Editing Interview:2003/07 Outburn

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'''Do you feel your segment in <i> Bowling for Columbine</i> increased your acceptance leven within a different age group or market share or something like that?'''<br>
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'''Do you feel your segment in <i> Bowling for Columbine</i> increased your acceptance leven within a different age group or market share or something like that?<'''br>
 
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I think it made a crowd of people who had not listened to me hear what those who have listened to me have always heard all along.  That maybe gave me the urge to then provide them with something that really could get to them.  I also didn’t want to make a record that approached my opinions and philosophies in the same way as the past, because I’ve often pointed out the flaws and I’ve often pointed out my problems with how I fit into the world.  This is more about creating a new world, truly what expressionism is about me. You’re taking your imagination and you’re taking an escape, like what Vaudeville, Cabaret, and Burlesque represented.  You’re taking the spirit of that.  Of course, when I started it, the fear was being felt.  It came at a time where we were in a political uncertainty.  The world needs things like this to make America worth fighting for.  Whether you agree with Michael Moore’s Oscar speech or whether you agree with anything that I do, it’s time to make sure that it’s heard, because that’s really what we fight wars for.  That’s what democracy is supposed to represent.  To me, that’s more important than writing a protest song or making statements giving your opinion on whether we should or should not be involved in some type of war, because rock’n’roll can’t change things in some strange way, but you can change things in smaller ways by just respecting people’s spirit.  In some strange way, this record is more uplifting, only in that it’s kind of a desperate celebration of life in that there may not be a tomorrow.  It’s a different type of nihilism for me actually finding a true release from this fear of dying.<br>
 
I think it made a crowd of people who had not listened to me hear what those who have listened to me have always heard all along.  That maybe gave me the urge to then provide them with something that really could get to them.  I also didn’t want to make a record that approached my opinions and philosophies in the same way as the past, because I’ve often pointed out the flaws and I’ve often pointed out my problems with how I fit into the world.  This is more about creating a new world, truly what expressionism is about me. You’re taking your imagination and you’re taking an escape, like what Vaudeville, Cabaret, and Burlesque represented.  You’re taking the spirit of that.  Of course, when I started it, the fear was being felt.  It came at a time where we were in a political uncertainty.  The world needs things like this to make America worth fighting for.  Whether you agree with Michael Moore’s Oscar speech or whether you agree with anything that I do, it’s time to make sure that it’s heard, because that’s really what we fight wars for.  That’s what democracy is supposed to represent.  To me, that’s more important than writing a protest song or making statements giving your opinion on whether we should or should not be involved in some type of war, because rock’n’roll can’t change things in some strange way, but you can change things in smaller ways by just respecting people’s spirit.  In some strange way, this record is more uplifting, only in that it’s kind of a desperate celebration of life in that there may not be a tomorrow.  It’s a different type of nihilism for me actually finding a true release from this fear of dying.<br>

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