The Way I Heard It with Mike Rowe - 492: Jon Erwin—Young Washington

Episode Date: June 30, 2026

Before he became the Father of His Country, George Washington was a young man with doubts, ambitions, failures, and a calling that would eventually shape a nation. Mike sits down with filmmaker and en...trepreneur Jon Erwin to discuss his new film Young Washington, and to explore the remarkable true story behind America's most iconic founder. Jon also shares how he launched The Wonder Project and his mission to tell stories that elevate faith, hope, and the human spirit. Along the way, he recounts the extraordinary legacy of his grandfather, a recipient of the Medal of Honor whose courage during World War II left an indelible mark on his family. It's a conversation about character, conviction, and the people who inspire history long before history remembers their names. This July 4th, make Young Washington part of your Independence Day celebration. See the film, share it with your community, and help spark civic curiosity about the character, leadership, and founding principles that continue to shape our nation. Shout out to our great sponsors NormalFolks.org/Podcast to check out Army of Normal Folks, the podcast making service easier for all of us. American-Giant.com/MIKE Use code MIKE to get 20% off your order. NetSuite.AI/Mike to try NetSuite Next for FREE!

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:03 Boy, did I enjoy the conversation you're about to hear right now. It's with a fellow named John Irwin, who directed a film called Young Washington. And this, of course, is the way I heard it. And I can't think of a more appropriate topic or guest that rhymes with the title of this podcast or the whole reason it sort of evolved from the very beginning than this film and this guy. Yeah, first of all, he's a great director. And he's done a lot of great movies and TV shows. He did House of David on Prime, which was a big hit.
Starting point is 00:00:41 And this movie is coming out just in time for Independence Day. Yeah, it'll be all over the country in theaters on July 3rd. Correct. So we got him in just under the wire. And I'm so glad we did because, you know, there's not much to say about George Washington that you haven't heard. Because most of what there is to say about him kind of starts around the revolution. and goes forward. And then the rest is rooted in mythology,
Starting point is 00:01:08 you know, cherry trees and cannot tell a lie and all that nonsense. This is a movie about the man who came of age very quickly, thanks to his role in the French and Indian War and in the Seven Years War and, of course, in the Revolutionary War. And what the film really does is what I tried to do, and all my little stories once upon a time, which is tell you something you didn't know about somebody you'd do.
Starting point is 00:01:39 Right. And walk his significance in history back to a couple of moments that really inform the man long before anybody knew who he was. And man, not only does this film do justice to that, but the conversation about the film is exactly what's fun to do
Starting point is 00:02:01 after you get a piece of, through the portal back into time. Absolutely. And he knows his stuff. He spent 10 years making this movie. Yeah. 10 years. Well, one of the first things I ask him is, you know,
Starting point is 00:02:14 can you describe what it feels like to be a director to live with the thing for a decade? And now really just right on the verge of seeing it come out. I'm so relieved to tell you that it's a good movie, you know? Because there are a lot of movies that I respect and that I really, really, really want to like. And, you know, they're okay. and they're worth recommending and they're worth watching for those reasons.
Starting point is 00:02:37 But when it's straight up legit, like, oh, man, this is so relevant and so captivating. And for once, when the movie ended, I wanted to see more. Yes, yes. And it's perfect for the semi-Quincennial. Yeah. This is everything that leads up to the Revolutionary War. This is how the father of our country became the general of the army. You see what happened in his life to give him.
Starting point is 00:03:02 him the medal to do what he had to do to win the Revolutionary War. And by metal, you mean metal, metal, two T's. Yes. Yeah. For sure. He was forged in fire. I see what you did there. A different kind of metal.
Starting point is 00:03:17 Yes. But look, this thing we call the American Revolution, it kind of lives in portraits and illustrations and we're taught it so often through days and dates and documents. And it all just feels so dusty and old. Yeah, not this. No, no, this really frames it for what it was. You know, the American Revolution was, in fact, really the first modern world war. It was huge, and it starts, really, with a little fort called necessity that Washington built out in the Ohio Valley.
Starting point is 00:03:55 And it was a botched, horribly failed attempt. No spoiler alerts. No, it happened. hundreds of years ago, dude, I'm not spoiling anything. But when you see the impact and the success of the father of our country through the lens of one of the most
Starting point is 00:04:14 colossal failures of his life, things fall into place. It hits different, as the kids say. Yeah. It's a terrific film. It was made possible, not just by John Irwin, and I say this credit where it's due, because look, you know, if you want to see more movies,
Starting point is 00:04:31 that you're really like, you've got to kind of follow the money back and really, like, who made this happen? So the Wonder Project is a terrific bunch of people who are making great content, and that was founded by John, who you're about to meet. But also our buddies over at Stand Together made this happen. Yeah. And they're doing a lot of good work and a lot of different areas, but for my money, making history interesting to people who otherwise wouldn't care. Yeah. And doing it through the medium of film and doing it well and betting on the right people, that, you know, that matters because stuff like this is always upstream of most of the headlines of the day.
Starting point is 00:05:15 It informs a lot of opinions. And this is liable to change some opinions for the better, I think. Let's see. Happy birthday to us. This is Young Washington and John Irwin right after this. Do do do do do do do do. Dumb. Hey, if you were a fan of returning the favor or people you should know, you need to be listening to a podcast called an army of normal folks because you will love it.
Starting point is 00:05:45 This is done by my old friend Bill Courtney, famous football coach and the subject of a documentary called Undefeated. The doc told the story of Bill's impact on the football team at a very poor school and a very poor part of Tennessee. I think it was. You should watch it. It is terrific. Anyway, Bill is hosting an army of normal folks. It's a podcast that shines a light on the people that I used to call bloody do-gooters, just the normal everyday people who take it upon themselves to go on a mission, to do something to make their zip code a better place, usually with some kind of bottom-up solution. Bill calls these bloody do-goaters his army of normal folks, and every week he shares one of their stories. These are just regular people who are genuinely moving the needle in a surprising way on any number of issues.
Starting point is 00:06:35 He's done over 150 episodes, all of which prove the power of what can happen when regular, like-minded people decide to attack a problem from the bottom up. The stories are all true. They're inspirational, empowering. Some are funny. Most are poignant. But they're all guaranteed to leave you feeling hopeful about the future and about our species. Listen and subscribe to an army of normal folks. on Apple, Spotify, IHeart, or just go over to normalfolks.org.
Starting point is 00:07:02 It's a great website, and this is a terrific podcast. You'll love it. But be advised. Listening to Bill and his guests has been known to inspire in his many listeners, an overpowering desire to make a difference in their own communities. It could happen to you, too. So heads up. Listen and subscribe to an army of normal folks wherever you listen to podcasts. All right, John Irwin, thank you so much for making the time. Oh, thanks for having me. You're kidding me? No, I'm not kidding you, man.
Starting point is 00:07:34 I'm super serious because you've done a couple of things with filmmaking and culture and history that are near and dear to me. I'm fascinated by the nexus of all that stuff. Although you can do all that stuff and still like fix things and do. Now, see, I can't do any of that. Well, then here we go. This is how we start with the power of myth, with the power of projection, with the trap of assumption. You wouldn't believe, well, maybe you would. the number of people who watched 30 jobs for 20 years
Starting point is 00:08:03 and who conclude that, yeah, I'm that guy, man. I can... This is true. This is the assumption that I, but you just gave voice to give audience. Even worse, man. I was an apprentice. For me, it was just a study in failure juxtaposed with actual competent workers and tradespeople
Starting point is 00:08:24 and letting the viewer conclude, okay, well, that must be, X difficult because Mike is failing miserably. Or maybe that's not so bad. Somehow the aggregate brand that was built, at least in my eyes, as a fan, was, oh, yeah, Mike can do all that stuff. This is a good point. And you should just go with that, by the way.
Starting point is 00:08:42 Well, you know what? I did for a while. And I got hired by all the likely, you know, Caterpillar and Ford. But really, it's not that I can't. It's just that in no way does it come easily. Yeah. And so the real estate that I occupied in that little slice of culture was a adjacent to competence. It was really like the willingness to try that I got paid for. And in
Starting point is 00:09:07 hindsight, well, you know, it's a lot easier to try than succeed. Yeah. Yeah, here's to, you have to do things poorly for a long time before you can do them well. Well, what's the Washington quote around failure? Yeah. Failure wants, basically failure recognize is twice amended, I think he said. Basically, the idea is if you admit, and this is a huge part of his life, if you recognize, if you're self-aware, if you recognize that you failed, and if you own it, then you're halfway to solving the problem already, basically. Own it publicly. Yeah. Not enough to like, okay, I'm going to sit down and really do some, you know, navel gazing and Kierkegaardian reflection and make some sort of internal adjustment. No.
Starting point is 00:09:53 You need to go out and say, I screwed the pooch. what a horrific mistake this was. I apologize for that. And I am now ready, it's my favorite scene in your movie, I am now ready to accept the consequences. I learned in my own life many times, but also in the study,
Starting point is 00:10:13 I just love history. And so the study of a lot of great leaders, most every truly formidable leader, whether it's Washington or Churchill, was forged much more in failure than they were in success and much more in difficulty than they were in ease. But the defining difference was their ability to hug the cactus
Starting point is 00:10:34 and kind of own it and acknowledge it. And you're right publicly. And then also apply curiosity to it and sort of evolve. I wanted to do the young life of George Washington because I was much more interested in like, where was this myth carved in granite forged, you know? And under what circumvent? And you get to this chapter in his life where this is where he became the leader in my view
Starting point is 00:11:00 Let me step back a sec, because I want to dive deep in all of it. How's it feel right now? I mean, I've never directed a movie. So I'm assuming you've lived with this thing now for a couple years. You've been through all the pre-production. Obviously the production. Now you're done with the post. You're going to go, this is going to be a nationwide release right before our 250th.
Starting point is 00:11:25 freaking birthday. I mean, things couldn't have lined up. And it's the only film in theaters nationwide on our 250. Yeah. That celebrates the American story at all, which is shocking to me. It's like, I thought there would at least be Independence Day 3 or, you know, or, or die hard four or, or, you know, saving Private Ryan against something, you know. Right. Right. And so, but yeah, this has been a decade in the making for me. I love while working on other, I think I made a commitment a while ago. because there's like a fog to success, and you don't really know it's hard. And so someone should write some book surviving success.
