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Sarah Lyall on London vs. New York | Big Think
Sarah Lyall on London vs. New York
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New York wins in the relaxed category, Sarah Lyall notes
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Sarah Lyall:
Sarah Lyall grew up in New York City and is now London correspondent for the New York Times. She lives there with her husband, the writer Robert McCrum, and their two daughters. Her first book was entitled The Anglo Files: A Field Guide to the British.
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TRANSCRIPT:
Lyall: Oh, that’s so interesting. I’m, you know, I’m from New Yo...
published: 24 Apr 2012
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Sarah Lyall on the British and Alcohol | Big Think
Sarah Lyall on the British and Alcohol
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Sarah Lyall explains why the Brits are always bombed.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sarah Lyall:
Sarah Lyall grew up in New York City and is now London correspondent for the New York Times. She lives there with her husband, the writer Robert McCrum, and their two daughters. Her first book was entitled The Anglo Files: A Field Guide to the British.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TRANSCRIPT:
Question: What is the average Brit’s relationship to alcohol?
Sar...
published: 24 Apr 2012
-
Sarah Lyall on Celebrity Culture | Big Think
Sarah Lyall on Celebrity Culture
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Sarah Lyall talks about a society keen on its celebrities and Heath Ledger.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sarah Lyall:
Sarah Lyall grew up in New York City and is now London correspondent for the New York Times. She lives there with her husband, the writer Robert McCrum, and their two daughters. Her first book was entitled The Anglo Files: A Field Guide to the British.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TRANSCRIPT:
Question: Do the British obsess more about celebri...
published: 24 Apr 2012
-
Sarah Lyall Reads from The 'Anglo Files'
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published: 20 Apr 2012
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Sarah Lyall on Writing About the British
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ABOUT BIG THINK:
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Big Think is the leading source of expert-driven, actionable, educational content -- with thousands of videos, featuring experts ranging from Bill Clinton to Bill Nye, we help you get smarter, faster. Subscribe to learn from top minds like these daily. Get actionable lessons from the world’s greatest thinkers & doers. Our experts are either disrupting or leading their respective fields. We aim to help you explore the big ideas and core skills that define knowledge in the 21st centu...
published: 20 Apr 2012
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Sarah Lyall on Crime in Britain | Big Think
Sarah Lyall on Crime in Britain
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Mix a densely populated island with a lot of knives and crime gets worse, Sarah Lyall notes.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sarah Lyall:
Sarah Lyall grew up in New York City and is now London correspondent for the New York Times. She lives there with her husband, the writer Robert McCrum, and their two daughters. Her first book was entitled The Anglo Files: A Field Guide to the British.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TRANSCRIPT:
Lyall: Well, there aren’t any guns...
published: 24 Apr 2012
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Sarah Lyall on the British and Religion | Big Think
Sarah Lyall on the British and Religion
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Immigration is making Britain more religiously diverse, but still agnostic, Sarah Lyall observes.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sarah Lyall:
Sarah Lyall grew up in New York City and is now London correspondent for the New York Times. She lives there with her husband, the writer Robert McCrum, and their two daughters. Her first book was entitled The Anglo Files: A Field Guide to the British.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TRANSCRIPT:
Question: Are the Bri...
published: 24 Apr 2012
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Sarah Lyall on Moving to London
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published: 20 Apr 2012
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Sarah Lyall on Newspaper vs. Book Writing | Big Think
Sarah Lyall on Newspaper vs. Book Writing
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The self-discipline required for writing books caught Sarah Lyall off guard.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sarah Lyall:
Sarah Lyall grew up in New York City and is now London correspondent for the New York Times. She lives there with her husband, the writer Robert McCrum, and their two daughters. Her first book was entitled The Anglo Files: A Field Guide to the British.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TRANSCRIPT:
Lyall: It’s really hard. It was so hard ...
published: 24 Apr 2012
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Sarah Lyall on the Decline of America | Big Think
Sarah Lyall on the Decline of America
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Sarah Lyall likens it to the fall of the Roman Empire.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sarah Lyall:
Sarah Lyall grew up in New York City and is now London correspondent for the New York Times. She lives there with her husband, the writer Robert McCrum, and their two daughters. Her first book was entitled The Anglo Files: A Field Guide to the British.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TRANSCRIPT:
Lyall: Well, I think the parallels with America are more like t...
