Jack Kerouac, Interview (doc, subtitled in italian)

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  • Опубліковано 3 лют 2025

КОМЕНТАРІ • 152

  • @ajsztehlo
    @ajsztehlo 11 років тому +18

    Very sad to see Kerouac in this condition I hope he is at peace now...

  • @starshaped41
    @starshaped41 13 років тому +6

    Jack Kerouac is one of the best authors...his style was unique back then,he created a whole generation...he was a genious! If someone doesn't like his beliefs and his way of living that's has nothing to do with his talent!

    • @kervilou5905
      @kervilou5905 6 років тому

      genius; but alcoolic !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

    • @paulgentile1024
      @paulgentile1024 2 роки тому

      👍

    • @ernestpicasso7729
      @ernestpicasso7729 Рік тому +2

      ​​@@kervilou5905 Same with many great writers. So what? What's your point?

  • @tonyjp83
    @tonyjp83 4 роки тому +20

    I'm amazed how in schools Kerouac is portrayed as a crazy hippie just wanting to have some kicks, but actually he was a very devout catholic.

    • @georgealderson4424
      @georgealderson4424 4 роки тому

      ...and sometimes Republucan?!

    • @tonyjp83
      @tonyjp83 2 роки тому

      @@sunkintree This is a non sequitur. Being a Catholic does not entourage you to become a drunkard.

    • @kalevala29
      @kalevala29 3 місяці тому

      @@tonyjp83 I was raised Catholic, altar boy and all. I'm surprised we're not all drunks.

  • @marcpadilla1094
    @marcpadilla1094 2 роки тому +2

    I doubt writers know the well spring of their own creativity or inspiration. Whatever makes the work so profound is as much of a surprise to them as it is to anyone else. Like discovering a natural talent for the first time,every time. You're a natural born expert in suffering and pain. A master of expressing both with a little digging.

  • @ТуратНурбеков-к9ц
    @ТуратНурбеков-к9ц 6 років тому +31

    Jack Kerouac was a real MAN

    • @Mookiethedog
      @Mookiethedog 5 років тому +1

      Турат Нурбеков fk yeah

    • @balwc147
      @balwc147 3 роки тому

      😂😂😂

  • @wertheriano
    @wertheriano 14 років тому +2

    what a pair!!!. Burroughs and Keroac, great friends and great writers.

  • @SeattleBlythe
    @SeattleBlythe 16 років тому +1

    I can't wait to see the article John!
    Interesting that Johnny Depp is reportedly doing a film on Kerouac as well.

  • @steezbird
    @steezbird 12 років тому +3

    William Burroughs is represented through Old Bull Lee in 'On The Road'. His mannerisms and the way he speaks are depicted perfectly by Kerouac!

    • @Jager1984
      @Jager1984 4 місяці тому

      Yeah. I read recently that chapter where they meet Old Bull Lee in New Orleans. After the sentence telling about fictive marriage with Belarus woman I understood that the character is based on Burroughs.
      So it was fun to explore about him through that character in the book. And yeah, things I already knew matched perfectly

  • @goback3spaces
    @goback3spaces 13 років тому +1

    To hear Kerouac's voice in this clip is to remember his voice over narration in the wonderful PULL MY DAISY.

  • @decleafs4
    @decleafs4 15 років тому +2

    Jack certainly had spirit.
    God love him.

  • @AllBobsAllTheTime
    @AllBobsAllTheTime 15 років тому +3

    I love that final line "I'm arresting you for decay."

  • @youvandal411vm
    @youvandal411vm 6 років тому +38

    Dude is 46 and looks 70.

    • @stevencoffin328
      @stevencoffin328 5 років тому +15

      He was dying from liver failure at this time.

    • @tedcantu1
      @tedcantu1 5 років тому +18

      He drank a quart of brandy a day which is insane...his stomach exploded with internal bleeding.

    • @jmanning6620
      @jmanning6620 4 роки тому +6

      No he doesn't. He looks 50. Remember people look younger nowadays. For 1960s, he doesn't look far off 46.

    • @rob_barriecharles2042
      @rob_barriecharles2042 Місяць тому

      His addictions show in his face

  • @jjjunglejim
    @jjjunglejim 12 років тому +42

    Kerouac was a genius. He invented a new genre of art that lives on to this day.
    Sadly, he was also a human train wreck.

    • @kervilou5905
      @kervilou5905 6 років тому +1

      alcool !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

    • @MrDanty64
      @MrDanty64 4 роки тому

      @@kervilou5905 r u rn haow tu spel. Keeech. Yes. I know. This is bad.

