Share This Episode
CBS Sunday Morning Jane Pauley Logo

CBS Sunday Morning,

CBS Sunday Morning / Jane Pauley
The Cross Radio
November 28, 2021 12:18 pm

CBS Sunday Morning,

CBS Sunday Morning / Jane Pauley

On-Demand Podcasts NEW!

This broadcaster has 331 podcast archives available on-demand.


November 28, 2021 12:18 pm

On this week's "CBS Sunday Morning" with host Jane Pauley: the FDA's recent approval of a new drug, Aduhelm, to clear the formation of amyloid plaques in the brain is potentially good news for the six million Americans who suffer from Alzheimer's disease. But the approval process for Aduhelm has stirred controversy. Correspondent Susan Spencer talks with experts about the clinical benefits of this new class of drugs; and with early-onset Alzheimer's patients, including a former neurologist who enrolled in an early trial of Aduhelm. As the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic begin to wane, prices are up, because supply and demand are in an historically out-of-whack phase. Correspondent David Pogue illustrates the economic pressures that are affecting the prices of everything from oil to consumer goods. Pat Benatar was a singer from Long Island, inspired by Liza Minnelli and coated in spandex; he was a guitarist from Cleveland. Together they are one of rock's most enduring couples, who have sold 36 million albums, recorded 15 Top 40 hits, and won four consecutive Grammys. Pat Benatar and Neil Giraldo talk with correspondent Jim Axelrod about their creative partnership, their 40-year-marriage, and their latest collaboration: the upcoming stage musical, "Invincible," a reimagining of "Romeo & Juliet" featuring their iconic rock songs. Finally, In 2020 Patti LuPone, star of the new Broadway revival of "Company," spoke with musical theater legend Stephen Sondheimto discuss his craft, his favorite character, and his college acting career. With the passing of Sondheim on Friday, November 26 at age 91, we offer their conversation – and her appreciation of Sondheim's artistry.

See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

  • -->
YOU MIGHT ALSO LIKE

CBS Sunday morning podcast is sponsored by Edward Jones college tours with your oldest daughter updating the kitchen to the appropriate decade retiring on the coast. Life is full of moments that matter and Edward Joe's helps you make the most of them. That's why every Edward Jones financial advisor works with you to build personalized strategies for now and down the road so when your next moment arrives bigger small, you're ready for it. Life is for living. Let's partner for all of it. Learn more@edwardjones.com Jane Pauley and this is a warning that almost warp speed vaccine to protect against covert developed in under a year.

Compare that to the progress or lack of it in treating Alzheimer's disease. Where until recently, no new medications were introduced in nearly 2 decades. Still want a new drug was approved for treatment by the FDA this summer, many charged a rush to judgment. Susan Spencer looks at the hopes and fears driving Alzheimer's research available – just 54 years old and suddenly struggling at work Joe Mann when he received a medical diagnosis that would change his life forever had Alzheimer's ever crossed your mind. I just kept thinking it was a normal part of Justin Golder as their new hope for people like Joe the future of Alzheimer's treatment ahead on Sunday morning. Pat Benatar is one of the pioneering women in rock 'n' roll history Jim Axelrod learned for decades later she still rocking out Benatar's path to rock superstardom music and she didn't walk it, along with her every step of the way her husband Neil drove us from day one that is always a mess to be up on the market because every song. 11 listen to was created by storyboard Benatar saw coming off on Sunday. This morning will of course offer innovation of our own. And remember, a Broadway legend, composer, lyricist Stephen Sondheim died Friday at the age of 91. Maraca has an appreciation will all use spanning more than six decades, Stephen Sondheim never stopped pushing forward along the way we shaping the American musical wanted be good and want to be a star and write the words and music. This song is station with all later on Sunday.

Pogue unravels the monetary mysteries, driving prices to record heights that Mankiewicz is in conversation with Cagney and Lacey's Sharon glass Keller for Saturday tunes into the strange world of HBO's hit how to with John Wilson, plus Steve Hartman, and more on this Sunday morning 28 November 20, 21, and will be right back some 50 million people around the world are living with Alzheimer's disease. There are a few treatments but no cure. Now, as Susan Spencer tells us a new medication is offering hope and courting controversy. Not long ago Joe Mann when he was a hardcharging market research, exact wowing audiences at conferences all over the world you like this job. I love your good at this job.

