Have you ever considered doing a video on how you curate your outfits/looks for your videos? Because you always SERVE in all of your videos 💁🏽♀️
@sophspice326 ай бұрын
i would love to see that too, like where can you get those cool historical garments?
@kyleanuar90906 ай бұрын
I hope Kaz will someday do a collab with Bernadette Banner on costumes, BB did a pirate's shirt which I thought would be perfect for Kaz.
@FabulousSquidward6 ай бұрын
I would absolutely watch
@euansmith36996 ай бұрын
This particular outfit is especially awesome.
@kathleenkilmartin54946 ай бұрын
@@kyleanuar9090that or Nicole Rudolph.
@CthonicMysteries6 ай бұрын
Ah, so "Byronic" is synonymous with "poor little meowmeow." I do so enjoy your work.
@maryeckel96826 ай бұрын
Very drunk Howl mode
@benjaminlammertz646 ай бұрын
Imagine hanging out with Mary "i lost my virginity on my mother's tombstone" Shelly and still being the biggest walking disaster in the room.
@sydney90116 ай бұрын
"What could possibly go wrong?" followed by "Byron Gets Cancelled" made me gut laugh!!!
@MelodyLee196 ай бұрын
i can’t believe this man is indirectly one of the reasons we have computers (his daughter was ada lovelace)
@sc66586 ай бұрын
I like joking about how this means it’s his fault that pornbots exist.
@tinkergnomad6 ай бұрын
You do understand the full extent of his participation in that right? 💦 Why give a man credit for something a woman did? Edit: Even "indirectly." I've never seen anyone credit a man's mother with something he did (unless it's an unsolicited 🍆 pic).
@lordbaphie6 ай бұрын
And he is also one of the great influences for the genre of sexy vampires/Twilight 💀
@SummerThymeMadness6 ай бұрын
@@sc6658ahahahahahahhaha STEALING THAT ONE THANK YOU SO MUCH gonna make that domino meme about it omgs
@Hollyberrystreats6 ай бұрын
@@sc6658That tracks
@user-iw7gu8rk5i6 ай бұрын
RIP Lord Byron, you would’ve loved ketamine 💔
@euansmith36996 ай бұрын
I imagine him living in the coked-up 80s.
@k80_6 ай бұрын
The world is lucky he died before the invention of poppers
@cedaremberr6 ай бұрын
@@k80_😮😂🤣
@CraftyVegan6 ай бұрын
I always imagined him on MDMA 🤔
@deanmaynard82566 ай бұрын
well he sure loved opiates.
@CAP1984626 ай бұрын
Forget Patreon, Byron’s “Only Fans,” page would be indescribable.
@archieman685 ай бұрын
he would advise his only fans on his poetry account 😭
@dumarae3 ай бұрын
😊😊@@archieman68
@pepperonicici2 ай бұрын
reading his own poetry naked in regal poses. I can see it
@Jane_83196 ай бұрын
I always forgot Byron hanged out with MARY SHELLY and JOHN POLIDORI. Absolute problematic legends the lot of them. Please talk about Mary Shelly.
@MatthewTheWanderer6 ай бұрын
It's "hung out" by the way. "Hanged" means something completely different and noose-related.
@cursed3artemis6 ай бұрын
And her mother because we need it!!! Also Polidori always intrigued me, specially since he usually is the "footnote" of the quartet.
@falconeshield6 ай бұрын
Don't forget: Byron gave the world ADA LOVELACE.
@cafeAmericano6 ай бұрын
Can we stop dropping the word problematic like the word the? It's become one of those go-to words like "toxic", and is used for anything even vaguely complex or simply unpleasant . It's losing all meaning at this point.
@نجمة-ت8د6 ай бұрын
@@cafeAmericanowhy it fits perfectly the way it is most often used when referring to people. Problematic literally means “constituting or presenting a problem or difficulty” usually referring to people were very morally complex/gray bordering on bad people and therefore difficult to understand or sympathize with from a moral perspective.
@padghd6 ай бұрын
He lived for a short time here in Portugal, in a villa near Sintra. He was forced to leave the country after a big scandal: he was getting closer to a very notable family, everyone believe he was about to get engaged with her, when became public that he was dating not the girl, but her brother!
