Going Home with Alaska and Miles

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  • Опубліковано 9 вер 2024
  • In which John spends a weekend with Charlie Plummer and Kristine Froseth, who will play Miles and Alaska in the Hulu adaptation of the book Looking for Alaska. And also Sarah Adina Smith, the director of the first episode!
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 1,3 тис.

  • @54321emb
    @54321emb 5 років тому +3180

    John's beautiful and poetic plea for people to stop asking him about decisions he has no control over

    • @vlogbrothers
      @vlogbrothers  5 років тому +409

      hahahahaha I'll admit to a bit of that ;) -John

    • @saber1epee0
      @saber1epee0 5 років тому +51

      doesjohngreencastmovies.com
      Needs an update to include Hulu Shows!

    • @Etheliajumper
      @Etheliajumper 5 років тому +2

      +

    • @Kay-kt1oj
      @Kay-kt1oj 5 років тому +6

      David Hurt LMAO That link gave me a good laugh😂

    • @ravendangernavy3575
      @ravendangernavy3575 4 роки тому

      @@Etheliajumper I love your IFH lyric videos!

  • @britneycampbell8696
    @britneycampbell8696 5 років тому +3059

    “I wrote the book because I wanted to go home.”
    That’s how I feel every time I want to reread the book

    • @noone-re3zp
      @noone-re3zp 4 роки тому +3

      Britney Campbell
      oh 🥺

    • @henryjackson4802
      @henryjackson4802 3 роки тому

      Bazinga

    • @connorallen657
      @connorallen657 3 роки тому

      I guess Im asking the wrong place but does anyone know of a tool to log back into an Instagram account??
      I stupidly forgot my account password. I would appreciate any help you can give me!

    • @maddenjulien1055
      @maddenjulien1055 3 роки тому

      @Connor Allen Instablaster =)

    • @connorallen657
      @connorallen657 3 роки тому

      @Madden Julien Thanks for your reply. I got to the site thru google and im in the hacking process now.
      Takes quite some time so I will reply here later with my results.

  • @laineygraham8709
    @laineygraham8709 5 років тому +2926

    Why is this making me cry

  • @5mileyrox5
    @5mileyrox5 5 років тому +335

    My roommate refused to look at me when the video finished because she figured I'd be crying. She was right.

    • @vlogbrothers
      @vlogbrothers  5 років тому +88

      thanks/sorry. :) -John

    • @ritumalani7211
      @ritumalani7211 4 роки тому

      @@vlogbrothers you are so confusing ..... i wish i could be sarah but then i wonder how she tolerates u

    • @ritumalani7211
      @ritumalani7211 4 роки тому

      Well now i am confusing

  • @anjalidedha1777
    @anjalidedha1777 5 років тому +1349

    I was actually expecting John to say that here goes Miles and Alaska to seek a greater perhaps. Skkakalala

    • @mattb5881
      @mattb5881 5 років тому +15

      Anji Winchester I’m too lactose intolerant for all this cheese

  • @vrulg
    @vrulg 5 років тому +854

    “You can go home again, the General Temporal Theory asserts, so long as you understand that home is a place where you have never been.”
    ― Ursula K. Le Guin, The Dispossessed

  • @fishpilgrim
    @fishpilgrim 5 років тому +2081

    Amazing casting. Not only do they look like real high schoolers, they look just like I imagined Miles and Alaska. Wow.

    • @ThisIsReMarkable
      @ThisIsReMarkable 5 років тому +2

      +

    • @bgraziano6867
      @bgraziano6867 5 років тому +68

      Alaska looks similar to me but I pictured Miles a bit differently

    • @lmsalim
      @lmsalim 5 років тому +90

      I thought Alaska had more curves & meat on her bones.

    • @fortheloveofLDS
      @fortheloveofLDS 5 років тому +5

      Good job, John! ;)

    • @djhero0071
      @djhero0071 5 років тому +4

      I wasn’t sure how to say that in a way that was appropriate so I’m glad you said it instead. I’ll still watch it because I have faith in the adaptation but definitely.

  • @Ari_Wil
    @Ari_Wil 5 років тому +913

    "Thoughts from Places" videos are some of my favorite...

  • @aspiringraccoon
    @aspiringraccoon 5 років тому +3101

    i always love these introspective scenery focused videos

  • @Gal_kid
    @Gal_kid 4 роки тому +575

    After I read and watched the series:"looking for alaska", I can no longer look at Kristine Froseth without feeling sad, as if she really died. She's really a good actress, no one else could have interpreted Alaska Young better than her.

    • @joshmcgeary2837
      @joshmcgeary2837 4 роки тому +48

      i know exactly what you mean. so many people were saying she wasn’t right for the character but i loved her. she was just sort of reimagined and it was perfect.

    • @KAJ7x
      @KAJ7x 4 роки тому +12

      BRUH I DIDN'T READ IT YET WTF

    • @Gal_kid
      @Gal_kid 4 роки тому +23

      @@KAJ7x I'm really sorry, I thought it was a obvious thing.

