Maira Kalman: The illustrated woman

44,592 views ・ 2007-10-16

TED


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

00:25
What I am always thinking about
0
25000
3000
00:28
is what this session is about, which is called simplicity.
1
28000
4000
00:32
And almost, I would almost call it being simple-minded,
2
32000
4000
00:36
but in the best sense of the word.
3
36000
2000
00:38
I'm trying to figure out two very simple things:
4
38000
3000
00:42
how to live and how to die, period.
5
42000
2000
00:44
That's all I'm trying to do, all day long.
6
44000
2000
00:46
And I'm also trying to have some meals, and have some snacks,
7
46000
3000
00:49
and, you know, and yell at my children, and do all the normal things
8
49000
4000
00:53
that keep you grounded.
9
53000
2000
00:56
So, I was fortunate enough to be born a very dreamy child.
10
56000
7000
01:03
My older sister was busy torturing my parents,
11
63000
4000
01:07
and they were busy torturing her.
12
67000
2000
01:09
I was lucky enough to be completely ignored,
13
69000
3000
01:12
which is a fabulous thing, actually, I want to tell you.
14
72000
2000
01:14
So, I was able to completely daydream my way through my life.
15
74000
4000
01:20
And I finally daydreamed my way into NYU, at a very good time, in 1967,
16
80000
6000
01:27
where I met a man who was trying to blow up the math building of NYU.
17
87000
5000
01:33
And I was writing terrible poetry and knitting sweaters for him.
18
93000
4000
01:37
And feminists hated us, and the whole thing was wretched
19
97000
5000
01:42
from beginning to end.
20
102000
2000
01:44
But I kept writing bad poetry, and he didn't blow up the math building,
21
104000
4000
01:48
but he went to Cuba.
22
108000
1000
01:49
But I gave him the money, because I was from Riverdale
23
109000
2000
01:51
so I had more money than he did.
24
111000
2000
01:53
(Laughter)
25
113000
1000
01:54
And that was a good thing to help, you know, the cause.
26
114000
3000
01:58
But, then he came back, and things happened,
27
118000
4000
02:02
and I decided I really hated my writing,
28
122000
3000
02:05
that it was awful, awful, purple prose.
29
125000
4000
02:09
And I decided that I wanted to tell --
30
129000
2000
02:11
but I still wanted to tell a narrative story
31
131000
2000
02:13
and I still wanted to tell my stories.
32
133000
2000
02:15
So I decided that I would start to draw. How hard could that be?
33
135000
3000
02:18
And so what happened was that I started
34
138000
5000
02:23
just becoming an editorial illustrator through, you know,
35
143000
3000
02:26
sheer whatever, sheer ignorance.
36
146000
3000
02:29
And we started a studio.
37
149000
2000
02:31
Well, Tibor really started the studio, called M&Co.
38
151000
2000
02:33
And the premise of M&Co was, we don't know anything,
39
153000
4000
02:37
but that's all right, we're going to do it anyway.
40
157000
2000
02:39
And as a matter of fact, it's better not to know anything,
41
159000
2000
02:41
because if you know too much, you're stymied.
42
161000
3000
02:44
So, the premise in the studio was,
43
164000
3000
02:47
there are no boundaries, there is no fear.
44
167000
3000
02:50
And I -- and my full-time job, I landed the best job on Earth,
45
170000
3000
02:53
was to daydream, and to actually come up with absurd ideas
46
173000
5000
02:58
that -- fortunately, there were enough people there,
47
178000
2000
03:00
and it was a team, it was a collective,
48
180000
2000
03:02
it was not just me coming up with crazy ideas.
49
182000
2000
03:04
But the point was that I was there as myself, as a dreamer.
50
184000
5000
03:09
And so some of the things -- I mean, it was a long history of M&Co,
51
189000
3000
03:12
and clearly we also needed to make some money,
52
192000
4000
03:16
so we decided we would create a series of products.
53
196000
4000
03:20
And some of the watches there,
54
200000
3000
03:23
attempting to be beautiful and humorous --
55
203000
2000
03:25
maybe not attempting, hopefully succeeding.
56
205000
3000
03:28
That to be able to talk about content,
57
208000
3000
03:31
to break apart what you normally expect, to use humor and surprise,
58
211000
4000
03:35
elegance and humanity in your work was really important to us.