@haanym6 ай бұрын
Stacy's brother in real life
@sophie38695 ай бұрын
@@haanymTHATS WHAT I WAS ABOUT TO SAY 😁
@EvonneLindiwe17 күн бұрын
@@haanym😂
@arcanistnpc47516 ай бұрын
My favorite Byron story is that time he disappeared for a few months and Shelley and Keats became worried. So Keats went to Italy after him. He apparently found Byron in a brothel, dehydrated as hell and on the verge of death. When Keats sent word back to Shelley, Shelley replied "Put him back where you found him." Even Shelley was done with Byron XD
@nyctori6 ай бұрын
YES kaz rowe shares the history of another "SILLY" GAY ARTIST and adds to my CONVERSATION POINTS AT THE DINNER TABLE
@rowanalexandriabennett6 ай бұрын
Thanks so much for the kind review, Kaz! How appropriate that, in a video about a disaster bisexual, the character you highlight from my book is also inspired by a disaster bisexual.
@fozziebean6 ай бұрын
I read your first sentence and wondered how Lord Byron was commenting on this video and how he interpreted this bio as "kind". 😂
@frogfrogcat266 ай бұрын
“[Byron] also had a close group of friends, one of which he was verifiably gay with” I mean, same
@rcusick24656 ай бұрын
We've all been there. Only one? Sounds like he was holding back to me.
@_.rainydays._2 ай бұрын
@@rcusick2465*verifiably* gay. we don't know if any more of his friendships had benefits
@AeronsMVs6 ай бұрын
" SHIT ! if i inherited this thing id become really annoying too " you're so real for that
@CanelaAguila6 ай бұрын
I love how Mary Shelley had a half-assed incestuous relationship in Frankenstein, my "headcanon" is that it's the result of a lot of justification speeches/ramblings from Byron that summer
@hypo.critter6 ай бұрын
she even has incestuous love between father and daughter in her next book - Mathilda, but there it’s actually nicely shown how damaging that is to both sides, especially to the young daughter
@aricheec77226 ай бұрын
as a disabled bisexual survivor of grooming ive always found him to be a great example of how being refused empathy and love as a child can impact many peoples future. in the modern day, i think he would have been able to heal and recover his relationship with familial love. unfortunately for many, including himself, there was no field of study to help mitigate the effects of trauma.
@aricheec77226 ай бұрын
@@TwisterTornado what are you talking about ma'am
@lbyblbab84966 ай бұрын
@@aricheec7722bro did not bother actually reading your comment
@aricheec77226 ай бұрын
@@lbyblbab8496 yeah that’s for sure. side note i thought you were them for a second lmfao.
@DumiNihi6 ай бұрын
@TwisterTornado that's not what they said?
@aricheec77226 ай бұрын
@@DumiNihi dont bother, some people in this world need something to be upset at. i think that commenter is used to being ignored or erased so they immediately assumed my comment erases them, but it doesnt. even now, people are denied empathy, the difference is that now we have the resources to deal with it-- which I dearly hope @TwisterTornado can one day acquire...
@LisEibh6 ай бұрын
"Everyone desires you carnally. Everyone hates you...carnally 😢" 😂❤
@VinceWhitacre6 ай бұрын
It is a blessing and a curse
@sarahwatts71526 ай бұрын
I love the outfits that Kaz wears for these, so stinking dapper. I think Byron was a hurt person hurting people - an explanation and definitely not an excuse
@margauxf43216 ай бұрын
Pain is cyclical. The victim often becomes the abuser.
@MaxOakland6 ай бұрын
@@margauxf4321breaking that cycle is one of the most powerful and impressive choices a person can make
@gardensofthegods6 ай бұрын
@@margauxf4321actually it's not often that the victim becomes the abuser ... it's some of them . A lot of people who have been abused even very early in life don't turn out to be the horrible disgusting abusers ... or even monsters that some become .
@PrincessDollieBunnieАй бұрын
@@gardensofthegods Exactly. You don't see it because they are just trying to live their lives.
@gardensofthegodsАй бұрын
@@PrincessDollieBunnie yep .
@MegCazalet6 ай бұрын
Byron would definitely be the type to be an influencer on TikTok, Twitter, Intsta, and YT, etc, while acting like he was soooo above it all. He’d probably have that notable “bored TikTok affect” that many influencers speak in. He would also have a manosphere-adjacent podcast to talk about his lofty intellectual ideals and have all his love interests as guests.
@43v3rh1d3n6 ай бұрын
he would be a regular guest if not a host of the Guys We F*cked Podcast lol
@tehbertl79266 ай бұрын
He'd definitely be showing off the Lamborghini in his garage while simultaneously saying "but what I really like is KNOWLEDGE"
@tacoindoggie17316 ай бұрын
"uuhhh dream guest on my podcast? Hmm let's spice it up, one of my exes!"
