Why should you read “Fahrenheit 451”? - Iseult Gillespie

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  • Опубліковано 21 січ 2019
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    Ray Bradbury’s novel imagines a world where books are banned- and possessing, let alone reading them, is forbidden.The protagonist, Montag, is a fireman responsible for destroying what remains. The story raises the question: how can you preserve your mind in a society where free will, self-expression and curiosity are under fire? Iseult Gillespie examines what makes the dystopian novel a classic.
    Lesson by Iseult Gillespie, directed by Anton Bogaty.
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 4,3 тис.

  • @Aj11117777
    @Aj11117777 5 років тому +9918

    Fun fact. Ray Bradbury wrote Fahrenheit 451 at a rented out typewriter at the library. So not only could he not go back and edit his writing (can’t erase on old typewriters) he was hurried because he was being charged by the hour to use the typewriter and he was nearly broke at the time.

    • @noellethomas2589
      @noellethomas2589 5 років тому +1696

      Another fun fact: He wrote drafts by hand before going to the library. If he wanted to change something later, he'd just write another draft and re-type that. It's not like he didn't do any editing

    • @Kaseus-lq7cj
      @Kaseus-lq7cj 5 років тому +100

      Paige Thomas lmaoo

    • @HachuOlivye
      @HachuOlivye 5 років тому +205

      It basicly costs 9 dollars and 85 cents,by the way(thats not the price of the book in market,thats price of the making of,sorry for bad english)

    • @uzzieb9984
      @uzzieb9984 5 років тому +210

      Gihrutik F you don’t have to apologize. Your English is very good. Thank you for the interesting information.

    • @bkl3893
      @bkl3893 5 років тому +5

      @@noellethomas2589 i dont get it. Reference to r6s?

  • @jessicajayes8326
    @jessicajayes8326 5 років тому +18644

    It's ironic that this book was banned in several schools.

    • @Taiyinxingjun
      @Taiyinxingjun 5 років тому +822

      I didnt knew about that. Do you know the exact reason?

    • @kittycat5972
      @kittycat5972 5 років тому +241

      Why?

    • @beatrisastefanova2032
      @beatrisastefanova2032 5 років тому +944

      In my school in Germany we have to read this book and we will write an exam about it

    • @YdenMk-II
      @YdenMk-II 5 років тому +1441

      @@Taiyinxingjun I believe there were complaints about obscenity. It's been a long time since I read the book so I don't know the details on what words were used. According to wikipedia, there was also a complaint because a bible was burned early causing the parents to complain the book was about persecution of Christians based on the few pages they read.

    • @bobbsesmeralda8623
      @bobbsesmeralda8623 5 років тому +495

      In public schools in Texas it is mandatory to read this book.

  • @grafitorecargado
    @grafitorecargado 3 роки тому +5408

    Fun Fact: Some copies of the novel were made with asbestos coating and other fire retardant materials.

  • @tornadospin9
    @tornadospin9 3 роки тому +2279

    Ray Bradbury died in 2008, so he was able to live long enough to see many aspects of his dystopian novel become a reality

    • @joshogden1081
      @joshogden1081 2 роки тому +125

      He died in 2012.

    • @coachhannah2403
      @coachhannah2403 2 роки тому +25

      He refused to fly. Wall-sized TVs were quite a novel idea back then.

    • @coachhannah2403
      @coachhannah2403 2 роки тому +4

      @@jacob7300 - Why would you invoke his name?

    • @coachhannah2403
      @coachhannah2403 2 роки тому +8

      @RedEyedSlimeBoi - Huh?

    • @murkkz1679
      @murkkz1679 Рік тому +8

      @@coachhannah2403 obama

  • @lauraceae8037
    @lauraceae8037 5 років тому +12937

    Fun fact: Fahrenheit 451, a book about the evils of censorship and banning books, was banned because it burned the Bible. A book about how people are too sensitive was banned because people were too sensitive. Ray Bradbury was spot on.

    • @romaniangamer1
      @romaniangamer1 5 років тому +874

      As a Christian, I apologise in the name of these people.

    • @grayfear2833
      @grayfear2833 5 років тому +385

      I heard that newer copies of the book have been altered and the story is different and censored now somehow. I'm not completely sure if it's true, but if it is that is pretty messed up

    • @rsync9490
      @rsync9490 5 років тому +193

      Ironic that we haven't learned our lesson in this new pc world.

    • @LupiZweier
      @LupiZweier 5 років тому +21

      @@rsync9490 Huxley? 😏

    • @reh3884
      @reh3884 5 років тому +199

      Fun fact: Fahrenheit 451 is NOT about censorship. Bradbury said so himself.

  • @damnb9338
    @damnb9338 5 років тому +5087

    1953: government will be able to spy on you in your house
    2019: alexa play sicko mode

    • @MapleMilk
      @MapleMilk 5 років тому +26

      👀

    • @lyncharles4856
      @lyncharles4856 5 років тому +9

      Way too formal. We don't do that over here

    • @okas425
      @okas425 5 років тому +6

      Bot Freeman Why here everyone is nerds it’s clear you copy and paste to every video you watch hoping you would get many likes to boost your self esteem.

    • @awies.mp4
      @awies.mp4 5 років тому +1

      667th liker if i pressed the like button but just gon let it be like dat for fun lol

    • @memesarekeem
      @memesarekeem 5 років тому

      @@lyncharles4856 You know I don't follow suit.

  • @ernilopezjordan
    @ernilopezjordan 3 роки тому +2240

    I' ve recently finished it. Captain Beatty's explanation about why society was like that and why they started burning books is both interesting and spooky. It's incredible that this book is almost 70 years old and it's still so modern.

    • @doctor1750
      @doctor1750 3 роки тому +46

      agree completely this part gave me chills and stood out as one of the most memorable parts of the book. kind of scary how smart beatty is and how much was going on in his head without montags knowledge

    • @TheSeamonkeyBrigade
      @TheSeamonkeyBrigade 3 роки тому +80

      Dude it terrifies me because it’s what we see happening with cancel culture. I don’t care if you’re left or right or a freakin moose, there’s this insane witch-burning of everyone and everything that minutely disagrees with you (though there are absolutely things that should not be said in a public sphere). It’s so scary, because it seems so out of control and so many good people and things are getting caught up in the inferno.

    • @GLASSB182
      @GLASSB182 2 роки тому +8

      Dude, no kidding! It honestly feels timeless

    • @knightshade2654
      @knightshade2654 2 роки тому +22

      I'm almost done with the book, and Beatty was such an amazing character. I like to think that he truly did yearn for a return to intellectualism and reading, but his desire for social conformity forced him to be a hardline fireman.

    • @neh7121
      @neh7121 2 роки тому +3

      Someone played Alter ego :P

  • @Jobe-13
    @Jobe-13 3 роки тому +2570

    Reading this book genuinely scared me. Because it’s literally becoming a reality right now. Except it’s giant corporations doing this stuff, instead of the government. And they’re doing it through monopolies.

