The Tim Ferriss Show - #386: Ken Burns — A Master Filmmaker on Creative Process, the Long Game, and the Noumenal
Episode Date: September 12, 2019“There’s always the certainty that the opposite of what I might believe in might also be true.” — Ken BurnsKen Burns (@KenBurns) has been making documentary films for more than 4...0 years.Since the Academy Award nominated Brooklyn Bridge in 1981, Ken has gone on to direct and produce some of the most acclaimed historical documentaries ever made, including The Civil War; Baseball; Jazz; The Statue of Liberty; Huey Long; Lewis & Clark; Frank Lloyd Wright; Mark Twain; Unforgivable Blackness: The Rise and Fall of Jack Johnson; The War; The National Parks: America’s Best Idea; The Roosevelts; Jackie Robinson; Defying the Nazis: The Sharps’ War; The Vietnam War, and The Mayo Clinic: Faith — Hope — Science.Ken’s films have been honored with dozens of major awards, including sixteen Emmy Awards, two Grammy Awards, and two Oscar nominations; and in September of 2008, at the News & Documentary Emmy Awards, Ken was honored by the Academy of Television Arts & Sciences with a Lifetime Achievement Award.His newest work is Country Music. It explores the history of a uniquely American art form: country music. From its deep and tangled roots in ballads, blues, and hymns performed in small settings, to its worldwide popularity, learn how country music evolved over the course of the twentieth century, as it eventually emerged to become America’s music. Country Music features never-before-seen footage and photographs, plus interviews with more than 80 country music artists. The eight-part, 16-hour series is directed and produced by Ken Burns, written and produced by Dayton Duncan, and produced by Julie Dunfey.It debuts on PBS on Sunday, September 15th, 2019, at 8 EST/7 CST.The first four episodes will stream on station-branded PBS platforms, including PBS.org and PBS apps, timed to coincide with the Sunday, September 15th premiere. The second four episodes will be timed alongside the broadcast of Episode 5 on Sunday, September 22nd; each episode will stream for a period of three weeks. PBS Passport members will be able to stream the entire series for a period of six months beginning Sunday, September 15th.This podcast is brought to you by Athletic Greens. I get asked all the time, “If you could only use one supplement, what would it be?” My answer is, inevitably, Athletic Greens. It is my all-in-one nutritional insurance. I recommended it in The 4-Hour Body and did not get paid to do so.As a listener of The Tim Ferriss Show, you’ll get a free 20-count travel pack (valued at $79) with your first order at athleticgreens.com/tim.This podcast is also brought to you by Peloton, which has become a staple of my daily routine. I picked up this bike after seeing the success of my friend Kevin Rose, and I’ve been enjoying it more than I ever imagined. Peloton is an indoor cycling bike that brings live studio classes right to your home. 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I also love reading the reviews!For show notes and past guests, please visit tim.blog/podcast.Sign up for Tim’s email newsletter (“5-Bullet Friday”) at tim.blog/friday.For transcripts of episodes, go to tim.blog/transcripts.Discover Tim’s books: tim.blog/books.Follow Tim: Twitter: twitter.com/tferriss Instagram: instagram.com/timferrissFacebook: facebook.com/timferriss YouTube: youtube.com/timferrissPast guests on The Tim Ferriss Show include Jerry Seinfeld, Hugh Jackman, Dr. Jane Goodall, LeBron James, Kevin Hart, Doris Kearns Goodwin, Jamie Foxx, Matthew McConaughey, Esther Perel, Elizabeth Gilbert, Terry Crews, Sia, Yuval Noah Harari, Malcolm Gladwell, Madeleine Albright, Cheryl Strayed, Jim Collins, Mary Karr, Maria Popova, Sam Harris, Michael Phelps, Bob Iger, Edward Norton, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Neil Strauss, Ken Burns, Maria Sharapova, Marc Andreessen, Neil Gaiman, Neil de Grasse Tyson, Jocko Willink, Daniel Ek, Kelly Slater, Dr. Peter Attia, Seth Godin, Howard Marks, Dr. Brené Brown, Eric Schmidt, Michael Lewis, Joe Gebbia, Michael Pollan, Dr. Jordan Peterson, Vince Vaughn, Brian Koppelman, Ramit Sethi, Dax Shepard, Tony Robbins, Jim Dethmer, Dan Harris, Ray Dalio, Naval Ravikant, Vitalik Buterin, Elizabeth Lesser, Amanda Palmer, Katie Haun, Sir Richard Branson, Chuck Palahniuk, Arianna Huffington, Reid Hoffman, Bill Burr, Whitney Cummings, Rick Rubin, Dr. Vivek Murthy, Darren Aronofsky, and many more.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Hello, boys and girls, ladies and germs. This is Tim Ferriss, and welcome to another episode
of The Tim Ferriss Show, where it is my job to deconstruct world-class performers,
people who are the best or one of the best at what they do. My guest today is certainly that
Ken Burns. You can find him on Twitter at
Ken Burns. He has been making documentary films for more than 40 years. Since the Academy Award
nominated Brooklyn Bridge in 1981, Ken has gone on to direct and produce some of the most acclaimed
historical documentaries ever made, including The Civil War. I'm going to pause at this point in the list,
because not everyone who's listening to this has seen the Civil War or realizes just how massively popular it was. Now, critics thought no one watched Civil War. Why? Because it's more than
10 hours long. And at the end of the day, it was broadcast on PBS on five consecutive nights in 1990,
and almost 40 million viewers, more than actually 40 million viewers, tuned into at least one
episode, and viewership averaged more than 14 million viewers each evening, making it
the most watched program ever to air on PBS.
Now, this is 40 million plus people watching something that is produced to be
10 plus hours long. This is not a five-second cat video on YouTube. So let that sink in for a second.
But back to the list. So the Civil War, baseball, jazz, the Statue of Liberty,
Huey Long, Lewis and Clark, Frank Lloyd Wright, Mark Twain, Unforgivable Blackness,
subtitle, The Rise and Fall of Jack Johnson Johnson. For those of you who don't know, Jack Johnson was an
incredible boxer. The War, The National Parks, subtitle America's Best Idea, The Roosevelt's,
Jackie Robinson, Defying the Nazis, subtitle The Sharps War, The Vietnam War, and The Mayo Clinic,
subtitle Faith, Hope, Science. Ken's films have been honored with dozens of major
awards, including 16 Emmy Awards, two Grammy Awards, and two Oscar nominations. And in September
of 2008, at the News and Documentary Emmy Awards, Ken was honored by the Academy of Television Arts
and Sciences with a Lifetime Achievement Award. His newest work is Country Music. I have it here
right next to me. It explores the history of uniquely American art form, country music, from its deep entangled
roots in ballads, blues, and hymns performed in small settings to its worldwide popularity.
Learn how country music evolved over the course of the 20th century as it eventually emerged
to become America's music.
Country music features never-before-seen footage and photographs. Of course, this is Ken's trademark, so to speak, plus interviews with
more than 80 country music artists. The eight-part and 16-hour series is directed and produced by
none other than Ken Burns, written and produced by Dayton Duncan, and produced by Julie Dunphy.
