Unblinded with Sean Callagy - Michael Uslan: The True Story of Batman With Sean Callagy
Episode Date: February 10, 2026What does it really take to will an impossible vision into existence?In this unforgettable episode of Unblinded, Sean Callagy sits down with legendary producer Mike Uslan, the man who helped bring Bat...man to the big screen when everyone said it would never happen.This is not just a Hollywood story.It’s a masterclass in conviction, persistence, rejection, and identity-level belief.Mike opens up about decades of “no’s,” being dismissed by studios, losing jobs, burning bridges — and why none of it mattered once he committed fully to the vision he knew was right.This conversation is about betting on yourself before the world agrees with you.What You’ll Hear in This Episode- Why Batman was considered “dead” in Hollywood — and how Mike refused to accept it.- The unseen emotional toll of carrying a vision alone for years.- How rejection sharpens belief instead of weakening it.- Why conviction must come before validation, not after.- The difference between “wanting success” and being willing to suffer for it.- How identity — not talent — determines who breaks through.- What most people misunderstand about perseverance.- Why believing early is lonely… and unavoidable.Timestamps00:00 – Opening: Belief Before PermissionSean sets the tone for a conversation about conviction, rejection, and seeing what others miss.04:45 – “They Told Me Batman Was Dead”Mike shares the moment Hollywood dismissed Batman—and why he refused to accept it.11:30 – Early Rejection & Creative IsolationWhat it feels like to believe in something no one else does.18:10 – Conviction vs. ValidationWhy external approval is a dangerous compass for creators and leaders.25:05 – The Long Road to Batman’s RevivalYears of persistence, setbacks, and quiet belief before the breakthrough.32:40 – Timing, Patience, and Staying the CourseWhy success often arrives later than expected—but right on time.39:50 – Identity, Integrity, and Creative CourageHolding your values when pressure demands compromise.47:20 – Influence Without Selling Your SoulHow Mike navigated power dynamics without losing himself.55:15 – Storytelling That EnduresWhy timeless stories come from truth, not trends.1:02:30 – Failure, Pain, and the Cost of BeliefThe emotional toll of staying committed when outcomes are uncertain.1:10:45 – Legacy Is Built in Invisible MomentsThe unseen work that defines impact more than applause.1:18:20 – Advice for Creators, Entrepreneurs, and DreamersMike’s guidance for anyone building something meaningful.1:26:40 – Reflection on Batman, Culture, and ImpactWhat Batman became—and what it still represents.1:35:15 – Final Lessons on Belief and EnduranceWhy the impossible often just needs time and faith.1:48:30 – Closing Thoughts & GratitudeSean and Mike reflect on legacy, belief, and staying true. Powerful Quotes from the Episode“They told me Batman was dead. I knew they were wrong.”“If you believe in something deeply enough, you’re willing to endure being misunderstood.”“The only way this doesn’t work is if you quit.”“Nobody joins you at the beginning. That’s the cost of being first.”Key Takeaways- Vision precedes permission.- Rejection is information, not identity.- Most people quit right before momentum begins.- True believers don’t need consensus.- Legacy is built by people who refuse to let go.Why This Episode MattersIf you’ve ever:Been told your idea was unrealistic.Felt alone in your conviction.Questioned whether the fight was worth it.Wondered how long belief has to last before results show up.This episode is for you.This conversation is a reminder that the world doesn’t reward potential —it rewards people who refuse to let go of what they see before it exists.
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The whole world was laughing at my Batman, and that killed me.
He said, don't you understand that since Batman went off the air in television,
the brand is as dead as a do-do.
He said, nobody's interested in Batman anymore.
This was a dream I had since I was eight years old.
For the next five months, I was working 20-hour days all the time.
I had no relatives in Hollywood, so how do you get there from here?
Perseverance, passion.
They said this was the worst idea they ever heard.
They said, you can't make serious comic book movies.
You can't do dark superheroes.
You can't make a movie out of an old TV series.
Nobody's ever done that.
I decided was that I had nothing to lose, so I stood my ground.
And if Batman and my journey have done nothing else, that for me meant everything.
I made a lot of that up.
I hope I was right.
So, no, Michael, congratulations and everything you've done.
It is an honor and privilege to have you here.
Thank you.
And I'm a little intimidated.
for like 14 different reasons, not the least of which is you bring an H-bomb to the party.
Is that true?
That you're a Harvard guy?
No.
You're not a Harvard guy?
No.
I'm an Indiana University.
Wow.
I'm so much less intimidated because I despise Harvard.
I played at Columbia.
But congratulations.
You guys are ranked number three in college football right now.
Yeah, it's the first time in history that Indiana's had a good football team.
Let's hear for that.
I grew up. It was all about basketball, Bobby Knight. It was about swimming in Mark Spitz.
But my God, it's football now. Who to think? So this is even better because you don't have to go to Ivy League of school to recreate the universe and create billions of billions of value. Make some noise for that.
So thank you for being here. It is an honor. We spoke back in the green room for a few minutes.
and I'll just share it.
Same thing I shed there.
I'll share with these folks
and just like hear the physical energetic connection
is the space of Batman
and the time frame
between when I was 3, 4, 5, 6
watching the Adam West
Bert Ward
Batman and reruns
to
1989
Michael Keaton
Jack Nicholson
was a time
I desperately
miss Batman
when they took
Batman
reruns off the air
with Adam West
when I was
little
we actually
wrote
to the
New York
TV station
to ask them
to please
put them back
on
like that's
how much
this meant
to my
heart and
being
so it is
such
an
unbelievable
honor
to have you
here
so
Michael
can you
just
share
how do we get here? Like what what's this look like for you growing up? Where do you intersect with
Batman and please take us from there? Sure well you first of all you can blame me for having that
silly TV series taken off the air. Look I get it if you were a little kid back then it was great
but back then in January 1966 when this premiered I was a teenage hardcore comic book fan
I had already met the creators of Batman, Bill Finger, and Bob Kane, and they told me what their vision was in the creation of Batman, and it was meant to be a dark night, to be taken very seriously, battling deeply disturbed villains in the shadows.
So my goal was to erase from the collective consciousness of the world culture these three awful words, pow, zap, and wham.
So, let's hear from Michael.
right
um and just because some folks you know
if you never saw
never saw an episode of the
adam west bert ward batman if you never saw it
say yes yeah few people so um tank mj
do we have a quick clip
all right let's let's see it so
can can you hold your breakfast down
for one moment because we want to support people
in seeing what was that you helped eradicate to what is.
I hope it's the Bat Tussi scene.
It may be worse.
It may be worse.
So here we go.
We don't want Michael to leave, so let's pause.
And then do we have our other clip?
Yes or no?
Michael?
Okay, so hold on for one sec.
So just like, what's present for you?
What was present for you when you first saw that?
Horror.
I realized 20 minutes into the first episode that this was a comedy and that Batman was played as a joke.
The whole world was laughing at my Batman and that killed me.
So that night in the basement den of our house down in Ocean Township...
New Jersey.
Yeah.
In front of my two best friends, Bobby and Barry, I made a vow.
I made a vow like young Bruce Wayne once made a vow,
except Bruce Wayne made his vow over the slaughtered bodies of his parents in the street.
My parents were safe upstairs in the kitchen.
And I said somehow, someday, some way, I will show the world the true Batman as he was created in 1939.
That's where it started.
And that is Zeus energy.
If you feel that Zeus energy, say yes.
The absolute certainty commitment to something.
immovable, resolved, decided, unstoppable.
Am I hearing you correctly, sir?
Yes, you are. To me, it all starts with passion.
You have to be passionate about something.
You have to feel it virtually burning through your veins.
And I mean, I'm a blue-collar kid from New Jersey, folks.
My dad was a stone mason, my mom was a bookkeeper.
I didn't come from money. I couldn't buy my way into Hollywood.
I didn't know anybody in Hollywood.
I had no relatives in Hollywood.
So how do you get there from here?
Perseverance, passion.
Yes.
And an incredible amount of influence mastery,
because you had to cause a lot of yeses
and we get there in one moment
that were driven by that passion and heart.
And let's watch just one more scene
to demonstrate the ridiculousness,
but just pause for one more second thing.
Before we do, though, remember, for those that don't know,
Batman became Batman, beginning with the...
murder of his parents.
In cold blood, murdered in front of his eyes as a child.
So imagine that's where it begins, and now we're seeing Pow and Zap, to understand where
Michael's heart would hurt.
Now, I was a little boy, so I had no idea that Batman's parents were murdered.
I'm three and four and five years old, and I was born in 70s, so 73, 4, 5, on 3, 4, 5, I'm like,
pow, zap, yay, fun, cool.
Because they had no idea of what this character actually was
at the depth and the drive and the trauma
and the recreation of reality.
So imagine, and let's hit this next scene,
imagine this is what Michael,
who understands what Bob Kane and the creators created in 1939,
imagine if you thought that was bad,
imagine this, please.
Oh, no, not here.
This was the straw that broke the camels back.
Here comes to wave the day.
They oughta be able to take off on it.
They have!
Something sure seems to be found in that trash can, Buzzy.
Joker's good. What a kick turn.
But watch Batman trimming!
Joker's shuffling, now he's cutting back to meet the curl.
He caught it! He's riding the hook!
Fuck.
Batman can't be Joker.
But watch him front for what?
Make the noise of this.
Michael, my God.
Please.
I'm sure you remember this.
Do you remember this, please?
So, many years later,
I'm at San Diego Comic-Con
on a Batman panel,
thousands of people in the room, SRO,
and they announce at the last minute
there's going to be a guest panelist
and who walks in but Adam West.
And he sits down next to me
and he grabs the mic
and for the first time ever,
he said, you know, I've come to realize
there can be many different interpretations
of Batman.
There doesn't have to be simply one Batman.
and it was a very, very kind gesture.
So I took the microphone and I said, you know, Adam, every two seconds Robin on the show was going,
holy chair, holy car, holy this, only that.
I said, but I'm now going to let 12-year-old Michael out for a moment.
And I'm going to give the microphone to Michael at age 12.