59
215000
5000
03:40
It was a very high, it was a very impersonal time in design
60
220000
5000
03:45
and we wanted to say, the content is what's important,
61
225000
4000
03:49
not the package, not the wrapping.
62
229000
2000
03:51
You really have to be journalists, you have to be inventors,
63
231000
3000
03:54
you have to use your imagination more importantly than anything.
64
234000
4000
03:58
So, the good news is that I have a dog
65
238000
5000
04:03
and, though I don't know if I believe in luck --
66
243000
2000
04:05
I don't know what I believe in, it's a very complicated question,
67
245000
2000
04:07
but I do know that before I go away, I crank his tail seven times.
68
247000
4000
04:11
So, whenever he sees a suitcase in the house,
69
251000
2000
04:13
because everybody's always, you know, leaving,
70
253000
3000
04:16
they're always cranking this wonderful dog's tail,
71
256000
2000
04:18
and he runs to the other room.
72
258000
2000
04:20
But I am able to make the transition from working for children and --
73
260000
5000
04:25
from working for adults to children, and back and forth,
74
265000
3000
04:28
because, you know, I can say that I'm immature,
75
268000
2000
04:30
and in a way, that's true.
76
270000
3000
04:33
I don't really -- I mean, I could tell you that I didn't understand,
77
273000
4000
04:38
I'm not proud of it, but I didn't understand
78
278000
2000
04:40
let's say 95 percent of the talks at this conference.
79
280000
3000
04:43
But I have been taking beautiful notes of drawings
80
283000
2000
04:45
and I have a gorgeous onion from Murray Gell-Mann's talk.
81
285000
3000
04:48
And I have a beautiful page of doodles from Jonathan Woodham's talk.
82
288000
4000
04:52
So, good things come out of, you know, incomprehension --
83
292000
3000
04:55
(Laughter)
84
295000
2000
04:57
-- which I will do a painting of, and then it will end up in my work.
85
297000
3000
05:00
So, I'm open to the possibilities of not knowing
86
300000
4000
05:04
and finding out something new.
87
304000
2000
05:06
So, in writing for children, it seems simple, and it is.
88
306000
5000
05:11
You have to condense a story into 32 pages, usually.
89
311000
4000
05:15
And what you have to do is, you really have to edit down to what you want to say.
90
315000
3000
05:18
And hopefully, you're not talking down to kids
91
318000
3000
05:21
and you're not talking in such a way that you,
92
321000
2000
05:23
you know, couldn't stand reading it after one time.
93
323000
3000
05:26
So, I hopefully am writing, you know,
94
326000
2000
05:28
books that are good for children and for adults.
95
328000
2000
05:30
But the painting reflects --
96
330000
2000
05:32
I don't think differently for children than I do for adults.
97
332000
2000
05:34
I try to use the same kind of imagination, the same kind of whimsy,
98
334000
3000
05:37
the same kind of love of language.
99
337000
3000
05:40
So, you know, and I have lots of wonderful-looking friends.
100
340000
4000
05:44
This is Andrew Gatz, and he walked in through the door and I said,
101
344000
2000
05:46
"You! Sit down there." You know, I take lots of photos.
102
346000
2000
05:49
And the Bertoia chair in the background is my favorite chair.
103
349000
2000
05:52
So, I get to put in all of the things that I love.
104
352000
2000
05:55
Hopefully, a dialog between adults and children will happen on many different levels,
105
355000
4000
05:59
and hopefully different kinds of humor will evolve.
106
359000
3000
06:03
And the books are really journals of my life.
107
363000
2000
06:05
I never -- I don't like plots.
108
365000
2000
06:07
I don't know what a plot means.
109
367000
2000
06:09
I can't stand the idea of anything that starts in the beginning,
110
369000
3000
06:12
you know, beginning, middle and end. It really scares me,
111
372000
2000
06:14
because my life is too random and too confused,
112
374000
3000
06:17
and I enjoy it that way.
113
377000
1000
06:18
But anyway, so we were in Venice,
114
378000
4000
06:23
and this is our room. And I had this dream
115
383000
2000
06:25
that I was wearing this fantastic green gown,
116
385000
2000
06:27
and I was looking out the window,
117
387000
2000
06:29
and it was really a beautiful thing.