published: 24 Apr 2012
0:44
Sarah Lyall on London vs. New York | Big Think
Sarah Lyall on London vs. New York
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Sarah Lyall on London vs. New York
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New York wins in the relaxed category, Sarah Lyall notes
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sarah Lyall:
Sarah Lyall grew up in New York City and is now London correspondent for the New York Times. She lives there with her husband, the writer Robert McCrum, and their two daughters. Her first book was entitled The Anglo Files: A Field Guide to the British.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TRANSCRIPT:
Lyall: Oh, that’s so interesting. I’m, you know, I’m from New York. I like New York, but London is just cool. It’s really cool. It’s really, really, really international. It’s incredibly fun to walk around, and you get lost really easily, ‘cause it’s impossible to… you know, there’s no grid pattern. You can’t find your way around. And as an American, it’s like a complete candy store, you know. It’s just so new and different and interesting. But, you know, when you come back to New York, people are so relaxed, and I like the relaxed bit.
https://wn.com/Sarah_Lyall_On_London_Vs._New_York_|_Big_Think
Sarah Lyall on London vs. New York
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New York wins in the relaxed category, Sarah Lyall notes
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sarah Lyall:
Sarah Lyall grew up in New York City and is now London correspondent for the New York Times. She lives there with her husband, the writer Robert McCrum, and their two daughters. Her first book was entitled The Anglo Files: A Field Guide to the British.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TRANSCRIPT:
Lyall: Oh, that’s so interesting. I’m, you know, I’m from New York. I like New York, but London is just cool. It’s really cool. It’s really, really, really international. It’s incredibly fun to walk around, and you get lost really easily, ‘cause it’s impossible to… you know, there’s no grid pattern. You can’t find your way around. And as an American, it’s like a complete candy store, you know. It’s just so new and different and interesting. But, you know, when you come back to New York, people are so relaxed, and I like the relaxed bit.
- published: 24 Apr 2012
- views: 2714
6:14
Sarah Lyall on the British and Alcohol | Big Think
Sarah Lyall on the British and Alcohol
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Sarah Lyall on the British and Alcohol
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Sarah Lyall explains why the Brits are always bombed.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sarah Lyall:
Sarah Lyall grew up in New York City and is now London correspondent for the New York Times. She lives there with her husband, the writer Robert McCrum, and their two daughters. Her first book was entitled The Anglo Files: A Field Guide to the British.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TRANSCRIPT:
Question: What is the average Brit’s relationship to alcohol?
Sarah: They just like to drink a lot more, you know? It’s weird, ‘cause I come from New York, and certainly I did my share of drinking in college, etc. But after, you get over it and you’re not kind of out getting trashed every single weekend. And, I think, with Brits, because they’re uptight, you know, they really depend on alcohol often to even have a decent conversation. And I’m really shocked, when I had lunch once years ago with a friend, and my husband was there, and it was a friend in Long Island and she invited us to her house, and it was just like a simple lunch, like a salad or something. And as we left, my husband said “God, you know, that guy she had there was such a nice guy. It’s a shame that he’s an alcoholic.” And I said “Well, why do you say that? We didn’t even have anything to drink.” He said “Well, yeah. That’s why I assumed she didn’t serve wine, because he has a drinking problem.” You know, he couldn’t, like, fathom the idea of having a meal with no alcohol. And I think, Brits, because they have a kind of ambivalent attitude in the society toward alcohol, you know, there’s a kind of strain of puritanism there, the way there is here, they really overdo it. And just specially, kind of kids and people even in their 30s, the object is to get as completely drunk as you can. It’s like frat boys every single weekend and, you know, they quickly move beyond the place where it makes them voluble and interesting and fun to where they are, like, insensible and vomiting. There’s like a pretty short span, ‘cause they drink so fast, too.
Question: Do the women drink as much as the men?
Sarah: Well, the girls drink just as much as the guys do, because they figure if you can’t they’re not going to talk to you. You might as well be drinking also, and maybe they’ll be able to meet someone. I mean, they all seem to get, like, completely trashed and then go home with each other without literally having had a conversation, and the whole idea is get fucked up, have sex, and maybe you’d like each other tomorrow, or maybe not. And over and over again, and the big issue now is women binge drinking the way the man do, because they’re trying to be cool the way the men are. And it seems like just as bad. It seems like a completely across the board problem. And, you know, you go to these cities in Britain in the weekends, and you can’t even walk down the street because there’s everyone sick, and they’re fighting, and they’re insensible and then they, it’s like being in college. The next day, they’re like, “Well, I was so fucked up, I can’t even remember how I got home. It’s so cool!” And it’s just, you know, after a while, you just think, “Grow up little bit.”
Question: Why do Brits get so smashed on holidays?
