Fresh Air - Remembering War Correspondent Rod Nordland
Episode Date: June 27, 2025After surviving many close calls as a war correspondent — from bullets, mortars and the threat of execution — Rod Nordland was diagnosed with a lethal brain tumor in 2019. He died last week, at th...e age of 75. In his interview with Terry Gross last year, he spoke about facing his mortality as a war correspondent and as a terminal cancer patient. Nordland covered wars and conflicts in Iraq, Afghanistan, Syria, Lebanon, Bosnia, El Salvador and Cambodia. Also, we'll listen back to Terry's 1993 conversation with legendary guitarist Buddy Guy, who has a cameo in Sinners. TV critic David Bianculli reviews the new season of Hulu's The Bear.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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Thank you.
This is Fresh Air.
I'm David Bianculli.
If there was ever a life designed to teach one
how to face death, mine was it.
Rod Nordlund wrote that while facing death
from a glioblastoma, a lethal brain tumor.
Life expectancy is between one and one and a half years,
but with experimental treatments,
he survived for six more years.
He died last week at age 75.
Nordlund was used to facing mortality from decades as a war correspondent for the New
York Times, Newsweek, and the Philadelphia Inquirer.
In 1979, Nordlund was part of the reporting team that covered the Three Mile Island accident,
including visiting the site of contamination, a risk he was willing to take.
That coverage won a Pulitzer Prize for the Inquirer.
While there were wars and conflicts in Bosnia, Somalia, Kosovo, Iraq, Yemen, Afghanistan,
Lebanon, Syria, Congo, Cambodia, he was there.
Nordlund wrote about his life as a war correspondent
and as a patient and how both extremes
affected his relationships and family life.
His 2024 memoir, Waiting for the Monsoon,
is a reference to his first seizure
while he was in India filling in
for the New Delhi Bureau Chief of the New York Times.
That seizure led to his diagnosis in
2019. A recent review of Waiting for the Monsoon in The Guardian said, quote,
this is a gripping memoir of a consummate foreign reporter and an
inspiring journal of self-discovery when the cold breath of mortality is on the
neck, unquote. We're going to listen back to Terry's interview with Nordland from last year when
his memoir was first published.
Rod Nordland, welcome to Fresh Air. We spoke years ago. Welcome back.
Yeah, thank you, Terry.
The neurologist who is your brain surgeon told you that this tumor would kill you and that
you needed to come to terms with that and that you needed to be honest with your loved ones about it.
You were reasonably confident that you'd be among the 6% of people who survive more than five years.
Why were you so optimistic and are you still?
I mean, I tend to see worst-case scenarios, so I'd love to hear how you manage to see
best-case scenario.
Well, I've always been an optimist and, you know, a very upbeat person.
So I think that has been, maybe doctors have even said it to me, it's my greatest strength
in fighting this disease.
There have been studies done of terminal, patients with terminal diseases, in which
they asked the people if they thought they would survive, and those that said they thought
they would survive, even though they had a diagnosis that medically
had doomed them, had better outcomes than people that just said, oh well, and sat back
and let it do its thing.
So that gives me a lot of hope.
You are confident in war zones that you aren't going to get killed.
Even though you knew fellow journalists who'd been killed, you had some very bad close calls with death yourself. So what made you think that you were
going to survive? I never understand this about war correspondence that I think you have to believe
that you're being careful enough that you can survive, but it's
a war and anything can happen.
So what made you confident that you would survive some of the evidence to the contrary?
Because I am the most careful person around, and no matter what conflict I was covering, I was always very conscious of putting, you know,
safety of myself and the people that worked with me, putting that first. I like to say that I
preach the virtues of Calvary's when covering wars. I never go to the front line.
I think the front line in a conflict where there's a lot of
explosions and high-speed projectiles flying around, I
think that's a very dangerous place.
And you have to be either an idiot or completely deluded to go there. Much more productive is to go,
say, to the headquarters or to the nearest hospital and talk to witness and survivors.
And I've always made that my mantra, kind of.
You faced down death several times in war zones. Tell us about one of the close calls.
And I know you have several to choose from.
You know, when I began working as a war correspondent,
I was still 20 something,
and still in many ways an adolescent.
