I dunno. I'm certainly not taking anything away from Mr. Eastwood, but these days there really is no fashion. Bell bottoms, huge collars, sideburns, etc can all still be worn successfully. The person makes the fashion, so to speak, and not the other way around.
Eastwood , served his apprenticeship in B movies and was a popular co-star in Rawhide ,that series had a more realistic style than the other westerns on TV back then , Clint absorbed everything he experienced and started to direct . The fact is he is a seasoned actor and great director who chooses good stories to shoot with a wide variety of subjects long may he continue.
Thank you, Maggie (former Mrs Eastwood) for encouraging Clint not to quit the business. Imagine how dull life would have been without Clint Eastwood in it.
I was in Paint Your Wagon as an extra it was a great summer of fun that I will never forget. I was also side man to Elvis in the film Double Trouble as a member of his band. Another memory I will always treasure. I am even on the cover of the DVD with Elvis, I am the guy with the guitar and black hair.
This guy is one of the few very good interviewers who knows his stuff, lets the actor talk...he plainly is getting into Clint's work, etc, and not there to salve his ego or recognition. There was a great interviewer I think on AMC or possibly TCM that was doing 1 hour talks with all the great stars...and I see him in my mind but cannot recall his name. Great stuff here, one learns with intelligent, humble people. Clint sure had his head on straight and probably the longest running actor and director in history...& he never seemed in love with himself.
As a kid, I always looked forward to watching his show, whether or not I knew who his guest was. He was so thorough and unique with his interviews. Martin Short (SCTV & SNL) spoofs him.
Thanks for this! An intelligent and knowledgeable interviewer asking questions of an intelligent actor. The kind of interview very rarely seen on American television!
Brian Linehan is a genius. Where did he even come up with his viewpoint? He was so knowledgeable and confident and truly interested in his interviewees. I wonder where he drew inspiration from.
Oh my God Clint Eastwood Jesus he’s so GOD DAMN beautiful! Damn! God now I know why the MOM’s were CRAZY FOR THIS GUY! Rocks, a baby, yellow turtleneck… oh my God how did I not see this before? Maybe because I was TEN
@@alukuhito Back then it was much more acceptable to have side affairs and no one was calling you out or posting lurid gossip and rumors it was all kept under the radar and they respected peoples privacy but believe me I think if you read his biography he certainly made plenty of successful dalliances
@@jamesmack3314 "Acceptable" doesn't mean "proper". Affairs are for the lowest of the low. If he was having affairs, then shame on him. Even just one is a shame. Anyway, there were plenty of people in the 60s and 70s who did not accept affairs, despite all the trashy hippy influence going on at the time in western countries, particulary the USA.
Brian Richard Linehan (September 3, 1944 - June 4, 2004) was a Canadian television host from Hamilton, Ontario, best known for his celebrity interviews on the longrunning talk show City Lights.
"The story is everything, without the story there's no use putting all these peripheral components together without the center". This is why Clint Eastwood is one of the most influential filmmaker in the history of cinema. He gets it.
I love how Clint talks about percentage instead of a single one million dollar payout. Most of his films made money so Clint made money. He took the risk and it paid off.
What glorious content “Reeling” holds. We who love content wish there was more made public but we also understand that selling content is your core business. As my generation ages we watch as Content ages too. Certainly, it’s yours to sell or eat but it sure makes our lives richer when you release it. At some point, the audience dies and everything from Johnny Carson to Film Noir to SCTV becomes irrelevant ( and unseen). Please release more of your vaults before we’re gone. Thanks
Is that a giant ashtray on the table in front of them? lol Oh, the world of 1974. I actually miss it. If only I could go back to it, except this time as an adult.
@@drott150 I don't think he looks older than 44. He looks better than a lot if men I know who are trn years younger. Clint isn't grey here, has a lot of hair and no beer gut .
@@stockinettestitch Thanks for that great little article! Man, a town of several hundred thousand and it can only support ONE used bookstore? I'd HANG MYSELF...or leave like she did. Yeah, that makes more sense. Jeez, Martin Short looks EXACTLY like the photo of Brock---a great homage. Also, great scene from ZOOLANDER. Take care!!