@cafeAmericano6 ай бұрын
That would no doubt be the only way I would ever watch tiktok
@ladyreverie70276 ай бұрын
He'd be Russell Brand tbh
@catherinegarrigan60756 ай бұрын
“Lady Caroline, with the chair!” 😂😂😂
@aliendeathrocker6 ай бұрын
💀💀
@atomicdogmom6 ай бұрын
Lady Caroline the real MVP 😂
@lisahoshowsky42516 ай бұрын
“Dionysiun Chaos” is a really evocative description😆
@KMFerguson6 ай бұрын
Kaz: Now, I know what you're wondering... Me: why did Mary Shelley keep a portion of Percy's skull? Kaz: Did Byron and the Shelley's have an affair Me: oh yeah sure that too
@prosperpascoe31766 ай бұрын
honestly if I had the opportunity to keep a portion of percy’s skull it would be my prized possession and guarded with my life, and I wasn’t even married to the guy. I get it and I love that for her
@rcusick24656 ай бұрын
Looking forward to YOUR video!
@j.s.walker36566 ай бұрын
It was both
@DefinetlyAHuman3 ай бұрын
@@prosperpascoe3176 love how you clarify that you're not married to him. Makes you sound like some kinda undead vampire that got just a bit too close to him back in the day, enough to have to clarify that, and now has slipped into the habit of still clarifying jt after it is reakistically necessary or proper to do so
@silversam6 ай бұрын
"I dont see whats so 'intellectual' about wandering around Italy in a puffy shirt trying to get laid." - Edmund Blackadder III, Royal Butler My romanticism professor introduced us to Byron as "probably the first person to achieve fame the way rock stars have today... No, I'm serious!" He also said Byron had a relatively "crude ear" and "other problems" before getting into Childe Harold. It was around then that I began to think he was trying to tell us without telling us that not just Byron, but romanticism in general was riddled with some great evil that he couldnt quite put his finger on... until we read Frankenstein, which we all agreed was pretty much the apotheosis of the whole era. Anyway, enough of that. Enjoyed this a lot! Thanks for making it 😊
@AmarisFrede6 ай бұрын
Sounds like a cool class you had!
@joanavitoria19616 ай бұрын
He had a... pet bear.
@euansmith36996 ай бұрын
And didn't he have a baby giraffe too; or was that just in Ken Russel's "Gothic"?
@ChristopherSadlowski6 ай бұрын
I mean, the pet bear was the least weird thing he had going on. But it is still exceptionally weird.
@cthulhucommander6 ай бұрын
A pet bear... if ya know what I mean.😂
@euansmith36996 ай бұрын
@@cthulhucommander Maybe an otter too?
@mister13eyond6 ай бұрын
After transition I chose the name "Byron" for myself, partially inspired by Lord Byron himself, and it always brings me joy (and/or amusement) hearing what a chaotic queer mess my namesake was. This was a great video, I've been hoping to see you cover Lord Byron for ages! Thank you for another super fun and entertaining dive into history!
@thundercat2876 ай бұрын
I took Alan Turing's middle name for not queer reasons so it was not intentional
@MatthewTheWanderer6 ай бұрын
I have used the name "Byron" for Sims characters myself, since it is such a cool sounding name.
@MatthewTheWanderer6 ай бұрын
@@TwisterTornado Lol, exactly!
@sommerblume96716 ай бұрын
Incest & obsession with young boys is always looked over though.
@SummerThymeMadness6 ай бұрын
oh my gods so there’s this Russian poet Mikhail Lermontov who was ALMOST DEFINITELY a queer and 100% a disaster. not only was he obsessed w Byron, he openly disliked how interested women were in him and wrote lots of love letters to famous poets. he also went to war so he could be with his “best friend” whom he basically called “my darling Sasha” and after the darling Sasha was killed, Lermontov provoked a dude to a duel and essentially let himself get killed cause he didn’t want to live without the darling Sashenka. his words, not mine. ANYWAY this guy wrote a few plays, one of which is called A Strange Man and literally we had always identified with one of the characters, to the point where, when we needed to change our surname from our abusers’ to our own, we picked that one IMMEDIATELY, there wasn’t even a question. this was waaaay before i transitioned and way before i learned i was a part of a DID system. but i find it so cool that you and i are kind of connected in this silly way!! hehe Byron is a super cool trans name btw 🩷🩵🤍🩵🩷
@purlypuss6 ай бұрын
your byron in the bathtub cosplay was the best thing on the internet this week 😂❤😂❤
@barkboingfloom6 ай бұрын
"Furiously bisexual". Damn! I love that turn of phrase.
@rcusick24656 ай бұрын
I've got to step up my game.
