StarTalk Radio - A Conversation with Morgan Freeman

Episode Date: March 28, 2013

Morgan Freeman chats about space, science, and the inspiration they provide for films and for the future. Subscribe to SiriusXM Podcasts+ on Apple Podcasts to listen to new episodes ad-free and a whol...e week early.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Welcome to StarTalk, your place in the universe where science and pop culture collide. StarTalk begins right now. Welcome to StarTalk Radio. I'm your host, Neil deGrasse Tyson, astrophysicist and director of New York City's Hayden Planetarium at the American Museum of Natural History. In this episode of StarTalk, we're featuring a conversation with award-winning actor Morgan Freeman. He came to my office at the Hayden Planetarium, and we chatted about his interest in science and space exploration. In fact, after we recorded this interview, we headed down to the radio studio for a StarTalk episode
Starting point is 00:00:44 where we talked about his Science Channel TV series, Through the Wormhole. So you'll want to check out that show on our website's archive, www.startalkradio.net. Morgan Freeman's Through the Wormhole series tackles some of the most intriguing questions in science today, including the birth of the universe, the origin of life on earth, the question of alien life, and the deep mystery of dark matter. Morgan Freeman is not only one of the most popular actors in Hollywood today, he's received Academy Award nominations for his performances in Street Smart,
Starting point is 00:01:26 Driving Miss Daisy, The Shawshank Redemption, and Invictus. He won an Oscar in 2005 for Million Dollar Baby, and he's also won a Golden Globe Award and a Screen Actors Guild Award. His other popular films include Unforgiven, Glory, Seven, my favorite, Deep Impact, Bruce Almighty, where, of course, he plays God, Batman Begins, The Bucket List. It goes on and on. So I had to ask him about the many characters he's portrayed over his career and what role science has played in his life. Morgan, you played God twice.
Starting point is 00:01:55 You played the President twice, one for the United States and in South Africa. You played a chauffeur and a convicted murderer. You know, I could barely eke out my one cameo appearance and I was playing myself. So what does it take to have that kind of breadth as an actor?
Starting point is 00:02:16 Because I don't know anyone who could rack up that kind of resume. You're asking me to pat myself on the back here, Neil. I'll admit to having been born with a specific talent, not yours. If I had your mind, I wouldn't be doing this. No, we'd send you back because we need you out there.
Starting point is 00:02:38 I think your president was the best president I've ever seen. As the bombs shattered the second comet into a million pieces of ice and rocked the burn harmlessly in our atmosphere and lit up the sky for an hour, still we were left with the devastation of the first. The waters reached as far inland as the Ohio and Tennessee valleys. It washed away farms and towns, forests and skyscrapers. But the water receded. The wave hit Europe and Africa too.
Starting point is 00:03:16 Millions were lost. Countless more left homeless. But the waters receded. Cities fall, but they are rebuilt. And heroes die, but they are remembered. We honor them with every brick we lay, with every field we sow, with every child we comfort, and then teach to rejoice in what we have been re-given. Our planet.
Starting point is 00:04:01 Our home. our home. So now, let us begin. You know you're saying that because you're like me. Wait, wait, you said you're born to, that meant as a kid, you had some foresight
Starting point is 00:04:20 that you'd land this way? Don't tell me you were kids, I'm going to play God one day. No, no, no, no, no. I was a kid that says I want to be an actor. That's what I'm going to do. I'm going to be an actor. I am an actor. I would tell kids now when I'm talking about me, they say, well, what are you going to do
Starting point is 00:04:34 when you grow up? I want to be an actor. I say, well, you know, you are an actor. Okay. So, that's as good an answer as I can give you concerning. Yeah, but there are a thousand actors who are waiting tables now. And so some of them pull this off and others don't. So I'm just saying, you played God and they came back for more.
Starting point is 00:04:54 So you're really him, aren't you? You want more proof? I haven't done the Pillow of Soft thing in a while. That's all right. I believe you. I just, I don't understand why you chose me. You want to change the world, son. So do I. What?
Starting point is 00:05:13 Why an ark? I mean, that's like flood territory. You wouldn't do that again. You wouldn't do that. Would you do that? Let's just say that whatever I do, I do because I love you. Well, then you have to understand that this whole building and ark thing is really not part of my plans here. I need to settle into my house.