And I think, like a lot of young people, I really didn't believe in my own mortality.
And I think that's true of a lot of people who do that kind of work, because otherwise,
who would do it?
I mean, who would jump out of an airplane into a parachute if they didn't have some belief in their own
immortality?
So I lost that arrogance very profoundly when I was on a front line against my own rules in Cambodia,
on the outskirts of a refugee camp
where there was a nasty little internecine war going on
between factions that ran the camp
and it lived off of the proceeds of the food and supplies they could steal.
So those creeps were, you know, in constant conflict with themselves.
And I found myself on the front line with a couple of them. I was standing shoulder to shoulder with
one of these militiamen and there were bullets whizzing over our heads. That
expression by the way is quite accurate. That's what it sounds like, something
whizzing over your head. And we just stood there like idiots. And one of those bullets hit the guy next
to me and blew his brains out, quite literally. His comrades then, you know, I had a rental
car, and they ordered me to put him in the car and take him to the hospital. I mean, he was clearly brain dead. He was
convulsing and bleeding kind of all over the Avis upholstery.
Avis rent-a-car. Yeah. As we used to say, what's the best
all-terrain vehicle to use in a war zone? Answer, a rental car.
Right. Okay, so you just told us about when you
were a young war correspondent and the person next to you had his brains blown
out and then you were forced to take him to a hospital even though you were sure
he was dead and I think there was a gun to your head while you were doing this
and you certainly
continued to be a war correspondent for many years after that. That was an early
warning that you know you would be surrounded by the threat of death. Why
did you keep doing it? Why did you keep staying in war zones after that?
I started doing it really differently.
That taught me that I was in fact mortal, which is an important lesson that all young
men should learn as soon as possible.
After that, I never went to front lines anymore, especially with irregulars.
And I stayed as far away from as I could
There were other times when you faced the possibility of death you were in a holiday in in Sarajevo during the conflict there
And you were staying on what was called snipers row in the holiday in because there was so much sniper fire there firing at
Everybody and you were told you had to someone bang your door and say, get out of the room and
into the hallway right now, because they're coming down the street with mortars.
And sure enough, as soon as you got into the hallway, your room was mortared and you probably
would have died there.
Your bed was basically exploded when you got back in. Yeah, the whole room was a rubble and shards of shells.
Yeah, that was another warning.
And another time was when you were scheduled to be executed with several other journalists
the next day, and a delegation from the International Red Cross happened to come by and rescue rescue you. So I mean you had a lot of brushes with death. What are some of
the differences in terms of your emotional state and your understanding
of death between facing the possibility of it doing your job in war zones as a
correspondent, as a foreign correspondent, and facing it
because of your brain cancer?
Well, there are a lot of similarities. One of the most important things I learned as a war correspondent
was that the first thing you had to be sure to do was to stay calm and not lose control of your emotions and just stay calm no matter
what. And I think that's been a really good lesson for dealing with cancer too.
Now that you've faced mortality as a war correspondent and as somebody, you know, battling brain cancer, a very
deadly form. Has your acceptance of mortality changed? Like, when you were in
in conflict zones, did you accept the fact that you thought you wouldn't die,
you thought you wouldn't be killed, but did you accept the fact that you might
be? Did you reconcile with the possibility of death?
And now as a cancer patient, even though you've survived longer than the odds would have given
you, this is a deadly form of cancer.
And even if you go into a remission, it's likely to come back.
So what's your level of acceptance of mortality now?
And again, how does that compare it to
what it was in war zone?
Well, I think in war zones,
it was much more of a coin toss.
And I think I became very good at playing the odds
and weighing the risks and moderating
them by the way I approach my work.
But with glioblastoma, there's no coin toss.
It's incurable.
It's terminal.
And it can be treated, but it can't be cured.
And I've had some good treatment but the treatments also been sometimes really difficult
and devastating.
So I mean I had to face reality that my death was within a fairly short time span, highly
probable.
That had never been the case before.
And I think it made me a better person for that.
In what way?
Well, because it made me look back on my life
and things that had happened in my life
and think about what was most important.