  • @AlongtheFarClimbDown843
    @AlongtheFarClimbDown843 10 років тому

    *In July 1957, Kerouac moved to a small house at 1418½ Clouser Avenue in the College Park section of Orlando, Florida.*

  • @allienato
    @allienato  16 років тому +2

    it's "What happened to Kerouac?" by Richard Lerner

  • @nikkiejanee1972
    @nikkiejanee1972 12 років тому +4

    i wish we had interview shows like the ones from the 70's....and bunch of intellectuals just hanging out talking about complex and current issues,,,,

  • @michaelkraemerman2009
    @michaelkraemerman2009 9 років тому +14

    Drunk as fuck he was.

    • @1adadada
      @1adadada 9 років тому +2

      +asdf ghijk .. and yet a genius still.

    • @andrewptob
      @andrewptob 8 років тому +2

      Extremely smart, but his intelligence was awash in a sea of booze. Quite sad.

    • @PoliteTia
      @PoliteTia 7 років тому

      So true. This is hard to watch, even for a few minutes

  • @guinnesstrail
    @guinnesstrail 7 років тому +27

    On The Road is a brilliant novel.

  • @cimonak
    @cimonak 2 роки тому +1

    What an absolute fucking legend

  • @readmelancholystrumpetmaster
    @readmelancholystrumpetmaster 12 років тому +4

    Did you get your insights from Wikipedia? One would think. Jack was depressed because he was depressed. Nothing makes a depressive depressed. He simply is that way, and this mental-spiritual condition is what has made so many great writers what they have become (in print).

  • @bailinnumberguy
    @bailinnumberguy 12 років тому +4

    Depressing to see Kerouac here starting to come apart.

  • @velvetunderground1343
    @velvetunderground1343 6 років тому +1

    Meraviglioso.

  • @busterbiloxi3833
    @busterbiloxi3833 5 років тому +2

    "Hoodlums"! Love it.

  • @nogthedervish
    @nogthedervish 12 років тому +17

    Jack drank his way through most of his life; it's dubious this was a direct result of celebrity status or sadness. And he stayed with his mum, probly like many alcoholics cause noone else will have them and they can't/don't want to care for themselves. His early work is genius, but later on you can see the speed and booze slaughter the script. Don't romanticise an illness that eventually destroyed one of our best writers.

  • @2lostbikes
    @2lostbikes 15 років тому

    Great clip. Do you know if the full interview with Buckley is up anywhere on the web? There's bits and pieces on the UMass website but that's all I can find.

  • @jeffhegarty
    @jeffhegarty 15 років тому

    A touch of an older William Shatner about him as well, but not just at the point you mentioned.

  • @akatripclaymore.9679
    @akatripclaymore.9679 2 роки тому

    Coffee Shop Speed freak's! My Mom + Dad were part of that movement in "Frisco" 1950's

  • @Illcastashadow1
    @Illcastashadow1 4 роки тому +1

    Id love to just get Jack's opinion on a few things. Young and strapping Jack or old and bumbly Jack. Both versions would have great answers

    • @georgealderson4424
      @georgealderson4424 4 роки тому

      Intersting. Do you think "the old Jack" has anything with "the young Jack" or for that matter do any of "the old us" have anything with "the young us"?

  • @MrDanty64
    @MrDanty64 4 роки тому

    Of all the lines let alone WORDS! to end this with.. Decay. GOOD GOD. How frigging. insightful. Especially now. In 2020. With a President with nothing but. Even tjough he tested...damnit. Ok UA-cam you win. Meh. I love you Kerouac. Rack 'em up.

  • @lainlain327
    @lainlain327 12 років тому +1

    just really like his book

  • @andrelebaron
    @andrelebaron 15 років тому +1

    you know, he was on to something. The first time I went to Vietnam I did notice that there were a lot of old US military jeeps around. The cops had refurbished a lot of them and were using them in Saigon.

  • @raouldukey8
    @raouldukey8 12 років тому

    if im not mistaken it means 'greeted'

  • @nikkiejanee1972
    @nikkiejanee1972 12 років тому +1

    salutai.....what's that mean in italian? hello

  • @zampieritto
    @zampieritto 3 роки тому

    Just because he felt old 46 he didn't care about the hippie movement. Ginsberg at 40 he really cared

  • @tnimbus
    @tnimbus 10 років тому +10

    he became a sad drunk - a victim of his own success which killed the world he lived in

    • @busterbiloxi3833
      @busterbiloxi3833 5 років тому

      He was a confused French-Canadian who couldn't deal with anyone in a serious manner. A fuck-up with one great book under his belt. A financial doofus. Gotta love the guy!

    • @tnimbus
      @tnimbus 3 роки тому

      @Raja Palaparty can't wait for the film 🙂

    • @tnimbus
      @tnimbus 3 роки тому

      @@willcuster7067 er yes I have - and probably before you were even born. It's a shame you don't seem to understand what I said. Maybe you should read it properly - & maybe also Kerouac while you're at it.

  • @Jimney00
    @Jimney00 12 років тому

    Thank you David.