    • @getmine9490
      @getmine9490 2 роки тому +243

      Giant corporations are the government, they are deeply intertwined. As long as politicians want personal benefits, giant corporations will be allowed to do as they please.

    • @loggedout8572
      @loggedout8572 2 роки тому +20

      Yup own the book. The author was on to something

    • @TucsonDude
      @TucsonDude 2 роки тому +6

      ...and the monopolies are run by who???

    • @brendenbaughman662
      @brendenbaughman662 2 роки тому +95

      @@TucsonDude Shareholders and executives. If you’re insinuating that the corporations are run by the government then you have it exactly backwards. The government is in the pocket of big business, not the other way around.

    • @haroldb1856
      @haroldb1856 2 роки тому +10

      Libraries and schools are banning problematic literature.

  • @theweakestbrazilianmale3398
    @theweakestbrazilianmale3398 5 років тому +15802

    I actually prefer the reboot titled Celsius 233.

  • @DanteKG.
    @DanteKG. 4 роки тому +11735

    The 3 classics of dystopian literature:
    1) George Orwell's "1984"
    2) Aldous Huxley's "Brave New World"
    3) Ray Bradbury's "Fahrenheit 451"

    • @ap4702
      @ap4702 4 роки тому +240

      More like reality

    • @michaelh13
      @michaelh13 4 роки тому +28

      Player piano?

    • @charliesusi3439
      @charliesusi3439 4 роки тому +110

      giver?

    • @vane6748
      @vane6748 4 роки тому +74

      David Nikolić hunger games. I know it is less important than these but it’s dystopian too

    • @isadoradavis6244
      @isadoradavis6244 4 роки тому +195

      1984 destroyed me

  • @CidTheGargoyle
    @CidTheGargoyle 3 роки тому +830

    It should be required reading in schools nowadays because it’s actually scary how we’re moving towards this kind of society.

    • @tonygc6925
      @tonygc6925 2 роки тому +30

      a lot of teachers in the high school assigned this, i live in waukegan born and raise where brad bury was born. the lit teachers in Waukegan are pushing for students to read that book. or they assigned the book.

    • @78anurag
      @78anurag 2 роки тому +16

      My English teacher is telling me to read it. I may give it a try when the holidays come so I can buy books.
      But I have to read the latest Diary of a Wimpy kid books first lol

    • @-Subtle-
      @-Subtle- 2 роки тому +30

      It is assigned in school. Why tf is this comment on every Ted-Ed video?
      tHiS sHoUlD bE tAuGhT iN ScHoOl.
      It's like you've never heard of school before.

    • @joedatius
      @joedatius 2 роки тому +30

      we're not moving to this kind of "society" we've lived through this kind of society, our history has been this kind of society. these stories aren't about possible futures its about reflections of the past we've lived and how dangerous it is. its not a simple "uh oh scary future"

    • @domino_201
      @domino_201 2 роки тому +2

      my school assigned this. i ended up reading it twice funnily enough, but I wasn't complaining. this is the most compelling of the famous dystopia books and really the most relevant.

  • @bostonbravenec
    @bostonbravenec Рік тому +611

    When I finished and shut this book I had never felt so depressed in my entire life. I realized that I live in the same world as Montag. Thanks, Ray for such a gift.

    • @yuviT
      @yuviT Рік тому +23

      Now go read "1984" and "Brave New World", depression awaits!

    • @andros2950
      @andros2950 Рік тому +20

      @@yuviT yooo I can't describe the feeling that I felt when I finished 1984. It was not even depression, it was something deeper and darker. I felt empty and even scared, but definitely one of the best books I've read.

    • @yuviT
      @yuviT Рік тому +2

      @@andros2950 Yeah man, definitely in my personal top 10 books or even works of art. It totally blew and changed my mind, can't stop writing dytopias every since.
      If you enjoyed it and want a bit more, go ahead and read "Animal Farm", it was the book George Orwell wrote prior to 1984. It feels like a "kid friendly" version of 1984, in a sense. It's great and I highly recomend it.
      My recomnded reading order for these would be - Animal Farm, 1984, Fahrenheit 451 and then Brave New World.
      Also, the 1984 movie is pretty solid, I enjoyed it (I watched it after reading the book).
      Very very side note, the year 1984 was a great year for film lol

    • @andros2950
      @andros2950 Рік тому

      @@yuviT I wanted to read Animal Farm and I definitely will when I get a copy, also Fahrenheit 451. I watched the movie yesterday and hence I watched this video as well. I never heard of Brave New World but I will look it up and read it if I get a copy of it. Also I have seen the trailer for the 1984 movie but never got a chance to watch it, but the trailer looks promising. Thanks for the recommendations!

    • @yuviT
      @yuviT Рік тому +2

      ​@@andros2950 Anytime pal! Wish I was you right now haha.
      Brave New World, is in my opinion, a reverse image to 1984.
      Whereas 1984 is a dystopia, BNW is a "utopia", but as we know, all utopis are dystopias.
      I will say it had the most, difficult, ending for me personally. Still worth the read, I'll definitely give my kids the copy my dad gave me.
      And fun fact, the name is taken from one of the very last lines from "The Tempest" by Shakspere.
      It was my first Shakespearean play, weird but funny, so another recommendation onto you my friend!

  • @midimusicforever
    @midimusicforever 4 роки тому +6454

    The scary part about this book is how we see the early symptoms in our society today, with the instant gratification and short attention spans.

    • @STho205
      @STho205 3 роки тому +323

      That isn't the scary part. That's been around a long time. The scary part that causes it is being overlooked, but is raging all around us this very minute.

    • @georgesracingcar7701
      @georgesracingcar7701 2 роки тому +83

      What’s good is that books like these remind us to take hard looks at society and see where things are wrong, preventing from ever becoming a true dystopia.

    • @sunnyside7369
      @sunnyside7369 2 роки тому +98

      TikTok is the manifestation of what society has/will become

    • @midimusicforever
      @midimusicforever 2 роки тому +1

      @@sunnyside7369
      Dem Hoes, and China owns you?

    • @mudkip90000
      @mudkip90000 2 роки тому +13

      Cool. Now I don't have to read the book because I've watched this

  • @sampletext4481
    @sampletext4481 5 років тому +4552

    Jokes on you
    *I’ve already read it.*

  • @gagandeepsingh7789
    @gagandeepsingh7789 3 роки тому +324

    3:44 top ten rappers eminem was afraid to diss.
    this book is really good tho.

    • @jelo1360
      @jelo1360 3 роки тому +4

      no cap tho ;)

  • @Kaboomboo
    @Kaboomboo 2 роки тому +158

    I remember reading a short story by Bradbury in elementary school called All Summer in a Day where the earth is covered in rain except for one hour every day. A girl from another place talked about how she saw the sun every day and eventually the other students in her school got fed up and stuffed her in a locker during the only sunshine. Since all the kids were too busy enjoying the sun, they forgot she was there until the rain came back. Interesting parallel that people want to silence what they don't want to hear.

