vHopeful Conversations Podcast
In this episode of vHopeful Conversations, I sit down with writer-director Peter Glanz to talk about his bold new period satire Savage House, a 1715-set black comedy that uses wigs, corsets, and a pox-ridden elite household to mirror the madness of our own political moment. We dig into how January 6th and QAnon-era unrest pushed Peter toward a story of social climbers trapped at an opulent dinner, why he and his team pursued “beauty in the rot” through tactile production design and candlelit, Barry Lyndon-esque cinematography, and how paintings by Hogarth, gossip rags like Tatler and The Spectator, and films from Withnail and I to Culloden shaped the film’s tone. Peter shares the path to casting Richard E. Grant and Claire Foy, the psychological layers behind the film’s recurring pig imagery and nightmare sequences, and what Savage House has to say about class, patriarchy, and our endless urge to climb the social ladder even when it slowly kills us. Transcript lightly edited. Podcast available on Dream of a Better World [https://vanessahope.substack.com/podcast], & Apple [https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/vhopeful-conversations-podcast/id1872137258], Spotify [https://open.spotify.com/show/465mqdUcSwAp5Q0UchSXtA] or wherever you listen Vanessa Hope:I’m really excited to be joined by filmmaker Peter Glanz, whose movie Savage House Ted and I just saw in a special screening and totally enjoyed. Peter is a writer-director whose work blends sharp political observation with dark comedy and a distinctly feminist lens, which I really appreciate. With Savage House, he steps into period filmmaking while keeping one foot firmly in the present, using the rituals and excesses of an elite historical world to interrogate contemporary power, class, and leadership. Known for crafting precise tonal balances where satire, anger, and humor coexist, Glanz has quickly emerged as a filmmaker interested in how systems of privilege perpetuate themselves and how individuals within those systems either perform, resist, or unravel. Peter, welcome. Peter Glanz:That was a great intro. I mean, I couldn’t have written that better myself. That was amazing. Vanessa:Thank you. Okay, good. Yeah, your film is deep. I mean, there’s a lot in there, and it is not an easy film to make. So… in your intro when we saw the film, you shared that there’s some maybe familial or personal connection to this kind of a story, but that it’s also speaking more broadly to the times that we live in. Can you share how you started writing this one and where it came from and how you wove these ideas together? Peter:Sure. I would say that the familial side of it… you kind of never start, or at least I don’t, trying to write about yourself or your life. You try and write the thing farthest from it, and inevitably, it ends up being yourself. It’s just— you can’t help it. It’s just who we are. And you’re just watching this madness unfold on television. And I was just like, okay, this is such a mad world. I had to find some way to cathartically let it out. But you never want to do something set today because I think it’s very difficult to release the preconceived baggage. And so to somehow reflect this mad world, I just Wikipedia’d and went through history, just trying to find a year. And I stumbled on 1715, in which there was, in England, a disputed king. There was an uprising. There was complete political and economic unrest. There was a pox outbreak. There was even an eclipse, which, around that time, there was this big eclipse in L.A. And I was just like, okay, that’s amazing as a backdrop, and just tried to think of a story. And for whatever reason, I got locked on an image of a nobleman at the end of a really long table with his wig askew and his makeup running and just looking at a table of food he’ll never eat, at a portrait of a life he’ll never live. And I was just like, who is this man? And I began to reverse engineer this kind of, as you were saying, a family of social climbers who led to this dinner, this kind of Waiting for Godot kind of, you know, without giving away anything, to this moment. And hopefully in that stew, I was able to comment on all the political schemes of today. And just the more I researched that time, the more I fell in love with him, the more I saw the black mirror to today and just kept leaning into it more and more. And then strangely, you know, I think parts of myself, as in any script, start to come out. Vanessa:Super smart approach, actually. You made me immediately remember two excellent films that did directly look at whether January 6th or President Trump, neither of which got any distribution whatsoever, or very limited. There was a documentary about January 6th following those guys. And the Ali Abbasi film, The Apprentice, I thought was excellent. Peter:Incredible. Vanessa:Incredible. Sort of disappeared. Peter:I mean, that’s the beauty of period and even science fiction. Some of the most political films ever are science fiction films. It gives you distance and it allows you to see yourself. It allows you to laugh at it. And it allows you