Стивън Кинг - интервюта
Модератор: Ka-tet of 19
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Re: Стивън Кинг - интервюта
http://newsok.com/doctor-sleep-was-a-ch ... eed/595718
'Doctor Sleep' was a challenge for Stephen King
'Doctor Sleep' was a challenge for Stephen King
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Re: Стивън Кинг - интервюта
http://abc.go.com/shows/the-view/video/ ... 0_vqgb1vmm
Stephen King On His New Book: Doctor Sleep
Stephen King On His New Book: Doctor Sleep
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Re: Стивън Кинг - интервюта
http://shine.yahoo.com/video/life-man-s ... 51646.html
The Life of Man: Stephen King
The Life of Man: Stephen King
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Re: Стивън Кинг - интервюта
http://www.cbc.ca/q/blog/2013/10/24/ste ... nd-family/
Stephen King and son Owen King on fiction and family
Stephen King and son Owen King on fiction and family
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Re: Стивън Кинг - интервюта
http://vimeo.com/77632071The first TV interview with Stephen King. Produced and aired in 1982, this is arguably the first "sit-down" interview with author Stephen King at his home in Bangor, Maine.
http://youtu.be/xB7JpUoJzvg
Stephen King: "I Sleep With the Lights On"
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Re: Стивън Кинг - интервюта
http://kniga-bg.com/lubopitno/%D0%BD%D1 ... %BE%D0%BC/
Няколко въпроса към Стивън Кинг за романа му "22 ноември 1963"
Няколко въпроса към Стивън Кинг за романа му "22 ноември 1963"
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Re: Стивън Кинг - интервюта
http://www.stripes.com/news/europe/step ... a-1.254123
Q&A with Stephen King at Ramstein Air Base, Germany
Q&A with Stephen King at Ramstein Air Base, Germany
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Re: Стивън Кинг - интервюта
http://youtu.be/rdO5ZdeN4hw
PEN Canada Benefit with Stephen King and Owen King
PEN Canada Benefit with Stephen King and Owen King
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Re: Стивън Кинг - интервюта
**** Q and A With King ****
(High Times interview, 1981)
Q: In Firestarter the parents are the ones who are apprehensive about their child's psychic powers. Do you feel that? Are you ever a little wary of your own children?
A: Well -- not yet. The one thing about kids is that you never really know exactly what they're thinking or how they're seeing. Kids are bent. After writing about kids, which is a little bit like putting the experience under a magnifying glass, you realize you have no idea how you thought as a kid. You can remember things about your childhood, but I've come to the conclusion that most of the things that we remember about our childhood are lies. We can have dreams where we re-dream things that are truer than what we remember waking. We all have memories that stand out from when we were kids, but they're really just snapshots. You can't remember how you reacted because your whole head is different when you stand aside.
Q: The experience of childhood is much more benevolent in The Shining than in Firestarter.
A: Well, Charlie McGee's a good kid, you know. It isn't that Charlie McGee wants to hurt anybody. After Carrie, people would say, "Why do you want to write about evil children?"
Everybody wants to psychoanalyze horror. They don't want to psychoanalyze a book like Gay Talese's "Sex with Your Neighbor" [sic] or something like that. It's pretty much accepted that Americans should be interested in who they're diddling and how they're doing it.
But this is a Popular Mechanics country. What's really going on here is that they're discussing the rocketry of sex and they're saying, "You can do it, too." The Talese book is a kind of Popular Mechanics guide. Instead of "How to Put on a New Garage Door,"
it's "How You Can Get a Swingers Club in Your Town."
But when it: comes to horror there's this need to analyze. When this "evil children" fad happened, there was The Exorcist and The Other and The Omen. People would say, "What this really means is that Americans don't want to have kids anymore. They feel hostility towards their own children. They feel they're being tied down and dragged down." In fact, in most cases, what those books are about is nice children who are beset by forces beyond their control.
Certainly Regan in The Exorcist was not to blame for what happened to her. In Carrie, it's not really Carrie's fault anything happens to her. She's driven to it. And when she perpetuates destruction on her hometown, it's because she's crazy. She doesn't want to make fires any more than she wants to wet her pants. That image is made in the book, that correlative. And she's kind of driven to it after a while.
Q: In Firestarter the parents are the ones who are apprehensive about their child's psychic powers. Do you feel that? Are you ever a little wary of your own children?
A: Well -- not yet. The one thing about kids is that you never really know exactly what they're thinking or how they're seeing. Kids are bent. After writing about kids, which is a little bit like putting the experience under a magnifying glass, you realize you have no idea how you thought as a kid. You can remember things about your childhood, but I've come to the conclusion that most of the things that we remember about our childhood are lies. We can have dreams where we re-dream things that are truer than what we remember waking. We all have memories that stand out from when we were kids, but they're really just snapshots. You can't remember how you reacted because your whole head is different when you stand aside.