    • @mewmew8932
      @mewmew8932 Рік тому +21

      I've also read it. I believe the story takes place on Venus, in fact.

    • @srikarbhuvanagiri1136
      @srikarbhuvanagiri1136 Рік тому +12

      We have read it too. We thought it was about how as people, we exclude differences and minorities

    • @thelosttomato4020
      @thelosttomato4020 Рік тому +5

      We had that too

    • @gamechanger6739
      @gamechanger6739 Рік тому +4

      I have read it too but I thought it was there was only sunlight every 8 years? I may be wrong

    • @Writer_Productions_Map
      @Writer_Productions_Map 8 місяців тому

      ​@@gamechanger67391 hour every 7 years

  • @ralphhuzz31
    @ralphhuzz31 4 роки тому +4587

    "It was the apathy of the masses that gave rise to the current regime"
    Hits too close to home

    • @STho205
      @STho205 3 роки тому +168

      Nope that came later.
      It was the hurt feeling aggrieved minorities that got it going. Cancel culture.
      Each minority demanded things be erased or banned, then demanded more be banned. Every other minority made counter demands. Eventually the government, unable to satisfy everyone, erased it all.
      That is the irony of 451, written in an era of Red Scare and communist dictatorships, the reader expected Big Brother, but it wasn't. It was Civil Rights with unintended consequences.
      There was no house monitoring devices, just all citizens neighbors suspect of any snobby smart guy and turning them in for doing upsetting things like reading fiction or histories.

    • @estren4
      @estren4 3 роки тому +16

      @@STho205 wow, that's true

    • @AndyFromBeaverton
      @AndyFromBeaverton 3 роки тому +11

      You wrote that comment a year too early.

    • @annasumner6841
      @annasumner6841 3 роки тому +40

      @@STho205 You think that Ray Bradbury was saying that in order to have a thoughtful society, women and minorities ought to be oppressed?

    • @STho205
      @STho205 3 роки тому +44

      @@annasumner6841 no he didn't say that in his book, and he didn't say that in the afterword interview in 2001 published in recent editions of 451.
      He objected to editors and PACs trying to get him to rewrite his original book to include an XYZ protagonist, specifically positioned to virtue signal. IOW they were trying to censor his book about media faddish censorship. Which he found ironic. They didn't think the dysutopic situation would apply to them.
      451 was an imaginative book because it turned the readers expectations upside down in the middle.
      Most readers assumed it was an Animal Farm/1984 situation of repression of civil rights. Instead it was media obsessed over giving everyone with the slightest beef a platform and megaphone. That frightened the cowardly politicians to cave in, then that emboldened the next group to demand similar capitulation, then the first group doubled down and said they didn't get enough capitulation, then the original haves screamed they were being oppressed....
      So eventually the government said... Nobody can think or have free expression because it causes problems. The public taste for media got stupider and stupider, and politicians relied more and more on the big media corporations to stay in office.
      So reality itself became scripted like the fake reality shows the public obsessed over.....
      Sound familiar.

  • @nafisahmad8645
    @nafisahmad8645 5 років тому +2551

    please never stop the 'why should you read' series,it's the best thing on youtube

    • @katyb3869
      @katyb3869 5 років тому +9

      I wanted to thumbs up this post but it had 451 likes and I didn't have the heart to change that number considering this video :P

    • @nafisahmad8645
      @nafisahmad8645 5 років тому +2

      @@katyb3869 but it changed anyway :3

    • @That_onekid
      @That_onekid 5 років тому +1

      You mean besides PewDiePie's book review

    • @nafisahmad8645
      @nafisahmad8645 5 років тому +1

      @@That_onekid no i don't mean that :3

    • @xatoor
      @xatoor 5 років тому +5

      when you see a comment at 998 likes and liking it and it goes to 999
      "I guide others to a treasure i can not posses"

  • @prolmandabeast6192
    @prolmandabeast6192 Рік тому +95

    The way Captain Beatty describes acceleration of mass culture is surprisingly chilling, especially given the fact that something like this was written over 50 years ago

  • @theesperanzacompromisebyja9044
    @theesperanzacompromisebyja9044 3 роки тому +104

    “Just write every day of your life. Read intensely. Then see what happens. Most of my friends who are put on that diet have very pleasant careers.” ~ Ray Bradbury

  • @mackf.249
    @mackf.249 5 років тому +3701

    Too bad they made me read and annotate this over summer before freshman year. It totally ruined the book for me since I was too focused filling the page with annotations to actually enjoy the book.

    • @surrealsupercell7217
      @surrealsupercell7217 5 років тому +224

      I hate annotating so much, even though I understand why it just doesn't allow me to actually absorb it.

    • @star5398
      @star5398 5 років тому +31

      It ruined "The Things They Carry" for me

    • @frisk4520
      @frisk4520 5 років тому +81

      Read the book at least once before you are even near close to annotating it in a classroom. No matter when the teacher says.

    • @sapphirestar22
      @sapphirestar22 5 років тому +164

      Schools don’t understand how you’re supposed to enjoy a book. I also had to annotate a couple of books I should’ve enjoyed, but being forced to do all this extra work really ruined the experience

    • @user-mx1tb1zm5w
      @user-mx1tb1zm5w 5 років тому +2

      !

  • @verbulent_flow6229
    @verbulent_flow6229 5 років тому +4004

    In my interperetation, it wasn't just about saving books, but preserving media with true quality. "It's not books you need, it's some of the things that were once in books."

    • @luischavez785
      @luischavez785 4 роки тому +35

      Faber

    • @luischavez785
      @luischavez785 4 роки тому +14

      The three most important things

    • @forgetful9845
      @forgetful9845 4 роки тому +90

      indeed, which is why people who blindly attack media today simply because its new and interesting miss the point.

    • @luischavez785
      @luischavez785 4 роки тому +60

      @@forgetful9845Correct, it's not the government's causing censorship, it is the citizens fault as they remove information that could be helpful to others.

    • @normalperson2462
      @normalperson2462 3 роки тому +29

      Well the book also preserves that notion when Montag reads the books in that he was confounded by what it was about it, and when it was made evident of their power not by being books themselves but of the quality of detail and introspection

  • @forestvvoods577
    @forestvvoods577 2 роки тому +104

    "It was the apathy of the masses that the government capitalised on" chillingly accurate

  • @ramonabdiel10
    @ramonabdiel10 7 місяців тому +18

    What’s most interesting is the fact that Fahrenheit 451 would itself be burned instantly if it existed in the dystopian world of the book

  • @TheLifeFormulaa
    @TheLifeFormulaa 5 років тому +2535

    Dystopian books always provide interesting insights to our world

    • @KafshakTashtak
      @KafshakTashtak 5 років тому +12

      They are just a very far fetched extrapolation of the current situation.