to really poke, I think, sometimes a searing kind of political lens at it without it being prescriptive. Because you’re like, oh, that’s not like me, they’re dressed in wigs and corsets. But… yeah, hopefully at the end you have a conversation with your partner and it becomes much deeper after all the laughs and corsets. Vanessa:That was a good way to put it, the black mirror effect. So, in a pragmatic logistical sense, or production process sense, how did you get this movie going? Because a lot of the listeners are filmmakers and they love to hear how people make extraordinary movies and get them out. Peter:Yeah, not for the faint of heart. Not easy. Not enough money or time — always the case. I had had a film that was about to go and it fell apart during COVID around this time. And then I was just kind of scrambling and then January 6th happened, and I’ve never written a script so fast in my life. Wrote it quick, got it into the hands of my intrepid, amazing producer, Oliver Roskill in England. If anyone needs one, he’s great. And he got it into the hands of Mike Runagall, who runs Altitude, which is a foreign sales company. We kind of talked about, okay, how can we actually make this crazy thing? And I just got so fortunate. Richard E. Grant is a legend. I’ve loved him in Withnail and I, you know, How to Get Ahead in Advertising. But even smaller, you know, The Player, L.A. Story. He just steals every scene. He’s amazing. I love this man. Vanessa:He’s incredible in your film. He’s outstanding. You got just a stellar performance from him. Peter:Yeah. I wrote a very larger-than-life character. Someone who’s absurd. And if he has anything, he has this superpower. He’s able to be so big and so crazy and so absurd and yet so human and so tragic and so heartbreaking. And he was just so perfect. And he— I mean, I’m sure some of your listeners know his story. He was going through a tragedy at the time. He’d just lost his wife. And my script, when he read it, he said was one of the first things that made him laugh after this tragedy. And it was just this kind of cosmic timing that he read this crazy thing, and I brought a smile to his face, and we had lunch at The Ivy and he was like, “Let’s do it.” And then it was Paramount UK — John Fletcher, who’s amazing — and Sage in here, Paramount Global, also great. John Fletcher loved Richard, loved Withnail and I, he immediately came on. And then it was a journey as a team to find who our Lady Savage was. And I can’t believe we thought of anyone other than Claire Foy. It was a journey. Vanessa:She’s so good. Peter:She’s so good. I think at first the instinct was to cast someone kind of Richard’s age. But the truth is, the more historically accurate thing to do — which became, I think, a North Star thread — was she would be much younger. And the moment we made that shift… Claire was our first person. I can’t even believe she said yes. I am so fortunate for it. And the moment she said yes, she fought for me to have more days and more time, and she was just such a partner, and so was Richard. And yeah, once the two of them were together, it was a sprint. And I’m so lucky that I had that journey up until that moment to storyboard my frames and to scout and kind of build it. So once the prep started, which was quite rushed, I had already done soft prep for like a year during that process. So yeah, that’s helpful. But yeah, I mean, Paramount came on super early in like a negative pickup to a small budget, which allowed me to have final cut, which is amazing. And I edited the film myself and it allowed me to kind of have— as long as I kept it a certain very small number, I won’t say how small, but very small— it afforded a lot of freedoms on casting, on crew hires, on our process, and it was an A-plus team. A-plus. Vanessa:I can’t imagine you had much of a budget considering that you were dealing with a period. It’s a period film, and you’ve got tremendous authenticity. I don’t know how you did achieve that, but I felt completely immersed in that world in ways that were almost too authentic for me. Like, you know, most period films look back in kind of a glossy way and they make a nice patina over everything. So you think, “Ooh, what pretty costumes they wore and what interesting makeup,” or something. But yours has the gritty reality — like the hygiene. So you have this tonal balance that’s like a combo of playful and comedic, but gritty, real, serious, deep. How did you do that? Peter:I find the two things are not antithetical. They’re actually intrinsically tied together. I think our North Star became just finding the beauty in the rot — the death and decay and decadence are all kind of intertwined. And just the more truthful we made it, the more honest it was, the more grotesque, sure, but also the funnier it was and the more timely it became. And it’s interesting, like, our whole concept of that time, and all the great films that have come after — and there have been so many great masterpieces I am in awe of — they all are kind of built on a fallacy, right? Our whole image of that time is paintings that are commissioned to make everyone look