I think I did a good job yes, but gradually he felt that the job he'd mastered was somehow mastering him. There was one situation that really stands out were on a call going through a number of topics hard time following the conversation and connecting the points in that had never ever happened to me before. That's why new something wasn't right because it was now affecting my ability to do my job.

So in 2017. Joe saw a neurologist whose diagnosis stunned him early onset Alzheimer's. He was 54 when the neurologist tell you. The outlook was sharp.

She said Joe the next 3 to 5 years you're going to start experiencing declines in the near likely not going to recognize your family in 5 to 7 years and I had life expectancy of around 10 years and what was your reaction when you heard this shock. Just a month later he retired from the job he loved. Today he makes the most of family time at home in Plymouth, Massachusetts, where these guys so these are my two sons. That's Alexander on the left and my older son Nick on the right, but he is haunted by what lies ahead but friends I always got early.

Hopefully they can help you get better you will realize that with Alzheimer's. There is no cure to be a fatal disease.

Alzheimer's disease is the most common form of dementia. The key is it's a progressive loss brain function and an astounding 6 million Americans suffer from it says Dr. Daniel gives a neurologist in Portland, Oregon for nearly 25 years as a physician, what was the most difficult aspect of treating Alzheimer's patients. I just felt so hopeless and and it was hard for me to give any hope to the patients because we all knew what was in store because of Alzheimer's disease.

Broadly speaking, is really a challenge still today, I challenge that so far has evaded answers.

But Maria Carino, chief science officer at the Alzheimer's Association in Chicago is nonetheless optimistic we have hope on the horizon and that hope is that there are new treatments not only available today, but hopefully in the near future. What approach goes after the abnormal deposits of protein found in the brains of Alzheimer's patients there called amyloid plaques and they may show up decades before symptoms do, so it's possible that in the future will be treating it before it's even symptomatic that is really the goal to be able to stop this disease in its tracks to stop at the biological time point when proteins are starting to actually in the brain that ultimately will lead to those memory and behavior changes that today we know of as dementia. That's the thinking behind ad you held the first new FDA approved Alzheimer's drug in almost 2 decades wired new medications for this disease so few and far between wells, not for want of trying.

It's a very complicated disease is the short answer, the excitement over Ajit now stemming from its proven ability to clear those protein formation. The amyloid plaques would you take this drug if offered. If I was out about insurance coverage. I would absolutely take the drug my challenges.

The price tag cannot afford the $56,000 price tag 56,000 and for now insurance coverage is no guarantee though drugmaker Biogen says he does offer programs to help patients assess eligibility for financial assistance. Initially, that it's hard because but beyond the staggering cost is a more urgent concern. Does Ajit Helm really do anything to stop symptoms so the new drug that the FDA approved in June targets amyloid plaques very effectively. Reportedly, the drug doesn't have any clear effect on the progression of Alzheimer's disease. Dr. Aaron Kessel Himes Prof. of medicine at Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston. He was on the FDA advisory panel on Ajit Helm until he quit in protest when the agency gave the drug a green light, a move he calls probably the worst drug approval decision in recent US history. But how can you say definitively that it doesn't work anymore than the FDA could say definitively that it does. You can't say definitively that it doesn't work.

You can't say definitively that it does work either in and in that circumstance, you need to do some more testing of the drug. The system in our country is that in order for a drug to be approved by the FDA. It has to show substantial evidence that the drug actually does work.