118
389000
2000
06:31
And so, I was able to put that into this story, which is an alphabet,
119
391000
3000
06:34
and hopefully go on to something else.
120
394000
3000
06:37
The letter C had other things in it.
121
397000
2000
06:39
I was fortunate also, to meet the man who's sitting on the bed,
122
399000
3000
06:42
though I gave him hair over here and he doesn't have hair.
123
402000
3000
06:45
Well, he has some hair but -- well, he used to have hair.
124
405000
3000
06:48
And with him, I was able to do a project that was really fantastic.
125
408000
5000
06:53
I work for the New Yorker, and I do covers, and 9/11 happened
126
413000
5000
06:58
and it was, you know, a complete and utter end of the world as we knew it.
127
418000
5000
07:03
And Rick and I were on our way to a party in the Bronx,
128
423000
4000
07:07
and somebody said Bronxistan,
129
427000
2000
07:09
and somebody said Ferreristan,
130
429000
1000
07:10
and we came up with this New Yorker cover,
131
430000
3000
07:13
which we were able to -- we didn't know what we were doing.
132
433000
2000
07:15
We weren't trying to be funny, we weren't trying to be --
133
435000
3000
07:18
well, we were trying to be funny actually, that's not true.
134
438000
2000
07:20
We hoped we'd be funny, but we didn't know it would be a cover,
135
440000
3000
07:23
and we didn't know that that image, at the moment that it happened,
136
443000
4000
07:27
would be something that would be so wonderful for a lot of people.
137
447000
4000
07:31
And it really became the -- I don't know, you know,
138
451000
2000
07:33
it was one of those moments people started laughing at what was going on.
139
453000
3000
07:36
And from, you know, Fattushis, to Taxistan to, you know,
140
456000
5000
07:41
for the Fashtoonks, Botoxia, Pashmina, Khlintunisia, you know,
141
461000
4000
07:45
we were able to take the city
142
465000
2000
07:47
and make fun of this completely foreign, who are -- what's going on over here?
143
467000
4000
07:51
Who are these people? What are these tribes?
144
471000
3000
07:54
And David Remnick, who was really wonderful about it,
145
474000
3000
07:57
had one problem. He didn't like Al Zheimers,
146
477000
5000
08:02
because he thought it would insult people with Alzheimer's.
147
482000
3000
08:05
But you know, we said, "David, who's going to know?
148
485000
2000
08:07
They're not."
149
487000
2000
08:09
(Laughter)
150
489000
2000
08:11
So it stayed in, and it was, and, you know, it was a good thing.
151
491000
6000
08:19
You know, in the course of my life, I never know what's going to happen
152
499000
3000
08:22
and that's kind of the beauty part.
153
502000
2000
08:24
And we were on Cape Cod, a place, obviously, of great inspiration,
154
504000
4000
08:28
and I picked up this book, "The Elements of Style," at a yard sale.
155
508000
4000
08:32
And I didn't -- and I'd never used it in school,
156
512000
2000
08:34
because I was too busy writing poems, and flunking out,
157
514000
3000
08:37
and I don't know what, sitting in cafes.
158
517000
2000
08:39
But I picked it up and I started reading it and I thought, this book is amazing.
159
519000
3000
08:42
I said, people should know about this book.
160
522000
3000
08:45
(Laughter)
161
525000
3000
08:48
So I decided it needed a few -- it needed a lift, it needed a few illustrations.
162
528000
3000
08:51
And basically, I called the, you know, I convinced the White Estate,
163
531000
4000
08:55
and what an intersection of like, you know,
164
535000
2000
08:57
Polish Jew, you know, main WASP family. Here I am, saying,
165
537000
6000
09:03
I'd like to do something to this book.
166
543000
2000
09:05
And they said yes, and they left me completely alone,
167
545000
2000
09:07
which was a gorgeous, wonderful thing.
168
547000
3000
09:10
And I took the examples that they gave,
169
550000
4000
09:14
and just did 56 paintings, basically.
170
554000
2000
09:16
So, this is, I don't know if you can read this.
171
556000
2000
09:18
"Well, Susan, this is a fine mess you are in."
172
558000
2000
09:20
And when you're dealing with grammar,
173
560000
2000
09:22
which is, you know, incredibly dry,
174
562000
2000
09:24
E.B. White wrote such wonderful, whimsical -- and actually, Strunk --
175
564000
4000
09:28
and then you come to the rules and, you know,
176
568000
2000
09:30
there are lots of grammar things. "Do you mind me asking a question?