    • @travislyonsgary
      @travislyonsgary 5 років тому +29

      @@KafshakTashtak not particullary far feteched often enough

    • @c0c0nutbeans
      @c0c0nutbeans 5 років тому +7

      WallE

    • @Gameworks1407
      @Gameworks1407 5 років тому +6

      Dystopia's driven into the ground. A non-extreme remnant of absurdism.

    • @stevengreen9536
      @stevengreen9536 5 років тому +28

      I view the dystopian works as a warning.The world's they depict could potentially become reality if we allow it to happen.

  • @SmogValley
    @SmogValley 5 років тому +4290

    I looked up the word "Dentifrice" thinking it meant something like pleasure or something deep, only to find out it meant toothpaste XD.

    • @luischavez785
      @luischavez785 4 роки тому +134

      It was an ad in the book

    • @metalicarus8372
      @metalicarus8372 4 роки тому +51

      yup. french word.

    • @kpp28
      @kpp28 3 роки тому +66

      I mean the etymology is pretty obvious. Dent for tooth in latin?

    • @SunBrohan
      @SunBrohan 3 роки тому +17

      I hear earplugs help with that when riding the subway.

    • @arisann7083
      @arisann7083 3 роки тому +14

      Hahaha yeah, the media in the bus is blasting these comercial things to keep people from thinking

  • @djteodoro9670
    @djteodoro9670 2 роки тому +172

    I am a teenager who rarely reads books, but a book about burning books was the best thing I have ever read. I can't say that I will start reading for the fun of it, but this book is everything. It is thought-provoking with great characters. I am not a fan of science fiction, but here is a science fiction book which seems to have turned into reality. Ray Bradbury's creative force needed up seeming to be a visionary's predictions of future events.

    • @luisfilipegodinhofreitas8163
      @luisfilipegodinhofreitas8163 2 роки тому +2

      I need to find a copy in Portuguese. It sounds like required reading

    • @cliftons.2722
      @cliftons.2722 2 роки тому +6

      Good to know there are smart teenagers who are exploring classic literary works. I hope you find many more great books to read.

    • @mehulvarshney3124
      @mehulvarshney3124 9 місяців тому +2

      ​@cliftons.2722 With all due respect, are you suggesting that teenagers who don't read classical novels are not smart? I ask this as I have met many elders who see teens who read modern novels or online books[not paper copy] are, for lack of better terms, degenerative.

    • @projectc.j.j3310
      @projectc.j.j3310 3 місяці тому

      @@mehulvarshney3124that’s not even close to what he said…

  • @zzamora3593
    @zzamora3593 2 роки тому +48

    I’m glad I was made to read this book in high school. In a sense, NOT reading is similar to burning books - if we don’t value them they are in danger of disappearing.

  • @danieldeak9141
    @danieldeak9141 5 років тому +1752

    Fahrenheit 451
    Aka the world where firemen have a reverse role.

    • @infidelheretic923
      @infidelheretic923 4 роки тому +61

      At one point one character says the correct word ‘arsonist’.

    • @josuepalomares6820
      @josuepalomares6820 4 роки тому +1

      Fire men still have to burn stuff like forest from time to time

    • @natalieanimal4063
      @natalieanimal4063 4 роки тому +22

      It's a good pun in English, I always thought 'firemen' sounds like people who are in favor fo fire rather than opposed to it. In my language it wasn't possible to use this word here, as it literally means a fire extinguishing person, so we used something like 'fire brigade member'.

    • @anonymus5637
      @anonymus5637 4 роки тому +10

      @@natalieanimal4063 In Spanish, at least, the term used for Firemen reminds me more to explosives worshippers (It's “Bombero”, by the way)

    • @natalieanimal4063
      @natalieanimal4063 4 роки тому +2

      @@anonymus5637 Thanks for sharing that piece of info, I'm into languages(and speak a bit of Spanish but I didn't know this word), so I'm always glad to learn about them. So yeah, one could easily think it means the same as 'bomber' in English lol. (hm, could be used for a dystopia too). Like someone in advertizing once thought 'embarrass' means the same as 'embarazar' :")

  • @c0ntra605
    @c0ntra605 5 років тому +3020

    I don’t know who this ted guy is, but this book looks dope

    • @truebobbian
      @truebobbian 5 років тому +42

      It is amazing! Give it a read if you haven't yet!

    • @Galaxy_J
      @Galaxy_J 5 років тому +144

      When will ted do the talk

    • @sodsurendunkhorol1576
      @sodsurendunkhorol1576 5 років тому +62

      Ted come out it is time for our battle

    • @mindmate0
      @mindmate0 5 років тому +20

      @@Galaxy_J final boss

    • @genghiskhan4697
      @genghiskhan4697 5 років тому +31

      Ted is a shy boi

  • @evank3718
    @evank3718 3 роки тому +487

    3:44 Math class
    3:47 Phys Ed
    3:50 English class
    3:52 Me waking up teacher slaps me
    3:56 Lunch time
    3:59 History

  • @aksula-1
    @aksula-1 2 роки тому +23

    Not to mention Ray Bradbury is a poetic genius in his writing style. This book is so masterfully crafted, not only is the story incredible, but the delivery of the wording is exhilarating, unlike anything I have ever seen.
    I seriously, highly recommend reading Fahrenheit 451. It is so incredibly relevant today, and Bradbury was SPOT on!

  • @fiorefiore9910
    @fiorefiore9910 5 років тому +712

    "It was the apathy of the masses that gave rise to the current regime. The government merely capitalized on short attention span and the appetite for mindless entertainment"
    This is too close to reality....

    • @j4u947
      @j4u947 5 років тому +31

      it is reality

    • @andrewkim9090
      @andrewkim9090 5 років тому +11

      Really close, but I don't think the masses are apathetic yet

    • @jamesklark6562
      @jamesklark6562 5 років тому +5

      I'M 12 AND THIS IS DEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEP!

    • @icameherejusttocomment550
      @icameherejusttocomment550 5 років тому +18

      @@jamesklark6562 Because anything mildly insightful and with critical thought belongs in r/Im14andthisisdeep. No, of course it doesn't. There's a difference between some random comment with no actual meaning and a reflection about apathy and modern society.

    • @JohnSmith-ik8nt
      @JohnSmith-ik8nt 5 років тому +3

      @@andrewkim9090 they are and history is being erased

  • @santoshd6613
    @santoshd6613 4 роки тому +3773

    "Short attention spans and mindless entertainment...."
    How relevant today!!!

    • @TH3F4LC0Nx
      @TH3F4LC0Nx 4 роки тому +146

      If you haven't read the book, there's a scene in it where the fire chief explains to Montag what happens when you give people quicker gratification without being made to work for it. He uses a metaphor of how the zipper replaced the button, and...well, I'll just say that it's a VERY profound passage.