And in this case, there is good evidence that the drug works but the FDA made Ajit Helm available while studies continue, citing the unmet needs for patients facing this fatal disease and concluding it is reasonably likely that reduction in amyloid plaque will result in meaningful clinical benefit reasonably likely sounds pretty good to patients like Joe Mann many some major major breakthrough that has taken us from drugs that only deal with the symptoms to a drug that now can deal with one of the root causes of the disease, possibly possibly describe for me the pressure from patients and their families to find a cure. There is pressure the experience that we have with Alzheimer's disease. Most of us is when we a relative or acquaintance is in the nursing home and dwindling away doesn't recognize anybody in this just you a terribly frightening thing to think, that's my future and it is devastating. A devastating future. Dr. Gibbs now sees through a very different lands. You no longer practicing medicine correct and why is that well because I have Alzheimer's and even though I'm still in the Bible. Cognitive impairment stage of I stop practicing neurology. Do you think that being an expert in this field is that at this point make it harder or easier for you to deal with it.

I'm not. I know what to expect, but also know what I need to do to 20 hold off the bad stuff at the end of as long as possible. Dr. Gibbs enrolled in an early trial of Ajit Helm which landed him in the ICU. He is one of a small number of patients who suffered serious side effects. My severe reaction doesn't doesn't affect my opinion on the FDA's approval. It doesn't know because they're rare and I fully recovered.

He says he is still optimistic about this class of drugs and asked for Joe Mann. Many I really come to realize how precious time is so much more focused on how I spent my time and why spend it with Giselle and he says he consider any new medication, controversy or not. If you don't take chances. Nothing good happens really pretty cool, we've been hearing about it nonstop prices on just about everything going up. David Pogue has our crash course on inflation. You might've noticed there's something crazy going on with the prices of everything. Restaurant prices are up 5% over a year ago, cars, furniture, meat, fish, and eggs up 10 to 12% used cars up 24% and gasoline. Gasoline is about 50% more expensive than it was a year ago and heating oil has the same problem could be an expensive winter at the heart of all this is one of the fundamentals of economics.

Supply and demand when there's a lot of supply and not much demand. Prices go down. But when is very limited supply and a lot of demand, the prices go way up. The question is why now Megan just eating into people's buying power. So that has real implications on every American economist Megan Greene is a senior fellow at Harvard's Kennedy school and chief economist at the Kroll Institute what the pandemic due to supply. So when we shut down the whole economy that automatically cause disruptions in parts that are really complex global supply chain were seeing huge backlogs in terms of containers waiting in ports and ships waiting offshore and that's partly because of levers that we can't find truckers or longshoremen in order to get all of these goods off of ships into ports and onto shell art. So what about demand as we reopen the economy, there's just been this surging demand as people go out to buy stuff on top of that you have the Christmas holiday season coming the spike in gas prices is a different problem. Oil companies who lost money during the great lockdown are now limiting how much oil they produce. If you're old enough, you might remember the big inflationary cycle of the 70s and early 80s. Mortgage rates at 18%, but Megan Greene thinks that this cycle won't be like that one actually think what we're facing right now is pretty different in the 70s we had really high inflation and really low growth and it's called stagflation, but doing the lockdown. Many companies make themselves more productive by investing in automation and other improvements. If we productivity growth doesn't necessarily result in higher priced does the fact that our government has poured trillions of dollars of cash into the economy play a part in all this with what the government has Artie done certainly has been the flames of inflation a bit and it was sort of designed to do that.

Don't forget the stimulus was offered in order to get the economy going and jumpstarted after it had been put in a deep-freeze.

And what about the trillions of dollars yet to come. As part of the new infrastructure spending bill and there is a lot less worried that fiscal stimulus measures on the table are all due to be deployed over the next 10 years.

