Designing books is no laughing matter. OK, it is.
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0:06 - 0:08Hi.
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0:08 - 0:10(Laughter)
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0:10 - 0:13I did that for two reasons.
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0:13 - 0:16First of all, I wanted to give you
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0:16 - 0:19a good visual first impression.
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0:19 - 0:22But the main reason I did it is that
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0:22 - 0:25that's what happens to me when I'm forced to wear
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0:25 - 0:28a Lady Gaga skanky mic.
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0:28 - 0:31(Laughter)
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0:31 - 0:35I'm used to a stationary mic.
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0:35 - 0:38It's the sensible shoe of public address.
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0:38 - 0:44(Laughter)
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0:44 - 0:47But you clamp this thing on my head, and something happens.
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0:47 - 0:50I just become skanky.
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0:50 - 0:54(Laughter) So I'm sorry about that.
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0:54 - 0:57And I'm already off-message.
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0:57 - 1:00(Laughter)
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1:00 - 1:03Ladies and gentlemen,
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1:03 - 1:07I have devoted the past 25 years of my life
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1:07 - 1:09to designing books.
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1:09 - 1:11"Yes, BOOKS. You know, the bound volumes with ink on paper.
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1:11 - 1:13You cannot turn them off with a switch.
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1:13 - 1:15Tell your kids."
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1:15 - 1:19It all sort of started as a benign mistake,
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1:19 - 1:22like penicillin. (Laughter)
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1:22 - 1:25What I really wanted
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1:25 - 1:27was to be a graphic designer
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1:27 - 1:29at one of the big design firms in New York City.
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1:29 - 1:32But upon arrival there,
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1:32 - 1:36in the fall of 1986, and doing a lot of interviews,
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1:36 - 1:39I found that the only thing I was offered
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1:39 - 1:42was to be Assistant to the Art Director at Alfred A. Knopf,
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1:42 - 1:44a book publisher.
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1:44 - 1:47Now I was stupid,
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1:47 - 1:50but not so stupid that I turned it down.
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1:50 - 1:53I had absolutely no idea
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1:53 - 1:55what I was about to become part of,
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1:55 - 1:57and I was incredibly lucky.
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1:57 - 2:01Soon, it had occurred to me what my job was.
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2:01 - 2:04My job was to ask this question:
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2:04 - 2:05"What do the stories look like?"
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2:05 - 2:08Because that is what Knopf is.
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2:08 - 2:11It is the story factory, one of the very best in the world.
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2:11 - 2:14We bring stories to the public.
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2:14 - 2:17The stories can be anything,
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2:17 - 2:19and some of them are actually true.
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2:19 - 2:24But they all have one thing in common:
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2:24 - 2:27They all need to look like something.
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2:27 - 2:30They all need a face.
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2:30 - 2:34Why? To give you a first impression
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2:34 - 2:37of what you are about to get into.
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2:37 - 2:41A book designer gives form to content,
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2:41 - 2:43but also
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2:43 - 2:46manages a very careful balance between the two.
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2:46 - 2:48Now, the first day
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2:48 - 2:51of my graphic design training at Penn State University,
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2:51 - 2:54the teacher, Lanny Sommese, came into the room
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2:54 - 2:57and he drew a picture of an apple on the blackboard,
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2:57 - 2:59and wrote the word "Apple" underneath,
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2:59 - 3:02and he said, "OK. Lesson one. Listen up."
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3:02 - 3:05And he covered up the picture and he said,
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3:05 - 3:08"You either say this," and then he covered up the word,
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3:08 - 3:11"or you show this.
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3:11 - 3:14But you don't do this."
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3:14 - 3:19Because this is treating your audience like a moron.
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3:19 - 3:22(Laughter)
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3:22 - 3:25And they deserve better.
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3:25 - 3:27And lo and behold, soon enough,
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3:27 - 3:30I was able to put this theory to the test
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3:30 - 3:34on two books that I was working on for Knopf.