Starting point is 00:05:34 I need to make a good impression at work. What? Your plans. What are you talking? We're talking about an arc, right? I mean, an arc? An arc is huge. I don't even know where I would begin.
Starting point is 00:05:51 Well, I hear that a lot. People want to change the world, don't know how to begin. You want to know how to change the world, son? One act of random kindness at a time. From the highest levels of society to the lowest, you are portraying these characters convincingly, compellingly, with warmth, with compassion. Can somebody learn that? No, I don't think so. It's like art.
Starting point is 00:06:21 I don't think acting is an art, but it's like art. You can teach painting. The mechanics of it. The mechanics of it, but you cannot teach art. You couldn't teach about it to do Starry Night. Blango's Starry Night. Yeah. I can look at it now and I can do it line for line, but I can never dream it up.
Starting point is 00:06:38 Okay. So in the purest form of art, that's got to come from someplace deep within that no one can teach you. Yeah. Not that I'm saying that acting is an art. I don't think it's an art. It's just a talent. You know, I get into discussion with people about my art. Well, I think being an artist, you have to start with nothing.
Starting point is 00:06:58 And no actor does that. We always start with a script. That's somebody else's art. We always start with a script. That's somebody else's art. By the way, that's a humble point of view because most actors, they see themselves as the thing. When somebody actually thought up the movie, thought up the script, wrote the words down. But it is curious that we live in a society where the person who portrays the art is the one who gets all the fame and glory.
Starting point is 00:07:22 It's just the nature of the beast. So I think we have to disclaim artistry as it is, you know. I'm an artist's son. Okay, but nonetheless, some are better than others. That's all I'm saying. Oh, wow. And I got a good one sitting next to me right now. That's all I'm saying. I appreciate that. I like you too. So, you know, I always ask, what role did science play when you were a kid? Did you have good science teachers? Did you like it? I think I probably had great science teachers, but let's go back to your original question. What were you going to be when you were a kid?
Starting point is 00:07:54 This is the annoying question adults always ask kids. It was never going to be a scientist. In your life? In my life, it was never going to be a scientist. That's right. For me, it was since I was nine I was given that answer. Yeah. They said, what are you going to be when you grow up?
Starting point is 00:08:05 I said, astrophysicist. And then they walk away. Right. And stop the conversation. Right. Right. But okay, I think you have some sensitivity to science that most people don't. And I'm just trying to probe that.
Starting point is 00:08:16 I've always been more interested in astrophysics than in the science of biology. And you're not just saying that because you're sitting in my office here at the Hayden Planetarium. Well, kind of. Okay. No, no. So the universe caught your fancy, you're saying? The idea of physics, just physics. I was in a school for a very few minutes in Nashville, Pearl High School,
Starting point is 00:08:41 and there I had a physics class. And I remember being very excited in that class. I was an A student. Give me a test and I'd make a C. But in everyday class... You were feeling the physics. I was feeling the physics, yeah. I had all these questions.
Starting point is 00:08:56 And every time I'd ask a question, I'd get an A. In everyday class activity, I was doing great. And I think I was doing great because I just had these questions. I still have them. You were cosmically curious. Cosmically curious. So I read Cosmos. Carl Sagan's Cosmos.
Starting point is 00:09:14 He just completely galvanized me. But you were a kid before that book came out. I'm pretty sure of that. I was in my 20s or 30s when I read Cosmos. I can't remember. Maybe my 40s or 50s. Well, so that's interesting because Cosmos treated science differently from other books. It looked at science as a human activity that could stimulate your soul of curiosity. Well, it certainly stimulated mine. The idea of looking deep into space, looking into the cosmos, having some understanding of distances and numbers.
Starting point is 00:09:50 The next thing you start doing is wondering, is there a reason for us to care? You're asking, what does it all mean? Yeah, what does it all mean? Why do we care? You look up there and you think, well, it's just up there. And then you get some smattering of knowledge that the nearest star is about eight light years away, something like that. Well, you've got Alpha Centauri, that system. That's four light years away.
Starting point is 00:10:12 Four light years. Yeah, from the sun. Okay. So 186,000 miles per second. Yeah, you multiply that out, it's staggering. Yeah. Exactly. It's six trillion miles per light year times 4, 24 trillion miles away.