@JinxDagger6 ай бұрын
"Regency era All or Nothing" made me laugh so hard i cried omfg. this might actually be my new favorite Kaz video
@mousequeer6 ай бұрын
According to a display in the Mary Shelley museum in Bath, Byron asked to keep Percy Shelley's skull but was refused "due to a story of him once using a human skull as a drinking cup." Really normal social group there.
@leoribic16914 ай бұрын
He also inscribed a few lines he wrote on it! Look up "Lines written on a skull." It was from a monk whose remains were found at Newstead Abbey.
@braydonthegreat50996 ай бұрын
The audio doesnt bother me but I adore that you filmed a whole section warning us about it. You're too good to us 😂
@MaxOakland6 ай бұрын
I wouldn’t even notice it 😊
@SniffanyBlues6 ай бұрын
Yeah it didn't bother me at all, but I respect the attention to detail
@ScarletRebel966 ай бұрын
Lord Byron is like the dark souls boss fight of bisexuality and thats something i can definitely appreciate 😊
@MegCazalet6 ай бұрын
I like the “Byronic Hero” so much more than I like Byron himself. He was such a jerk to Clair Clairmont. Though she kind of made herself a pest after being repeatedly rejected, but the way he treated her and her daughter when Clair was clearly tormented, makes me sad. She idolized that man.
@annaSHRRR6 ай бұрын
He doesn’t owe her anything just because she’s obsessed with him. Actually, the opposite. She was ANNOYING, we all would do the same in his place
@annaSHRRR6 ай бұрын
He doesn’t owe her anything just because she’s obsessed with him. Actually, the opposite. She was ANNOYING, we all would do the same in his place
@BlancheNeigefan6 ай бұрын
@@annaSHRRR He was a nineteenth century man who had premarital sex with a woman. He owed her security and safety at the very least. Even more after she got pregnant. He did not adequately provide for her or her child, and what help he did give came after much prompting. Let's not apply 21st century morality to this situation: you don't get to have "boundaries" when you basically condemn a member of a vulnerable group to social death with your irresponsibility and you aren't "a stalker" just because you internalized the belief that sex=love and love=marriage and being a fallen woman=death after it was hammered into you by the combined powers of Hester Chapone, Hannah More, James Fordyce, Jane West and every conduct book writer of the time.
@chloeedmund43506 ай бұрын
@@BlancheNeigefanhe couldn't even give himself security and he was an actual aristocrat. Stalking and begetting a child with a mess like Byron is not exactly the best idea in the world for a woman of any time.
@carsonramsey55036 ай бұрын
@@chloeedmund4350do you think she, as the seventeen year old who byron had sex with as a full grown twenty eight year old man, would have been aware that byron, a man she looked up to, as a lord apparently couldn’t provide for his self? Also I can totally see her ignoring the red flags and making the conclusion that byron’s deteriorating relationship with his wife would lead to a situation where she could later marry him because that’s literally exactly what happened with percy and mary.
@joshuachapman42806 ай бұрын
I love the supposed description attributed to Byron of him being "mad, bad and dangerous to know." He's a fascinating person particularly if you believe the rumour that John Pollidori based the vampire in his book "The Vampyre" written during a stay with him and Mary Shelley during the year without a summer, on Byron. I do believe if I met him I'd want to kiss him but the urge to punch him would win out and I'd right hook him.
@gabriellebertrand30546 ай бұрын
That’s an interesting connection. I’m thinking of Lestât from Interview with a Vampire to be a very Byronic character then 😂
@charischannah6 ай бұрын
Byron does sound like he would have been extremely punchable.
@_.rainydays._2 ай бұрын
@@charischannahand vampiric
@wingedhatchling6 ай бұрын
As a woman who programs I started screaming when you said the name "Ada Lovelace" Grandmother of Binary!!!
@gardensofthegods6 ай бұрын
Yes and forgive me for saying it sounds like her father was the Godfather of Bi .
@allisonfarrell79686 ай бұрын
Byron-ary?
@oldu_53066 ай бұрын
Oh my god, just a couple days ago i thought "damn Lord Byron seems to be such an interesting fellow, i have to do research about him, wish Kaz had a video about him in their amazing in-depth exploration style". And wouldn't you know it, i return home from work and it's here!!!! Thank you so much, you made my evening 😂😂
@giorgosmichael91426 ай бұрын
The fact that he died in Mehssolongi in Greece in 1824, while commanding Greek Revolutionaries fighting against the Ottomans, shows what kind of a loose cannon he was.