A lot of it is aimed at infrastructure spending and because we don't have many good shovel ready projects ready to go infrastructure spending ends up being kind of back ended RMA and so the question when will this end, but I think unfortunately we need to see is both demand to Wayne and also this backlog in the supply chain to be alleviated and so I think that will probably really see inflation abates in early 2023, so there is a crash course in the inflationary cycle of 2021 and 2022, 20, 23, the pandemic triggered a shortage of almost everything in the recovery triggered an increase in demand for almost everything. Things will not get back to normal until supply and demand even out again. It's Sunday morning on CBS and here again is Jane Hawley. It happened this past week. On Friday we learned of the passing of Stephen Sondheim, a legendary songwriter who reshaped the Broadway musical maraca begins our appreciation. Stephen Sondheim forced the American musical took rollup all leading audiences to places never been before. To become like little red riding hood and into the woods confronted with the new, sometimes scary, always exciting and Sondheim was just 26. We wrote the lyrics from West side story and shockingly dark looking gang like the New York City. The very next year he wrote the lyrics for Gypsy about the mother of all states mother's antihero for the ages made a very fine living sticking to words, but he wanted to write the words and music and so began a string of creative, if only rarely commercial triumphs with subject matter well outside the confines of boy meets girl's featuring aging showgirls set in the decaying theater was about faded dreams and the Pulitzer prize-winning Sunday in the Park with George about the painter George Seurat obsessively working watching the rest of the world from a window. Sondheim himself was raised primarily by a mother he described as a social climber, and whom he resented, but as a boy he met the great lyricist Oscar Hammerstein of Rogers and Hammerstein.

The relationship would set him on his course my pathway for fostering a sense of what he was you, I've often said that if you block out if I would've an archaeologist. Instead Sondheim became a kind of anthropologist, a master observer of human behavior. A man who never had children and yet wrote the classic children will listen breakthrough hit company a musical about marriage Sondheim a gay man until that point was unattached, invited his friend Mary Rogers over one evening to tell him about married life. He took out a yellow legal pad and after two hours he said he had most of the score including a personal favorite of mine. Sorry.

Grateful you're all your always very well no doubt about it. No one to ambivalence better than Sondheim just one reason some of the greatest actors of the last half-century only grateful to have sung his words and music and who better to pick up, distribute Patty LuPone storing in the current revival of company until last year spoke with Stephen Sondheim for us all sometime for 40 years and had the privilege of appearing in six of his musicals last year, just before Steve's 90 in what was supposed to be the opening of a groundbreaking production of company we set down for a one-on-one ready for these questions. I'm allowed to move my head so I Patty is awfully great house Matt house Jim everything.

We laughed and chatted about our love of movies. My education as Hollywood movies would be both better not get on. As we will and Steve answered some rapidfire questions about Donna desk. That's a nice one. I guess I like this better vanilla or chocolate vanilla coffee or tea. The velvet silk give me the creeps.

Both Steve and I were excited for the premiere of company with a fresh perspective instead of bobbing with the why it would be Bobby with and I what's happening in the audiences is an extraordinary experience, not just because it's gender bent over has nothing to do with it being gender is because company is these everybody that today.

Steve's work has transcended Broadway his musicals on our films. Songs make appearances everywhere and after a lifetime of actually knowing Tony's eight Grammy awards and an Oscar. It's easy to forget Steve wasn't always a critics darling as he told Charles Osgood back in 1995 Florida people have gone historically musicals to forget their troubles come on get Harvey. I'm not it runs making people unhappy but I'm not interested in looking at what I do what I want to write a perhaps this next part of our conversation sheds light on why I was coming and I didn't know that you are an actor on TV with the cell bars all just play some cords see if I know I wasn't talking about the TV musical June I was talking about Steve's acting career at Williams College.

Do you remember this review sometime as an actor who knows how to use his whole body dramatically, his gestures, movements, and even the angles of his body anticipated participated in and completed the vocal presentation of the character you made that up that I've never heard that I like that is a review I'm not done is whenever idle or awkward but dutifully asked us of at all times. He was acting every minute he was on the stage and acting very well. All this is not something know this is college student. Also, they always cast me replay.

They do if there was very neurotic, self-destructive, gloomy I Play Every Misfit, but That Was One Part Always Want to Play, Which Was Done in My Blissful Serial Killer, Which Is a Play I Have Loved since I First Read It Once I Played the Part I Retired.

He Might Have Retired from Acting, but Acting Seems to Have Informed All of Steve's Musicals That You Are an Active for Me. Steve Makes so Much More Sense When the Crime but the Fact That the Sunset You Might Are so Singing Is so Complex between Michael Which Way to People Asked Me This Question.