It debuts on PBS on Sunday, September 15th at 8, 7 central. Again, that's
Sunday, September 15th at 8, 7 central. The first four episodes will stream online on the PBS
platforms, including pbs.org and PBS apps, timed to coincide with the Sunday, September 15th
premiere. And the second four timed to the broadcast of episode five on Sunday, September 15th premiere, and the second four timed to the broadcast of episode five on
Sunday, September 22nd. So each episode will stream for a period of three weeks. The simple
version of that is on TV, Sunday, September 15th at eight Eastern, seven Central, eight Eastern,
seven Central. And if you do not have television, if you're a cord cutter, you can go to pbs.org or use one of the PBS apps.
PBS Passport members will be able to stream the entire series for a period of six months beginning Sunday, September 15th.
So all that said, without further ado, please enjoy, and my God, did I enjoy it, this wide-ranging conversation with none other than Ken Burns.
Ken, welcome to the show.
Thanks for having me.
I am thrilled to be having this conversation. I've been a fan of yours for effectively as long
as I've been consciously aware of what I'm watching in front of me. So I can't say the first few years, but shortly thereafter. And I thought
we might bounce around quite a bit in this conversation and begin with something that
came up in the research I did for this podcast episode. And it relates to mementos in your pocket.
Do you still carry mementos in your pocket? And whether it's past tense
or current tense, present tense, can you describe what those are and why you carry them?
Sure. I've just dug into my pocket and amidst some change, I have four items, which I've had
for many, many years now. No one's been retired. One of them is a coin palmed to me by an ex-Marine
who was the headmaster at the Greenwood School in tiny Putney, Vermont. The Greenwood School
is equally tiny and is a school for boys with learning differences, meaning they suffer from
dyslexia or ADHD or executive function, a host of things.
This school addresses this problem head-on.
It's been around for about 40 years.
And after Thanksgiving, when the boys come back ages 10, 11 to 17,
when they come back from Thanksgiving vacation,
they are all asked to memorize the 10 complicated sentences of Lincoln's Gettysburg
Address and then publicly recite them. A difficult task for any one of us, but if you have these
learning differences, it can be a nightmare. And when the boys successfully complete that,
they are given a coin by the headmaster in typical kind of military fashion,
even though it's not a military school and he's anything but militaristic.
But I was asked once many, many years ago to be a judge.
I found myself in tears at the effort of these boys to do it
and said somebody's got to make a film about it.
It obviously would be a cinema
verite film, which is not my style. But as the 150th anniversary of the Gettysburg Address came
up in 2013, I thought, you know what, I got to dive in and do it. So we embedded in the school
with a sound man and a cameraman and assistant and recorded 300 and some hours. And when the whole thing was over,
and we made the film and realized that the kids had never in the then 35 years history of the
school been to Gettysburg, I rented two buses and took the whole school there and put them up for
a night and gave them a tour of the battlefield as the kind of coda to this film. When it was over, he palmed a metal in my pocket.
So I have that Greenwood School thing. The oldest thing I have is what's called a feeling heart.
It's a stainless steel shape of a heart with a little indentation in it. So you can sort of hold
it and palm it. It's not like a coin. It has a little bit more dimension
to that. And it's maybe, you know, much bigger than the silver dollar. And it was sent to me
by a woman in upstate New York, an artist who had fashioned this. And she had written after
the Civil War series was broadcast in September of 1990. And sometime in the first few weeks after
that, she had sent me a heart. I then got another
two hearts for my two oldest daughters, and recently got two more hearts to give to my
two young daughters who are, you know, 14 and 8. And so, it just, it's always there. I can feel it,
and sometimes I find myself just, you know, holding it in my hand. I'm sure
doing exactly what she had intended the heart to do. Another object I have was given to me by a
friend, and it's a mini ball, now polished and free of all the calcification that it tends to.
The mini ball is a bullet that would have been used during the Civil War, and it was found on Gettysburg as well. Faust, the former president of Harvard's extraordinary scholarship that instead of the
600 or 620,000 that was generally accepted as the death toll in the Civil War, it looks like it's
more like 750,000, three quarters of a million, well more than 2% of the population, an extraordinary
death toll, you know, and as the poem Casey at the Bat says, in this favored land.
And then the fourth and final object that I've carried around for years and years
is a button off a jacket of a friend of mine's father.
His son gave it to me, so a friend of mine's grandfather as well
wore on an army uniform, and he had landed at D-Day at Normandy.
And so I've just kind of kept these reminders in my pocket, and they're comforting.
I do have one object that I can't fit in my pocket,
but I have next to me at my desk at home in New Hampshire, and it's leg irons that I purchased at auction. Heavy, weighty, horrible
things. They are a human invention whose only purpose is to keep other human beings in bondage,
which is a legacy of a very difficult part of our history and a reckoning we still not have fully completed.
And it turns out that though I don't necessarily go looking for it in my
projects, that, that,
that question is always lingering in, in,
in our American story and whether it's country music, it's there,
whether it's in the national parks, it's there. In unlikely places, it's there. In likely places, like a biography of Jackie Robinson or Jack Johnson or jazz. all men are created equal, but the guy who wrote that second sentence of the Declaration,
our creed, owned more than 200 human beings when he wrote it, and didn't see the contradiction nor the hypocrisy, and more important, didn't see fit in his lifetime to free any one of those
human beings who had inalienable rights. And so, you know, if you're going to do a deeper
dive than just mere regurgitation of conventional wisdom, then you have to deal with this ever-present subject of race.
And so I wish I could tell you that I could carry around those leg irons, but they don't fit in the pocket.
And they have a weight and a disturbing heaviness to them that is nevertheless very close to me when I'm at home.
Ken, you have a remarkable memory, and you also must receive, be offered, be exposed to
thousands of different objects that you could keep. What you said as reminders earlier, are there particular reasons why you chose of all the other
options? Let's start with the objects in your pocket. What purpose do those serve for you?
Well, you know, you're asking a question which requires an answer from the head,
and I'm not sure the head made the decision to keep them. I think the heart did,
and the heart doesn't necessarily have a rational or easily articulated response to the question,
which is a good one and an obvious one, and I wish I could be truthful and honest. I mean,
I do get lots of stuff, objects, and mainly these are things that are close to me. I mean, I do get lots of stuff, objects, and mainly these are things that are
close to me. I mean, I never thought when I received this healing heart that I would put
it in my pocket, but I did instinctively and it's never left. I mean, I can't tell you how
many times I'd emptied it to go through TSA screenings, you know, it's really there. And there's a kind of commitment and loyalty to it
that I can't explain. And the bullet was given to me by a friend. And he, I adore him. He's one of
my closest friends. And he's a big bear of a loving man and i just sort of felt the you know there's something
so contradictory about a bullet being anything but a bad thing uh and yet it it represents all
of the totality of the civil war the woman who had sent this feeling heart wrote in her letter
that she saw the series that we made on the civil war
as an american bahagavita you know this you know story and you just kind of went whoa and i i don't
think i was it was the flattery of that that stuck it in my pocket it was the something of it and it
may have been the struggles that it took me to go through, the growth that I'd undergone. Obviously, these kids at the Greenwood School had moved me to my core. And I just
presumed that some other filmmaker better equipped to do a cinema verite film would do it, but found
myself having to do it and found myself with a crew that was really excited and was able to get a lot of fly-on-the-wall stuff.