And I then looked at him and I said, oh my God, I'm sitting next to the back.
of the swinging 60s.
Holy shit.
And with that,
the place went crazy. He stood up,
gave me a bear hug. I gave him a bear hug.
And we made peace.
Wow. Thank you.
Because
correct me if I'm wrong.
So Adam West is the person that played Batman
in the Campy series.
And he was
deeply offended and upset.
when the movie in 19, it was 89, am I correct, 89?
Yes, correct.
Yeah, right.
89, the Batman movie came out with Michael Keaton playing Batman at Jack Nicholson,
that he was deeply offended and upset that he wasn't going to play Batman.
Am I correct on that?
Yeah, yeah, he wanted to either play Batman or, as he used to say,
I'll at least play Uncle Batman.
And as if those of you have seen the 89 movie that Tim Burton directed,
there's kind of no room for that interpretation of,
Batman anymore. Yes. So what happened? You go from I, Michael, am horrified at this.
And if I could, actually, one half a step back. So where did your love for Batman come from
in the comic? How did you become introduced to Batman in the comics? Thanks to my older brother,
Paul. First of all, you have to understand, my older brother was a superstar in every sport he
ever did. And I barely could swing a bat. And no pun intended, by the way. And I escaped into a world
of comic books, a world of superheroes. And for me, it was Superman and Batman and Spider-Man
and all the DC and Marvel superheroes in particular. That was my world. And they, my mom said that
that's what taught me how to read before I was four years old. By the time I graduated.
I graduated high school at Ocean Township High School.
I had over 30,000 comic books dating back to the 1930s.
Wow.
From the day my, we moved into our house,
my dad never once could get his car in the garage.
It was Florida ceiling comic books.
And that's where the passion was nurtured.
My parents were very supportive.
They knew they had a strange son.
And they catered to my interests.
I attended the first comic book convention,
convention ever held on the planet earth.
I was 14, there were 200 of us at the first Comic-Con.
And I got to meet people of my community.
I found it was a community.
And we got to meet for the first time, all of us fans face to face,
or more accurately, pimple to pimple.
But it was really incredible.
And I knew that I had to make comic books and superheroes
part of my adult life.
If there's anything shown
that my dad ever taught me it was as a stone mason he would get up every morning
before dawn work six days a week from age 16 when he dropped out of high school
to help his family survive the depression till he was 80 years old my dad woke up
with a smile on his face and couldn't wait to get to work he was an old world
artist a real craftsman and what he built out of stone and cement just incredible
and when you live in a house like that and you have somebody who has that kind of an attitude,
how can you not want to wake up on a rainy Monday morning and say,
boy, I can't wait to get to work.
Wow.
So Paul and I went to work for my dad during high school,
and it was the worst thing I ever experienced in my life.
We were carrying bags of cement and bricks.
We were tarring foundations in the heat.
And that's when my dad explained to me, Michael, you need to find your own bricks and stones.
Wow.
That's the difference.
How masterful a storyteller and context setter is Michael.
Make some noise for that.
Yeah, thank you.
Really.
Because this is what we're teaching, influence, mastery, what to do with it, how emotionally get yourself to use it, to generate your bricks and stones in life.
Like, that's what we're doing here.
And really, I had no idea how masterful you were already.
Thank you.
It's remarkable.
So from there, what is it about was Batman your favorite?
And if so, why?
Batman was my favorite.
And it's for a very simple reason.
He was one of the only superheroes with no superpowers.
Amen.
His greatest superpower is his humanity.
And I could identify with it.
Everybody can identify with that.
It transcends borders.
It hits cultures.
He also, as you pointed out, has the most powerful origin story witnessing as a child the murder of his parents before his eyes.
He has the greatest array of supervillains ever created.
And I was having lunch with Stan Lee, my mentor and friend.
Those of you who don't know.
Let's hear for Stanley.
And can I drop a quick footnote?
We have licensed Stan Lee's AI voice and make some of our videos with his voice.
but please back to you. Well, I first met Stan when I was 11 years old. And there'll be more about
Stan as this conversation generates. But Stan said to me, he said, you know, Michael, you've got
to remember when you start doing these movies, that it's the supervillains who are just as important
as the superheroes, because ultimately they define the superheroes. And he was very right
about that. And the last bit of magic of Batman, the car.
I mean, that car.
Amazing.
You will have to drag me off this stage
or Michael will have to leave first because I will be here for the next four days.
And I just, like, I cannot tell you this.
So, and fun footnote,
do you know David Maisel, founder of Marvel Studios?
So did you know David was here at this immersion?
He spoke two days ago.
That's great. I know David. It's a great guy.
Yeah. So we had a, you know,
this is like unbelievable and it was just pained my heart to say how much more of a DC guy than
more of a guy I am but you know we'll stay here and quick footnote so um going off track just
streaming consciousness Batman I'm sorry Superman versus Muhammad Ali larger comic book of course you have to
know that um your feelings impressions about that and when that came out I was working at DC
when that came out. So I was behind the scenes at the time that book was being prepared.
And at that point, Muhammad Ali was maybe the most famous person internationally that existed at the moment.
And he was a superhero in his own right. So the idea that DC had of setting up a battle of the century
between Superman and Muhammad Ali worked on a lot of levels. And the theme was basically made.
humanity toward man.
And the themes of that particular issue were very, very strong, very, positive.
And it was one of the great projects that D.C. undertook.
Amen.
And I loved it as a child.
I loved this day.
I have my copy of it.
I got it literally fresh in the store.
And the cover of it had Superman and Muhammad Ali fighting in a boxing match.
And the entire crowd, or almost all the crowd, were famous people.
And so you would see their faces on the cover and you open up the inside cover and their faces were numbered.
And then you look up the number and the name of who it actually was like Farah Fawcett and other famous people of the day.
I mean, it was beautiful and remarkable.
So we have this world of Batman and your love for Batman.
And how does this turn into your life's work?
Well, I was always looking for an opportunity to get a lot of.
at my foot in the door somewhere somehow that would take me on a path into the world of comic
books and movies.
And that opportunity first arose when I went to Indiana University.
It was the early 70s folks.
It was a time of great experimentation on college campuses, and that's all I'm going to say about it.
But in response to those times, the College of Arts and Sciences began an experimental curriculum
department. If you had an idea for a course that had never been taught in college before,
and if you could get the backing of a department on campus, you then had the right to appear
before a panel of deans and professors and pitch it. Even though I was an undergrad, I was a
junior, I could literally teach a course on campus for three hours of credit. I said,
what an opportunity. Nobody in the world, there's never been a college accredited course on comic
books before. So I wrote a syllabus and I went to the folklore department and I met with my professor.
I said, look, comic books are our modern day mythology. The superheroes are contemporary folklore.
I said the Greeks called them Poseidon, the Romans called them Neptune. I call him Aquaman.
The Greeks called him Hermes, the Romans called him Mercury. I call him the Flash.
And my professor said, you know, Michael, you're right. If you go back and look, it doesn't matter if
we call it King Arthur and the Knights of the Roundtable or the Avengers, it's the same thing.
I will back you.
Wow.
So I went in to appear before the dean and the professors, my hair down on my shoulders, I'm
wearing a Spider-Man t-shirt, package of comic books under my arm, my hippie love beads, thank
you very much.
And I walk into this cavernous dark room and the dean is sitting at the end of a table.
He's got that little pair of half glasses at the end of his nose looking down at me over his
glasses and says, so you're the fellow who wants to teach a course on funny books at my university?
I knew I was in deep trouble.
I launch into the first pitch of my career. He lets me speak for two minutes and cuts me off.
He says, Mr. Yuslin, come on. I read comic books when I was a little boy. I read every
issue with Superman I could get my hands on. But all comic books are are cheap entertainment for
little kids, nothing more, nothing less, and I reject your theory.
Wow.
This was now a life-changing moment for me, because what I decided was that I had nothing to lose, so I stood my ground.
And I said, Dean, may I just ask you two questions?
He said, ask me anything you want?
I said, are you familiar with the story of Moses?
And he looked at me like I was out of my mind?
He said, yeah, so?
I said, so, Dean, very, very briefly, could you just summarize the story of Moses for me?
He sits back.
He goes, Mr. Yuslin, I don't know what game you're playing here.
but we have a few minutes yet, I'll play it with you.
The Hebrew people were being persecuted, their firstborn were being slain.
Hebrew couple placed their infant son in a little wicker basket and send them down the River Nile.
There he's discovered by an Egyptian family who raised him as their own son.
But when he grows up and learns of his true heritage, he becomes a great hero to his people.
I said, stop.
That was great, Dean.
Thank you so much.
You said you read Superman comics when you were a kid.
By any chance, do you remember the origin of Superman?
He said, sure, the planet Krypton was about to blow up.
A scientist and his wife placed their infant son in a little rocket ship and send him to Earth.
He said, there he's discovered by the kents who raised him as their own son.
When he grows up, he stops, stares at me for what I swear to you is an eternity,
and says, your course is accredited.
That's it.
The superpower of human influence.
If Michael can, you can.
Is it valuable to have speakers here?
Yes.
Thank you.
Amazing.
By the way, if you thought before this moment that Batman had superpowers, say yes.
Yeah.
Batman had none.
He was a master.
And he developed himself at every level completely.
his mind, his body, his spirit
from the place of the deepest trauma.
And that is why Michael loves him,
why I love him,
and why so many people have Batman as their favorite superhero,
because Spider-Man was bitten by a radioactive spider
and developed superpowers.
Superman is an alien from another world
that the gravity works differently on him here
and a number of other dynamics.
The Hulk is the Hulk,
and all of these creatures,
the flash, superpowers,
they all have superpowers,
Batman has none.
And as Michael shared, his humanity,
Batman, no matter what,
would not only not kill the supervillains,
but he would risk his life
to save their life
because he would not
want to become what killed his parents.
Am I hearing you correctly, sir?
Absolutely.
May I tell part two of what just happened?
Yes.
There was a follow-up to this.
Yes.
I was so excited, Sean.
I raced back to my apartment, and I called my mom and dad in New Jersey.
And my mom said, Michael, this is very exciting.
