The 4 a.m. mystery | Rives

779,164 views ・ 2007-07-19

TED


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:27
This is a recent comic strip from the Los Angeles Times.
0
27000
2000
00:29
The punch line?
1
29000
2000
00:31
"On the other hand, I don't have to get up at four
2
31000
2000
00:33
every single morning to milk my Labrador."
3
33000
2000
00:35
This is a recent cover of New York Magazine.
4
35000
3000
00:38
Best hospitals where doctors say they would go for cancer treatment,
5
38000
3000
00:41
births, strokes, heart disease, hip replacements, 4 a.m. emergencies.
6
41000
5000
00:46
And this is a song medley I put together --
7
46000
2000
00:49
(Music)
8
49000
19000
01:09
Did you ever notice that four in the morning has become
9
69000
2000
01:11
some sort of meme or shorthand?
10
71000
3000
01:14
It means something like you are awake at the worst possible hour.
11
74000
4000
01:18
(Laughter)
12
78000
1000
01:19
A time for inconveniences, mishaps, yearnings.
13
79000
5000
01:24
A time for plotting to whack the chief of police,
14
84000
3000
01:27
like in this classic scene from "The Godfather."
15
87000
2000
01:29
Coppola's script describes these guys as, "exhausted in shirt sleeves.
16
89000
3000
01:32
It is four in the morning."
17
92000
2000
01:34
(Laughter)
18
94000
1000
01:35
A time for even grimmer stuff than that,
19
95000
2000
01:37
like autopsies and embalmings in Isabel Allende's
20
97000
3000
01:40
"The House of the Spirits."
21
100000
2000
01:42
After the breathtaking green-haired Rosa is murdered,
22
102000
2000
01:44
the doctors preserve her with unguents and morticians' paste.
23
104000
3000
01:47
They worked until four o'clock in the morning.
24
107000
3000
01:50
A time for even grimmer stuff than that,
25
110000
3000
01:53
like in last April's New Yorker magazine.
26
113000
3000
01:56
This short fiction piece by Martin Amis
27
116000
2000
01:58
starts out, "On September 11, 2001, he opened his eyes
28
118000
4000
02:02
at 4 a.m. in Portland, Maine,
29
122000
2000
02:04
and Mohamed Atta's last day began."
30
124000
4000
02:08
For a time that I find to be the most placid
31
128000
3000
02:11
and uneventful hour of the day, four in the morning sure gets
32
131000
4000
02:15
an awful lot of bad press --
33
135000
2000
02:17
(Laughter)
34
137000
1000
02:18
across a lot of different media from a lot of big names.
35
138000
3000
02:21
And it made me suspicious.
36
141000
3000
02:24
I figured, surely some of the most creative artistic minds in the world, really,
37
144000
4000
02:28
aren't all defaulting back to this one easy trope
38
148000
4000
02:32
like they invented it, right?
39
152000
2000
02:34
Could it be there is something more going on here?
40
154000
3000
02:37
Something deliberate, something secret,
41
157000
3000
02:40
and who got the four in the morning bad rap ball rolling anyway?
42
160000
4000
02:44
I say this guy -- Alberto Giacometti, shown here
43
164000
4000
02:48
with some of his sculptures on the Swiss 100 franc note.
44
168000
3000
02:51
He did it with this famous piece
45
171000
2000
02:53
from the New York Museum of Modern Art.
46
173000
2000
02:55
Its title -- "The Palace at Four in the Morning --
47
175000
3000
02:58
(Laughter)
48
178000
1000
03:00
1932.
49
180000
3000
03:03
Not just the earliest cryptic reference
50
183000
2000
03:05
to four in the morning I can find.
51
185000
1000
03:06
I believe that this so-called first surrealist sculpture
52
186000
4000
03:10
may provide an incredible key to virtually
53
190000
4000
03:14
every artistic depiction of four in the morning to follow it.
54
194000
3000
03:17
I call this The Giacometti Code, a TED exclusive.
55
197000
4000
03:21
No, feel free to follow along on your Blackberries
56
201000
3000
03:24
or your iPhones if you've got them.
57
204000
2000
03:26
It works a little something like -- this is a recent Google search