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3:34 - 3:38The first was Katharine Hepburn's memoirs,
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3:38 - 3:41and the second was a biography of Marlene Dietrich.
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3:41 - 3:44Now the Hepburn book
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3:44 - 3:47was written in a very conversational style,
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3:47 - 3:50it was like she was sitting across a table telling it all to you.
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3:50 - 3:53The Dietrich book was an observation
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3:53 - 3:55by her daughter; it was a biography.
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3:55 - 3:58So the Hepburn story is words
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3:58 - 4:02and the Dietrich story is pictures, and so we did this.
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4:02 - 4:05So there you are.
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4:05 - 4:08Pure content and pure form, side by side.
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4:08 - 4:11No fighting, ladies.
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4:11 - 4:13"What's a Jurassic Park?"
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4:13 - 4:16Now, what is the story here?
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4:16 - 4:19Someone
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4:19 - 4:22is re-engineering dinosaurs
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4:22 - 4:25by extracting their DNA
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4:25 - 4:28from prehistoric amber.
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4:28 - 4:31Genius!
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4:31 - 4:35(Laughter)
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4:35 - 4:38Now, luckily for me,
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4:38 - 4:40I live and work in New York City,
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4:40 - 4:42where there are plenty of dinosaurs.
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4:42 - 4:45(Laughter)
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4:45 - 4:49So,
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4:49 - 4:51I went to the Museum of Natural History,
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4:51 - 4:55and I checked out the bones, and I went to the gift shop,
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4:55 - 4:56and I bought a book.
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4:56 - 5:00And I was particularly taken with this page of the book,
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5:00 - 5:04and more specifically the lower right-hand corner.
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5:04 - 5:07Now I took this diagram,
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5:07 - 5:11and I put it in a Photostat machine,
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5:11 - 5:17(Laughter)
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5:17 - 5:20and I took a piece of tracing paper,
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5:20 - 5:24and I taped it over the Photostat
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5:24 - 5:27with a piece of Scotch tape -- stop me if I'm going too fast --
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5:27 - 5:34(Laughter)
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5:34 - 5:37and then I took a Rapidograph pen --
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5:37 - 5:40explain it to the youngsters --
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5:40 - 5:43(Laughter)
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5:43 - 5:47and I just started to reconstitute the dinosaur.
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5:47 - 5:50I had no idea what I was doing,
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5:50 - 5:52I had no idea where I was going,
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5:52 - 5:54but at some point, I stopped --
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5:54 - 5:58when to keep going would seem like I was going too far.
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5:58 - 6:02And what I ended up with was a graphic representation
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6:02 - 6:06of us seeing this animal coming into being.
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6:06 - 6:08We're in the middle of the process.
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6:08 - 6:11And then I just threw some typography on it.
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6:11 - 6:13Very basic stuff,
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6:13 - 6:16slightly suggestive of public park signage.
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6:16 - 6:22(Laughter)
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6:22 - 6:24Everybody in house loved it,
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6:24 - 6:26and so off it goes to the author.
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6:26 - 6:28And even back then,
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6:28 - 6:30Michael was on the cutting edge.
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6:30 - 6:34"Michael Crichton responds by fax:"
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6:34 - 6:36"Wow! Fucking Fantastic Jacket"
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6:36 - 6:43(Laughter) (Applause)
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6:43 - 6:47That was a relief to see that pour out of the machine.
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6:47 - 6:50(Laughter)
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6:50 - 6:53I miss Michael.
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6:53 - 6:56And sure enough, somebody from MCA Universal
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6:56 - 6:59calls our legal department to see if they can
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6:59 - 7:01maybe look into buying the rights to the image,
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7:01 - 7:04just in case they might want to use it.
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7:04 - 7:07Well, they used it.
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7:07 - 7:12(Laughter) (Applause)
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7:12 - 7:15And I was thrilled.
