change the names to English names if it is in English. All the other words are in English. The same goes for Dostoyevsky.
Perdon, punto para la chica, Bradbury no se la esta tomando enserio. No quiero pensar mal de el pero me huele un poco a MansPleaning, que decirle. La chica le expuso buenos argumentos.
@@lucasm7781 Quizás al inicio cuando ella le relataba su preguntacon esa típica perspicacia universitaria , pero luego tomó más enserio a esa pregunta que a las demás que le siguieron y precedieron, por lo que vió la oportunidad de regalarnos en pocos minutos, una enseñanza que a mi parecer fué más valiosa que lo que trató en su discurso.
Pues al principio si le contesta con algo de desdén, pero la neta es que se nota que es por lo absurdo que le resulta la idea de "esperar a solucionar los problemas del mundo para después poder avanzar", además de que luego le da una respuesta que a mí parecer fue excepcional; y pues buenos argumentos, no se que tan buenos, porque al final del día la situación que plantea la chica no es como que haya cambiado en la actualidad, no es como que haya sido mejor en el paso y no es como que vaya a cambiar, y dios luego luego se nota que la forma en la que contesta su pregunta es la misma con la que contesta las demás, porque es su estilo
+youtubed I read Bradbury described himself as a "delicatessen religionist," picking his favorite bits from many different religions. So I'm guessing not exactly a Bible thumper, but not an atheist either.
+youtubed Hmm, I'm not sure. Maybe. Bradbury is kind of hard to figure out at times. I think his religion was imagination more than anything else. And despite being a cranky old dude, as a lot of writers are, I do find his words inspiring. Well, the non-profane ones. Haha.
Alguien más viene por Migala?
No entiendo mucho el inglés va estar difícil :-/
Cual es la parte donde el estudiante le pregunta?
@@StarS00001 46:00 :v ahí merengues jsjsj
@Juan Pablo tendré que aprender ingles por "dos semanas" xd
blusero gibson yo lo acabo de terminar de ver. Vuelve a intentar cargar el canal.
Y como el Hobbit piensa en inglés...
I'm here cuz of MIGALA 👌
I love the man's insistence on quality. If the music industry abided by it, the industry would shrink by at least 95%.
15:13 "I don't exist without my books, I exist through them."
This is timeless.
BRILLIANT!!!!!!
He writes through his stories and books.
"HHMM!" He utters that plenty. listen up and Believe. Amen
What a man. He knew stuff we only fumble at in the dark.
La chica del "Twitter" empieza a hablar en el minuto 46:00
migala?!
heroe sin capa :D
Yes, I would suggest that any writer should listen to this.
Now a writer doesn't get published, only essayist who can show oppression, much like Marx!
Incredible talk by an incredible individual
Gracias Comunidad Migala 🍪
☮️
🌻
❄️
I love this.
This one is my favorite.
46:00
Avila2 “salida de tweeter 2020”
Migala
Migala
JJAAJJAJA
Thank you man
I miss mad magazine and Ray Bradbury. As the saying goes they don't make em like that anymore.
12:55 (about 1 min, 20 sec)
16:34 (under 1 min)
And forty years later -- 2008 -- they don't hate themselves, they hate us.
I adore his works. "Martian chronicles" is masterpiece.
Elaborate, please. To this day I haven't heard a single good reason why it is a "masterpiece".
@Jake Stockton K. The way you'd pronounce it would be even funnier.
Q&A starts around 42:00. First question is Star Trek related.
Mr. Bradbury wrote some very wierd shorts and very heart-melting poignantly compassionate material. His Dandalion Wine works. Hm. I've much respect for him. I'm esp. impressed by his praise of Rod Steiger as the Finest American actor. Very reassuring of my high opinion of Rod because I've found that man simply Amazing! In the Heat of the Night to Doctor Zhivago to On the Water Front to Al Capone to etc. Incredibly versatile motion picture artist! And I've no formal training to properly access cinema productions.
On the Space exploration thing, he'd be badly disappointed on the progress made. I'm disappointed too. We should by now be colonizing the moon and using it as a jump off point to make trips back and forth to the moons of Jupiter and Saturn and further further beyond and all that's been reached is some Goddamned ISS!?!? What the Friggin FUCK!?!? What happened??? Do we have to be so trapped in the rut of competing with each other on who can come up with the ultimate video game?!? Is that what Science is suppose to be at the summit of it?!?!
I think you are wrong
@@stacylarge5636 I think you are right.
@@Gweidemann this man is tied to my heart we share a love of the ages expressed in words alone just this side of Byzantium ...this might seem crass but I love that video fuck me Ray Bradbury by Rachel bloom . I ve read all his work even as a young child knew he was taking me somewhere very familiar. Do I have a favorite ? Many but there will always be a special place for dandelion wine ...though my favorite may well be farenheit 451 for the end when the people become the books what book would you choose to be if the necessity arose?
