A theory of everything | Emily Levine

440,085 views ・ 2009-04-09

TED


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

00:12
I am going to talk about myself,
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which I rarely do, because I --
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well for one thing, I prefer to talk about things I know nothing about.
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And secondly, I'm a recovering narcissist.
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(Laughter)
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I didn't know I was a narcissist actually.
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I thought narcissism meant you loved yourself.
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And then someone told me there is a flip side to it.
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So it's actually drearier than self-love;
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it's unrequited self-love.
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(Laughter)
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I don't feel I can afford a relapse.
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But I want to, though, explain
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how I came to design my own particular brand of comedy
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because I've been through so many different forms of it.
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I started with improvisation,
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in a particular form of improvisation called theater games,
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which had one rule,
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which I always thought was a great rule for an ethic for a society.
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And the rule was, you couldn't deny the other person's reality,
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you could only build on it.
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And of course we live in a society that's all about
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contradicting other peoples' reality.
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It's all about contradiction,
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which I think is why I'm so sensitive to contradiction in general.
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I see it everywhere.
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Like polls. You know, it's always curious to me
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that in public opinion polls
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the percentage of Americans who don't know the answer to any given question
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is always two percent.
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75 percent of Americans
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think Alaska is part of Canada.
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But only two percent don't know the effect
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that the debacle in Argentina will have on the IMF's monetary policy --
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(Laughter)
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seems a contradiction.
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Or this ad that I read in the New York Times:
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"Wearing a fine watch speaks loudly of your rank in society.
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Buying it from us screams good taste."
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(Laughter)
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Or this that I found in a magazine called California Lawyer,
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in an article that is surely meant for the lawyers at Enron.
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"Surviving the Slammer: Do's and Don'ts."
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(Laughter)
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"Don't use big words."
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(Laughter)
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"Learn the lingua franca."
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(Laughter)
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Yeah. "Lingua this, Frankie."
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(Laughter)
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And I suppose it's a contradiction that I
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talk about science when I don't know math.
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You know, because -- and by the way to I was so grateful to Dean Kamen
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for pointing out that one of the reasons,
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that there are cultural reasons
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that women and minorities don't enter the fields of science and technology --
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because for instance, the reason I don't do math is,
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I was taught to do math and read at the same time.
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So you're six years old, you're reading Snow White and the Seven Dwarves,
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and it becomes rapidly obvious
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that there are only two kinds of men in the world:
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dwarves and Prince Charmings.
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And the odds are seven to one against your finding the prince.
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(Laughter)
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That's why little girls don't do math. It's too depressing.
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(Laughter)
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Of course, by talking about science
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I also may, as I did the other night,
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incur the violent wrath of some scientists
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who were very upset with me.
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I used the word postmodern as if it were OK.
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And they got very upset.
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One of them, to his credit, I think really just wanted to engage me
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in a serious argument.
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But I don't engage in serious arguments.
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I don't approve of them
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because arguments, of course, are all about contradiction,
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and they're shaped by the values that I have questions with.
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I have questions with the values of Newtonian science,
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like rationality. You're supposed to be rational in an argument.
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Well rationality is constructed
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by what Christie Hefner was talking about today,
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that mind-body split, you know?
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The head is good, body bad.
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Head is ego, body id.
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When we say "I," -- as when Rene Descartes said,
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"I think therefore I am," --
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we mean the head.
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And as David Lee Roth sang in "Just a Gigolo,"
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"I ain't got no body."
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That's how you get rationality.
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And that's why so much of humor
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is the body asserting itself against the head.
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That's why you have toilet humor and sexual humor.
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That's why you have the Raspyni Brothers
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whacking Richard in the genital area.
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And we're laughing doubly then
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because he's the body, but it's also --
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Voice offstage: Richard.
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Emily Levine: Richard. What did I say?
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(Laughter)
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Richard. Yes but it's also the head,
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the head of the conference.
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That's the other way that humor --
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like Art Buchwald takes shots at the heads of state.
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It doesn't make quite as much money as body humor I'm sure --
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(Laughter)
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but nevertheless, what makes us treasure you and adore you.