And it meant a lot to me.
And the button is the button is the button.
You know, the greatest invasion in human history took place on June 6, 1944,
on the northwest coast of France that ended what Adolf Hitler had ended, began to end in 12 years,
what Adolf Hitler had intended to be a thousand-year Reich.
Well, let's talk about, I would like to talk about the heart. Maybe that's
almost a contradiction in terms, but I have been very hyper-analytical my whole life, and I think have neglected
to pay attention to signals from the body. And I've been trying to cultivate this over the last
few years in particular, and a woman named Diana Chapman and Jim Detmer, introduced me to this concept of the whole body or the full
body, yes. And I've read that, at least in response to questions like, when you start one
of these big movies, what's the first step? That you talk about looking for the big wholehearted
yes that isn't coming from your head, but your heart, kind of like falling in love. And so,
what I've been trying to do is pay attention to the sensations, whether it's heart-centered or gut-centered,
to assess whether something is a full yes for me. What does a full wholehearted yes feel like to
you? And could you give us an example of a project where that was a clear signal? Sure. I think the best example is the one
sort of right in front of us, which is country music. I had had country music as an intellectual,
didactic, expository idea, if that's what it was, on a list that I've recently found from the 1990s
and another list from the aughts, meaning that I was thinking
about it, right? And there might be 50 different things. You know the lottery where they've got
all these ping pong balls bouncing around and then one drops down? Imagine these are all just
completely arbitrary head things. Just an idea, oh, we should do this. We should think about that.
What about this? And so you just want to write them down so you don't forget them and whatever, but nothing happens.
And nothing did happen, and I had forgotten that they were even there.
But I remember visiting a friend of mine in Dallas, Texas, who had been raising money for us, a wonderful dear friend.
And I came down for breakfast one day, we done an event I was staying at his house and
I guess we were the first people up and he said you ever thought about country music and when he
said it it was like this huge whole body explosion and I looked at him and it was just I could feel
it in my chest and I could feel it in my gut and so so it wasn't, I started to answer yes.
And then I realized that that yes was so feeble and so partial because it had to do with sort of trying to be, oh, what little blip it was as a kind
of mental construct that had worked its way in the 90s and later the aughts onto a sheet of paper
with 10, 20, 30 other subjects, some of which I've done, some of which I haven't done, some of which
I'll get to, some of which I will never get to. And so this was something else. And so as I kind
of felt like I got down on one knee,
I didn't physically and proposed to Country Music that there was a big yes. Now, the biggest thing
I knew is that this project would have to go through one of my partners who I knew knew more
about Country Music. And more importantly, he and I had been thinking about another big project.
And we're just throwing around some ideas and doing a little research could we possibly pull this off and we were
not in quicksand but we were you know our back rear right tire was stuck and I went back to
New Hampshire and I went to him and I said what about look we don't need to abandon this other
thing but what about country music and it like he looked at me like yes and the two of us i mean that from
that moment i mean i do remember what the other project was but it you know we hadn't shot anything
we hadn't written anything there had been no budget raised for it was just early conceptual
stuff it was dropped in favor of the next eight and a half years of work. And it was, you know, you say total.
This is wholeheartedness.
That's what it is.
It has to be the integration so that you physically commit to it,
you mentally commit to it, but you emotionally commit to it.
And that, yes, is very similar to the chemistry we feel with others
when we fall in love, either romantically or as friends.
And as all the films have been, it's just been a wholehearted yes, because you realize that the
stories are firing on all cylinders, that they're complex, they represent challenge and opportunity
and difficulty.
You know, I once was with a group of students recently, and I told them that every film that I'd done was at least a million problems.
But I didn't think that the word problem was necessarily pejorative, that it represented friction that needed to be overcome. It was the necessary
friction of the creative process of the making progress. You know, you just, that wall won't
hold itself up. So builder, you need to have scaffolding and false work that once you've
reached a certain stage can be disassembled. So this is what we had to do. And how do you take,
you're not going to be the encyclopedia, you're not going to be the reading of the telephone book,
how do you take something as monstrously big as the Civil War or baseball or jazz or the
National Parks or World War II or the Roosevelt's or Vietnam or now country music and say, what do we tell?
Where do we start?
How do we go back and pick up its ancestors?
Where do we end?
How do we tell this story?
Just really practical things that have to do with the craft and the art of filmmaking
and larger big question things.
And all of that represents, in the case of a series, maybe millions of individual problems in quotes.
But if you look at them as just whatever a runner takes
to overcome that brain that's screaming stop
as you're running a marathon,
then you understand what we're engaged in.
Because people always come up and say, wow,
you just spent 10 and a half years on Vietnam, eight and a half years on country music.
How do you do that? I said, I'm sad. I don't want to leave it. You know, it's not like,
the fact that I'm talking to you is one of the palliative kind of aspects of this. The promotional
stuff permits, is the airlock that permits you to leave the
project because all of a sudden you've been attending to the stories, you lift up and you
begin to share it with other people and they begin to synthesize some ideas. And they're saying,
oh, you intended this. And you say, no, we didn't. We just wanted to tell the story. But now that you're saying this, we realize the way in which this
historical moment, say, resonates in the present. Harry Truman once said, the only thing that's
really new is the history you don't know. People are so fond of saying history repeats itself.
It does not. Mark Twain is supposed to say that history is supposed to have said that
history doesn't repeat itself, but it rhymes. And if he did say that, he's so on the mark,
because I believe that human nature doesn't change. Ecclesiastes put it this way, you know,
there's nothing new under the sun. That's the Old Testament. And that may be the best what has been
will be again, what has been done will be done again. There's nothing new under the sun. And so I think that that suggests that human nature
doesn't change and that it superimposes itself over the seemingly random chaos of events.
And we begin to perceive patterns and echoes and themes, rhymes, Twain would say. And I love that. We attend to the storytelling part of it.
I happen to work in American history, the way somebody painter works in oil as opposed to
watercolor. And fortunately, the word history is mostly made up of the word story plus high.
You know, you don't have to get into the binary his story or her story.
It's just story plus hi, which is a wonderful greeting.
And we finish it, and then we look up and go, my God, it is resonating with the present.
And every single film I've done, like you will look at country music, and you will cannot believe that we were editorially complete before the Me Too movement
started. You will go, oh no, oh no. They were aware of the Me Too movement, and they just
worked it in. Or I used to start my stump speech for the Vietnam War series that came out in 2017.
So imagine where we'd been for the first nine months of 2017 and for the preceding
election year. And I said, what if I told you that I had been working for 10 and a half years
about mass demonstrations taking place all across the country against the current administration,
about a White House in disarray, obsessed with leaks, about a president certain the press was
making up stories about him lying, about
asymmetrical warfare that confounded the mighty might of the U.S. military, about huge big document
drops of stolen classified material into the public sphere that destabilized the political
equation, and accusations that a political party reached out to a foreign power during the time of a national election to influence that election.
You would say I'd been working on the last year and a half.
But all of these things were true of the more work on it, in December of 2015, a month before the Iowa caucuses, out of which Donald Trump was not supposed to emerge as a candidate.
I could take any film, any film, and do that, that I've worked on, And it's nothing that we're prepared for.