Starting point is 00:10:27 And so can you even contemplate going there? Forget, say, the galaxy. Right. Just the nearest, the neighbor. Backyard. Backyard. Backyard. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:10:37 Just to clarify. So you're saying as a kid you had a curiosity, but it didn't really become philosophical to you until after Cosmos. Yeah. Okay. Gotcha. But you were primed to receive it. I was primed to receive until after Cosmos. Yeah. Okay, gotcha. Yeah. But you were primed to receive it. I was primed to receive it, yes.
Starting point is 00:10:48 All right, okay. Because you were physics-friendly before then. Right. All right. Now, here's another realization, though. I think that anything humankind can imagine, they can do. All right. And so how have you brought this to bear on your life?
Starting point is 00:11:06 Is this stuff you've imagined that you want to make happen? Ask yourself, why are you sitting here as an astrophysicist, as a very well-known and accepted astrophysicist? How did you manage that from nine years old? I imagined it. You imagined it. But I didn't imagine that I would stop the rotation of the Earth or reverse time. I mean, I was kind of sensible, I think, about what the stuff I was it. But I didn't imagine that I would stop the rotation of the earth or reverse time. I mean, I was kind of sensible, I think, about what the stuff I was imagining.
Starting point is 00:11:28 So I would modify the word, not anything you can imagine. I think anything you can imagine doing, you can do. What did Archimedes say? Give me a place to stand. Give me a lever and a fulcrum and a place to stand. And I can move the earth. That's what he said well it's true so that's actually good sort of philosophy of life if you have high ambitions yeah have them have them because if you if you can imagine it you can do it in one hour you are going to take an exam
Starting point is 00:12:01 administered by the state to test your basic skills and the quality of education at Eastside High. And I want to tell you what the people out there are saying about you and what they think about your chances. They say you are inferior. You cannot learn. You're lost I mean all of you Are you getting my point people? Is it beginning to sink in?
Starting point is 00:12:35 We sink, we swim We rise, we fall We meet our fate together And now I've got a message for those people out there We meet our fate together. And now I've got a message for those people out there who've abandoned you and written you off. You are not inferior. Your grades may be. Your school may have been.
Starting point is 00:13:07 But you can turn that around and make liars out of those in exactly one hour. Welcome back to StarTalk Radio. I'm Neil deGrasse Tyson. In this episode of StarTalk, we're featuring a conversation with the award-winning actor Morgan Freeman. In this part of the interview, we talked about the many movies he's appeared in over the years in which science is celebrated and the dramatic potential that science-themed plots can offer. So let's get to your movie career. Forgive me for leaving out the ones where science was not a theme. Starting off, you narrated Cosmic Voyage, the IMAX film, which was produced by some of my very closest colleagues.
Starting point is 00:14:05 Really? And that was my first time hearing you as a voice, by the way. And that was 1996 or 7, I think it was. The late 1990s. Oh, you didn't see the shock track redemption? Well, yes, you were the voice of that, but I think of you as an actor of that, not the narrator. But yes, of course you narrated that. No, you get a pass.
Starting point is 00:14:22 It's all right. Let me slide on that one. So that was the first time I heard what your voice could do in that context. And it looked like a perfect match, you know, your voice and the universe. And IMAX was, of course, the IMAX. You like me! You like me! Since the universe is a big place, we could easily get lost.
Starting point is 00:14:41 So we'll need signposts to give us a sense of scale. The acrobat's ring is one meter wide. The crowd is 10 times wider, 10 meters across, larger by one power of 10. Now, with every step, every ring, we travel 10 times farther from Venice, and our view of the universe is ten times wider. The 100-meter ring surrounds St. Mark's, and 1,000 meters, one kilometer, the city center. As our speed increases, four steps, four powers of ten, reveal all the islands of Venice, the Adriatic Sea, and the mainland of northern Italy. Six steps take in Europe from central Germany across Italy to the Balkans.
Starting point is 00:15:30 And soon we can see the entire planet, our home in space. Eight steps on our Outlook journey, eight powers of ten, and we pass the farthest reaches of human travel, the moon. If we visualize the path that the nine planets take in their orbits around the sun, at 13 steps from St. Mark's Square, the entire solar system comes into view. the entire solar system comes into view. And with 15 steps, 15 powers of 10, we can see that our sun is just another star. From here on, our void will be measured in light years,
Starting point is 00:16:17 the distance light travels in an entire year. Only now do we fly past our nearest neighbor stars, almost five light years away. The same journey at the speed of today's spacecraft would last 100,000 years. So Cosmic Voyage was like a kind of an IMAX version of the Powers of 10 journey, where you zoom out from Earth to the edge of the universe and then back down to the center of an atom. So good choice. I'm happy they found you for that. Of course, you did March of the Penguins, which has that science.