58
206000
3000
03:29
for four in the morning.
59
209000
2000
03:31
Results vary, of course. This is pretty typical.
60
211000
2000
03:33
The top 10 results yield you
61
213000
2000
03:35
four hits for Faron Young's song, "It's Four in the Morning,"
62
215000
5000
03:40
three hits for Judi Dench's film, "Four in the Morning,"
63
220000
4000
03:44
one hit for Wislawa Szymborska's poem, "Four in the Morning."
64
224000
4000
03:48
But what, you may ask, do a Polish poet, a British Dame,
65
228000
4000
03:52
a country music hall of famer all have in common
66
232000
3000
03:55
besides this totally excellent Google ranking?
67
235000
3000
03:58
Well, let's start with Faron Young -- who was born incidentally
68
238000
5000
04:03
in 1932.
69
243000
2000
04:05
(Laughter)
70
245000
2000
04:07
In 1996, he shot himself in the head on December ninth --
71
247000
6000
04:13
which incidentally is Judi Dench's birthday.
72
253000
3000
04:16
(Laughter)
73
256000
3000
04:19
But he didn't die on Dench's birthday.
74
259000
2000
04:21
He languished until the following afternoon when he finally succumbed
75
261000
3000
04:24
to a supposedly self-inflicted gunshot wound at the age of 64 --
76
264000
5000
04:29
which incidentally is how old Alberto Giacometti was when he died.
77
269000
5000
04:34
Where was Wislawa Szymborska during all this?
78
274000
2000
04:36
She has the world's most absolutely watertight alibi.
79
276000
4000
04:40
On that very day, December 10, 1996 while Mr. Four in the Morning,
80
280000
5000
04:45
Faron Young, was giving up the ghost in Nashville, Tennessee,
81
285000
3000
04:48
Ms. Four in the Morning -- or one of them anyway -- Wislawa Szymborska
82
288000
3000
04:52
was in Stockholm, Sweden, accepting the Nobel Prize for Literature.
83
292000
5000
04:57
100 years to the day after the death of Alfred Nobel himself.
84
297000
5000
05:02
Coincidence? No, it's creepy.
85
302000
2000
05:04
(Laughter)
86
304000
2000
05:06
Coincidence to me has a much simpler metric.
87
306000
2000
05:08
That's like me telling you,
88
308000
1000
05:09
"Hey, you know the Nobel Prize was established in 1901,
89
309000
3000
05:12
which coincidentally is the same year Alberto Giacometti was born?"
90
312000
5000
05:17
No, not everything fits so tidily into the paradigm,
91
317000
4000
05:21
but that does not mean there's not something going on
92
321000
3000
05:24
at the highest possible levels.
93
324000
2000
05:26
In fact there are people in this room
94
326000
2000
05:28
who may not want me to show you this clip we're about to see.
95
328000
4000
05:32
(Laughter)
96
332000
1000
05:33
Video: Homer Simpson: We have a tennis court, a swimming pool, a screening room --
97
333000
2000
05:35
You mean if I want pork chops, even in the middle of the night,
98
335000
3000
05:38
your guy will fry them up?
99
338000
2000
05:40
Herbert Powell: Sure, that's what he's paid for.
100
340000
2000
05:42
Now do you need towels, laundry, maids?
101
342000
3000
05:45
HS: Wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait -- let me see if I got this straight.
102
345000
3000
05:48
It is Christmas Day, 4 a.m.
103
348000
2000
05:50
There's a rumble in my stomach.
104
350000
2000
05:52
Marge Simpson: Homer, please.
105
352000
2000
05:54
Rives: Wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait.
106
354000
2000
05:56
Let me see if I got this straight, Matt.
107
356000
3000
05:59
(Laughter)
108
359000
2000
06:01
When Homer Simpson needs to imagine
109
361000
3000
06:04
the most remote possible moment of not just the clock,
110
364000
3000
06:07
but the whole freaking calendar, he comes up with 0400
111
367000
4000
06:11
on the birthday of the Baby Jesus.
112
371000
2000
06:13
And no, I don't know how it works
113
373000
3000
06:16
into the whole puzzling scheme of things, but obviously
114
376000
4000
06:20
I know a coded message when I see one.
115