Starting point is 00:12:03 And so after your first kind of breakout, there's a lot of voices and they're loud, but I've concluded that inspiration is kind of internal and quiet. What was the first breakout? I just, so I would say that we did a movie called I Can Only Imagine and raise the money for it to both make it and to market it. So every filmmaker should do that at least once in your life. You're throwing up at a trash can Thursday night before it released.
Starting point is 00:12:25 is we built the film to break even at 15 million in U.S. box office. And it did 17 million in its opening weekend and 86 million overall was the number one independent film of the year. And I had grown up in Alabama, was told to do kindergarten again because I was an ADHD nightmare, you know. And so like I had no means of my brother and I of being in Hollywood or in the studio business. Well, that film was such a hit that it introduces to a great company
Starting point is 00:12:53 right here in Santa Monica at Lionsgate and some other studios and then it was just the pressure of can you do this again, this anomaly thing this is a Lionscape this is not no but for five years one of the great mentors of my life was Michael Burns, Vice Chair Lionscate
Starting point is 00:13:08 sure and and I love The production company that did dirty jobs Oh did they really? Yeah I love Felt and Mike and their my whole career is based off mentors and when I did that deal I said I just want to learn how your studio works and I'm a very curious entrepreneur and I'd like to be seen as an entrepreneur first and filmmaker second and Michael just took me under his wing as it felt. So I'm so curious.
Starting point is 00:13:34 So okay, you get a hit in relative terms financially, you crushed it. Oh yeah, we all. I mean, that's very well. We owned it and everybody did well and we all got a chance to my house and it was a wonderful moment in life. But what I realized on the other. side of that is, you know, when you have the pressures to repeat success and when you don't even really know how it happened. And, you know, our next film was number one, number one movie in America Friday night. When it opened, it was called I Still Believe in. My brother and I were in pre-production
Starting point is 00:14:07 on a film called American Underdog and producing a film called Jesus Revolution. And then five days later, COVID had taken out all theaters worldwide. So I was like, oh, welcome back. Disappointed. But what I learned after that was just, you know, I think at the end of the day, you've got to be motivated by the work itself and the work has to be its own reward and to me I just decided kind of through the dark night of the soul that period to I'm just going to tell the stories that are most moving to me so did this come to you fully formed do you stumble across it was it oh no this is a Michael Burns quote that he loves socrates said I've suffered my way to wisdom and so I think it was just it was just difficulty that allowed me to come to a full of realization of
Starting point is 00:14:49 like, you know, the joy of it is just in telling stories that I think are meaningful and life changing to me and hoping they're meaningful and life changing to other people. It's wonderful when they succeed, and many of them have. But so that led to, I created a series for Amazon called House of David, and that's a story I had wanted to do since I was 16 years old. And it was a number one on prime and 60 million viewers globally. And I had carried around a magazine that I had found on the internet. It was 50 years old that no one understood that there was a movie in there, but it was like a psychedelic Jesus. And it said, Jesus Revolution. And it was very much like a spiritual hippie awakening in California. That movie, you know, broke even in like three days and, uh, and, and there's a movie and
Starting point is 00:15:32 and everything. There is. And then Washington 10 years ago, I, uh, I'm from the South. So I'm very, um, fairness means a lot to me. And, uh, and, and so I could not get in to see Hamilton like a decade ago. And, uh, it just felt unfair. I mean, I, uh, I'm from the South. I mean, I, um, I'm very, um, um, I'm not. I wasn't. And so I'm like, I'm going to rage against this by reading 30 books, you know, which I did. And I fell in love with the story of the American Revolution, but not to tell a movie, not to make a movie or TV show. But I just loved, I mean, it's an incredible story. Well, here's what you did that I want to compliment you on primarily.
Starting point is 00:16:04 And I'm obsessed with this. We did, I don't know, probably 200 stories called the way I heard it. That's what this thing originally was. And in some way, shape, or form, there were all short stories. many of them have been brought to life, reenacted, and so forth. But they all try to go back into, it's something you didn't know about someone you do. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:16:28 You know the name, you don't know the story. That's right. I love that. So, I mean, look, and in the spirit of no new ideas and good-natured theft, of course, I stole this from Paul Harvey. Good day. Picasso said, good artist copy, great artist, steel. So this has been going on for a long time.
Starting point is 00:16:43 Picasso was also obsessed with a model that was diametrack. epitrically opposed to Seizons, which is fascinating. Now you're beyond me. I don't. All I know is the quote. Okay. Arguably, the two greatest artists, whoever lived, one was never finished. The other was done in, like the minute Picasso was finished.
Starting point is 00:17:06 And it was usually in the course of a few hours or maybe a day. That thing was framed and sold and out of his life and he never went back. Which to you is. described to. Sazon, on the other hand, that guy would show up in people's homes who had bought his works and touch him up. He was never done. And Picasso was always done. You know, it's interesting in film, I don't agree with this idea of like the director's cut or a re-release. I think a movie is a reflection of two things. What the world was like at that time, you know, the decade, the 90s, the 80s, the 70s. The time it was made. When it was made, yeah. And what the filmmaker was
Starting point is 00:17:45 going through personally in their journey. And for that reason, I like George Lucas said, films are never complete. They're also abandoned and they're only abandoned. And I think that's the way it should be. I think once they're done, they're done. And they're a time capsule of what the world was and what you were. And they shouldn't be touched. Yep. That's my view. My view is I agree 100%. But tragically, I did not inherit the conviction of my agreeance. And I almost said, I'm Cézahn, as if there was some sort of relative parallel to our respective talents. There's not. But it's not because I don't think my inability to finish a thing is rooted in insecurity.
Starting point is 00:18:29 I just love messing with it. Yeah, me too. I just love going back and going, you know what, what if? And it drives everybody in my life insane. We have this thing that you say the work expands, the time allowed. you get to that day in my world is picture lock. And that's the last time that I can really screw with the story. That's it.
Starting point is 00:18:47 And then I actually delegate it to a fabulous team for finishing. Color. Yeah. And a lot of times, I don't think I've seen the final print of Washington. Just because after I can't change the story, my team is incredible and we do a lot of work together. And I'd rather just wait until it opens. Well, that's why I asked how you're doing, just on a real simple, like human level.
Starting point is 00:19:10 All the work is done, right? You're Sandy Kofax. You let the ball go. It's on the way to the plate. Mm-hmm. There's not a damn thing you can do about it. But, yeah, except wait and see how the batter handles it. Yeah, it's two things for me, if I were to talk really philosophical, I would say for a long time in my life, I think a lot of artists do.
Starting point is 00:19:33 You put so much of your identity into the work itself that you, and it never works in that way. Like if you're welcome to a volatile, you know, life of. And so I think I had to, over time, put less of my identity in the work and just more identity in just doing the work in the sense of like constant improvement in craft and just a love of the game. I love what I get to do. It's a privilege of a lifetime to get to entertain people and putting less of my identity into the result of the work and just more identity into, you know, myself and also just
Starting point is 00:20:09 just into the doing the work and the fun of it and the joy of just doing the work, it tends to make better work. And better work tends to work more. And so, oddly enough, you kind of get the thing that you're no longer chasing a little bit. Just a quick moment to thank my friends at American Giant, again, for proving that high quality clothing can still be made in America for a fair price. They've been at it now for 15 years. Clearly, they've got it down. They source locally grown cotton. They built. their factories and towns across the nation where they can find and hire hardworking locals who care about making a quality product. It's not complicated, but it's not easy. Point is,
Starting point is 00:20:51 when you buy a piece of clothing from American giant, you're not just buying a sweatshirt or a t-shirt or another pair of jeans, which are all awesome, by the way. You're investing in a local supply chain. I think that's important. I also want to thank them for putting the Microwworks logo on a limited line of T-shirts and sweatshirts and donating the proceeds back to my foundation. We're using that money to fund our next round of work ethic scholarships. And I'm sincerely grateful. Check out the high-quality staples, hoodies, t-shirts, denim. It's all built to be worn year after year at American-giant.com slash Mike.
Starting point is 00:21:28 It's quality you can feel. And a true American success story you can be proud to support. Use code Mike. Get 20% off your first order at America. American-giant.com slash mic. American giant American made. American giant American made. And so for me, just the sheer love of storytelling and stories in their meaning and what they do.
Starting point is 00:21:57 And then being able to just take the stories that are most meaningful to me that I think find me in some way over long periods of time. And then trying to transmit that experience to the audience as much as I can is a joy. Beyond that, it's almost like you're a football coach where it's like, you know, I have learned success is the byproduct of incremental improvement over a lot of areas, especially in something like film. So it's all about like how's the special teams, how's the defensive line, how's the punter?
Starting point is 00:22:24 In that world with theatrical movies, it's like, how are the pre-sales, how are our grassroots efforts, how's the, you know, and you have to like fire, you have to execution over many, many areas at the same time is really important. And then what I've learned to really win you have to just catch a lightning in a bottle,
Starting point is 00:22:40 kind of a perfect storm that you cannot create. So you have to keep swinging. I think that you're right about the entertaining thing, but I also, clearly you have an agenda. You want to inform. You want to show the country that there's something important, I think. I watched the film last night on my computer.
Starting point is 00:22:57 I'm sorry, but I couldn't get the damn thing on the TV. No worries. How was it on a computer? Did it work for you? Well, you know what? The thing is, man. I just brought it three feet from my face. It was great.
Starting point is 00:23:08 It was great. And I had headphones in. Fantastic. It was terrific. But one little weird quirk about screeners that I'm sure you've experienced, you know. So like the studio, I guess it was Angel Chuck sent it to you and you sent it to me. Yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:23:23 Right. So it's identified as mine, right? Huge thing on the screen. My name pops up the second we see George Washington in battle in the very opening scene. Like, boom, he's there. And underneath it says, Right row. Yeah, we planted that way just for you. I'm like, what?
Starting point is 00:23:41 This is my name appeared there as well. It's shocking. It's shocking to see your name. You pop up throughout the screener. But my question is, nobody wants a lecture. Nobody wants a sermon. Right? Yeah, that's right.