This is great.
But if you don't market yourself, if you don't market your creative wares, nobody will
ever hear of it.
And I said, Ma, I'm 20 years old.
I'm in Bloomington, Indiana, and I have no money.
What am I supposed to do?
She said, you're a smart boy, you'll think of something.
So I hung up from my parents, thought for two minutes, and I picked up the phone.
And I called UPI United Press International.
Now, back then, UPI was as big a new syndicate as the Associated Press is today.
I asked to speak to a reporter.
This poor man gets on the phone.
I need to interrupt.
Do you understand what you're listening to?
Just fucking do this.
Thank you.
Please back to you.
This reporter gets on the phone, and I started screaming at him.
I go, what is wrong with you?
He goes, excuse me?
I said, you're supposed to be the watchdogs of our society.
You're not doing your job.
He said, what are you talking about?
am I talking about? Are you kidding me? I just heard there's a course on comic books being taught at Indiana University.
I said, are you telling me as a taxpayer in this state, they're now using my money to teach our kids comic books?
I said, this is outrageous. This must be a communist plot to subvert the youth of America.
And I slammed down the phone. Oh my God. It took this guy three days to four.
find out if there was such a course. He found out who the lunatic was teaching it, shows up at my
doorstep with a photographer. They do an article. It's a third of a page long. It gets picked up
by virtually every newspaper in North America, a bunch in Europe.
Unbelievable.
Listen, this has been an incredible lineup, right? We had Charlie Sheen here. We had Ralph Macho here.
We had arguably the most brilliant woman in AI in America
that was Google's chief decision officer
and ran their AI program to train 20,000 people at Google.
And we had David.
And when we had this conversation,
this was, and I thank Brian Esposito,
it's here for Brian, for Michael being here, right?
So thank you, Brian.
And we just, like, we had eight folks coming to speak.
We have still a sugar at Leonard and Gary Vaynerchuk and Kevin Mayer that acquired Lucas Films and Pixar and Marvel for Disney, Sadia Khan tonight.
And it was like, oh my God, like, this is unbelievable this opportunity of all these speakers.
And I was like, we just can't, we can't.
I can't tell you how grateful I am because I, and I want to say so precisely, I don't want to in any way shape or form.
limit all of the prior insanity,
but there has been no more practically useful conversation we've had than this one.
The dude just picked up the phone, disruptively went from LODES, created virality before they were computers.
That's what this guy did, and you could do the same.
Okay.
Sorry, Michael.
Please back to you.
Well, I got invited on radio and TV talk shows.
Every class I ever taught, their classroom was filled with television cameras and reporters.
NBC Nightly News, the CBS Evening News.
There was one day I had Parade Magazine, Family Weekly, and Playboy.
I mean, everybody was into this.
And the word was spreading.
So two weeks later, my phone rings.
And it is this exuberant male voice.
He goes, hi, is this Mike?
Yuselin.
I go, yeah.
Hi, I'm Mike.
This is Stan Lee from Marvel Comics in New York City.
It's crazy.
I call this my Burning Bush moment.
I was talking to my God.
And Stan said, you know, Mike, I'm seeing you on TV.
I'm reading about you in newspapers.
What you're doing is great for the whole comic book industry.
How can I help you?
And that was the moment Stan changed from my idol to my mentor.
That's unbelievable.
And eventually building up a friendship.
How unbelievable, dude.
I mean, Stan Lee, many people relate to.
Until I did some research a little bit more recently, about two months ago, I thought Stan Lee was the creator of Marvel Comics.
He was not, but he is the face, the identity of Marvel.
Who is Stan Lee, your mentor?
Who is he in the comic world and the Marvel world, according to Michael Eustlin?
He is the co-creator of the entire pantheon of Marvel superheroes.
He is the person that elevated comic books.
Up until that time, comic books were being aimed at 8 to 12-year-old boys.
And Stan started to write more intelligently in a more sophisticated graphic storytelling manner,
along with the fabulous artists like Jack Kirby and Steve Ditko,
who worked with him, created with him.
And he turned comic books into something that,
you could continue to read as you hit high school, as you hit college.
And he opened up the audience worldwide to older people which ushered in the age of graphic novels,
which is where we are today.
So I don't know how you measure that, but it really is immeasurable.
Wow, unbelievable.
And has anybody here, if you have never read a comic book ever, say yes?
Okay.
If you've never read a graphic novel, say yes.
Okay.
So how would you articulate, Michael, what graphic novels are, just so we can contextualize all this
and then go back into the 70s rollout up until you acquire this option, which I cannot wait to hear this story.
But what is a graphic novel according to Michael Eustlin?
Those of you who are not Gen Z, you need to.
tune in because this is one of the ways the world is changing. Graphic novels, think of
the floppy comic books, the individual issues we all read. Think about putting four
or five or six of them together and publishing it as a book form. Okay, that's the
concept of a graphic novel. Go to a Barnes & Noble while there's still some left and
go through the aisles and you will see an entire row of graphic novels and then you
will see two rows of manga. Manga are graphic novels coming out of Japan. There's Manoa coming out of
Korea. And this is where it is all moving. I think the last statistic I saw was currently
50% of all Gen Zs and millennials are reading graphic novels monthly. 50%. Overall, for all
groups, it's 30%. And it's growing in leaps and bounds. I
I just spoke at New York Comic-Con, Javitt Center, 225,000 people.
It's about one-third now Asian groups that are set up there.
The feeling is within just a couple of years,
it will dominate both San Diego Comic-Con and New York Comic-Con.
That's how fast things are changing.
Whether it's American or English-speaking graphic novels,
graphic novels coming from Europe,
or the fastest-growing audience out of Asia.
Amazing. And to give you just a bit of an illustration, a graphic novel that I loved incredibly was Batman and Jack the Ripper.
So this is a deep graphic novel, and he just opened up, and Batman is in the time of Jack the Ripper, and the greatest detective ever, because Batman was introduced, not in a comic called Batman, but in a comic called Detective Comics.
and now Batman is in pursuit of Jack the Ripper.
And that's not necessarily known as a great graphic novel,
but it was a graphic novel I love.
And then at some point, like Batman was like the lone ranger,
but like seriously, like not in jest.
So this world in my 20s of graphic novels emerging
became something I would do, Michael, on every Friday.
I was in the beginning of building this formula, this work,
and not wanting to go blind and be brought.
broke and my de-stressor wasn't alcohol. It wasn't drugs, thankfully, but it was going to, at the
Bergen Mall, the comic book store, and buying every single Batman detective comic, all the graphic
novels, and then I would spread to getting Superman, and there's, and for those, again, I don't
know, there's, there's, like, alternate storylines running for these characters as the proliferation
of more and more comic books came out through the 1980s and to the 1990s.
And it's an entire universe of dynamics.
So, again, I thank you for all that.
But so what year is this you're teaching in Indiana?
What year?
I'm sorry, what year are you teaching these courses?
This was the early 70s.
Okay, so how does...
72.34.
Now, Stan Lee is your mentor.
So how do we move towards you and Batman?
Okay, so there were two giant steps to come.
Two hours after Stan call me, I get a call from the president of D.C.
Comics.
And they said, we've been listening to you on the radio, reading about you in magazines.
You're a very innovative young man.
We'd like to fly you to New York and discuss ways we could work together.
Okay.
I'm in New York, and they offer me a job where I would work in the offices during my summers,
and then they would put me on retainer and help me pay the rest of my way through Indiana University.
Wow.
So.
I'm on the job less than a week in New York.
It's the end of a day.
I hear yelling and screaming coming from down the hall.
I think somebody's being murdered.
I go running down.
It's the editor of a comic book called The Shadow.
The Shadow is a very, very famous character in the history of media.
Dark, mysterious.
And the singular major influence on Bill Finger and Bob Kane in the creation of Batman.
And all the Shadow's adventures took place in the 30s and 40s.
And it was the editor of the shadow.
So I said, are you okay?
He goes, no, I am not okay.
I go, Denny, what's the problem?
He said, they just told me, they switched our publishing schedule, and that a shadow comic
book script is due in by tomorrow afternoon.
I said, so why is that bad?
He said, Michael, it's bad because I don't have a shadow script.
I don't have a shadow story.
I don't even have an idea for a shadow story.
I said, I have an idea for a shadow story.
He said, you do?
I didn't.
But I recognized that the door was open a crack, so I shoved my foot in.
He said, all right, come in, sit down.
What's your idea for a shadow story?
You're going to love this.
My wife, Nancy, at that point, my girlfriend, Nancy and I,
just came back from a trip tonight.
And when we were up there, we learned that back in the 30s and 40s, people were going over the falls and barrels.
And walking across Niagara Falls on a tightrope, I said, picture this shadow and a bad guy battling on a tightrope over Niagara Falls at night with floodlights going.
He said, now that's a great visual.
That'll make a great cover.
But what's the story about?
I said, well, I was just getting to that.
The story is about smuggling.
What are they smuggling?
Well, they are smuggling drugs.
And he says, well, Michael, you know, a story, you need a creative take.
You need something really creative.
I said, Danny, this is the best part.
I've been saving it for last.
They were going over the falls and barrels back then.
False bottoms in the barrels.
That's where they hide the drugs.
They go over the Canadian side.
They wash up onto the American side.
That's how they'd get them across.
He said, now that's different.
That's creative.
Can you have a full script on my desk by 6 o'clock tomorrow?
I said, not a problem.
He says, go do it.
I'm now a writer for DC Comics.
Unbelievable levels of self-mastery.
If you're present, you would say yes.
Influence mastery, if you're present to it say yes.
Ecosystem merging process mastery say yes.
He's got to have the dean say yes.
He's got to have the press say yes.
He's got to then have the creator of the shadow say yes.
It's incredible.
And the power of the stage and the microphone
is what generates the inbound call from Stanley, Marvel, and DC.
The intersection of the entire comic world
is in search of Michael Euslin
because Michael has created a stage and a microphone for himself,
not only in the college classroom,
but also in the media, on radio, on television.
why can't you do the same?
If you're inspired to do the same, say yes.