@honeyLXIX6 ай бұрын
I like that you were slightly annoyed talking about Byron's escapades 🤭
@zaraandrews6006 ай бұрын
My grandad used to be a stonemason at Newstead Abbey when I was a child. It is interesting you mentioned how well kept it is today, because, actually, the building has been falling into disrepair. I visited recently and the staff were talking about how they are really struggling to care for the building and the grounds because the council which owns it is bankrupt. Some buildings have had water damage due to the roof needing repair and the gardens have become overgrown in areas. Nearly all the staff there are volunteers too. Previously, when my grandad worked there (around 15 years ago) they had a team of stone masons, gardeners, stewards etc. to care for the place. The gardens were immaculate and the building was kept in repair.
@pansepot14906 ай бұрын
Don’t you have the National Trust in the UK that takes care of historical buildings and sites? I heard the Tories have been cutting funding for everything. If the local council is broke and struggles to maintain it, it would make more sense to hand the place over to the NT.
@zaraandrews6005 ай бұрын
@@pansepot1490 We have several charities that care for historic buildings, but, the charities have to be willing to take on the historic building. If they need too much work done to them, making it very costly, then National Trust or English Heritage are less likely to take the place on. Also, Newstead Abbey is one of the few historic buildings the council has which makes them money, so they are less likely to get rid of it due to that. They did sell Sherwood Forest to RSPB a number of years ago, but that was because it was operating at a loss.
@DorianMatt6 ай бұрын
The shot of you staring out the window w/ the Byronically popped collar at 37:16 was the final nail in my coffin, this is simply too good. You have provided us with a hilarious, enthralling, albeit exhausting, tale of woe. Thank you for your service, king.
@CharredFibers6 ай бұрын
🎶Isn't it Byronic? Dontcha think? A little too Byronic. And yeah I really do think.🎶
@gretablackwell4956 ай бұрын
IT’S LIKE RAAAAAAAIN
@JauntyCrepe6 ай бұрын
🎶 on your friend fourway It’s the large debt that your dad didn’t pay~ 🎶
@crumbsintopebbles6 ай бұрын
@@JauntyCrepe *It's the good adviiiiice that you just didn't take*
@justafallperson21085 ай бұрын
This is the BEST comment thread I've ever come across! Y'all are legends
@CharredFibers5 ай бұрын
I have a knack for starting song lyrics in a thread. My friends and I did the entire Bohemian Rhapsody on my FB once just because it was thundering and lightning outside. LOL My life is a movie soundtrack
@nbhubbard6 ай бұрын
Odd story: A number of years back I was in a Kroger's store where I found a book titled. Women and Their Demon Lovers, on one of those turn-style thingies - that used to be in stores everywhere - which claimed to contain true stories of everyday women suddenly being tormented by randy ghosts. One of them was an account of a lady Byron scholar who become possessed by the spirit of Lord B. At first she finds it exciting, but over time he becomes more and more abusive. I guess even Death couldn't slow him down.
@AidanOAArch6 ай бұрын
Are we not going to Mention the other story about Annabella going into labor with Adda, where she complained that Byron was in the room below her, throwing things at the ceiling and yelling to torment her, and Byron responded by saying that no, he was just passing time by chopping the tops of champagne bottles with a saber and the corks happened to hit the ceiling, and that was the noise, and he only went to the theater when Arabella told him to knock it off? 10/10 chaotic mess.
@kenbrown29276 ай бұрын
You should do a video on Anne Lister!!! I was so obsessed/passionate about the show, Gentleman Jack, that I got a tattoo dedicated to Anne!!
@RachaelLongLastName6 ай бұрын
This NEEDS to become an “Our Flag Means Death”-esque show. It’s just too perfect
@MatthewTheWanderer6 ай бұрын
Agreed! Lord Byron had far too interesting of a life to not have a show!
@hughcaldwell10346 ай бұрын
Honestly, I was thinking it could work as a crass, intellectual animated comedy. Some blend of Archer and BoJack Horseman. Can't comment on the OFMD connection, as I'm yet to watch it.
@MatthewTheWanderer6 ай бұрын
@@hughcaldwell1034 That also sounds interesting!
@hughcaldwell10346 ай бұрын
@@MatthewTheWanderer Well, glad you think so. Honestly, I wasn't sure if it was a terrible idea :- especially as my eye condition means I have very little grasp of animation styles and what kinds of atmospheres they convey.
@MatthewTheWanderer6 ай бұрын
@@hughcaldwell1034 It would certainly be unusual, though. I don't know of any history-based animated adult comedy-dramas like that.
