I glimpsed the face of God and heard the following: There's a dang CHEETO in the WHITE HOUSE
@fyt543214 жыл бұрын
Meeeooooowwwwww.
@azureknight7774 жыл бұрын
xD
@Bisquick4 жыл бұрын
@@TheDystopiaInside Cheetos all the way down.
@cahoots60654 жыл бұрын
My guy had to trip balls in order to be able to explain his Better Call Saul take. I respect the commitment.
@porpwah4 жыл бұрын
Lol. Had to go into space time communism.
@superneko994 жыл бұрын
It IS a mediocre show
@zackamania65344 жыл бұрын
mae you’re a goofus and clueless
@benbascheable4 жыл бұрын
These are better than most actual chapo episodes
@britzman99054 жыл бұрын
I AGREE! More raw and unfiltered.
@Panama_lewis4 жыл бұрын
Right?!
@Bisquick4 жыл бұрын
Agreed and in reflection on why this is the case, I feel like it has to do with the goals/objectives that guide the format. With Chapo it's kind of just a funny acknowledgement that despite being at a sort of self-described apex in terms of technological development and the "progress" of knowledge, life itself is boring, monotonous, and just bad. And dumb. The recognition of this is good, but sort of vague and meandering in terms of "content". While the Christman manifesto currently in development has a focused objective in its articulation of whateverthefuck the machine elves are coercing him to say. In summation, PURPOSE! As it turns out, meaning is cool and in short supply because it's not profitable. I wonder if an incredibly nuanced, meaningful, and empathetic society that could accurately reflect the ideals of communism would ironically evoke a nostalgia for banality/authentic struggle out of some seemingly bs element of "human nature". Lucky for us, we're all but guaranteed to never find out... Or something. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
@waterporch4 жыл бұрын
I was feeling suicidal and someone linked me to this and a lot of it spoke to me. I'm sorry to hear folks got mad at you. I get the majority of what youre getting into here and I appreciate the brave attempt at throwing it all into a youtube video. Thank you.
@patrickselley25184 жыл бұрын
I thought Matt was having a manic episode but it turns out I just had the playback speed set to 1.25x
@fyt543214 жыл бұрын
Be that as it may, it doesn't ensure that he also isn't having a manic episode. (Matt did indicate that no substances had been consumed thus far in the day.)
@clumps4 жыл бұрын
and then you were sure he was
@antipusrises4 жыл бұрын
These daily (or more) submersions into Matt's consciousness added with the deepening distance with the outside world are bringing me to the brink.
@stanthonysfire63874 жыл бұрын
fr, I go through withdrawals when I don't watch these though
@brendancostello97774 жыл бұрын
Yeah but the brink of what? Insanity and a terrifying enlightenment might look or feel the same. Then again... maybe I need to get caught up on "Better Call Saul" first.
@antipusrises4 жыл бұрын
@@brendancostello9777 I hear you. I only watched the first season.
@RootinrPootine4 жыл бұрын
That is why you fail
@joepeake89724 жыл бұрын
Brink of what?
@heymancoolvideo4 жыл бұрын
Waking up, rubbing one out, and watching Matt Christman before working from home. I’ll miss these days soon.
@Dualhammers4 жыл бұрын
What alienated labor are you performing from home?
@heymancoolvideo4 жыл бұрын
Dualhammers Makin vidya. Hours are rough, but it’s a solid paycheck.
@tamartin644 жыл бұрын
Can't you rub one out WHILE watching Matt? It seems like it would save some time.
@PhotonTensor4 жыл бұрын
These comments so under appreciate this brilliant manifesto. I have been Mattpilled.
@RootinrPootine4 жыл бұрын
Exactly. This is a super great steam! So happy for him and glad to be along for the ride!
@ramonalejandrosuare4 жыл бұрын
This whole vlog is a 21st century analogue to when Samuel Taylor Coleridge experienced an opium dream of an ethereal Xanadu, wrote the first 200 or so lines to Kublai Khan, was interrupted and could not remember the rest.
@ramonalejandrosuare4 жыл бұрын
@mike york Something tells me its manifested in Simpsons style drawing.
@usernameuser55734 жыл бұрын
This is legit one of the most interesting hours of content I've heard in a while. Very fascinating stuff. I hope Matty Boy turns this into a recurring segment if the quarantine ever ends.
@chocodoco48554 жыл бұрын
Woah, my brother Matt here got INITIATED AF. Now he definitely will be devoured by an invisible demon.