I was watching the wolverine, and put on TH-cam while the ad break was on. I clicked on this random Clint Eastwood interview, and I thought to myself, he would have played wolverine really well. Then I scrolled down and saw your comment. Amused me.
I'm just fascinated by the camera quality. In 1974, a camera like that would've costed thousands and it would've been huge. In 1999, that would've been an affordable family VHS camcorder that was able to be held in a single hand. Amazing how technology works.
Its funny that the criticisms aren't remembered and neither are the critics themselves. They have a job to do and they can serve a useful purpose but they can also be a pointless interference to art. Eastwood had endured because of his past work and because he continued to be relevant. It speaks louder and longer than any critic's writing. The masses will decide what's most relevant without being guided, shamed, ridiculed and re-educated from the voices on high. They can also support the worst garbage if it's strategically marketed by a billion dollar industry. Critics today are more politically and ideologically motivated by extreme bias than ever before. Somewhere in the middle of all that, a decent movie is occasionally made and even seen.
How can he hold his eyebrows like that?i realized i do that when i wanna do but when in public or someone asks me question my eyebrows went like a bow and it loses it's all toughness.
He proves himself a very considerable actor by answering with a straight face to a man who has a hairstyle like a warthog's warehouse of abandoned dreams
Ah ... you focus on looks rather than what the person is saying/asking. Sign of high intelligence. Just listen to the questions, the research that when into them, and perhaps learn something about what makes a good interview.
This was pretty standard fare in the 70's. Michael Parkinson, who recently passed, was an outstanding chat show host in the UK. Grown up, interesting content and interviewing like this, is pretty much gone. Its all mostly bubblegum for the brain now.
His voice is very relaxing and ASMR.
Only Clint could make a turtleneck sweater look badass.
Lewis 970
A lemon one at that
I dunno. I'm certainly not taking anything away from Mr. Eastwood, but these days there really is no fashion. Bell bottoms, huge collars, sideburns, etc can all still be worn successfully. The person makes the fashion, so to speak, and not the other way around.
And Christopher reeves could pull it off too
@@jccohen9626 21:30
So could Steve McQueen.
Clint Eastwood - A humble man, respectful to others. I guess, what's not to admire and respect? A Class Act.
ask his wife
I love it when an interviewer actually does research and doesn't ask the same tired questions.
Brian Linehan was so great at researching for his interviews that the interviewees often wondered 'how do you know that?'
@@rachybaby72 Yeah. You know their good questions when the interviewee says that
He’s doing his best to read his mind as well , inside the head of a famous movie star and his work process.
One of the best Entertainers We ever had.
I could listen to Clint Eastwood for hours
I prefer feel good inc, but to each their own I guess
Clint Eastwood is a legend
Easily
Clint has been the same person for the past 40 yrs.... Really one of kind....
Clint Eastwood is unique to Hollywood, to filmmaking. No other person has been such a megastar AND a highly regarded director for decades!!!!
Absolutely.
Orson Welles, Woody Allen,
Mae West, etc.
There have been others.
@@geofflepper3207 are you trying to be funny?
@@MrAdvance2go Eastwood is not the only respected actor-director.
@@geofflepper3207woody Allen? When was the last time he made a big movie? Eastwood has a far superior work record.
Eastwood , served his apprenticeship in B movies and was a popular co-star in Rawhide ,that series had a more realistic style than the other westerns on TV back then , Clint absorbed everything he experienced and started to direct . The fact is he is a seasoned actor and great director who chooses good stories to shoot with a wide variety of subjects long may he continue.
Thank you, Maggie (former Mrs Eastwood) for encouraging Clint not to quit the business. Imagine how dull life would have been without Clint Eastwood in it.
I wonder what Clint would have done if he quit acting? Imagine going to a dealership and this man is selling a car? Or a construction site etc.
Eastwood is a national treasure
I was in Paint Your Wagon as an extra it was a great summer of fun that I will never forget. I was also side man to Elvis in the film Double Trouble as a member of his band. Another memory I will always treasure. I am even on the cover of the DVD with Elvis, I am the guy with the guitar and black hair.