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Re: Стивън Кинг - интервюта
http://youtu.be/69cK87DZn-k
Under The Dome - Live Chat with Stephen King
Under The Dome - Live Chat with Stephen King
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Re: Стивън Кинг - интервюта
http://youtu.be/CHNUhIc9Fig
Stephen King Interview - The Today Show (1999)
5 месеца след инцидента, при който едва не загива
Stephen King Interview - The Today Show (1999)
5 месеца след инцидента, при който едва не загива
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Re: Стивън Кинг - интервюта

Playboy interview, 1983
Q: Considering what you write about, have you ever thought of going to a séance or of finding some other supernatural way to communicate with him?
A: Are you kidding? I’ve never even attended a séance. Jesus, no! Precisely because I know a little bit about the subject, that’s the last thing I’d ever do. You couldn’t drag me to one of those things, and the same thing goes for a Ouija board. All that shit— stay away from it! Sure, I know most mediums are fakes and phonies and con artists, the worst kind of human vultures, preying on human suffering and loss and loneliness. But if there are things floating around out there— disembodied entities, spirit demons, call them what you will— then it’s the height of folly to invite them to use you as a channel into this world. Because they might like what they found, man, and they might decide to stay!
Q: Is your fear of séances an isolated phenomenon, or are you superstitious about other aspects of the so-called supernatural?
A: Oh, sure, I’m very superstitious by nature. I mean, part of my mind, the rational part, will say, “Come on, man, this is all self-indulgent bullshit,” but the other part, the part as old as the first caveman cowering by his fire as something huge and hungry howls in the night, says, “Yeah, maybe so, but why take a chance?” That’s why I observe all the old folk superstitions: I don’t walk under ladders; I’m scared shitless I’ll get seven years’ bad luck if I break a mirror; I try to stay home cowering under the covers on Friday the 13th. God, once I had to fly on Friday the 13th— I had no choice— and while the ground crew didn’t exactly have to carry me onto the plane kicking and screaming, it was still no picnic. It didn’t help that I’m afraid of flying, either. I guess I hate surrendering control over my life to some faceless pilot who could have been secretly boozing it up all afternoon or who has an embolism in his cranium, like an invisible time bomb. But I have a thing about the number 13 in general; it never fails to trace that old icy finger up and down my spine. When I’m writing, I’ll never stop work if the page number is 13 or a multiple of 13; I’ll just keep on typing till I get to a safe number.
Q: Are you afraid of the dark?
A: Of course. Isn’t everybody? Actually, I can’t understand my own family sometimes. I won’t sleep without a light on in the room and, needless to say, I’m very careful to see that the blankets are tucked tight under my legs so I won’t wake up in the middle of the night with a clammy hand clutching my ankle. But when Tabby and I were first married, it was summer and she’d be sleeping starkers and I’d be lying there with the sheets pulled up to my eyes and she’d say, “Why are you sleeping in that crazy way?” And I tried to explain that it was just safer that way, but I’m not sure she really understood. And now she’s done something else I’m not very happy with: She’s added this big fluffy flounce around the bottom of our double bed, which means that before you go to sleep, when you want to check what’s hiding under there, you have to flip up that flounce and poke your nose right in. And it’s too close, man; something could claw your face right off before you spotted it. But Tabby just doesn’t appreciate my point of view.
Q: Have you ever considered probing under the bed with a broom handle?
A: Naw, man, that would be pussy. I mean, sometimes we have house guests staying overnight; how would it look if the next morning, they said, “Gee, we were going to the bathroom last night and we saw Steve on his hands and knees, sticking a broom handle under his bed”? It might tarnish the image. But it’s only Tabby who doesn’t understand; I’m disturbed by the attitude of my kids, too. I mean, I suffer a bit from insomnia, and every night, I’ll check them in their beds to see that they’re still breathing, and my two oldest, Naomi and Joe, will always tell me, “Be sure to turn off the light and close the door when you leave, Daddy.” Turn off the light! Close the door! How can they face it? I mean, my God, anything could be in their room, crouched inside their closet, coiled under their bed, just waiting to slither out, pounce on them and sink its talons into them! Those things can’t stand the light, you know, but the darkness is dangerous! But try telling that to my kids. I hope there’s nothing wrong with them. God knows, when I was their age, I just knew that the bogeyman was waiting for me. Maybe he still is.
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Re: Стивън Кинг - интервюта

Кинг участва в първата серия на втория сезон на телевизионната поредица Finding Your Roots, който ще бъде излъчен на 23 септември по PBS. Ето откъс:
http://video.pbs.org/video/2365314332/? ... tephenKing
Stephen King's Progressive Past