It's only an after-the-fact kind of collection of accounting,
that bittersweet period when you get a chance to finish the film,
you don't want to leave it, and so you're obligated because of the shoe leather necessary to promote public broadcasting films
you do in 40 cities, and you begin to construct something that talks
about how you related to it. But it's true of every film, every film, including the Civil War.
You know, every film I've made, it just resonates in the present and suggests that
Twain is absolutely correct.
Yeah, that's one hell of a rhyme. And I have a question about motivation. You mentioned
eight and a half years, 10 plus years. Some people have signs in their office, these motivational
quotes of various types, effectively some version of go get them tiger, you can do it, etc. I have
read that you have a neon sign in your editing room. Yes. What does it read, and how did you choose this particular sign?
Well, you know, filmmakers are notorious for once something works, you don't touch it, right?
You say, leave that alone, it's working, right?
And that may be great in Hollywood, but if you find out new and contradictory facts, you're kind of obligated to do it. And we never
have a set research period followed by a set writing period, followed by a script that's now
etched in stone that informs the shooting and the editing. We never stop researching. So we're
always finding out stuff and we never stop writing. So we're always corrigible and willing to be flexible in what we
do. And we're often filming, interviewing before we've even written a word of a script so that
every time you see a talking head in our film, it's a happy accident. It's not that I've gone
to you and it said, hey, you know, Mr. Ferris, could you please get me from paragraph two to paragraph three and episode four? Thank you. Thank you. You know,
could you say that again, but do it with a little bit more economy? Yeah, that was it. But now could
you end the way you did the first? We've never done that. We just go and have an interview.
And if it doesn't work, it's our fault. If it works, it's their greatness, right? And so we have this complex process that I think serves us very well
in the pursuit of a complicated story. So what's the neon sign? It says it's complicated. And it's the license to say, even if it's perfect, even if it's working, let's open it up and add in that complicated, conflicting, contradictory fact.
And sure, it might destabilize it, but let's do it anyway.
And so it just says in cursive lowercase, it's complicated.
And then the onsite.
And it's something we've said to each other for a long time.
It's sometimes like a scarf or a muffler, warm gloves on a cold day.
It just arms you against the scariness of going out into that unknown region.
And other times it's just like, yeah, this is what we do.
And I wanted it, I finally immortalized it by putting it in neon so that we could all remember that this is what we celebrate.
I remember making a film years ago on the Statue of Liberty.
I interviewed the now past statesman, Saul Linowitz.
Wonderful interview.
And he was quoting Judge Learned Hand.
Could there ever be a better name
for a jurist than Learned Hand? And apparently Learned Hand said,
liberty is never being too sure you're right. And I'm sure he meant it in a rather narrow political,
perhaps jurisprudent sense, but I took it in a broad spiritual sense, you know,
that the opposite of faith is not heresy. It's not doubt. It's just conviction, right? So,
faith requires doubt. It doesn't require certainty. And what we've tried to do is instill in ourselves,
which is the hardest thing to do, it's much easier to try to instill it in others,
this idea that we're not done. We got to open this up again. We've learned contradictory stuff. And we're, you know, for a while, our Vietnam script, its footnotes were longer than the script itself.
Like we would say four regiments of Viet Cong, four regiments of NVA went down the Ho Chi Minh Trail that month.
And we'd have an asterisk or, you know, footnote 117. And footnote 117 would say, this scholar says this, this scholar
says that, this scholar says that, because it's in these two places, we're going with four.
But later on, we found out after we locked the film that yet another scholar had said three,
and we were beginning to feel a little bit more comfortable with that and would rather err on the conservative side.
And so we changed.
We found where the narrator had said the word three and we cannibalized it and moved it over.
Sometimes we call it a Frankenbite.
And we put the three in instead of the four so that we could just exhale a little bit.
No one would ever in a million years, not even a scholar, take us to task for it. But that was not acceptable for us. So we'd rather,
and if we hadn't been able to find that tree, we would have asked the narrator back in,
Peter Coyote back in and record it.
I'd like to talk about the Civil War. And maybe we could start with a question about
Civil War. Do you have any idea how many people have seen, have watched the Civil War? Do you
have any estimates?
No idea. I know we reached about 40 million people who watched some or all of it. The first
time is broadcast about this time, 29 years ago in September of 1990.
And I know that in subsequent broadcasts it's done very well.
It's worked itself into schools.
Many, many other people look at it regularly.
So I assume it might be a couple multiples of that original 40 million as it's gone out.
Those are astronomical numbers.
I mean, they're huge, huge numbers.
And yet, 20 plus years ago, television critics, at least some,
thought nobody would watch the Civil War for many reasons,
including that this new musical, Cop Rock, was going to blow you out of the water.
That didn't end up being the case.
And what I wonder, especially given that we were just talking about faith, conviction, and so on,
have you, as someone who comes across, say, in an interview like this, as completely confident and clear in focus, have you ever felt lost or had self-doubt? Are there
any stories that you can paint just to provide maybe a fleshed out human picture of you?
Could you talk about a difficult time or any difficult time that you've gone through? Well, I am a very, very anxious person. And I now don't have too much time for anxiety,
because people that I love are anxious now, too. And I've got to give my attention to them. So the
early days, the first film on the Brooklyn Bridge through the Civil War were agonizing.
Every morning up at 4 a.m. I remember
I asked Shelby Foote about Grant, and he said Grant, meaning U.S. Grant, had what they call
four o'clock in the morning courage. That meant that you could wake him up at four o'clock in the
morning and tell him the enemy had turned his left flank and he'd be as cool as a cucumber.
I remember thinking, oh my God, I wish I had four o'clock in the morning courage.
And I think I've developed it now, and I've learned how to harness it and turn it around, but it was
debilitating, crushing anxiety about whether this would work. You know, I was told while I was
making the Civil War that, yeah, sure, these first six films on the Brooklyn Bridge and the Shakers
and Huey Long and the Statue of Liberty and, and Thomas Hart Benton, an hour and a half, an hour in length. People will watch still photographs
for that long, but they're not going to look for the five one hours that initially we proposed the
Civil War to be, and it ended up being nearly 12 hours in length. And that was terrifying to be
told that over and over again. And I remember, I knew the film was good when it was done, but I remember arriving in Los Angeles for the Television Critics MTV cutting, and that two and a half minutes was
the length of the American attention span. And I remember thinking, wow, that's too bad.
You know, it didn't produce anxiety the way the actual making of the film did. And I'm so grateful
for those loved ones and colleagues, and sometimes
they were both, who shored me up and pretended that I was okay or, you know, covered for me if
it was just too much. Really, really important people still in my life to this day. But I remember thinking that I thought that all real meaning accrued in duration,
that the work we're proudest of, that you're proudest of, I would presume, that the relationships
you care the most about have benefited from our sustained attention, and that it's okay to have
both, that we do need the fast-paced fast cutting two and a half minute mtv music video
just as today as people were telling me during the aughts that no one would watch the the national
parks or the world war ii because of youtube which you know meant that kitten with a ball of yarn
um so these could coexist,
that the stuff we cared about,
that all meaning accrued in duration was an important thing.
And what was true
was that the Civil War bore it out.
