I too have a weird affection for fake food. In the tattoo shop I’ve worked at for 20+ years, i have systematically placed plastic sandwiches to confuse my clients.
So this makes you realize is one of most free country no matter your sex, race or religion? I'd go read the Constitution & Bill of Rights if you don't understand.
Waters has a house in Baltimore now. According to an article that appeared in the New York Times a few years back, Waters devoted one of the rooms in the house to an art installation he calls "The Bomb Room" - actually, it's a full-room installation by artist Gregory Green (who called it “Work Table #7”) that depicts the den of a mad bomber/terrorist, with a work bench strewn with paraphernalia resembling an in-progress explosive device, along with Christmas cards, junk food wrappers, etc, etc - basically all the crap and detritus that people typically litter their desks with. How's that for cheeky?
@@peka__ Actually, you're right on the mark, because that's exactly what Waters goes through every time he has a big party - usually there are politicians from DC attending - and security has to do a sweep of the house first.
@@tommydurkin213 Awww... don't know what you're dreaming of, little troll. You seem so eager to share some of your personal fantasies with us. I love all of his movies and he is one of the few artists who managed to become even better when he switched from underground to mainstream.
Just came here from a video of Werner Herzog saying (paraphrasing), "After knowing John Waters for 35 years, I turned to my wife and said, I think he might be gay"
A guy with more weird books than I have - whew! I thought I was nuts, though he is John Waters. It reminds me of how desperately I need a bookshelf, I've been using tables - shelving was easier to find in the good ol' days. Now it's cheap and expensive all at the same time.
He actually lives more modest than i expected as i assumed he had a nice big house somewhere in a Baltimore suburb. Reminds me of an old MTV Cribs episode showing Moby's N.Y. apartment
This recording is quite old, from before he found massive commercial success. He now owns a home in a Baltimore neighborhood called Tuscany Canterbury, which is about as suburban as you can get while still living in the city bounds, and as the name suggests it is a very nice neighborhood. He also owns properties in San Francisco and Provincetown I believe. So yea, definitely living that life now. Good for him! He is the GOAT!!!
The point I wanted to make was that he isn't ostentatious. He wants comfortable place to live but he's so not Beverly Hills. He did write a book about himself hitchhiking across America and he did that well past his success. He roughed it.
Start going to flea markets and you'll amass a collection in no time, for very little money. Although everything there has some value as collectibles, the audience for that type of thing will die with this generation, and prices will get lower and lower. Do you really think that modern kids care about kitsch and vintage collectibles?
"Hairspray," which wasn't too far into the future from this point, made John Waters mainstream. It's almost a shame; he was kind of more fun before. I'd forgotten how cute he was when he was younger.
In my world, he is considered Sir John Waters! He's got to be one of the most coolest and real entertainment behind the scenes people around and think-out-of-the-box filmmaker artist.
Wow what a time to be alive. People lived interesting lives and passionately persued their interests without any though of promoting themselves by taking photos of their breakfast or showing off their boring vacations on social media. There were lots of exceptional people, so only the most exceptional among them were deemed worthy of celebrity. Now it is the opposite. Now influencers would only have that many books if it was for a decorative wall.
Hi Tod. This is WJZ-TV here in Baltimore. We saw your hilarious posting with John Waters touring his home in 1986. Is that your footage? We were hoping to use some of that in a story we are doing with him and didn't know who owned it and if we could use it with courtesy?
Thanks for watching and I’m glad you enjoyed the piece! I was working for what is now WUSA, and was at the time WTOP, the CBS affiliate in Washington, D.C. as a director/writer/producer on a weekly series called Capital Edition, that aired on Sunday mornings after the CBS News series Sunday Morning, then hosted by Charles Kuralt. My guess is that the station owns the copyright on the story, unless the host of the show, John Goldsmith, bought the series from them. I’m not monetizing the piece, and I don’t claim any rights to it - I put it up because I always enjoyed the opportunity to meet and film John Waters, and I’m happy it’s been up thus far without issue. That’s all I know about the rights and ownership.
I saw that in a theater with 500 people in like 81-82. They had scratch and sniff cards for everyone. When number 2 flashed on the screen, you could HEAR all the scratching of the whole audience, then 500 people sniffing deeply, followed by groans and shrieks. I've only once in my life been in such a crowd that collectively smelled a sulphurous rotten egg fart at the same instant. It was hilarious, vile and glorious at the same time. Plus It only cost me 99 cents. Waters totally gets what's behind the facade of the American dream like nobody else.
Maybe that old movie about the woman giving birth was one my mother mentioned watching and she got faint at the sight of blood and had to be carried out of the theater.
@@nightstalkerck Yeah, but you'd think a guy like him would've spent the money. Plus I don't think they were really that prohibitively expensive, anyway.
@@Melissa0774 Believe me, someone who's always collected many films, they were very expensive, I had two vcrs which cost me around $450 apiece just so I could rent and copy them, movies didn't start getting cheaper until the early 90's.
a local Washington, D.C. television station, in those days WTOP, a CBS affiliate. I was a director/writer/producer on a weekly Sunday morning magazine show titled Capital Edition.
I'm in love. He's so DADA. Would have totally married him. Books, research, and tongue-in-cheek design. YES. That's me as a man. Style, dear sir. STYLE.
Anything is possible in this world with determination and inspiration. John Waters is proof of this. As human beings we ALL make mistakes but we can also do amazing things, love is the most beautiful thing mankind will ever know and it is an invention that is not are own.💜