Starting point is 00:16:53 We'll take it as science, I think. Yeah, I think that's science. Biology. Yeah, it's ecology. We'll give you that. I really liked that one, though. I really liked it. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:17:04 You know, I think at the time I was penguined out, you know, because I saw Happy Feet. And I thought, how many penguins can a man take? Yeah. And I just, I had to, like, put a hold on my penguin viewing for a while there. All right. Just, you know, no offense. I'm just saying. Hey, I'm not a penguin.
Starting point is 00:17:23 And then you did some environmental clips. One Earth, I think, was one of them. And so you're a man about science, I think. We'll claim you, whether or not that's deep within you, whether or not it was just your next gig. I'll take it because I think it's important to have at least that association. I don't claim to have any knowledge towards scientific anything. Except that you were in Outbreak. I remember that movie with that Ebola-like virus that was killing people in sex.
Starting point is 00:17:52 You were in Chain Reaction. You were in Deep Impact. My next gig. You were in Batman Begins. My next gig. The Tech Guy. My next gig. Well, but not everybody has next gigs that celebrate science the way these films do.
Starting point is 00:18:06 Well, see, you're just putting dots together. Oh, false pattern recognition. That's a crime of the analysis of data. That's what I'm doing, you're telling me. Well, okay, so I will ignore what you said, that it's just an accident that you line these movies up. I want to connect my own damn dots and say, I want to say it's not a coincidence that you're in more science movies than other actors are. If I try to find, you know, how many science movies has Sean Connery been in? Or, you know, or Robert De Niro.
Starting point is 00:18:40 The doctor on Amazon. Oh, that's true. They're searching for cancer. Okay, well, yeah, he's got one. How about Robert De Niro? No. on Amazon. Oh, that's true. Yeah. They're searching for cancer. Yeah. And now, okay, well, yeah, he's got one. How about Robert De Niro? No. No. No, no, no.
Starting point is 00:18:50 He was in, where he was this guy who was in a coma. Not a coma, coma. Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah. You're talking about Awakening. Awakening. So, whether or not it was just your next gig, I have to say, I enjoyed all the science movies you've been in, especially Deep Impact with the asteroid strike. Because we know these things are out there.
Starting point is 00:19:09 And so it's not just, oh, here's a science fiction movie. It's like there's some real stuff going on here. And it's a wake-up call, a shot across our bow, if you will. the tech dude in Lucius for Wayne Industries supplying Batman with his bulletproof cape and all the doodads. Who doesn't love the doodads? I'm just saying those are all convincing and meaningful roles and I'm going to take you as a
Starting point is 00:19:36 science geek, honorary science geek for those roles in those films. Hey, I'll buy that. I'll accept it. You'll take the honor. An honorary geek. It's not quite like Knighthood, it. You'll take the honor. And honor every geek. It's not quite like knighthood, but it's the best we can do for you in America. I listen.
Starting point is 00:19:51 I'm on it. So let me ask, as an actor, do you think science makes compelling drama? Absolutely. Oh, yes, yes, yes. I think some of our most compelling dramas have been around science. Well, I'm glad you feel that way because I think there's many more science stories to tell. Oh, heavens, there are. I'm tired of law dramas and cop dramas.
Starting point is 00:20:14 I'm sorry. I'm tired. You know, the world is, how many more lawyer stories can you give us? I'm with you. I think we can go into more science-based drama, even comedy. I mean, you're funny. No, the universe is funny. I just reveal that fact.
Starting point is 00:20:32 Okay. Well, people have to know a little bit about science before they can get it. And if we don't talk about it, they never will. They never will. That's deep. And that's the challenge that lay before us all. Well. Be we artists or scientists.
Starting point is 00:20:44 Let us step up to it. So, that's great that you agree that science can make compelling drama. Could you give a really good example? Yeah. I read Michael Priton's book, The Andromeda Strain. Oh, that was, oh, man. That was awesome. I was struck by that book.