Sarah: The Brits really enjoy the behaving bad part. They really enjoy the aggression that it allows them to give play to. And so, what they do now is they take these cheap flights all over Europe and they go to these really beautiful places, like Prague or Budapest or, you know, Ibiza and Spain, where it’s cheaper. The drinks are cheaper, the bars and clubs cater to British tourists and have really cheap kind of package deals, you know, all you can drink for $40 kind of thing. And the idea is, you know, just drink as much as you can, as much as you can. I interviewed these guys… I couldn’t really put it into the piece. It’s too long. But they’re telling me what they had had the night before, and this was, I met them at breakfast, and they were kind of completely hung over, having a little, you know, hair of the dog in the morning to get them through the day. And they described to me, and they said, you know, in the hotel we had some vodka and some lager, some beer. Then we went out, and there was this special thing where they had, like, 6 types of alcohol all mixed together, plus fruit juice, and they have 5 of those apiece, and they’re in bowls, and there is some special €2 per bowl. And then they had some kind of rum drink.
Read the full transcript at https://bigthink.com/videos/sarah-lyall-on-the-british-and-alcohol/
https://wn.com/Sarah_Lyall_On_The_British_And_Alcohol_|_Big_Think
Sarah Lyall on the British and Alcohol
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----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sarah Lyall explains why the Brits are always bombed.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sarah Lyall:
Sarah Lyall grew up in New York City and is now London correspondent for the New York Times. She lives there with her husband, the writer Robert McCrum, and their two daughters. Her first book was entitled The Anglo Files: A Field Guide to the British.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TRANSCRIPT:
Question: What is the average Brit’s relationship to alcohol?
Sarah: They just like to drink a lot more, you know? It’s weird, ‘cause I come from New York, and certainly I did my share of drinking in college, etc. But after, you get over it and you’re not kind of out getting trashed every single weekend. And, I think, with Brits, because they’re uptight, you know, they really depend on alcohol often to even have a decent conversation. And I’m really shocked, when I had lunch once years ago with a friend, and my husband was there, and it was a friend in Long Island and she invited us to her house, and it was just like a simple lunch, like a salad or something. And as we left, my husband said “God, you know, that guy she had there was such a nice guy. It’s a shame that he’s an alcoholic.” And I said “Well, why do you say that? We didn’t even have anything to drink.” He said “Well, yeah. That’s why I assumed she didn’t serve wine, because he has a drinking problem.” You know, he couldn’t, like, fathom the idea of having a meal with no alcohol. And I think, Brits, because they have a kind of ambivalent attitude in the society toward alcohol, you know, there’s a kind of strain of puritanism there, the way there is here, they really overdo it. And just specially, kind of kids and people even in their 30s, the object is to get as completely drunk as you can. It’s like frat boys every single weekend and, you know, they quickly move beyond the place where it makes them voluble and interesting and fun to where they are, like, insensible and vomiting. There’s like a pretty short span, ‘cause they drink so fast, too.
Question: Do the women drink as much as the men?
Sarah: Well, the girls drink just as much as the guys do, because they figure if you can’t they’re not going to talk to you. You might as well be drinking also, and maybe they’ll be able to meet someone. I mean, they all seem to get, like, completely trashed and then go home with each other without literally having had a conversation, and the whole idea is get fucked up, have sex, and maybe you’d like each other tomorrow, or maybe not. And over and over again, and the big issue now is women binge drinking the way the man do, because they’re trying to be cool the way the men are. And it seems like just as bad. It seems like a completely across the board problem. And, you know, you go to these cities in Britain in the weekends, and you can’t even walk down the street because there’s everyone sick, and they’re fighting, and they’re insensible and then they, it’s like being in college. The next day, they’re like, “Well, I was so fucked up, I can’t even remember how I got home. It’s so cool!” And it’s just, you know, after a while, you just think, “Grow up little bit.”
Question: Why do Brits get so smashed on holidays?
Sarah: The Brits really enjoy the behaving bad part. They really enjoy the aggression that it allows them to give play to. And so, what they do now is they take these cheap flights all over Europe and they go to these really beautiful places, like Prague or Budapest or, you know, Ibiza and Spain, where it’s cheaper. The drinks are cheaper, the bars and clubs cater to British tourists and have really cheap kind of package deals, you know, all you can drink for $40 kind of thing. And the idea is, you know, just drink as much as you can, as much as you can. I interviewed these guys… I couldn’t really put it into the piece. It’s too long. But they’re telling me what they had had the night before, and this was, I met them at breakfast, and they were kind of completely hung over, having a little, you know, hair of the dog in the morning to get them through the day. And they described to me, and they said, you know, in the hotel we had some vodka and some lager, some beer. Then we went out, and there was this special thing where they had, like, 6 types of alcohol all mixed together, plus fruit juice, and they have 5 of those apiece, and they’re in bowls, and there is some special €2 per bowl. And then they had some kind of rum drink.
Read the full transcript at https://bigthink.com/videos/sarah-lyall-on-the-british-and-alcohol/
- published: 24 Apr 2012
- views: 3704
4:09
Sarah Lyall on Celebrity Culture | Big Think
Sarah Lyall on Celebrity Culture
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Sarah Lyall on Celebrity Culture
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Sarah Lyall talks about a society keen on its celebrities and Heath Ledger.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sarah Lyall:
Sarah Lyall grew up in New York City and is now London correspondent for the New York Times. She lives there with her husband, the writer Robert McCrum, and their two daughters. Her first book was entitled The Anglo Files: A Field Guide to the British.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TRANSCRIPT:
Question: Do the British obsess more about celebrities than Americans?