    • @shawncicalese4094
      @shawncicalese4094 3 роки тому +2

      Really,

    • @darling30038
      @darling30038 10 місяців тому +2

      I'm sorry, but you so lucky people, because you speaking in English language, I'm just from Russia, Hello America!

  • @shookings
    @shookings 5 років тому +649

    What a beautiful human being you are, John Green.

  • @meredithblack8360
    @meredithblack8360 5 років тому +146

    I'm in tears. They are so perfect for these roles. I was so worried when they announced this series was going to be made because I hold this book so close to me, but watching Miles and Alaska walk off together in real life...oh my god it's so surreal. Congratulations John ❤️

    • @vlogbrothers
      @vlogbrothers  5 років тому +33

      Thanks. I also really like Charlie and Kristine! -John

  • @jacobhelbig6967
    @jacobhelbig6967 5 років тому +446

    fun fact: a few months ago, the sign-out forms for the boarding students changed to include an example. John Green signed out, driven by Daniel Alarćon, to go to Chick-fil-a.

    • @vlogbrothers
      @vlogbrothers  5 років тому +202

      That's amazing. Daniel and I usually went to Taco Bell or McDonald's, though. -John

    • @jacobhelbig6967
      @jacobhelbig6967 5 років тому +27

      vlogbrothers do you know about the secret pathway to waffle house?

    • @sexyscientist
      @sexyscientist 5 років тому +3

      @@vlogbrothers Was there used to be a Taco bell on Oak Mountain Park road?

    • @jacobhelbig6967
      @jacobhelbig6967 4 роки тому

      there still is! waffle house, taco bell, pizza hut, mcdonalds, dunkin donuts, chick-fil-a, whataburger, walmart, and a couple other things.

  • @ThatRandomGirlAndrea
    @ThatRandomGirlAndrea 5 років тому +552

    Death of the author, but the author definitely still cares.

    • @vlogbrothers
      @vlogbrothers  5 років тому +278

      The literary theory I've come round to is this: The Author Is Dead But Won't Shut Up. -John

    • @ThatRandomGirlAndrea
      @ThatRandomGirlAndrea 5 років тому +29

      vlogbrothers haunting your own work, I approve.

    • @jillians9921
      @jillians9921 5 років тому

      +

  • @ruairiwalsh2317
    @ruairiwalsh2317 5 років тому +795

    Well this is my favourite video you've ever made.
    Its made me somehow really sad yet really warm inside at the same time.

    • @vlogbrothers
      @vlogbrothers  5 років тому +48

      awwww thanks! Glad you liked it. -John

  • @rekindle7602
    @rekindle7602 5 років тому +289

    so we beat on, boats against the current, borne back ceaselessly into the past.
    -The Great Gatsby

    • @TheRedverb
      @TheRedverb 5 років тому

      My favorite last line.

  • @AdmiralJellypants626
    @AdmiralJellypants626 5 років тому +460

    "Maybe through fiction, I would be allowed back into the home from which time and loss had expelled me." Absolutely incredible, John. Yet again, you manage to so beautifully and succinctly describe the emotional wanderings I find myself in.
    I'm glad you were able to find peace in letting go. You inspire me to do the same. (Also, hearing that you were 23 when you first started Looking for Alaska brings so much hope to this 23yo who feels she has fallen desperately behind in life) DFTBA

    • @N3rdfightermom
      @N3rdfightermom 5 років тому +20

    • @gnarthdarkanen7464
      @gnarthdarkanen7464 5 років тому +5

      Somewhere, it's worth pointing out something that a friend told me years ago...
      "Life is like a race. The faster you run, the farther ahead you get, but the sooner it's all over."
      ...so maybe "falling a bit behind" isn't the worst we could do. ;o)

    • @LiviClaire
      @LiviClaire 5 років тому +4

      @@N3rdfightermom I'm 22 and I needed to hear this today, thank you

  • @catleaxmas5416
    @catleaxmas5416 2 роки тому +27

    I'm coming back here, i don't know why, and these words hits harder than I thought. The part where you said you wrote Looking for Alaska because you wanted to go home, to go back in time spending your time and having adventures with people you ferociously loved and ferociously loved you, speak to my soul on a galaxy level. Because I too misses my friends from college too much, the friends that I found and love so much like I never did before. It has been 4 years since I graduated from college and they all moved on with their lives and I feel like I am alone once again. So I often write about them, because I wanna come home. To the parking lot of my university, to that fast food chain that we loved, to that little corner in the back of my university's building. I write and write and write but I never quite get the exact feeling like when I was with them, back on those times. So I went back to those places once again, and you are right. Those places doesn't feel like home anymore. It felt like home because I was with them.
    I haven't quite reaching the point of letting go just yet, but maybe in the near future I will be able to.