Starting point is 00:21:02 Really? Yes. I read it when it came out. It was back in the 70s. Yeah. But here, in my estimation, is a way to ask scientific questions and impose answers. And very dramatic. You could do a science series, a drama series, based strictly on science.
Starting point is 00:21:23 Which hasn't been done yet. Not quite. No, it has not. I mean, crime scene investigation is the closest thing to it. Yeah, yeah, yeah. In bones. And it's a testament to what you're saying, how successful that series has been. I mean, it's still going strong, and it's in different cities.
Starting point is 00:21:39 And what helps, I think, make the science meaningful is that they've embedded it in a social, cultural context. Yeah, exactly. And so people have ways, they have access points. You do the exact same thing with science, with deep science, I think. Astrophysics would be awesome. So you're titillated by this. I am titillated by it.
Starting point is 00:22:00 Well, good to hear. The amount of science that you can expose young people to by doing this kind of stuff is amazing. So of your catalog of movies that had science themes, are there any one of them that triggered you to think more deeply about that particular topic? Like, after Deep Impact, were you saying, gee, let me read up on these asteroids, see how true this script is? No. I read Rendezvous with Rama back in the 60s. That's when I saw it. Okay. About asteroids. See how true this script is. Ah, no. I read rendezvous with Rama back in the 60s. That's when I saw it.
Starting point is 00:22:27 Okay. So you didn't need deep impact to set you off on asteroids. No. You would asteroid go way back. Way back. Yeah. Because this was an asteroid that hit Italy and Italy was no more.
Starting point is 00:22:43 If you haven't made a catastrophe like that. That's probably the only time that the world coalesces. Yes, where all differences are forgotten because you have a common enemy. We have a common enemy in this space. So in Batman Begins, when you were a tech dude, did you think, gee, I want one of these. I want a few of these, actually. And I want to live like this. And I want. Did you have any of these I want one of these. I want a few of these, actually. And I want to live like this. And I want...
Starting point is 00:23:05 Did you have any of these thoughts? No. No. That was a silent no. Let the radio audience know that he quietly shook his head. Lips pursed. Head shaking. So that means you are drawing a line between science fiction and real life.
Starting point is 00:23:23 No. I draw a line between science fantasy and real life. No, I draw a line between science fantasy and real life. Oh, that's good. Thank you. Nomex survival suit for advanced infantry. Kevlar bi-weave, reinforced joints. Terror resistant. This sucker will stop a knife.
Starting point is 00:23:39 Bulletproof. Anything but a straight shot. Why didn't they put it into production? Being conners didn't think a soldier's life was worth 300 grand. So, what's your interest in it, Mr. Wayne? I want to borrow it. For, uh, spelunking. Spelunking?
Starting point is 00:23:58 Yeah, you know, cave diving. You're expecting to run into much gunfire in these caves. expecting to run into much gunfire in his case. When StarTalk Radio continues, we'll have more of my conversation with the award-winning actor, Morgan Freeman. Welcome back to StarTalk Radio. I'm Neil deGrasse Tyson. In this episode of StarTalk, we're featuring a conversation with the award-winning actor Morgan Freeman. Many people might not realize that in addition to being a famous actor,
Starting point is 00:24:46 he's an airplane pilot. And so I had to ask him what led him to take flight and how far that ambition has gotten him. You've become an aviator in later years. Yeah. That seems like you don't want gravity to keep you on Earth. This is what that is to me. That's what that sounds like to me.
Starting point is 00:25:04 Is that what it sounds like to you? I'm tired of Earth. Get me the hell off the Earth's surface. I always wanted to fly. I always had flying dreams. I have falling dreams where I never hit the ground. I leveled off. And what does Freud say about that?
Starting point is 00:25:17 I don't know. Did he talk to you about it? 15 seconds. No, no, wait, wait. I can't do this. Sure you can. No, i can't do this sure you can no i can't really it's not the jump you're afraid of the hell is not you're just afraid your shoes won't open and you'll show up at your own funeral as a dead baron no i'm pretty much just
Starting point is 00:25:40 worried the shoes won't open! No! No! Man's got some lungs! Let's hit the steel! Geronimo! Oh yeah! Beautiful! Pull the thing! Pull the cord! You defy! Pull the thing! Pull the cord! How about this, huh?