If you're willing to commit to do the same, say yes.
You don't need all the yeses.
You just need the right ones.
Present to it?
Yeah, let's hear for that.
Okay.
So, thank you, Michael.
So the shadow, and please keep us going.
This is a, if you are enthralled, say yes.
Okay, please.
I pull an all-nighter.
I get the script.
done. I hand it in. Two weeks later, I'm walking down the halls of DC Comics and who's coming
toward me, but a very important editor, one of the most important editors in comic book history
who reintroduced the dark Batman to comic books after that thing went off the air. And it is a gruff
guy. He was a marshmallow once he got to know him, but he was pretty gruff. And he sees me come
and he goes, hey, kid, I said, yes, Julie. He goes, I read your shadow script.
I said, you did?
He goes, yeah, it didn't stink.
I said, oh, thank you so much.
Thank you very, very much.
He goes, how'd you like to take a shot at writing Batman?
Oh, my God.
I still get the chills.
I still get the chills.
What did you feel in that moment?
Stunned.
The fact that I can still, whenever I say it today,
still get the chills up my neck,
gives you an idea of the impact it had.
This was a dream I had since I was eight years old to one day write Batman comics.
And when my first Batman comic book came out, through the tears, admittedly, I panicked.
I said, oh my God, this dream I had since I was eight has come true.
I don't have a dream anymore.
I need a new dream.
And that's when I remembered back that cold night in January 66.
I said, okay, now's the moment.
I got to go make dark and serious Batman movies.
I have to show the whole world the true Batman.
And that was the next step forward.
What may ask, what was it Batman, Detective Comics?
What was your first Batman creation?
Detective Comics No. 460.
I want Detective Comics number 460 team for sure.
Yes.
And if you want to see the shadow.
with Niagara Falls,
it's the shadow number nine.
Guys,
let's pull up and put up on the screen,
shadow number nine,
let's grab that,
and Batman,
Detective Comics,
right?
Detective Comics episode 460.
So Detective Comics 460,
Shadow number nine,
who shows up on the screen
in the moment in honor of Michael.
If you're inspired,
say yes.
Yeah,
yeah.
And if you note,
it's also Michael's
influence master,
in his contextualization, emotional and energetic transference, and delivery.
If you're present to that, say yes.
If you find, I'm not saying that Michael, that you like Michael most, that's not the question,
maybe you do, but if you find his influence mastery in delivering the truth of the points
for you to take away, is the most powerful of anyone yet on this stage, say yes, undoubtedly.
Yeah, but now come all the setbacks and all the heartbreak.
So which is this now? I can't see.
Yeah, that's my first Batman story.
Let's hear for that.
And who's on, I can't see.
I'm like, what's on the cover?
Well, first of all, you see the logo for DC Comics back in the 70s up there, the line of superstars?
I designed that.
And that was one of my proud contributions to DC Comics.
I figured if Batman existed in the real world and villains were analyzing this, they said, nobody could be that great.
Nobody could have so many skill sets.
There has to be more than one Batman.
And this group of criminals come up and they look at everything.
All right, one clearly is acrobatic.
One clearly is really strong.
One clearly is super smart.
And they believe that there are three men who together comprise a team that everybody
believes is one Batman.
And Bruce Wayne gets onto this and sets them up so that it looks like what
are saying is actually what the case is and then he uses it to boomerang back and defeat them
wow that is absolutely unbelievable unbelievable and how did you continue do we have shadow let's let's go
shadow number nine um so yes please take us from there and then whenever you guys have shadow
just put it up um so what happens from there now this vision of bringing batman to the big screen
please. All right, so now I needed to go to work in the movie business, movie and TV business.
But again, I know nobody in the industry. I have no relatives in the industry.
So my senior year at Indiana, every Friday, I went to the library, they got a copy of Variety
magazine, which is the Bible for the movie TV industry. I took a yellow notepad and a pen.
I'm that old. And I would write down the names of any executive that I ever saw.
listed, what their title was, what their company was. At the end of my senior year, I had a list of
372 executives in the movie and TV industry and was able to type out and send 372 resumes
to specific human beings, not to human resources. Hold on now. Hold on now. So if you've ever
used AI, say yes. If you could produce
372 letters to ideal potential
ecosystem partners for you in two hours or
less. If you know that's true, say yes. If you have not
done it, say yes. No judgment. This dude did it on a typewriter.
That's why he's sitting here. And there's no
Yeah, I'm going to go take it. One sec. One sec. One sec. Wait, wait, wait, one sec.
It's not judgment to feel bad from. It's simply to make a behavioral change.
He didn't dream of slaying the dragon. He went out and found the dragon.
And he sprinted into the cave.
Repeatedly and continuously.
There is no more efficient embodiment story of HologiS than what you're sharing.
The efficiency with Richard Sharon that said, and Michael mentioned in the greenroom,
I was like, yeah, I kind of go off a tangent or something.
I'm like, dude, you are insanely masterfully laser focused with unbelievable heart energy
and transference.
I had no idea.
And I don't say to agree.
This is what I do for a living.
This is my mastery in the world.
The words I'm saying to you, my opinion is about as informed an opinion is on the planet.
Like, that's what I do.
and I'm just, brother, I see you.
This is incredible how you deliver, but please over you.
I attribute that to my mom.
My mom taught me and my brother the meaning of commitment and perseverance.
And I go back to the Little League story where I couldn't swing a bat,
and I had a jerk for a coach.
I was eight years old.
And at the end of one little league game, come on, I'm eight years old,
this coach pulls aside three of us,
just out of range of our parents where they could hear it,
and starts screaming in my face and says,
you guys all struck out more than once this game.
You cost us this game.
The three of you are a bunch of clowns.
Get out of my face.
Oh, my God.
And I went home hysterical.
And, of course, my mom had her mom radar going,
and she knew something was up.
And I said, I hate him.
I hate this whole thing.
I'm never going back.
And my mom says, yes, you are.
And I got really upset.
She said, listen to me.
She goes, I'm going to talk to him.
That will never, ever, ever happen again.
I promise you that.
But Michael, you made a commitment to your team that you would show up at every practice and every game.
And sometimes when we make a commitment, it becomes a matter of what we call honor.
And we have to honor those commitments.
And sometimes doing that will cause pain.
So you have to endure a little bit of pain.
But this is a matter of honor.
And you have to fulfill it.
You don't have to go back next year if you don't want to.
And it was my mother's making us understand this whole concept of commitment, perseverance, and pain that have helped both me and my brother through life.
My brother was in a horrible motorcycle accident.
He was in the hospital for a year.
Oh, my God.
I had 26 operations.
Oh, my God.
And was the fifth microsurgery leg
reattachment in the country.
Oh, my God.
And through all that pain and all that suffering,
it was my mother's, what she put into him
about persevering, enduring the pain,
and getting across the finish line ultimately.
So it impacted us in different ways,
but it was the same thing.
My God. Wow.
Let's see everyone else.
And, if I may ask this,
so clear.
So we break things, just for fun,
To give Michael a sense of what we're up to,
just throw the full formula slide up there, tank for a sec.
So this conversation that you're sharing
is for us, the work that we claim we're in
is the codification of all results ever produced in the world.
It's a small claim.
And we say we have the only complete holistic diagnostic,
dynamic, interconnected actualization tool
for all of human AI business emission acceleration
on Earth that explains,
the rise and fall of the Greek and Roman empires,
explains the story of Moses,
the proliferation of Batman and Marvel,
your life, everything, mine, everyone's here.
And so we're having a conversation right now with your mom
about self-mastery,
the seven components that liberate or destroy
our ability to take zone action,
and you are a master of taking zone action.
But then you have to cause yes.
So it isn't just the perseverance,
it's the mastery,
just the concept of how you communicated
with the people in the newspaper
and how you framed it out.
This outrage.
It's a communist plot.
That's an unbelievable demonstration of human influence.
Any place that came from, was it your mom who's also a masterful communicator?
Where is your masterful ability to create yes from?
We say, and no, there's four steps, 12 and dispenseable, almost four energies in that codification.
Where did yours come from?
Because it is remarkable.
I think it comes from both my comic book influence and my Jersey influence.
Okay.
Let's hear for that.
Look, we have a Jersey attitude, right?
That can't be beat.
I got to tell you a story.
Do we have time to...
We have.
Dude, they could...
You guys can do whatever you want.
If you want more of Michael, say yes.
Okay.
Yeah.
All right.
Here's what I mean by Jersey attitude.
I had a comic book property
that I wanted to make into a movie,
and Bruce Willis was interested in it.
This is many years ago.
And his agent manager, I'm talking to them.
And they said, all right, we're going to set up a lunch
for you to meet Bruce and talk about it.
He said, Michael, you know, Bruce can be challenging sometimes.
And if he has a bad attitude or something,
please don't take it personally.
I said, I think I can handle it.
I'm OK.
So I go to meet him.
And he's already sitting down.
I introduce myself before I can even get my butt in the seat.
He goes, you know, the only reason I took this damn meeting was because they told me you were a Jersey boy like me.
He said, is that true or is that just more Hollywood BS?
I said, no, actually that's true.
And he goes, yeah.
I go, yeah.
He goes, where are you from?
I said, well, I grew up at Exit 105 and today I live at Exit 145.
At that he smiles, he stands up, he goes, only a Jersey boy knows how to talk like that, comes over and gives me a big bear hug.
I said, Bruce, where are you from?
He said, exit two.
I said, exit two, screw you.
That's Delaware.
That's not even you chosen.
What is exit two?
Kate May is exit one.
Pensocking.
That's, okay, Pennsock.
That is super funny.
But he got it.
You know, it's this attitude.
We both respected each other.
That is super funny.
I think that's part of it.
Yeah, absolutely.
So let's throw up just shadow number nine real quick.
I know we had a, so something in my peripheral before.
just so we can have that on the screen and get a quick description if we don't mind Tink.
And as we are sourcing back to Shadow Number 9, so we're not yet at, here we go.
So this is, I can't see.
Is that over the, did it end up being over Niagara Falls?
Yeah, that's Niagara Falls in the background.
That's where it all started.