  • @NateandNoahTryLife
    @NateandNoahTryLife 5 років тому +601

    I’m fascinated by the idea of going back to a place that you can’t go back to. Thank you for making this video John. Just last night I was lying awake at 3 AM, thinking about how damn linear life is. I feel I’ve been chasing something that can’t be found in my past, maybe it’s time to let go.

    • @TheLetterFifteen
      @TheLetterFifteen 5 років тому

      +

    • @leilaofpaper
      @leilaofpaper 5 років тому

      +

    • @lyreparadox
      @lyreparadox 5 років тому

      +

    • @joshuathiel4301
      @joshuathiel4301 5 років тому +7

      No matter where you go, there will always be Cheyenne, Wyoming.

    • @squeekytoy123
      @squeekytoy123 5 років тому +28

      Once during University I happened upon a friend of mine crying in a stairwell. When I asked her what was wrong she said "I need to go home, and I don't even know where home is right now". I've often felt this way since, and remembered that conversation. I just turned 27, it's been a rough year, and often I feel like I just need to go home to a home I haven't had for a decade... I haven't written a bestselling novel documenting my experience, but at least I can share my feelings here! Thanks John (and nerdfighters

  • @the4thwall528
    @the4thwall528 4 роки тому +48

    John's way of verbalizing emotions is just amazing

  • @sebastianliu9986
    @sebastianliu9986 5 років тому +1032

    i'm soooo excited for this! nostalgia all the way down

  • @fae2536
    @fae2536 5 років тому +73

    This is making me nostalgic for a place I’ve never physically been to but have only mentally created through reading your book.
    Thank you.

  • @monicad9230
    @monicad9230 5 років тому +433

    Actually screamed out loud when I saw the title of this video! I'm so excited for the Hulu adaption

    • @crochetingcanuck
      @crochetingcanuck 5 років тому +9

      I am disappointed that it's on Hulu. Hulu is not available outside the U.S.

    • @monicad9230
      @monicad9230 5 років тому +5

      @@crochetingcanuck I'm happy to be getting it at all but I do wish it was going to be more widely available

    • @isabelagraton
      @isabelagraton 5 років тому +1

      @@crochetingcanuck well you can always find it on the internet anyway

    • @dustinhiatt3835
      @dustinhiatt3835 5 років тому

      +

  • @journalsbysophie
    @journalsbysophie 5 років тому +77

    Well thank you for making me cry... A good cry a cry of Happiness for something that lived in my head and now I see Miles and Alaska walking together. If it's surreal for me I don't know what you must be feeling while filming these videos. I knew what happened in the book but I never knew how and When I got to THAT part I was lost I had no words my dad was looking at me funny and I just watch the wall thinking of that moment. I can't wait for the show John thank you for writing this book.

  • @mariliagontijo1700
    @mariliagontijo1700 5 років тому +201

    I can't believe this is finally happening!!!

  • @phantomstrider
    @phantomstrider 5 років тому +45

    When I wrote a story, re-reading it years later has felt a lot like going back in time to me. Suddenly I'm flooded with not just the emotions I felt at the time of writing, but the different perception I had of the world. And it feels more vivid in my mind than seeing an old picture. Even if no one ever reads it, I find it a pleasant, therapeutic experience to have written.

  • @LaydayEruanna
    @LaydayEruanna 5 років тому +259

    You have to let everything go, after a while. It's tough.

    • @vlogbrothers
      @vlogbrothers  5 років тому +68

      So true. The first line of my original script was, "Of course all life is letting go, but....." -John

    • @JornamMusic
      @JornamMusic 5 років тому +13

      @@vlogbrothers That's the premise of my entire life basically. "Of course all life is letting go, but..."

    • @gitoshrisen7687
      @gitoshrisen7687 5 років тому +2

      I'm facing it now, and it's really difficult.

  • @Alyska
    @Alyska 5 років тому +81

    I saw the title and got very confused for a second

  • @melaniedelmo5249
    @melaniedelmo5249 5 років тому +68

    0:44 to 1:14 felt so weirdly intimate; it feels like a stranger watching a couple of friends walk back towards a campus. For a moment, I really did see Miles and Alaska.

  • @Smasher
    @Smasher 5 років тому +61

    So happy it's finally being adapted and bringing such a beloved story to screen. Preparing myself for pure nostalgia when the series is out!

  • @megansullivan3695
    @megansullivan3695 5 років тому +184

    John, your voice makes me feel better

  • @WorldWideWong
    @WorldWideWong 5 років тому +88

    I guess Looking For Alaska was John's fanfic of his own past...

    • @eliza3986
      @eliza3986 4 роки тому +1

      World Wide Wong thanks, i hate it!

  • @d_konja
    @d_konja 5 років тому +98

    Honestly, I read this book at the start of highschool, and it meant a lot to me. So thank you for sharing your words.