177
570000
3000
09:33
Do you mind my asking a question?"
178
573000
3000
09:36
"Would, could, should, or would, should, could."
179
576000
2000
09:38
And "would" is Coco Chanel's lover, "should" is Edith Sitwell,
180
578000
4000
09:42
and "could" is an August Sander subject.
181
582000
3000
09:45
And, "He noticed a large stain in the center of the rug."
182
585000
2000
09:47
(Laughter)
183
587000
2000
09:49
So, there's a kind of British understatement, murder-mystery theme
184
589000
3000
09:52
that I really love very much.
185
592000
2000
09:54
And then, "Be obscure clearly! Be wild of tongue in a way we can understand."
186
594000
4000
09:58
E.B. White wrote us a number of rules,
187
598000
2000
10:00
which can either paralyze you and make you loathe him
188
600000
2000
10:02
for the rest of time, or you can ignore them, which I do,
189
602000
5000
10:07
or you can, I don't know what, you know, eat a sandwich.
190
607000
3000
10:10
So, what I did when I was painting was I started singing,
191
610000
3000
10:13
because I really adore singing,
192
613000
2000
10:15
and I think that music is the highest form of all art.
193
615000
3000
10:18
So, I commissioned a wonderful composer, Nico Muhly,
194
618000
3000
10:21
who wrote nine songs using the text,
195
621000
4000
10:25
and we performed this fantastic evening of --
196
625000
4000
10:29
he wrote music for both amateurs and professionals.
197
629000
3000
10:32
I played the clattering teacup and the slinky
198
632000
2000
10:34
in the main reading room of the New York Public Library,
199
634000
3000
10:37
where you're supposed to be very, very quiet,
200
637000
2000
10:39
and it was a phenomenally wonderful event,
201
639000
2000
10:41
which we hopefully will do some more.
202
641000
2000
10:45
Who knows? The New York TimesSelect, the op-ed page,
203
645000
4000
10:49
asked me to do a column, and they said, you can do whatever you want.
204
649000
3000
10:52
So, once a month for the last year,
205
652000
1000
10:53
I've been doing a column called "The Principles of Uncertainty,"
206
653000
4000
10:57
which, you know, I don't know who Heisenberg is,
207
657000
2000
10:59
but I know I can throw that around now. You know,
208
659000
2000
11:01
it's the principles of uncertainty, so, you know.
209
661000
3000
11:04
I'm going to read quickly -- and probably I'm going to edit some,
210
664000
3000
11:07
because I don't have that much time left -- a few of the columns.
211
667000
3000
11:10
And basically, I was so, you know, it was so amusing,
212
670000
3000
11:13
because I said, "Well, how much space do I have?"
213
673000
1000
11:14
And they said, "Well, you know, it's the Internet."
214
674000
2000
11:16
And I said, "Yes, but how much space do I have?"
215
676000
2000
11:18
And they said, "It's unlimited, it's unlimited."
216
678000
2000
11:20
OK. So, the first one I was very timid, and I'll begin.
217
680000
5000
11:25
"How can I tell you everything that is in my heart?
218
685000
2000
11:27
Impossible to begin. Enough. No. Begin with the hapless dodo."
219
687000
3000
11:30
And I talk about the dodo, and how the dodo became extinct,
220
690000
4000
11:34
and then I talk about Spinoza.
221
694000
2000
11:36
"As the last dodo was dying, Spinoza was looking for a rational explanation
222
696000
4000
11:40
for everything, called eudaemonia.
223
700000
2000
11:42
And then he breathed his last, with loved ones around him,
224
702000
3000
11:45
and I know that he had chicken soup also, as his last meal."
225
705000
2000
11:47
I happen to know it for a fact.
226
707000
2000
11:49
And then he died, and there was no more Spinoza. Extinct.
227
709000
3000
11:53
And then, we don't have a stuffed Spinoza,
228
713000
2000
11:55
but we do have a stuffed Pavlov's dog,
229
715000
2000
11:57
and I visited him in the Museum of Hygiene in St. Petersburg, in Russia.
230
717000
4000
12:01
And there he is, with this horrible electrical box on his rump
231
721000
5000
12:06
in this fantastic, decrepit palace.