@TheSoundonly126 ай бұрын
Damn, I'll never slut-shame Lord Byron again. That childhood trauma probably played a role.
@RainbyFIN5 ай бұрын
It's still ok to shame him for the p*dophilic stuff though. It's not like it cancels out the victimhood of the underage if the pervy adult was once also a victim
@NicoleM_radiantbaby6 ай бұрын
Back when I was a teen queer in the late 80s, I was as obsessed with Byron as I was with some rock/pop stars of the day. He was just so intriguing to me back then (seriously, in my senior year I high school I did a paper on him...by choice) and had that intrigue been more recent, I might have described him in modern parlance as 'he's so gender'. Obviously, much like what happens when you learn about the dark side of your fave celebrity's life in any time period, some of the details of Byron's life don't sit as well with me as I've grown up. But I have to say, that at 51 years old, I still have a weird soft spot for him -- or at least the IDEA of him -- and how his nonconformity really pushed me toward my own in my youth. And so I'll always love that aspect of him and his 'Bryonic Hero' legacy, in a way. Despite all the bad stuff, of course.
@bostonsandatot49486 ай бұрын
Forever my 80s teen crush, brought to life watching Gothic. Well, he went from rake to just gross after watching this video. RIP Julian Sands and Natasha Richardson.
@euansmith36996 ай бұрын
I guess that Julian, himself, met with a rather Byronic fate; alone on a storm-raked mountain. 😭
@NicoleM_radiantbaby6 ай бұрын
SAME! I remember finding 'Gothic' at the height of my 80s Byron obsession and it was such a fave of mine!
@gardensofthegods6 ай бұрын
Yeah I think he was gross too and I'll bet you this doesn't even tell us the whole truth about him because he probably was worse than what has been told about him .
@chriswilson41126 ай бұрын
AH GOTHIC! Yea...remember when those small independent movies were the cool thing to go see? Especially if it were in a city and you went to the cool movie theater. One felt so "in". LOL
@FishareFriendsNotFood9726 ай бұрын
LIVING for your Byron fit, you rocked it
@phoebemurtagh30596 ай бұрын
My friend was recently called Byronic and texted me to ask if he should be insulted. My take was "no... *BUT*..." 😂
@_local.alien_6 ай бұрын
As someone who LOVES your channel and history and also grew up in Nottingham I jumped SO fast on this notification! Lord Byron was insanely talked about in my English classes in school and would always come up in conversation. I love this!!
@unabashedlybashful6 ай бұрын
His time in Venice was both epic and hysterical. Surprised he didn't pick up some deadly illness during his swims up and down the Grand Canal, much less during his romantic escapades!
@uburoi94066 ай бұрын
Holy shit here it is. Making myself a tea and bringing a warm blanket to watch this comfy
@lucastapleton5586 ай бұрын
Such a great, well made video! I’m actually a descendant of Lukas Chalandritsanos, Byron’s last object of his desire, so it’s always a crazy feeling to hear my ancestor mentioned.
@SamyTheBookWorm6 ай бұрын
Lord Byron is buried in the church at the end of my road. I can’t believe you were literally here in my town a few weeks ago 😂
@lilpetz5006 ай бұрын
Please I can't be giggling that hard at the line "Everyone hates you, carnally" it's late and I have work tomorrow 😂😂
@idridian6 ай бұрын
kaz: what could possibly go wrong? chapter title card: "Byron Gets Cancelled"
@christophercastanon22776 ай бұрын
Lord Byron. A Train Wreck DEMANDING TO HAPPEN.
@i0m0s6 ай бұрын
as a greek myself and a resident of the town of Missolonghi, I wish I could put into words how much of an icon he is for us. the statues, the paintings and the buildings we have dedicated to him.... every year we commemorate his doings and praise him for the things he did for the greek cause. So, every year I eagerly remind everyone of his other side that everyone tries to conceal; the reactions are always so funny, lol.
@Demonreached6 ай бұрын
"Historical figure youtube apologies" is a series I would watch!
@indigohalf6 ай бұрын
The shot of you from behind brooding at the window got a chuckle out of me. What a perfect image, especially with that costume! The drama and silliness come through without even needing to show your face- that's the power of Regency menswear.
@aprilconnett51486 ай бұрын
This video, like all of yours, was great. There is just one minor thing I would like to correct for you. Byron’s Don Juan was a satire of the Spanish folk legend, Don Juan. Part of the satire was the pronunciation. It is not pronounced in correct Spanish. Byron’s satire is actually pronounced “Don Ju-un” with the “j” sound and the accent on the first syllable. (I have a degree in English Education, please don’t be upset by the correction😊)
@MegCazalet6 ай бұрын
Ah, like the play Camino Real.