And it also made me want to, instead of being angry at my, I was accepting and just, you know, they also came to my bedside
and I felt a lot of love from them, which was very heartening.
When you're a journalist, you have license to ask anything that you wouldn't normally
ask people.
And the way you describe it, that's also true for you with the brain cancer, because you
feel like having a terminal illness allows you to ask things that you normally wouldn't
ask about the meaning of life or about death.
Do you see a similarity between those two licenses as a journalist and as somebody with a
terminal illness? Yeah and I played played that for all it was worth. I asked
everybody I met what the meaning of life was. I even asked Alexa,
who had a pathetic answer.
I'm sure she had the best answer. What was the answer?
The answer was
to quote Eleanor Roosevelt,
that
the purpose of life
is to live life to the fullest
and to enjoy
everything about it.
That's somewhat of a lame answer. But at one
time I asked that question of a nurse and she turned it around on me and said,
what do you think the meaning of life is? So I said, well'm sorry, I'm gonna have to punt on that. But I think the meaning of life is,
as Raymond Carver said,
to fill yourself beloved on this earth.
And that was my answer then,
and it's my answer in the book too.
You met your partner, your current partner in 2016. She's a poet and a human rights activist.
You had planned a life together and then, you know, about three years after you became a couple,
your relationship was tested because of the brain cancer diagnosis, you know,
and it's a form of brain cancer that's lethal. And she has been
with you the whole time overseeing your health care, making all the arrangements
that need to be made when someone is seriously ill. You had planned... She's been
amazing, yeah. She sounds amazing in the memoir, I have to say. And you were so
upbeat about what you expected your outcome to be.
You expected to be one of the survivors, one of the small percentage of survivors.
But you were given the advice to grieve, for you and Lila to grieve, not necessarily to
grieve for imminent death, but to grieve for the kind of life you had planned that you
could no longer have.
Because what you can do now has been compromised. Places you can go to or travel to. So
tell me about what it means to have grieved for the life that you could no
longer have and to do that together. I think it made us even closer than we were already.
Was there a process?
Were there things that you talked about that were helpful?
Yeah, I think there's things we decided to do together.
There are books that we read that we both found very moving,
books on dying and death and on facing death, especially a book called
The Five Invitations by an American Buddhist monk, Frank Osteweski, his name name, I usually mangle. He ran a hospice, a Zen Buddhist hospice in San Francisco
at the height of the AIDS epidemic. The hospice was for people dying of HIV and
for homeless people, people who had no one to care for them or be with them.
And he writes so movingly about how these people faced the awful ordeal of dying.
And it's really inspiring.
I recommend it to anybody who's got a friend with a serious
illness. It really changed our lives. We read the book out loud to each other and
for days on end sometimes. How are you mentally preparing yourself for death?
Because you know that this is a terminal illness and
you never go into total remission.
This is a cancer that recurs even if you're in remission.
So far you've really beat the odds, but you know somewhere along the line it's inevitable.
I mean it's inevitable one way or another, but it's inevitable sooner.
There's more of a deadline.
So how are you mentally preparing yourself for that?
I think by repairing my relationships more than anything else and working hard on those, both my relationships with my friends and with my family,
and especially with my partner.
Well, Rod Nordlund, thank you so much for talking with us, and I wish you more life.
Thanks. I plan to have some. War correspondent Rod Nordland who covered four decades
of war for the New York Times, Newsweek, and the Philadelphia Inquirer. He spoke with Terry after
the publication of his 2024 memoir, Waiting for the Monsoon. He died last week at age 75. After a
break, we'll listen to Terry's 1993 interview with legendary guitarist Buddy Guy,
who has a cameo in Sinners, now streaming on various platforms.
And I'll review the latest season of The Bear, now streaming on Hulu.
I'm David B. Inculli, and this is Fresh Air.
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Buddy Guy was one of the first blues guitarists to use electronic feedback and distortion, and his technique is legendary.
In 1986, Eric Clapton called him the greatest guitarist of all time.
Guy has a cameo in Sinners, Ryan Coogler's hit movie set in 1932 in the Mississippi Delta
during the Jim Crow era.
Twins, both played by Michael B. Jordan, open a juke joint and try to keep the business
going despite unexpected obstacles, including evil vampires.