Starting point is 00:26:12 This is living! I hate your right gut! Oh, so you're falling, but then you level off. Yeah. Oh, no, yeah, that's different. That means you grew wings. I didn't grow wings. I just grew the power of flight.
Starting point is 00:26:26 Okay. No wings. No angel stuff at all. No, yeah. You just leveled off. Pulled myself up. So I wanted to fly from early on. And then I realized that wanting to fly jet planes and be a fighter pilot was all movie romance. So many years later, though, I had a chance to learn how to fly.
Starting point is 00:26:46 How old were you when you learned how to fly? Six or five, about. Man. And you own some planes? Yeah, yeah. Three planes. Three planes? Four planes.
Starting point is 00:26:54 What does one plane do that the other doesn't? Don't they all fly? They all fly. I'm sorry. Is that a stupid question? The latest one I have flies. Are you going to show me a picture on your BlackBerry here? Oh, that's sweet.
Starting point is 00:27:08 Yeah. She flies better than anything in her class. That's a sweet-looking jet. It's a Swearingen SJ-30. Say that again, eh? Swearingen SJ-30. SJ-30. Right.
Starting point is 00:27:19 Okay. Sounds fast. It is fast. Okay. And I've been buying airplanes after I came to the conclusion that I could no longer fly commercial. It's just got to be, you know, my God, look who's here. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Maybe the celebrity prevented it is what you're saying. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:27:39 So I bought fractional ownerships in these companies, and that turned out to be expensive. So remind me how this works. You are a participant in the total ownership of a fleet of planes. Right. And the plane comes available to you when you need it. It's like a taxi. Yeah, exactly. It's always one of my beck and call.
Starting point is 00:27:56 It's not like I call and they say, oh, we don't have anything available. Okay. They come get you. They come get you. But it's expensive. You're paying. It depends how well you did in the last movie. Yeah, I guess that too.
Starting point is 00:28:10 Because I have to remind myself that actors don't have steady jobs. They go movie to movie, and you've got to budget that stuff out. When I first started working, I'd get a job on stage, and I'd think, oh, man, now I can go out and buy a suit of clothes. I can get caught up in all my rent. And you do that and you realize that, oh, wait a minute, they just announced that the play is closing. Right. So I don't want to ever lose sensitivity to that.
Starting point is 00:28:39 Right. I have a steady gig. Right. Right. That's how you sometimes get trapped in a steady job, too. It's like, how long have you been doing this show? Oh, that's right. Then you don't grow.
Starting point is 00:28:50 You don't grow. Yeah, so what a delicate line that is to walk. It is a very fine line to walk. Okay, so you need the money to keep this access to planes. Then what happens? Well, when I learned how to fly, I just went out and bought my own airplane. And realized that, okay, I got my own airplane. I can go anywhere I want to go.
Starting point is 00:29:09 But I couldn't get there in reasonable time. So I had to buy more airplanes. A better airplane. A better airplane. So then that turned out to be not possible either. I bought a twin engine. Then that turned out to be not possible either. I bought a twin engine. I bought into a twin engine airplane, a small twin engine Seneca, and flew it to California from Mississippi.
Starting point is 00:29:32 It took two days. Two days. Two days. So this won't do. You can get through security usually sooner than two days at an irregular airport. So I bought a bigger, that's a bigger twin engine, piston-driven aircraft, and that cut the flying time down dramatically, but it still took nine hours. That feels like Lindbergh, you know, if you're on a plane for half a day.
Starting point is 00:29:57 Well, yeah, where you stop for fuel, that's the main thing. Wouldn't that be cool if you had mid-air fueling for private jets? Wouldn't that be something? Wouldn't that? Ooh, ooh, ooh. So then I said, okay, this won't do. And so I bought a jet. There you go.
Starting point is 00:30:12 And that cut three hours off flying time, I think. But still six hours. Yeah. So I'm starting to worry about blood clots in my legs and stuff, you know. Sitting that long, yeah, yeah. So I bought a little bigger jet. And still I had to worry about blood clots in my legs and stuff, you know, sitting that long. Sitting that long, yeah, yeah. So I bought a little bigger jet. And still, I had to stop the fuel. So then this plane, I got wind of it.