@@stacylarge5636 , you didn't ask me, but I'll tell you my choice: "A Month in the Country," by J.L. Carr. It's not at all of the Bradbury ouevre, but it's a magnificent, immensely moving novel ( in part, about the invaluability of great art ), and if Bradbury read it, I'll bet he loved it.
@@bobtaylor170 thank you Bob you dont know me but I will concider it my mission to read this my bedside at any time is littered with books I am reading and cross referencing and salivating over and reading to others without any provocation or at times appreciation but it is fun for me to share things I know they need but wont do for themself anyway I do appreciate you ❤❤❤
Y los subtítulos? 💔
Aprende un idioma!
yo lo vi en ingles no es tan difícil traducirlo
i am more diverse in my reading and recommendations than Ray, but I wrote for pleasure and to take brain dumps from 1957 to this present 2020, which is my 78th year.
I was born in 1968 i couldn't tell you how much he's meant to me when he wrote of holding the chain link fence watching the rockets launch he took me with him if only he had lived long enough to see Elon Musk and SpaceX land those rockets but perhaps he was the inspiration after all he wrote of it and must have seen it in his minds eye...i am the real Clarisse McClelland
Thank you, Mr. Bradbury. ( ´◡‿ゝ◡`)
Quien esta aca por el hobbit?
quien es el hobbit?
@@juandavidgualterosnunez2614 la verdd no a todos funciona como habla de filosofia algunos se aburren
Bueno a mi encanta
@@dariio6653 el del canal de migala,es el que habla y el que dirige el proyecto.
De Mejala
Así llegue aqui jajajja
vengo por Migala :3
Yo igual
I like the way he describes the 3 wildernesses and totally blows off the Indians living in the wilderness first!
56:20
idea generation technique
Like his works and his ideas, but in some cases his short-sightedness is obvious, however he cannot be blamed it seems like he really believed in peacemakers/enemies and Moon travel... but to praise a bomb it's really weird provided that the ones who launch the war create the weapons. Bradbury must haven't known of this game, he was such a romantic trusting the governmental bs.
I agree about the names in Tolstoy novels. Why not just change the names to English names if it is in English. All the other words are in English. The same goes for Dostoyevsky.
Para los que llegaron aquí por culpa de MIGALA aquí empieza la pregunta 45:55 un saludo.
If he were with us today I wonder what Ray Bradbury would think of all the big tech censorship?
Subtitulos please
At 39:00 Bradbury turns into Captain Beatty. How odd.
wow
Soy ese 😎
Migala
Alguien que poga Sub en español xd
@Ian Dinerstein no me sale en español solo en inglés
@@bizarroocioso4367 míralo desde una pc o desde el modo de escritorio de un navegador de un movil
@@bizarroocioso4367 a mi igual en inglés
@@gustavcarl velo en la compu,ahi si funciona chida la traduccion a español
47 empieza lo bueno
Me engañaste Migala esta en ingles 😟
Si lo vez en pc ahí te salen los subtítulos...
Es q el Hobbit piensa en ingles
Kurt Gödel
Wrong thread.
Das ist schade .
Wrong thread, partner.
Perdon, punto para la chica, Bradbury no se la esta tomando enserio. No quiero pensar mal de el pero me huele un poco a MansPleaning, que decirle. La chica le expuso buenos argumentos.
De que hablas, si le dió una respuesta hermosamente real.
@@dylamjesusjaimechiong5143 puede ser. XD. No se. Siento que la boludeo
@@lucasm7781 Quizás al inicio cuando ella le relataba su preguntacon esa típica perspicacia universitaria , pero luego tomó más enserio a esa pregunta que a las demás que le siguieron y precedieron, por lo que vió la oportunidad de regalarnos en pocos minutos, una enseñanza que a mi parecer fué más valiosa que lo que trató en su discurso.
Pues al principio si le contesta con algo de desdén, pero la neta es que se nota que es por lo absurdo que le resulta la idea de "esperar a solucionar los problemas del mundo para después poder avanzar", además de que luego le da una respuesta que a mí parecer fue excepcional; y pues buenos argumentos, no se que tan buenos, porque al final del día la situación que plantea la chica no es como que haya cambiado en la actualidad, no es como que haya sido mejor en el paso y no es como que vaya a cambiar, y dios luego luego se nota que la forma en la que contesta su pregunta es la misma con la que contesta las demás, porque es su estilo
Por que mansplaining?
Let me guess... He doesn't believe in God?
+youtubed Guess again.
Once was enough.. Feel free to prove me wrong. I'm not that stubborn.
+youtubed I read Bradbury described himself as a "delicatessen religionist," picking his favorite bits from many different religions. So I'm guessing not exactly a Bible thumper, but not an atheist either.
Sort of agnostic then?
+youtubed Hmm, I'm not sure. Maybe. Bradbury is kind of hard to figure out at times. I think his religion was imagination more than anything else. And despite being a cranky old dude, as a lot of writers are, I do find his words inspiring. Well, the non-profane ones. Haha.
What? Stay home get back in bed.
Dream on.
No wonder you and rod serling can't have a conversation.