@beehivecity4 жыл бұрын
sending this to someone to explain why i didnt like the irishman
@nelsongalvan21784 жыл бұрын
No one in their death bed utters, "I wish I had seen more TV."
@TTV54 жыл бұрын
Idk if I die tomorrow I wish I'd watched more TV and worked less. Lots of good shows I haven't seen
@nelsongalvan21784 жыл бұрын
@@TTV5 You will never see it all; will that be nagging you in your death bed?
@DownUFO4 жыл бұрын
Mundanity is still valuable. Life can have moments of adventure, learning, romance, etc, but mundane relaxation and leisure is also part of that picture. And hell, I have some treasured nostalgic memories of just watching Star Trek or Columbo with my mom back in the 90s, and honestly those memories wouldn’t be enhanced at all if the setting had changed to us climbing a mountain or whatever. Sometimes the boring normalcy of life is just as important as the grand moments.
@Rompelstaump4 жыл бұрын
No one in their death bed wishes they had read ulysses
@Rompelstaump4 жыл бұрын
@@DownUFO - life's only purpose is to show me fleeting joys that I can never attain other than randomness provides. I have mental illness and corona virus. I'm going to buy a nitrogen tank, regulator, and hoses to breathe deeply until I'm gone. Fair the well humanity. My only hope is that you finally overcome the religious facist movement sooner rather than later. Thanks capitalism for enslaving me to debt. It's ironic that I will use that debt to buy a onr way ticket out of my massive suffering. Peace out!
@raccoonmellows12434 жыл бұрын
Loving these deep dives into the mind of cushbomb
@adammuschler39544 жыл бұрын
Dude I've been pretty fed up lately with being in a rut and I was actually thinking about tripping soon to clear my head. But I've also been trying to be more sober and I got say this has saved me the trip. Like i totally think i see where you're coming from and there were a lot of got insights in here that really speak to my current situation.
@cravinghibiscus79014 жыл бұрын
Imagine if the libs watched this, omg the columns they would write. Enough content for a human lifetime could be sparked from this one.
@RatPfink664 жыл бұрын
but how much of it would just be dire, depressing, second-hand and stale?
@jmarvins4 жыл бұрын
graduate student in philosophy of religions here, reporting that he isn't going insane, just to assuage any worries. he's just accidentally re-inventing a smorgesboard of ideas from various times and places with the power of drugs. some of it's quite good, though obviously not as refined as you'd get it in better sources.
@arglbargl4 жыл бұрын
matt took a bunch of psychedelics and became a calvinist
@etchalsey4 жыл бұрын
Matt makes me feel like I'm on drugs.
@brendancostello97774 жыл бұрын
That means it's working!
@salamimami77204 жыл бұрын
this cocaine makes me feel like i'm on this vlog
@pnptcn4 жыл бұрын
Ulysses is pretty good imo. Don't get too caught up in the trivia and minutiae that occupies the minds of the various characters, reading the confusing bits out loud is helpful (and fun) and I think it's totally worth reading. Met em pike hoses
@waynewapeemukwa81614 жыл бұрын
Must be their civilization, or syphilisation
@brendancostello97774 жыл бұрын
@@waynewapeemukwa8161 The bit about if you meet an asshole in the morning that's one thing, if you meet them all day then it's on you is very similar to the discussion in the library scene when Stephen quotes Materlink.
@dm68014 жыл бұрын
Portrait of a young artist or Ulysses?
@nikolademitri7314 жыл бұрын
I’m jealous of your brief second of oneness with the universe... It’s been a couple years since I’ve had one of those, and most of them I’ve had come from staring at the sky on lysergic and/or psilocybin; especially when if was a night sky with very little light pollution... I will forever cherish them, as I forever cherish Camus, and Sisyphus.
@nebuler14 жыл бұрын
I was seriously trying to talk myself into meditating when this showed up in my notifications.
@jacobbreslau21594 жыл бұрын
One advantage tv enjoys over more personal art forms is that it is understood by everyone to be an event, and not an artefact, addressed not to an abstract audience but *this* one, at this moment. The repetitions, intertextual communication, and generic conventions are glimpses this audience catches of its own reflection in the mirror. Streaming has done more harm to tv than the profit motive as such ever could.