Starting point is 00:30:33 This beautiful one you just showed me on your Blackberry. Yeah, as soon as I got wind of it, I... So that's your baby then? That's my baby. That's your baby. So for you to want to be in control of your movement and motion through space and time, do you ever dream about commanding a starship? You've got some time on your hands.
Starting point is 00:30:51 I'll tell you all about it. So the answer is yes, apparently. Okay, okay. Yes, I've dreamed about it. Yes, you've dreamed about it, and yes, you know, it's just... I'm going to tell you why. Okay. We have access to Arthur C. Clarke's book, Rendezvous with Rama.
Starting point is 00:31:08 And I'm... The whole series. The series. Just that one. But there are four. So my fantasy of commanding the starship is commanding Endeavor, Which is the ship used to maneuver with this craft as moving towards, into, as entered our solar system. It was an alien thing. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:31:33 Yeah, that's right. Okay, okay. So you're dreaming yourself into science fiction roles. Yeah. Well, that's what a good actor would do, because you see roles, and hey, I could do that, or I could be. Oh, absolutely. Wow. So is this a pitch to be, like, that person if they ever make that movie?
Starting point is 00:31:48 Well, we're going to make that movie. You are going to make the movie? Yeah. That's what you mean. Excuse me. You said you had access to it. I have to wait. Excuse me.
Starting point is 00:31:56 That means you bought the rights to the book. Yeah. Didn't I make that? Because? No, I'm just... Okay. Access to it is code for... Code for...
Starting point is 00:32:06 You bought the rights. I bought the rights. Because you want to be that commander on that ship. I have... Since I read that book somewhere back in the 60s, I always saw it as a movie. And since you bought the rights to the book, you can be whatever damn actor in that story you want to be. I want to be, right. Right.
Starting point is 00:32:22 So the other thing that has happened is i've got this producing partner who's very enabling so i'm i've been enabled that's a good kind of partner to have yeah all right well we'll look for that okay make that come out sooner rather than later well the only task you have that's really really hard and making movies harder than getting money is getting a script. A good script. A good script. Yeah, because movies rise and fall on that. Absolutely.
Starting point is 00:32:50 And I think we've gotten mature enough in our special effects to now no longer have the special effects save a movie. The story's got to be something. The story's got to be there. It's got to work. You've got to have the story. It's got to work. When StarTalk Radio continues,
Starting point is 00:33:04 we'll have more of my conversation with the award-winning actor, Morgan Freeman. Welcome back to StarTalk Radio. I'm Neil deGrasse Tyson. In this episode of StarTalk, we're featuring a conversation with the award-winning actor and smooth-as-butter voice, Morgan Freeman. In this last part of our interview, we talked at length about space exploration and the possibility of alien life. I got an email from one of our friends at either NASA or JPL. They invited me to come and watch the landing of the next Mars probe. There's nothing more thrilling than the launch of any space probe and their landing.
Starting point is 00:33:59 These are the two critical points, of course, because there it is months and months en route and there's all this anticipation and they're waiting for the first signal. They're waiting for it to call home. Yeah. When you get that signal, people pop the champagne corks. Then you're on another planet. Part of my amazement is that everything in this universe is moving. It's not standing still.
Starting point is 00:34:29 is moving it's not standing still so when you shoot at something there's a lot of calculations you have that's an underappreciated fact and i'm glad you brought that up because you're launching a spaceship from a moving platform earth to another moving platform and you have to aim it for not where the target is but where it will be when it gets there nine months in terms of a mars shoot nine months wow okay no but i didn't everybody appreciate that i'm glad you appreciate that the other thing is that incredible thing is that voyager is now outside the solar system. You got it. It has crossed over out of the influence of the sun and has entered interstellar space. Voyager launched in the 1970s. And you might remember the Voyager spacecraft has a little plaque on the side and some information that an intelligent alien might decode and learn about us.
Starting point is 00:35:22 Some people are kind of afraid of that prospect. If you send your return address out. Yeah. Some people don't give out their email prospect. If you send your return address out. Yeah. Some people don't give out their email address. And here we are giving their return address. So you worried that the aliens come and suck our brains out? I'm with Clark. Arthur C. Clark.
Starting point is 00:35:36 Yeah. I don't think the universe is populated with Northern Europeans. You mean of the ilk that upon reaching a strange civilization... Destroy everything. Kill them all. Kill them all. Let God sort it out.