richer and skinnier and prettier and all of these things. And then, for whatever reason, all the films and all the TV shows that exist after are just carrying that image. And so the rich look romanticized and Jane Austen, and the poor are like Monty Python with their crooked teeth and their mud-soaked existences. The truth is they were much closer together. And what these people put themselves through, it was barbaric. And I obviously drew a very clear, lineage connection between what people do now for Instagram and TikTok and what they put themselves through to create this image. And I was like, okay, the more real I make it, the more we’re going to create that connection and the funnier it will be. And so the two things were tied. I’d never seen a movie where, you know, a fancy lady had a slop pail of waste underneath, just stenching up the whole place. I’d never seen the actual leeches, or that they’d brush their teeth with sticks until their gums were bleeding at lunches. It was just so horrific. They knew, they knew that there was lead in their powdered makeup. I think Princess Isabel in Spain had died from it. They all knew. And yet they still did it every day because the paler you were, the more regal you were. And so they were so in pursuit of this social ladder, this social esteem, that they were willingly killing themselves slowly. And I was like, there’s such a sad, tragic, but also funny parallel to today. And so I just kept leaning into that. And I felt like it got funnier and grosser and more timely. And so the two things… it wasn’t like a “tonal balance.” They were connected, at least in my mind, in the pursuit. And I was so lucky that all my heads of department, like the DP, were all about finding the texture and the grit and the grime. Adriano Goldman, who’s amazing — we never put a light in a room. All the light came from outside or was candlelit. You know, very Barry Lyndon. We used these crazy old Panavision anamorphic lenses, which, again, create texture and barrel. My costume designer, Alex Bovaird — amazing, does The White Lotus and things — there’s a tattered gold robe that he has. He showed it to me, he’s like, it’s beautiful, but there’s huge holes in it, of the time. And I was like, the holes are perfect. I want the holes. Give me all the holes. And everyone was just about finding the beauty in the rot, and I felt like the realer we made it, the funnier it became. And it also carved a very small sliver that made us unique, because there’s so many great films before us. Even The Favourite recently — amazing. The Favourite doesn’t show that, does not show that. Or The Great. So I just felt like that was our sweet spot. So I leaned pretty heavy into it, yeah. Vanessa:And then you really do get these tremendous performances all across the board. Everyone in your cast, it’s so well cast. But you must have really found the sweet spot with Richard E. Grant and Claire Foy, that they have never been better. I don’t know how you pulled that off. Peter:Yeah. First, Carmel Cochrane, my casting director — she’s the best. She’s amazing. Everything from Saltburn to Nosferatu, she’s the best. Yeah, Richard and Claire are very different in their approaches, as every actor is different. Luckily for me, I feel like their approaches were analogous to the characters themselves. And so there was a meta quality to all of it. Richard, like I said before, is absurd. The first day, I wrote an absurd script, but then I realized what he was doing with it. And rather than trying to put reins on him, I let him just run wild and just followed him. And I’m so happy I did that. There’s a scene where he’s like— I think it’s in the trailer even — he’s drinking wine and he starts regurgitating it like a demon, and it’s spewing out. That’s not in the script. He’s just like, he thinks the meal is foul. He makes it… foul. Richard has this other thing where in real life, every plate of food before he eats it, he picks it up and inhales it. He has this olfactory sensory thing. I was like, I’m putting that in the movie. So every time in the movie before he eats, he inhales. He’s just so crazy and absurd in such a beautiful way that he just was Chauncey. And I was really just trying to catch his wildness and those moments he created. Claire is— I’m in awe of Claire. I storyboard every frame. I am so prepared. I pale in comparison. Her script is… she’s so intricate. She’s so fastidious. You never need more than two takes. And if you do, you better have a good reason or the camera went out or something. She is so rock solid, so incredible. And I’m just in awe. The whole movie hinges, in a way, because these are despicable characters doing despicable things. You have to believe, as an audience, that she loves Richard, and her love for Richard — or Chauncey, the character — allows us to love him too in all of his wild ways. And there’s a scene in it in which she professes that love to the valet. I wrote my monologue knowing this. Her performance of that monologue was my favorite day on set. Her eyes… and my favorite scene. It’s not a funny scene, so I’m not going for the joke. But seeing her eyes