Starting point is 00:23:54 History sucks. People hate it, except we love it. It shouldn't, though. It shouldn't. Sometimes the telling of history sucks. Well, sure is pretty amazing if it's in the hands of a good story. Oh, it's the best. But, you know, you know, you know, you know,
Starting point is 00:24:07 you did a great job in this movie of telling me an entertaining story that was filled with stuff that I was curious about and was learnable. But I think the classic mistake people make, especially history professors, is they just reverse that. Correct. And we just go in with, okay, facts and dates and names and places and times. Yeah. And that just put a glass eye to sleep. What I like is, I think the documentary filmmaker Ken Burns calls it emotional archaeology, which is a cool term and process and fun of like, man, do everything that you can to put the audience there. Like, what would this have been like in a visceral way, which is what we really tried to do with Young Washington? And if there is any agenda to the work, it's that, you know, at Wonder Project, which is the independent studio I founded,
Starting point is 00:24:59 that Michael Burns at Lionsgate, help me found. we talk about this sentence of stories that restore faith and things worth believing in, whatever those things are. And I think I would submit that America, while imperfect, is one of those things. And it's worth believing in. Where would you rather be? And yeah. And so to me, that is the, and not to say that there's anything wrong with, I'll give you an example.
Starting point is 00:25:24 I think probably one of the most perfect hours of television ever is the finale of Breaking Bad. That is probably, it's so hard to architect and end in television and Vince Gilligan, probably the great showrunner and master of his craft. But I had at some point to stop watching Breaking Bad because I was just meaner as a person. You know what I'm saying? I had to like disconnect from it. So while I'm not saying that those things shouldn't exist because they're incredible,
Starting point is 00:25:49 whether it's Breaking Bad or Game of Thrones or whatever, I would say that there is this need culturally and also an entertainment for stories that pull you to the, the better parts of your nature to the better parts of humanity and pull you back. Don't you think it goes both ways? I mean, to be fair, personally, I agree with you. But how much hallmark can you watch? How much saccharine sweet, G-rated, holy, you know, just... Yeah, but see, I actually think I have strong theories on this. Like, I think the best book on optimism I ever read is Victor Frankl's Man's Search for Meaning, which... The great comedy. Right? Yeah, right. Yeah, yeah. do a musical on that. But it's, you know, this guy survived the Holocaust and yet he had this
Starting point is 00:26:35 kind of optimistic approach. So I actually don't think that the storytelling people want is storytelling that rips out what I think Hallmark does and does well if that's what you're looking for, rips out the stakes of the story. Like let's create a world that's not real to life where, you know, the biggest, the most dramatic decision that is going to be made is, you know, whether Candace Cameron chooses kind of someone from the city or someone. from the country. You know, that's thing. There's no bride.
Starting point is 00:27:01 And again, my wife loves those movies. But my point is, I think what the audience is yearning for is stories that grapple with real life and the grit of real life, but through a lens of optimism and belief. And I think that's what's missing. Or character. Or character. I mean, sound of freedom. Correct.
Starting point is 00:27:20 It's not a feel good. Not at all. Yeah. But you're invested. But you're invested. Or, you know, I could, and my dad and I will watch this film, he's probably watched it. I think he watched it seven times in theaters. Top Gun Maverick, I think, is a good example of, like, you go to that movie, you just feel
Starting point is 00:27:34 you believe in things again. And I think that that's the content that's missing and what we aspire to create. And so the idea of let's grapple with real life, let's tell a story in his gripping and entertaining a way possible we're first entertainers, but let's design and architect the story to inspire the audience to do something that's very countercultural and kind of punk rock, which is to embrace optimism again and embrace. belief in each other and in things that are imperfect like America, but still absolutely worth believing in and worth perfecting together. That's the kind of, so if there is an agenda
Starting point is 00:28:11 in the things that I do, it's that. And it's letting the story do as much of the work as possible and hopefully instigating the journey for the audience where you watch, you know the name Washington, you don't know about this story, you learn about this story. In my view, this was a movie about leadership, like what it isn't and what it is and what it should be, those type questions and you watch it and then you immediately hopefully what I've heard from a lot of people that have seen it you know you're on google that night oh yeah did this happen did this happen do that's the other back part of my compliment it's um don't take this the wrong way but movies and stories i think inherently you just have to realize that all you can offer in two hours is the shallow
Starting point is 00:28:50 end of the pool correct but if you do it right it's going to make a lot of people want to take a deeper dive down on the other side. And that's exactly what the movie does. Well, and you did it, like, beyond the form of the story, an eight-minute podcast episode of yours, I believe. At the crossroads. Oh, at the crossroads. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:29:11 In eight minutes, you had me saying, wait, did this place exist? Did Washington really go there 25 times once on his way to the inauguration? And it was great storytelling. It was a great device of let's hold who the traveler's name is till the end. And to me, that's the job of a storyteller is to entertain and to kind of give a window into the meaning of life.
Starting point is 00:29:31 I agree with you. I like this. Aaron Sorkin said, when you do an adaptation of a true story, you're not trying to take a photograph. You're trying to paint a portrait. You're painting a portrait. And you're painting the most accurate portrait you can. But you have to make, typically, in making a movie,
Starting point is 00:29:47 you're compressing timelines and you're doing composite characters, but you're trying to get that portrait right. I remember when we did the Kurt Warner movie, you know, he signed a ramselman and said, got my story right. And we made those changes typical to an adaptation, but you're trying to paint an accurate portrait so that the audience is then inspired to go find the photographs. Let me tell you what happened to me, and then you tell me if this rhymes in some way with the way you think about the movies you make. I read conflicting accounts of the first inaugural
Starting point is 00:30:17 address by Washington. Witnesses some say he concluded it by saying, so help me God. when he was sworn in. Others say he didn't. There's been this giant debate ever since. This podcast is called the way I heard it in large part because we seem to be surrounded by ambiguity and certainty in the expert class. So here's just like one more instance where, okay,
Starting point is 00:30:44 a lot of people are really pretty sure this happened, did it or didn't it? Well, I certainly don't know. But here's what I know. I grew in Baltimore, not far from the intersection of 175, and Route 1 down in Columbia. There's a holiday in there today. Turns out there's been an inn at that crossroads for centuries.
Starting point is 00:31:01 And it used to be run by a guy named John Spurrier. And John Spurrier got famous because he wrote a book called The Practical Farmer that both Jefferson and Washington loved and endorsed. Spurrier's Inn, or Spurrier's Tavern, was on the way to a lot of important places that Washington frequented. So he wound up staying there over 25 times. And so in my story, and this is where I go totally off the rails, I'm just making stuff up and I'm like, well, wait.
Starting point is 00:31:31 But you hypothesize in a way that it does not, it could have happened. It makes total sense that it could have happened. Well, there's no way these two men didn't share multiple private conversations. Washington admits as much, and of course, John does as well. But what did they talk about? So the hook from my story was, okay, you can fill a book with what i don't know but the only words i'm going to put in washington's mouth are quotes that there's no ambiguity about yeah so what kind of conversation could the father
Starting point is 00:32:05 of our country have with an innkeeper that might somehow be relevant to people today that's the riddle and hopefully what came out the other end was was okay you know but how do you think about what i'm washington like i love the history and i was like wait did this happen it was written a way that was visceral and engaging, and that's exactly what stories should do. Oh, this in existed, this guy existed. He wrote this book. Well, spoiler, just so people can track it. In my story, at the end of one of their meetings where Washington is constantly giving Spurrier great advice on how to run his in, which he inherited from his mom and dad and didn't really want. Yeah. Right. In one of those exchanges, as Washington is leaving, Spurrier promises to take
Starting point is 00:32:51 his advice, so help me God. And in my story, Washington cocks his head and goes, oh, I like the way that sounds, so help me God. That should be at the end of a promise, and a day later, it makes his promise. Here's what we do know, and it actually intersects with the movie I made, is when you read the words of his first inaugural dress. And I actually thought John Adams got this right, the series.
Starting point is 00:33:15 Washington has, plurality when he was younger, and it kind of takes his voice, so he kind of has what would be like a breathy, deep voice. So Washington did. Washington. And he said, no matter, I would rather be known by my deeds than my words. But he would have spoken softly. And this is where David Morse and John Adams gets it absolutely right.
Starting point is 00:33:36 So on the inauguration, everybody was said to be leaning in because they couldn't hear him. Because he spoke in this soft tone or this kind of deep, quiet tone. He had such a resounding presence. But John Adams was like the voice, you know, or Patrick Henry. George Washington. was a guy that walked in the room and changed the room. But quietly, and he architected himself and his ethos and his look. Big news, business owners, for the first time ever. You can try NetSuite next for free. Why is that a big
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Starting point is 00:35:46 Daniel Day. And so I think the reason there's some controversy, around this is because no one could hear him. And it said that he said, so help me God and kiss the Bible. But with that many people with no PA, who knows? Because he wasn't an orator. But what I can tell you is that when you read his first inaugural address and his other speeches, there was absolutely a recognition of what he would call the architect of the universe, the divine hand, being inextricably linked to his rise and to the nation itself. And that's kind of a part of our ethos, the American Revolution being kind of a collision
Starting point is 00:36:25 of faith and thought and purpose and reason, the Great Awakening preceding the American Revolution and the rights of man and kind of the age of reason coming out of Europe. Those things collided in the American Revolution. And so I think it's absolutely in the context of his actual speech, it makes total sense that he would say, so help me God, because what we dramatized, spoiler alert in our film, was that when he really humbled himself under Braddock and really defined himself as the leader he would someday be, he later learned it was 14 years later.
Starting point is 00:36:59 We moved it up into the context of the film that there's Native American chief and his men were firing right at him. And they said could not hit him. And in fact, one of the bullets went through his hat. Their claim was that there was some kind of, the creator was kind of protecting him in some way, some divine hand of providence.
Starting point is 00:37:19 That really stuck with him. And then I think whether it's the fog on the crossing of the Delaware, there's a bunch of stuff in his life where he was like, I don't understand how this happened. I don't see any other explanation for this happening. And I have to recognize some sort of a divine hand in the story of his life and in the story of the nation itself. That was very what he says in his first inaugural heavy on his mind, you know. And so I think within that context, him saying, so help me God, would have been absolutely in character. although no one could hear. So who knows? Who knows? How do you decide where to start a story? Yeah. I'm just obsessed with the formation of things. Like, and anytime there's a leader
Starting point is 00:38:07 that's mythic, whether that's David, you know, in the showhouse David that I made, or if it's Washington, you actually ask, okay, or Churchill, or Churchill, since you invoked. But Churchill, you get to Gallipoli. You get to a massive blonde girl. Biggest mistake of his life. I think 50,000 people died. A lot of people died because of a decision he made. And so what I am obsessed with learning is like, what are the primary characteristics of a person and then where are they made? And so with Washington, what a lot of people don't understand is that the Revolutionary War was a War of Attrition or the War of Posto. That means it's basically you have the largest amphibious fleet ever assembled in the history of the world, filled with Hessian mercenaries, like hired guns, basically.