  • @calliebritt9297
    @calliebritt9297 5 років тому +7

    I wasn’t expecting to cry but soon as he said “Miles and Alaska we’re also walking away” I lost it

  • @despoina3628
    @despoina3628 5 років тому +101

    this was actually very moving,and it sounds like the best kind of growth

  • @ElleOfTheMills
    @ElleOfTheMills 5 років тому +57

    OMG I'M SO EXCITED

  • @AliJardz
    @AliJardz 5 років тому +200

    I'm excited for this. (Also, always enjoy a good thoughts from places)

  • @trinkab
    @trinkab 5 років тому +46

    A.K.A.: How An Author Reconciles To Himself And His Audience That The Video Adaptation Is Not Going To Be Word For Word.

  • @T1J
    @T1J 5 років тому +118

    I know a couple people that went to Indian Springs. Being from Alabama is probably a big part of why I checked out the book and also this channel :)

  • @MattisNearMello
    @MattisNearMello 4 роки тому +9

    I was in plays with Charlie when we were younger, hes a really nice guy

  • @NateandNoahTryLife
    @NateandNoahTryLife 5 років тому +32

    It’s always interesting seeing the characters you’ve read and re-read in your head come to life. They look like they’ll be good, really looking forward to this project!

  • @jeremyud
    @jeremyud 5 років тому

    My old high school holds an alumni luncheon every year. By the last year that I had gone, I was about 9 years out of high school and fewer and fewer people I knew were going and a lot of the teachers I knew were starting to retire. I never meant that to be my last one, but it kind of felt like time to let it go. It was my "home" but it wasn't. The building was there, but the place I had called home receded into time. I couldn't go back to 2005 any more than John Green can go back to 1993. What a lovely way of putting it, Mr. Green!

  • @soumyapathak3303
    @soumyapathak3303 5 років тому +36

    "you have to let it go at some point" 😭😭😭😭

  • @millie3948
    @millie3948 3 роки тому +4

    I always come back here. I don't know what's about this video that every time I watch it I find a new meaning, like when reading the book. Maybe it's just John's magic

  • @ezridx11
    @ezridx11 5 років тому +12

    Whenever I picture the settings of Looking for Alaska I always picture it being very, for a lack of a better word, bleak. I think it is partially because of the time in my life when I read it. I was overworked, depressed, and living on my own for the first time. It was late winter; the plants were still mostly brown and grey, the snow had gone but only to be replaced by rain, and I was coping with the death of one of my best friends.
    And yet the actual place looks exactly how I pictured it. I'm very excited for this adaptation, and even more excited for John that it's actually happening!

  • @Megan0714
    @Megan0714 5 років тому

    I kept a copy of this novel in the glovebox of my 1991 Toyota Camry(my first car) and took it everywhere until the heat of one summer melted the binding and the pages fell out. I bought a new copy to read and read, but I kept the old one, wrapping rubber bands around it to keep the pages in order, even though it can never really be read again. A story changes so much from person to person, but it also changes for the same person each time they experience it. This video demonstrated that perfectly. In some weird way, I feel like I can never get back to the way I read LFA out of that now destroyed, coffee-stained paperback. This Hulu series will undoubtedly be strange for a lot of nerdfighters, but I’m excited, if a little nervous, to see someone else’s version of my beloved story. Because it isn’t mine, but it kind of is.

  • @carsonlatham
    @carsonlatham 5 років тому +3

    I cannot explain how important "Looking for Alaska" is to me. The part where you say "It belongs to the people who read it, which is a wonderful and painful surrender." touched my heart, because this book felt like it was apart of me after I read it. And I am so glad to see it come to screen. But not matter what this book will always be something I go back to again and again when I need it.

  • @Elidien1
    @Elidien1 4 роки тому

    John - Watching this vlog really put my thoughts into words. You and I are about the same age (I am a year older) and while I did not go to a school like Indian Springs/Culver Creek, I went to a very small high school and had many similar experiences. When Looking for Alaska was published, I was a few years from getting married and was already in my professional career (professor). I did not come to Alaska as a book but I found it as a miniseries and it changed my life. It opened my eyes in ways no other work of literature has. I cannot find the words to explain it but you addressed it in this video - going home again. I lost my Mom in 2018 and ever since an oppressive nostalgia has overtaken me with a desire to go back to simpler times; the little things from growing up that we do not think we will miss. What I wouldn't give to wake up to a home cooked breakfast, a weekend before me to spend with friends without a care in the world - building friendships that you hope will last forever. The tragedy is they do not, and, if I may, all things fall apart and we are left with memories of what feels like a former life as we continue in the labyrinth. And that to me is the labyrinth - this longing for before, longing to go home again; no matter how hard you try, how much you wish for it - it cannot be. You spend you days trying to escape it only to reach a point in your life when you want nothing more than to go back.
    I say all this to thank you. Thank you for writing this, for being open and for echoing in such beautiful words that which we all feel and long for.

  • @bishfish7726
    @bishfish7726 5 років тому +77

    John, did you ever find a different home? I'm in college right now, and I have friends that I love fiercely and unselfishly for the first time in my life. I feel fulfilled and understood, and I'm terrified that I'm going to lose it all when I graduate, and that these are the happiest years of my life, and I'll never get to return to them. I feel nostalgia and longing for things that are happening to me right now.