@testbildmuc4 жыл бұрын
About the satori moments: imo the forgetting is part of the phenomenon. Like no matter how often you have these, you will not be able to keep them in normal existence. But you don't want to love in that consciousness all the time it's neither possible nor desirable. There's no real objective knowledge or "meaning" to draw from them, only personal growth, healing and assurance. It can't be communicated second hand. The moments themselves are a reminder that this level of consciousness exists, more than anything. The enlightened man continues to chop wood
@Panama_lewis4 жыл бұрын
“Strange sounds make people turn another way” Sun Ra
@heraclitusblacking12934 жыл бұрын
Christman's notes on Adorno's "Culture Industry."
@2marples2 жыл бұрын
This episode is fire 🔥 thank you Matt for everything you do! We love ❤️ you so much
@beebgegegeg-xr3cm Жыл бұрын
25:32 *conflict? Yin and Yang. I had the exact trip Matt’s talking about last year, and I’m so happy he got to experience it ❤
@Arakasi04 жыл бұрын
Matt you should read Spinoza's Ethics. Similar theological foundation and can probably 'get you there' as it were.
@lotoreo4 жыл бұрын
some profound shit Matt! made a ton of sense to me, "I" experienced the same ego-less state a few months ago I'm pretty sure, and was thinking very much along these same kines
@00mongoose4 жыл бұрын
A point about tv as art: yes, the added financialization dilutes the purpose somewhat, but theres an advantage in producing tv being a collaborative process.
@noidontlikeu4 жыл бұрын
all that means is TV would be so much better under socialism
@alfiewillis48934 жыл бұрын
@@shakespearefan I'm not following why more input inherently results in a more degraded form of art. A function of art, at least in how people consume it, is that its purpose is sometimes broad and vague, and doesn't have any one set meaning. When you're dealing with a show that is about many things, sometimes those added voices can expand something's purpose and be targeted at different things, where they doesn't need to be any singular purpose - as if that's what makes something great art to begin with. There are films made by people which don't have thematic unity, and something containing thematic unity doesn't immediately elevate it, especially when a piece of art deals with multiple things. There are plenty of great albums that don't have thematic unity, and books which are scattershot as hell in what they're approaching and what it's trying to say. You could just as well say a film is just a longform video where it changes from scene to scene in terms of its aesthetic quality or how the film might shift what it's about over time. You're making a case for why it's less specific, and more broad, but not making a case for why this means it's inherently degraded or worse. I don't buy into the notion that art needs to be vision of one person or a handful of people for it to constitute a true artistic vision. This also applies to what Matt is saying. I follow his point well enough, that because of the financial incentives to make a show as appealing as possible to everybody it degrades it as an artform, but there are a lot of very esoteric shows out there with niche audiences. This is to say nothing of authors who write certain things in or out of a work because they don't think it'll be appealing to a publisher, which is something that we're less aware of but I guarantee you happens. If we remove the financial incentive that'd solve the problems to a certain degree, but it's not like shows with bad ratings would continue to exist infinitely under communism, because there's a finite amount of space and resources with which to produce art, and there needs to be at least some incentive to keep backing certain art while not backing others. I'll say this: television is a much more micromanaged medium of art/entertainment than other mediums, which is what Matt is talking about. And in this sense, it is a degradation of art, but it's not inherent to the medium, and it seems like a show you would least be able to make this complaint about is something like *The Sopranos* or *Better Call Saul*, which HBO and AMC were very hands-off about in their approach to telling David Chase and Vince Gilligan what to do, or what needed to be in the show to get good ratings.