Do You Have a Favorite Character That You've Written Character We See, I Don't like the Characters, the Book Writers) Explore the Characters Book Writers like Arthur Lawrence, Who Wrote Gypsy, with Music by Julie Stein and Lyrics by Steve As Far As Character Goes like This Early Pigment Rose Just so Much Larger Than Life. At the Same Time Life That's Really Hard to Do and I Really like Her. I Really Want to Hitter and Its Just so Alive When I Celebrated Steve's 90th Birthday with a Concert in April 2020. One of My Favorite Times and Sometimes Steve's All and We Will Be Forever Grateful You Are, You Know It's I Have To Say Thank You.

I Had to Say Thank You for Me and I Have To Say Thank You for All of Us Know the Plan Because It Justice Can't Be Set up by Nothing I Feel Very Good Take out with Preacher Gareth This Week Stephen Law Ally of Mitch McConnell in One of Washington's Biggest Midterm Monument List for Me to Set Races You Think Republicans Have the Best Chance of Taking a Democratic Seed. What about Not George George's Right up There with New Hampshire's Surprised New Hampshire People Really Just Kind of Don't like That You Have for More from This Week's Conversation, Follow the Take out with Major Gareth on Apple Podcasts or Wherever You Get Your Podcasts. Lacey Was a Hit TV Police Drama for CBS Back in the 1980s Helped Make Sharon Glasses*but It Turns out That Life for Glass off the Screen Had Plenty of Drama to She's Talking with Our Men in Hollywood, Ben Mankiewicz, Surrounded by Movies like in My Dream That Someday I Could Do That.

Raised in Upper-Class LA Neighborhood Sharon Gless Grew up Surrounded by the Allure Hollywood Christ Go out There at Night and Had Clean Going across the Sky. In Those Days That Her Grandfather Neil McCarthy Was a Powerful Entertainment Howard Hughes Attorney Cecil B DeMille Is Leaving Mayors and Watches Her Granddaughter to Go and That the Movie Industry You Stay Out Of It. It's a Filthy Business.

Gless Ignored Grandpa's Advice. She Started Late at 26 a Talent Scout from Universal Studios Happened This Year in a Small Play and Led to a Seven Year Contract Is an Actor for Waitress Money, How Much We Make in the First Contract Hundred and $86 a Week You Want to Sign a Contract. It Universal from You Again All Changed in the Early 1980s, Cagney and Lacey Gless Earned to Best Blame Detective Chris Cagney Time Daily's Marybeth Lacey 14. What the Hell Are We Talking about Talking about Here on the Line Every Time We Got Now 78, Sharon Gless Examines Those Laws and Some Terrifying Lows in the New Memoir.

Apparently There Were Complaints Published by Simon & Schuster of Viacom, CBS Company Gless Is Typically Candid and Print, Including Some PG Rated Kissing and Telling like the Time the Studio Set Her up for One Night out with a Relatively Unknown Director Steven Spielberg Here and Kiss Me One Day When Date Set up. We Were Assigned to Each Other for the Evening, but We Never Spoke on the Show Clear His Folks Less Just Guest Star Rocio Don Love You. First Time I'd Here Is an Screen and Rosie Sent Me Flowers Sends Me a Dozen Roses That Year a Good Kisser, from Their Friendship Grew, Then Years Later There Was This One Moment with Rosie. One Night I Was Doing Such Intense Feelings for Her to Love and I Think I Got Confused and Interested Row Coming. I'm Married, She's Married and She Said How Glassy Whole so Straight at Me and Then There's Barney, Her Husband the Body Because My Essay. Rosensweig Was Also the Boss, the Executive Producer of Cagney and Lacey Was a Cop with What Happened to Be Cops. We Talk to Gless and Rosensweig, the Legendary Hollywood Restaurant You Soon Frank Cummings and She Was a Baby, Where She Met Barney for the First of over the Job and Was Arrogant and You Know Tell Me How Hard I'd Have To Work.

I Took This Job Hard Work, Blessed Already Turned the Role down Twice and She Was Set to Say No Again and I Didn't Pack a Rod You Know I Just Didn't Want to Be Carrying around the Hardware.