Starting point is 00:38:48 sent to crush us. And we're not even us yet. And we're not even us. And all of a sudden, that's a whole other discussion. We're not even a nation. We are colonies that are banded together to declare independence.
Starting point is 00:39:01 Or to basically, and then we didn't really know what would happen afterwards. But if there even wasn't afterwards, which was highly unlikely. So the idea that this unstoppable force meets this immovable object, which is Washington. And by force a character
Starting point is 00:39:17 and force of will and force of myth and ethos, this one man, before there was a national anthem or creed or flag, this one person embodied this movement. And his army, people don't understand, was not a standing army. That means every six months, most of your army can just be like, well, that's all that South Carolina, you know, and they would just leave, you know. And so the idea of one guy holding it together like that, where did this person with an absolutely uncommon grit and endurance and the ability to suffer over a long period of time in a way that just outlasted the enemy, which is what you're, a war of attrition, you're waiting on them to just get tired. Where do you learn that kind of stochism?
Starting point is 00:40:01 Where do you learn it? And then you get to this early part of his life and you learn that great characters like that are forged, they're never forged in ease and success and kind of like, um, or alone. Or alone. They're forged in hardship and adventure and risk and failure and brotherhood and, you know, mentors. Adventure. So there was this adventure chapter in the beginning of his life that I knew we were on to something when we went to Mount Vernon to research it.
Starting point is 00:40:34 And one of the gate attendants, she's like, what are you all working on? We're like, oh, we're working on a movie on, it's called Young Washington. She goes, oh, I guess he was young once, wasn't it? And so nobody really thinks of that. And so it was this chapter that in my mind was very much like pride and prejudice meets the revenant. It was his first great adventures. And he made this really big mistake. I mean, it was not a small mistake.
Starting point is 00:40:57 It was a shot heard around the world that he was responsible for that started a global conflict. And then he made this fort in the wrong place and got his ass kicked at the highest levels of failure. Kickery. And he went from Colonel to No. nothing. But then he self-assessed, he humbled himself, he owned his failure, and he became an aide-de-camp for Braddock went back out into the frontier and absolutely defined himself as the leader that he would become. And so I just thought that chapter of how our myths made was so interesting to me. And I think so many of us have either failed in such a way that we think we can't recover
Starting point is 00:41:38 or are so afraid of failure that we don't try, that we don't realize that actually, few failures are fatal and failures shape great people much more than success. And so I wanted to kind of process that of like, what is leadership, where are leaders born, and what is the use of suffering and failure and adventure and risk in the development of yourself? I think
Starting point is 00:42:01 in the human moment, you can handle all of that in a portrayal and in a narrative as well. In a historical context, like Washington couldn't, I don't think he could have possibly known that the French and Indian War that he forced Gumped his way into would become the Seven Years War, which would in turn inform everything that became the American Revolution, which if you're really going to step back and ask yourself what the first World War was in the modern age.
Starting point is 00:42:36 Seven years war. That's it. Right? And so if you go back a little further, go, okay, so it's Fort Necessity. All right, that was a bad idea built in a bad spot. He greenlit that. But wait a minute, go back before that. The first shot that's fired.
Starting point is 00:42:52 We don't know who fires it. Was it the French? Was it the Brits? Was it Washington himself? I guarantee you, John, 98% of the people who are going to walk into this theater are not going to realize that George Washington was a colonel in the British Army. Yeah. We just don't think of it.
Starting point is 00:43:10 Colonel in a British Army, but never given a Royal Army. Commission, which meant that he could have been, you know, there's a line in the movie where a British officer says you could be a general and I wouldn't have to listen to you. And so there was this incredible lack of fairness that he was never able to accomplish on merits alone. And that feeling of the American idea, to me, America is just simply an idea that if you can get yourself here, you can do anything. And there's nothing, it's not, you're not your bloodline. You're not your class. You know. this is the land of opportunity.
Starting point is 00:43:45 You see in Washington that if he was just truly let into these circles and not put down because he was a colonial, I don't know that there is an America today. But yes, he became colonel just before necessity, not Royal Commission, but certainly it was major first, then a colonel, because he volunteered for things he had no idea how to do. And he failed miserably at first trying to do them,
Starting point is 00:44:08 but learned. And he learned this new style of warfare of, of harass and outlast the enemy that he would end up using against the British. So, again, I just think it's a great lesson that sometimes when you're going through incredibly difficult seasons in life, sometimes when you're failing, you're just learning how to win incrementally if you'll just keep going and not give up. Again, understand that the father of our country built a fort on a floodplain surrounded by heavily wooded trees right behind.
Starting point is 00:44:38 There is no inflayed and defallade. You can fire at will, right, into an open fort, which of course is exactly what happened. It was just disastrous. Yeah, and the idea that he just felt the French would face them in this field in honor. That's proper gentleman. The French are like, we're going to hide in the woods and just pick you guys off. And it was a horrible defeat. Like, if it was a basketball game, it would have been like 110 to 2, you know.
Starting point is 00:45:07 And then, again, to make matters worse, He signed a document that he, because he was not. Articles of capitulation. He was not as educated as many others because his father died. We portrayed that in the film. But he missed it, as did his interpreter. And I guess he would have been forced to sign it anyway. But that basically he agreed to assassinating the officer that started this conflict.
Starting point is 00:45:29 And so. Joel Pee, what was his name? Oh, gosh. It's in the film. I'm going to butcher it if I say. Well, it's like eight long, but there's actually a place. today in this country you can visit, like Joel Pines Bluff or something like that.
Starting point is 00:45:45 Yeah, Jamon-Ve-Glen is the- Yeah, that's what I'm talking about. It's like 60 miles out of Pittsburgh. Yeah, yeah. Yeah. So it's interesting that, oh, and by the way, as an aside on this shot heard around the world, that no one knows who fired the first shot at Jamon-Veglum that started kind of the first global conflict. That's how we portrayed in the film. But these muskets that we were using were very temperamental and very old and constantly,
Starting point is 00:46:10 we were doing these very complex, what we would call a oneer, which is a single shot with a lot of precision work in like horse lanes and explosions and mortars. And constantly these guns would not go off. You'd get to like the close up of the gun, click, they don't go off. And so this was a constant frustration as we were filming the movie and enlightening of like, how did people fight with these things? And so, but there was one where we had this kind of like kid extra and we were doing Jean-Mond Voglint and he had his musket and we're on him. And we haven't yet called background action and we're doing we're going and all of a sudden his gun just goes off and obviously blank and he looks at the camera and he's like was I not supposed to fire that shot and I'm like we figured
Starting point is 00:46:51 it out there it is it was you guys we saw 270 years of history right here isn't it weird you know how things rhyme like that I mean when you say the shot heard round the world I think lexington and conquered I mean but yeah but in that same battle we don't know who pulled the trigger, or at least that's the story. That's the way somebody heard it. I think the guns just went off accidentally. I mean, that literally could be what happened in at least one or both instances. But here's what drives me crazy.
Starting point is 00:47:21 These very temperamental guns would just go off, you know. Okay. So I watched Burns version, the American Revolution. Yeah. Let me say first, wow. I mean, what he did with the Civil War, I mean, my dad and I just had weeks of bonding watching that together. Incredible. My dad was a history teacher. Jazz, baseball, Vietnam, National Parks. He's one of our great, certainly one of our greatest documentarians, I think, walking around. Oh, he's the great
Starting point is 00:47:53 documentarian, I think, yeah. But what do you make of it? Like, I watched your movie, and in the film, the way you heard it, the way your advisors heard it, whatever, we don't know who pulled that trigger. We don't know. Now, in Ken's movie, we know, we know. exactly who pulled the trigger. We know exactly who fired the first shot. It was George Washington. Now, there is one account that there's not enough evidence to make that claim. In my opinion. This is what I love, dude. This is what I love. I mean, it's the history for people who don't properly enjoy it, man. It's the ultimate Monday morning quarterback meets a trial, meets looking at the evidence. It's making your best call. But it's very different in a lecture hall when the academics
Starting point is 00:48:39 can just go at each other versus, hey man, I'm writing a podcast. You're making a movie. I'm saying when I dramatize that scene and this early 20s kid has got this camp surrounded, there's 35 of them down there and there's 50 surrounding him. And it's his job to go tell him to leave again. And if they don't, to use whatever force necessary, which is an order he didn't understand, a very unclear order. I don't think he fires his gun. I'm saying when we dramatized it, I'm like everything I know about this character. You know, so there's all kinds of theories. You know, the half king who was there with him, hated the French and said that they ate
Starting point is 00:49:17 his father, whether that was true or not. That's what he said. I don't think that there is near enough to say that it was because the other thing is the account that Washington fired the shot was, as I understand it, decades later in an absolute retrospect. So there was nothing first person in the moment at the time that said, oh yeah, Washington pulled the trigger. that you can't, I would be uncomfortable as a storyteller
Starting point is 00:49:39 claiming that to be true. Do you remember, I don't know if you're old enough to remember this man, you are there. Later I think changed to you were there. This was on in the 70s and... Slightly before I am, 80th, child of the 80s. So I remember a series on the Alamo. And basically, so it's just a big recreation,
Starting point is 00:50:01 but it's presented, you know, in the 1950s, 1960s like John Cameron Swayze, everything is as it was on that famous day in history, except you are there. That's very cool. Right. It's cool. But once you say that, once you say you are there and everything else is the way it was, you're not saying that's the way I heard it.
Starting point is 00:50:24 You're not making a move. See, that's better because first of all, nobody knows how it's, but you know. Right. But it's just a delightfully arrogant pretense to go, okay, the only thing that, you isn't exactly as it was is you're there. So they put the viewer as a witness into the re-created. Good marketing hook. It's terrific.
Starting point is 00:50:44 Impossible to execute. And I'm much more vocal of like this is a commentary. This is a storyteller wrestling with everything that they can learn. And then when you put it up on its feet and you add context and you add hopefully this kind of emotional archaeology to it, it's revelatory. You can process it, but this is how I heard it. I don't know. This is my best efforts to saying of all I know,
Starting point is 00:51:11 this feels emotionally right and authentic to me. Look, I mean, the greatest lesson a filmmaker or a writer can learn from Washington is humility. Correct. It's got to be. Yeah. I think that he, I mean, there's so many lessons to learn from his life, but the way he kind of, he was very self-aware, he forged himself. and he humbled himself when he failed.