    • @ravendangernavy3575
      @ravendangernavy3575 4 роки тому +2

      You must not worry about the future if you do you'll never enjoy the present

    • @TheEmmaHouli
      @TheEmmaHouli 4 роки тому +14

      It's been a year since you wrote this, so I hope you are okay.
      I won't sugar coat it for you; no, once you leave home you can never really go back. You my friend are on that great hero's journey and you can not return unchanged.
      When you are young, it's hard to imagine that this is a good thing. And not just for boring grown up reasons like "now you are more responsibile" or "now you have fond memories to look back on".
      But for reasons like: you don't get to have 20 year long friendships by staying in college together. You don't know who's bond is the strongest until you call in the middle of the night after 2 years of barely talking cos your world has been torn down.
      Friendships are made when life is easy, but they grow and become real when life is complicated. A complicated life might not be something you look forward to, and your easy life is something you will ache for many times. But it is a life worth living.
      I hope you have wonderful friendships to see you through it

    • @artemissunandmoon
      @artemissunandmoon 3 роки тому

      You can go back just watch Aoron Doughtys UA-cam vids on manifestation & vibrational levels

    • @sirpranabR
      @sirpranabR 2 роки тому

      these are the days that must happen to you

  • @cookieblue20
    @cookieblue20 5 років тому +1

    Looking for Alaska is my all time favourite book. I even have a tattoo of a daisy and I've read it over 7 times. People ask me why I keep reading it, and until now I really didn't have a specific answer but "I dont know, I guess there's something about it that I like", but after watching this and hearing what you said about going back home, I realised why: it takes me home. When I read looking for Alaska I feel at home, and that's why I keep going back to it. I guess there will come a time when I too have to let go of the book, but I'm glad as hell that it will forever be marked on my body because it has marked my soul. Thank you John for everything you have given me without knowing.

  • @soumyapathak3303
    @soumyapathak3303 5 років тому +14

    John Green videos make the world a better place. thank you so much, John.

  • @flyboymike111357
    @flyboymike111357 3 роки тому

    So I just watched the series, and it hit me in a way I didn't expect.
    I wish I had come across this story two years ago. Or even just watched the series when it first aired.
    I'm not from Alabama, but I've been living here for longer than I'd like, and from personal experience I can say that the struggle for young people to find hope and meaning outside of stort lived and volatile romances played up to be something larger than life is a major issue for this unfortunate State.
    I know a tragic young local woman, with a similarly dark and unsettling past, who Alaska reminded me off so much that I found myself projecting my frustrations, disappointment, fear, and even defiant hope for this real woman onto Alaska.
    This story has given me a degree of closure. For not saving my friend from herself. And I've forgiven her just a bit more, for all the pain and confusion from the second hand emotional abuse I got from her, because I saw so much of her in Alaska.
    I just hope sooner rather than later this place shapes up to become an environment the next generation of young people deserves to live in.

  • @shamusquinn3891
    @shamusquinn3891 5 років тому +75

    Mr. Green,
    This was an arrow through the heart for me in the best of ways. I've spent a lot of this past year trying to recreate my past, my home, all things familiar and comforting, through my writing. And it's only recently that I came to the realization that that particular recreation just isn't really possible. Text on a page can only go so far in that regard...
    But it can go miles - no pun intended - further in the hands of others. Books belong to their readers, after all. Like you've always said. And maybe that's enough for me - or it could be.
    Thanks for yet another thoughtful video. You aren't afraid to get vulnerable, and I've always admired that.
    Wishing you all the best. And congratulations on letting go of Looking For Alaska. I'll be trying to do the same with a story of my own.
    Warmest regards,
    Shamus
    (just another deeply appreciative Nerdfighter)

  • @maritberg3702
    @maritberg3702 5 років тому

    This video made me cry. I discovered the book when I made my own first group of friends that I would love intensely for the very first time; we were 19 in college. Along with this book we discovered cigarettes, sex, and Whitman (the "smoking spot" trope is so very real). There was something so magical about that time and about those people, the way we loved each other. To this day I only talk to one of them but they all still have a special place in my memory and I will always love them, even the one that broke my heart. Thank you so much for giving this book to us.

  • @Shadowhuntedwizards
    @Shadowhuntedwizards 5 років тому +22

    I’m so excited for this! Looking for Alaska is one of my favorite books!

  • @savcampbell6912
    @savcampbell6912 5 років тому

    Having gone to a boarding school in Alabama myself, I always felt connected to Looking for Alaska and the experiences that I shared with the characters. There's a universal Alabama boarding school experience in there - the type of love you feel for your friends when they are all you have, being left alone when you are far to young to be left alone with peers, the heat and bugs. It's hard to explain that shared feeling, but I have always been in love with how well the book did that for me. Thanks.