@Dirk Diggler People are such assholes...pathetic, at least be funny if you're gonna be a keyboard koward.
Greg Estes says the little man behind his keyboard
me me me me me me look at me mememem
You lucky dog 🤩
Wow. How lucky can you be! Being in the presence of two legends! I even have the "Double Trouble" LP.
He smiles a lot, but don't think I've ever heard him laugh out loud.
He’s not an idiot that’s why
He chuckles in Thunderbolt and Lightfoot at the mention of racoon shit. That's the only time he's ever laughed, according to unwritten biographies
Watch Don Rickles with him.
@@Chelz12 Laughter is a normal human act.
God he was such a good looking bastard. Bless.
This guy is one of the few very good interviewers who knows his stuff, lets the actor talk...he plainly is getting into Clint's work, etc, and not there to salve his ego or recognition. There was a great interviewer I think on AMC or possibly TCM that was doing 1 hour talks with all the great stars...and I see him in my mind but cannot recall his name. Great stuff here, one learns with intelligent, humble people. Clint sure had his head on straight and probably the longest running actor and director in history...& he never seemed in love with himself.
Brian Lineman is an excellent interviewer. I had never heard of him before. I also sadly found out that he died in 2004.
As a kid, I always looked forward to watching his show, whether or not I knew who his guest was. He was so thorough and unique with his interviews. Martin Short (SCTV & SNL) spoofs him.
I used to watch him all the time. On CTV, I believe. CFCN,
I'm impressed with the interviewer, he's intelligent and respectful
Thanks for this! An intelligent and knowledgeable interviewer asking questions of an intelligent actor. The kind of interview very rarely seen on American television!
The interviewer is Canadian. His interviews were generally held in Toronto, although this one was held New Orleans I believe.
He's exactly at the half way point in his life right here. 44 years old.
He looks good for 44
Too
Much sun
Helen Cambell 44 isn't exactly old
He looked old then
@@chrisg9615 no
I like watching Clint out of character. He's just as cool.
Been my idol of sorts since my teens im 62 now , such an icon and so many great films
My god, he’s so beautiful 😍 😍😍 His face is mesmerizing to watch. This guy likes watching him too.
I mean that guy! I’m all female 👄
@@nca1668 sure sure…sure you are🤔
It’s ok to be gay these days😁
Clint or Brian?
MANY HAPPY RETURNS , Mister CLINT EASTWOOD !!!
Brian Linehan is a genius. Where did he even come up with his viewpoint? He was so knowledgeable and confident and truly interested in his interviewees. I wonder where he drew inspiration from.
He was inspired by Brock Lineahan, his cousin.
@@davidbernardi3410 Brock was amazing. Truly an inspiration for all. A lot of today's interviewers should take note.
Marvellous Mr. Clint Eastwood.
Aamir Ali 7
What a great interviewer !!!
Oh my God Clint Eastwood Jesus he’s so GOD DAMN beautiful! Damn! God now I know why the MOM’s were CRAZY FOR THIS GUY! Rocks, a baby, yellow turtleneck… oh my God how did I not see this before? Maybe because I was TEN
THE BADASS MAN WHO EVER WALK ON AND STILL WALKING ON THIS PLANET.I JUST HOPE I WILL MEET HIM ONE DAY!
He's just an actor. He PLAYS the badass. He isn't an actual one.
This guy is getting over. If you look at those 1950s beefcake photos, there is no way this guy never sat on the old "casting couch".
Clint definitely never had a problem getting a date....
Agree. Sounds like he had trouble not having multiple dates on the same date.
@@nomiddlenamenmn427 guys a stud Hell I got a bit of a man crush on him😂
I'm sure he had a lot of trouble, considering he was married. There were probably chances, but he was shackled.
@@alukuhito Back then it was much more acceptable to have side affairs and no one was calling you out or posting lurid gossip and rumors it was all kept under the radar and they respected peoples privacy but believe me I think if you read his biography he certainly made plenty of successful dalliances
@@jamesmack3314 "Acceptable" doesn't mean "proper". Affairs are for the lowest of the low. If he was having affairs, then shame on him. Even just one is a shame. Anyway, there were plenty of people in the 60s and 70s who did not accept affairs, despite all the trashy hippy influence going on at the time in western countries, particulary the USA.