Starting point is 00:51:36 And that process of failing, admitting it, humbling yourself, learning. What do you most admire about the man? I know that's broad. What did you learn in the course of making the movie that actually took your breath away? Man, there's so much to learn from Washington as I wanted to make a film about leadership.
Starting point is 00:51:55 You know, what does that mean? Is it important? Okay, if it is important, which I think we could call say it is. Okay, what's the good version of it? What's the bad version of it? And what I learned about Washington, first of all, what I found interesting, and this is again, this is my take, but he was not this boring stoic. This dude's personality raged.
Starting point is 00:52:15 His quest for stoicism and self-mastery was almost like the lid on a volcano. Like there was a lot of passion underneath the surface of Washington that he learned to control in ways that other founders didn't. And like I think Patrick Henry's influential as he was, the revolution would, the reason why he was a great orator, not necessarily great leaders, man, his passions were everywhere. John Adams is the same way. Washington learned to control this massive personality. Now, when that lid blew off, like with Lee in the Revolutionary War, it would say that when he like really reams somebody out, the trees shook, I think, is the actual word. So he had this incredible personality that he learned to control. So that lifelong quest to forge oneself and to control oneself and that and being successful in that is really interesting.
Starting point is 00:53:08 I also found it really interesting like I think the lesson of like be careful who you study and who you admire. He was a guy that couldn't go to school because his dad died. And so he, his, I portrayed in the film, his half brother really mentored him. And there was a question of whether he had tutors or not. But he read a lot. And I do think that that is important, like reading, learning, studying. And then who are you in allegory, I think matters? Because it's interesting that Washington, like, loved Cato, love the play, love the book.
Starting point is 00:53:40 And there's a line that was often passed between the founding fathers that we quote in the film that, I think it does not moral to command success. We'll do better. We'll deserve it. The idea of like, you can't predict success, but damn it, we can deserve it. You can command obedience, but not respect. Correct. And I think that he also modeled himself after Cincinnati, which is where we get Cincinnati.
Starting point is 00:54:04 It's a Roman general that was given total power, but also a farmer. Protected Rome, gave it back twice. And so Washington, like, became his obsession. I think is interesting that he really architected himself, his interior and exterior. He built himself. And over a long period of time,
Starting point is 00:54:23 and he learned through failures and he crafted something very powerful. But I think what I wanted to point the most defining attribute, I think, to Washington that I wanted to point out in the film is here's a guy that through this first set of adventures in his life realized that it kind of wasn't about him, even though it would be,
Starting point is 00:54:43 in the sense that he realized that to lead, you know, the first half of our film, which I think is accurate, as with any story about someone that wants to make a name for themselves, you know, or wants to make it in the big city or whatever. This is kind of a story trope. It's selfish.
Starting point is 00:54:59 It's about them, you know? And I think for Washington it was. He wants to be weighed and measured. Yeah, he wants to advance his station. And so it is about him until his, what we say in the film was his ambition was, he put his ambition in front of his men and he got a lot of his men killed. And I think this guy realized that, oh, leadership is to have. actually serve, to serve the people you're entrusted with, and to serve an idea that is so much
Starting point is 00:55:28 bigger than you, that in service to that idea, you become the embodiment of the idea itself. And the discipline, man. I mean, he was such my experience of the guy, and not just through your movie, but he was such a fan of rigor. He was such a fan of a codified system. Yes. I mean, he loved his men, but I remember reading, it may have been Valley Forge, that terrible, terrible, unthinkable winter, you know, where he has deserters shot in front of his men.
Starting point is 00:56:00 Flogged shot. And he would, yeah, and he had, I think discipline was very important to him. Order was very important to him. Also as an exercise, which is something any American can do. I don't know for you, like whenever I'm in between movies or whatever, I like to like redesign something, like a wall, a room or something because it's like, this is the little thing that I can control. in this uncontrollable, yeah, you know.
Starting point is 00:56:23 And so for Washington, he would always write these very specific letters to his brother Jack about Mount Vernon often before a battle. His brother was Jack? Who's the brother portrayed, his half-brother? That's Jack. That's Jack. Yeah. Okay. And Jack would have been a little older.
Starting point is 00:56:42 We made him younger for the story. He would have been actually, like, in the context of our story, like 17 or 18. But we, again, we're trying to explain that it was his younger brother. was Augustine. Correct. And so Mount Vernon, if you want to get into the psychology of Washington, because Mount Vernon is so well preserved,
Starting point is 00:57:02 you're thinking this guy is under great duress in this war that he cannot control. Mount Vernon is the thing he can control. So the more pressure he's under out in battle, the more letters he's going to write to be like, plant the shrubs here, because this is this one thing that he can control. And so you go to Mount Vernon,
Starting point is 00:57:19 and there is everything is symmetrical. Like if you go into the little rotunda on the left house, you go in and there's two windows. There's the same exact piece of furniture underneath both windows. There's the same two paintings, the same two on both walls. In the same room. Exactly the same. The room is completely, I'm like, was this dude on the spectrum? Like there was something like completely symmetrical about the room. Mount Vernon is in complete symmetry. And so it's just an interesting exercise to be like, this is totally preserved. This is Mount Vernon is this dude's painting.
Starting point is 00:57:55 And what does it say about his personality? To me, it says that there was an extreme quest for order and perfection and balance and symmetry. So that would tell me that then a lot of, you know, he said, are these the men with which I am to defend America? A lot of the chaos of the war would have driven him absolutely nuts. Think about the tactics that ultimately led to his near demise at Fort Necessity, but that he ultimately embraced later in the fight when all those red coats just looked like targets standing in a line. And he told his own men to adapt the same tactics of the Indians and the French who kicked his ass 10 years earlier. That's a really interesting way to think about a guy.
Starting point is 00:58:36 I mean, that's how you can explain two identical paintings on opposing walls in the same room. The man was forced to literally abandon all pretense of order in battle and let his guy's friends. And so that there was this hyper order at Mount Vernon. Right. So you see the two happening that he had to abandon. He had to embrace the tactics of like guerrilla warfare. And I think that drove him, you know, that that was such a grade on him that he wanted this row of roses planted exactly this way at Mount Vernon. And so you kind of see one informing the other. And he did completely embrace a new method of winning. And he was able to endure long seasons of losing and of horrific stage. and he would have been, he would have had some sort of a presence that it's an uncommon person that after Valley Forge or after the crossing of the Delaware before this victory or death kind of like thing to recross the Delaware, it's an uncommon person when a lot of the army could say, all I have to do is get to December 31st and then I can go home. For thousands of
Starting point is 00:59:44 those people to stay because of one person, there had to be something uncommon about this one leader that's like, I'm going to stay and fight and die for that guy, even when I don't have to. And so a lot of storytelling is just really sitting with that and trying to find out what in the world would have forged that in anyone. Don't you think there's this other thing too, which is maybe a level down or maybe not? But I remember when I read, well, certainly at Flight 93, you know Todd and the gang they charge the
Starting point is 01:00:20 cockpit and then years later that attack on the Paris train a couple of guys get up and they just Clint Eastwood did that film yeah with the actual guys movies like that
Starting point is 01:00:32 and scenes in yours when they're done right they make the viewer ask the question what would I do what would I do on Flight 93 I'd like to think I'd be right there with them.
Starting point is 01:00:48 But I don't know. Yeah. I don't know. I'd like to think that I would have learned a lesson from Ford necessity like Washington did and have the good sense to course correct my own life, but I don't know. You know what I came to, I asked this, again, it's fun to have, you never get to have extended interviews. You never actually, you know, you're always answering the same four questions. Not here, man.
Starting point is 01:01:15 But my grandfather, I thought about this in depth. In depth. No, this is great. My grandfather received the congressional medal of honor in World War II. He was a radio operator on board of B29 Super Fortress. One of his jobs was a drop of phosphorus flare. Phosphorus burns 2,000 degrees. It'll burn through steel.
Starting point is 01:01:33 It'll burn underwater. They hit an air pocket. The bomb went back up into the plane, ignited in his face. And instead of trying to save himself, he actually grabbed the bomb like a football, marched it all the way to the front of the plane, threw it out of the front of the plane, of the plane. And it started this series of very, very unlikely events that got him the Medal of
Starting point is 01:01:51 Honor in a week. It was the only, it was a stolen medal from Pearl Harbor because it was the only one in the Pacific. But he was horribly burned. He lived through the war, mostly because my grandmother, when she came back, kissed him, said welcome home, and it gave him the will to live. But he was very much like, like, like, like, the right side of his body completely burned. His arm infused in place. And I remember he said to me, I held his medal when I was like seven years old and not knowing at the time what this would mean later on. But, you know, he said over my shoulder, freedom isn't free. And, you know, he bore the marks of this statement. And, but it did lead me later on in life after his funeral to ask that question of like, you know, would I be able to do
Starting point is 01:02:33 this? What I learned in that exploration, talking to some of the other members of the Congressional Medal of Honor Society. Because the Medal of Honor is like these guys that do these superhuman you know, things in like the blink of an eye without thinking twice and, and where does that happen? What I learned, my grandfather, his dad died, he had to provide for the family when he was 11. He signed up so his brothers wouldn't have to. What I learned was, I remember asking Gary LaTrell, the medal, who's the time president of the Medal of Honor Society, like, how do you make this decision? And the idea is that you don't. You don't.
Starting point is 01:03:13 Whatever you are up to that moment manifests. So it's actually about in the preparation of what has life taught you to become. So when there's moments of these great pressure and stakes, my grandfather had lived his whole life, just sacrificing himself for the people he loved. That's what he did. And so when it was a moment of a bomb on the floor, what do you do?