  • @sunitinelson5564
    @sunitinelson5564 5 років тому +134

    John, as always I am deeply inspired by your musings. It made me wonder what I carry along with me. What do I need to let go of? I am afraid to find out, but I think I can find the courage to ponder and to let go. Thank you.

  • @mymyzie525
    @mymyzie525 5 років тому

    You so eloquently put words to feelings that are inside all of us. This reminds me of my 27 year old son, who would like to go back to the childhood he loved but everyone is gone and they all grew up and moved away. But he still drives down the old streets where he played with those friends. Memory lane is a great place to hang out.

  • @kittyburrito
    @kittyburrito 5 років тому +419

    i wish someone would tell j.k.rowling this

  • @Medafets
    @Medafets 5 років тому

    I read LFA in 2007. I was 13, barely out of childhood and the school librarian gave it to me. I'm about to turn 25 and having spent a lot of time reflecting, as we all do the older we get older, I think that book was my turning point into adolescence. Something changed in me when I read it, it gave a glimpse into the incredible highs and low that await us all when we grow up. What Catcher in the Rye was for my father's generation, this was mine.
    Thanks John.

  • @katelyntrammell6059
    @katelyntrammell6059 5 років тому +4

    It’s amazing to hear an author speak on those characters we have loved. I remember finishing Looking for Alaska at 2 am and feeling lost. I look forward to seeing Alaska and Miles again.

  • @heidi64freedom
    @heidi64freedom 5 років тому

    This just makes me cry...Looking for Alaska has always been my fave John Green bks and...it let me realise how close death could be, and what it might actually imply before a frd of mine did suddenly pass away two yrs after I read the bk. It echos my fear, wishes, anger and so much, it was there when I needed someone, something to think, to process thru this death with me and LfA did that for me.
    Sp it also rings so truw that i gotta let go, not of my frd paasing but to write another narratice, to see the past with a differenr me. I just....i am so thankful that John walked thru his experiences and then wrote this bk and let it go to belong to us too

  • @PierceFamily
    @PierceFamily 5 років тому +11

    Absolute chills. What an incredible experience this must have been.

  • @lilfitzgirl
    @lilfitzgirl 4 роки тому +2

    A year and a half later and I still cry when I watch this

  • @redphantom2670
    @redphantom2670 4 роки тому +9

    And yet youtube recommend me this in the exact day as i started to watch the show.

  • @malenaromano9817
    @malenaromano9817 5 років тому

    It is crazy how many homes and experiences you created for other people while looking for that home yourself, not just in reading your books but in connecting with other poeple who've read them, truly some of the people i love the most, and who love me the most.

  • @booksfortea
    @booksfortea 5 років тому +19

    I cannot wait for this adaptation 😭❤️

  • @belindaweber7999
    @belindaweber7999 5 років тому

    In my 30's I went back to my old Primary and High School, so different and yet still the same, so true that you can't go back. Thanks John, for all the feels and all the years and all your poetic, heartstring lines weaved throughout. DFTBA

  • @estrellacasias
    @estrellacasias 5 років тому +9

    These kind of blogs are my favourite because it's nice hearing how happy you are

  • @rdoetjes
    @rdoetjes 5 років тому +1

    Charlie is my current favorite actor. I first saw him in King Jack and I was impressed but it could be that it was just the kid’s demeanor. But then I saw Lean on Pete and Dinner and I’m beyond impressed with his range.
    I read this book and I really loved it. Even more than paper towns. And when I saw that Charlie is onboard as Miles, I can only say that I can’t wait to visit the US next year and binge some HULU :)
    I am available for some VFX and music compositing for the flick ;) What I found weird about reading Finding Alaska, is that for me it was like a trip back. But I’m even older, I graduated college in 94. Yet it feels as though it’s very 80s. Perhaps it’s because high school is high school. No matter where in the world and whether or not it’s a boarding school or not.
    Good luck to all on this project, and frankly I’m glad that Charlie didn’t land Spider-Man, his roles have been so wonderfully complex and diverse.

  • @kimberlyreeder6052
    @kimberlyreeder6052 5 років тому +4

    Holy cow, this place looks basically exactly like I imagined the setting of the book. Great job of setting the scene, Mr. Green.

  • @emilyann5928
    @emilyann5928 5 років тому

    this was the first book i read in high school, about 5 years ago now. i still remember the way it made me feel, and even the way it looked in my head. this book is the first book that made me cry, that felt like i was saying goodbye to a friend when i put it down. thank you, john.

  • @Sleepover137
    @Sleepover137 5 років тому +4

    This reminds me of a German song by Reinhard Mey called "Erinnerungen" (memories) that very roughly translates to: "Memories are first and foremost in ourselves and not in any place. And their significance to us only resonates in our memories. It is foolish to stop a clock and turn the handles back and it is just as foolish to walk on the paths of days long gone."
    I learned this lesson at a fairly young age but I still get this feeling with UA-cam a lot. This was the first place on the internet where I truly felt home and it has changed so much in the past decade that I find myself longing for the UA-cam of 2007. I can go back an watch the old videos of course but it won't ever be the same. I have changed, the plattform has changed and the creators have changed. I think it is partly that UA-cam meant something very different to me then but it is also knowing "the end of the story". A lot of the people I used to watch don't make videos anymore or have changed a lot or in one case even died. And I cannot go back and watch their old videos without the knowledge of their future being there and changing my perception.