Buddy Guy plays the older version of blues musician Sammy Moore.
Guy was born in rural Louisiana in 1936, the son of sharecroppers.
He set out for Chicago as a young man and quickly became a central part of that city's
blues scene.
In 1989, he founded his own club there, Buddy Guy's Legends, which is still going strong.
Buddy Guy has won eight Grammy Awards and a lifetime
achievement award. In 1985, he was inducted into the Blues Hall of Fame, and in 2005,
he was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. Guy was one of the first guitarists
to use electronic feedback and distortion before Hendrix and other rock guitarists.
Terry asked how he developed that technique.
Accidentally.
Actually, we've in Chicago there. We didn't have stages.
We'd always go in the corner and play and
they had jukeboxes during the breaks and they would play tunes and that's how I learned by listening to other people, Great Smutty,
Walter Wolf and so on. And I forgot to turn my guitar off one day,
and a lady passed by, and her dress tear hit the G string,
and it just stayed there with an extortion for about 20
minutes, and I said, I'll never forget that.
And I went up, and it worked with me,
and I've been doing it ever since.
Explain this again.
Her dress touched the G string?
Yeah.
And I forgot to cut it off, and it
was lying against the amplifier. You know, know and as I say we didn't have a
stage we were just in the corner playing and she get up from my table to
probably go get a drink or use the bathroom or something like that and I
said wow I forgot to cut my guitar out. It was right in tune with the
particular tune I was playing on the jukebox. So then how did you start using
that yourself intentionally? Well after I found out it would stay there and extort that long, I just went up one day
and played and stood right there where it was and it works.
Now when you were recording for Chess Records back in the first part of the 60s, you were
already doing some of this on stage I think, but you've said that Leonard Chess didn't
like that, he wouldn't let you cut loose. Well first of all you know Leonard had gotten to the
point that you know let's for an example if you had a win and then say I want to
do some rapping now they would have shot you with a shotgun you know but if he
was in the streets you know what the young people was asking for and what
was they was reacting to the what she was playing and I was like throwing the guitar down missing notes and it was ringing out with the extortion
stuff and people is going crazy saying look at that listen to that and I would try to
take it back and say this is what's out there and they will say get out of here you know
and I'm like saying okay and later on in his life I think it was like three four six months
before he passed away he called me in and said, I want to talk to you.
And he had found out because that was a Henrikster, Eric and the Cream and so on playing that.
He looked at me and said, how dumb could I be?
You've been trying to give me this stuff for so long.
And I was calling the noise and I was selling it to me and I said, you're kidding me.
You know, and it was just like a joke to me.
Well, buddy guy, I want to play one of your first records with chess recordings and you were saying that
that Lennar chess wouldn't let you do what you really wanted to, but this is a
really pretty good recording. It's called First Time I Met the Blues. It was
recorded in 1960 Little Brother Montgomery's at the piano. Do you
remember this session? Yes, that's Little Brothers Montgomery tune, him and Willie
Dixon got me together on that because I was with Koba Records before that and I got with Chess in
the 60s and that's the tune they brought me first and I was more of a student, a listener, well
whatever you might say at that time and I was doing whatever they thought was best for me in order
for me to get a record out with the Chess people because otherwise if if I'd went in and said look I'm doing it my way I would
have been you probably wouldn't be talking to me now because that was the confident end
at the time to try to get recorded with.
Okay well let's hear it recorded in 1960 by guest buddy Guy on guitar and vocals. The first time I met the blues He know I was walking, I was walking down through the woods
Yeah, I was up right in my house with you
Blues you know you dug me, you dug me all in all, got you cool
You don't be on your own, that you could
The blues got after me
If you know the right people to treat it with Let's go back to your very early years. Your father was a sharecropper.
Did your parents want you to get off the plantation? Were you brought up with the sense of when you get old enough you should really get out of here?
My parent was like, I got two sisters and two brothers, five of us, and they was like
sharecroppers and they would teach us all that when we got grown, if you go away,
I want you to go away, do better than we did.
And if you marry an elephant,
if you love him, we have to like him.
And that's just the way they was until he passed away.
They never was the type of people that had tried
and chose what we should do or whatnot.
