Transcript
Eric Roth (0:02)
Tetragrammaton. And now I don't want to make this whole thing about death and. But I just the thoughts of like, you know, which I'll repeat. But that comment my mother had made as she was dying when who's a lifetime atheist and communist and didn't believe in anything past this. And I asked her, are you afraid? When she was kind of at the end. And she said she was curious. And I thought, well, that was a good place to start with something, you know. And then you sent me that beautiful poem about that. When we're not watching ourselves, maybe somebody else is watching us as we move, move through something else, you know. And I loved your book, by the way. I have it right behind me here. It'll stay here now forever.
Interviewer (1:05)
Thank you so much. I'm so glad you like it.
Eric Roth (1:07)
I thought it was beautifully architectured. And then, you know, in all ways. In all ways.
Interviewer (1:12)
Are all stories good for the same reason?
Eric Roth (1:15)
I think they might be because I think you get to unleash the use of words into ideas. Trying to put the. As a writer trying to put the best word in front of the other. Some people are way better at it than others. You know, just to relate to well known artists. Writer named Dennis Johnson, who I think was one of the great American writers, wrote a short story called Jesus Son that is pretty well recognized as one of the great short stories. And then more recently I've been friendly with George Saunders, who's a wonderful combination of words and science. You know, I tried to sort of compete with them in emails. It's like a joke, you know, it's like talking to a poet. But I think it's how they've learned as the great writers have, or great artists. Same thing with painting or something, being able to put one brushstroke in front of another to, you know, to communicate an idea. So in that sense, I think all storytelling is the same and that's just how good you're able to do it. But I think it's a cliche probably, but probably true that everybody does have a story to tell. It's like I always believe everybody. There's somebody for everybody. Same kind of thing.
Interviewer (2:28)
Do stories need a structure and do they need the same structure?
Eric Roth (2:32)
I would say neither is true. I think that's up to the artist. It's however they best communicate. I mean, you know that better than anybody with music that somebody will make just a sound and that sound will be everlasting and someone else will do it a different way. I'm pretty Traditional in my structure. Very Shakespearean, you know, not that I'm Shakespeare, but even though I think Shakespeare said the two greatest lines in the English language, exit ghost. You can think about that for a while. But, yeah, I think you need that. What's scaring me with AI a little bit. It's now learned to. It learns dramatic function of Shakespeare. So he knows about catharsis and act structure and it. And that will then use that to obviously, you know, increase its ability to tell stories. But I. I think people can tell stories in any way they can. I think you just do what you think is comfortable. I think one thing I've. I've learned, and I think I learned this, oddly, a little bit from Bob Dylan just by osmosis, that anything's culturally appropriate in a sense that you can use anybody else's work to. If it encourages you, it creates for you something that you hadn't thought about. And then it becomes a wide kind of mass of what bubbles over in you. Something maybe beautiful or corny, you know, or that. I remember I was writing something in. There was an Emmy Lou Harris duet with, like, I think, Lefty Frizzell or somebody, you know, and it was like. It was always very moving to me, and it always kind of just stuck with me. But it helped me to then use that, to appropriate that to not a particular song, but that sound, whatever that felt like, to be able to try to articulate that. So I think there's, you know, haikus and there's. I wrote a movie a long time ago for. And I haven't told this story, so not that much for Kurosawa. And he had asked me to help make an Anglo character in his movie called Rhapsody in August. And we talked through a translator, but he'd sent me the script, which was translated, and it was like a haiku. I mean, it was just so beautiful. Just an ant on an ant hill. And however he was describing things, and it was really, really quite lovely. And then I realized I wrote in this kind of Jewish intellectual, psychiatric kind of prosy. You know, it was so. So different from what the beautiful way he was explaining things. And. And, you know, any artist will do things differently than another, and. But I think they all kind of have to borrow from each other and also have to learn through some experience, you know. So you don't get to be Kandinsky or something without spending the time, you know, learning to be candid. Ski. And you don't get to be Rick Rubin without learning how to be you