Lyall: I think Americans obsess a lot over celebrity, but, I think, the thing about Britain, you have to remember, it’s a small country. It, you know, there’s an expression that they use, saying that you punch above your weight, which means you kind of play with the big boys when you’re not such a big boy? So, Britain, you know, tries to be more of a kind of world figure than it maybe is, and so, it kind of want to do what America does, but it doesn’t have as many celebrities. It doesn’t have as many serious things to fill its paper with, papers with, as America does. So, it has this weird celebrity culture filled with not that important celebrities, actually. A lot of newspapers that it has to sell and a lot of tabloids that are completely, Hollywoodized. I mean, they’re all about kind of crap, really. And so, so you do, it’s in the culture much more. I mean, there is a kind of lack of seriousness in discourse there because of all that, I think. It’s really brought down the tone of a lot of the papers, all the celebrity stuff.
Question: What was your experience interviewing Heath Ledger?
Sarah: Sure. I interviewed him right before the Dark Knight was wrapping. I think he was in his last couple of months of filming, and he was… you know, first of all, he’s really good looking. A lot of movie actors aren’t good looking at all when you meet them, you know? They’re much smaller than you would hope they were, which is fine. I have nothing against short people, but that… But, you know, but you’re disappointed ‘cause they don’t look the same as you want them to look. And he was like a big, strapping, you know, Australian guy. He clearly was really bright, really creative, and very restless. And, you know, but charming, and charming and intelligent, and clearly having a tough time with the filming. And one of the things we’ve talked about was insomnia, because I suffer from insomnia as well, so we were sort of trading tips. So, I mean, what kind of drugs to take and what kind of, you know, techniques we used. And he, kind of hauntingly, he said, you know, “I’ve been taking Ambien, and I took one last night and it didn’t work, so I took another one, and then I only slept for an hour.” And he said, you know, “My mind is fizzing with this role. I cannot get my mind to shut up.” And he didn’t seem like he was, you know, on anything. He just seemed like he was clearly somebody who was, one of those people who gets so into his work that he couldn’t calm it down, those voices that were, you know, all excited and fizzy. And so I felt just so sad at the way he died because, clearly, he was talking about that and it clearly was a mistake, I think, because he just couldn’t get any sleep, and I know what that feels like. It’s awful. And so, it was just shocking, ‘cause he seemed… He was so full of life and so lovely, and we talked about his daughter. He was, you know, a little baby daughter. He just loved her. And it was just such a waste. It was so sad. The interview was in November… Did he die in February, was it that? I think it was pretty… So, I think, the last big interview that he did. And again, you know, I just would have had no idea, and he certainly wasn’t suicidal. He was really full of life, but it was so poignant. He was living in a beautiful rented house in London. It had, I think, 3 or 4 bedrooms. They took me on a tour. Beautiful place. And he showed me every single bed he had been. It was all [mussy], you know, all the sheets were everywhere. And he said, “‘Cause last night, I just couldn’t sleep, so I went from bed to bed, hoping I could fall asleep somewhere.” It’s just so sad. Just so sad. And, you know, you wonder if someone had really kind of taken him in hand and said, you know, “This movie is hurting your health. Let’s try to work on this,” if he could have been helped. Who knows? You know, creative people are, you can’t really… you don’t really have answers do you? You can’t really know what makes them tick. But it was just… It was a tragedy. A real tragedy.
https://wn.com/Sarah_Lyall_On_Celebrity_Culture_|_Big_Think
Sarah Lyall on Celebrity Culture
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Sarah Lyall talks about a society keen on its celebrities and Heath Ledger.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sarah Lyall:
Sarah Lyall grew up in New York City and is now London correspondent for the New York Times. She lives there with her husband, the writer Robert McCrum, and their two daughters. Her first book was entitled The Anglo Files: A Field Guide to the British.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TRANSCRIPT:
Question: Do the British obsess more about celebrities than Americans?
Lyall: I think Americans obsess a lot over celebrity, but, I think, the thing about Britain, you have to remember, it’s a small country. It, you know, there’s an expression that they use, saying that you punch above your weight, which means you kind of play with the big boys when you’re not such a big boy? So, Britain, you know, tries to be more of a kind of world figure than it maybe is, and so, it kind of want to do what America does, but it doesn’t have as many celebrities. It doesn’t have as many serious things to fill its paper with, papers with, as America does. So, it has this weird celebrity culture filled with not that important celebrities, actually. A lot of newspapers that it has to sell and a lot of tabloids that are completely, Hollywoodized. I mean, they’re all about kind of crap, really. And so, so you do, it’s in the culture much more. I mean, there is a kind of lack of seriousness in discourse there because of all that, I think. It’s really brought down the tone of a lot of the papers, all the celebrity stuff.