Starting point is 01:03:37 You pick it up and you try to save the people around you. That's just who you are. So what I took from that exploration Now having said that if I were just to keep talking about this story I was also on a Southwest flights once And this very old guy Like started having a seizure and was like On the floor beside me
Starting point is 01:03:55 And by the way we had just taken off And that plane did not turn around or land So Southwest will get you there dead or alive But I'm like oh we don't care But then like someone helped and then someone else helped And this guy's And the first thing that went through my mind. Literally the first conscious thought was like, well, he's really old and hasn't taken
Starting point is 01:04:13 care of himself. I'm like, oh my God, John, your dad, your granddad's a medal of honor recipient. And so I realized there, oh, I probably wouldn't do anything. A lot of people help before me. I don't know what I would do here. I would crowd that. So maybe that, maybe I'm a storyteller in that DNA, skipped a generation. I learned that day. But, you know, I do think that what I find very interesting is you take these heroic moments. They're actually forged over a long period of time. and you can kind of trace, whether it's George Washington or my grandfather or Churchill or whoever, these moments in their lives
Starting point is 01:04:45 are developed over a long period of time. Of course. And so that's what I learned. I still feel bad about that guy. He was fine. He made it through once we landed in New Orleans. Did they still do the meal service for the peanuts? They kind of did everything as if it didn't happen at all.
Starting point is 01:05:00 They're like, you know, this is, yeah. I love Southwest, but they're just, they're going to get you there. They're going to get you there. You know? What's the old FedEx ad? You absolutely positively have to be there overnight. Yeah, exactly. Even if the guy besides you dies.
Starting point is 01:05:15 Yeah. Anyway. I want to go back to something you kind of glossed over that I think is really important today. And it had to do with this curiosity vis-a-vis books. Yeah. And really, one of the heroes in the movie that you haven't invoked yet is, is fair Fairfax. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:05:38 Played by Kelsey Grammer. It's not a huge part, but what an influence Fairfax had. So when you talk about Washington's curiosity interest in Cincinnati or Seneca or really any of the Stoics, that whole Greek sort of mafia. Yeah. Right? And like even earlier, you talked about mentorship, you know, and that was, you know, Socrates taught Plato and Plato taught Aristotle and Aristotle taught Alexander, who was pretty great, you know. And so I've talked to a lot of people in that chair about how do you bring mentorship back in
Starting point is 01:06:19 to the schools. But right adjacent to that is why were books so valuable? Like there's that scene with Fairfax where he like takes six or seven and Fairfax's like there's one at a time. Yeah, exactly. Right? Yeah. So my theory is that they were in such short supply. Yeah. And that there was... That's accurate. Oh, okay, cool.
Starting point is 01:06:41 Because, like, today we're drowning in information. I've got right here access to everything Seneca and Cincinnati's ever wrote. Think about that. And it's free. Yeah. And I'm not reading it. I'm scrolling through people getting scared and falling down steps instead, right? I'm not like...
Starting point is 01:07:01 Which is kind of fun, actually. It's great. Yeah, yeah. Don't let anybody tell you it's not great. But what is it? doing to our minds. Nothing good. Nothing good.
Starting point is 01:07:10 Cat fail videos. Talk about scarcity with regard to books, information, and greatest. Is it an interesting when there's no longer scarcity of knowledge, it's sort of like if you live too close to the theme park, you don't ride the ride somehow. But back then, you know, in a scene that we portray in the film, it would have happened progressively and earlier in his life. We kind of pushed the idea of it into the movie. But Fairfax was Washington's first role.
Starting point is 01:07:36 patron, kind of like the gate he walked through. And Fairfax, that would have been like the rich people living down the road, Washington would have been that kid down the street, you know, and they would have known about him. But there's a scene in Fairfax's library, and he had 3,000 books. He called them his true tenants. Washington breaks into his house. Yeah, exactly. Crashes a party. Crash his party. Yeah. Right. And that basically leaves with books. And leaves with a gig to go survey Fairfax's land, but also with the books. And the books that he got on surveying, he actually got from Fairfax's cousin. And so what you see with Washington is a guy whose education was denied him very early,
Starting point is 01:08:14 and he became incredibly curious and incredible student and reader. Verocious. And voracious reader. And one of the things that you don't think about the American Revolution and why it worked when most revolutions don't, our founding fathers, it was a war of words as much as it was a war of, you want to talk about some of the great writers. The best. And you just look at Washington's writing and his penmanship and you read, like, you know, we hold these truths to be self-evident that all men have created equal, you know.
Starting point is 01:08:45 That is the rights of man and this age of reason coming over from Europe, colliding with kind of the purpose and faith and it's also the finished product. Like that's not how it was originally written. Yeah. Yeah. Well, Jefferson, I think, much quieter, probably the greatest mind in the history of our country. and in my opinion, but I think that that would have frustrated him greatly
Starting point is 01:09:09 because I think he wrote it a version and then it was Franklin specifically and others of like, people are going to need to, there's going to be some rewrites. Thomas, which I think would have been like, so Jefferson's rewrite, Jefferson wrote,
Starting point is 01:09:20 we hold these words to be sacred and undeniable. Jefferson, I'm sorry, Franklin coming out for, you know, he's a scientist. He's like, no, we should go with like empirical, measurable. We hold these words to be self-evident that all men have created equal.
Starting point is 01:09:33 Just think one of the great. Like obvious. Like today in Perrin, we would go, duh. But the gauntlet of your saying to Europe and to England, and here's the fundamental difference in America, we hold this basic thing to be obvious, blatant in front of everyone's face, a no-brainer, everyone is created equal. That is a defiant sentence and a wild concept at the time. especially as articulated by men in a country, and believe me, I'm only saying it because half the audience is thinking it,
Starting point is 01:10:12 but where do we get off wrapping ourselves in self-evident truths regarding equality while we're holding slaves? And look, I have my theory, but give me yours. How do you parse it the film? If you did a doc or a podcast of just words struck out by the Declaration of Independence, you would get to. sacred and undeniable struck out self-evident that all men are created equal everyone then you would get to subjects struck out with citizens then you would get to an entire paragraph about the evils of slavery struck out to get south there south carolina is not down uh rutledge as i recall yeah and so here is not many people know this it's quite the study that change does not happen when people
Starting point is 01:11:00 realize something is wrong. Change often waits for a moment and doesn't happen. It's a war of convenience and opportunity. So Jefferson tried to be an abolitionist when he was like 30 years old. It was so inextricably linked to the economy and so hard to deal with. Everyone, there was a broad consensus that this is wrong. We don't know what to do with it. We don't know how to fix it. And so what I would say in the kind of the riddle me this, first of all, it's an incredible thing to look around the world as you've always known it and say, maybe it shouldn't be this way. Like, that is its own act of courage.
Starting point is 01:11:36 So for this group of founders to look at slavery and say, we're going to go ahead and throw the gauntlet that we know in our lifetime we will never achieve. And then we don't know how to deal with this national sin. But what they did know, what Jefferson said is, we're going to push this to the work of greater men, to the work of future generations. And so the idea is, my theory is what they realize is their job was to forge a nation,
Starting point is 01:12:03 a solidified nation that was strong enough to deal with slavery. And that that was their work and that that would set the stage for the work of future generations. That's my read on it. And my riddle me this to whoever disagrees with me is if they choose to keep that paragraph in the Declaration of Independence, dealing with slavery. There's no nation. And if there's no nation, there's nothing. consolidated and powerful enough to deal with slavery. It's this kind of like chicken and egg conundrum,
Starting point is 01:12:34 but to blame them for the paradigms of the world they grew up in when they're the ones that actually had the boldness to say, I don't think the world should be this way. Yeah. Is ridiculous, in my opinion. Well, I mean, it's ridiculously noble in part, but I think more so it's just so human. Look, we're all hypocrites.
Starting point is 01:12:56 Yes, that's true. Every single one of us preaches something slightly different than what we practice to some degree. When you think about the mind of Franklin, Jefferson, Adams, all those cats, man, they weren't stupid people. They knew that, A, the declaration was a death warrant, and they signed it anyway. And they also knew it was the biggest invitation ever to just, The rejoinder was going to be you hypocrites. But they did it anyway. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:13:32 For the reasons I think that you're suggesting, it was, like you said, what's a film? It's a reflection of the filmmaker's personal life at the time he tells the story. That's what this is too. That was the moment in time. Yeah. And there was never even supposed to be a unifying concept. There was never supposed to be a gauntlet. It was just supposed to be this committee that's writing a time.
Starting point is 01:13:56 document for all the reasons that England sucks and we're leaving. So the courage of saying we want to summarize this whole idea mumbling up in the colonies in one sentence. That was never on the kind of the like the boxes to check for that committee. So it says something about them that we're actually going to write this sentence that I think they knew would lead to a constant quest. imperfect as it is of like it's a sentence by which we're never able to totally accomplish or measure up. You're talking about all men are created equal. All men are created equal endowed.
Starting point is 01:14:35 We're trying to figure it out today. We were trying to figure it out 50 years ago. What does that mean and how can we form a more perfect union? And so I think that there was the one of the things I love about this generation is they set these crazy goals. And then even in forging the Constitution, which is kind of where we became a nation, they actually baked in this idea. It was not Picasso.
Starting point is 01:15:00 It was the other guy. It was the idea of this is a never-finished document that we will just keep improving upon and they had that self-awareness. That's an incredible thing. So I don't think that you, again, I don't at least do the work of studying the history to understand if you're going to criticize them
Starting point is 01:15:20 for the world that they came from while they dreamed of a new one. That's an amazing observation. actually. The Constitution is my best argument for Cézons process. But they're not selling the Constitution over and over again. At some point, if you're an artist, you got to, you got to move on. You got a frame in someone's house. What have you done for me lately? I would love to do a short film of this painter that's literally breaking into someone's house.
Starting point is 01:15:42 Like, move, move, just get a, I need a brush. You know, he's like, yeah. He's like changing paintings and something. What are you waiting for? Man, where's the story at least? I mean, maybe it's not a film, but you're pops, dude. Phosphorus bomb runs it out of the plane. I mean, technology, I think, by the way, so if to go on that rabbit trail, so we're, so they're the lead plane. Their plane was called the city of Los Angeles, and it's the Pathfinder. So they're leading 800 planes. LeMay, which is kind of like the patent of the Pacific.
Starting point is 01:16:17 Like Curtis? Curtis LeMay, yeah, was like you never turn around. Mission over the man, you never turn around. Well, there was a colonel on board when this happened. And they started to descend because the plane was filled with smoke. He marched it to the front of the plane, threw it out over the colonel's shoulder, collapsed in flames. The colonel was so moved by what he saw that he said, I don't care if they court marsh. We turn this plane around right now.
Starting point is 01:16:40 So they drop out and they were like, we're going to try to save this man's life because I've never seen anything like this. So the air strip at Iwojima had just opened. There was still basically conflict at Iwojima. And so they were actually fired upon as they landed Iwo Jima. The pilot of the plan on that colonel wrote the citation for the congressional medal of honor that night. Normally it takes about a year. It's like a trial to say, does this act merit above and beyond the call of duty? What was his name, your pup?