    • @noodletribunal9793
      @noodletribunal9793 4 роки тому +25

      this is funny cause i tried reading but got dead bored.
      i do want to read it though, ill try again

    • @TheMCCraftingTable
      @TheMCCraftingTable 4 роки тому +14

      @@noodletribunal9793 some novels are slow... Try reading short stories first bruh :D Some are just a couple of pages long

    • @noodletribunal9793
      @noodletribunal9793 4 роки тому +26

      @@TheMCCraftingTable well, i thought 100 pages was short! it's just that all the description made me lose interest. yea, idk what my deal is. i just gotta try again. all i really want to read is this and 1984. im not much of a reader lol

    • @battlesheep2552
      @battlesheep2552 4 роки тому +6

      Every time i see someone with earbuds i think “just like Mrs. Montag”

  • @Cthaang96
    @Cthaang96 3 роки тому +50

    This video introduced me to a love of reading and helped me get through this quarantine where all you could do in a congested city was look at a screen. I felt like Montag but I was never able to express these feelings into words for a long time. Thank you

  • @dorianbrlic8632
    @dorianbrlic8632 Рік тому +23

    Our school gave us this book to read 2 weeks ago, it was so weird but reaching the end the perspective I saw and thought about the book changed so much, it feels like a revolutionary book for the mind

  • @Qlegal
    @Qlegal 5 років тому +2425

    Fahrenheit 451 is important to read because it’s slowly occurring as we speak. Adoooooooro.

    • @firepower7017
      @firepower7017 5 років тому +62

      Benosoar Thankfully the Democrats haven't taken the liberty to weaponizing the media and you'll definitely end up with this for sure.
      Edit: This will certainly happen in America since the people who live in it can kinda be half baked in the brain. Not saying that every US citizens have it but at least a majority and I ain't kidding

    • @haiironosora9714
      @haiironosora9714 4 роки тому +30

      @Benosoar Awesome sarcasm...

    • @BruteSix
      @BruteSix 4 роки тому +2

      its ok ebooks exists

    • @ErickSoares3
      @ErickSoares3 4 роки тому +3

      @@BruteSix Anti-piracy doesn't help.

    • @francismoore3352
      @francismoore3352 4 роки тому +1

      Do you mean Adooooooorno?

  • @kay3346
    @kay3346 5 років тому +409

    I am in love with the “why should you read” series!

  • @afonsop0419
    @afonsop0419 2 роки тому +21

    I read the book and watched the movie. The detail that stuck with me from the movie is when Montag's wife threatens to leave him if he doesn't burn the books. He promises he will after he reads him. Well, Montag's wife doesn't just leave him, she turns him in to the authorities, which wasn't in her original threat to Montag. It seems like she wanted to revenge the loss of her friends and her new TV screen she would get if Montag had gotten his promotion.

  • @sh00kspeared73
    @sh00kspeared73 3 роки тому +28

    Fahrenheit 451 is one of my FAVORITE books of all time. I would give ANYTHING for a sequel, because I totally think it could have worked as a series (perks of liking a book that's so old that a sequel is literally an impossibility, amirite?). It's such a wonderfully written, powerful story.

    • @goldencreeper2551
      @goldencreeper2551 8 місяців тому +1

      Would kind of need a prequel. A sequel would be a nuclear wasteland

    • @caingamin2
      @caingamin2 7 місяців тому

      Maybe insight into what their society might become if it ever manages to change

  • @SAli-uh3qr
    @SAli-uh3qr 5 років тому +163

    “A portrait of independent thought on the brink of extinction and a parable about a society which is complicit in its own combustion. “

    • @scheelite7341
      @scheelite7341 5 років тому +2

      S Ali
      I was scrolling down the comments and read this one as the exact same text was read out loud at the video 🤣.

    • @Vortexxian
      @Vortexxian 2 роки тому

      I'm 14 and this is deep moment

  • @BoneChill8118
    @BoneChill8118 5 років тому +667

    Fun fact: Guy Montag’s name was not originally Guy. In the early drafts of the story, the name was Leonard Montag.

    • @darkrider1878
      @darkrider1878 5 років тому +29

      His actual name was Maito Guy

    • @GS-ny1ll
      @GS-ny1ll 4 роки тому +24

      Reminds me of Leonard Mead, a character in Bradbury's short story "the pedestrian". I think both the short story and F451 are set within the same universe.

    • @Caroline28483
      @Caroline28483 4 роки тому +25

      @@GS-ny1ll I believe so, too. Clarisse mentions at one point in the book that her uncle was arrested for being a pedestrian, probably referencing the short story.

    • @Caroline28483
      @Caroline28483 4 роки тому +1

      @S Raaj K Lol I know I was just saying how the poem connects to the book

    • @amikishimoto7680
      @amikishimoto7680 3 роки тому +13

      I think giving the main character such a generic name was a fun way for Bradbury to show how individualism was no longer a thing.

  • @slimyduck2140
    @slimyduck2140 10 місяців тому +9

    One detail I loved about the book is how at the start of it it's really hard to read. Lot of punctuation, repetition, almost incoherent. But as it progress and Montag evolve, it becomes easier to read, and it expresses itself way better. I thought that was neat

  • @AdministratorMorale
    @AdministratorMorale 8 місяців тому +10

    It's unvelieveable how much of this novel is becoming true in todays society. Short attention spans, eyes glued to screens, lesser and lesser vocabulary, you name it. We might not even realize it, but we are slowly "burning" books essentially with everything nowadays switching over to online sources. There is no more reading from textbooks when you can find your answers with a quick search. There's no more creative thought when you can just ask an AI to write you anything you could need. Truly sad.

  • @arcticfoxanimations3540
    @arcticfoxanimations3540 5 років тому +270

    After this recommendation, I went out, bought it, and now my mouth is dry and I'm at part 3. I absolutely love this book.

  • @kirbgaming8192
    @kirbgaming8192 4 роки тому +671

    We had a thing in our school where we had to dress up as something/someone in a book we liked
    Now my friend liked this book. And he said that he would dress up as a book. Another friend dressed up as a “Russian” with a flamethrower
    Best timing ever

    • @frost_co
      @frost_co 3 роки тому +35

      welp now that school thinks russians wield portable flamethrowers

    • @TarekMidani
      @TarekMidani 2 роки тому +12

      Rip your book friend

    • @mk-ki4ls
      @mk-ki4ls 2 роки тому +6

      @@TarekMidani " rip " lol

    • @OrangeDied
      @OrangeDied 2 роки тому

      @@frost_co wait they don't?

  • @francisco.hurtado
    @francisco.hurtado 3 місяці тому +3

    I just read the book, it was quite shoking to me the accuracy of the description of the society of that future and the similarities with our society today.