And the Shadow was a great radio show.
Is that right?
Yes.
originally a radio show and a pulp magazine
created in 1931
and that's super cool
and I mean there's so much
that I'm sure of one there's just like curiosity
when were comics
originated
do you are you present to that
like what what's considered to be the first
American comic book or around what time frame
if you happen to know Michael
well there's different ways historically
you can answer this question
but I'll say the modern day version of the comic book
took place in the
mid-30s when a couple of brilliant guys decided to take a newspaper comic strip, fold it in half,
fold it again, fold it again, staple it, cut it, put a 10-cent price sticker on it,
and then dropped them off at a bunch of little outlets around Manhattan, and went back the next
week and found they were all sold out. And he said, oh, this may be something. And then the
next major step forward was when a gentleman named Major...
Malcolm Wheeler Nicholson formed a little company, put out a comic book called New Fun Comics in
1935, and that company ultimately became DC Comics, joined in 1939 by timely comics,
which would later become Marvel Comics. And it was the need for superheroes as we were
approaching World War II. That's what really propelled the comic book industry. Superman was created in Action Comics 1,
June 1938 and that opened up the floodgates.
Batman May 39, then came Wonder Woman, Human Torch, Submariner, Captain Marvel,
and it just exploded from there.
And Captain America was that pre?
Captain America was December 1941.
How's that for a coincidence?
There we go.
Created by Joe Simon and Jack Kirby.
They were two young Jewish men who were keenly aware of what was happening in Germany
with Hitler, what was happening in Europe and wanted to bring it to the attention of the United
States, which up until that point were really turning their backs on it. They were really not
trying to acknowledge it. They were trying to appease a lot of people and countries. And on the
cover of Captain America, number one, there's Captain America slugging Adolf Hitler in the jaw.
Let's pull that up. Let's throw that up on the screen. Captain America slugging Adolf Hitler
face, Captain America won. That is unbelievable. The power of story, the power of
heroic unique identity is this landing okay you need your heroic unique identity you're not an accountant
you're not an attorney you're not a financial service provider and if you are you are forgot
forgotten before you're done with the sentence of what you do that is not what you do unless you
choose it and that will be a very foolish choice about as foolish as leaving batman on surfboards
with spray shark repellent.
If that is landing, say yes.
And being the goofball comic
that is not your answer,
being the hero. If you hear that, say yes.
So please,
now this vision of film is present,
and where do we go?
Now come all the setbacks.
372 resumes went out,
I got two job offers.
Oh, sorry, what is that?
Out of 372 resumes,
I got two job offers.
Wow. One was to go to work for a talent agency in New York, work in their mailroom.
They were willing to pay me $95 a week. I would have to relocate on my own dime from Indiana to New York.
Nancy and I planned on getting married after we graduated. I didn't think the two of us could live comfortably on $95 a week in New York City.
Second offer from Los Angeles, producer of a lot of these big movies like earthquake and roller coaster and some of the disaster films said, I'll make you a production assistant.
You'll go for coffee. You'll do a lot of back then we called it Xeroxing.
Move to L.A. on your own dime and I'll start you at $95 a week.
Plan B.
always have a plan B and C and D
let's hear for that
you never know about the twists and turns of life
so plan B for me reluctantly
bitterly I went to law school
the Vietnam War was still on
if I went to law school I continued to get my
2S deferment from the draft
and I didn't want to be there, but that's where I was.
And it turns out I don't think I could be doing what I'm doing today
if I hadn't gone down that path that I didn't want to go down.
Because I got out of law school, and I had no job prospects.
I wasn't making any headway.
And where did you go to law school, Michael?
Indiana.
Oh, cool.
Stayed in Indiana for the whole time.
Got my master's and my doctorate there.
And so Nancy and I moved back to,
my parents home. We were living in the bedroom that I grew up in. And we were there for months.
I was working construction on my dad's crew while I was trying to go for interviews in New York.
Nothing was happening. I remember the one day I just teared up. I said, I'm going to be working
for my dad the rest of my life. This is going nowhere. And it was at that moment in time
where I got a call from United Artists, which was a
major motion picture studio, the only one based in New York City, and they said we have a
legal business affairs job open. The head of it saw your resume and would like you to come
in. Now what they didn't know is I had two resumes. One was just mentioning about legal and
how I had done a legal paper, never mentioned I wrote comic books or anything, and the other
one never mentioned I went to law school. So I was sending two resumes to each movie
and TV company, one to legal and business affairs, and then one to production and programming.
Wow.
So I was getting two job interviews at the same company.
I had this one thing in L.A. It was my first job interview.
I pull into CBS Television City and Hollywood, and I have a meeting with the head of legal
and business affairs. I'm in a three-piece suit with an attach case. I have a rented Ford Pinto.
And I go running across the parking lot, up the steps down the hall.
There was a receptionist there, clearly from New York.
And I didn't know that they kept people waiting for meetings.
I had no idea.
So he kept me waiting for like 40 minutes before he would see me.
And I had my next interview with the head of programming at CBS,
and I was running right into it.
So I finally got up.
I had my interview with the lawyer.
and I look at my watch, I've got six minutes before my meeting is supposed to begin with the programming person at CBS.
I run down the hall past that woman, run down the steps, run across the parking lot, get in the back seat of the Ford Pinto, and I changed my clothes.
I put on jeans, a T-shirt, a Steven Spielberg-type baseball hat.
I went back rushing back in.
I go up to the same receptionist.
I said, I'm here for the programming meeting.
and pardon my French, but she looks at me, she goes,
you got balls, kid.
A quick superhero costume change is what I'm hearing.
There was no phone booth around.
What could I do?
Yes.
So then what year are we in?
We are in 76.
Okay.
So it'll still be my correct.
It's three more years until you...
I finished law school, working for my dad,
and then I get the call from United Artists.
So I go up to UA, they offer me a job.
I really don't want a legal business job,
but it's all I got on the plate.
So I said, okay, I said to Nancy,
I'm going to do this for no more than four years,
as if it's graduate school.
At the end of four years, I'm going to quit.
I'm going to try to learn everything I can
and network like mad,
but at the end of four years,
I am not going to be trapped into being a lawyer
for the rest of my life.
I am not going to wind up doing people's wills and estates and taxes.
I will, at the end of four years, I'll either be writing and producing movies, TV, and animation,
or I'll be delivering pizza for dominoes, but I will not be trapping a lawyer.
And that was, and Plan B worked.
Plan B worked.
They put me in charge, I learned so much, they put me in charge of the legal business financial affairs of the first three Rocky movies.
Wow.
A beautiful movie, if you've never seen it, called Black Stallion.
Yes.
A movie that's on everybody's top ten list of all time called Raging Bull.
Wow.
And for two and a half years of my life, a movie you've probably all heard of called Apocalypse Now.
Oh my God.
And that was a crisis every day of my life for two and a half years.
So Charlie Sheen was here.
Am I correct that at some point Martin Sheen was wandering naked through the streets of the Philippines
in Apocalypse now? Did that actually happen or no?
Well, what happened, Martin Sheen and Marlon Brando were the two stars of the picture,
and this was taking place in the Philippines.
They build all these sets.
They're ready to go, and Martin Sheen had a heart attack.
So everybody had a stop and wait for him to recover.
Then a typhoon comes through and destroys all the sets.
All the sets have to be rebuilt.
And that's just the beginning of that story.
Wow.
Charlie Sheen said two days ago that they began to call it Apocalypse Never.
was that, like, in terms of, like, their family, and he was living in the Philippines.
So all this amazingness, and what about these Batman rights?
So I was coming up past my three-year mark at United Artists.
I knew I had my next vow that I had made that I was going to quit by year four.
So I went back to the president of D.C. comics, the man who mentored me into D.C. when I was teaching the course.
His name was Saul Harrison, a wonderful man.
I said, Saul, I now have the credentials.
I've worked at United Artists now for over three years.
I know how to do this.
I want to buy the rights to Batman
and go out and make dark and serious Batman movies
and show the world that Batman is not a pot-bellied, funny Pousap Wham guy.
Saul looked at me, did you ever see the poster for Home Alone?
He looked at me like that.
He goes, Michael, for God's sake, don't do this.
he said don't you understand that since Batman went off the air in television the brand is as dead as a dodo he said nobody's interested in Batman anymore
I said yeah but Saul nobody's ever seen a dark and serious comic book superhero movie before this is going to be like a new form of entertainment he said is there anyway I can talk you out of this crazy idea I said no so he said all right come on in and that began a six-month
negotiation that gave me six months to find the right partner who had been through the loop on
this, who was a legend in the movie business, he was my dad's age. His name was Benjamin Melnaker,
and we raised money privately. And all the people who put up the money, none of them knew a
thing about Batman. They put their money on me, not on Batman. And on October 3rd,
1979, we signed the piece of paper. I now bought the rights to Batman. I put it in my back pocket.
And is it okay to ask, what did that cost? A lot. A whole hell of a lot. I'm still a kid in my
20s. How does a kid in his 20s, by the rights of Batman? I mean, today, impossible. Nobody could
even envision or imagine it. I flew out to Hollywood with that.
man in my back pocket said, this is going to be a piece of cake. Everybody's going to see the chance
for sequels and animation and toys and games. I was turned down by every single studio in Hollywood.
They told me I was crazy. They said this was the worst idea they ever heard. They said,
you can't make serious comic book movies. You can't do dark superheroes. You can't make a movie
out of an old TV series. Nobody's ever done that.
And as a result, folks, from the day I bought the rights to Batman,
till I could finally get our first movie made, took me 10 years.
Wow.
Ten years of rejection.
Ten years where Nancy and I did not know how we were going to pay next week's bills.
Ten years of figuring out how I keep a roof over our head and food on the table.
when I bought the rights to Batman, Nancy was six months pregnant.
Wow.
And we were building our first house.
And I just quit United Artists at the, let's see, it was two months after our son was born,
giving up our medical plan, our dental plan, my pension, and my bonus.
Oh, my God.
Because I had a great support system in my wife, Nancy.
in my parents, in her parents, and you can't do it alone.