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There's also a contradiction in rationality in this country though,
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which is, as much as we revere the head,
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we are very anti-intellectual.
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I know this because I read in the New York Times,
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the Ayn Rand foundation took out a full-page ad
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after September 11,
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in which they said, "The problem is not Iraq or Iran,
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the problem in this country, facing this country
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is the university professors and their spawn."
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(Laughter)
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So I went back and re-read "The Fountainhead."
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(Laughter)
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I don't know how many of you have read it.
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And I'm not an expert on sadomasochism.
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(Laughter)
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But let me just read you a couple of random passages from page 217.
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"The act of a master
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taking painful contemptuous possession of her,
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was the kind of rapture she wanted.
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When they lay together in bed it was,
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as it had to be, as the nature of the act demanded,
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an act of violence.
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It was an act of clenched teeth and hatred. It was the unendurable.
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Not a caress, but a wave of pain.
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The agony as an act of passion."
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So you can imagine my surprise
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on reading in The New Yorker
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that Alan Greenspan, Chairman of the Federal Reserve,
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claims Ayn Rand as his intellectual mentor.
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(Laughter)
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It's like finding out your nanny is a dominatrix.
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(Laughter)
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Bad enough we had to see J. Edgar Hoover in a dress.
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Now we have to picture Alan Greenspan
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in a black leather corset, with a butt tattoo that says,
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"Whip inflation now."
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(Laughter)
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And Ayn Rand of course, Ayn Rand
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is famous for a philosophy called Objectivism,
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which reflects another value of Newtonian physics,
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which is objectivity.
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Objectivity basically is constructed
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in that same S&M way.
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It's the subject subjugating the object.
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That's how you assert yourself.
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You make yourself the active voice.
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And the object is the passive no-voice.
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I was so fascinated by that Oxygen commercial.
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I don't know if you know this but --
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maybe it's different now, or maybe you were making a statement --
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but in many hospital nurseries across the country,
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until very recently anyway, according to a book by Jessica Benjamin,
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the signs over the little boys cribs read,
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"I'm a boy,"
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and the signs over the little girls cribs read,
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"It's a girl." Yeah.
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So the passivity was culturally
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projected onto the little girls.
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And this still goes on as I think I told you last year.
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There's a poll that proves --
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there was a poll that was given by Time magazine,
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in which only men were asked, "Have you ever had sex
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with a woman you actively disliked?"
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And well, yeah.
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Well, 58 percent said yes,
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which I think is overinflated though
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because so many men if you just say,
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"Have you ever had sex ... " "Yes!"
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They don't even wait for the rest of it.
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(Laughter)
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And of course two percent did not know whether they'd had --
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(Laughter)
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That's the first callback,
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of my attempted quadruple.
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(Laughter)
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So this subject-object thing,
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is part of something I'm very interested in
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because this is why, frankly, I believe in political correctness.
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I do. I think it can go too far.
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I think Ringling Brothers may have gone too far
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with an ad they took out in the New York Times Magazine.
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"We have a lifelong emotional and financial
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commitment to our Asian Elephant partners."
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(Laughter)
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Maybe too far. But you know --
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I don't think that
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a person of color making fun of white people
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is the same thing as a white person making fun of people of color.
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Or women making fun of men is the same as men making fun of women.
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Or poor people making fun of rich people, the same as rich people.
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I think you can make fun of the have but not the have-nots,
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which is why you don't see me making fun of
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Kenneth Lay and his charming wife.
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(Laughter)
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What's funny about being down to four houses?
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(Laughter)
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And I really learned this lesson
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during the sex scandals of the Clinton administration or,
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Or as I call them, the good ol' days.
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(Laughter)
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When people I knew, you know, people who considered themselves liberal,
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and everything else,
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were making fun of Jennifer Flowers and Paula Jones.
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Basically, they were making fun of them for being
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trailer trash or white trash.
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It seems, I suppose, a harmless prejudice
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and that you're not really hurting anybody.
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Until you read, as I did, an ad in the Los Angeles Times.
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"For sale: White trash compactor."
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(Laughter)
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So this whole subject-object thing
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has relevance to humor in this way.
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I read a book by a woman named Amy Richlin,
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who is the chair of the Classics department at USC.