Question: What was your experience interviewing Heath Ledger?
Sarah: Sure. I interviewed him right before the Dark Knight was wrapping. I think he was in his last couple of months of filming, and he was… you know, first of all, he’s really good looking. A lot of movie actors aren’t good looking at all when you meet them, you know? They’re much smaller than you would hope they were, which is fine. I have nothing against short people, but that… But, you know, but you’re disappointed ‘cause they don’t look the same as you want them to look. And he was like a big, strapping, you know, Australian guy. He clearly was really bright, really creative, and very restless. And, you know, but charming, and charming and intelligent, and clearly having a tough time with the filming. And one of the things we’ve talked about was insomnia, because I suffer from insomnia as well, so we were sort of trading tips. So, I mean, what kind of drugs to take and what kind of, you know, techniques we used. And he, kind of hauntingly, he said, you know, “I’ve been taking Ambien, and I took one last night and it didn’t work, so I took another one, and then I only slept for an hour.” And he said, you know, “My mind is fizzing with this role. I cannot get my mind to shut up.” And he didn’t seem like he was, you know, on anything. He just seemed like he was clearly somebody who was, one of those people who gets so into his work that he couldn’t calm it down, those voices that were, you know, all excited and fizzy. And so I felt just so sad at the way he died because, clearly, he was talking about that and it clearly was a mistake, I think, because he just couldn’t get any sleep, and I know what that feels like. It’s awful. And so, it was just shocking, ‘cause he seemed… He was so full of life and so lovely, and we talked about his daughter. He was, you know, a little baby daughter. He just loved her. And it was just such a waste. It was so sad. The interview was in November… Did he die in February, was it that? I think it was pretty… So, I think, the last big interview that he did. And again, you know, I just would have had no idea, and he certainly wasn’t suicidal. He was really full of life, but it was so poignant. He was living in a beautiful rented house in London. It had, I think, 3 or 4 bedrooms. They took me on a tour. Beautiful place. And he showed me every single bed he had been. It was all [mussy], you know, all the sheets were everywhere. And he said, “‘Cause last night, I just couldn’t sleep, so I went from bed to bed, hoping I could fall asleep somewhere.” It’s just so sad. Just so sad. And, you know, you wonder if someone had really kind of taken him in hand and said, you know, “This movie is hurting your health. Let’s try to work on this,” if he could have been helped. Who knows? You know, creative people are, you can’t really… you don’t really have answers do you? You can’t really know what makes them tick. But it was just… It was a tragedy. A real tragedy.
- published: 24 Apr 2012
- views: 1297
4:29
Sarah Lyall Reads from The 'Anglo Files'
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- published: 20 Apr 2012
- views: 547
1:14
Sarah Lyall on Writing About the British
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https://wn.com/Sarah_Lyall_On_Writing_About_The_British
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- published: 20 Apr 2012
- views: 440
1:20
Sarah Lyall on Crime in Britain | Big Think
Sarah Lyall on Crime in Britain
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Sarah Lyall on Crime in Britain
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Mix a densely populated island with a lot of knives and crime gets worse, Sarah Lyall notes.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sarah Lyall:
Sarah Lyall grew up in New York City and is now London correspondent for the New York Times. She lives there with her husband, the writer Robert McCrum, and their two daughters. Her first book was entitled The Anglo Files: A Field Guide to the British.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TRANSCRIPT:
Lyall: Well, there aren’t any guns, so, they have knives… I think another thing about England, is really… in Britain in general, a very angry kind of place, and all that kind of the old sort of image of Brits as being really polite and sort of not bothered by things isn’t really true anymore. I think they’re, you know, it’s a small space. They live too many people in too little an area, and there’s a lot of frustration, and so it erupts, you know. There’s a lot of kind of road rage and other sorts of rage: computer rage, people’s throwing computers out the window ‘cause they don’t work. There’s a horrible thing recently where somebody was in line and they thought someone had not, you know, sort of bumped in from them in the line and they called their boyfriend, who came and beat up the guy, but they beat up the wrong guy and the guy they beat up died. He, you know, he, like, fell on the ground and hit his head and died. And so, I think, the knife thing is a kind of manifestation of the anger, you know. It’s kind of quick, quick crime. And I think there’s a lot of, you know, inner city violence these days, and if people [aren’t] themselves that’s what going to happen, you know?