You've got to have a support system.
People.
And what do we have up here on the screen team?
What's up there?
Oh, I know her.
That's Nancy?
That's Nancy.
That's amazing.
Here for Nancy.
Amazing.
So if I can inject, a couple of important things you need to know about my wife.
We met first day freshman year at Indiana.
She was not even unpacked when we went out for the first time.
and for four years everyone said
you don't fall in love with the first person
you set your eyes on in college, it doesn't happen.
We now have been married 52 years.
Amazing.
And yes, it's a Hollywood record.
But here's what you need to know about my wife.
She does the important work in the family.
Nancy has an NGO, a non-profit,
boots on the ground in Rwanda.
She has personally
set up programs of literacy
teaching kids English and critical thinking.
She is right now financed
and is building her ninth clean water project in Rwanda
that's impacting the lives of hundreds of thousands of people.
She started a vision care program
when she saw no kid in Rwanda had a pair of glasses
and found that there was no eye care outside of the Capitol.
She is now a consultant to the United Nations
and her first children's book was published recently by McMillan.
So,
Wow.
Holy Nancy.
Edge is a small token of my gratitude.
I'd like to for my Calgary Christian Foundation
make a donation of $25,000 to Nancy's
NGO-engineering.
So thank you.
So thank you.
As a small token of the impact,
and again, I'm very confident
this is the beginning, not the end, for sure.
So thank you.
And the team will handle that.
so you acquire the rights it is 10 years of all this insanity so how do you finally get a yes
think about where you were 10 years ago imagine 10 years of no and nancy's hanging in there
and their families hang in there and they're staying by michael's side to pursue this dream
and they chose very very wisely so how do we get a yes what happens
Two steps in this process.
Number one, everything changed in 1986
when a young genius named Tim Burton
came into our lives.
Here was a young Disney animator,
and Warner Brothers said,
we're setting up a screening
of the fine cut of a movie
this kid's done for us.
You've got to see it and tell us what you think.
It was called Peewee's Big Adventure.
And I came out and I said,
I have never been,
seen more creative combination of direction and art direction in my life. I'd love to meet him.
And I had three lunches with Tim. By the end of the third lunch, I knew this was the guy.
And here's how he made this all happen, how he revolutionized Hollywood and the world culture's
perception of comic books and superheroes. And here's how he did it. I always call it the big
idea, Tim Burton's big idea. He said to me this one particular day, if we are going to make the first
ever serious comic book superhero movie. This movie cannot be about Batman. And I just wanted to fall to
pieces in the ground. I said, what are you talking about? He said this movie has to be about Bruce Wayne.
Ah. We have to show a portrayal of Bruce Wayne so driven, so obsessed to the point of being psychotic
that people around the world who have never read a comic book before will say,
oh yeah, that's a guy who would get dressed up as a bat
and go fighting a guy who looks like the Joker.
And Tim's corollary to that was from the opening frames of the movie,
Gotham City had to become the third most important character of the film
because audiences had to suspend their disbelief
and believe in Gotham City before they could believe in all of this.
So 86 was the turning point, but then I had a problem.
I had no money left.
I had been doing everything I could, trying everything.
I was in debt, and it looked like I could not make it any further.
Now I talk about support systems.
Nancy's father, who was the founder of the Cincinnati I Institute, flew out to New Jersey.
He sat me down.
He goes, you know, Michael, this is why you went to law school.
So you would have something to fall back on if things didn't work out.
He said, you've tried your hardest.
That's the measure of a person's success.
Not what you've achieved, but by how hard you've tried.
So you can't feel like you're a failure.
But now it's time that you gave up your dream and became a lawyer and took care of your family.
And I said, I understand that.
And I'm prepared to do it.
It's just so frustrating because I'm so close.
You know, while we're waiting for Batman, I've been developing an animated series.
And I've got such interest in it.
and we're making such progress.
And he goes, let me ask you a question.
He said, how long do you think it would be
before you have in your hands not a deal,
not a contract, not a promise,
but a check for six figures?
How long do you actually think that would take you?
He said, and think carefully.
I said, five months.
He said five months.
I said, yes.
He said, all right, I'm going to pay all your bills
for the next five months.
But at 6 p.m., five months from today,
if you do not have a check for six figures in your hand,
you agree you will have given it your best shot,
and you will go be a lawyer and be content with that.
I thanked him profusely.
For the next five months, I was working 20-hour days, all the time,
and I was pushing on the animated series pushing,
and all the guys who were working on it with me,
at Columbia Television,
and an animation studio called,
They knew about the pressure I was under.
Turns out that they got all the contracts signed for it.
They got the commitment from the different broadcast networks.
And they held back the contract and the check until the last day.
And sometime between noon and 3 p.m., a FedEx truck pulled up in front of our
house. Come on. And there were the signed contracts and a check for six figures. I was able to pay back
my father-in-law and that gave me enough money to get to Batman. So sometimes you can't do it alone.
You need a guardian angel. You need a support system. I had mine.
Dude, like, again, look at this. Nobody else has had standing ovations. This is unbelievable.
Crazy. How is this not a movie? How is you? How are you? How are, you? How are you?
you not a movie, right?
Well.
Well, right.
I am happy to announce.
First of all, I wrote my memoir.
It's called The Boy Who Loved Batman.
Available, as Stanley always said, Michael,
get in a plug whenever you can.
Available through Barnes & Noble.com and Amazon.
I also recorded the audible book version of it,
if you don't want to read.
Yes.
And I'm proud to tell you,
that Niederlander worldwide, which own about half the Broadway theaters,
theaters in London, and all over, they are turning my memoir into a Broadway play.
Unbelievable.
Unbelievable.
Dude.
We did a workshop.
We opened in Tampa, Florida, at the Stras Center for the Performing Arts for six weeks.
We got a standing ovation at every performance.
And they are now looking for an A-list star to play me.
and my wife Nancy
and the goal is within the next year or so
to open on Broadway followed by London
unbelievable
dude
just the guy as a son of a stone nation
from the Jersey Shore
like this is what we got going on
I guess so
okay so
and what was the animated series
Dinosaurs
Now you never heard of it
We did 65 half hours in syndicated TV.
My son David, when he was little, there were two things he loved,
outer space and dinosaurs.
And I thought, gee, that's just like me when I was growing up.
In fact, I think every kid loves outer space and dinosaurs.
So I thought, how can I combine dinosaurs and outer space?
And I have my best thinking, creative thinking when I'm shaving.
So I was like, dinosaurs, outer space, dinosaurs, dinosaurs.
That is dinosaurs.
And I got the name, and then I worked up backwards from there
and created this TV series about dinosaurs from Matters Space
who come to Earth, meet four kids, two of whom were my kids.
And they take them around and show them what Earth and humans are like,
and the evil tyranos follow, and it was a great series.
We had a lot of fun.
That's awesome, awesome.
So now, the first Batman movie,
I saw it in its opening at the 10plex in Paramus, New Jersey, no longer there.
It was the first multiplex cinema that I ever experienced.
And it was, tears came down my face.
I couldn't have been more thrilled and elated to experience all of this.
Jack Nicholson as the Joker, the depth of it.
people actually died.
People had chemicals being thrown in faces and dropped into vats and all sorts of incredible things.
How did you feel about the movie?
When the movie was completed, there was a special screening for a group of us.
And my partner, Ben, turned to me.
We had to go into the theater through heavy velour black curtains.
and he stopped me. He goes, Michael, you're going to go through these curtains right now.
You're going to come out two hours later, and your life is going to be changed.
And he was right about that. It changed the course of my whole life.
What I thought would be a mission, a job, turned into a career, and then basically my entire life.
I want to tell you about when we opened, right before we opened, I had a spin.
premier screening for family and friends in New York City. And I got to speak for about 10
minutes or so before then. When I was in seventh and eighth grades at Ocean Township
School, I had two English teachers, Mrs. Stiller and then Mrs. Friedman. It was Mrs. Stiller in
seventh grade who told me I had a creative ability and that I needed to believe in myself
as a creative writer.
And she thought that I had the ability
that I could use this as an adult in my work.
And then she passed me off to her sister-in-law,
Mrs. Friedman, who had a red pen.
She was the roughest, toughest, toughest teacher you could imagine.
At the end of the first day of English in eighth grade,
she asked me to stay.
And I went up to her desk, and she said,
Michael, Mrs. Stiller told me about you and she showed me your portfolio of your creative work.
I think she's right.
And I have very high standards in this class, but if you really truly want to become a creative writer,
it's more than just having ideas, creative ideas, anybody can have creative ideas.
You would need to become a master of your craft of writing.
If you are willing, I am going to then hold you to a higher standard than anybody else.
I am going to be as tough as possible.
You're going to learn vocabulary.
You're going to read so much.
You're going to learn how to diagram sentences and understand structure.
And she was as tough as nails for me.
Wow.
So the night of Batman Premier, I found Ms.
Stiller, Mrs. Friedman.
And I think that Mrs. Friedman was in Florida.
I can't remember where Mrs. Stiller was, but I brought them up, and I sent a limousine
to bring them to my premier.
And as I spoke, I said, for those of you who don't believe there are superheroes
in real life, you've never met a great teacher.
I said, there would be no Batman here tonight.
There would be nothing here tonight if it wasn't for.
for two great teachers that changed my life.
And I said, now, if you ask them,
they will say they've gotten everything
they could want out of life
from teaching their generation of students.
I said, but there's one thing I know they've never gotten,
and that's a standing ovation.
And they got a standing ovation that night.
Now.
Dude.
Unbelievable.
Unbelievable.
Unbelievable.
Unbelievable.
Dude.
Crazy.
The power of the power
Of story, emotional, energetic, transparency.
Incredible.
So, and that's what actualizers are.
He was consulted.
He was trained to his coach.
And what was the word that they told him he had to have and achieve?
Say it?
One more time?
That's our word.
A whole bunch more movies.
And what are your rights and just so that the room knows and how would they appropriately
describe your relationship to Batman in the cinematic world?
I'm his godfather.
So I'll tell you, I'll sum it up in a story.
We were down to Ben Melnaker and I were down to pitching to the final studio.