Brian Richard Linehan (September 3, 1944 - June 4, 2004) was a Canadian television host from Hamilton, Ontario, best known for his celebrity interviews on the longrunning talk show City Lights.
You will never see actors like this again..shame
It is a shame.
Clint was outstanding as the laid back, quietly spoken, tough, ruthless and violent cowboy.
Loved him as Dirty Harry too.
@@helencampbell9203 When did Eastwood play someone who was violent for the sake of violence?
Amazing to think Clint's 91 now. I haven't enjoyed everything he's done, but for the most part, I have. :)
Clint and Steve McQueen are the coolest.
Few people today can interview an actor.
what a man
Clint Eastwood is the reason Bad has more than one meaning. There are Legends of acting and then there are Icons. Mr. Eastwood & Mr. Wayne are Icons.
Clint's answers to this loaded question were awesome!! 18:51
Especially at 19:28.
I was 22 yrs at the time
Of this interview!! Wow
What a men ? No
Wonder. He had a lot of
Woman .
He's so cool....................................
Unequivocally, my most favorite actor, ever.
Clint put the 'C' in cool.
and the OOL
"The story is everything, without the story there's no use putting all these peripheral components together without the center".
This is why Clint Eastwood is one of the most influential filmmaker in the history of cinema. He gets it.
I luv him!
I love how Clint talks about percentage instead of a single one million dollar payout. Most of his films made money so Clint made money. He took the risk and it paid off.
What glorious content “Reeling” holds. We who love content wish there was more made public but we also understand that selling content is your core business. As my generation ages we watch as Content ages too. Certainly, it’s yours to sell or eat but it sure makes our lives richer when you release it. At some point, the audience dies and everything from Johnny Carson to Film Noir to SCTV becomes irrelevant ( and unseen). Please release more of your vaults before we’re gone. Thanks
Clint is just the man. End of.
Very insightful.
Still looking for the 1983 interview with Ann-Margret
We love those movies!!
Damn he's gorgeous
Certainly was very good looking in his day.
They don't make men like that any more.
It sucks that there won't be another man like him
Love Mr Eastwood
So gorgeous
He was answering questions in the seventies about equality and feminism that would be valid and difficult to answer as well now.
Very handsome
Without a doubt, THE greatest movie star in 100 years of cinema.....
DrVonChilla lets not get carried away. I can think of ten others who eat his lunch every time.
Crazy Canuck brando, newman, pacino, deniro, nicholson, day lewis, hoffman, hopkins, hackman.
@@bwaters735 He did say Movie star, not greatest actor.
Clint Eastwood is soulful, calm, deliberate and serene
And oooohhhh so sexy
Is that a giant ashtray on the table in front of them? lol Oh, the world of 1974. I actually miss it. If only I could go back to it, except this time as an adult.
I Was Born 2 Decades Or More At The Time This Interview Was Televised
When I was a kid Clint was the coolest man alive......
No doubt
He still is.
This was Clint Eastwood at 44 years of age.
He looked a bit older than 44 but still a very good looking man :)
lmc2664 too much sun
@@drott150 I don't think he looks older than 44. He looks better than a lot if men I know who are trn years younger.
Clint isn't grey here, has a lot of hair and no beer gut .
@@drott150Agreed.
I didn't think the sun damaged skin spoilt him though. He had so many other attractive assets.
44...magnum!?
At the height of his Superstardom.
Been watching Clint movies since 1964. Don't think I've ever seen a dud.
Clinteastwood Love 🤠🤠💪☠️👍🤎🐎
Terrible dresser, boring off screen personality but one of the best looking men of all times. Also an actor with tremendous screen presence.
1:08 Oh my God ... He is laughing ... First time in my life I see him laughing ...
Gotta love the crazy 1974 hairdos.
Clint's looks okay. Today we have some whacked-out stuff.
This interviewer has GOT to be the inspiration for Martin Short's SCTV interviewer "Brock Linehan"...watch it and you will see.
He is.