I Just Had Other Dreams Wetted Nine Could You Say I Didn't Want to Pack a Rod Again Really Is the Most Thrilling Moment of My Which Really Just Didn't Want Baccarat, Cagney and Lacey Became a Hit, Gless and Rosensweig Fell in Love, and It Was Rosensweig Who Made a Bold Decision for a TV Show in the 80s Blesses Character Would Confront Her Deep My Name Is Christine I Am in a Eerily Prescient Television Moment Is Roughly a Year Later Life Imitated Art Sharon Gless Did You Think That Sharon Was Going so That Was Not Part of Your Thinking at All. I Have Probably Leveled the Drake Home Social Worker, but with Blackouts As She Got Older over the Booze Got Worse and Worse. Gless Spent Seven Weeks in Rehab Stayed Sober for 15 Years When She Started Drinking Again.

One Doctor Gave Her a Grave Warning He Said Say 70s If You Ever Have Enough to Drink Again. Don't Call Me As I Don't Do Suicide along That's over. I Think Seven Years. I Miss the Martini Every Day. Gless Writes That Being Happy Has Always Been My Goal, so Here's a Happy Ending. Sharon Gless and Bernie Rosensweig Survived Tough Times That of Been Married 30 Years Pandemic Is Brought a Couple of Old Friends Closer Is Hardly a Morning Goes by That I Call My Wife. In Fact I'm Having Dinner with Here. It Was on Frank's Next Week off to a Wedding with Our Steve Hartman Troy Katie Hudson Colorado Say Their Wedding Was Going.

Just until the Reception When a Member of the Wedding School Wasn't Something That We Were Necessarily Prepared Emotionally to Here Is Just like I'm Doing What I Wanted You Here We Go Passionate Is Also Not I Was Planning on Making a Speech for What These Little Brother Had First Led She's Just the Best Sister I Can't Know If I Wanted to Go.

This Is Actually Katie's Half-Brother Are Separated by Nearly 2 Close As Conjoint, Which Is Why When Katie Got Engaged Just Says His Feelings Got Complicated. I Was Worried That She Would Not Spend As Much Time to See You Still Do Is Really Stressful and That Way I Didn't Want to Lose Her. Fortunately Gus Says There's Just Something about a Wedding Ceremony Just like My Worries about. Which Brings Us Back to the Reception Area Today and Now I Might As the Holidays Says Story Should Be a Reminder. Never Let the Word Cloud the Word You You Toast Ruby Sunday Morning on Again Hauling Benatar Is Best Known for Rock Anthem like Hit Me with Your Best Shot, and Love Is a Battlefield Jim Axelrod Talks with Benatar and Partner Neil Geraldo for the Record to See and Hear Benatar and Her Husband. Indeed Belong Together for Years. They Are among the Most during Couple.

If Not, at the Very Top of the List, Collaborating with Somebody for Years Is A Lot That Basically Is Only Selling 36 Million Wedding Four Consecutive Grammys Recording Top 40 Hits Heartbreaker Right. Love Is a Battle Possible, Particularly What Is at the Root of Successful Collaboration Some Way All of Them Combined Together Your Parents or Leverage Her Husband and Wife.

Your Grandparents Are Your Musicians or Writers or so, Long Island Almost Never Had the Chance to Get a Pressure Choosing Young Love over Voice My Boyfriend That I Met When I Was 16 Years Old Got Drafted and I Thought It Was Going to Die and so I Can Didn't Die and I Became a Bank Teller and Burn the Story Might've Ended Had Some Friends Not Dragged Her to a Concert Yes Is Three Born Adam Wiseman That We Should Gain Friends Said Let's Go See Lies in Richfield, Stage Lights Came up.

She Started Singing on Going Next. I Quit My Job for a Quick Literally No Liza Minnelli. Yeah, It's Just the Fact That I Saw Somebody Doing What I Really in My Heart Really Wanted within A Few Years. She Was Divorced in a New York City Booking Any Club She Could. Then Came Halloween 1977. We Are Coming into a New Situation and Her Costume Taken from the B-Movie Women of the Moon and Career Would Never Be the Same Eyeliner on Little Short Is Baptizing in a Radon.

