The 4 a.m. mystery | Rives

796,696 views ・ 2007-07-19

TED


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00:27
This is a recent comic strip from the Los Angeles Times.
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The punch line?
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"On the other hand, I don't have to get up at four
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every single morning to milk my Labrador."
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This is a recent cover of New York Magazine.
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Best hospitals where doctors say they would go for cancer treatment,
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births, strokes, heart disease, hip replacements, 4 a.m. emergencies.
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And this is a song medley I put together --
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(Music)
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Did you ever notice that four in the morning has become
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some sort of meme or shorthand?
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It means something like you are awake at the worst possible hour.
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01:18
(Laughter)
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A time for inconveniences, mishaps, yearnings.
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A time for plotting to whack the chief of police,
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like in this classic scene from "The Godfather."
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Coppola's script describes these guys as, "exhausted in shirt sleeves.
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It is four in the morning."
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01:34
(Laughter)
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A time for even grimmer stuff than that,
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like autopsies and embalmings in Isabel Allende's
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"The House of the Spirits."
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After the breathtaking green-haired Rosa is murdered,
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the doctors preserve her with unguents and morticians' paste.
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They worked until four o'clock in the morning.
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A time for even grimmer stuff than that,
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like in last April's New Yorker magazine.
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This short fiction piece by Martin Amis
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starts out, "On September 11, 2001, he opened his eyes
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at 4 a.m. in Portland, Maine,
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and Mohamed Atta's last day began."
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For a time that I find to be the most placid
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and uneventful hour of the day, four in the morning sure gets
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an awful lot of bad press --
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(Laughter)
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across a lot of different media from a lot of big names.
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And it made me suspicious.
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I figured, surely some of the most creative artistic minds in the world, really,
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aren't all defaulting back to this one easy trope
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like they invented it, right?
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Could it be there is something more going on here?
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Something deliberate, something secret,
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and who got the four in the morning bad rap ball rolling anyway?
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I say this guy -- Alberto Giacometti, shown here
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with some of his sculptures on the Swiss 100 franc note.
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He did it with this famous piece
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from the New York Museum of Modern Art.
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Its title -- "The Palace at Four in the Morning --
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(Laughter)
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1932.
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Not just the earliest cryptic reference
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to four in the morning I can find.
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I believe that this so-called first surrealist sculpture
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may provide an incredible key to virtually
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every artistic depiction of four in the morning to follow it.
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I call this The Giacometti Code, a TED exclusive.
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No, feel free to follow along on your Blackberries
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or your iPhones if you've got them.
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It works a little something like -- this is a recent Google search
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for four in the morning.
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Results vary, of course. This is pretty typical.
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The top 10 results yield you
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four hits for Faron Young's song, "It's Four in the Morning,"
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three hits for Judi Dench's film, "Four in the Morning,"
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one hit for Wislawa Szymborska's poem, "Four in the Morning."
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But what, you may ask, do a Polish poet, a British Dame,
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a country music hall of famer all have in common
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besides this totally excellent Google ranking?
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Well, let's start with Faron Young -- who was born incidentally
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in 1932.
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(Laughter)
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In 1996, he shot himself in the head on December ninth --
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which incidentally is Judi Dench's birthday.
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(Laughter)
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But he didn't die on Dench's birthday.
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He languished until the following afternoon when he finally succumbed
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to a supposedly self-inflicted gunshot wound at the age of 64 --
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which incidentally is how old Alberto Giacometti was when he died.
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Where was Wislawa Szymborska during all this?
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She has the world's most absolutely watertight alibi.
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On that very day, December 10, 1996 while Mr. Four in the Morning,
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Faron Young, was giving up the ghost in Nashville, Tennessee,
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Ms. Four in the Morning -- or one of them anyway -- Wislawa Szymborska
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was in Stockholm, Sweden, accepting the Nobel Prize for Literature.
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100 years to the day after the death of Alfred Nobel himself.
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Coincidence? No, it's creepy.
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(Laughter)
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Coincidence to me has a much simpler metric.
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That's like me telling you,
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"Hey, you know the Nobel Prize was established in 1901,
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which coincidentally is the same year Alberto Giacometti was born?"
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No, not everything fits so tidily into the paradigm,
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but that does not mean there's not something going on
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at the highest possible levels.
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In fact there are people in this room
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who may not want me to show you this clip we're about to see.
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(Laughter)
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Video: Homer Simpson: We have a tennis court, a swimming pool, a screening room --
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You mean if I want pork chops, even in the middle of the night,
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your guy will fry them up?
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Herbert Powell: Sure, that's what he's paid for.
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Now do you need towels, laundry, maids?
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HS: Wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait -- let me see if I got this straight.
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05:48
It is Christmas Day, 4 a.m.
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There's a rumble in my stomach.
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Marge Simpson: Homer, please.
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Rives: Wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait.
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Let me see if I got this straight, Matt.
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05:59
(Laughter)
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When Homer Simpson needs to imagine
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the most remote possible moment of not just the clock,
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but the whole freaking calendar, he comes up with 0400
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on the birthday of the Baby Jesus.
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And no, I don't know how it works
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into the whole puzzling scheme of things, but obviously
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I know a coded message when I see one.
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(Laughter)
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I said, I know a coded message when I see one.
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06:29
And folks, you can buy a copy of Bill Clinton's "My Life"
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from the bookstore here at TED.
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Parse it cover to cover for whatever hidden references you want.
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Or you can go to the Random House website where there is this excerpt.
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And how far down into it you figure we'll have to scroll
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to get to the golden ticket?
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Would you believe about a dozen paragraphs?
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This is page 474 on your paperbacks if you're following along:
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"Though it was getting better, I still wasn't satisfied
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with the inaugural address.
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My speechwriters must have been tearing their hair out
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because as we worked between one and four in the morning
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on Inauguration Day, I was still changing it."
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Sure you were, because you've prepared your entire life
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for this historic quadrennial event that just sort of sneaks up on you.
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And then --
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(Laughter)
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three paragraphs later we get this little beauty:
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"We went back to Blair House to look at the speech for the last time.
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It had gotten a lot better since 4 a.m."
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Well, how could it have?
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By his own writing, this man was either asleep,
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at a prayer meeting with Al and Tipper or learning how to launch
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a nuclear missile out of a suitcase.
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What happens to American presidents at 0400 on inauguration day?
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What happened to William Jefferson Clinton?
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We might not ever know.
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And I noticed, he's not exactly around here today
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to face any tough questions.
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(Laughter)
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It could get awkward, right?
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I mean after all, this whole business happened on his watch.
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But if he were here --
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(Laughter)
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he might remind us, as he does in the wrap-up to his fine autobiography,
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that on this day Bill Clinton began a journey --
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a journey that saw him go on to become
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the first Democrat president elected
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to two consecutive terms in decades.
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In generations.
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The first since this man, Franklin Delano Roosevelt,
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who began his own unprecedented journey
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way back at his own first election,
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way back in a simpler time, way back in 1932 --
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(Laughter)
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the year Alberto Giacometti
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(Laughter)
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made "The Palace at Four in the Morning."
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The year, let's remember, that this voice, now departed,
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first came a-cryin' into this big old crazy world of ours.
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(Music)
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(Applause)
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