Starting point is 01:17:09 Red Erwin, Henry Eugener, when they called him Red Erwin. And as my granddad. And basically they, so they wake LeMay up at five in the morning on Guam, which is its own act of courage. He was so moved by what he read that he used his abrasiveness to get it to Washington. Well, all this happened the day FDR died. So it's Truman's first day in office. Oh, man. Truman said basically, I'd rather have the Congressional Medal of Honor than be president of the United States.
Starting point is 01:17:36 So here comes this first day in office. Here comes this hero in the Pacific, this guy through this Bono. And he gets it through Congress in one day, because they all thought he was going to die. It never happened before. So then it's like you were going to give the Medal of Honor posthumously to this guy. LeMay says, no, I want to pin a medal of honor on this kid's neck. Well, there's only one medal of honor in the Pacific. When you get a medal of honor, you get your real one, you get a display medal.
Starting point is 01:18:00 So there's one display medal. It's in a general's display case at Pearl Harbor. So they stripped down a B-29. It's ultra-long flight from Guam, the secret mission. They land, the general's not there. They break into his office. They can't find the key. They smash the display case.
Starting point is 01:18:13 You've got to be kidding. Dead series. All this happens when my grandfather's brother was in Saipan, and LeMay asked him, what can I do for you? He's like, I'd like to see my brother. And it was Tyrone Powers, the actor was doing like a tour and he was a pilot. So he flew my granddad's brother to his bedside. And he didn't recognize my granddad because he was so burned, which started his fear of like,
Starting point is 01:18:34 he was married three months before the war, really good looking. What's my wife going to think? So they get him, LeMay gets this medal. They steal it. They scratch my grandfather's name in the back of it. And they pin it on his neck a week after it happened, which has never happened before. And then my granddad endured like 47 surgeries or something. something came back 87 pounds, clinging to life.
Starting point is 01:18:54 The guy in the burn ward beside him, his wife came in, was so horrified by what she saw. So it's like, that's not my husband. And she laughed like I was dead of a broken heart the next morning. So my granddad was terrified of this. My grandmother comes in, having only received a telegram that he was injured, married three months before the war, he goes away, this super good looking guy. You know, look like Matt Damon. He comes back. Shell of a person.
Starting point is 01:19:15 She comes in. He clutched the bomb like this. So the whole right side of his face. She finds the only unburned portion of his cheek. kisses him and says, welcome home, I love you. That gave him the will to live. And they had five kids all after the where there is. That's my granddad.
Starting point is 01:19:29 Look at this. Holy crap, dude. That's like, Odie Murphy. So the story of like, but the idea of, you know, to go above and beyond the call of duty and what that means to do more than is required of you is how it. That's red. That's red. That's red or when my granddad, yeah.
Starting point is 01:19:45 What are you waiting for, dude? What are you waiting for? There's only one fly. What do you need to do you need some AI? Dude, do you need some AI? Because we got it. No, we do. Yeah, my show, House of David,
Starting point is 01:19:54 is one of the first shows to really integrate fully a lot of new technology. But we're waiting on, I got to put 800 B-229s up in the air. So I've got time. Let the technology. You must.
Starting point is 01:20:03 You must. Okay, if there's anything I've taken from this is Washington opens well, I have to do my granddad's life. You have to, dude, I mean. It's a great story.
Starting point is 01:20:14 I'm just looking at your resume. You've got permission. You can do pretty much whatever you want. I hope so. But I mean, how many people in your position actually have that bit of genealogy? Well, also, I didn't. Here's the thing of like the stories that we list to the books we read, the mentors we seek out, like you said, about Washington. I would go over.
Starting point is 01:20:35 My grandfather had like a photographic memory. He had a stroke late in his life. I would go over and stay with him. How long did he live? He lived 2001. I was 19 years old. And I did not listen to his stories. Like, I loved him.
Starting point is 01:20:48 And we would talk. but I did not listen. And it was not until his funeral that I was sitting there. And it was like he wanted to be buried in Birmingham where he was from. And it was very cloudy, very rainy, cold. And there were like generals and all these people. And then there was a bomber from the 23rd Air Force that found its way under the cloud line and tipped its wings. And then there were these two officers playing taps in echoing.
Starting point is 01:21:19 And I remember going up to one of them and saying, thank you for what you're doing for our family. I'm so sorry you're having to stand out here in the rain, sleet. And they said, no, this is your grandfather. Your grandfather's one of our nation's heroes. This is our honor. And it just flipped a switch of curiosity of like, what did I miss? So I got to go all over the country and find his only living crew members and eyewitnesses
Starting point is 01:21:39 and talk to them and listen. Absolute blessing. And one of them said he didn't save 11 guys. He saved generations of people. And so, and then a long time was like, what does this mean for me? of going above and beyond the call of duty. For me, it's just do the best you can, do more than it is required of you.
Starting point is 01:21:54 What's his wife's name? Betty. Okay. See, this is why I asked you at the beginning, how do you know where to start a story? Yeah. I mean, I ask myself the same question all the time because there's no real right answer.
Starting point is 01:22:06 I mean, Travis Mills, familiar with him? He's a friend of ours. He came back from Afghanistan. I think one of the first or second to quadruple. amputees to survive. Wow. Now, I know this person, yeah. Okay. He wrote a book called, I think, the harder, harder they come or never quit or one of those things. I'll find it. But,
Starting point is 01:22:33 I mean, there's so many things I could tell you about it. Tough as they come. Tough as they come. But the thing is, it's his wife. Yeah. It's his wife. He's out. He's blown up. He's got no arms. He's got no legs. Yeah. And he's got no clear. path forward and his first kid, I think, is on the way, right? And he's just in a hospital on the other side of the world. And he's just, there's just no way, man. There's just no way. Yeah. And, you know, by the time they get in the same room together, she's like, no, no, no, I didn't, you know, I signed on. He said you didn't sign on for this. And she said, I signed on exactly for this, the uncertainty of it. This is, I'm not going anywhere. You know,
Starting point is 01:23:19 my grandmother, there was a moment when my... There she is. These two. That's incredible. Look at that. There was a moment like that. They've had a second kid. They're raising their... I mean, it's just... My grandfather, I remember my granddad had a stroke. This is about a year before he died. And I remember he caught my grandmother's eye across the room. And it was like
Starting point is 01:23:39 two star-struck teenage lovers. And I'm like, what? Here's this guy. Horribly burned. Now he's... Half his body's paralyzed. He can't walk. And the way they look to each other. So after he died, I interviewed my grandmother, and I just said, how do you make, what did you know? All she knew was he had been injured. That's it. Okay, now you come in.
Starting point is 01:23:57 It's her movie. 87 pounds, 45 surgeries already, arm fused in place, horrific burns. Like I've got a picture on my mantle with him because he saw all the presidents with JFK, and he would turn like this for photos, you know, because his face was so burnt. And I said basically, how did you choose to stay? Like how? Especially in this kind of like, you know, Kardashian culture we live in now. Like, how do you do it?
Starting point is 01:24:26 And she couldn't even contemplate, she couldn't understand the question. Like, she's just like, I don't understand. How would I not? Why would I, that was my husband. She's my husband. Like, there was no other option. Right. So the same quality in red that really gives him no choice but to pick up the false first bomb and run to the front.
Starting point is 01:24:45 Yeah. Is the same quality in her. Yeah. I don't want any credit. But maybe a walk-on or something. If this is my next movie, it happens right. It's called The Kiss. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:24:58 It's told through Betty's point of view. Huh. It's got all the excitement you need. But everything you said, it's like, yes, his bravery, his moment. Oh, yeah, with the real strength, man. But her walk in and kiss in the one part of his face that's not peeling off, dude. There won't be a dry eye in the house. And just said, welcome home, I love you.
Starting point is 01:25:17 And that's what gave him the little of. And they had five kids all after the war. My dad being the second. He worked at the VA hospital for 30 years, helping other veterans get their benefits. And yeah, I've just, you know, it's very moving to me. It's certainly the story that has driven my film career is to have those awestruck moments where you say,
Starting point is 01:25:38 how does someone do that? And then to try to cipher their life to answer that question. That's the idea. And I do love at a, when they say a filmmaker, finds their story and tells it over and over again. I love adaptations of true stories. And so, yeah, I always thought continuing Washington. But maybe, you know, that he's dead.
Starting point is 01:25:57 He's gone, man. He's on my. I can get there. Maybe it's time for my granddad story. And if it did, it happened right here. It's so good. I want to be respectfully, how long I've been gone by like hour 20 or something? Yeah, hour 20 exactly.
Starting point is 01:26:12 I'm happy to, I've got time. Well, the guy who's coming in next, dude. is just something else. You got to, you gotta. There's a lot of people that have sat in this chair. You know what? Well, as you were just talking, I was thinking our friend Gary Sinise was here not long ago. I love Gary Sinise.
Starting point is 01:26:29 And I asked him a similar question about Medal of Honor recipients. Yeah. I don't think anybody's ever been in the presence of more of them than him. Yeah. I'd actually written a story about Jack Lucas, the kid who stowed away on a carrier. Yes. Yes. Ewo.
Starting point is 01:26:47 Yes. They found him. They were going to court-martial him. Uh-huh. And he talked his way into the battle. And that crazy son of a gun threw himself on two grenades. It's incredible. One went off, the other didn't.
Starting point is 01:27:00 Didn't kill him. His book's called Indestructible. Incredible. But the point is, that guy forged his mother's name after Pearl Harbor and got in when he was 13. Incredible. By the time he's on Ewo, he's like 16? Incredible. And so he's the youngest Medal of Honor.
Starting point is 01:27:20 16 years old. It's, look, it's the greatest generation for a reason. But that's what I've read. I'm like how, I mean, Washington at necessity was 21, 22. 21 going in 22. So I think it's 22 and it happened. Gosh, don't. Look it up.
Starting point is 01:27:36 The guy who's coming in here next is 22. His name's Ethan Thornton. He's running what's probably going to be the most consequential defense industrial company in business today. He's leading the charge for autonomous weapons. Incredible. He dropped out of MIT to start this company that's now valued at $1.8 billion. He was a teal kid, right? Yeah, he was a teal fellow. Yeah. By the way, yeah, the whole founders, that whole PayPal Mafia. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. But it rhymes, man. Like, like, if you, like, why am I so impressed with the fact that Ethan is 22? Yeah.