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7:15 - 7:17We all know it was an amazing movie,
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7:17 - 7:19and it was so interesting to see it
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7:19 - 7:23go out into the culture and become this phenomenon
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7:23 - 7:26and to see all the different permutations of it.
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7:26 - 7:29But not too long ago,
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7:29 - 7:32I came upon this on the Web.
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7:32 - 7:35No, that is not me.
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7:35 - 7:38But whoever it is,
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7:38 - 7:41I can't help but thinking they woke up one day like,
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7:41 - 7:44"Oh my God, that wasn't there last night. Ooooohh!
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7:44 - 7:47I was so wasted."
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7:47 - 7:50(Laughter)
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7:50 - 7:53But if you think about it, from my head
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7:53 - 7:56to my hands to his leg.
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7:56 - 8:01(Laughter)
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8:01 - 8:04That's a responsibility.
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8:04 - 8:07And it's a responsibility that I don't take lightly.
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8:07 - 8:10The book designer's responsibility is threefold:
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8:10 - 8:14to the reader, to the publisher and, most of all, to the author.
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8:14 - 8:17I want you to look at the author's book
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8:17 - 8:20and say, "Wow! I need to read that."
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8:20 - 8:23David Sedaris is one of my favorite writers,
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8:23 - 8:26and the title essay
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8:26 - 8:29in this collection is about his trip to a nudist colony.
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8:29 - 8:31And the reason he went is because
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8:31 - 8:33he had a fear of his body image,
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8:33 - 8:36and he wanted to explore what was underlying that.
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8:36 - 8:39For me, it was simply an excuse to design a book
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8:39 - 8:42that you could literally take the pants off of.
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8:42 - 8:45But when you do,
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8:45 - 8:47you don't get what you expect.
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8:47 - 8:49You get something that goes much deeper than that.
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8:49 - 8:53And David especially loved this design
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8:53 - 8:56because at book signings, which he does a lot of,
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8:56 - 8:59he could take a magic marker and do this.
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8:59 - 9:05(Laughter)
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9:05 - 9:08Hello!
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9:08 - 9:11(Laughter)
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9:11 - 9:14Augusten Burroughs wrote a memoir
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9:14 - 9:17called ["Dry"], and it's about his time in rehab.
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9:17 - 9:22In his 20s, he was a hotshot ad executive,
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9:22 - 9:25and as Mad Men has told us, a raging alcoholic.
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9:25 - 9:28He did not think so, however,
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9:28 - 9:31but his coworkers did an intervention and they said,
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9:31 - 9:35"You are going to rehab, or you will be fired and you will die."
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9:35 - 9:39Now to me, this was always going to be a typographic solution,
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9:39 - 9:41what I would call the opposite of Type 101.
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9:41 - 9:43What does that mean?
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9:43 - 9:45Usually on the first day of Introduction to Typography,
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9:45 - 9:48you get the assignment of, select a word
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9:48 - 9:51and make it look like what it says it is. So that's Type 101, right?
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9:51 - 9:53Very simple stuff.
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9:53 - 9:56This is going to be the opposite of that.
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9:56 - 9:59I want this book to look like it's lying to you,
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9:59 - 10:03desperately and hopelessly, the way an alcoholic would.
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10:03 - 10:06The answer was the most low-tech thing you can imagine.
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10:06 - 10:10I set up the type, I printed it out on an Epson printer
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10:10 - 10:13with water-soluble ink, taped it to the wall
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10:13 - 10:16and threw a bucket of water at it. Presto!
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10:16 - 10:18Then when we went to press,
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10:18 - 10:20the printer put a spot gloss on the ink
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10:20 - 10:22and it really looked like it was running.
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10:22 - 10:25Not long after it came out, Augusten was waylaid in an airport
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10:25 - 10:27and he was hiding out in the bookstore
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10:27 - 10:29spying on who was buying his books.