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And the book is called "The Garden of Priapus."
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And she says that Roman humor
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mirrors the construction of Roman society.
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So that Roman society was very top/bottom,
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as ours is to some degree.
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And so was humor.
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There always had to be the butt of a joke.
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So it was always the satirist,
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like Juvenal or Martial,
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represented the audience,
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and he was going to make fun of the outsider,
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the person who didn't share that subject status.
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And in stand-up of course,
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the stand-up comedian is supposed to dominate the audience.
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A lot of heckling is the tension
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of trying to make sure that the
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comedian is going to be able to dominate,
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and overcome the heckler.
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And I got good at that when I was in stand up.
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But I always hated it because they were
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dictating the terms of the interaction,
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in the same way that engaging in a serious argument
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determines the content, to some degree,
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of what you're talking about.
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And I was looking for a form
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that didn't have that.
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And so I wanted something that was more interactive.
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I know that word is so debased now
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by the use of it by Internet marketers.
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I really miss the old telemarketers now, I'll tell you that.
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(Laughter)
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I do, because at least there you stood a chance. You know?
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I used to actually hang up on them.
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But then I read in "Dear Abby" that that was rude.
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So the next time that one called
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I let him get halfway through his spiel and then I said,
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"You sound sexy."
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(Laughter)
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He hung up on me!
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(Laughter)
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But the interactivity allows the audience
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to shape what you're going to do as much as
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you shape their experience of the world.
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And that's really what I'm looking for.
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And I was sort of, as I was starting to analyze
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what exactly it is that I do,
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I read a book called "Trickster Makes This World," by Lewis Hyde.
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And it was like being psychoanalyzed.
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I mean he had laid it all out.
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And then coming to this conference,
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I realized that most everybody here
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shared those same qualities
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because really what trickster is
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is an agent of change.
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Trickster is a change agent.
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And the qualities that I'm about to describe
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are the qualities that make it possible
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to make change happen.
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And one of these is boundary crossing.
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I think this is what so, in fact, infuriated the scientists.
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But I like to cross boundaries.
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I like to, as I said, talk about things I know nothing about.
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(Phone Ringing)
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I hope that's my agent,
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because you aren't paying me anything.
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(Laughter)
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And I think it's good to talk about things I know nothing about
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because I bring a fresh viewpoint to it, you know?
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I'm able to see the contradiction
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that you may not be able to see.
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Like for instance a mime once --
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or a meme as he called himself.
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He was a very selfish meme.
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And he said that I had to show more respect
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because it took up to 18 years
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to learn how to do mime properly.
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And I said, "Well, that's how you know only stupid people go into it."
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(Laughter)
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It only takes two years to learn how to talk.
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(Laughter)
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(Applause)
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And you know people, this is the problem with
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quote, objectivity, unquote.
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When you're only surrounded by people
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who speak the same vocabulary as you,
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or share the same set of assumptions as you,
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you start to think that that's reality.
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Like economists, you know, their definition of rational,
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that we all act out of our own economic self-interest.
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Well, look at Michael Hawley,
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or look at Dean Kamen,
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or look at my grandmother.
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My grandmother always acted in other people's interests,
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whether they wanted her to or not.
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(Laughter)
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If they had had an Olympics in martyrdom,
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my grandmother would have lost on purpose.
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(Laughter)
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"No, you take the prize.
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You're young. I'm old. Who's going to see it?
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Where am I going? I'm going to die soon."
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(Laughter)
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So that's one -- this boundary crossing,
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this go-between which --
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Fritz Lanting, is that his name,
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actually said that he was a go-between.
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That's an actual quality of the trickster.
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And another is, non-oppositional strategies.
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And this is instead of contradiction.
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Where you deny the other person's reality,
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you have paradox
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where you allow more than one reality to coexist,
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I think there's another philosophical construction.
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I'm not sure what it's called.
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But my example of it is a sign that I saw in a jewelry store.
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It said, "Ears pierced while you wait."
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(Laughter)
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There the alternative just boggles the imagination.
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(Laughter)
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"Oh no. Thanks though, I'll leave them here. Thanks very much.