I mean, then as soon as
we were working on baseball,
they said, geez, 18 and a half hours,
not even 11 hours and 40 minutes
of the Civil War,
but 18 and a half hours,
nobody's going to watch that.
And then there was a strike and everybody did. And jazz, oh man, nobody's going to watch,
you know, 18 hours of black people, right? And I just said, I think so, or the national parks,
that's not a travelogue, that's not a, you know, which lodge or inn you should have your family stay at. And so I just started trusting at some point along the way.
And I got a, it's funny that you ask this because I've just been dealing it recently with a loved one.
I developed in the early to mid-90s a sort of sense of three things, I call them.
One of my daughters calls them the three truths.
I'm not willing to elevate them to that.
I just call them the three things that I try to do as I help others,
friends and loved ones with anxiety of this debilitating kind,
that this will pass.
You know, all things are transitory.
Get help from others and be kind to yourself.
And if I had to do a neon sign, another neon sign,
I think I'd do the three things.
And I've learned to internalize them in large measure
because like that alcoholic or drug addict
who becomes the most effective counselor,
somebody who's been through the ringer of it
is, I think, a much better,
is a much more authentic spokesperson. And this goes back to country. This is at the heart of it,
is the sincerity or the authenticity that is at the heart of these relatively simple songs
that are, as the songwriter Harlan Howard said, three chords and the truth. So it's acknowledging that there's a simplicity to it.
It doesn't have the sophistication or the complication of classical music or some forms of jazz.
But that back end, the truth, it means it's dealing with universal human things.
And I find the universality of those three things similar to the effectiveness of a good country song.
Charlie Pryde says in the introduction that I think there's a good country song. Charlie Pride says in the
introduction that I think there's a country song for every mood you're in. It might make you cry,
but you'll feel better for crying. So if you hear Hank Williams say, hear that lonesome whippoorwill,
he sounds too blue to fly. The midnight train is whining low. I'm so lonesome I could cry. You know, if you've got music, which Wynton Marsalis
says in this film, in country music, not just jazz, is the art of the invisible. The only art
form that's invisible is music. And you add to it poetry, which is the distillation of language,
our form of communication. Then you're mainlining a completely benign form of
heroin, emotional heroin, right into your bloodstream. And it gets there really quick.
And its effects are only positive. This is the Hank Williams who also wrote,
I've got a hot rod Ford and a $2 bill and I know a place right over the hill. And he goes on
to talk about the joy of young love or the possibility of new love, in that just as he speaks, you know, the silence
of a falling star lights up a purple sky, and as I wonder where you are, I'm so lonesome I can cry.
You know, there's just, there's no one within the sound of my voice that has not experienced that.
I moved to Austin, Texas a few years ago and spent a lot of time on Willie Nelson Boulevard.
I saw him perform recently at Austin City Limits.
And I think my memory serves me right that he was part of the pilot for that series in 1972. And it was just spectacular,
just absolutely spectacular. So I'm looking forward to digging into country music. I did
have a follow-up question on the three truths, as your daughter calls them. The third in particular,
be kind to yourself. Could you...
Yeah, that's the hardest.
Yeah, it's the hardest for me too. Could you describe what that looks like for you? Are there
any practices or things that you now say to yourself in your own head that's different?
Yeah. I can talk myself down from the first thing.
I'm smart enough to surround myself with people that are willing to put up with doing with the second thing.
But I'm a complete failure on that last thing, too.
I can pay lip service to it only because I know it's true and it's therefore not phony.
It isn't lip service.
It is the truth.
But I think this is the hardest thing for all of us, is how to be kind to ourselves.
How do we not murder this moment?
How do we prepare ourselves for the next moment, whatever it is?
And to try to liberate ourselves from the prison of
the contemplation of the past, which may promote depression, not to deny the chemical
origins of that, nor anxiety, which is an anticipation of the future. Thomas Jefferson
had a wonderful thing,
how much pain has caused us the evils which have never happened. And it really surprised me that Tom, who was really good at ignoring some fundamental things right in front of him,
like the fact that he lived in a plantation and his comfortable life was due entirely to people that he owned and did not pay,
could realize too that these basic elements of the human heart often have to do with worry.
What that is is a great late 18th century, or maybe he wrote it in the early 19th century,
commentary about worry. How much pain has caused us, the evils which have never happened.
Thomas Jefferson was also a fan of Seneca the Younger and the philosophical school of Stoicism,
as was George Washington, who had a play about Cato performed at Valley Forge to bolster the morale of the troops.
Are there any, do you gravitate to any particular philosophies or philosophical writings?
Not that you have to, but I mean, you're very well read, clearly.
Well, you know, I love what Jeffrey Ward, who's my longtime writing collaborator, along with Dayton Duncan, Jeff has been writing a little bit longer, and he wrote The Roosevelts.
And he was quoting Franklin Roosevelt when asked what his philosophy was.
He said he was a Christian and an American and left it at that. And, you know, at the end of the day,
I'll hide behind FDR's skirts. You know, I am, I think, a Christian. I'm not a practicing Christian,
but I'd like to believe that I'm a believing Christian and that I'm an American. And that basically says that I do not need to hew to any one political philosophy because there's always the possibility, and in fact, it isn't a possibility, there's always the certainty that the opposite of what I might believe in might also be true. And that requires the nimbleness
of human, that requires a human dexterity that the binary aspects of politics don't
subscribe to. And that's why I think FDR said it exactly right. And I have friends,
as close colleagues as possible, who I guess would
call themselves atheists and others who have other faiths in addition to Christianity, but
this is what I am. I am what I am, I think Popeye said. And I like both. I like that American part.
It's for all the things that we've screwed up, for all of the things we've gotten so wrong. I do believe, as Lincoln said in his message to Congress, what we are by these two magnificent oceans that have protected us as well, permits us to incubate so many horrible tendencies, an addiction to money and guns and suspicions of the other. You know, I have spent my entire professional life living in a kind of space,
I like to think about it, it will sound now absurd to you as I explain it, between the two-letter,
lowercase, plural pronoun, us, and its capitalized version, the U.S. That is to say, all of the intimacy and warmth of us, along with we and our,
and all of the breadth, the majesty, the complexity, the contradiction, even the controversy
of the United States. And what I've learned over 40 plus years of practicing in my professional life telling stories in American history about us
and the U.S. is that there's only us. There's no them. You know, country music has been since the
very beginning an alloy, a mixture of things, stronger because it has constituent elements
that make it stronger. And that at any time in our
history, when we suggest that pulling out one aspect of it will make it pure American, you have
a priori weakened the ally and made it brittle and more breakable. And I like our suppleness.
I like our muttness. I like our mongrelness, which is, of course, abhorrent to various currents that are boiling and swirling in the United States.
This is what makes us stronger. The banjo, one of the key family, the original Carter family, Bill Monroe, the founder of Bluegrass, the aforementioned Hank Williams, and Johnny Cash, people who deserve to be on the Mount Rushmore of early country music, all had an African-American tutor that took their chops from here to way up here to qualify them
for consideration in that pantheon on that Mount Rushmore. And Jimmy Rogers, the first superstar
at the same time as the Carter family, grew up with the blues sung by the black train crews
that he worked with in Southern Mississippi. So while he didn't have one mentor,
the way Hank Williams did, Rufus T. Todd Payne, about whom he said, everything I learned about
music I got from Rufus. That's not bad for arguably the most important country singer-songwriter.