https://wn.com/Sarah_Lyall_On_Crime_In_Britain_|_Big_Think
Sarah Lyall on Crime in Britain
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Mix a densely populated island with a lot of knives and crime gets worse, Sarah Lyall notes.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sarah Lyall:
Sarah Lyall grew up in New York City and is now London correspondent for the New York Times. She lives there with her husband, the writer Robert McCrum, and their two daughters. Her first book was entitled The Anglo Files: A Field Guide to the British.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TRANSCRIPT:
Lyall: Well, there aren’t any guns, so, they have knives… I think another thing about England, is really… in Britain in general, a very angry kind of place, and all that kind of the old sort of image of Brits as being really polite and sort of not bothered by things isn’t really true anymore. I think they’re, you know, it’s a small space. They live too many people in too little an area, and there’s a lot of frustration, and so it erupts, you know. There’s a lot of kind of road rage and other sorts of rage: computer rage, people’s throwing computers out the window ‘cause they don’t work. There’s a horrible thing recently where somebody was in line and they thought someone had not, you know, sort of bumped in from them in the line and they called their boyfriend, who came and beat up the guy, but they beat up the wrong guy and the guy they beat up died. He, you know, he, like, fell on the ground and hit his head and died. And so, I think, the knife thing is a kind of manifestation of the anger, you know. It’s kind of quick, quick crime. And I think there’s a lot of, you know, inner city violence these days, and if people [aren’t] themselves that’s what going to happen, you know?
- published: 24 Apr 2012
- views: 490
2:03
Sarah Lyall on the British and Religion | Big Think
Sarah Lyall on the British and Religion
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Sarah Lyall on the British and Religion
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Immigration is making Britain more religiously diverse, but still agnostic, Sarah Lyall observes.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sarah Lyall:
Sarah Lyall grew up in New York City and is now London correspondent for the New York Times. She lives there with her husband, the writer Robert McCrum, and their two daughters. Her first book was entitled The Anglo Files: A Field Guide to the British.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TRANSCRIPT:
Question: Are the British religious?
Lyall: Not really. I mean, it’s the Church of England, which is the old Anglican, you know, pretty strict religion. Not much anymore. You know, there’s a lot of immigration now and a lot of them are Catholic. There’s a lot of Poles there, a lot of Eastern Europeans. And so that’s where the immigration, that’s where religion would be increasing. And Islam is increasing because there’s more Muslim immigrants as well. But they, they’re shocked, [my] American, you know, the American religions right, you know, they can’t believe that people exist who have the 10 Commandments on their front lawns and who were saying that Iraq is God’s will, and that makes some kind of sick, actually.
Question: Why did Tony Blair convert to Catholicism?
Lyall: Well, he did it after he left office. His wife is Catholic. And, I think, you know, he honestly is a kind of spiritual guy, you know? He really… For all that you might think he made terrible, terrible mistakes, you know, I’m not allowed to say it, [some mystery reporter]. But, for all you think that Iraq might have been a terrible, terrible thing, I honestly believe that he thought it was the right thing to do morally. I think he felt there was an obligation to get rid of Saddam Hussein. And, I think, while he was in office, he couldn’t convert to Catholicism because it would have been seen as a big deal politically. And I’m not sure it’s ‘cause he didn’t want to alienate Anglicans. I think it’s just it would have detracted, distracted from his job and all the other stuff he was doing. But it is kind of shocking, ‘cause it makes you look backwards and think, or, you know, some of the decisions he made, is that because he was already a Catholic or whatever? You just don’t really know. But he did it pretty quietly, and he… It seemed, you know, again, if you sort of at least respect someone for following through on their own principles, it was a commendable thing to do.
https://wn.com/Sarah_Lyall_On_The_British_And_Religion_|_Big_Think
Sarah Lyall on the British and Religion
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Immigration is making Britain more religiously diverse, but still agnostic, Sarah Lyall observes.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sarah Lyall:
Sarah Lyall grew up in New York City and is now London correspondent for the New York Times. She lives there with her husband, the writer Robert McCrum, and their two daughters. Her first book was entitled The Anglo Files: A Field Guide to the British.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TRANSCRIPT:
Question: Are the British religious?
Lyall: Not really. I mean, it’s the Church of England, which is the old Anglican, you know, pretty strict religion. Not much anymore. You know, there’s a lot of immigration now and a lot of them are Catholic. There’s a lot of Poles there, a lot of Eastern Europeans. And so that’s where the immigration, that’s where religion would be increasing. And Islam is increasing because there’s more Muslim immigrants as well. But they, they’re shocked, [my] American, you know, the American religions right, you know, they can’t believe that people exist who have the 10 Commandments on their front lawns and who were saying that Iraq is God’s will, and that makes some kind of sick, actually.
Question: Why did Tony Blair convert to Catholicism?