So I Find I Sang in Costing All Experience and I Remember Standing There Thinking to Myself What's Happening Here. What Was Was Her First Record Deal.

In 1978, Which Is How She Met Her 22-year-old Guitarist from Cleveland. All's I Was Looking for Was a Great Singer.

I Just Want to Find so I Can Write Songs Produce Right, Make Records, Make Great Records Want to Be a Solo Artist. I Wanted What Robert Platt and Jimmy Page Had Together or Keith and Mick. I Wanted Back and Forth Back and Forth Back and Forth. She Was Looking for. You Were Her and She Was Sick.

We Got a Certificate. This Is Going to Go up There's Another Party? Getting Heartbreaker First Minute We Did That Was Good Follow up with Three Kids in the Next Five Years and Her Persona Would Speak to a Generation and Icon of Female Empowerment for Me to Take Any Crap from Any DJ Who Held the Power of Playing Her Socks Walking There Right Here with Me and I Was Still Kind of like Tim and Then I Finally Started to Realize Weight. I Have an Opportunity Here If I Change This for Myself. It Will Start the Ripple Effect I Had Howard Now Said That Changed Everything. Almost. We Partner Neil Had Realize Their Connection with Far Deeper Than Musical Collaborators.

Then There Is This Sort of Winning Lights Lottery Component Golfing Was Ridiculous to Mary Formalizing Thereto against the World. Posture in Dealing with the Music Business.

I Start This by Myself. I Did This Together from Day One. It Seems like It's Important Almost Set the Record Straight. This Is a Part Is Always a Mess to Be up on the Market Because Every Song. 11.

Listen to It Was Created by That They Say Rains One of the Mysteries of the Universe That Influence Number toward Not Be in the Rock 'n' Roll Hall Of Fame Is Not Bothered at This Point You're Not in the Rock When You Win Things.

It's Really Fun, but the Point Is Validate Not Validate What We Would Be Nice to Have It for Our Children for the Fan. Everything Else I Need Someone to Acknowledge. That Sounds Disarmingly Healthy. Besides, They Have Better Things to Focus on Two Grown Daughters and Two Grandchildren Who Live near Their Home outside Los Angeles. Neil Started to Record Bourbon a Company That Your Mark Some of the Sales to Help Struggling Musicians Just Found the Next Chapter for the Rock 'n' Roll Love Story Using Their Songs As the Foundation for Musical Always Called Because They Tried to Split Us up so Early on a Modern Version of Romeo and Juliet. They Hope to Bring to Broadway Next Year. It's Gorgeous.

It's like the Story That Differences between Us Stronger, Not at the Point of the Story That Exists. Romeo and Juliet Were Neil and Pat How to with John Wilson Is Your Typical Television Show. Then Again, As Caliphate Discovered John Wilson Is No Ordinary Television Host. There Are Countless Opportunities to Make Small Talk in a Big City Day after Day, the Host of HBO's How to with John Wilson Rooms New York City Filming Thousands of Moments to Put in His Show See What the NYPD Throws out Hours and Hours Every Dumpster Tells the Story Networks. Vivid Cast of Characters. Omar Little Play Play. When Mr. Terry Bradshaw, John Wilson Knows He's an Unlikely Star. He Says He Was As Surprised As Anyone When His Own Unassuming Persona Caught on the Restaurant Right after the Show Premiered. Someone Asked Me If Anyone Ever Told Me That I Look like Don Wilton Which Was Really Strange to Me Because They Assume That I Knew That Was at First. His Idea Was a Tough Sell at One Network. They Were like I Don't Get It. You Know You're the Host We Don't See You like This Was Going to Waste As Witnessing Yeah but You Know I I Always Thought That I Would Be the Least Interesting Part.

He Doesn't Sound like a Typical TV Announcer Someone Told Me That They Wish That My Voice Was Two Octaves Lower Wish for Someone Else to Have Yeah but It Stuck with Me.