@maryeckel96826 ай бұрын
The first time I heard it said, my brain went 🤯
@villyardk6 ай бұрын
Great vid! But yes, Claire was William’s stepdaughter/Mary’s stepsister. I’d love for you to do a vid on Mary. She used to go nap on her mother’s grave. When Claire was traveling with Mary and Percy, they used to tell each other ghost stories (even without Byron). One morning Mary woke up and found Percy and Claire sitting up in the living room, too afraid to get up after spending the night scaring each other with ghost stories, and laughed at them. Goth Queen.
@elena_17765 ай бұрын
Omg the Byron youtuber apology killed me haha he would've been an absolute menace on social media
@CaylasCapsule6 ай бұрын
“His university years seemed to be uneventful. Other than the bear.” Legit laughed out loud. 😆😂🤣
@thrillhouse41516 ай бұрын
My late ex used to compare me to Lord Byron all the time, such a flattering sentiment, I miss her so much. If anything she was the Byron.
@anniel64796 ай бұрын
I would honestly love a Regency-era All or Nothing about Byron and Hobhouse, they sound hilarious together. I'm also going to have to add "verifiably gay" to my vocabulary.
@atiya-said-hey6 ай бұрын
Byron had you descending into spins homeboy. I appreciate your sacrifice for this video.
@human_plant6 ай бұрын
Bro's like a level 1,000 bisexual
@GBart6 ай бұрын
Lol it sounds like a cat gently licking some cellophane next to the mic
@VinceWhitacre6 ай бұрын
I'm so glad Byron lived 200 years ago and not today... So much better the poetry we have from him rather than the "toxic gossip train" stuff he'd be writing today.
@maryeckel96826 ай бұрын
I can see him sitting down at a Broadwood grand piano and going all Beethoven. BOOM BOOM BOOM BOOM "These rumours, ah, these dastardly rumors that dog my heels like...a pack of hounds? Oh damn!"
@maryeckel96826 ай бұрын
Damn ads ate my response, but I see him pounding away at a Broadwood grand piano, howling about the dastardly rumours that hound him like...a pack of hounds.
@ashtray81676 ай бұрын
I’m majoring in Art Education and hopefully Art History as well someday. Your videos as well as my talented professors have inspired me to learn so much about history and everything involved. Thank you much for caring so deeply about us and donating to help us!!
@maryeckel96826 ай бұрын
Feed that savings account early and often in this post capitalist hellscape. Art History degree holder who got paid for teaching two semesters in the mid 90s and never got paid for it again 😂 but it sure fed my neurodivergent skill of connecting absolutely everything. Miss Jane Austen might have said "Money is dirt," but that was after she made some 😂
@sasusakufangirl6 ай бұрын
The apology video sketch in the beginning had me laughing out loud XD But in all seriousness, it was a really interesting video - I would love to see a video on Mary (and Percy) Shelley if possible :)
@cornflakes-does-stuff6 ай бұрын
that apologie video and the title card "Byron gets cancelled" had me rolling, all your videos atret amazing, but this is a certfied batnger!
@bostonsandatot49486 ай бұрын
"Byron's favorite genre of mess" 😂
@willowtdog64496 ай бұрын
It’s such a tragedy to lose the memoirs of such a strong writer. His daughter was such a genius, I believe he really must have been, as well. I don’t think the audio was that bad, don’t stress! :)
@euansmith36996 ай бұрын
The setting, costume and presentation are all excellent; what a joyous video. "Here comes Lady Caroline, with a chair!" 😄😄😄
@tracimcmurray52446 ай бұрын
I learned about Lord Byron in high school. My uncle was named Byron. His son, my cousin, was named Byron. I had a Beta fish named Byron. Yeah, I've felt linked to this name for a while now and George Gordon is a highly interesting figure to me, including taking an entire semester of British Romantics, so I could learn more about him. Pre-internet days. Thanks for covering this topic. Always enjoy your content.
@ren.pfa.996 ай бұрын
As a greek, it feels like your past few videos have been a treat. Great work all around!
@JuliaZeeGreat6 ай бұрын
So, no mention of the theory that Polidori's The Vampyre was based on Byron? That's, like, the one thing I knew about Byron going in. Ah well, great video anyway!
@entityvoid6 ай бұрын
All I can say is that I can't wait for the Ada Lovelace, Mary Shelley and Oscar Wilde videos respectively.