Lyall: Well, he did it after he left office. His wife is Catholic. And, I think, you know, he honestly is a kind of spiritual guy, you know? He really… For all that you might think he made terrible, terrible mistakes, you know, I’m not allowed to say it, [some mystery reporter]. But, for all you think that Iraq might have been a terrible, terrible thing, I honestly believe that he thought it was the right thing to do morally. I think he felt there was an obligation to get rid of Saddam Hussein. And, I think, while he was in office, he couldn’t convert to Catholicism because it would have been seen as a big deal politically. And I’m not sure it’s ‘cause he didn’t want to alienate Anglicans. I think it’s just it would have detracted, distracted from his job and all the other stuff he was doing. But it is kind of shocking, ‘cause it makes you look backwards and think, or, you know, some of the decisions he made, is that because he was already a Catholic or whatever? You just don’t really know. But he did it pretty quietly, and he… It seemed, you know, again, if you sort of at least respect someone for following through on their own principles, it was a commendable thing to do.
- published: 24 Apr 2012
- views: 1012
0:54
Sarah Lyall on Moving to London
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ABOUT BIG THINK:
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Big Think is the leading source of expert-driven, actionable, educational content -- with thousands of videos, featuring experts ranging from Bill Clinton to Bill Nye, we help you get smarter, faster. Subscribe to learn from top minds like these daily. Get actionable lessons from the world’s greatest thinkers & doers. Our experts are either disrupting or leading their respective fields. We aim to help you explore the big ideas and core skills that define knowledge in the 21st century, so you can apply them to the questions and challenges in your own life.
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https://wn.com/Sarah_Lyall_On_Moving_To_London
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- published: 20 Apr 2012
- views: 533
2:25
Sarah Lyall on Newspaper vs. Book Writing | Big Think
Sarah Lyall on Newspaper vs. Book Writing
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Sarah Lyall on Newspaper vs. Book Writing
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The self-discipline required for writing books caught Sarah Lyall off guard.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sarah Lyall:
Sarah Lyall grew up in New York City and is now London correspondent for the New York Times. She lives there with her husband, the writer Robert McCrum, and their two daughters. Her first book was entitled The Anglo Files: A Field Guide to the British.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TRANSCRIPT:
Lyall: It’s really hard. It was so hard to switch gears, you know. I’m so used to writing relatively short pieces, 1200 words, 800 words, whatever, maybe some magazine pieces. But suddenly you’re writing a book, and you’re expanding, and you don’t have to just keep cutting out material. You can put more material in. You can write in a different way. And I feel that, you know, all the old, my old abilities as a creative writer in school, etc., before I was a newspaper reporter had kind of atrophied, you know. The muscles that I had, it just dwindled, and I had to really, really, really work to get those going again. Also, you know, having all that time. When you’re a reporter – and you probably know this, too – you work to deadline, you know. It’s like, do it now! You have 2 hours, and 2 hours is, like, a long time. But, suddenly, you have 2 years, and it’s really hard to discipline yourself to actually do it. Also, I was shocked at how bad I felt doing the book, you know? I felt like it took so many drafts to make it sound like it hadn’t taken any drafts at all, you know? I think it was John Kenneth Galbraith who once said something like, “It takes me 8 drafts to achieve that casual, effortless tone that my editors love so much.” And that’s how I felt. I mean, I had to write it over and over again to get it to sound exactly the way I want it to. And I found being stuck alone, with just me and my thoughts, which when you’re newspaper reporting, you’re not, ‘cause you’re always looking at the web and you’re always doing interviews and you’re always talking to your editor, and that’s, you know, you have to have a very short attentions span, in a way. For a book, you have to have a long attention span
You know, this is a book of essays, and they’re supposed to be funny, and there are, you know, it’s impressionistic, these topics that I have picked. So, if I do another book and, you know, picked one topic that, you know, it would be a whole different world for me. I’d love to try it. I’m, you know, incredibly relieved I was able to do this one at all, ’cause for awhile, I thought , I don’t know how people do this, how they’re left with themselves and live through it, book after book after book. It’s just beyond me.