It just tells you that whatever superficial thing you've got about country music in your head, whatever
conventional wisdom that you think you're now going to enjoy, it ain't true. That it's always
been a mixture. And it's always been mostly working class. This is a story of women, really
strong women from the very, very beginning. It's the story of people coming out of poverty, black
and white, and changing the dynamics of their lives.
And if they didn't bring other people out, they gave them at least the tools to dream how to do that.
It's about geographical dislocation and psychological dislocation.
And at the end of the day, this extraordinary marriage of this invisible art form combined with the poetry of the words and the, for us as filmmakers,
startling emotion we did not ever expect to find in the story of country music.
I'd like to ask a question about the making of Ken Burns, because you said,
I am what I am, which is true. You are what you are. I can't deny that. But my girlfriend said to me recently over dinner,
she was quoting someone else, but she said that every child is born into a different family in
the sense that if you have two or three siblings, as people change over time, you're born into a
different family. And likewise, I would imagine that there are certain aspects of Ken-ness that have remained
the same for a long time, but you made choices that have shaped who you are today. And I wanted
to ask about one in particular, and this is Hampshire College. Could you talk about
Hampshire, describe Hampshire College and how you ended up there, because I actually do not know.
Okay, so I am the son of an anthropologist and a mother who had an advanced degree in biology but couldn't really use it.
She raised two sons until she died of cancer in 1965, which is the dominant event of my life. Shortly afterwards, I watched my father
cry at a movie and decided I wanted to be a filmmaker. I had seen the safe haven that it
had provided for him, a man who I had never seen cry, not during my mother's illness, not at her
death, not at her funeral, a point pointed out to me by friends, which I knew meant that there was an implicit criticism,
and I saw my dad cry in a movie called Odd Man Out. Anyway, I was going to be a Hollywood director.
So, flash forward, I am in my senior year at high school in Ann Arbor, Michigan,
and my best friend subscribes to a magazine, apparently, that I have never heard of called
Newsweek. Our family subscribed to Time magazine.
I didn't know there was anything else but Time magazine for Newsweekly,
which I devoured by that time cover to cover.
And here was a description of a tiny experimental college
that had just opened in the last few weeks.
This was October of 1970.
It had opened in September of 1970, which was,
for lack of a better word, a graduate school experience at an undergraduate level. That is to
say, you were trusted to either know what you wanted to do or to find out what you wanted to
do, and you proceeded in much the same fashion you would in graduate school, with a de-emphasis
on classwork and more emphasis on independent study and the assembling of your own examinations, your own proposals, and the assembling of a small faculty group of two or three who would judge it along the way and finally pass on it, pass or fail.
I like falling in love with country music.
It just lit me up.
And I said, I want to go there.
And he said, I'm applying.
And I was supposed to go to the University of Michigan, where I could get in for free or nominal stuff,
because my dad taught there.
Hampshire was the most expensive college on earth.
Room, board, and tuition in the fall of 71,
the class to which I hope to enter in, was $4,730, $30 more than Harvard University.
And I basically moved all my chips. I quit school early. I had advanced placement courses
that permitted me to interpret the Michigan laws that said I needed X number of credits,
not four years of high school or three years of high school. And that I had that and that I was leaving after Christmas and the guidance counselor said, you were making a big
mistake. And I worked in a record store part-time. I now went full-time to that, saved up money. My
grandmother gave me a thousand dollars. I had inherited a thousand dollars. I pushed all my
chips into year one, fully intending to come back to Michigan, just having, you know,
blown it all on that, you know, experiment. I so fell in love with Hampshire. I am so
a poster boy for it that I couldn't not do it. So I quit. I took a leave from Hampshire my second
year and worked literally as an indentured servant to a dear friend still who ran the bookstore at the college
and got enough money to pay for the next two years of Hampshire. And though it took four years,
I spent only three years actually matriculating there and ended up with a Bachelor of Arts in
Film Study and Design. And I left there with this sort of naive and perhaps arrogant assumption that
I could start my own film company rather than do what everyone else was supposed to do, which is go
to New York or LA or whatever big city and apprentice at a film company and work your way up.
So I started with two other Hampshire grads, Florentine Films, in 1976, the year after I graduated, though we'd been talking and thinking about it for a long time.
And that's been my only employer, meaning I've got the worst boss ever, which is me.
Two quick questions.
Hampshire was central.
It was central. It was central. We had two teachers, film and photography teachers, mostly still photographers, social documentary still photographers, Elaine Mays and Jerome Liebling.
They became mentors in the best sense of the word, almost in a medieval renaissance sense of a real master-student relationship.
And my relationship with Jerry Liebling was complete through to the
end of his life. He died in 2011. I still worship him and all that he gave me. If he did not exist,
you would not be having this conversation. I said that, you know, once Dizzy Gillespie said of
Louis Armstrong, know him, know me. Know Jerry Liebling, no me. Period. Full stop.
What are some of the things that stuck with you from Jerry or were imprinted upon you that had such a tremendous impact? Or was it his care for you? How would you describe
what was important?
He was a curmudgeonly kind of tough guy.
I remember I was a precocious film student all through high school, not having any formal courses to take, but studying and reading.
And I knew stuff.
And I had a sentence, which I think I can still do, from Andrew Sarris, one of the great critics and proponents of the French auteur theory that the director is the author of the film.
And he was talking about Nicholas Ray, who made Rebel Without a Cause,
but he also made a film called Johnny Guitar, whose screenwriter was Philip Yorden,
who was eventually blacklisted during those terrible Hollywood days in the 50s.
And so there was a sentence that I had looked at as a perplexed,
and you'll understand exactly why,
perplexed teenager, where it said, Jordan set out to attack McCarthyism, but Ray was too delirious
to pay any heed as Freudian feminism and Marxist masochism prevailed over Pirandellen-transcended
polemics. And to me, that was my holy grail, right i finally got up a nerve second semester of hampshire to i
i'd been in elaine mays his his colleagues and younger colleagues and somebody he had imported
to hampshire the year i came the second year he'd come the first year and um i i i showed this sentence. I went into his office and I suddenly, like I said, blurted it out.
I was showing off, right, that not only had I memorized it, but I think I knew what it meant.
I'd like to have this discussion with him.
And when I finished the sentence, he looked at me and he got up from his desk and he walked around the desk and he took me by the elbow, which he always did to
everybody, both in affectionate ways, but this was clearly not an affectionate way. He sort of
lifted me out of my chair, moved me to the door, opened the door and pushed me out into the
hallway and shut the door. And I sat out there contemplating suicide because Jerry was known for this, to being a terrifying person.
And I thought, here I'll go in and I'll disarm him with this wonderful sentence, which I was
going to attempt to deconstruct and everything would be great. And my career, such as it is,
and I rarely use the word career after that, would be launched. And he had reminded me, this was just absurd gobbledygook,
that Hollywood called itself the industry, which ought to be warning enough. And we were interested
in something else. He was a great, great still photographer. I urge you to Google him,
labeling L-I-E-B-L-I-N-G, extraordinary photographs, which he put up in our classes,
along with our photographs and our films, and they're stunning. He was about, he wanted us to
know history. He wanted us to know ethics. He wanted us to be humanists. He understood there
was an essential reciprocity that took place. Stuff didn't occur. Stuff wasn't imparted just during classes.