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10:29 - 10:32And this woman came up to it,
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10:32 - 10:34and she squinted, and she took it to the register,
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10:34 - 10:37and she said to the man behind the counter, "This one's ruined."
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10:37 - 10:41(Laughter)
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10:41 - 10:46And the guy behind the counter said, "I know, lady. They all came in that way."
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10:46 - 10:51(Laughter)
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10:51 - 10:54Now, that's a good printing job.
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10:54 - 10:57A book cover
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10:57 - 11:00is a distillation.
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11:00 - 11:03It is a haiku,
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11:03 - 11:06if you will, of the story.
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11:06 - 11:09This particular story
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11:09 - 11:12by Osama Tezuka
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11:12 - 11:15is his epic life of the Buddha,
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11:15 - 11:18and it's eight volumes in all. But the best thing is
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11:18 - 11:22when it's on your shelf, you get a shelf life
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11:22 - 11:26of the Buddha, moving from one age to the next.
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11:29 - 11:32All of these solutions
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11:32 - 11:36derive their origins from the text of the book,
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11:36 - 11:39but once the book designer has read the text,
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11:39 - 11:42then he has to be an interpreter
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11:42 - 11:45and a translator.
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11:45 - 11:48This story was a real puzzle.
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11:48 - 11:51This is what it's about.
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11:51 - 11:54"Intrigue and murder among 16th century Ottoman court painters."
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11:54 - 11:57(Laughter)
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11:57 - 12:01All right, so I got a collection of the paintings together
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12:01 - 12:03and I looked at them and I deconstructed them
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12:03 - 12:05and I put them back together.
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12:05 - 12:07And so, here's the design, right?
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12:07 - 12:10And so here's the front and the spine, and it's flat.
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12:10 - 12:13But the real story starts when you wrap it around a book and put it on the shelf.
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12:13 - 12:17Ahh! We come upon them,
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12:17 - 12:20the clandestine lovers. Let's draw them out.
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12:20 - 12:25Huhh! They've been discovered by the sultan.
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12:25 - 12:28He will not be pleased.
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12:28 - 12:31Huhh! And now the sultan is in danger.
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12:31 - 12:34And now, we have to open it up
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12:34 - 12:37to find out what's going to happen next.
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12:37 - 12:40Try experiencing that on a Kindle.
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12:40 - 12:47(Laughter)
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12:47 - 12:50Don't get me started.
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12:50 - 12:53Seriously.
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12:53 - 12:57Much is to be gained by eBooks:
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12:57 - 13:00ease, convenience, portability.
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13:00 - 13:03But something is definitely lost: tradition,
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13:03 - 13:08a sensual experience, the comfort of thingy-ness --
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13:08 - 13:11a little bit of humanity.
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13:11 - 13:14Do you know what John Updike used to do
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13:14 - 13:16the first thing when he would get a copy
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13:16 - 13:18of one of his new books from Alfred A. Knopf?
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13:18 - 13:21He'd smell it.
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13:21 - 13:25Then he'd run his hand over the rag paper,
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13:25 - 13:28and the pungent ink and the deckled edges of the pages.
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13:28 - 13:33All those years, all those books, he never got tired of it.
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13:33 - 13:37Now, I am all for the iPad,
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13:37 - 13:41but trust me -- smelling it will get you nowhere.
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13:41 - 13:44(Laughter)
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13:44 - 13:47Now the Apple guys are texting,
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13:47 - 13:50"Develop odor emission plug-in."
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13:50 - 13:55(Laughter)
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13:55 - 13:58And the last story I'm going to talk about is quite a story.
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13:58 - 14:01A woman
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14:01 - 14:04named Aomame in 1984 Japan finds herself
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14:04 - 14:07negotiating down a spiral staircase
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14:07 - 14:10off an elevated highway. When she gets to the bottom,
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14:10 - 14:12she can't help but feel that, all of a sudden,
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14:12 - 14:14she's entered a new reality
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14:14 - 14:17that's just slightly different from the one that she left,
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14:17 - 14:19but very similar, but different.