search and emote — I mean, even right now, I’m going to get choked up thinking about it. It was so beautiful. And she made me sound like a better writer than I am. You love Richard because of her in that moment. And I mean, I could talk about— I mean, Bel Powley, she’s amazing. Bel Powley is like the chicest, most beautiful woman with those fishbowl eyes. And we gave her crooked yellow teeth and frizzy red hair. And she came in with this Yorkshire Northern accent, which is amazing. And Jack Farthing, who plays the valet, he is one of the most versatile, incredible actors. And the neighbors — I love my neighbors. Phil McCabe, Vicki Pepperdine, who play the two neighbors, the Bennetts. They probably cracked me up more than anyone. Phil McCabe goes— there’s a scene where they’re about to do a duel, very funny, he goes, “It’s going to be an absolute riot,” and he does all this— his excitement and enthusiasm for the imminent death of these people is so hysterical to me. And yeah, I don’t know. They’re all great. I just got really lucky. I could go on and on about my actors. Vanessa:You did a great job as a director, too, let’s just say. So, you mentioned there’s a poster behind you, but I’ve seen another of your posters where it’s like a pig in a wig, right? And finding the beauty in the rot or the ruin sounds like it was a theme, but also that question of: can you dress a pig in a wig and change them into moral people, or a different class? Or will that help them wield power more morally? What were you thinking around those questions of class and power and the big themes that you convey in your poster? And we’ll put a link to the one that’s behind you because we can’t quite see it. Peter:So, that poster with the pig head — Richard does not like this poster. But I love it. The pig head with the wig on it. Because in a way, it was interesting, again, in writing these characters and creating them, what was the tragedy of this character? Why did he want to climb this ladder so much? And whether it was the paintings of William Hogarth — Hogarth, Hogarth, Hogarth — the movie’s just inspired by all things Hogarth. I just want to say it is all Hogarth. He has a series called The Rake’s Progress, which is about a similar character with a similar end. And I have frames in my movie that directly copy the paintings of Hogarth. But the pig… I was just researching and researching what kind of humble beginning this man could have come from. And I think I had stumbled on some story that was talking about pig farmers and this pig farmer that had infiltrated this house. I can’t even remember where in the research it is. But I just became obsessed with this image — that equally, a roasted pig was a sign of elite delicacy and yet, at the same time, him coming from pigs. And this idea that there would be a pig stable in which they were killing pigs and farming pigs right outside, and that in some way, on a daily or monthly basis, he’d be confronted with this upbringing, and that everything he did in the movie was to bury this upbringing of being the child of a pig farmer. Just bury it and bury it, and again and again it keeps poking through. To the point where, I mean, it’s very kind of Barton Fink surreal. There’s a wandering pig in the house throughout the movie. And I obviously don’t really think that pig is real. It’s him — he is the pig in the house. That pig wandering is him just being a pig lost inside this regal world. And he keeps trying to hide it. And we even say at the beginning, he’s of kind of Yorkshire descent, a Northern descent. Again, lesser, kind of… not his regal upbringing. So the whole movie he has a fancy Richard accent. And then there’s this one nightmare sequence where his bed is now suddenly in this pig barn where he grew up. And in that scene, Richard beautifully plays with a Yorkshire Northern accent. In that one moment in his dreamscape, he’s suddenly a child again. His whole mask, his façade, is kind of crumbled. And, you know, largely Richard’s idea of finding moments where to poke holes in the mask and the façade. And it’s just so beautiful. And obviously throughout the movie we play with auditory pigs. He’s constantly hearing the honking and all the pig stuff. And at the end, I don’t want to give it away, but he ends up in a place that could possibly be back in his childhood pig farm. It could be read multiple ways. And I just thought it was a beautiful way to get into his psychology and to make him— as fun and crazy as he is— to make him heartbreaking and tragic. And I think that’s why the movie works, because of the tragedy in him. Vanessa:Again, I don’t want to totally give it away, but the surreal nighttime nightmare sequence with a pig — and it is deep. It is psychologically deep. And the poor man has been wounded various ways and fed terrible drugs to deal with it. Medicine in that day and age was not good. And so who knows? And then he wasn’t even following the doctor. I mean, he was constantly drinking. So… yeah, that was very moving. It’s very moving and surprising. And so… what are you suggesting to us about class and power that viewers should understand