    • @Anbessa98
      @Anbessa98 5 років тому

      Beautiful! I'm feeling the same! Especially the youtube part. It's kinda sad but also makes me feel warm inside when i think about it..

    • @Sleepover137
      @Sleepover137 5 років тому

      @@Anbessa98 I know exactly what you mean! It is a very bitter sweet feeling. fuzzy and warm but so heavy.

  • @JJMalchus
    @JJMalchus 5 років тому

    Every beautiful and mysterious and painful nuance marking that uniquely adventurous journey called "novel writing," that metaphorization of one's life--nuances I've struggled to articulate--you describe with precision. I'm an amateur author and 23, same age you wrote "Looking for Alaska." Thanks for this, John. With all my heart, I hope to one day reminisce on these years and experience a fraction of the nostalgia you just shared with us.

  • @TheLetterFifteen
    @TheLetterFifteen 5 років тому +4

    This is one of those videos that feels like it came right when I needed it. It resonated with me a lot... and also made me cry. Looking forward to the series!

  • @MattPalka
    @MattPalka 5 років тому

    John, thank you for the reminder that home is always evolving like we are, so each time we go somewhere, we get to rediscover the familiar and unfamiliar and how they have interwoven. I once returned to my childhood lake a couple years ago and helped my stepdad catch his first ever largemouth bass, the same my dad did for me when I was three 20 years ago. I let the place go a little, and then met it anew and still loved it so. A home is where we make it.

  • @vell__
    @vell__ 5 років тому +5

    The scene where you talk about spending time under the bridge and wanting to return to the home you remember there immediately sparked a connection in my head to Tyler, The Creator's "November". The overall theme of the song wanting to return to the place you were happiest, but needing to come to terms with the facts that that place had a time too, and that time was in the past.

    • @JornamMusic
      @JornamMusic 5 років тому

      Makes me wanna check out that song rn

  • @moiradarling97
    @moiradarling97 5 років тому +1

    I can’t explain it but this made me emotional. I’ve read Looking For Alaska more than other book. I’ve read it laying on a blanket in the middle of summer and I ’ve read it laying in bed while it was storming outside. I’ve read it at 13 and 21, when I needed to laugh and cry. Great video today. Also if you see this John, thanks for this book. I know you’ve heard it a million times but I hope it never loses meaning when someone says your work is amazing.

    • @moiradarling97
      @moiradarling97 5 років тому

      I have to add that seeing the gym made me made me feel sick to my stomach, it’s exactly how I pictured it for “the scene”.

  • @Carina5707
    @Carina5707 5 років тому +15

    I'm really interested in this project. Looking For Alaska was a decent read, but I look forward to the development and heightened drama that an 8 part series will do for it. :) Lovely video, John. Nostalgia trips are the best.

  • @juliak7654
    @juliak7654 5 років тому

    This is one of those videos where, after it ended, I just sat and looked at the black screen for a few minutes and. just. thought.
    I love those moments, so thank you John for creating this one.

  • @lahma7819
    @lahma7819 5 років тому +17

    This video is so poetic
    WOOOOOOO! Go Mr Green!

  • @gulcinhasirci3205
    @gulcinhasirci3205 5 років тому

    LfA will always have a special place in my heart. I feel like it did change me like few stories did. And my opinion to it, the ending, changed over the years too. Like I was so pissed ten years ago when I first read it and that it wasn't clear what actually happened and that they were left to deal with the aftermath. But like that's life and I was able to accept it better even if not completely, never completely in a way. But now I know that's okay too? It's weird and I hate being a grown up but I can honestly say that LfA was one of the coolest books I have read in my teenage years. Mostly because it felt real. I guess now after this video I finally understand why this book through all the others stood out to me so much... I felt the longing and nostalgia, still do, probably more now then ever and I can't let go either. Did I mention growing up suuuuuuucks

  • @Silvia-rk8mr
    @Silvia-rk8mr 3 роки тому +3

    I keep coming back to this video. It puts into words something that feels very personal to me. I'm glad I'm not alone.