232
726000
2000
12:10
"And I think it must have been a very, very dark day
233
730000
2000
12:12
when the Bolsheviks arrived.
234
732000
1000
12:13
Maybe amongst themselves they had a few good laughs,
235
733000
2000
12:15
but Stalin was a paranoid man, even more than my father."
236
735000
4000
12:19
(Laughter)
237
739000
1000
12:20
You don't even know.
238
740000
1000
12:21
"And decided his top people had to be extinctified."
239
741000
5000
12:26
Which I think I made up, which is a good thing.
240
746000
2000
12:28
And so, this is a chart of, you know, just a small chart,
241
748000
3000
12:31
because the chart would go on forever of all the people that he killed.
242
751000
2000
12:33
So, shot dead, smacked over the head, you know, thrown away.
243
753000
4000
12:39
"Nabokov's family fled Russia. How could the young Nabokov,
244
759000
3000
12:42
sitting innocently and elegantly in a red chair,
245
762000
2000
12:44
leafing through a book and butterflies,
246
764000
2000
12:46
imagine such displacement, such loss?"
247
766000
3000
12:50
And then I want to tell you that this is a map.
248
770000
2000
12:52
So, "My beautiful mother's family fled Russia as well.
249
772000
4000
12:56
Too many pogroms.
250
776000
2000
12:58
Leaving the shack, the wild blueberry woods, the geese, the River Sluch,
251
778000
3000
13:01
they went to Palestine and then America."
252
781000
3000
13:04
And my mother drew this map for me of the United States of America,
253
784000
2000
13:06
and that is my DNA over here, because that person who I grew up with
254
786000
9000
13:15
had no use for facts whatsoever.
255
795000
2000
13:17
Facts were actually banished from our home.
256
797000
3000
13:20
And so, if you see that Texas -- you know, Texas and California
257
800000
4000
13:24
are under Canada, and that South Carolina is on top of North Carolina,
258
804000
3000
13:27
this is the home that I grew up in, OK?
259
807000
2000
13:29
So, it's a miracle that I'm here today.
260
809000
2000
13:31
But actually, it's not. It's actually a wonderful thing.
261
811000
3000
13:35
But then she says Tel Aviv and Lenin,
262
815000
2000
13:37
which is the town they came from, and, "Sorry, the rest unknown, thank you."
263
817000
3000
13:40
But in her lexicon, "sorry, the rest unknown, thank you" is
264
820000
2000
13:42
"sorry, the rest unknown, go to hell,"
265
822000
2000
13:44
because she couldn't care less.
266
824000
1000
13:45
(Laughter)
267
825000
1000
13:46
"The Impossibility of February"
268
826000
2000
13:48
is that February's a really wretched month in New York
269
828000
3000
13:51
and the images for me conjure up these really awful things.
270
831000
3000
13:54
Well, not so awful.
271
834000
2000
13:56
I received a box in the mail and it was wrapped with newspaper
272
836000
3000
13:59
and there was the picture of the man on the newspaper and he was dead.
273
839000
4000
14:03
And I say, "I hope he's not really dead,
274
843000
2000
14:05
just enjoying a refreshing lie-down in the snow,
275
845000
2000
14:07
but the caption says he is dead."
276
847000
2000
14:09
And actually, he was. I think he's dead, though I don't know,
277
849000
3000
14:12
maybe he's not dead.
278
852000
2000
14:14
"And this woman leans over in anguish, not about that man,
279
854000
2000
14:16
but about all sad things. It happens quite often in February."
280
856000
4000
14:21
There's consoling.
281
861000
2000
14:23
This man is angry because somebody threw onions all over the staircase,
282
863000
4000
14:27
and basically -- you know, I guess onions are a theme here.
283
867000
3000
14:30
And he says, "It is impossible not to lie.
284
870000
2000
14:32
It is February and not lying is impossible."
285
872000
2000
14:34
And I really spend a lot of time wondering,
286
874000
2000
14:36
how much truth do we tell?
287
876000
2000
14:38
What is it that we're actually -- what story are we actually telling?
288
878000
3000
14:41
How do we know when we are ourselves?
289
881000
2000
14:43
How do we actually know that these sentences coming out of our mouths
290
883000
3000
14:46
are real stories, you know, are real sentences?
291
886000
2000
14:48
Or are they fake sentences that we think we ought to be saying?