@Bisquick4 жыл бұрын
@@alfiewillis4893 I agree with both sides of this revealed dialectic and I think it parallels the pros and cons of imposing more siloed specialized academic disciplines vs a more generalized cross-disciplinary framework and what assessing that even means. But to use Matt's musings here to maybe elaborate (though I agree with your general principle of a collective "pilot wave" _probabilistically_ getting closer to truth in certain contexts with authentic consensus *_cough_* George Lucas *_cough_*), this is kind of elaborated with the sentiment, "all existence is translation. All art is translation." So like, the process of translation _necessitates_ a loss of information as a restraint of physics itself from its "pure" ideal form, so extra noise can further obscure/deteriorate the "vision" of an artist _but_ to your point it can also achieve the opposite in certain contexts. The only real issue I take with it, instead of just embracing both means, is what capitalism seems to reveal, which is that the sort of novel, nuanced, or generally _moving_ art, the art that we appear to _actually_ value, the art that gets at the closest representation of the intention that drives its creation and offers a glimpse at some sort of connection to a world of forms, is in some regard "lost in translation", as in order to appeal to the widest margins of consumers it must conform and appeal to the lowest common denominator of consumption which allows extracting the most profit. I think you get all of this since...you said it all in a different way, but I think your specific analysis is, much like it is to _every person on earth_ , tainted by a domineering frame of capitalist realism that cripples the most foundational mechanisms of imagination and I think _this_ is the more foundational underlying idea Matt is attempting to articulate here via the case study of Better Call Saul. I'm extrapolating this largely from this sentence which might just be a coincidental oversight if it's not as revealing as I'm making it out to be: "If we remove the financial incentive that'd solve the problems to a certain degree, but it's not like shows with bad ratings would continue to exist infinitely under communism, because there's a finite amount of space and resources with which to produce art, and there needs to be at least some incentive to keep backing certain art while not backing others." This description is seems absolutely agreeable from our current societal episteme of neoliberal capitalism, but I think it might be forgetting _that_ very point. Specifically that we are stuck in this societal reference point and might be ideally degraded through the assumption that, ratings themselves are emergent from the very same profit motive, rational consumer logic that drives...everything. I don't know, maybe I'm just over or under complicating things, but I do think our current clusterfuck of a situation is primarily the consequence of a _lack_ of incentives or at least actually meaningful incentives. I mean fuck why did any of us write these long ass introspections in the form of youtube comments that maybe like 4 people will read? I feel like it's some deviation from our socially imposed deification of wealth as a means to "progress" and a lack of nuance into...well, anything. I like Fredric Jameson's paraphrasing of what I'm trying to say for its succinct efficiency in preserving this conception, "it's much easier to imagine the end of the world than the end of capitalism." Fuck this is already long as shit, but rereading your last paragraph gives a self-contained rebuttal to some of this, as indeed I think the noticeable increase in "quality" TV comes from this somewhat recent embrace of artistic carte blanche or at least more hands-off corrupting corporate force (though I'd argue this arises simply from technological advancement reducing artistic production/distribution costs and allowing things like youtube which sort of forces corporate power to make such a compromise), but even subconsciously (or maybe _especially_ subconsciously) such profitability factors will no doubt influence artistic direction. Soo yeah, not sure if I said anything or just reworded the same thing 20 times but uh I guess that in and of itself kind of highlights the loss of resolution during translation. Or something.
@Dualhammers4 жыл бұрын
Matt has articulated my own thoughts to me and confirmed I need to do paychadelics soon. As someone who wrestles with my pre-concious habits and my concious sense of self this helps me realize two things. The wrestling is the heart of being alive so being unhappy that it doesn't abate is a waste of time On a long enough timeline it will inevitably end
@diggins19894 жыл бұрын
Better call saul is the best show on TV IMO. Also reading ulysses atm. Feel like matt and I could have a hella good chat right now.
@dr.freshmemes36964 жыл бұрын
The flesh is fluid IT CAN BE REMADE -darkest dungeon ancestor
@AloisWeimar4 жыл бұрын
Dr. fresh memes “How quickly the tide turns” , Love me some Wayne June
@apartofthewhole66394 жыл бұрын
This dude is tapping into the Exegesis man. Beautiful stuff
@johnsmith42044 жыл бұрын
“There is loss at every level of translation” I came to a very similar conclusion during a very intense and profound trip. It’ s an isolating thought but it’s comforting in a way.
@Snuffyofthewind4 жыл бұрын
i feel like the cat when watching this
@78deathface4 жыл бұрын
True enlightenment is acknowledging the cat when it meows at you. Namaste, kitty...
@SJ-oi7tk4 жыл бұрын
So, Virgil disappeared and Matt is a guru now. Hope Bernie is happy with himself.
@matthewfurnari-omara20794 жыл бұрын
Slaying brother. I really relate to your feelings you share here. Keep moving forward towards truth.
@andrew46384 жыл бұрын
I really liked this one. Possibly one reason why some are having problems with your more mystical concepts is that socialism is superficially a materialistic dogma so socialists sometimes have difficulty with mysticism. Possibly the best attempt to synthesize the two is Latin American liberation theology. I'm not a catholic (or a christian) but the little bit I have read makes me think I should read some more.
@brendancostello97774 жыл бұрын
I really dig this, there's so much insight and honesty and, I don't know, revelation? But I also kind of wonder whether the cat is really the one being kept out of the rest of the apartment, or whether the cat just happened to get caught in Matt's sequestration. "I'm not locked up in here with you..." Kidding aside, a great talk, thanks very much.
@lindsayanglestein87384 жыл бұрын
Reminded me of similar theories that were discussed during the Alan Moore interview by Will Menaker. Chapo/Alan Moore book club talks after Ulysses. ? Cheers Matt!