They just told me, son, don't be the best in town, just be the best
until the best come around.
Were there any musicians on the plantation where you grew up?
Not really. It was a distant guy my dad brought the first guitar for me from and his mother,
my grandmother. And if she was living, I was talking to you today and you 10 minutes conversation
with her, she would figure out that we was related in some kind of way.
Sooner or later, if you think back real deep religious wise, I guess we are in a way of
speaking, but she could figure that out.
And this guy was supposed to be some kind of distant relative of ours.
And, uh, and, and that's just the way they had me feeling.
And I kind of feel that way now with the music I'm playing
and traveling around the world.
Everybody I see looks and smiles the same.
I just see you bigger, taller, smaller, different colors.
But we still walking around on two legs,
drinking water and eating food and sleeping and talking.
So she got this guy to give you a guitar or teach you a guitar?
No, my dad played two bucks for, played two dot two bucks for one of that two strings on it.
Now, uh, uh, first electric guitar I saw was Lightning Slam and I gave him my weekly
allowances, which is 35 cents.
Oh, you heard him playing and you, you.
No, he came through on a Sunday evening, plugged up on the stove front porch and played
Book of Chiller.
So how did you get your first amplifier?
Poets and played Book of Chiller. So how did you get your first amplifier?
A stranger bought my first real guitar and my first real amplifier.
He bought it from me. Actually I was sitting on my sister's porch with the two strings trying to get my first year in high school.
My mother had had a stroke and a stranger passed and said, son I bet if you had a guitar you would learn how to play.
And this is the third evening. I said, probably so. And he said, what are you doing tomorrow? I said,
I sit here every evening. And the next evening he came by and said, let's go. And I said,
why? He said, I'm going by to get a guitar. And he took me downtown and bought the guitar.
My sister came in and we were laughing. It was drinking the quarter beer. And he said,
well, let's go in the country where my mom and dad are at, in the country boy with the
country guitar. And the guy followed us out, then strangely enough, him and my
dad talked for 10 minutes and they grew up together as a boy.
So who was he?
The guy's name was Mitchell. He grew up as a boy with my dad. And after he bought the
guitar, my dad tried to trace him down, which he moved to Chicago and became a preacher
and we never could track him down because I still owed him the money for the guitar. Still do. So did you feel like
you still owe him a lot of thanks? Do you feel like you were able to express? A lot.
A lot. And I'm sure wherever he is at this point if it's in a way that he
should know he should know I want to thank him and I owe my whole career to him.
You left the plantation when you were owe my whole career to him.
You left the plantation when you were 21.
You went to Chicago.
No, no, no, no.
I left the plantation trying to get to one year high school and went into Baton Rouge.
Oh, I see.
And then I left Baton Rouge September 25, 1957, 840 a.m. in the morning.
Wow, you really remember exactly the moment.
I can't forget that.
Tell me about the moment. I can't forget that. What tell me about that moment
My mother was sick and she had had a stroke and she kept telling me if you don't don't
Live my life around her because we were very close and I figured it, you know I should stay and she said no and she learned how to
Make us understand some of the things she was saying because of the fix your speech and she said go
You know and I said, okay if you happy I'm gone and she said go you know and i said okay if you have been gone she's my lisa go and was
you had the first record i made
to tell me she got my big smile
did you see her again after you left
oh yeah i want to know what to see every and as you pass away she passed away
april sixteen nineteen sixty eight i had been jamming with him recently passed
with her
so you went to chicago Why did you choose Chicago?
I didn't go to Chicago to be a musician.
I went there looking for better common labor employment and I got there and got stranded
and wind up being forced to play get-togethers.
At one point in my life I was too shy to even talk.
You wouldn't get the answers you get now from me when I was about 20 years old.
I can tell you that.
So were you playing on the street for money?
No, no. This stranger met me on the street for money? No, no
I just stranger met me on the street and led me and I played a Jim Reid song for him and he led me to this
famous club was the 708 club and that's the address 708 East 47th Street and that was
Otis Royce on stage and he let me went on stage and I played a song and somebody went and called Muddy and he
Come out and I was telling him I was trying to get back to Louisiana because I was busted, hungry and hadn't eaten in the third day.