https://wn.com/Sarah_Lyall_On_Newspaper_Vs._Book_Writing_|_Big_Think
Sarah Lyall on Newspaper vs. Book Writing
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The self-discipline required for writing books caught Sarah Lyall off guard.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sarah Lyall:
Sarah Lyall grew up in New York City and is now London correspondent for the New York Times. She lives there with her husband, the writer Robert McCrum, and their two daughters. Her first book was entitled The Anglo Files: A Field Guide to the British.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TRANSCRIPT:
Lyall: It’s really hard. It was so hard to switch gears, you know. I’m so used to writing relatively short pieces, 1200 words, 800 words, whatever, maybe some magazine pieces. But suddenly you’re writing a book, and you’re expanding, and you don’t have to just keep cutting out material. You can put more material in. You can write in a different way. And I feel that, you know, all the old, my old abilities as a creative writer in school, etc., before I was a newspaper reporter had kind of atrophied, you know. The muscles that I had, it just dwindled, and I had to really, really, really work to get those going again. Also, you know, having all that time. When you’re a reporter – and you probably know this, too – you work to deadline, you know. It’s like, do it now! You have 2 hours, and 2 hours is, like, a long time. But, suddenly, you have 2 years, and it’s really hard to discipline yourself to actually do it. Also, I was shocked at how bad I felt doing the book, you know? I felt like it took so many drafts to make it sound like it hadn’t taken any drafts at all, you know? I think it was John Kenneth Galbraith who once said something like, “It takes me 8 drafts to achieve that casual, effortless tone that my editors love so much.” And that’s how I felt. I mean, I had to write it over and over again to get it to sound exactly the way I want it to. And I found being stuck alone, with just me and my thoughts, which when you’re newspaper reporting, you’re not, ‘cause you’re always looking at the web and you’re always doing interviews and you’re always talking to your editor, and that’s, you know, you have to have a very short attentions span, in a way. For a book, you have to have a long attention span
You know, this is a book of essays, and they’re supposed to be funny, and there are, you know, it’s impressionistic, these topics that I have picked. So, if I do another book and, you know, picked one topic that, you know, it would be a whole different world for me. I’d love to try it. I’m, you know, incredibly relieved I was able to do this one at all, ’cause for awhile, I thought , I don’t know how people do this, how they’re left with themselves and live through it, book after book after book. It’s just beyond me.
- published: 24 Apr 2012
- views: 335
1:36
Sarah Lyall on the Decline of America | Big Think
Sarah Lyall on the Decline of America
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Sarah Lyall on the Decline of America
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Sarah Lyall likens it to the fall of the Roman Empire.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sarah Lyall:
Sarah Lyall grew up in New York City and is now London correspondent for the New York Times. She lives there with her husband, the writer Robert McCrum, and their two daughters. Her first book was entitled The Anglo Files: A Field Guide to the British.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TRANSCRIPT:
Lyall: Well, I think the parallels with America are more like the Roman Empire, but that was way long ago. You know, the thing about the Brits is they had this huge empire and they had a lot of land all over the world, and the end of their empire is when they had to give it up, you know, a lot… Between the wars and then after World War 2, they gave up the rest of it. And they’re just this tiny little place, tiny, tiny little place, and they gave up a lot of their economic power when they gave up those places. The American empire, such as it is, isn’t a land empire. It’s not like it owns, you know, half of the world. It’s more, you know, how it manifest its power, its economic empire. It’s an influence empire. And so it’s, I’m not quite sure it’s the same. And also, Britain, you know, it always had a strange attitude towards its empire. It felt entitled, but it also felt this kind of that it wasn’t allowed to be proud of itself, you know. Brits don’t like to boast. They feel that their kind of greatness is innate and doesn’t have to be discussed, whereas Americans actually feel entitled and they feel they should talk about how great they are, and, I think, you know, to the extent our empire is ending and will eventually end here. It’s going to be devastating for the American sense of themselves, whereas the British, you know, they’ve been trying to work that out for a long time now.
https://wn.com/Sarah_Lyall_On_The_Decline_Of_America_|_Big_Think
Sarah Lyall on the Decline of America
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Sarah Lyall likens it to the fall of the Roman Empire.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sarah Lyall:
Sarah Lyall grew up in New York City and is now London correspondent for the New York Times. She lives there with her husband, the writer Robert McCrum, and their two daughters. Her first book was entitled The Anglo Files: A Field Guide to the British.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TRANSCRIPT:
Lyall: Well, I think the parallels with America are more like the Roman Empire, but that was way long ago. You know, the thing about the Brits is they had this huge empire and they had a lot of land all over the world, and the end of their empire is when they had to give it up, you know, a lot… Between the wars and then after World War 2, they gave up the rest of it. And they’re just this tiny little place, tiny, tiny little place, and they gave up a lot of their economic power when they gave up those places. The American empire, such as it is, isn’t a land empire. It’s not like it owns, you know, half of the world. It’s more, you know, how it manifest its power, its economic empire. It’s an influence empire. And so it’s, I’m not quite sure it’s the same. And also, Britain, you know, it always had a strange attitude towards its empire. It felt entitled, but it also felt this kind of that it wasn’t allowed to be proud of itself, you know. Brits don’t like to boast. They feel that their kind of greatness is innate and doesn’t have to be discussed, whereas Americans actually feel entitled and they feel they should talk about how great they are, and, I think, you know, to the extent our empire is ending and will eventually end here. It’s going to be devastating for the American sense of themselves, whereas the British, you know, they’ve been trying to work that out for a long time now.
- published: 24 Apr 2012
- views: 664