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14:19 - 14:22And so, we're talking about parallel planes of existence,
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14:22 - 14:26sort of like a book jacket and the book that it covers.
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14:26 - 14:29So how do we show this?
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14:29 - 14:33We go back to Hepburn and Dietrich, but now we merge them.
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14:33 - 14:37So we're talking about different planes, different pieces of paper.
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14:37 - 14:40So this is on a semi-transparent piece of velum.
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14:40 - 14:43It's one part of the form and content.
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14:43 - 14:46When it's on top of the paper board,
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14:46 - 14:49which is the opposite, it forms this.
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14:49 - 14:53So even if you don't know anything about this book,
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14:53 - 14:56you are forced to consider a single person
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14:56 - 14:59straddling two planes of existence.
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14:59 - 15:04And the object itself invited exploration
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15:04 - 15:09interaction, consideration
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15:09 - 15:12and touch.
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15:12 - 15:14This debuted at number two
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15:14 - 15:16on the New York Times Best Seller list.
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15:16 - 15:18This is unheard of,
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15:18 - 15:20both for us the publisher, and the author.
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15:20 - 15:22We're talking a 900-page book
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15:22 - 15:24that is as weird as it is compelling,
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15:24 - 15:26and featuring a climactic scene
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15:26 - 15:28in which a horde of tiny people
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15:28 - 15:30emerge from the mouth of a sleeping girl
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15:30 - 15:32and cause a German Shepherd to explode.
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15:32 - 15:40(Laughter)
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15:40 - 15:43Not exactly Jackie Collins.
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15:43 - 15:46Fourteen weeks on the Best Seller list,
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15:46 - 15:49eight printings, and still going strong.
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15:49 - 15:52So even though we love publishing as an art,
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15:52 - 15:55we very much know it's a business too,
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15:55 - 15:58and that if we do our jobs right and get a little lucky,
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15:58 - 16:01that great art can be great business.
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16:01 - 16:04So that's my story. To be continued.
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16:04 - 16:07What does it look like?
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16:07 - 16:12Yes. It can, it does and it will,
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16:12 - 16:15but for this book designer,
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16:15 - 16:18page-turner,
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16:18 - 16:21dog-eared place-holder,
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16:21 - 16:24notes in the margins-taker,
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16:24 - 16:27ink-sniffer,
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16:27 - 16:31the story looks like this.
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16:31 - 16:34Thank you.
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16:34 - 16:37(Applause)
- Title:
- Designing books is no laughing matter. OK, it is.
- Speaker:
- Chip Kidd
- Description:
-
Chip Kidd doesn’t judge books by their cover, he creates covers that embody the book -- and he does it with a wicked sense of humor. In one of the funniest talks from TED2012, he shows the art and deep thought of his cover designs. (From The Design Studio session at TED2012, guest-curated by Chee Pearlman and David Rockwell.)
- Video Language:
- English
- Team:
closed TED
- Project:
- TEDTalks
- Duration:
- 16:55
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Morton Bast edited English subtitles for Designing books is no laughing matter. OK, it is. | |
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Morton Bast edited English subtitles for Designing books is no laughing matter. OK, it is. | |
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Stefania Scardigli edited English subtitles for Designing books is no laughing matter. OK, it is. | |
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Stefania Scardigli edited English subtitles for Designing books is no laughing matter. OK, it is. | |
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Stefania Scardigli edited English subtitles for Designing books is no laughing matter. OK, it is. | |
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Stefania Scardigli edited English subtitles for Designing books is no laughing matter. OK, it is. | |
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Hyunjung Jung declined English subtitles for Designing books is no laughing matter. OK, it is. | |
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Hyunjung Jung edited English subtitles for Designing books is no laughing matter. OK, it is. |