I still think Murray's Razor's Edge is one of the greatest coming of age, life lesson, philosophy movies. It made me think and more importantly it made me curious about world outside my bubble, about people's motivations, about the point of life and how I should live mine. In a phrase it woke me up. Thanks.
It's too bad audiences couldn't get past expectations for a slapstick comedy.
because when the going gets tough, the tough get going in the pants. Also when I see that other guy in some tv show or movie, I'm like "Cujo!". I still have it somewhere on betamax.
It doesnt say if he got the 800 number in the end, he probably did.
god such a long piece just so he can be friends with Bill Murray. and yet, totally worth it!
I've always loved how Bill Murray toys with, and flat out ignores the media. It's funny how the reporter seems to feel entitled to be able to speak with Bill Murray. He makes it out to be a big deal, almost a personal insult and disservice, when he doesn't get to. It's simply foreign to him why someone who doesn't know him doesn't want to speak to him. The only reason he can come up with is that Bill Murray must be mad at him!
To hear these stories is refreshing, and it really flips the common narrative of movie stars looking for all the attention they can get on it's head.
The reporter was right though. Bill Murray had actively avoided the reporter because someone else had warned him to.
But what she didn’t tell me, until confirming weeks later in a follow-up call, was that she had been uneasy enough about our interview to send Murray a warning.
Newman pulled up the exchange and read part of it to me over the phone.
Murray was already “horrified,” though we couldn’t determine if that was embarrassment about being singled out for the Twain.
Yeah, you're correct there. I'm not sure if that makes it much better though. He was even warned by the interviewee that Bill would not like what he was doing.
The other thing is that he is super friendly to random people on the street. I know quite a few people who have bumped into him and he always has some sort of quick joke to tell.
In all seriousness though, hacker mentality is exemplified in people like Bill. His quotes in this piece on "waking up" by rattling things around is a great perspective to have for budding entrepreneurs, or for "hackers" stuck at the office at 5pm on a Friday.
Exactly the same as the last 10 fluff articles on Bill Murray. I love the guy but this is one of those standby stories you keep around for when you don't have anything better to run.
I don't know why people find Bill Murry's behavior weird.
He from the baby boom generation--I guess. This classification of certain age groups is kinda new. I don't find it helpful, but certain age groups had certain characteristics. In my mind, his formative years were from the 50's through the eighties.
Bill Murry seems like the guys I grew up with, although I'm younger than him.
We didn't like conformity. We weren't impressed with money. We weren't impressed with what school you went to. We didn't need awards, or a pat on the back. We looked at a lot of "Puffed Chests" as absolute jokes. We though Regan was an absolute laughable president. We looked at the entrenched establishment types with extreme disdain. Remember Punk Rock. Remember Letterman when he first got the Late Show? Remember how he treated the "Stars". That wasen't an act. We rebeled. There was a FU attitude to everything our parents kinda valued. We didn't want to be our dads who died at fifty. We wanted to have a good time. We wanted to be left alone. We valued privacy. You can say we wanted it all, but we didn't. We were just different, or maybe we weren't?
All I know is if I could live like Bill Murry I would. Oh yea, what does our generation value; talent, ethics, and morality.
(Why was Murry one of the few actors Letterman didn't destroy? Murry had talent, and not just the funny talent. Letterman liked the way the thought. He liked the guy on a lot of levels? I think they both respected eachother.)
Or maybe it's not about intellectually lazy media-created categories like "hipsters", but more about sincere interest in an artist whose career spans 4+ decades -- far beyond when "hipster" was even a thing in the modern (not the Norman Mailer 50s) sense.
If by that you mean "responded with an argument to a vague and contentless accusation", then yes.
Is there a more childish response to an argument than "ha! it got to you"?
(Not to mention that age-wise I'm far off from the "hipster" demographic, and was watching Bill Murray way before hipster was even a term. Not everybody is 20-something on the internet).
stories of random encounters with bill are my favorite. whether true or not, i think it says something that most are believable.
from the comment section on WP:
Personal Bill Murray Story - A woman I know (a mother of 6 kids) was working in a small town Montana clothing store when Bill Murray walked in. He asked her to show him the nicest woman's garment they had in the store. She showed him a winter coat and he asked her to model it for him. He told her he would take it and when she started to box it up he told her "the coat is for you Mary." I am sure that she had never personally owned something as nice in her life, given to her in such a generous manner
42 comments
[ 4.2 ms ] story [ 79.5 ms ] threadMaybe Garfield.
It's too bad audiences couldn't get past expectations for a slapstick comedy.
One title to prove you wrong: Orlando.
http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0236519
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/arts-and-entertainment/w...
http://wgntv.com/2016/10/21/bill-murray-crashes-white-house-...
To hear these stories is refreshing, and it really flips the common narrative of movie stars looking for all the attention they can get on it's head.
But what she didn’t tell me, until confirming weeks later in a follow-up call, was that she had been uneasy enough about our interview to send Murray a warning.
Newman pulled up the exchange and read part of it to me over the phone.
Murray was already “horrified,” though we couldn’t determine if that was embarrassment about being singled out for the Twain.
Then he responded to her concerns about me.
“I’ll try to kill this,” he wrote.
The interview? The story? My career?
In all seriousness though, hacker mentality is exemplified in people like Bill. His quotes in this piece on "waking up" by rattling things around is a great perspective to have for budding entrepreneurs, or for "hackers" stuck at the office at 5pm on a Friday.
He from the baby boom generation--I guess. This classification of certain age groups is kinda new. I don't find it helpful, but certain age groups had certain characteristics. In my mind, his formative years were from the 50's through the eighties.
Bill Murry seems like the guys I grew up with, although I'm younger than him.
We didn't like conformity. We weren't impressed with money. We weren't impressed with what school you went to. We didn't need awards, or a pat on the back. We looked at a lot of "Puffed Chests" as absolute jokes. We though Regan was an absolute laughable president. We looked at the entrenched establishment types with extreme disdain. Remember Punk Rock. Remember Letterman when he first got the Late Show? Remember how he treated the "Stars". That wasen't an act. We rebeled. There was a FU attitude to everything our parents kinda valued. We didn't want to be our dads who died at fifty. We wanted to have a good time. We wanted to be left alone. We valued privacy. You can say we wanted it all, but we didn't. We were just different, or maybe we weren't?
All I know is if I could live like Bill Murry I would. Oh yea, what does our generation value; talent, ethics, and morality.
(Why was Murry one of the few actors Letterman didn't destroy? Murry had talent, and not just the funny talent. Letterman liked the way the thought. He liked the guy on a lot of levels? I think they both respected eachother.)
Is this site no longer moderated?
If you mean the article, it's on HN because HN is a social bookmarking site, and it was upvoted.
This site has been turning to shit for a while.
Is there a more childish response to an argument than "ha! it got to you"?
(Not to mention that age-wise I'm far off from the "hipster" demographic, and was watching Bill Murray way before hipster was even a term. Not everybody is 20-something on the internet).
from the comment section on WP: Personal Bill Murray Story - A woman I know (a mother of 6 kids) was working in a small town Montana clothing store when Bill Murray walked in. He asked her to show him the nicest woman's garment they had in the store. She showed him a winter coat and he asked her to model it for him. He told her he would take it and when she started to box it up he told her "the coat is for you Mary." I am sure that she had never personally owned something as nice in her life, given to her in such a generous manner