Often he'd say, my car's broken down.
Can you drive me to Northampton the next count over?
And I'll pick up the laundry.
I said, sure.
And along the way, you get, look at the way the angle of that light hits.
You see the way that woman brushed her arm there.
And he wasn't kind of saying this is a good thing or a bad thing.
He was just saying, notice.
As his daughters say, he would always say, go, see, do, be.
Go, get out into the world.
See, look around you.
Do, make something, you know, relate.
Have an exchange with somebody.
Be, take it in.
Go, see, do, be.
And that, to me, along withhire's sort of secret sauce of how they
organized it was it i do not recognize the person who went into hampshire in september of 1971 and
the person who left in may or june of 75 i just completely rearranged my molecules and I have always had this extraordinary devotion and affection for it.
And when I lost Jerry, when we lost Jerry, his family, obviously, his teaching had reached so
many people that we all still gather and collect to talk about him and what he and Elaine had given us over those years and how transformative
that exposure to their generosity, whether it was artistic or human, it really doesn't matter.
And I loved the fact that in retrospect, those lines were blurred. You know, some of the best
times I've ever had in my life were at his house, you know, where we could just go and listen.
Yeah, I really look back also on my own history and the mentors who had the largest impact certainly had no clear boundary between sort of work hours and off hours.
And that's the same now true for me. That is to say, I don't distinguish. I mean, I understand that the
world sort of Sunday night gets a little bit unhappy and that I know Friday afternoon is some
thing that's supposed to be good. I don't have that. I don't have that. The cliche is, if you love your work, you don't work a day in your life.
And, you know, it is a cliche and stultifying one at that, but it's pretty true. The people I love
are the people I work with. I work with my daughter. She's one of my producers. She teaches
me stuff, as does my son-in-law, all of the time. And people, I mean, my cinematographer, we barely talk to one another.
We have been working together for 46 years.
That's incredible.
I mean, he was at Hampshire.
And now we just, we go into situations and it's just sort of, it's almost like telepathy.
Where we just, through hand, you know, look, a little gesture,
whatever, and all of it. If you were talking to Buddy Squires, who's this extraordinary
cinematographer, about Jerry, you'd be hearing different sorts of things, but the meaning
would be exactly what I've imparted about Jerry Liebling, Jerome Liebling. How did your father respond, if at all, to your decision to put all of your chips, push all of your chips under the table for this one thing, particularly given that you only had funds for one year?
Was that a conversation?
No. I think a lot of it had to do with some stuff that befell him.
He was not as mentally sound as he should be.
I came across a few years ago a letter from my mother to his mother, her mother-in-law, in which she's saying, I'm dying.
What am I going to do with my little boys?
He can't possibly take care of them.
And, uh, we muddled through, we did okay. And I think when I decided this, he knew in some
respects that I needed to get out of Dodge, that I couldn't be at the scene of the crime. That is
the death, the place where my mother had died. And, uh, I think because he wasn't financially involved, he had no resources. He was in a kind
of publisher parish situation with the University of Michigan, which eventually ended up with the
perishing. He was in no position to help. So it was really, I was going to do this. And I think
he was happy for me that I had found the clutch necessary to put myself in gear because he's still the most brilliant man I've ever met.
Like a Maserati, my younger brother Rick described him as, without a clutch.
So you can rev the engine in the driveway, but you can't go anywhere.
And that was my dad. Was the presenting symptom of the missing
clutch depression or something that resembled depression? And what, if you don't mind me asking?
I believe so. No, no, no. I believe, I think we would all generally agree that it was probably
bipolar, but no significant attempt was made at a diagnosis. He was eventually, uh, ended up at a, uh, sort of tertiary level university in Western
Michigan and, uh, got somebody who was supposed to help him who didn't really.
And so we never really, he was never really treated for that, but it, it was, uh, you
know, it was a sad, sad lifetime. However, he's the smartest person
I've ever met. He was an amateur still photographer and a professional anthropologist.
And my very first memory, the first little film strip that runs through my head is him,
just a couple seconds of him building a dark room in the basement of our track house in Newark,
Delaware, where he was the only anthropologist in the state of Delaware. And then the next clip is
of me being held in his very strong left arm as he manipulated the tongs in that finished dark room,
one of the few things he finished, in that eerie red light with those ghastly smells of the chemicals as I watched
the miracle of a picture come out of a blank page. And if you think about what I do,
there is an anthropology to it, and it is rooted in the DNA. My DNA of my work is a still photograph.
Even if I've got all the footage in the world, I will still
often default for real meaning to communicating with a single still image. And that's my dad,
as much as it is Jerome Liebling and Elaine Mays. It's my dad with the kind of anthropology,
the story of us. And so a lot of, you know, strength and I hope goodness comes came from my mother who I had a
very short time with on this earth I mean I we just passed this past April
um 60 55 years without a mother which I have to tell you, is way too long to be without a mother.
But at the same time, she is present every single day of my life in the way my father isn't.
And yet I actually have to pay him the honor of having created not only me, but my brother and my mother, too.
And my brother, Rick, is much more understanding of this. And we just had an interesting conversation together at the Telluride Film Festival, which was supposed to be talking about us as filmmakers.
And we immediately went to this dynamic.
And he spoke about him as feeling the physical love of my mother and me always kind of pushing away and going out and doing things and having projects.
And so the thing that I'm lacking is that sense of ultimate security, which he actually has,
if not the ability to execute in quite the same way that I am. And so it's just one of the most
amazing conversations I've ever had in my life with the gift of my brother speaking truth to
a situation that informs every film I made. I mean, I was going through a crisis and my father-in-law,
my late father-in-law said to me, I said, I seem to be keeping my mother alive because I couldn't
be present on the day she died, April 28th. It was always approaching
and then always disappearing, but I was never aware of that day. And he said, I bet you blew
out your candles as a young boy wishing she'd come back. I said, I did it my last birthday,
you know? And he said, you're kidding. And he said, but look what you do for a living. And I
said, what? He said, you wake the dead. You make Abraham
Lincoln and Jackie Robinson come alive. Who do you think you're really trying to wake up?
And from that moment on, I plowed towards finding a way. I've never not been present on April 28th.
For a long time, it took me going to Ann Arbor with my then small children and renting a car
and making a picnic out of it and
visiting a grave that we had finally established. My father had not bothered to pick up the ashes
and became one of those forgotten, repressed memories of childhood. And all of a sudden,
at this crisis, my brother and I realized, you know what? We have to do this. And so,
we tracked down our ashes at some godforsaken cemetery way outside of Ann
Harbor and put a plaque there. And for many, many years, I would go there every year with or without
my daughters and turn it into an event. And my mother's name was Lila, L-Y-L-A, an old 19th
century spelling. She was named after her mother who was born in the 19th century.
And when my oldest daughter, Sarah,
had her first child,
she named her Lila, L-Y-L-A.
She was born on January 18th, 2011.
And I can't begin to tell you
that we never said Lila.
We still, even at this talk at Telluride Film Festival, we refer to her as Mommy.
Two men in their 60s, their mid-60s, referring to Mommy because that's who she was, right?