All studios had rejected it.
Columbia was the last studio.
So we go in to pitch Columbia.
And it's this stapper dressed silver hair guy.
He'd been at the studio for years and years and years, and I pitched my heart out for a dark and serious Batman.
And at the end of it, he turns to me and Ben, and he goes, Michael, you're out of your mind.
Batman will never be a successful movie because our movie, Annie, has not done well.
I say, wait a minute.
Are you talking about the little red-headed girl from Broadway that sings the song tomorrow?
He says, yeah.
I go, well, what does that have to do with Batman?
Oh, come on, Michael, they're both out of the funny pages.
Nobody wants to pay money to see a cartoon character walk and talk.
Oh, my God.
And with that, he then said, look, I'll tell you what,
I will consider making a Batman movie,
but it's got to be that pot-bellied, funny, Pousap, Wham guy,
because that's all audiences will remember and love.
And I looked at him and I said, no.
And with that, he brought his chair, leaned into me, and he said, son, when people call me son, I know I'm in trouble.
Son, better to have a movie made than no movie at all.
And I said, no.
That was the end of the meeting.
We're now on a park bench sitting on the lot of the studio.
My head is down.
And Ben's sitting next to me, and he goes, you know, Michael, don't you think it was ironic that our
last no came from you. He said, you know what that makes you? I said, I know, Ben, I'm an idiot.
He says, oh, no, you have this vision for Batman that you believe respects the integrity of
his creators. You defend Batman. You are protecting Batman. You are Batman's Batman.
Wow. And that's my role. Wow.
And to get the plug in, that's the name of volume two of my memoir.
So what happens?
How does that, how do you find the actual making of the movie?
Who says yes?
Ben said, you know, I just got word that Casablanca Records,
which were the kings of disco back in the day,
Donna Summer and all of those,
they just got an influx of money from Polygram in Europe,
and they're going to open up a film device.
vision. The guy in charge of it, he said, Ben knew from 1969. He said he's much younger than all of the
studio people we've pitched to. He's a lot more hip. He may get it. So he got Peter Goober on the phone
at Casablanca Records, and he put me on the phone, and I pitched it over the phone from New York.
And Peter said, I love this idea.
Let me just pause for a quick sec. So Peter Goober, you guys have ever heard of Tony Robbins Platinum
partnership. Peter Goober is the inspiration for Tony Robbins' platinum partnership. Peter
Guber became great friends with Tony Robbins and invited him into a group that they called the
Scorpions and they traveled and went places together and invited Tony in. He felt like he didn't
belong. He was 32 at the time when he was first invited and he had to put up like 30 grand for
the trip and they were going all over Asia, flying private.
And that was the genesis of the concept of the Platinum Partnership.
And Tony and Peter Goober are still incredibly great friends this day,
the only interest in professional sports teams together, et cetera, et cetera.
So Peter Gruber, back to you, please.
So is Peter and his partner, Neil Bogart.
And we went out and did an official pitch in front of them.
And they said, we'll make this.
We have an output deal now.
We're going to make movies through Universal.
It'll be a universal picture.
and then you can imagine what happened.
Casablanca faded away.
Polygram pictures came into play.
There was another company for a second and a half
called the Boardwalk Company.
Then there was Universal, then Filmways,
then 20th Century Fox.
Then finally Warner Brothers came into the picture
as everybody else kind of disappeared.
But it was a 10-year process.
Unbelievable.
So then the original Batman movie is a massive success, critically acclaimed Jack Lincolnson
the Joker.
And then there was a number of other movies that we worked through in the Danny DeVito's the Penguin.
And we have Val Kilmer and George Clooney as Batman, Arnold Schwarzenegger as Mr. Freeze.
You know, Jim Carrey is a riddler.
So we have that sequencing of movies.
If we could, because we are finally running a little bit short on time, how does that all sort of transpire?
What does that mean to you?
And then we'll jump into Christopher Nolan and the next step in the process.
But what does that, those years mean and look like?
And how is that all for you, Michael?
All right.
Well, I'll start out with, it was Memorial Day weekend of 1980.
and I'm in New York,
getting ready to get on the bus back home to New Jersey.
I got the afternoon paper, the post.
I open it up to the movie section,
and there I see two big movies are premiering.
The Empire Strikes Back.
And another movie, a horror movie called The Shining.
And I see this picture of Jack Nicholson for the first time.
You know the Here's Johnny shot?
Where it's like peering maniacally around the corner?
I go, oh my God, this is the only actor who could play The Joker.
I tore the picture out.
When I got home, I ran to my desk.
I took white out, and I whited out Jack's face.
I took a red pen and I did his lips.
I did a magic marker.
I did his hair.
And that's what I showed to everyone connected to Batman.
I said, Nicholson, he's the only one who could play the Joker.
That's unbelievable.
When he was hired, it was the greatest day of my career to that point.
Absolutely amazing.
Unbelievable.
And for those that don't know, the Ridler, I mean, I'm sorry, the Joker,
is a deeply, deeply disturbed villain.
And the complexity of his relationship with Batman,
which is told in a litany of different ways
over the course of the comics and movies,
and Michael can speak into this,
a thousand times more masked than I.
But in the simplest essence,
there is this incredible interdependence
where the Joker loves Batman,
despises Batman, needs Batman.
Batman tells Batman this continuously, and Batman has this element of integrity and humanity
at the foundational core that prevents him from ever killing the Joker.
And there's this dance that goes on into eternity of the Joker continuing to come back
and back and back and back again, and this dance continues forever.
And so what I'm hearing you say, Michael, is that Jack Nicholson in this amazing moment
of The Shining, which my dad took me to see at 10 years old.
My dad made a lot of very poor movie decisions.
He took me to see Count Jorga when I was three in the movies and thought it was child appropriate.
And recently, and my dad was in the hospital for fun energy, I asked our act I, is Count Jorgia
appropriate for a three-year-old?
And the first sentence was, Count Jorga is completely and totally inappropriate.
For a three-year-old was the headline sentence.
But what I'm hearing to say is Jack Nicholson in this sense of derangement of the character
in the shining could not have.
been at no other human in acting could possibly have embodied the derangement of the
Joker like that am I hearing you correctly yeah and I mentioned the Joker
specifically first of all in 1999 90 the motion picture Academy was mostly a
bunch of well-to-do white-haired white guys who were like the Dean at Indiana that I
pitched to looking down their noses at comic
books. There is no way back then the Academy would vote for Jack Nicholson in a comic book movie
as best actor. He should have. Had he been in it more recent times, he would have won the
Oscar for that. When Chris Nolan came along, Heath Ledger plays the Joker. Heath Ledger wins the
Oscar for it. Then when Todd Phillips comes along and does Joker, Joaquin Phoenix wins the Oscar for Joker,
we really should have had three times where actors won the Oscar for Joker.
But that's the bridge for me from one filmmaker to another filmmaker to another filmmaker.
Unbelievable.
And so that run then, because we're going to show a couple clips from the,
we saw the surfing and pow-wap-bam.
Then we'll take a look at the dark night in a minute.
But just, you know, that period of the, which, by the way, I love every, all those movies.
because every time Batman's on the screen, I love him.
I know some of those movies more than others.
Love them.
But just for you, if we can encapsulate that grouping of the Danny DeVito Penguin version,
Mr. Freeze, Riddler, as Jim Carrey, what did that period mean to you and to Batman?
To me, as a comic book geek, these movies represent different eras of the comic book version of Batman.
Tim Burton's Batman was really the Batman of 1939 into 1940 before Robin.
And it was much darker, and he captured that really well.
When you look at what Dear Joel Schumacher did with Batman Forever,
it was more the Batman of the late 40s and into the 50s.
Batman and Robin punning their way against a rogues gallery of supervillains,
hopping on giant typewriter keys, and they captured that era.
The Clooney thing was the TV show Redux.
I'm hearing your deep abiding love for it.
And with Val Kilmer, I thought he was more like the Batman of the Comhooks of the 1990s.
He was a deeply mysterious and dark, romantic version of Bruce Wayne, and I thought very effective.
to me it evoked Frank Langella's Dracula, which he did on Broadway and in a film that showed that villainry could be romanticized and be attractive.
Yeah.
I saw Frank Langella as Dracula at Montclair State University at one point.
It was unbelievable.
Amazing.
It was really great.
A Bayonne boy, by the way, Frank Langella.
Amazing.
Can we hit Bain Batman in their initial interaction in the Dark Nighter?
rises. Can we hit that team?
Yes, I was wondering what would break fast.
Your spirit?
Oh, your buddy.
That is not shark repellent
on a surf wave
and pow, web, bam.
Thank you.
Well, as Bain said,
So, when this
happened and just in all I loved all the Batman movies prior and I still ate for this and this is the
third of the trilogy and as Michael and I were chatting in the green room he said this is really one movie
in three acts Batman begins dark night dark night rises and if you have never seen
Batman begins and you only relate to the dark night
as like this incredible movie
and there's other movies around that time
it's one story
and Batman begins
contextualizes
the dark night and the dark night rises
the dark night rises completes the dark night
and these are just absolutely masterful
and I think where critics get it wrong sometimes
and these were all critically
acclaimed for sure
but is to
to and people
following the words of critics is just so often missing the point of things.
And these movies were received masterfully, but to compare one to the other, I think it's just a
mistake. It's just one thing, right, is what it is. And so the completion, Dark Night Rise,
Batman begins amazing. And when I saw Batman begins, the level of gratitude I had Michael
and everyone for this is who I knew Batman.
to be, and I loved the 1989 Batman with Jack Nicholson.
I mean, loved, and I loved all those movies.
But this is, from my heart, my soul, my being, this is Batman.
Yeah, and so thank you, Michael, for that, from my heart, right?
I appreciate that, Sean.
Let me mention two things about Christopher Nolan's Batman movies.
Number one is when Chris came aboard, he had to restore the darkness and dignity to Batman
after Batman and Robin.
And he went about it, just like Tim Burton had to,
but 180 degrees different.
He was not going to build Gotham City.