from the film? Peter:I think what you realize when you do probably any historical thing — but what I realized doing this — is just nothing changes. It’s all the same. Whether it’s that Instagram stuff I was talking about or obviously the January 6th of it all, history repeats itself. And every time the price goes up, as they say, right? I just love the idea of dramatizing, you know, but also very humorously, hopefully, the social ladder. I love that every single— and again, reflects today— every single person is trying to climb a rung on the ladder, whether it’s the help who want to be the Savages, the Savages who want to be the duke and duchess, the neighbors who want to be the Savages, the Savages who want to be the neighbors. Just seeing everyone climb that rung on the ladder so desperately — it’s equally funny, but it is also very human. There’s something so human about all of them just wanting a little bit more, just wanting a little bit more. And I think there’s something very timely about today in that. And there’s even a scene where Bel, who plays the lady’s maid, dangles a mouse over a flame. Again, there was no animal harmed. It was forced perspective, he was like ten feet away on a long lens to make it look like that. But the only creature lower on the ladder than her was that mouse in that moment. And it’s weird — it gets fed better food than her. So she has to steal food from the mice. There’s just something so heartbreaking and tragic about it. And my hope is that people take away that there are these systems in place, that this ladder and us trying to all climb it — to what end? And… yeah, I don’t know. Just, yeah, the fallacy. But yeah. Vanessa:Yeah. That’s really well said. You were making me think— at first I was thinking, well, what about— aren’t we better at poking fun at these systems of class and power today than they might have been back in the day? But then I was like, wait a minute. You know, Mozart— that movie Amadeus, Miloš Forman’s movie, is one of my all-time favorites. Peter:Masterpiece. Vanessa:Yeah, masterpiece. And of course there was a separation of classes and what entertainment they received. So the fancy operas that were for the fancy people versus the working-class people who get the bawdy… But it’s making fun of wealthy people, of the rich. So there’s always been a sense of, we need to do something about this imbalance and inequality. And some have more sense of it than others. You have these characters in your movie, the Jacobites. And along with the pox that’s hanging over like COVID, and the eclipse that’s hanging over threatening doom — which I guess we also had an eclipse during COVID, you reminded me — suggest some kind of uprising could be coming. And we can follow up on this question with how we make progress in this world. But I think it might be through artists leading the way. But tell me about the Jacobites and all of the impending doom forces that are weighing on this family. Peter:Yeah, I would just say the first part that you were saying made me want to say Hogarth again. He was really the first one to skewer the elites. He was the first one to tear them down. And his frames and his pieces — he was kind of like the first storyboard artist. Maybe that’s why I love him so much as well. He would do these eight-piece or five-piece series. They’re so funny and they’re so cinematic and they’re so detailed and they get all of it in there. The Rake’s Progress and Marriage A-la-Mode and all of it. Between that, and I should also say that around the same time arose these gossip magazines called Tatler and The Spectator. They both started around the same time and they are the most honest and true voice of that time. They say— I don’t know if I’m allowed to curse on this, but they say “c**t,” “s**t,” “f**k.” I’m not putting that stuff in as anachronistic voices of today. They spoke that way and were far filthier. And I found that between Hogarth and reading those magazines and hearing the voices, there was something kind of true in that. So, as far as the Jacobites go, again, like I said, it came around the QAnon time and that madness and that fever dream and the kind of divided America and our disputed monarch — no kings — all that stuff. The Jacobites, it was a similar thing. It was a break in the bloodline and James Edward Stuart was trying to get the crown back, and there was a German king and there was their version of xenophobia and all these things going around. And I just felt, what an amazing stew, what an amazing mix, what an amazing weird mirror of now to poke fun at. And again, like I said before, the more you lean into the truth of it, the funnier it is. The real mantra of the Jacobites was “Down with the Rump.” And this is what they’re saying. And the more I wrote “Down with the Rump” in different ways in my path, I saw that oh, it can kind of look like “Down with Trump.” There’s a scene in it where it’s graffiti. Vanessa:By the way, on this podcast, you can say “s**t,” “c**t,” “f**k,” but you can’t say “Trump.” Peter:Great. It also appears in the movie a lot. Richard E. Grant’s favorite word is “c**t.” He improvises it