If You Can Hear Me
What happens when a kid from the Netherlands grows up to write the origin story of America's first president? In this episode, screenwriter Diederik Hoogstraten joins Ben to talk about Young Washington — the Wonder Project film releasing July 3rd to mark America's 250th — and why an immigrant might be uniquely positioned to remind us what this country actually is. We get into: - Growing up progressive in 1980s Holland and how Family Ties (yes, really) planted the seeds - Becoming a U.S. citizen in 2019 and what most Americans miss about their own country - The Wonder Project, House of David, and building a studio for the audience Hollywood forgot - Writing George Washington from age 11 to 22 — the failures, the loss, the overbearing mother - Why failure shaped Washington's character (and what that means for the rest of us) - A Native American chief, a battlefield, and the moment Washington's purpose became clear A conversation about country, craft, and the kind of leader formed in the quiet years. Young Washington hits theaters July 3rd. CHAPTERS: 00:48 Welcome & guest intro 02:18 Why an immigrant celebrates America 250 03:51 Family Ties and discovering America 06:28 World Cup as a unifying moment 12:48 What the Wonder Project is 17:15 Faith-based or family-friendly? 22:19 The loneliness of screenwriting 27:10 Why focus on young Washington 30:34 Balancing history with creative license 36:36 How failure shapes leaders 43:05 What viewers should take away 48:09 How the project changed him See omnystudio.com/listener [https://omnystudio.com/listener] for privacy information.
22 episodes
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