@TheARCADEFIRElover4 жыл бұрын
You gotta listen to 22, A million Matt. The last song in particular feels very resonant with some of what you’re talking about. Also listen to the whole album on acid I’d say
@A.W.B.2474 жыл бұрын
In terms of capital intensity and art, I remember a line from "He Died with a Felafel in his Hand" where the main character only uses a spool of paper for his typewriter since 'the pages impose an artificial construct on his stream of consciousness.' I understood this, like other things in the movie, as hilarious, intentionally egotistical, self aggrandizing and deluded. Yes capital imposes a structure on art, but can we evaluate this as good or bad by the required concentration of capital? Low tech doesn't make better or 'purer' art. Your book had to be formatted for printing. The subtlety of hand written prose is lost with print, just as the subtlety of speech is lost with writing, but so what? We evaluate a form for how we experience it. Books are great and they are not just poor substitutes for a verbal tale. Films and television are also enjoyable for what they are given both their economic and technological constraints. I suppose standardization is a convenient sacrifice for accessibility, but this is not always such a big deal. Some subtlety is lost, but this is not necessarily better than the convenience. Back in the 90s I liked to read 'Finnegan's Wake' on acid. That was a fun one! I could not imagine this in another form. If it was it would be a different thing altogether. I've read about the attempts to translate it have been decades long philosophical exercises. Probably one of the least accessible books ever, but fun none-the-less. finwake.com/1024chapter1/1024finn1.htm
@A.W.B.2474 жыл бұрын
"Hohohoho, Mister Finn, you're going to be Mister Finnagain! Comeday morm and, O, you're vine! Sendday's eve and, ah, you're vinegar! Hahahaha, Mister Funn, you're going to be fined again!"
@nikolademitri7314 жыл бұрын
Okay, after having watched this all the way now, I gotta leave another comment and just say that this is your best of these so far, by far imo, and I want to hear you talk with Michael Brooks now, bc in the rare occasions I get to hear him wax poetic and philosophical about his spiritual views and practice, I hear someone who I think would connect with a lot of this. A dialogue could be fruitful, and I think injecting these bits of non/anti dogmatic spirituality into leftist discourse is useful, and healthy, and possibly even desperately needed! (Imo it’s actually essential for the left, whether or not you want to call any of it “spiritual”, I always use that for lack a better term, and certainly don’t mean the “supernatural”, which I also use for lack better term.) Anyway, much of this has been things I’ve been thinking a lot about, and trying to make sense of in an actually intelligible way (to the extent that’s even possible), and a lot of this monologue actually helped out, some of it quite a bit. Not that entheogens are the answer, but I’m not entirely sure it’s the “lazy” or “cheap” way of getting there, and damnit, I really wish I had some during this crisis, and not just bc my access to good spaces for meditation are highly limited at the moment.. ✌️❤️♾🕉☸️🔯☦️⚛️🧠💦
@brendancostello97774 жыл бұрын
Tie this in with the groundswell of studies around psychedelic substances and their therapeutic application (which I am somewhat skeptical about) but more broadly the resurgence in popularity of these experiences may lead to a broadening of a lot of minds.... I know that's pretty vague but I think it ties in pretty well. I agree that Matt & Michael would probably have a fascinating discussion, especially if they disagree on something.
@nikolademitri7314 жыл бұрын
Brendan Costello Word! I’m curious, what aspects of the “therapeutic application of psychedelics” are you skeptical about? No judgement, just interested in hearing what aspects you’re more skeptical of, and/or what ways you’re skeptical. It’s been quite a while (3-5 years) since I’ve looked into studies being done on psychedelic/entheogen substances, but at one point in my mid-late 20s, I kept up with that stuff pretty regularly, especially when I was at uni, as I was a psych major, and it was relevant to multiple things I studied and papers I wrote. I didn’t necessarily always care for the frameworks that the research was done in, or how it was being contextualized sometimes, but as far as very significant (statistically, and otherwise) results are concerned, most studies that I was aware of really did show them, and gave good reason to be optimistic about serious potential for psychedelics coming back into “respectable” contexts. Granted, many of these things are in early and preliminary stages, and a lot more research needs to be done (and replicated) if we’re to have more hardy data, but I really don’t recall many (if any) instances of the studies I read showing a lack of efficacy of the substances, whatever the context/content of the studies. Again, I’ll repeat that it’s been a few years since I’ve really dug into the matter, for various reasons, not the least being I no longer have access to research like I did in uni, and I refuse to pay the high price to get access to full details of research as it’d appear in academic journals. (which one doesn’t need per se, but there’s obviously a massive difference between reading an abstract and some parts of a conclusion, vs reading everything, particularly the methodology, participants, stats breakdowns, etc., but I digress.)