292
888000
3000
14:51
I'm going to quickly go through this.
293
891000
2000
14:54
A quote by Bertrand Russell,
294
894000
2000
14:56
"All the labor of all the ages, all the devotion, all the inspiration,
295
896000
4000
15:00
all the noonday brightness of human genius
296
900000
3000
15:03
are destined to extinction.
297
903000
2000
15:05
So now, my friends, if that is true,
298
905000
2000
15:07
and it is true, what is the point?"
299
907000
3000
15:10
A complicated question.
300
910000
1000
15:11
And so, you know, I talk to my friends
301
911000
3000
15:14
and I go to plays where they're singing Russian songs.
302
914000
3000
15:17
Oh my God, you know what?
303
917000
2000
15:19
Could we have -- no, we don't have time.
304
919000
2000
15:21
I taped my aunt. I taped my aunt singing a song in Russian from the --
305
921000
2000
15:23
you know, could we have it for a second?
306
923000
3000
15:26
Do you have that?
307
926000
2000
15:28
(Music)
308
928000
18000
15:47
OK. I taped my -- my aunt used to swim in the ocean
309
947000
3000
15:50
every day of the year until she was about 85.
310
950000
5000
15:57
So -- and that's a song about how everybody's miserable
311
957000
2000
15:59
because, you know, we're from Russia.
312
959000
2000
16:01
(Laughter)
313
961000
1000
16:02
I went to visit Kitty Carlisle Hart, and she is 96,
314
962000
2000
16:04
and when I brought her a copy of "The Elements of Style,"
315
964000
3000
16:07
she said she would treasure it.
316
967000
2000
16:09
And then I said -- oh, and she was talking about Moss Hart, and I said,
317
969000
2000
16:11
"When you met him, you knew it was him."
318
971000
2000
16:13
And she said, "I knew it was he."
319
973000
1000
16:14
(Laughter)
320
974000
3000
16:17
So, I was the one who should have kept the book, but it was a really wonderful moment.
321
977000
3000
16:20
And she dated George Gershwin, so, you know, get out.
322
980000
3000
16:23
Gershwin died at the age of 38.
323
983000
3000
16:26
He's buried in the same cemetery as my husband.
324
986000
3000
16:29
I don't want to talk about that now.
325
989000
2000
16:31
I do want to talk -- the absolute icing on this cemetery cake
326
991000
2000
16:33
is the Barricini family mausoleum nearby.
327
993000
3000
16:36
I think the Barricini family should open a store there and sell chocolate.
328
996000
3000
16:39
(Laughter)
329
999000
1000
16:40
And I would like to run it for them.
330
1000000
1000
16:41
And I went to visit Louise Bourgeoise,
331
1001000
2000
16:43
who's also still working, and I looked at her sink,
332
1003000
2000
16:45
which is really amazing, and left.
333
1005000
2000
16:47
And then I photograph and do a painting of a sofa on the street.
334
1007000
3000
16:50
And a woman who lives on our street, Lolita.
335
1010000
3000
16:53
And then I go and have some tea.
336
1013000
2000
16:55
And then my Aunt Frances dies, and before she died,
337
1015000
3000
16:58
she tried to pay with Sweet'N Low packets for her bagel.
338
1018000
3000
17:01
(Laughter)
339
1021000
2000
17:03
And I wonder what the point is and then I know, and I see
340
1023000
2000
17:05
that Hy Meyerowitz, Rick Meyerowitz's father,
341
1025000
2000
17:07
a dry-cleaning supply salesman from the Bronx,
342
1027000
2000
17:09
won the Charlie Chaplin look-alike contest in 1931.
343
1029000
4000
17:14
That's actually Hy.
344
1034000
2000
17:16
And I look at a beautiful bowl of fruit,
345
1036000
2000
17:19
and I look at a dress that I sewed for friends of mine.
346
1039000
3000
17:22
And it says, "Ich habe genug," which is a Bach cantata,
347
1042000
2000
17:24
which I once thought meant "I've had it, I can't take it anymore,
348
1044000
3000
17:27
give me a break," but I was wrong.
349
1047000
3000
17:30
It means "I have enough." And that is utterly true.
350
1050000
3000
17:33
I happen to be alive, end of discussion. Thank you.
351
1053000
2000
17:35
(Applause)
352
1055000
3000
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