We actually built five square city blocks of Gotham City
on the back lot of Pinewood Studios.
He was not going to do that.
He wanted to make this movie feel real.
He wanted to convince you that Batman could be real today.
The Joker could be real today.
And he had about five challenges
to try to overcome.
So number one, how do you prove that Gotham City could be real?
He didn't shoot it in New York,
where as soon as you see Central Park or the Statue of Liberty,
you go, oh, it's New York,
and it breaks your sense of disbelief.
So he chose Chicago.
You take two buildings out of the skyline of Chicago,
and people around the world cannot identify the city,
and you still have lower-wacker drive
and a lot of interesting places
where I watched them actually flip a semi-truck.
So he made Gotham City real.
Then he had to make you believe Bruce Wayne could be real today.
A young man struggling post-traumatic stress syndrome on a journey of personal discovery, almost like Lost Horizon.
And through the casting of Christian Bale made us all believe that that could really happen to a person today.
Yeah.
Then he had to make you believe the Joker could be real.
And this was his testament to 9-11 and the aftermath of 9-11.
And the Joker was conceived as a modern-day terrorist,
someone who places no value whatsoever on human life.
And you fear him.
He was scary.
And he was real, unfortunately.
The last thing, which was the biggest challenge,
was how is he going to convince all of you all this tech?
All these gadgets could be real.
That was a big challenge.
He hired Morgan Freeman to tell you it was real.
And if Morgan Freeman says something's true, by God, it's true.
Yes, amazing.
So those of the scene, that's Lucius Fox is the character,
and he works in Wayne Enterprises.
And they were developing so much of this for military contracting companies
and the military, and then it went into a side project,
and it was revived by Lucius Fox,
as he began to sense it was requested by Bruce Wayne, who went away.
And in the movie, in the story, Batman, Bruce Wayne, Christian Bale, as playing Bruce Wayne,
loses himself.
And he goes traveling around the world and to find his heart, his soul, his being,
he's robbing, stealing, he's trying to learn what criminals look like and decide what he's going to be.
He finds this group called The League of Shadows.
and they take him in to train him,
to recreate him, to find, to channel this energy,
but then they were going to violate the very principle of Batman wouldn't,
and they killed the bad.
They killed who they decided were bad.
And they were judge, jury, executioner,
and these people who trained and developed Bruce Wayne,
the League of Shadows, asked him in the final step
to kill someone who had stolen
and in front of all
the people that had
made him
what he had become
he had to now fight them
and that is why Batman
begins is such an
unbelievable movie, film
story and it's
your story
it's what we're doing here
at least
you can choose to decide that
because I am
Batman
That's Batman, your Batman, or Wonder Woman, or any of these characters,
if Wonder Woman has some superpowers, this is real if you decided this.
And the breaking of the back by Bain, that's your fear of picking up the phone.
That's the person who mocks you and says,
you think you know what you're talking about?
That's what Michael faced over and over.
That's why you stood because he's living.
the living embodiment of Bruce Wayne into Batman.
Integrity and mastery.
He was just a kid from Jersey
who had masterful teachers who gave him,
we say this, Michael, we teach this.
This is not made for you today.
You just are bringing forward what we teach all the time.
They've heard me say these things a thousand times.
I'm not saying to the prison of you as example.
influence is the only human attainable superpower.
That's his superpower.
That's your superpower.
And then self-mastery comes in when we face the Joker,
face Bain most often inside of our own head.
And then we create the fiction that the other person saying no to you
is actually trying to kill you and destroy you and break your back,
which is a complete joke and lie.
And our work here is to deal with truth.
And what I just spoke is the truth.
And the truth is, it's all a fiction.
That's not the fiction.
The crap we make up about why we don't send out 370 letters
when it could take us two hours or pick up the phone
and call yes with people.
And the right yes is.
That's the truth.
If you feel that truth in your heart,
and you see the possibility available for you, say yes.
Brother, thank you for that.
And then if we could, let's go with broken back.
Your back is broken.
Whether that's your bank account, your heart, your vision, possibility,
what people say to you.
So here lies you buried in your worst nightmare.
You're broken.
You're lying there.
You've tried to climb out.
You've tried to escape.
And you can't.
And you can't.
And then you have your next actualizer who tells you
you need to make the climb.
Like the child did.
Without the rope.
So you can find fear again.
because you need fear to drive you
and not fear of what's in front of you
but fear of that final day on your deathbed
and having stood and sat and stood and sat in this room
and heard this and heard it all
and I promise you and I want this for you
if you do not
this day may it haunt you on your death bed
bed.
May you have that blessing of remembering this moment and to fear that every day from this
day forward.
And let's see how Bruce Wayne handled it.
Please thank.
You rose from Michael because you experienced him doing that in his life story.
The hopeless in this prison, this hell,
are all the humans on earth who suffer blind,
unable to see,
and are seeking you to light their way
as Michael has lit the way here today.
And when you rise,
all of these people would have laughed and mocked
and laughed and mocked,
and they roared and cheered,
as we always do for the rise.
You rose and cheered,
but with great respect, almost all of you would have laughed at Michael in 1970s 1 and 5 and 9 and 80,
and 82, 84, and 86, and the same people who laugh at you laughed at him and laughed at me.
The difference is, like Bruce Wayne, Michael Rose, and you can too.
whether it's in money, scaling, or impact overall that you chose the back right corner on day one.
If you are recommitted to that truth, say us.
And, sir, when you watch that, how does that feel for you and what's present, please?
It's so powerful.
You know, over the years, there's one scene from Dark Night that people keep talking about
and asking me about and commenting on, telling me how this particular scene impacted them.
It's a scene that takes place on a ship, and people are on the ship, and they are given
a moral choice.
Do they press this button and blow up the other ship filled with people in order to save themselves,
or do they not?
and what people tell me is when this scene comes up, and what is it?
It's about what do you do when you have to make a moral choice and your choices are bad and worse?
And they tell me, in the darkness of the movie theater, by themselves,
no matter who they were with or who they were around, they had to come to terms and think what they would do in that situation.
Would they press that button or would they?
not. And I've had people
approach me at screenings and all
literally with tears in their eyes
about the impact that that had
on them introspectively.
And for a comic book
superhero movie to have that
kind of thematic heft
was really, really
amazing.
Yeah. Okay. If I said this and
go back. And what I appreciate, Michael,
for me personally, most
about that scene,
because, you know, one person,
posted about Charlie Sheen being here
and he shouldn't be here and what's he doing
here and all these terrible things did.
In that scene,
it is
the law enforcement people, the prison guards,
the warden
that wants to, or the head of the prisoners,
that wants to blow up the other ship of the prisoners.
And it is the prisoner
and the guy struggling
who takes it from him and says,
I'll do what you can't.
And what he thinks is the guy's going to press the button
to blow up the other ship.
This guy's a murderer,
a prisoner that's transporting his prisoners.
And he takes it and he throws it overboard
to make sure it doesn't happen.
And what that means to me
is the same conversation we had.
But for the grace of God, go I,
who are we to judge?
And because someone has made a mistake
just like we've all made mistakes,
it does not mean that they are still not heroic
and capable of heroism.
So I also thank you for that moment
in that unbelievable power.
And by the way, just for fun,
I wasn't lying when I said it was a big fan.
Thank you.
I'd like to offer one last story to you.
At the time of dark night,
I got a call from a colonel at West Point.
And he said, Mr. Eusland,
every year the cadets of West Point have a cadets choice award that they award to the one who they feel
most embodies the code of honor of West Point. This year they elected the dark night Batman
and they said would you possibly consider coming up here accepting the award and speaking to our
cadets? Wow. So I said absolutely I would be honored to do that. So Nancy and I went up there
and it was magnificent.
And they said, we're going to do this at lunchtime.
And it's 4,500 cadets standing at attention at their tables.
They bring me into this meeting hall or eating hall that was like a set from Harry Potter.
The Vikings could have built this.
It was stone coming to a V with a stone balcony and vaulted ceilings and flags.
It was incredible.
So as we're going up to the top for this, I said, you know, you'd never.
told me how long you'd like me to speak. Would you like a half hour? Do you want 45 minutes? Should it be
Q&A? And he said, oh, I'm sorry. He goes, our lunchtime here is only 15 minutes. So we'd like you to
speak for about two minutes. And oh, we're on. And they present me with this award, which was amazing,
and they hand me the microphone. And I'm looking out over 4,500 cadets standing at attention.
And I just said, cadets of West Point, when Bruce Wayne was a boy, he saw his parents murdered before his eyes on a concrete altar of blood.
At that moment in time, he sacrificed his childhood and made a vow.
He promised that he would get the bad guy who did this, that he would get all the bad guys, even if he had to walk through hell for the
rest of his life in order to honor that commitment. I said in doing so he became an urban warrior.
He became a legend. He became a dark night. I said cadets of West Point, you are Batman.
And at that moment in time, they erupted, applause and yelps and they were on
the chairs and it was like incredible and it went on for a couple of minutes and it was just this
amazing amazing moment but it was punctuated one week later when I opened my mail and I get a letter
from a woman and it went something like this dear Mr. Euslin you don't know me I am the mother of one of the
cadets that you spoke to last week at West Point in May our kids are all going to
to Afghanistan and Iraq. This is serious business for our families. I don't know if you understand
what you and Batman have done here, but right now our kids are walking across campus,
high-fiving each other, doing chest bumps with each other going, I am Batman, you are Batman.
She said, what you've done is give them a calling card. And in the years to come,
when they once again may encounter each other on some foreign battlefield,
this will be their calling card, and I can't thank you enough for that.
And if Batman and my journey have done nothing else, that for me meant everything.
Wow.
Let's hear from Michael Yusin.
One more time.
Let's hear from Michael Eustlin.
And I'm like, thank you.
Let us hear it for Mr. Michael Euslin.
if this was remarkable for you say yes remarkable masterful impactful say yes and last thing i'll say
michael is people will die for their identity and thank you for doing that for our nation
thank you doing all the people in this room and thank you for giving batman his truest identity
And may this last forever.
And I thank you, Michael.
Thank you.
This is what Jersey produces right here.