Starting point is 01:28:14 When that's kind of the way it was from the beat. It's only recently that we've become so like dope, be dope, be dope, dope. I mean, our founders, our generals. Jefferson writes probably one of the most perfect sentences ever written. He's held. He's 33, I think. He's young. He just wants to get home and get a lady, Mrs. Martha, you know.
Starting point is 01:28:42 It's like, my thing is, young people can change the world. And that's one of the things that I wanted to point out in the film is I wanted to show with Washington that this was an adventure, it's entertaining. But this guy was young. And you don't have to wait to change the world wherever, or your world, wherever you are.
Starting point is 01:29:01 How old was red when he picked up the bomb? He was 23. In that world, there's a pattern here. By the way, you should do something of like, I'm always interested in, somebody told me one time, if you're around great people, don't learn what they do, learn how they think. So as many people have sat in this chair, it'd be interesting to say, like, what are the common characteristics of thinking or, you know, values that you find?
Starting point is 01:29:25 I'll give you one that you don't read about a bunch. They're agitated. They're contrarian in a way? They're contrarian. They're all, they're open to the reverse commute. Yeah. They're suspicious of the direction where everybody is going. Interesting.
Starting point is 01:29:42 They're looking for an alternative way to do it. But mostly they just wake up agitated that the world's not quite the way it ought to be. And they're the ones that let that agitation finally. They're disagreeable. I agree with that. By the way, we are a nation founded by rebels. Like remember that. You know what I'm saying?
Starting point is 01:30:01 Like these were contrarian. You know, they didn't like the way the world was and they dreamed of a better one. And they didn't just dream of it, man. And then they rolled up their sleeves and they willed it into existence. When in the course of human events, it becomes necessary. Are you kidding me? That's not a dream. You know, somebody asked me.
Starting point is 01:30:22 Necessary, yeah, it's true. Ooh, it becomes necessary for necessity. Yeah. Coincidence? Maybe not. Yeah. Oh, I assume you saw 1776 the musical. Yes, not in a great length of time, but yes, yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 01:30:39 You know, there are so many things you said reminded me of it, but mostly just as a very different piece of art. Yeah. This is a Broadway musical that for me did more to open that portal to the past than really any other thing I've ever seen. You know, here's my hope, whether it's 1776, certainly not, I finally did see Hamilton, never with the original cast, but multiple times. But you're not bitter.
Starting point is 01:31:09 I'm not bitter about it, but I'm like, I'm going to rage against this. I was kept out of kindergarten. Now it's this play. And it does something to you. But I will, I hope, if there was any invitation I could give, first of all, I hope people love the movie. It is out nationwide. It's the only movie that celebrates the American story in theaters nationwide on R250.
Starting point is 01:31:30 So I hope you love it. Go check it out. I made it from my whole family. My youngest is nine. So it's visceral. It's PG-13, but in a way that he loves. So go take your family to see it. Or you don't care about America.
Starting point is 01:31:42 I'm kidding. But it's a... No, I don't think you are, man. It's... Go see the movie. Having said that, my hope is that people will go on the same... Sounds like 1776 might have started it for you. Go on a bender of learning the origin of our country.
Starting point is 01:31:55 First of all, the story lives up to its hype. It's an incredible story. Yeah. Like, once you start learning, you can't stop. But second, you know, cynicism and gratitude can't each other out. You cannot feel both emotions at the same time. And so I think I would argue that so many of the problems that we're having come from the fact that we don't know our origin story.
Starting point is 01:32:18 And we don't understand why we're here and what America is. And I think if you take the time to learn it, all I can tell you is what happened to me. What happened to me is when I really took time to study the American Revolution and the founding of our country and the idea of what America represents it is. I was filled with on wonder and gratitude and a sense of stewardship and pride. and like this American experiment, this idea, is somehow entrusted to us. 250, that's a cool anniversary.
Starting point is 01:32:49 But you go to Greece or somewhere, like where we film House of David, you realize, oh, we're still like a little IKEA story. This is still a new idea. And it's entrusted to us. And my hope is that people will see the movie, love it, and then go on their own quest. And then the story will do the work.
Starting point is 01:33:04 But of just understanding who we are, why we're here, and that we're a nation found by ideas and ideals. And that's my hope. That's my hope for ultimately for what I hope the movie provokes. It's the same thing when I went through your eight-minute podcast. At the crossroad, yeah. Like, I instantly had to know, did this really happen?
Starting point is 01:33:24 What does this mean? And is this is this tavern a real place? And that's my hope is that people will see the movie that will love it. And my oath is that, you know, I'm going to do as much as I can to tell American stories. And whether it's my granddad's is a great idea or continued Washington or whatever, that would be my dream if the movie really works in a fundamental way. And but I do think ultimately we have way more that unites us than divides us and we've just lost sight of it. And my hope is that the movie will be one of those things that could be an agent of getting us to love the ethos of our country together. I think it can do that seriously.
Starting point is 01:34:08 But I also think given the occasion, it's a celebration. Yeah. It'll make, I mean, in real time, what I watched it in June, tomorrow, you know, right after this podcast drops, you can watch it on the 4th of July. Yeah. It is a terrific way to celebrate the country, but it's also who called Washington the indispensable man? Oh, man. See if you can find that. Someone did call Washington the indespensable man.
Starting point is 01:34:36 man. And that is a true statement. For sure. It's undeniable that if this guy does not, and here's the crazy thing is he knew. He had an awareness, especially when he went back, as he said to the gallows to become president. He knew he embodied the concept. He knew he was the galvanizing figure. And twice, he gave up absolute power, gave it back to the people after his model, Cincinnati, that is incredible. Someone that's so aware of their power and so willing to give it up.
Starting point is 01:35:14 I don't want to end on anything remotely cynical, but when you think about what drives power today, what drives ambition today, when you look at how hard someone will work to hold elected office, when you look at the absolute absurdity of people staying in office for 50, 60 years. Right? Yeah. Like that when you see the political superstructure become the goal of the individual, that's not what Cincinnati was thinking. That's not what was baked into any of the founding documents.
Starting point is 01:35:53 Yeah, the idea of a republic, this idea of government of the people, by the people, for the people. I think it's such a simple concept, but it's the last line of the movie and I think it's true. The idea that to lead is to serve. That's the job. It's not about you. It's not about what you can accomplish. It's not about it's to lead is to be in the service to the people that you're entrusted with and to the idea itself. You know, JFK said ideas live on, you know, that type thing.
Starting point is 01:36:24 I think we would do well to remember that. And then I also think, as I've studied it, what's missing of like, I'll tell you how to cure a partisan divide. a dictator. Like our form of government, one of the things that makes our form of government unique is our ability to argue. And a republic is indistinguish, you cannot separate a partisan divide
Starting point is 01:36:47 from the idea of a democracy and a republic. So we got to remember how to argue well in the sense of like, the point is we can even celebrate. We get to argue. There's some countries where if you argue, bad things happen to you. That's not America.
Starting point is 01:37:02 We get to argue. And that actually is one of the things that makes us unique. But in studying the American Revolution and in studying books, I'm like, what is the difference? I think one of the defining differences is you had a group of people that actually had true intellectual curiosity to find out what works and what was true. And I think what we've lost is we just want to be right. It's kind of very tribal and it's us versus them. There was partisan divides then. In some cases, you could argue it was even worse. We don't have duels anymore. But maybe we should.
Starting point is 01:37:34 Maybe we should. Hey, look, that's a deep rabbit hole. What was missing, though. The death of manners is linked to the absence of consequence. And a duel was the ultimate love letter to consequences. Maybe we should bring duels back. You heard it here. But basically, but basically, even like Jefferson and Adams dying 50 years to the day after the document that they co-wrote after they were on each end of a partisan divide and then wrote letters to each other.
Starting point is 01:38:02 and then died on the same day of the document they wrote 50 years later. It just shows that they could win each other over. They had the courage to be wrong and to admit that they were wrong and to evolve in their thinking. And they had true intellectual curiosity. And I think a basic respect for the other side and a basic loyalty to the overall idea despite their differences. And we would do well to remember that as well. Like we're not each other's enemy, even when we differ.
Starting point is 01:38:35 We're just trying to figure this thing out, you know. Young Washington will remind you of all of those things. Who said it, Charlie? James Thomas Flexner, historian. He wrote a book called Washington, The Indispensable Man. Oh, so then I can't steal it for the title of this, but maybe I could. I don't see why not. Good artist copy, great artist steal.
Starting point is 01:38:54 Hey, man, you know what? It all rhymes, doesn't it? It does. And I don't know you well enough to say this, but I would wager reds looking down giving you a big thought. That means a lot to me, man. Although there is nothing like a great conversation. Many of them have been had across the table. So I'm honored to sit then, to sit here. Look, I'm a fan. I can't wait to get my lawyers involved after the kiss goes to number one with Betty and Red. You heard it here. You know what's interesting is just trying to crack the story.
Starting point is 01:39:24 Yeah, yeah. Man, you've ruined me. Now I'm going to be releasing a movie. I'm like, oh, my grandmother's kiss. It's her point of view. Oh, my. Gosh. Ever since Roe said, where do you start the story? And now I see it. Now I understand. And then if Washington really works, everybody's going to be like sequel to Washington. I'm like, no, but I watch the micropagic.
Starting point is 01:39:43 I've got to go do my granddad story now. You know what? It's providential. It's a divine hand. It's a thing. Wonderful conversation. Real pleasure. Real pleasure.
Starting point is 01:39:52 Great fun. Go see the movie. Bring the whole family. You shall be restored. Thank you, John. He said it. Great. Thank you.
Starting point is 01:39:59 This episode is over now. I hope it was worthwhile. Sorry it went on so long, but if it made you smile, then share your satisfaction in the way that people do. Take some time to go up and leave us a review. I hate to ask, I hate to beg, I hate to be a nudge,
Starting point is 01:40:38 a nudge, but in this world the advertisers really like to judge. You don't need to write a bunch, just a lighter two. All you've got to do is leave a quick five-star review. Not four. All you've got to do is leave a quick five-star review. And not three. All you've got to do is leave a quick five-star review. Definitely not too.
Starting point is 01:40:55 All you've got to do is leave a quick five-star review. We need five. All you got to do is leave a quick... Even if you hate it. Five-star... Especially if you hate it. Video. Thank you.
Starting point is 01:41:08 Yeah.

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