380000
4000
06:24
(Laughter)
116
384000
1000
06:25
I said, I know a coded message when I see one.
117
385000
4000
06:29
And folks, you can buy a copy of Bill Clinton's "My Life"
118
389000
3000
06:32
from the bookstore here at TED.
119
392000
2000
06:34
Parse it cover to cover for whatever hidden references you want.
120
394000
3000
06:37
Or you can go to the Random House website where there is this excerpt.
121
397000
3000
06:40
And how far down into it you figure we'll have to scroll
122
400000
2000
06:42
to get to the golden ticket?
123
402000
3000
06:45
Would you believe about a dozen paragraphs?
124
405000
3000
06:48
This is page 474 on your paperbacks if you're following along:
125
408000
3000
06:51
"Though it was getting better, I still wasn't satisfied
126
411000
3000
06:54
with the inaugural address.
127
414000
2000
06:56
My speechwriters must have been tearing their hair out
128
416000
3000
06:59
because as we worked between one and four in the morning
129
419000
3000
07:02
on Inauguration Day, I was still changing it."
130
422000
4000
07:06
Sure you were, because you've prepared your entire life
131
426000
3000
07:09
for this historic quadrennial event that just sort of sneaks up on you.
132
429000
4000
07:13
And then --
133
433000
1000
07:14
(Laughter)
134
434000
2000
07:16
three paragraphs later we get this little beauty:
135
436000
4000
07:21
"We went back to Blair House to look at the speech for the last time.
136
441000
3000
07:24
It had gotten a lot better since 4 a.m."
137
444000
3000
07:27
Well, how could it have?
138
447000
2000
07:29
By his own writing, this man was either asleep,
139
449000
2000
07:31
at a prayer meeting with Al and Tipper or learning how to launch
140
451000
3000
07:34
a nuclear missile out of a suitcase.
141
454000
3000
07:37
What happens to American presidents at 0400 on inauguration day?
142
457000
4000
07:41
What happened to William Jefferson Clinton?
143
461000
2000
07:43
We might not ever know.
144
463000
2000
07:45
And I noticed, he's not exactly around here today
145
465000
3000
07:48
to face any tough questions.
146
468000
2000
07:50
(Laughter)
147
470000
2000
07:52
It could get awkward, right?
148
472000
2000
07:54
I mean after all, this whole business happened on his watch.
149
474000
2000
07:56
But if he were here --
150
476000
2000
07:58
(Laughter)
151
478000
1000
07:59
he might remind us, as he does in the wrap-up to his fine autobiography,
152
479000
4000
08:03
that on this day Bill Clinton began a journey --
153
483000
3000
08:06
a journey that saw him go on to become
154
486000
2000
08:08
the first Democrat president elected
155
488000
2000
08:10
to two consecutive terms in decades.
156
490000
3000
08:13
In generations.
157
493000
2000
08:15
The first since this man, Franklin Delano Roosevelt,
158
495000
3000
08:18
who began his own unprecedented journey
159
498000
3000
08:21
way back at his own first election,
160
501000
3000
08:24
way back in a simpler time, way back in 1932 --
161
504000
7000
08:32
(Laughter)
162
512000
1000
08:33
the year Alberto Giacometti
163
513000
1000
08:34
(Laughter)
164
514000
1000
08:36
made "The Palace at Four in the Morning."
165
516000
2000
08:38
The year, let's remember, that this voice, now departed,
166
518000
4000
08:42
first came a-cryin' into this big old crazy world of ours.
167
522000
5000
08:47
(Music)
168
527000
24000
09:11
(Applause)
169
551000
2000

Original video on YouTube.com
About this website

This site will introduce you to YouTube videos that are useful for learning English. You will see English lessons taught by top-notch teachers from around the world. Double-click on the English subtitles displayed on each video page to play the video from there. The subtitles scroll in sync with the video playback. If you have any comments or requests, please contact us using this contact form.

https://forms.gle/WvT1wiN1qDtmnspy7