297: RIP James Lipton, a huge influence and inspiration episode artwork

EPISODE · Mar 4, 2020 · 8 MIN

297: RIP James Lipton, a huge influence and inspiration

from This Sustainable Life

James Lipton, who started and hosted the show Inside the Actors Studio, died yesterday.Here are the notes I read from for this episode:I could talk about how much I enjoyed the episodes, his humor, and a few things I learned from his guests that only his interviewing could have elicited but I will go deeper, to share how fundamental his work has been to mine.Many times I've said that if my courses existed before I went to business school and someone were teaching them, I would have taken them instead of business school and gotten more of what I valued. He helped me create them.Context: I had taken leadership classes but, despite high grades from top school, I didn't know how to act.Watched Inside the Actors Studio for entertainment.Noticed great actors excelled at social and emotional skills, beyond what my professors could do.Noticed they tended to have dropped out of school, been kicked out, or never enrolled.How to resolve this conflict?Also noticed names popping up a lot—Stella Adler, Lee Strassberg, Sanford Meisner, Group Theater, Harold Clurman, most of all Konstantine Stanislavsky.Looked them up and learned of tradition often called Method Acting that grew in America from Russia.Around recession because friend sold his business to take Meisner Technique classes.Asked him all sorts of questions about it. He suggested taking it.Realized actors didn't stop education. They switched style of learning.Experienced new levels of learning social and emotional skills, relevant to all relationships, not just acting.Taking it changed how I learned ASEEP fields, combined with learning about John Dewey and project-based learning, which led to how I teach leadership. Led me to start founding a school for leadership.NYU ended up hiring me to teach, which led to my books.The structure of how I teach and coach leadership, initiative, entrepreneurship, sales, and social entrepreneurship is Meisner Technique.The exercises are similar, but drawn from their respective domains instead of acting.Start with basics and build toward mastery with no big jumps.Results include students consistently saying they didn't know they could learn these things at all, let alone in a structured class.All this comes from James Lipton making known the style of learning from Inside the Actors Studio.I since realized the structure exists in teaching to play musical instruments, to sing, to dance, to play any sport, improv, the military hence basic training, and all ASEEP fields.In a totally other direction, since I interview people on the podcast, I follow him a lot—supportive, not confrontational, getting to know the person, though I don't do the quick end questions.I went to see them record Inside the Actors Studio live twice. Sarah Silverman and Bryan Cranston. 5-hour events. I loved. I brought notes to leave to invite him to be a guest on the podcast. Spoke to several people. Actually, went to his office at Pace and spoke to people there, but nothing came of it.Thank you, James Lipton for helping form two of the foundation stones everything I do rests on.Blog posts of mine referring to James Lipton or Inside the Actors Studio:Method acting, leadership, and improving your life, from James LiptonSeeing my inspiration, Inside The Actors Studio, live Observations on leadership and success from Inside the Actors StudioLeadership lessons from method actingHow to turn lemons into lemonade, part I Observations on leadership and success from Inside the Actors Studio More on leadership and success from Inside the Actors Studio: what anyone overcame, you can tooGeorge Clooney on being yourself in the face of adversity Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