And he come and brought the salami and the loaf of bread and said don't think about going
back to Louisiana.
Muddy Waters said that?
Yep.
So what happened next?
Then you started getting bookings?
No, they start coming, yeah, well the local clubs.
It wasn't no such thing as booking and traveling but I got to work in that club and a few more. I had
a million clubs in Chicago that time and two million musicians. And you had to play the
top ten on the jukebox, at least some of them, to get in the clubs. And fortunately I could
do that. I had to play the Ray Charles, what I say. I had to play B.B. King.
I had to play Muddy Waters.
I had to play Bobby Bland.
And I had the advantage of some of the guys,
because some of them would just want to be Muddy Waters
or Howlin' Wolf or Lil Walter.
And I didn't stay at that.
I tried to learn them all, Light and Hopkins and everybody.
And so I had a little advantage there,
because I learned how to copy all of their music.
Tell me more about what the blues scene was like in Chicago when you started playing there.
For six and a half or seven years, I didn't know what was the weekend.
I had to go back and ask somebody when was Sunday because we even had jam sessions started
at seven o'clock on Monday morning and you couldn't get into the place.
Were there like blues cutting contests?
Yes, that's what it was all about.
There were so many clubs till after someone decided to hire me in a club, Junior, Otis,
Freddie King, Magic Sam, Earl Hooker, just to name a few of us, we all had gigs each
night.
Each club was packed.
A lot of people was working at a big stockyard, a steel mill, and the shift was 11 o'clock,
7 or 8 o'clock in the morning.
That's why the Blue Monday could work.
And in order for us to get together and play, we had to all say, let's start playing at
7 o'clock on Monday morning.
Then nobody would have a gig at night.
And that's how we got to really jam together with Muddy, Wolf, Otis, myself, Junior, and
everybody else. And that's why so many people would be there in Muddy, Wolf, Otis, myself, Junior and everybody else.
And that's why so many people would be there in the morning because they'd say, man, you
go to this club with a blue mudnet, you see Muddy, you see Sonny Boy, you see Lil' Walter,
man, what a jam.
Blues guitarist Buddy Guy speaking to Terry Gross in 1993.
More after a break, this is Fresh Air.
This is Fresh Air. This is Fresh Air.
Let's get back to Terry's 1993 interview with legendary blues guitarist Buddy Guy,
who has a cameo at age 88 in Ryan Coogler's supernatural horror film Sinners.
I saw you in Buffalo at the State University there.
I guess it was the late 1960s.
And the way I remember it, you started off on stage, but midway through the concert,
you were like down the aisles, out the door, through the other end of the student union,
and I think you maybe let us all outside and then back in again.
I don't remember if I've exaggerated or not over the years, but you let us pretty far
on that.
Well, that's the same thing was happening in chicago i i i had says that you know
i couldn't challenge muddy waters uh...
uh... how the wolf is a little great chance who i was learning from
and i was just trying to get some attention to let someone know that uh...
i had something that they were all was sitting in chairs matter fact the blues
bb keng doesn't know he was going to do that and i just say we not tired we just
said now that you know i blues was played 42 years ago and
I was like I saw guitar slam which I mentioned earlier and I said look they can outplay me
but they can't outdo me so I just started jumping up laying out on my back with the
guitar under my back and all you got to do is like an exercise you know you raise your
back up off it and just pick the strings if you can find a way to put your fingers in
the right place you can play it anywhere. Did you have to get really really really
long guitar wires from your guitar to the amplifier in order to walk as far as
you did? Well actually I saw guitar slim with that first of all when I first got
to Chicago I would go to the shop to have this wire made They wouldn't make it because they'd tell me it wasn't going
to work. I said, well, give me the wire. I'll make it. And I learned how to solder my own
ends on there. And finally, one of the technicians came out and said, this guy's crazy. I don't
believe this thing is coming through. And they used to examine my wire. One guitar player
cut it in half one night because he figured I had somebody else behind the curtain playing.
You know, it's funny. You've gone from being a younger person trying to establish himself
and trying to figure out who he is and what makes him different from everybody else to
being now one of the blues legends that everybody wants to emulate.