@@stockinettestitch LOL--I knew it!! Thanks for the confirmation!
1060michaelg Here’s (hopefully) a link to a piece I just read about him in: www.steynonline.com/10396/remembering-brian-linehan-for-some-reason
@@stockinettestitch Thanks for that great little article! Man, a town of several hundred thousand and it can only support ONE used bookstore? I'd HANG MYSELF...or leave like she did. Yeah, that makes more sense.
Jeez, Martin Short looks EXACTLY like the photo of Brock---a great homage.
Also, great scene from ZOOLANDER. Take care!!
Hugh jackmans dad
BlackGypsyCharm yeah I know what you mean.he'd have been a fucking great wolverine
Yes Lol
Damn Clint Eastwood really looked like Wolverine back in the day lol!
natedoggg2002 👏👏😂😂😂
I was watching the wolverine, and put on TH-cam while the ad break was on. I clicked on this random Clint Eastwood interview, and I thought to myself, he would have played wolverine really well. Then I scrolled down and saw your comment. Amused me.
Ahem, Wolverine looks like him!! 😉
Clint Eastwood. Top dog.
Brian Linehan...oh brother come on!
I'm just fascinated by the camera quality.
In 1974, a camera like that would've costed thousands and it would've been huge.
In 1999, that would've been an affordable family VHS camcorder that was able to be held in a single hand.
Amazing how technology works.
My thoughts, exactly.
Martin Short will take you to places you didn't think you'd go lol obsessed with C list interviewers
Legend cowboy movie..
The classic 70s Han Solo lid. Chicks still dig it!
I cannot be the only one who thinks that Clint is here sounds so much like Ted Bundy! Much love, Clint
Its funny that the criticisms aren't remembered and neither are the critics themselves. They have a job to do and they can serve a useful purpose but they can also be a pointless interference to art. Eastwood had endured because of his past work and because he continued to be relevant. It speaks louder and longer than any critic's writing. The masses will decide what's most relevant without being guided, shamed, ridiculed and re-educated from the voices on high. They can also support the worst garbage if it's strategically marketed by a billion dollar industry. Critics today are more politically and ideologically motivated by extreme bias than ever before. Somewhere in the middle of all that, a decent movie is occasionally made and even seen.
❤️
Brian Linehan. His hair. My mum had a similar style.
I wish he had been cast opposite Debbie Reynolds in “The Unsinkable Molly Brown”.
No desks and no notes, all in his head
How can he hold his eyebrows like that?i realized i do that when i wanna do but when in public or someone asks me question my eyebrows went like a bow and it loses it's all toughness.
they're styled.
Back in the old days when Clint only used to talk to footstools.
If you want to see Clint laugh out loud watch him with Don Rickles
clint is the best stop pushin him
Who was more handsome, Sean Connery or Clint Eastwood?
Clint easily
Thomas Norman was handsome in the 70s 80s 90s
The interviewer looks like one of the oompa loompas from Willy Wonka & The Chocolate Factory
😂
Alfred E. Neuman
For most of his career he stayed out of Hollywood. Same with Charles Bronson.
1:09 Wow. What would not have been.
He proves himself a very considerable actor by answering with a straight face to a man who has a hairstyle like a warthog's warehouse of abandoned dreams
Lol 😂
Ah ... you focus on looks rather than what the person is saying/asking. Sign of high intelligence. Just listen to the questions, the research that when into them, and perhaps learn something about what makes a good interview.
Okay Jim the Hippie
Never ruffled .
Brian looks like a oompa loompa
Clint Eastwood is so hot
Holy fuck. What happened to Brian's hair.
that's the biggest oompah loompah I've ever seen
ROFL!!!!!! You nailed it.
notonetowine ubibabies lmao. Just paint him orange and hes ready to go
Clint, Lee Van Cleef and Tom selleck = hunks of human race.
I agree blue gypsy
Michael j fox saw this and used his name in Back to the Future!
This was pretty standard fare in the 70's. Michael Parkinson, who recently passed, was an outstanding chat show host in the UK. Grown up, interesting content and interviewing like this, is pretty much gone. Its all mostly bubblegum for the brain now.