"Conversations with Eric Hoffer," 12 part interview by James Day of KQED, San Franscisco, 1963.
"Eric Hoffer: The Passionate State of Mind" with Eric Sevareid, CBS, September 19, 1967 (rebroadcast on November 14, due to popular demand).
"The Savage Heart: A Conversation with Eric Hoffer," with Eric Sevareid, CBS, January 28, 1969.
1/5 1:54~ http://youtu.be/kTcv4HyEY3w "I think some of the most original ideas I had, Mr. Sevareid, came to me while I was working. And you know, what a glorious feeling it is! Here you work, you talk with your partner … and in the back of your head, you compose sentences. That’s when life is glorious. … And then you come home in the evening and before you even wash your hands, you sit down and it’s all there, see. It’s a glorious feeling."
1/5 9:20? http://youtu.be/kTcv4HyEY3w “You could be a Michelangelo and still be a plain workingman. … America is for the poor, Mr. Sevareid". Only we have a good time in this country. The rich have it much better elsewhere―better service, more deference.”
4/5 3:35~ http://youtu.be/N9amjBIVraY “Don’t forget, Mr. Sevareid, the whole of the Occident was involved with the persecution, the humiliation, and the final annihilation of six million Jews.”
5/5 http://youtu.be/o6XM1Mh4Ciw 3:44~?5:00
“This is a fantastic country and a good country for me,” he summed up. “Death will come tomorrow. Death will come this evening. It matters not, see. I have no grievance against anybody. I always got more than I deserved.”
参考: Amazon.co.jp: American Iconoclast: The Life and Times of Eric Hoffer 電子書籍: Tom Shachtman: Kindleストア
yojisekimoto highlighted: On Tuesday evening, September 19, 1967, CBS News aired “The Passionate State of Mind.” Sevareid’s brief introduction set out Hoffer’s background—blind for seven years as a child, never schooled, orphaned at 20, worked odd jobs, then as a migrant, and since early in World War II as a dockworker—and asked where his ideas came from.
I think some of the most original ideas I had, Mr. Sevareid, came to me while I was working. And you know, what a glorious feeling it is! Here you work, you talk with your partner … and in the back of your head, you compose sentences. That’s when life is glorious. … And then you come home in the evening and before you even wash your hands, you sit down and it’s all there, see. It’s a glorious feeling.
Although he rejected the “cold” label, Hoffer then recited the equally-frosty first sentence of one of his most celebrated articles, on brotherhood: “It is much easier to love humanity as a whole than to love one’s neighbor.” He confided that one day he had shared that first sentence with co-workers, who had mostly agreed with it and then had spent the rest of the day with him, hashing over the subject, “on the company’s time, under the hook, on the stringer, see—and they wrote [the article].” Hoffer insisted that he was the common man, the working stiff who did most of America’s manual labor. “If you want to know how the average longshoreman’s going to vote on anything, you ask me,” Hoffer boasted, but added, “You could be a Michelangelo and still be a plain workingman. … America is for the poor, Mr. Sevareid. Only we have a good time in this country. The rich have it much better elsewhere—better service, more deference.” 4 minutes ago
“Don’t forget, Mr. Sevareid, the whole of the Occident was involved with the persecution, the humiliation, and the final annihilation of six million Jews.”
“This is a fantastic country and a good country for me,” he summed up. “Death will come tomorrow. Death will come this evening. It matters not, see. I have no grievance against anybody. I always got more than I deserved.”
1/5 9:20? http://youtu.be/kTcv4HyEY3w “You could be a Michelangelo and still be a plain workingman. … America is for the poor, Mr. Sevareid. Only we have a good time in this country. The rich have it much better elsewhere―better service, more deference.”
I think some of the most original ideas I had, Mr. Sevareid, came to me while I was working. And you know, what a glorious feeling it is! Here you work, you talk with your partner … and in the back of your head, you compose sentences. That’s when life is glorious. … And then you come home in the evening and before you even wash your hands, you sit down and it’s all there, see. It’s a glorious feeling.
http://youtu.be/o6XM1Mh4Ciw 3:44~?5:00 “This is a fantastic country and a good country for me,” he summed up. “Death will come tomorrow. Death will come this evening. It matters not, see. I have no grievance against anybody. I always got more than I deserved.”
I think some of the most original ideas I had, Mr. Sevareid, came to me while I was working. And you know, what a glorious feeling it is! Here you work, you talk with your partner … and in the back of your head, you compose sentences. That’s when life is glorious. … And then you come home in the evening and before you even wash your hands, you sit down and it’s all there, see. It’s a glorious feeling.
1/5 7:30 love http://youtu.be/kTcv4HyEY3w “It is much easier to love humanity as a whole than to love one’s neighbor.”
1/5 9:20? http://youtu.be/kTcv4HyEY3w “You could be a Michelangelo and still be a plain workingman. … America is for the poor, Mr. Sevareid. Only we have a good time in this country. The rich have it much better elsewhere―better service, more deference.”