You've talked a lot about how you felt like you really had to work hard and outdo everybody
else, you know,
to call attention to who you were.
Does that still motivate the kind of show that you do?
I mean, because now you're a buddy guy, and everybody knows who you are.
Not quite everybody. You know, I'm not as well known as some people
who play the guitar. I wish I were. You know, then maybe I wouldn't have to work so hard.
But in another sense, maybe I don't want to be like that.
It might stop me from working as hard as I do.
Because if you come and see me, I want you to have 110, 20 percent of body guy,
nothing less. Because if I get to the point I start taking that from you,
I don't think I want to play anymore.
Do you still have the energy to do the kind of show you used to do?
I don't know if I have as much as I had.
I'm not going to lie to you and tell you I feel like I was when I was 17 years old.
But when I pick up my guitar, I feel like I'm 14.
Let me ask you about the influence of B.B. King on your playing
and what the influence has been and where the point of departure is.
You've known him a long time, you've been on stage with him a bunch of times. Tell me a little bit
about his influence on you and also how you feel very different from him. Well let me put it to you
like this. His influence should be on every guitar player that picks up a guitar. Because
he told me when I first met him, he didn't learn how to use the slide and we all, Eric,
Stevie, myself, Albert King, Albert Collins, we all squeezed the strings. And I tell him
every time I get a chance to talk with him, he's the one that invented that squeezing
the string and bending the way we do. And on tour with him now, it's like Buddy Guy's going to school in his first year and
in grade school.
I'm still learning from him.
And as long as he around, I still think his name should be on every guitar that's put
out there.
Oh yes.
Buddy Guy, I have one last question for you.
We started recording this interview at 9.30 in the morning,
and there are very, very few musicians who will wake up to do a 9.30 in the morning interview.
You're on the road. You're in the middle of a tour. How the heck did you get up this early?
Well, honestly, I'm still a country farm boy, and I don't want to change that in all of my life.
I don't care how late I stay up or what I still get to sleep that I think I need but it's just the
thrill of my life and I love this as well as I do my get-tie to get up at 5
30 maybe even at 5 in the morning and go out and take a big deep breath of fresh
air and say I remember when I had to get up like this and go feed the hogs
chickens and cows and I still get the fresh air. And I got two little dogs whenever I'm at home and I don't need a alarm clock.
Buddy Guy, thank you so much. It's really been such a pleasure to talk with you.
Well thank you very much and I enjoyed every minute of it. Don't wait so long next time.
Blues guitarist Buddy Guy speaking to Terry Gross in 1993. He has a cameo in Ryan Coogler's
supernatural horror film Sinners
now streaming on various platforms.
His new album, Ain't Done With the Blues,
is scheduled to be released on July 30th,
Buddy's 89th birthday.
Coming up, I review the latest season of The Bear,
now streaming on Hulu.
This is Fresh Air.
This is Fresh Air. This is Fresh Air.
I'm TV critic David Bianculli.
The Bear is back.
This week, the Hulu streaming service launched Season 4 of the intense and astoundingly excellent
series about a talented chef trying to launch a successful high-end restaurant in Chicago.
Jeremy Allen White stars as Carm, who returns home after his brother Mike's death to save
the family's beef sandwich shop, then expand it into something more grand.
The creator of The Bear is Christopher Storer, who won an Emmy for directing the show's
hectic holiday dinner flashback episode called The Fishes.
The series has an especially talented cast
and even a deep bench with lots of guest actors and regulars racking up Emmy
nominations and wins. At the most recent Emmys, the Bear won 11 awards, the most
ever for a comedy series in a single season. And that beat the awards set by
the Bear at the previous Emmys where it won 10. That's an amazing accomplishment.
It's also a somewhat bizarre one, because, and I say this every time I review this show,
the Bear is not a comedy.
I've seen all 10 episodes of the new fourth season, and the first genuine comedy-style
dialogue exchange didn't happen until episode 5.
But that's my one and only complaint about The Bear, that it should be winning all these
Emmys as a drama, not a comedy.
But the quality and the artistry and the ambition, those are givens.
Most impressive, perhaps, is that Christopher Storer and his writing staff are playing the
long game and have a clear idea where they're
going.