into almost every scene, so there’s a lot of that. But yeah, so “Down with the Rump” looks like “Down with Trump,” and so that’s graffiti. And again, I just found every time the more we did what was real, what was truthful, the more it reflected today and you saw how little changed. There’s also— it’s a movie, it’s a mockumentary— but there’s this great British filmmaker named Peter Watkins, and he made this movie called Culloden, which is about the 1745 uprising. But he does this fake BBC newsreel, interviews with the Jacobites during the uprising. And it is so hysterical and so funny and beautiful. It’s only 40 minutes long. I think you can watch it for free on YouTube. Everyone should. That also became a touchstone in the timeliness of it. I mean, he was using it to comment on England at that time. But it’s… yeah. Just time and time again, if I told their true story, it reflected ours. Like all the crazy things they’re saying about the eclipse then. None of that is fake. I have it printed out. It is word for word from The London Gazette about the eclipse at that time. They thought dark spirits were going to funnel from the sky. They thought it was going to be the end of the world. And… yeah. Just keep it true. Truth is stranger than fiction. That’s where you can create a heightened truth, you know? Vanessa:Yeah. Okay. You gave me some hope that maybe we’ve made progress in science and some areas have been developed. Peter:A little bit. Vanessa:A little bit. Even if there’s something socially rotten at the core, if we can’t figure out how to do something about patriarchy and hierarchy and the way we’re structuring our social existence. Peter:I mean, it just keeps happening. I mean, it’s just crazy what’s going on right now. I think if I hadn’t made Savage— I mean, you know, something I’m writing now, we’re always just trying to process the madness of today into some story. And sadly, history just shows us it just keeps repeating. Vanessa:Yeah. Yeah. And history and movies like yours are so important to watch. So how can we tell people how to see this film? Peter:It’s on all platforms right now. In America, it’s on Apple and Amazon and all of that. In England, I think it’s still in a few theaters and they have a longer rollout. But yeah, here, on all the usual platforms— rent it, buy it, tell your friends. Vanessa:Exactly. And look out for your next movie because you’re already making progress. Peter:I mean, I’m trying. You know, it’s always hard when you’re making things kind of left of center, as you guys know. I’ve got like three horses in the race right now, and so hopefully one reaches the finish line. I also have a newborn child, so I’m not rushing to go behind a camera just yet. So I’m writing still, but hopefully next year we’re mounting one of these things. Vanessa:Great. Well, you’re an amazing writer and we look forward to your next movie. Peter:Thank you. Vanessa:Thanks so much. Peter Glanz is a British-American writer and director based in Los Angeles whose work spans indie features, major studio screenwriting, and highly stylized commercial and music video work. He made his feature debut with The Longest Week (2014), adapted from his Cannes and Sundance-premiering short A Relationship in Four Days, and has since co-written Marvel’s Captain America: Brave New World (2025), written the forthcoming film adaptation of Philip Roth’s Nemesis, and is developing Chopin and Beyond: My Extraordinary Life in Music and the Arts for the screen alongside a slate of other prestige projects. In parallel, Glanz has built a prolific career in advertising and music videos, directing visually distinctive campaigns for brands such as Chanel, DKNY, Tommy Hilfiger, Carolina Herrera, Marc Jacobs, RAM, and YSL, as well as Carly Rae Jepsen’s hit video “I Really Like You” with Tom Hanks. SAVAGE HOUSE is Available to Watch Now on YouTube [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0Es7u9L-5Jg]Watch [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0Es7u9L-5Jg] Google Play Movies & TV [https://play.google.com/store/movies/details?id=KQobP_q9hug.P]Watch [https://play.google.com/store/movies/details?id=KQobP_q9hug.P] Apple TV [https://tv.apple.com/us/movie/honneur-et-decadence/umc.cmc.291jhkbgnaw787fkttbzo8m8w]Watch [https://tv.apple.com/us/movie/honneur-et-decadence/umc.cmc.291jhkbgnaw787fkttbzo8m8w] Fandango [https://athome.fandango.com/content/browse/details/Savage-House/4943898?cmp=OrganicSearch~Vudu~GoogleWatch]Watch [https://athome.fandango.com/content/browse/details/Savage-House/4943898?cmp=OrganicSearch~Vudu~GoogleWatch] Amazon Prime Video [https://www.amazon.com/gp/video/detail/amzn1.dv.gti.d9215bab-56d8-4c78-9369-40339ee7713c?autoplay=0&ref_=atv_cf_strg_wb]Watc [https://www.amazon.com/gp/video/detail/amzn1.dv.gti.d9215bab-56d8-4c78-9369-40339ee7713c?autoplay=0&ref_=atv_cf_strg_wb]h Dream of a Better World is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber. Get full access to Dream of a Better World at vanessahope.substack.com/subscribe [https://vanessahope.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]
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