Starting point is 00:35:51 Yeah. So you think they're the kinder, gentler species. Even though you have no data to back that up, you're wishing that this is true. Well, why not wish that was true? If you're going to...
Starting point is 00:36:04 If you're going to go there. Just do it another way so we're not terrified if something does show up. Oh my God, bang! Now ask a question. Right. So you want, like,
Starting point is 00:36:17 1960s peaceniks to be the aliens. See, now, I don't think you're being kind. You saw Close Encounters of the Third saw close encounters of the third yeah of course yeah now did you walk out of that movie looking up i did i drove out to a space where there was no light i want to be abducted i want him to come find me every time i'm alone out on the sky said
Starting point is 00:36:39 come on yeah you know if you're there i'll go'll go? I'll go. So that makes you feel safer in a universe where you just might get a visitation. Let's go back to Von Donaghan for a minute. Eric Von Donaghan, right. So he went around the world, found these ancient artifacts and structures, and he couldn't explain it. And he didn't think anyone back then could have figured out how to do it. So he figured intelligent aliens from another planet came to Earth and directed them. Yes, that's what he thinks. And he also thinks that there are depictions among some of the sculptures and drawings
Starting point is 00:37:18 in ancient societies that depict these space people, because some of these drawings have figures with helmets on them. Space helmets, yeah, yeah. Now, this is an idea that if there are visitations, they are benign. So you invoke that as evidence. Well, it's not an evidence that there are benign aliens out there, but that we can think of them as benign. We can think of them, okay.
Starting point is 00:37:43 Now, here's the thing. It was the Northern Europeans who embraced the Industrial Revolution, giving them the power to cross the oceans and the weaponry to slaughter people. They weren't the only ones that crossed the oceans. Well, they did it with Verve. Okay, so here's my point. If the alien civilization, the one that is across the ocean of space, the ones who are into conquering are more likely to be the ones to have the spaceships.
Starting point is 00:38:12 So maybe there's a selection effect. There's a bias in terms of who's going to come here first. It's going to be the conquerors. The peaceniks are still there saying kumbaya around a campfire. Let's turn it around here. What if we are the ones who are managed
Starting point is 00:38:27 to get out there to another world first? What if it's us who do it? Are we going to go with guns and... Guns drawn?
Starting point is 00:38:35 I don't know. If we find some materials that we say, oh my God, you know what this stuff is worth? Oh, you mean,
Starting point is 00:38:43 yeah, natural resources, right. Are we going to do what the other Europeans did before? We've seen that playbook multiple times. Manifest destiny. That's our oil, not yours. That's our gold, not yours. So the difference here would be the humans would be the invaders.
Starting point is 00:38:57 If we did it that way. No, the question is, how would they view us landing on their peaceful planet? We would have to get there and find out. First you go... So you're giving the Spock symbol with the Vulcan live long and prosper. Yeah, live long and prosper. We're not here to cause... But that could mean...
Starting point is 00:39:14 But what you don't know is whether that Vulcan live long and prosper signal could mean like, F you, aliens. You don't know what the cross-cultural meaning of that hand gesture is. But we know that there is a universal sign that means I am unarmed. And what is that? Open hands. I hope universally that's what that means. I'm strapped with a bomb.
Starting point is 00:39:35 I know. That's just for protection. That's just in case. As they say in the military, trust but verify. Trust but verify. How do you feel about NASA? Where do you want it to go? If you're going to write a letter, dear Mr. President.
Starting point is 00:39:49 Dear Mr. President, dear world, cut the defense budget to the bone, take that money, and give most of it to NASA. Ooh. What is it that has ever improved the human condition? Exploration. And what have we got now? We ain't got Jack. No, no. We have the universe. We have our own universe right here in the solar system.
Starting point is 00:40:19 There are things that we need to know about it. There are things we could be out there doing. They would say, well, it's meaningless to send a human to Mars. It's just too much involved in trying to keep humans alive on Mars. Okay, fine, don't send humans. Build robots, but send them. Keep the frontier moving. Keep it moving.
Starting point is 00:40:47 That's the end of my interview with the award-winning actor Morgan Freeman. You've been listening to StarTalk Radio, partially funded by the National Science Foundation. I'm Neil deGrasse Tyson, and as always, until next time, keep looking up.

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