Last season ended on a cliffhanger with the restaurant staff awaiting its first influential
review.
This season charts the staff's ups and downs but as much off the job as on it.
And there are constant callbacks to everything from a chicken wishbone to the movie Groundhog
Day and its intentional monotony.
The restaurant staff is working to meet and exceed expectations while the show's writing
and production staff is working just as hard to defy them. So much happens to so many characters
in this season of The Bear, dealing with the past as well as the future, that I don't want to play
any excerpts that could reveal any secrets.
Rest assured though, that this season includes one expanded episode that finds a reason to reunite
the show's extended cast of guest players, including Bob Odenkirk, John Mulaney, Brie Larson, and Sarah Paulson.
And, as this season gains momentum, there are shared scenes between key characters that once again
are sure shots to gain Emmy nominations. Scenes between Jeremy Allen White as Carm and Jamie Lee
Curtis as his mom. And between Carm and Io Etaberry as his head chef, Sydney. Eben Moss
Backrack as Richie, Liza Colon-Zayas is Tina, John Bernthal is Carm's late brother
Mike.
All of them already are Emmy winners for their work on this show, and all of them shine brilliantly
once again.
But the only season four Taste of the Bear I'm willing to present is from the very first
scene of the very first episode.
It's a flashback, with Carm and his brother Mike in a kitchen stirring
some tomato sauce and talking about food as a radio plays in the background. Carm
is visiting after working successfully at a Michelin star at California
restaurant and is explaining to his brother why he's so passionate about his
chosen vocation.
Look, every one of our good memories, they happen in restaurants, right?
Like, Homer's ice cream after baseball.
Uh, you know, Omega after that weird birthday party with Mom.
You know, we couldn't stop laughing.
Look, like, all this good shit that happened to us in restaurants, because restaurants
are special places, right?
People go to restaurants to be taken care of, right?
They go to restaurants to celebrate, to relax, to not have to think about anything else for
a minute.
People go to restaurants to feel less lonely.
This new season of The Bear is all about turning Carm's new restaurant into just such a place.
There's a lot of pressure, financial and otherwise, and it's all depicted so you feel every bit
of it.
Sometimes there are rapid-fire montages of food prep.
Other times, lots of times, there are
lengthy dialogue scenes between two people shot in extreme close-up. I should
mention how unusually emotionally real all of these characters seem and how
much you end up caring about them. Abby Elliot as Carm's sister, Oliver Platt as
his uncle, and even some new cast editions
like guest star Rob Reiner as a potential investor.
Finally, the choice of music on the soundtrack is inspired.
Songs by Paul Simon and Lou Reed, Van Morrison and R.E.M., Bob Dylan and the Who, are played
in ways and in spots that make you respond to the lyrics in a new context.
Call the bear a comedy if you must, but I won't.
Watching this new season, I cried more times than I laughed.
Yet however you characterize it, The Bear, right now, is the best series on television. through the water when the fever runs high
You got the look of love light in your eyes
and I was in crazy motion
till you calmed me down To keep up with what's on the show and get highlights of our interviews, follow us on
Instagram at NPR Fresh Air.
On Monday's show, Terry talks with Jeffrey Seller, who played a key role as a producer of the Broadway musicals Rent, Hamilton, In the Heights, Avenue Q, and the revival of Sondheim's Sweeney Todd that starred Josh Groban.
His new memoir, Theater Kid, is about his life and offers a behind-the-scenes look at what it's like to produce a Broadway musical. I hope you can join us. Fresh Air's executive producer is Danny Miller.
Sam Brigger is our managing producer.
Our senior producer today is Thea Challener.
Our technical director and engineer is Audrey Bentham
with additional engineering support
by Joyce Lieberman, Julian Hertzfeld,
and Adam Stanaszewski.
Our interviews and reviews are produced and edited
by Phyllis Myers, Roberta Shurok and Marie Balden Otto Lauren Krenzel Teresa Madden
Monique Nazareth Susan Yakundi and Anna Bauman our digital media producer is
Molly CV Nesper hope Wilson is our consulting visual producer for Terry
Gross and Tanya Mosley I'm David being cool