  • @GhostCryProductions
    @GhostCryProductions 3 роки тому +19

    Do not forget the hidden chapter. Montag is called into Beatty office. Montag isn’t in trouble, Beatty just wants to chat. Beatty has been noticing that Montag has been seemingly bothered by something. Montag dodges the questions relating to his opinions on what they do for a living and whether he has any doubts to the reasoning behind what they do. Beatty, unsatisfied with Montag’s reluctance, go over to the side of his office and removes a section of wall to reveal bookcases filled with literature. Montag is surprised and shocked by the revelation, not understanding how Beatty could be loyal to their role, yet be in possession of contraband. Beatty explains that he firmly believes in destroying books and that literature can be a dangerous tool; however, he first defends the keeping of the collection in that the crime is in the act of reading, not owning a single book or many books. And secondly, like many others, he is illiterate and has no interest in learning to read, therefore, a book left on shelf collecting dust is just as destructive and finalizing as burning it wholesale.
    By Mr. Bradbury’s explanation, the chapter was left out because he thought it was too short to dedicate a chapter, nor could he find a spot in the story where it would fit without interrupting the narrative or having a side of Beatty that did not fit his characterization as someone blindly loyal to his job.

  • @PaladinVII
    @PaladinVII 5 років тому +412

    Fahrenheit 451 and George Orewell's 1984 should be required reading.

    • @howardbaxter2514
      @howardbaxter2514 5 років тому +43

      And should be warnings, not a manual on how to change our society.

    • @PaladinVII
      @PaladinVII 5 років тому +13

      @@howardbaxter2514 Exactly! You get it!

    • @mattsmith1039
      @mattsmith1039 5 років тому +16

      PaladinVII animal farm too

    • @nicholasneyhart396
      @nicholasneyhart396 5 років тому +13

      In most schools you need to read this ,anthem, brave new world, and the giver. All the main stays of the genre.

    • @OceanAce
      @OceanAce 5 років тому +1

      They were, in my school district.

  • @GusCraft460
    @GusCraft460 5 років тому +259

    I’ve heard of this book being banned and burned in some times and places, though possibly fictional, my memory isn’t too good, I can’t help but feel the pang of irony at the thought of a book about burning books being burned.

    • @JRed-jf7jn
      @JRed-jf7jn 5 років тому +6

      GusCraft460 that’s exactly the point of the book lol

    • @mik3_exe
      @mik3_exe 5 років тому +7

      @@JRed-jf7jn yeah he pointed out the irony of the situation, he knows that's the point of the book lmao

    • @colemair5367
      @colemair5367 5 років тому

      @010Lemon010 And in countries that burn bibles it was banded iorny.

    • @ben3634
      @ben3634 5 років тому

      010Lemon010 if im not mistaken i remember a school in one state banning it for that reason

    • @thehermit8618
      @thehermit8618 4 роки тому

      There's an edition of the book that comes with a match and the spine is lined with match striker paper so you can burn it

  • @prestonbyrd8443
    @prestonbyrd8443 3 роки тому +6

    I read it s assigned reading for my freshman year of high school. Ever since I read "A Sound of Thunder" the previous year, I have been a fan of Bradbury's work. He has a phenomenal way of making subjects that you may feel uncomfortable about, due to their plausibility, into works that you can't put down until you're done.

  • @guerimjj
    @guerimjj 2 роки тому +7

    Oh I'm surprised to see "Burmese" in the caption! These days we're at our worse state and I can't do anything and stuck at home watching the country falling apart. But I'm reading a lot to escape from reality for a short while... Thank you for all these recommendations.❣️

  • @mangolollipop_
    @mangolollipop_ 5 років тому +182

    I heavily ignored this book in high school then actually read the book when I was 18. Ever since then I became a fan of Bradbury's work. I never stopped recommending his novels.

    • @yourdadsof1325
      @yourdadsof1325 4 роки тому +1

      Is there any other specific book you would recommend that he wrote?

    • @ratherbfishing455
      @ratherbfishing455 4 роки тому

      I read it in sixth grade.

    • @ataraxisdrizz7827
      @ataraxisdrizz7827 Рік тому +2

      @@yourdadsof1325 not it being three years later 💀 but I hear the pedestrian by Ray Bradbury is good

  • @supertwitchy4116
    @supertwitchy4116 5 років тому +223

    I thought they just had the salamander symbol on them. I dont remember them being salamander shaped

    • @memesarekeem
      @memesarekeem 5 років тому +41

      It would make sense either way, as in early European folk tale, it was said that salamanders were born from flames.

    • @christopherj2733
      @christopherj2733 3 роки тому +4

      Actually, on page 37 it reads, “ They sat there looking out the front of the great Salamander as they turned a corner and went silently on. “

    • @christopherj2733
      @christopherj2733 3 роки тому

      @@tormclean9657 There are other instances in the book that would substantiate their engines being of salamander shape. Of course I may be erroneous.

  • @vaishnaviyadav4144
    @vaishnaviyadav4144 4 місяці тому +4

    Just read it this month. The book scared me . The fact that it could and would become true unless we,the people, read, analyse, think and perceive. Today after so many years since it's publication, it seems to be slowly turning true. We are ourselves carving the path to our doom. Most people don't enjoy reading these days (there are some exceptions obviously) ,they prefer quick media . They are becoming as shallow as Montag's wife , Mildred.
    Let us be alert lest the books would get lost.

  • @carriesmith8600
    @carriesmith8600 Рік тому +2

    One of my favorite books. I even have a signed copy of it that my dad got me for Christmas one year. I love all of Ray Bradbury's work but this one is special because it was the first one I read by him.

  • @lavo-ld4wm
    @lavo-ld4wm 3 роки тому +656

    There's one important point you forgot to mention about the novel : the reading banning didn't come from any totalitarian government, but from the people itself, as they started protesting against political incorrect books, so the government simply followed so it could keep some order ; just simply read the passage when Captain Beatty goes to Montag's and tells him the story on how the firefighters like them, became to be !

    • @blackswordsman2988
      @blackswordsman2988 3 роки тому +67

      he mentions it
      he says that the state of fahrenheit 451s world came about due to the apathy of the masses and not due to a totalitarian government

    • @lavo-ld4wm
      @lavo-ld4wm 3 роки тому +19

      @@blackswordsman2988 that apathy is merely a consequence ; read the book, Captan Beatty truly gives away the real origins of the present situation.

    • @blackswordsman2988
      @blackswordsman2988 3 роки тому +50

      @@lavo-ld4wm yea the video forgot to mention that part that you're talking about
      it was something about "minority" groups deeming certain books to be offensive right? and then more and more of them got banned

    • @lavo-ld4wm
      @lavo-ld4wm 3 роки тому +20

      @@blackswordsman2988 exactly ! As that was part of the origins of the situation, as the general sense of the plot is, reading makes you think, therefore, prevents you of being happy... of course, there's this general feeling and also what's said during Montag and Clarisse dialogues, points out towards the Consumerist Society as the "real power" behind everything (thus making the government, just a figurehead, where the nation's president is elected because of his looks, instead of his qualities).