  • @MrLovington
    @MrLovington 14 років тому +2

    2:45
    Oh my Kerouac.

  • @closetome
    @closetome 13 років тому +8

    I wanna hug him and kiss him...not on the lips but just too let him know i care...

  • @elaine31347
    @elaine31347 14 років тому +2

    I saw this live on TV 42 years ago while living on the lower east side of Manhatten. I remember that Jack was drunk and Ed Sanders of the band the "Fugs", sitting all the wayKon the right of the panel, kept making disgusted faces at him, because he was so drunk...It was actually a little bit embarrassing to tell you the truth.

  • @bostonboyo
    @bostonboyo 14 років тому +3

    It's such a shame how alcoholism can slowly change ...and ultimately kill you ...look at pictures of Kerouac just 8-10 years earlier ...He was a good lookin' cat ...In '68 ...He was a bloated caricature of himself ...A truly great mind destroyed by his fame and own self destructive tendacies....

  • @cannand81
    @cannand81 13 років тому +2

    "Why not?" was already the last question of Timothy Leary.
    There must be a sense under those words, somebody knows?

  • @jozinhobass
    @jozinhobass 13 років тому +1

    That guy fly the Airwolf?

  • @Runawayslave2023
    @Runawayslave2023 13 років тому

    @dionusos2 I am sure his mom was comforted by his faith when she got off of a 12 hour shift.

  • @thebigfatmonkey
    @thebigfatmonkey 11 років тому +5

    Yes, it's really depressing to see him like this. He's obviously quite drunk, but it's probably mostly the permanent damage the alcohol had already done to him.
    'On the road' and 'Tristessa' are of such overwhelming beauty and sadness, always with one eye pointed to the sky, waiting and hoping, "mad to be saved". But the man we can see here is just an ordinary alcoholic. Very depressing indeed.

    • @Bluenosegrows
      @Bluenosegrows 5 років тому +1

      the brilliance of what was between the lines, has a price.

  • @ginoatam9940
    @ginoatam9940 2 роки тому

    not only a proud catholic but also a real sufic dervish...

  • @notaticket
    @notaticket 13 років тому +6

    did it occur to anybody that his conspiracy theory was just a joke?

  • @crowebroke
    @crowebroke 14 років тому

    @cdphatty He was never actually very old. Sadly ill health was his cross in those final years.

  • @Oscar301
    @Oscar301 15 років тому

    Eerie: at 3.00 Jack's held face to me is Brion Gysin.
    ...anyway it seems sad Jack was hauled in as apologist for everything he became the figurehead for, seeing as he was never political, never a captain of men - let alone captain of his own soul; Jack was always a seeker, of freedom - and in a world decimated of freedoms, he became a hero, a beacon of light; but his freedoms were spiritual, he searched after redemption; but he knew it was futile... that I think was why he felt sad and betrayed

  • @horsedoctorman
    @horsedoctorman 14 років тому

    @Smic3 you don't know what you're talking about. kerouac's just wrote about his friends like burroughs and neal cassady who were all cooler than him. he lived with his mom! look it up

  • @jjmalone1966
    @jjmalone1966 11 років тому +38

    Kerouac the only real man on the set.

    • @kelman727
      @kelman727 7 років тому +2

      He was a sozzled mama’s boy.

    • @donaldmartin5685
      @donaldmartin5685 6 років тому +1

      @@kelman727 yeah right...he's just an alcoholic broken down

  • @holden1787
    @holden1787 15 років тому +2

    In his letters, Kerouac believed Ginsberg should have kept his nose out of politics and saw him as an attention hog who politicized prose and poetry. Ginsberg ignored his insults and even visited Jack in Long Island in the 60s but Jack and his mother didn't answer the door.

  • @bill210858
    @bill210858 12 років тому

    whats this accent he has

  • @infoscholar5221
    @infoscholar5221 28 днів тому

    Very talented man, but a drunk. We remember you at your finest, brother.

  • @jjpme92un
    @jjpme92un 15 років тому

    how about William Burroughs there? just a little cameo, ha ha

  • @nicoheckens1
    @nicoheckens1 15 років тому +1

    adamite;adomite? adammm? What is an ad(t)om(am)ite?

  • @Edgarsopper
    @Edgarsopper 12 років тому

    and who are you?

  • @edeneye808
    @edeneye808 12 років тому +4

    This interview doesn't have a single interesting remark from Kerouac. Look at the way he presents himself, slouched in that chair, hiding behind that invulnerable "Roman Catholic" label. He certainly doesn't seem "desirous of everything at the same time" or "mad" to live and talk. Every word that comes out of his mouth here is a "common place thing."