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I have some errands to run. So I'll be back to pick them up
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around five, if that's OK with you.
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Huh? Huh? What? Can't hear you."
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(Laughter)
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And another attribute of the trickster
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is smart luck.
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That accidents, that Louis Kahn, who talked about accidents,
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this is another quality of the trickster.
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The trickster has a mind that is prepared for the unprepared.
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That, and I will say this to the scientists,
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that the trickster has the ability to hold
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his ideas lightly
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so that he can let room in for new ideas
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or to see the contradictions or the hidden problems
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with his ideas.
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I had no joke for that.
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I just wanted to put the scientists in their place.
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(Laughter)
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But here's how I think I like to make change,
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and that is in making connections.
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This is what I tend to see
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almost more than contradictions.
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Like the, what do you call those toes of the gecko?
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You know, the toes of the gecko,
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curling and uncurling like the fingers of Michael Moschen.
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I love connections.
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Like I'll read that one of the two attributes
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of matter in the Newtonian universe --
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there are two attributes of matter in the Newtonian universe --
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one is space occupancy. Matter takes up space.
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I guess the more you matter the more space you take up,
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which explains the whole SUV phenomenon.
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(Laughter)
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And the other one though is impenetrability.
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Well, in ancient Rome, impenetrability
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was the criterion of masculinity.
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Masculinity depended on you
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being the active penetrator.
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And then, in economics, there's an active producer
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and a passive consumer,
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which explains why business always has to
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penetrate new markets.
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Well yeah, I mean why we forced China
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to open her markets.
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And didn't that feel good?
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(Laughter)
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And now we're being penetrated.
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You know the biotech companies are actually going inside us
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and planting their little flags on our genes.
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You know we're being penetrated.
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And I suspect, by someone who actively dislikes us.
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(Laughter)
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That's the second of the quadruple.
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Yes of course you got that. Thank you very much.
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I still have a way to go.
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(Laughter)
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And what I hope to do, when I make these connections,
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is short circuit people's thinking.
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You know, make you not follow your usual
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train of association,
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but make you rewire.
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It literally -- when people say about the shock of recognition,
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it's literally re-cognition, rewiring how you think --
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I had a joke to go with this and I forgot it.
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I'm so sorry. I'm getting like
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the woman in that joke about --
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have you heard this joke about the woman driving with her mother?
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And the mother is elderly.
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And the mother goes right through a red light.
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And the daughter doesn't want to say anything.
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She doesn't want to be like, "You're too old to drive."
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And the mother goes through a second red light.
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And the daughter says, as tactfully as possible,
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"Mom, are you aware that you just went through two red lights?"
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And the mother says, "Oh! Am I driving?"
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(Laughter)
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And that's the shock of recognition
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at the shock of recognition.
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That completes the quadruple.
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(Laughter)
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I just want to say two more things.
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One is, another characteristic of trickster
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is that the trickster has to
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walk this fine line.
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He has to have poise.
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And you know the biggest hurdle for me,
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in doing what I do,
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is constructing my performance
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so that it's prepared and unprepared.
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Finding the balance between those things
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is always dangerous
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because you might tip off too much in the direction of unprepared.
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But being too prepared doesn't leave room
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for the accidents to happen.
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21:19
I was thinking about what Moshe Safdie
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said yesterday about beauty
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because in his book, Hyde says that
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sometimes trickster can tip over into beauty.
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But to do that you have to
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lose all the other qualities
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because once you're into beauty
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you're into a finished thing.
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You're into something that
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occupies space and inhabits time.
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It's an actual thing.
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And it is always extraordinary to see a thing of beauty.
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But if you don't do that,
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if you allow for the accident to keep on happening,
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you have the possibility of getting on a wavelength.
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I like to think of what I do as a probability wave.
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When you go into beauty the probability wave
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collapses into one possibility.
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And I like to explore all the possibilities
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in the hope that you'll be on the wavelength of your audience.
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And the one final quality I want to say about trickster is
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that he doesn't have a home.
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He's always on the road.
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I want to say to you Richard, in closing,
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that in TED you've created a home.
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And thank you for inviting me into it.
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Thank you very much.
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22:45
(Applause)
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About this website

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