@GarageBandKing0126 ай бұрын
If I'm not mistaken wasn't John Polidori also present for the writing contest between Byron and the Shelleys? It was his love of Byron's story, and his general infatuation of Byron, that lead to him writing the Vampyre which featured a lord described strangely similar to Byron himself.
@randallcraft40714 ай бұрын
The way you described Lord Byron in the intro I will now take on board and it will be the way I am described from now on.
@bostonsandatot49486 ай бұрын
I know I've commented way too often here yet I'm so excited about this Byron exploration as my best friend and I were eaten up with Byron and romanticism as 80s teens. She even went to Greece for her graduation gift. She was murdered by a stranger just months later, while living alone off campus. In true Byronic romantic fashion, I've missed her every day and this deep dive into our shared interest was both intriguing and well .. kinda yucky.
@mr.stealyourjams6 ай бұрын
Oh man, that’s awful! I’m sorry to hear about your friend. 😢
@SummerThymeMadness6 ай бұрын
that was literally such a TURN of events at the end there omg…sorry about your friend! i hope you heal 🤍
@haanym6 ай бұрын
Im so sorry about your friend
@CanelaAguila6 ай бұрын
Regency era All or Nothing, oh god 😂😂😂 Perfect timing for my big brain phase of connecting a lot of disperate historic people that I never realized were contemporaties, and were all somehow connected with Byron
@maryeckel96826 ай бұрын
Six Degrees of Lord Byron
@furuyawn6 ай бұрын
"regency era all or nothing" fucking sent me lmfao
@thatguyp44116 ай бұрын
Great vid! Although I must point out one little error here. Claire Clairmont was not married to William Godwin. She was his stepdaughter through his marriage to her mother, named Mary as well. Also, since she was unmarried at the time, it might have explained why it was she who pursued Byron and not the other way round.
@akuugawa69145 ай бұрын
I took a British Romanticism class my junior year of college. One of the people we talked about was Lord Byron. I always think back to my professor who said that had Lord Byron lived today, he definitely thinks he would be a "they/them." 😭😭 like okay, ally?
@bostonsandatot49486 ай бұрын
8 minutes in and I'm hoping for a mention of another bi artist who did the whole Screamin Lord Byron character that set my 80s adolescent soul on fire. (It was Bowie for those not coming of age in early Mtv lol)
@Lil1kv6 ай бұрын
As someone who has spent the past 3 months devoted to researching mary shelley and hating percy shelley, i can't wait to watch this video.
@hopeforstariskies11326 ай бұрын
"everyone hates you... carnally" a tragedy, truly
@KvaglyArt6 ай бұрын
! Treasure Planet mentioned ! That made me very happy. It’s still my absolute favorite movie.
@josephel4292Ай бұрын
I really enjoyed your presentation. I suppose Lord Byron could be called many things, but never boring.
@valeriadonati98366 ай бұрын
I first learned about lord byron because he was cited in an article about people with eating disorders in the past. Lovely
@Hollyberrystreats6 ай бұрын
I've generally been of the opinion that this was a very unflatering era in menswear but you are WEARING that suit, Kaz! ❤️
@sewinghippie6 ай бұрын
Yay another Kaz vid! Thank you for researching the difficult history of LGBTQIA history ✌️🖤
@CarlosRodrigues-we2vn6 ай бұрын
Glorious video as always. If I could request one for Arthur Rimbaud I´d be oh so happy,. His short life was so chaotic that the nicest thing was his mother, who he called the mouth of darkness, so you can imagine what other things happened in his life.
@phantasmagore79916 ай бұрын
william godwin was claire clairemont's step-father, she never married
@nhmisnomer6 ай бұрын
Thanks. I love Kaz but that was bugging me.
@rcusick24656 ай бұрын
Agreed. I left a comment saying the same but it seems to have disappeared. Also, Percy *Bysshe Shelley, not Percy Blythe Shelley. But it's a great video and I love the dry humor.
@phantasmagore79916 ай бұрын
@@rcusick2465 hail to thee blythe spirit...
@lilacsunset38486 ай бұрын
Ohh this was confusing me. I watched the movie Mary Shelley and it portrayed Mary and Clair as sisters.
@millicentduke66526 ай бұрын
The auto-stabilization made the panning shots of the castle jitter and jerk in a way that made them hard to look at. Besides that I’m hooked. Back to the video!
@katszulga18886 ай бұрын
"...other than the bear" might be the best exception that has ever been articulated.
@seattlebeard6 ай бұрын
I just watched 'Bride of Frankenstein' and wondered about the back story on Byron, who is such an affected freak in the opening. Your videos are such a relief after being barraged with AI bot video channels. Cheers. :o)