  • @vincentvancraig
    @vincentvancraig 11 років тому +3

    Satiori in Paris and pic are two amazing works, I think he had more to.contribute, his body just gave out, that bar fight he got into the last few weeks of his life didn't do him any good either ......obviously

  • @swlabr123
    @swlabr123 13 років тому

    Buckley and Kerouac went way back to school days, and Buckley was being kind having him on his show interviewing him in his state. No one ever seems to point this out, just that he was messed up and what they talked about, and how strange it was. It's strange but they were school chums.

  • @claudioorlandi73
    @claudioorlandi73 6 років тому

    Genius

  • @rdisalvo5544
    @rdisalvo5544 12 років тому

    He is obviously on the decline here- he had already contributed everything he had to contribute. Part of the problem is Buckley's line of questioning...he was a devout Catholic for years- painting pictures of the Pope, putting crucifixes on every page of some of his manuscripts...it just adds to his intrigue in my opinion.

  • @imtv
    @imtv 11 років тому +1

    Cap. James T. Kirk...

  • @myroncope
    @myroncope 14 років тому +1

    He reminds me of an old Sinatra.

  • @AlongtheFarClimbDown843
    @AlongtheFarClimbDown843 9 років тому

    *It's sense-around sound in a two inch wall; I was waiting for the communist call; I didn't ask for sunshine and I got world war three; I'm looking over the wall and they're looking at me - Sex Pistols, “Holidays in the Sun”*

  • @Misserbi
    @Misserbi Рік тому

    Kerouac did great things but he did not finish what he started. The academics attach themselves to him and all know about him and he is a drop out. I keep saying -- what if he graduated from Columbia? He was among others (Burroughs) who did finish what they started. Most wonder how he was so close to his mother and not a "go getter" who does not give up. I think that is what people admire the most and what led to his doom.

  • @dionusos2
    @dionusos2 13 років тому

    @thedavidwilson He had faith that he'd pay her back through a novel--and he did

  • @kkennedy3466
    @kkennedy3466 3 роки тому

    Kerouac was in the final throes of alcoholism by this stage and would be dead within the year. What’s even more remarkable is that he was only 47 and get looked easily 15-20 years older. Sweaty, ugly, fat…quite a contrast to what he was perhaps a decade or so earlier. Just another reason to quit or seriously curtail ones drinking if it’s becoming a problem

  • @Lario
    @Lario 14 років тому

    Before you watch this, one should have several drinks...

  • @goodvibesallround
    @goodvibesallround 15 років тому +1

    and died the following year.......

  • @ladedalounge
    @ladedalounge 3 роки тому

    RIP guys 2021 is here with some cancel culture, I don't vote so I ain't playing

  • @horatiodreamt
    @horatiodreamt 6 років тому +1

    Buckley was pomposity personified.

  • @RollingOrmond
    @RollingOrmond 14 років тому +1

    Bukowski a poor man's Henry Miller, writing shit prose about shitty people and scenes. Kerouac and Ginsberg wrote circles around him.

  • @jeffreyrichardson
    @jeffreyrichardson 6 років тому

    dougy?

  • @hmahmo
    @hmahmo 12 років тому

    @nikkiejanee1972 Seriously. Instead, we're constantly plagued by the likes of "reality shows" that do nothing more than numb the senses. I fear the world my children will have to face.

  • @Nobodyimportant3216
    @Nobodyimportant3216 2 місяці тому

    Jack dated my aunt LMAO

  • @vincentvancraig
    @vincentvancraig 11 років тому

    all great artists have faults, usually serious faults

  • @jeffreyrichardson
    @jeffreyrichardson 6 років тому

    scotts poet aster

  • @Runawayslave2023
    @Runawayslave2023 13 років тому +2

    "his alcoholism stemmed from his sudden celebrity status and sadness at the way the world was headed, "
    Was that the cause of him mooching off of his mother in his 30's while she worked 10 hours a day in a shoe factory while he pursued his "art" with Ginsburg and got drunk every night? Read a biography.
    He was not a man and is not someone to emulate.

    • @jeremyfoster8726
      @jeremyfoster8726 6 років тому +1

      WTF? but she didn't have to work after he found success with OTR.

  • @WestPawProductions
    @WestPawProductions 14 років тому

    2:20-2:25
    ...
    fucking freaky

  • @dionusos2
    @dionusos2 15 років тому

    He spoke well for someone who was shitfaced.

  • @walendxweg
    @walendxweg 25 днів тому

    👢🎈

  • @kapverde2
    @kapverde2 3 роки тому

    to get Jeeps in the Country!!! holy jesus what die the Taliban and Afghanistan soldiers get, billions of Dollars in arms and helicopters in their Land now, never laugh about war

  • @LazyGigolo
    @LazyGigolo 12 років тому +2

    Yeah, Jack talks exactly the same way he wrote: to bore the audience

  • @sohooded
    @sohooded 14 років тому

    @dionusos2 hahahahaha

  • @monumentofwonders
    @monumentofwonders Місяць тому

    Buckley was such an ass.