@heatheradeletate4 жыл бұрын
I love this conversation. Thank you for putting it into words
@ramonalejandrosuare4 жыл бұрын
There is a lot of rationalization here by Matt for why he didn't like Better Call Saul so much.
@bananafish584 жыл бұрын
Multi-level Enlightenment.
@yomama53684 жыл бұрын
every time someone wonders why i complain so much about all the bs commercialized entertainment everyone else seems to enjoy so much, all i can think is "that shit ain't no Shawshank Redemption." Why the hell should my standards for entertainment not be as high as the best examples i've had the pleasure of experiencing? Why should I be satisfied with an industry whose greatest pleasure seems to be the absence of any thought save that of the instinctual fascination with special effects and the lexical analyzation of intertextuality?
@nitewalker114 жыл бұрын
it is extremely funny to me that your conceptualization of uncommercialized high art is shawshank redemption
@RootinrPootine4 жыл бұрын
Dylan Pierson This. Shawshank is the paragon of normie “great art” film. Just look at IMDb user ratings best of all time.
@alfiewillis48934 жыл бұрын
The problem with this is that there are undoubtedly people out there whose lives were enriched more by 5 seasons of Breaking Bad than Shawshank Redemption. And I love Frank Darabont and think he's a great, interesting director who gets bashed too much for being a normie just because he made Shawshank Redemption and Green Mile, but that film is the embodiment of commercialised Hollywood schmaltz. There's a reason it was nominated for a bunch of Oscars and resonated with an entire generation of film-goers. Ultimately, I've found that how commercialised something is or isn't doesn't affect its quality as much as people say it does. I've seen movies made on a budget of less than a million dollars that are shit and forgettable, and I've seen 50+ million dollar films that have stuck with me for years.
@boipolloi6874 жыл бұрын
Ok so the pursuit of pleasure exists to cope with the inadequacies and anxieties of poverty and toil and general material scarcity and an inability to develop our full potential. This is represented by the demiurge, today the machine because we killed the spirit in favor of pure rationality, which is sort of like a base instinct to just get by and live? This keeps us alive and reproducing, giving us a material base to maintain existence and seek pleasures, both mental and physical, that make life bearable, but at the same time it alienates us from others as well as from ourselves and our true potential. So the goal is to elevate human society and consciousness to a new level that transcends scarcity and unlocks true human potential. And the only way to do that is to harness productive forces in a way that distributes work and pleasure equitably, allowing both material production and human mental development to rise together, eventually making pleasure no longer alienating or harmful to others because it will be less and less a scarcity that only some can have in any meaningful way. am I getting this at all?
@businessgoose60574 жыл бұрын
"Enjoy the work, for the work sake. Not the outcome" That's all
@weakboson78134 жыл бұрын
please be nice to your cats everyone they are fluffy and good and deserve infinite love and happiness
@TheLokiBiz4 жыл бұрын
I find Better Call Saul to have different atmosphere than Breaking Bad, myself. I honestly much prefer it. I don't see how TV is any more commercial than film, honestly...
@alfiewillis48934 жыл бұрын
I don't fully agree with Matt, but the heart of what he's saying is true. TV exists on a week-by-week basis, and the minute that ratings start to plummet it's in danger of losing its ability to tell the story it wants to tell. The studios basically fund directors and, with major blockbuster exceptions, generally leave the director, producers, and writers alone to hash it out. Television shows operate differently, where the studio heads and development team will constantly give producers and writers notes to incorporate into the show, because they want to keep the ratings up for advertisers. Literally the only reason television as a medium of entertainment exists in the first place is to sell bleach and toilet paper, which the studio heads know even if that's not an obvious thing to most viewers, and that impacts how shows are run and operated.
@MoonbaseTV4 жыл бұрын
@@alfiewillis4893 Totally agree in general but I feel like BCS could literally do whatever because they are AMC's prestige baby. Like the climax of many episodes is legal fuckery or a speech. Sure, there is action and I'm sure producers and executives have say but after BrBa Gilligan and Gould have em by their nuts.