Wilson Features People on the Street Captured in Unguarded Moments. Somebody Always Invites That One Friend That Nobody Wants Their Feces. It Shows a Kind of Nature Documentary like the BBC's Planet Earth Way to Begin Is by Leaving Your Apartment and Trying to Mostly Lose-80. You're the David Attenborough Telling Viewers with Their Seeing That Might Be Insulting to David Attenborough Wilson's Approaches a Bit More Do It Yourself.

Get All Dolled up to Go out and You Call a Friend to Make. He Paints His Own Title Cards Are Newspaper Doesn't Have People to Make Signs on Them so I Could Have Had a Title Budget If I Wanted One but I'm More Interested in the Actual Title As an Art Object in a Way of Warning for Viewers and Alert. The Show Was Literally Homemade Yeah That's a Warning Using a Special Paint Called White Yeah so This Is Really Think This Is the Only Thing That HBO Bought for the Titles Was They Supplied Me with A Few Bottles of White out after the Newspaper John Wilson Grew up on New York's Long Island.

You Are Using the Family Video Camera.

He Turned His Average Teenage Life and What He Called the John Show Johnson Hello I Made a Movie Every Single Day.

Growing up Now. It Was Just so Fun to Be Able to Make Your Friends Laugh. He Always Had an Eye for the Obscure and the Rejected and Sometimes He's the One Who's Rejected Where It Is like the Private Spaceflight Began in White As a Public Space Method Is Simple. Just Keep Filming Feel a Little Safer When You're Holding. Filming Is the One Thing I Don't Regret. I Regret so Many Other Things That I Do.

I Never Regret Filming Something Sean Wilson Here. Another Video Tutorial 10 Years Ago. He Began Posting How to Videos Online, like How to Clean a Cast-Iron Pan and It Was Basically like a Portrait of a Friend of Mine Who Didn't Clean up after Himself, and I Just Continued to Make Things in That Style Because Tutorials Are Really Elastic to Format in 2015 He Tagged along.

During the Making of a David Byrne Documentary Called Contemporary Color Because an Extra Spot in the Van.

Wilson Called His Film Temporary Color. It Could Have Been Called How to Get a Film Distributed at an Even Think David Had Approved Me to Be There, but Then after I Made the Movie He Saw and He Liked It so Much That He Put It on a DVD and I Was Really Nice Strong Thoughts about No Soon HBO Took Interest in His How to Video the Tragedy Is That You Never Really Learn How to Do the Thing That I'm Telling You How to Do, but Learn Something about Yourself. Hopefully, in the Process. Most of Us Don't Speak up When Were You Satisfied and Then Things Just Begin to Accumulate until You Can't Really Imagine an Alternative How to with John Wilson Premiered in October 2022 Enthusiastic Reviews Its Second Season Just to Get Something Therapeutic about Making the Show.

Yeah, Yeah, I Think the Show Deals with A Lot Of Personal Personal Issues of Mine That I Hope Other People Can Relate to Every Single Episode Is Is Is Kind of This.

This Therapy and Very Public Therapy for You.

Yeah I Don't Go to Actual Therapy so Everything in the Show Is Very Unprocessed, Something I Really like about That Helps Me Cope with the World in a Way and I Hope It Helps Other People Cope to You Don't Always Realize You're in the Middle of History until John Wilson Has Gone from Posting Pseudo-Instructional Videos Online Learning in Unexpected Lesson so How to Become the Real You for Listening. Please Join Us When Our Trumpet Sounds Again Next Sunday Morning, It's Me Drew Barrymore All My Goodness, I Want to Tell You about Our New Shout to His Knees and Each Episode Mean Weekly Gas That Can Cover All the Quirky Find Inspiring and Informative Stories That Exist on the Ball Because Well and Maybe You Do Too. From the Newest Interior Design Trend Barbie Car to the Right and Wrong Way to Wash Her Armpit Also Getting the Things That You Just Kind of Will Probably Not Able to Do in Daytime Television. So Watch out.

Tristan Is Ever You Get Your Podcast. It's a Good News on the Got