00:00you know, I think it was just those were huge topics that I think I must not be the only one
00:04who thinks about these things. So I think that was sort of the catalyst. And then on top of that,
00:10it was really for my first film, I think it was my homage and paying respects to all of the sort
00:16of left of center films that I grew up loving, which are all of the I mean, one I haven't
00:21mentioned, but but when I was a small, I was way too young to watch this movie when it came out,
00:25but the man with two brains with Steve Martin. So I think that formed that along with like the
00:31comedian Steven Wright, I grew up while I loved him in very strange perspectives on things. And
00:39then with other movies, like Scorsese's After Hours, or Paul Thomas Anderson, Punch Drunk Love,
00:46Eternal Sunshine, Spotless Mind, Charlie Kaufman is probably one of my favorite screenwriters of
00:52all time. So I really, you know, a lot of it is paying sort of homage to those. The most important
01:00message is, I think that that no matter what's going on, you know, one thing I've come to realize
01:06over recent years is that all of the all of the bad things, all of the good things, those are all
01:11what make us who we are. That's all part of our experience. You know, everything happens for a
01:16reason. There was a reason why, you know, X happened and Z happened for Mortimer. Because
01:25he just sort of needed, needed to be shooken, or shaked, you know, and woken up, just being an
01:32artist. You know, for me, I try not to separate it. You know, for a long time, I think a lot of
01:39artists struggle with like trying to define themselves. And I truly feel that there's a
01:44renaissance, you know, I think things go in cycles, maybe every 30 years, you know, in the
01:4980s, in the early 80s, late 70s, in New York City, you had Debbie Harry, you had Basquiat, you had
01:54all of these amazing artists who eventually became known for Blondie or as a fine artist or whatever.
02:00But back in the day, when they were all living in New York City, they were artists.
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