Our father went from daddy to dad.
Our mother always was Mommy.
And I can't begin to tell you that though we never said the word Lila, it was always draped in black crepe from April 28th, 1965 until my granddaughter Lila was born, in which case we say it 20
times a day and we talk to her and she is beautiful and she, you know, the birds sing
and flowers bloom and it's a wonderful, wonderful thing and has helped immeasurably with what we were talking about before, anxiety and the burden of that.
That is really beautiful.
Thank you so much for sharing that and being so forthcoming, I think that not only is your personal experience informative, I would imagine, for a lot of people listening.
As you mentioned, the similarity of blowing out the candles and wishing your mother to be back,
I'm sure that transcends the experiences of the two of you to many people who are listening who have lost
a loved one of one type or another and i also think it's really important and courageous of
you to talk very directly about your father's struggles with with mental illness with depression
i have a very severe bipolar depression on both sides of my family,
and that applies to blood relatives, but also relatives by marriage. My aunt died of a Percocet
plus alcohol overdose last year, which was certainly correlated to depression. And so,
this is really just a way of saying thank you for talking so vulnerably. was obligated in some ways to be transparent in my individual biography and life if I were going
to continue doing what I was doing seemingly so successfully. That is to say, if I was going to
feel the ability to talk about Abraham Lincoln, I needed also, or Jackie Robinson, I needed the ability to talk
about Lila and Robert and about my brother Rick and about my granddaughter Lila and my daughters,
Sarah, Lily, Olivia, and Willa, and do so with, you know, no differentiation. I'm sure they at times would like to have a free and separate life,
which they do have. And because of the notoriety of the film, sometimes there's
people come up to me and talk to me about things that are emotional. You know, a veteran will say
about the Vietnam film,
this is the best thing I've ever heard. This helps me. Or I hear from another veteran that his best friend watched it and said, he thinks he's okay now. I mean, that's what happens.
And I realized that the emotional archaeology that I had said at the very beginning of my first film,
I wished to pursue, I was not interested in merely
excavating the dry dates and facts and events of the past, but looking for an emotional archaeology
that would sort of glue those shards, those dry, brittle shards together. And I have to, by saying
the word emotional, put an asterisk. I do not mean nostalgia or sentimentality. That's
the enemy of good anything. But I do believe that there are higher emotions that we are frightened
of. And so we would retreat to a rational world most of the time, where one and one always equals
two, when in fact what we want out of our love, out of our sex perhaps, out of our faith,
out of our art, out of maybe just something simple like a cup of tea or looking at a sunset,
we want one and one to equal three. And I'm looking for that periodically, that
improbable equation to obtain in the films that we are working on.
Well, Ken, I think that as a narrative alchemist of sorts,
that you have managed with many of your films, much of your work,
to create that unlikely synergy of one plus one equals three. If you look at all of
the ingredients, all of the elements that you've pieced together over decades, the sum is greater.
I'm going to mess up this one. I always mess this one up. What is it? The whole is greater
than the sum of its parts. There we go. Well, but you know, Tim, that's exactly it.
When we say that, let's just stop for a second and take a rational approach.
Let's say the sum of the parts comes up to here, but the whole is up here.
What is in there?
What is in there?
That's the only question there is.
There's the phenomenal world that we can see and we know is reflected light,
filled with colors and sounds and all of these sorts of things.
And there's a noumenal world, an unseen world,
which is actually much more compelling if we knew how to trust and access it.
And that's the big human dilemma. There's nobody
gets out of this alive. No one gets out of this alive. And this is an amazingly
depressing sort of thing if you wish to take it that way. And we could be reasonably excused as a sentient species for lying in a fetal position, sucking our thumb,
waiting for that inevitable end. But we do not. We raise babies, and we tend gardens,
and we build buildings, and we paint paintings, and we make films, and we are in conversation
with each other. And we're keeping, as Witten ourselves calls it,
the wolf from the door. The wolf is the apprehension of our own mortality.
And that's what storytelling is. Storytelling is basically, honey, how was your day?
And then you're required to edit human experience. And how you edit human experience is really what it's all about.
You know, honey, how your day, you know, it doesn't begin,
I back slowly down the driveway avoiding the garbage can at the curb,
unless, of course, somebody T-bones you, and that's exactly the way you describe it.
But you say, oh, you'll never believe what an SOB my boss is,
and then all of a sudden Aristotelian poetics, that's not so scary. Aristotle wrote an essay called Poetics about storytelling,
beginning, middle, and end, protagonist, antagonist, climax, denouement. You begin
to obey the laws of the editing of human experience. And by sharing the story, like raising a baby,
like tending a garden,
like building a building,
we ensure a kind of immortality.
Well said.
And the editing of the human experience
is also one of those ever so valuable,
invisible arts right alongside music.
And I want to remind people that your newest work is Country
Music, explores the history of uniquely American art form country music. And I have a long
description here that I'll include in the show notes. It'll also have already been heard in the
introduction. I'm holding it in my hand right here, A Story of America, one song at a time. I cannot wait to dig in. And it premieres Sunday,
September 15th, 8, 7 central. You can also stream it, and it's available on the PBS video app.
So you can find that on pbs.org and also on the apps. I'm very excited about this, and I'm so thrilled
that we were able to spend some time in conversation today.
Is there anything else that you would like to say, Ken, before we wrap up?
No, I think that I would let Merle Haggard, who we were very fortunate to be able to
interview for this country music thing many, many years ago,
six years ago, and he passed away soon afterwards. He said, it's what we believe in but can't see,
like dreams and songs and souls. And I love that idea that songwriting, creating songs,
combining music might be these things that we believe in
but can't see. I've quoted you a couple lines from Hank Williams, you know, could you Johnny Cash,
at my door the leaves are falling, a cold wild wind will come, sweethearts walk by together and I still miss someone I don't know
that's all unseen and it is a common if I sang it it would be a combination of music and words
and it's stuff that we believe in like dreams and songs and souls Merle Haggard one of the greatest
of all Emmylou Harris in our film,
later on, five episodes later, this is in the introduction that he says this,
but five episodes later, she said, you want to know what country music is? Get a Merle Haggard
record, any Merle Haggard album, and put the needle, just dating her, put the needle on any
cut, any cut, it doesn't matter which one, and begin from
there. So I think if you take it from this, I always think whenever he appears on our film,
he's like Zeus. And I just think if you take it from this God from Olympus, that it's the things that we believe in but can't see, no pun intended, and is there for us if we expose ourselves to it.
And I think that's the business of art. Leo Tolstoy said, art is the transfer of emotion from one person to another.
Sounds pretty straightforward and simple, and I will sort of leave you with two great philosophers, Merle
Haggard and Leo Tolstoy. And it seems easy, but sometimes it's complicated,
and it's worth the complication. Ken, thank you so much for taking this time. I had just a
wonderful experience bouncing around here in the ether having this conversation and
i highly recommend everybody check out country music pbs.org forward slash country music they
can say hello give a give a hand wave on the internet at ken burns on twitter and this has
been such a pleasure thank you ken tim it's been my pleasure. Thank you so much.
Hey, guys.
This is Tim again.
Just a few more things before you take off.
Number one, this is Five Bullet Friday.
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