    • @blackswordsman2988
      @blackswordsman2988 3 роки тому +8

      @@lavo-ld4wm yea i agree for the most part but i think it was apathy and minority groups that contributed to the problem both
      like for example faber could have spoke out against it but he didnt
      and after the government outlawed them, peoples apathy increased because like they can just watch the tv all day for instant gratification.
      its a great book man

  • @vaishnavigupta9111
    @vaishnavigupta9111 4 роки тому +235

    Here's the fun part. The book talks extensively about short attention spans. Look at us now. Playing a video that talks about short attention spans on a 1.5x speed and how UA-cam has recently changed its display style, feeding into this instinct
    Sayonara!

    • @veronicacameron1703
      @veronicacameron1703 2 роки тому +15

      Yep! I literally only clicked on this video because it was 4mins...didn’t wanna watch anything longer

    • @alexsch2514
      @alexsch2514 2 роки тому +10

      I literally can't watch a video below 1.5 speed because of my adhd😂😂😂

    • @domino_201
      @domino_201 2 роки тому +1

      the rise of tiktok makes it even moreso

    • @Vortexxian
      @Vortexxian 2 роки тому +2

      @@alexsch2514 excuses, people have lived with ADHD since the dawn of time and still survived. Your now just trying to justify the fact that your attention span is decreasing, which over time will make it decrease even more, forcing you to watch at 2x speed, then click off the video after 2 seconds. Ultimatelly, you will lose your mind and become unable to live because of negative attention span. Do something about it, if you care about your life & mental well-being.

    • @alexsch2514
      @alexsch2514 2 роки тому

      @@Vortexxian I'm sorry for having problems, what else should I do about it more than I do already? I read a book a week minimum.

  • @intravenous6327
    @intravenous6327 10 місяців тому +2

    That was quite the fascinating read. I finished it in one sitting- the first book in years that's managed to make me do that, as i usually can't sit still for too long (unless I'm crafting something). The descriptions were lovely, and the message rather poignant.

  • @Peterinho
    @Peterinho Рік тому +7

    I only discovered this book today and I am beyond intrigued in reading it now. I loved George Orwell's 1984, so I'm sure this will be just as good :)

  • @noahgreer1497
    @noahgreer1497 5 років тому +354

    It gives me great peace and pleasure to know that book sales are higher than ever and millinials and gen Z visit public libraries at a higher rate than any other generations previously.

    • @andreaarchaeology
      @andreaarchaeology 5 років тому +12

      I love hearing that!!! ❤👍📚📚📚

    • @BicBoi1984
      @BicBoi1984 5 років тому +17

      Zoomers are leagues ahead and better than millinials in almost every aspect

    • @andreaarchaeology
      @andreaarchaeology 5 років тому +13

      @@BicBoi1984 I'm a millenial and I'm triggered by your comment.

    • @Skull-jd8ql
      @Skull-jd8ql 5 років тому +2

      That's amazing !!

    • @richardpowell1772
      @richardpowell1772 5 років тому +8

      Then, they go on their college campuses and try to get speakers they don’t agree with banned.

  • @BobMcCoy
    @BobMcCoy 5 років тому +1067

    *If TED says I should, I shall!*

  • @bernardosantos8020
    @bernardosantos8020 3 роки тому +27

    Honestly, this is the only book I’ve read for pleasure in a long long while. I’m infatuated with it. One day I crammed 40 pages on a work day, which doesn’t sound like a lot, but I’m a very slow reader

    • @deangreen2567
      @deangreen2567 2 роки тому

      You need to read Aldous Huxley’s brave new world, and Orwell’s 1984.

    • @78anurag
      @78anurag 2 роки тому +1

      Relatable

  • @FakenameStevens
    @FakenameStevens Рік тому +9

    I am reading that and this just came up! My reasoning for reading it is he makes you like the characters then creates mystery about them, so there's an element of compassion

  • @pratikmane5064
    @pratikmane5064 5 років тому +168

    It's scary how perfectly a book published 65 years ago describes today's society

    • @jodirex4639
      @jodirex4639 5 років тому +3

      How is that so?

    • @ap4702
      @ap4702 4 роки тому +3

      @*/ it's the concept of the limited availability of knowledge, control and keeping the masses dumbed down and complicit. In this era we habe more similarities of that book yet people still turn a blind eye to the world around us. Ironically this book is banned in many areas.

    • @Vortexxian
      @Vortexxian 2 роки тому +4

      I'm 14 and this is deep moment

  • @teentraveler1790
    @teentraveler1790 Рік тому +2

    After reading this book, it left me with a heavy heart.
    The ending was very sad yet filled with me with hope as the one's who still read congregated and talked with each other regarding their latest findings.

  • @_chrshcmps
    @_chrshcmps 2 роки тому +9

    I remember finishing this book back in April and it's so scary cause it's so accurate of what is happening now. I only buy the book cause I was curious, it was always recommend to me and gave in and buy one. This got to be one of my fav books

    • @Vortexxian
      @Vortexxian 2 роки тому +1

      I'm 14 and this is deep moment

  • @rainehilbero9626
    @rainehilbero9626 5 років тому +151

    I love dystopian novels so much, and I don't know why. . .but I just do.

    • @RaeWakefield
      @RaeWakefield 5 років тому +2

      Raine Hilbero right?! Me too

    • @b1e2t
      @b1e2t 5 років тому +2

      Raine Hilbero Same!

    • @R2bEEaton
      @R2bEEaton 5 років тому +1

      @@b1e2t Same! Have you read Jennifer Government?

    • @kuykasamjoktar6191
      @kuykasamjoktar6191 5 років тому +6

      Because those novels are based on real life."Big Brother is watching us."

    • @asielmilian38
      @asielmilian38 5 років тому

      Lucky you.

  • @suntzu2102
    @suntzu2102 5 років тому +135

    This channel deserves an Oscar for it’s animation

    • @shozter7390
      @shozter7390 5 років тому +1

      Oscar ha? Not too sure about that.
      ua-cam.com/video/wILkUIzh1Jo/v-deo.html

    • @bhq3860
      @bhq3860 5 років тому +1

      No it doesn't lol

  • @ej2u545
    @ej2u545 Рік тому +9

    Fahrenheit 451 was a very good book and yet it’s kind of scary because it feels like that reality, is seeping in our reality. With how people refuse for people to change, or how if you’re this way then you can’t go that way. And any kind of thinking that is different is bad. I think this book is becoming more of reality than what we believe. The man who wrote the book was thinking 60 years into the future.

  • @JacF6734
    @JacF6734 3 роки тому +81

    "It's no good Montag. We've all got to be alike; the only way to be happy is for everyone to be made equal. So... we must burn the books, Montag. All the books."
    Scary how we've reached this point now.

  • @Mephitinae
    @Mephitinae 5 років тому +106

    Always try to find the earliest edition of any book you want to read, especially when studying religion. *Controversial facts* may have been replaced with *diplomatic lies* in later versions.

    • @meirsolomon5626
      @meirsolomon5626 3 роки тому

      Very true.