@matthewevans3718 Жыл бұрын
Your cat wants u bad
@salamimami77204 жыл бұрын
the only way out is through
@BenjaminTheBatchelor4 жыл бұрын
god this fucking rocks
@matthewevans3718 Жыл бұрын
This is so trippy, it literally looks like u are in my bed with my headboard and my walls and windows, this looks like my selfies in bed
@YamSakerII4 жыл бұрын
go on JRE. would be good publicity for the cause
@alfiewillis48934 жыл бұрын
I want to see Matt smoke up with Joe and riff about the Democrats being cynical opportunists for 2 hours straight. Felix needs to be there though.
@adamskorupskas21843 жыл бұрын
god damnit you brilliant bastard you figured it out!
@johannF094 жыл бұрын
Matt turning into one of the villains from Far Cry 5, learning to accept "Yes"
@heidimelcarek36774 жыл бұрын
Dude... there's no fuckin' way financial/business/political leaders fear hell. If they did they wouldn't be the vampires they are
@bowser_inthe_darkworld24 жыл бұрын
Wow, this is incredible
@FreePercussion Жыл бұрын
That was the most incredible better call Saul review I've ever heard
@SuperFivealive4 жыл бұрын
No need to be self-conscious of sounding like a lunatic. You make sense.
@PeterMcLoughlinStargazer18774 жыл бұрын
Dialectic Materialism is a really good analysis of the economy. Anwar Shaikh models it pretty good in his economics he does better or at least to me it makes more sense the Keynes or Friedman or Hayek. I don't know what y'all think of him but he models economics what he calls classical tradition (capping off with Marx) and that later economic interpretations are misunderstandings in later schools and Shaikh incorporates their insights into the original Classical or Marxian understanding.
@PeterMcLoughlinStargazer18774 жыл бұрын
You are right Russell used that in a Key paper in his project I think he wrote a paper in it for Mind it was supposed to be a key paper in Analytic Philosophy On Denoting www.goodreads.com/book/show/29782075-on-denoting
@PeterMcLoughlinStargazer18774 жыл бұрын
I suspect Jordan Peterson ripped off his Jung stuff from Joseph Campbell who I prefer.
@PeterMcLoughlinStargazer18774 жыл бұрын
Praxis
@PeterMcLoughlinStargazer18774 жыл бұрын
For the record I was demoted from PMC
@PeterMcLoughlinStargazer18774 жыл бұрын
If you are the only consciousness in the Universe then you are a fucking Boltzmann Brain and that is a horrible thing.
@RoryBecktar4 жыл бұрын
"and the rock started rolling back down the hill, and i was sisyphus, and i got to walk down it. and the thing about sisyphus is: Camus says you must imagine sisyphus happy. that's one of those things that just sounds like a zen koan or something; i understand it now. because happy sisyphus is when he gets to the top of the hill as often as possible, because being on the top of the hill is fun, and walking down the hill is not as fun as being on the top of the hill, but it's a lot more fun than pushing the goddamn rock up the hill. so, you just gotta increase the circuits. you can't just keep pushing the boulder up one long gradient, which is what most people do. and which we're cursed to do, because of our material realities that constrain us, and chain us."
@DaKrakenRule4 жыл бұрын
Contact with the Depths
@fuzzyplasmacat63574 жыл бұрын
Ignore chat, it's pure id
@azathoth004 жыл бұрын
Most interesting lecture yet matt meow
@arnold-pdev4 жыл бұрын
2x doesn't even make this worthwhile
@OblateSpheroid4 жыл бұрын
This is very close to Infowars.
@dkthg4 жыл бұрын
chem-trails....
@ladedade23Blunticus4 жыл бұрын
Not at all
@alfiewillis48934 жыл бұрын
Must be why it fucking rocks.
@arlostein10004 жыл бұрын
I wish I had flex in 2016 so that when I got into an argument about how the only interesting parts were the black and white vignettes. Any scene with violence involving Saul or Mike I know they'll be fine ice seen the shot show that is breaking bad
@salamimami77204 жыл бұрын
best one yet
@akumakorgar4 жыл бұрын
Arthur C Clarke mode, "My God, it's full of stars"
@jacobbreslau21594 жыл бұрын
John Ralston Saul is a scion to the Canadian metaphysical tradition, and therefore committed to a project of putting dresses on chair legs. This is what happens when Prebyterians are allowed to read Blake.