James Lipton, who started and hosted the show Inside the Actors Studio, died yesterday.Here are the notes I read from for this episode:I could talk about how much I enjoyed the episodes, his humor, and a few things I learned from his guests that only his interviewing could have elicited but I will go deeper, to share how fundamental his work has been to mine.Many times I've said that if my courses existed before I went to business school and someone were teaching them, I would have taken them instead of business school and gotten more of what I valued. He helped me create them.Context: I had taken leadership classes but, despite high grades from top school, I didn't know how to act.Watched Inside the Actors Studio for entertainment.Noticed great actors excelled at social and emotional skills, beyond what my professors could do.Noticed they tended to have dropped out of school, been kicked out, or never enrolled.How to resolve this conflict?Also noticed names popping up a lot—Stella Adler, Lee Strassberg, Sanford Meisner, Group Theater, Harold Clurman, most of all Konstantine Stanislavsky.Looked them up and learned of tradition often called Method Acting that grew in America from Russia.Around recession because friend sold his business to take Meisner Technique classes.Asked him all sorts of questions about it. He suggested taking it.Realized actors didn't stop education. They switched style of learning.Experienced new levels of learning social and emotional skills, relevant to all relationships, not just acting.Taking it changed how I learned ASEEP fields, combined with learning about John Dewey and project-based learning, which led to how I teach leadership. Led me to start founding a school for leadership.NYU ended up hiring me to teach, which led to my books.The structure of how I teach and coach leadership, initiative, entrepreneurship, sales, and social entrepreneurship is Meisner Technique.The exercises are similar, but drawn from their respective domains instead of acting.Start with basics and build toward mastery with no big jumps.Results include students consistently saying they didn't know they could learn these things at all, let alone in a structured class.All this comes from James Lipton making known the style of learning from Inside the Actors Studio.I since realized the structure exists in teaching to play musical instruments, to sing, to dance, to play any sport, improv, the military hence basic training, and all ASEEP fields.In a totally other direction, since I interview people on the podcast, I follow him a lot—supportive, not confrontational, getting to know the person, though I don't do the quick end questions.I went to see them record Inside the Actors Studio live twice. Sarah Silverman and Bryan Cranston. 5-hour events. I loved. I brought notes to leave to invite him to be a guest on the podcast. Spoke to several people. Actually, went to his office at Pace and spoke to people there, but nothing came of it.Thank you, James Lipton for helping form two of the foundation stones everything I do rests on.Blog posts of mine referring to James Lipton or Inside the Actors Studio:Method acting, leadership, and improving your life, from James LiptonSeeing my inspiration, Inside The Actors Studio, live Observations on leadership and success from Inside the Actors StudioLeadership lessons from method actingHow to turn lemons into lemonade, part I Observations on leadership and success from Inside the Actors Studio More on leadership and success from Inside the Actors Studio: what anyone overcame, you can tooGeorge Clooney on being yourself in the face of adversity Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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Big Old Life: Heather Blackbird interviews people on planet earth. Heather Blackbird loves asking questions. This podcast is a learning experience. Join me, Heather Blackbird, as I talk to people about their lives. Frequency of new episodes is a little all over the place and I'm learning as I go. Big Old Life is a small way of talking about the vastness of life, one person at a time. If you are reading this or found this podcast it's probably because someone you know gave you a link to it. :) Explicit Tales Of A Superstar DJ The Insomniac Spun seemingly out of nowhere from her complacent life in the corporate world, turned seemingly overnight from 16-Hour shift work and into the life of a literally starving artist and working musician, The Protagonist navigates her supposed rise to fame and superstardom on a journey through spiritual awakening, coming-of-age, and intimate self-realization--guided by an omnipresent force and equipped with the power of love, magic, and music. {Enter The Multiverse.} [The Festival Project] The Festival Project, Inc.™ is a multidimensional multimedia platform which encompasses exploratory and artistic social personifications and expressions on cosmic theory, spirituality, growth, health & wellness, philosophy and theoretic dynamics in entertainment such as music, design, film, television, radio, dance and festival culture, art, fashion, literature, and science. The Festival Project™ and its subsidiary Non-Profit, The Collective Complex © aims to challenge modern artistic and philosop Explicit The Sacred +Profane Podcast nephtaragrace The Sacred + Profane Podcast is a provocative conversation dedicated to cementing a better future for all. We specialize in unpacking the nuances of what is considered sacred and profane, particularly focusing on sex, death, and all that pertains to the circle of life. Our aim in focusing on such ”taboo” subject matter is to demystify what is unconscious, bring to light what has been known for centuries as ”the occult,” and empower the rapid transformation that is occurring on the Planet. Explicit Northern Sass and Southern Class Tay and Ani Come sit in on girl talk with Tay and Ani as we discuss life in Texas, girl math, food, wine and roasting each other. Explicit

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James Lipton, who started and hosted the show Inside the Actors Studio, died yesterday.Here are the notes I read from for this episode:I could talk about how much I enjoyed the episodes, his humor, and a few things I learned from his guests that...

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