    • @hugo57k91
      @hugo57k91 3 роки тому +2

      @@person10 as a muslim myself, Islam (and most other religions) need to change radicaly to be able tp survive

  • @mina-hs1qv
    @mina-hs1qv 5 років тому +7

    I read this for my lit class and I have to say, the tests and due dates and assignments that come along with the book really ruined it for so many of my classmates. I hope when I am older, I can reread it and truly enjoy it. I loved the storyline and all the messages it conveys, just not being forced to read it to save my grade!

    • @natalieanimal4063
      @natalieanimal4063 4 роки тому +1

      The same happened to me with so many books. I either read and enjoyed them before or after we did them in school. When people say it should be obligatory to read a book because it's very good, I always think that's exactly why I don't want it to be an obligation.

  • @indumathikr7774
    @indumathikr7774 3 роки тому +2

    I read this book on Ted-eds recommendation and it was really a wonderful book. I really can't imagine how the writer builds a whole new world (what we are becoming to be honest) in such a short novel. I really liked the last part were the many eminent and book loving people carry books on their heads. But still it was disturbing because they had to wait for the world to accept them.

  • @flexconnectors
    @flexconnectors 3 роки тому +11

    "12 rules for life"
    I perfectly sensible book
    Banned in Norway..

  • @BumanHeing
    @BumanHeing 5 років тому +21

    1:21
    Why were the vehicles in salamander shape only?
    Why not dinosaurs....

    • @James_Simon
      @James_Simon 5 років тому

      @LagiNaLangAko23...what's that

  • @thecheck968
    @thecheck968 4 роки тому +8

    It's scary how much our world parallels certain aspects in Bradbury's work. Constant distractions, the development of technology, and the movement away from books. But it's a double edged sword. Because now we've got so many new mediums to enjoy stories through: movies, television, video games. And they're all readily available. And to be able to go online and discuss any thoughts with nearly anybody, is... outstanding. Sure, a lot of this meaning is lost in a sea of nothingness, and some governments are cracking down on certain ideals. But our ability to share and hear stories has recently peaked. I'm sure a lot of this world would scare Bradbury, but also, some aspects would be a welcome change.

  • @cookeychef
    @cookeychef Рік тому +3

    i really loved the comic version of it, the plot was amasing and it was truely one of the best books i have ever read

  • @BhaskarMitrasherlock_holmes94
    @BhaskarMitrasherlock_holmes94 3 роки тому

    Thank you Ted-Ed. This is an amazing recommendation!❤️

  • @dinolover8558
    @dinolover8558 5 років тому +13

    Oh man, I'd love it if you guys did a video on the Unwind book series. Its world building is amazing, and the character development never falls flat.

  • @zacharyallen5663
    @zacharyallen5663 4 роки тому +90

    Me when I respond to my crush: 3:44

  • @Kahrot
    @Kahrot 6 місяців тому +4

    this book is soo accurate of our current situation
    a government coming to power by capitalizing on the peoples short attention span

    • @camoTiara
      @camoTiara 6 місяців тому +3

      I am just here to make a record of support of your post. Society is breaking down in English speaking "democracies", and England has a near fascistic government.
      Like a Lich, coming to full 'dark' power.

  • @Opal7777
    @Opal7777 3 роки тому +12

    3:43 when you try to make a sentence using only your keyboard's predictions

  • @Todomo
    @Todomo 4 роки тому +128

    this sounds suuuuuuuuper accurate to the world right now, i’m gonna read this

    • @notlogical4016
      @notlogical4016 4 роки тому +10

      its based on what humanity has done to itself in the past, so i wouldn't doubt that its a lot like today too.

    • @forgetful9845
      @forgetful9845 4 роки тому +4

      enjoy the read

    • @TheUltimateBlooper
      @TheUltimateBlooper 3 роки тому +3

      2020: "Hold my beer..."

    • @STho205
      @STho205 3 роки тому +4

      So did you?
      If so did you get the cause this presenter completely skipped over (probably because it was uncomfortable)?

    • @TucsonDude
      @TucsonDude 2 роки тому

      Just look around you and see who is directly behind censorship, today.

  • @wuznab5109
    @wuznab5109 5 років тому +7

    You couldn’t have uploaded this video at a better time, we just started reading this at school.

  • @Jmasley1
    @Jmasley1 3 роки тому +2

    I was lucky enough to meet Ray twice in LA when I worked at a bookstore in Hollywood. He would arrive in a limo (he didn’t drive I think) and then enter the store like a kid in a candy store. He is missed.

  • @misan2002
    @misan2002 3 роки тому

    an extract of this came in one of my exams. i fell in love with the book straight away. i didn't get a chance to read it yet, I hope to read it soon.

  • @stylizedbasix1257
    @stylizedbasix1257 5 років тому +75

    I will come back to this in 2020

  • @meower808
    @meower808 4 роки тому +5

    This books sounds inspiring and enlightening, I'd love to read it sometime :D

  • @De4dPoo1
    @De4dPoo1 3 роки тому +1

    I just read it and omg that ending. Sooo goood, thanks for the recomendation

  • @plainkeeperathome
    @plainkeeperathome Рік тому

    I listened to the audio book earlier this year and thoroughly enjoyed it.

  • @ghostpepperwine
    @ghostpepperwine 4 роки тому +13

    I read Fahrenheit 451 for an English assignment in grade 7. I think it’s impossible to fully understand it without understanding the context it was written in. (Got a B+ on the assignment though)

  • @blimeygirl4357
    @blimeygirl4357 5 років тому +5

    This was excellent.😃
    Especially the part about the acceleration of mass culture. Strange to think it's truer now than at the time when the novel was written.

  • @hermanhansirahm9754
    @hermanhansirahm9754 3 роки тому

    This book analysis is very mesmerising to listen to, nearly hard to describe with mere words. It depicts Fahrenheit 451's meaning and ideas with clean accuracy. Using eloquent, articulate and breviloquent language.
    This video alone is reason enough to read Ray Bradbury's dystopian novel, then read it again.

  • @Gooddoggo4
    @Gooddoggo4 2 роки тому +2

    My Highschool made us read this book, and I'm very glad they did! Great read and eerily relatable to our current societal issues.

  • @katharsiz4661
    @katharsiz4661 5 років тому +8

    Its awesome how you explain this

  • @efremendez
    @efremendez 5 років тому +3

    I read this back in highschool, along with all his books in our library. I forgot what it was about, thank you for reminding me, now I don't have to waste my time re-reading it lol.

  • @gabriellegoodwin4422
    @gabriellegoodwin4422 2 роки тому +1

    I'm intellectually illiterate, so before I read a classic book like this I'll watch one of TED-ED's "why should you read ___" videos to help me understand the more complex themes.
    It's helped so much, books that used to stump me and make me quit out of frustration are now some of my all time favorites that I won't stop gushing about to my friends. I really love this video series, keep it up!

  • @MrPonytron
    @MrPonytron Рік тому +3

    This book reminds me of some things going on in the world today, mostly on social media. A society of a simple-minded hivemind of people being judgmental towards intellectuals. I definitely gotta pick up this book now