5/5 Eric Hoffer pt. 5 of 5
http://youtu.be/o6XM1Mh4Ciw 3:44~?5:00 “This is a fantastic country and a good country for me,” he summed up. “Death will come tomorrow. Death will come this evening. It matters not, see. I have no grievance against anybody. I always got more than I deserved.”
http://youtu.be/N9amjBIVraY “Don’t forget, Mr. Sevareid, the whole of the Occident was involved with the persecution, the humiliation, and the final annihilation of six million Jews.”
8 Comments:
yojisekimoto highlighted:
On Tuesday evening, September 19, 1967, CBS News aired “The Passionate State of Mind.” Sevareid’s brief introduction set out Hoffer’s background—blind for seven years as a child, never schooled, orphaned at 20, worked odd jobs, then as a migrant, and since early in World War II as a dockworker—and asked where his ideas came from.
I think some of the most original ideas I had, Mr. Sevareid, came to me while I was working. And you know, what a glorious feeling it is! Here you work, you talk with your partner … and in the back of your head, you compose sentences. That’s when life is glorious. … And then you come home in the evening and before you even wash your hands, you sit down and it’s all there, see. It’s a glorious feeling.
Although he rejected the “cold” label, Hoffer then recited the equally-frosty first sentence of one of his most celebrated articles, on brotherhood: “It is much easier to love humanity as a whole than to love one’s neighbor.” He confided that one day he had shared that first sentence with co-workers, who had mostly agreed with it and then had spent the rest of the day with him, hashing over the subject, “on the company’s time, under the hook, on the stringer, see—and they wrote [the article].” Hoffer insisted that he was the common man, the working stiff who did most of America’s manual labor. “If you want to know how the average longshoreman’s going to vote on anything, you ask me,” Hoffer boasted, but added, “You could be a Michelangelo and still be a plain workingman. … America is for the poor, Mr. Sevareid. Only we have a good time in this country. The rich have it much better elsewhere—better service, more deference.”
4 minutes ago
“Don’t forget, Mr. Sevareid, the whole of the Occident was involved with the persecution, the humiliation, and the final annihilation of six million Jews.”
“This is a fantastic country and a good country for me,” he summed up. “Death will come tomorrow. Death will come this evening. It matters not, see. I have no grievance against anybody. I always got more than I deserved.”
1/5
7:30
love
http://youtu.be/kTcv4HyEY3w
“It is much easier to love humanity as a whole than to love one’s neighbor.”
1/5
9:20?
http://youtu.be/kTcv4HyEY3w
“You could be a Michelangelo and still be a plain workingman. … America is for the poor, Mr. Sevareid. Only we have a good time in this country. The rich have it much better elsewhere―better service, more deference.”
1/5
1:54~
http://youtu.be/kTcv4HyEY3w
I think some of the most original ideas I had, Mr. Sevareid, came to me while I was working. And you know, what a glorious feeling it is! Here you work, you talk with your partner … and in the back of your head, you compose sentences. That’s when life is glorious. … And then you come home in the evening and before you even wash your hands, you sit down and it’s all there, see. It’s a glorious feeling.
Eric Hoffer pt. 5 of 5
http://youtu.be/o6XM1Mh4Ciw
3:44~?5:00
“This is a fantastic country and a good country for me,” he summed up. “Death will come tomorrow. Death will come this evening. It matters not, see. I have no grievance against anybody. I always got more than I deserved.”
1/5
1:54~
http://youtu.be/kTcv4HyEY3w
I think some of the most original ideas I had, Mr. Sevareid, came to me while I was working. And you know, what a glorious feeling it is! Here you work, you talk with your partner … and in the back of your head, you compose sentences. That’s when life is glorious. … And then you come home in the evening and before you even wash your hands, you sit down and it’s all there, see. It’s a glorious feeling.
1/5
7:30
love
http://youtu.be/kTcv4HyEY3w
“It is much easier to love humanity as a whole than to love one’s neighbor.”
1/5
9:20?
http://youtu.be/kTcv4HyEY3w
“You could be a Michelangelo and still be a plain workingman. … America is for the poor, Mr. Sevareid. Only we have a good time in this country. The rich have it much better elsewhere―better service, more deference.”
5/5
Eric Hoffer pt. 5 of 5
http://youtu.be/o6XM1Mh4Ciw
3:44~?5:00
“This is a fantastic country and a good country for me,” he summed up. “Death will come tomorrow. Death will come this evening. It matters not, see. I have no grievance against anybody. I always got more than I deserved.”
4/5
3:35~
http://youtu.be/N9amjBIVraY
“Don’t forget, Mr. Sevareid, the whole of the Occident was involved with the persecution, the humiliation, and the final annihilation of six million Jews.”
http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt0n39n6dd/entire_text/
Box/Folder 38 : 10
Sevareid, Eric, 1967-1983
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