  • @debhausen
    @debhausen 5 років тому +2

    I've just been reminded how important this book is to me, because I teared up at just the opening of this video. I read this book for the first time about 10 years ago. I was on vacation, camping on a lake in Ontario with my family. I remember reading it before going to sleep a few nights in a row. Then when I got to the pivotal part, I couldn't put it down. I stayed up till about 4am until I finished the book. John, I love your Thoughts From Places style videos and I can't wait to watch this series bring this story to life. ❤

  • @alaha8349
    @alaha8349 5 років тому +3

    any reference to looking for alaska in any way, shape, or form, drags me back to the first time i read it. thank you

  • @JS-no3pz
    @JS-no3pz 4 роки тому +1

    Looking for Alaska truly meant the world to me reading it so many years ago now. Watching the miniseries now, I've never felt truly satisfied by the retelling of something that was and still is, so dear to me. Every moment of it made me feel the same way I did when reading the book, it felt like full circle and I didn't realise how much I needed that until now finishing the series. Thank you for being true to yourself and the story. The poetic justice of it all is just the most heartwarming experience, I also feel like I can let go now of that time in my life. I've hoped and waited all these years for this and the way you brought it about couldn't be any better. Thank you

  • @ohyouprettythings4642
    @ohyouprettythings4642 5 років тому +3

    This makes me nostalgic for times I never had.

  • @annyeongannie
    @annyeongannie 5 років тому

    AM CRY. Thank you for sharing something so raw and real with us, both in Looking for Alaska and this video. It's things like this that remind me why I've been a big fan of vlogbrothers (or as I tell my friends, 'the Brothers Green') for so many years. Thank you, thank you, and a million more times thank you.

  • @samanthakim1975
    @samanthakim1975 5 років тому +5

    I'm crying so much right now

  • @btbesquire5
    @btbesquire5 5 років тому

    This is an entirely heartfelt commentary. Touched by it all. Especially the lines about writing a book, means letting go of it

  • @samanthakim1975
    @samanthakim1975 5 років тому +6

    I AM SO EXCITED

  • @adityaHB456
    @adityaHB456 4 роки тому +1

    I always wanted to write something like this..i am almost 23 now..! but i cannot..i cannot imagine things, stories..i am dumb to write such beautiful characters..
    I realy want to write but dont know how.. but you inspired me..i will atleast try to imagine,thinking..reading more books..
    BUT i realy enjoyed looking for Alaska..i totaly relate to Miles..
    I always wanted to have someone to spend night holding hands talking deeply about life.. eye contacts..
    and i always wanted someone like Alaska in my life...but i know i dont deserve someone like her..

  • @devshriwakadekar9936
    @devshriwakadekar9936 2 роки тому +3

    Kristine will always, always be Alaska for me.

  • @JS-cm3fy
    @JS-cm3fy 5 років тому

    I just finished this book today and this video really brings all the scenes and emotions back. Thank you John.

  • @maggiebookworm
    @maggiebookworm 5 років тому +3

    I remember feeling that feeling for the first time: loving my peers so ferociously and un-selfconsciously. I was 18, living with 25 people from around the world in a couple of run-down houses on a 100-acre park. Working hard in all weather conditions, spending our days off sprawled on a giant couch watching shit music videos for hours. I sobbed like a baby in the airport when that year ended and I still mourn it, though with each year the memories fade a little. I've mostly learned to let it go but sometimes I still yearn to be back there, with those people, at that time.

  • @philansellcardozo7536
    @philansellcardozo7536 5 років тому

    Looking for Alaska made me feel something , something I can't explain. I will always hold fond nostalgia to it.

  • @jules_in_stars_we_fall
    @jules_in_stars_we_fall 5 років тому +5

    GUYS IT'S HAPPENING!!!!

  • @MighlinJosie
    @MighlinJosie 5 років тому +1

    The first time I’ve read the book was when I was 15teen. It was also the year when I began to understand life to it‘s fullest. It deeply understood me as a teenager and how I perceived things in my surrounding . As I grew older (I’m 18teen now) I understand the book more deeply. Interpreted things more. And I’m feeling very old now when I read the book once or twice a year. I’m very nostalgic like an old, wise man you could say and I miss the time when I was 15teen and everything was new to me. Sometimes I think that sincerity and innocence are the key to pure happiness. I hope that someday I can be as happy as I was then again. But I just want to say thank you John. Because Looking for Alaska was also the book why I started to read and also the reason why I started to write more. I cried when I watched the video. Thank you for everything!!

  • @mi.7086
    @mi.7086 5 років тому +4

    and people to this day makes fun of the book because tumblr fell in love with it the first couple of years it came out, why don't we all drop the whole cringe culture and just allow people to like what they like? i received this book from my mom on my 18th birthday as a present for getting into college and she never got me anything before.
    maybe i was idealizing it at the time but for a young teen who just turned into an adult in a place like the philippines where a setting like how john described in the book could never happen to me in real life, i found it to be magical. the setting was so far off yet i can relate to the emotions and feelings of the characters and that's what made it so magical to me at the time.

  • @BuriedErect
    @BuriedErect 5 років тому +1

    I had a hard day at therapy today and this is the first thing I saw and I just cried. I'm proud of you but I'm not sure why. Thanks for always making videos and being around.

    • @emptythecan3793
      @emptythecan3793 5 років тому

      haileybears hey you:) good job for going to therapy even though it’s hard. I love this kind of video, they are oddly comforting?