@arubinojr56704 жыл бұрын
A. At least he's not losing his mind in quarantine. B. I'll still show up for the Ulysses Storytime.
@veiler84154 жыл бұрын
Gnostic beliefs have cut through all this bullshit in my life
@GenshinX4 жыл бұрын
It's not that it's incoherent; what you're trying to say is beyond words like you said (or language is a lie), so it's difficult or possibly impossible to translate an experience like you had into the medium of language. Anyway keep at it brother, I bet many of us are on our own paths towards enlightenment and this is a nice reminder of that.
@benbascheable4 жыл бұрын
Oh yeah this one. Like this If you watched this already on that bootleg KZbin account like a real head. This is an all time choomba
@MrEzuma4 жыл бұрын
honestly the last chapter of Ulysses really does deliver something like that feeling. The 500+ pages before is pushing the boulder up the hill.
@philihp4 жыл бұрын
I miss F.F. Woodycooks shaking the crime stick. His name is... ME!
@thehuz134 жыл бұрын
"What about when someone, coming from looking at divine things, looks to the evils of human life? Do you think it is surprising that he behaves awkwardly and appears completely ridiculous, if while - while his sight is still dim and he has not yet become accustomed to the darkness around him - he is compelled, either in the courts or elsewhere, to compete about the shadows of Justice..." Republic, 517d, trans. CDC Reeve
@saramayhew4 жыл бұрын
Art has always been impacted and influenced by money and profit. Sure, modern mediums involve more of it, but that’s because the modern world in general is. Literature, sculpture, painting, and music has always been somehow constrained and shaped by the influence of money and power. I’m all for critiques of how commercialism impacts art, but can’t help but cringe when people rant about what “real” art is. It over-simplifies and romanticizes the relationship great artists of the past had with audiences and patrons, as if they operated in this pure artistic space.
@michaelm.36944 жыл бұрын
Irenaeus and Constantine permanently derailed Christianity from the start. As Chesterton said, " it's not that Christianity is a failure, it's that it's never been really attempted".
@Swimmaroo Жыл бұрын
A very important and influential talk 🐳
@RidWalker4 жыл бұрын
Better Call Saul is busking outside cushbomb's mind palace and he went Douglas Levinson mode
@dearvariant86824 жыл бұрын
This was really great
@bananafish584 жыл бұрын
YES!
@NoRace4 жыл бұрын
Better call Saul of Tarsus... Roman Fascism is here
@azureknight7774 жыл бұрын
Matt is totally elevating his brain out of the range of human words. Or he was, y'know... like...really high.
@anemoneyas4 жыл бұрын
Just gonna go ahead and admit that I have absolutely no idea what any of this means. It sounds kinda like the first time I did acid but also the opposite in a lot of ways
@muscovyducks4 жыл бұрын
I am become Cush
@Apicalgrowth4 жыл бұрын
I was terrified to know what happens if you can maintain the sublime. I didn’t have the strength that’s for damn sure
@blacklagooner64524 жыл бұрын
Matt: *watches Jim Carrey's "Yes Man" one time*
@adamazzalino52474 жыл бұрын
So matt didn't like better call saul is my take away. :P
@Rompelstaump4 жыл бұрын
Holy shit! Matt finally broke his brain. He thinks that "reading ulysses" is gonna make a difference.
@jonchoppelas61764 жыл бұрын
You were able to find it? Awesome, it was good!
@cosymonkey45724 жыл бұрын
John Dewey: Entertainment (tv) represents our known reality. Art seeks to express a new or imagined reality - art is a transformative experience for both artist and viewer. Entertainment can never achieve this. It adds no value to the world because it can never transform us.
@A.W.B.2474 жыл бұрын
If everything is predetermined, how is anything a mistake? Even if I take this for granted, why do mistakes accumulate? Is the idea that what is correct dissolves or transforms but what is 'wrong' persists? If mistakes are all that is not intended, we are dealing with the ways that reality does not conform to pure thought. This is idealism in contrast to materialism. Yes, material shapes thought, but only broadly in terms of concepts and framework. Thought does not equal matter, but is subordinate to it. Cosmology, like an evolutionary adaptive mutation only needs to be good enough to reproduce itself better than the previous form, it need not be 'correct' in any absolute sense, just better than the alternative in a place and time. The thing with reactionary ideas like Peterson's is that they come from a previous material basis pushing back against modernity. They are not from nowhere, they are have just become outmoded in their utility and their adherents are grasping for the image of their previous ascendancy. They don't realize that they can't get this back or more that even if they could it would make everyone worse off for it including them. I feel like you are getting at an evolutionary metaphor, where the new correct displaces the old, but never fully. It displaces them differently, not in an ideal absolute sense.