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Oliver Anthony: Country Music, Blue-Collar America, Fame, Money, and Pain | Lex Fridman Podcast #469

2h 19m 0s25,181 Wörter3,274 segmentsEnglish

VOLLSTÄNDIGE ABSCHRIFT

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- The following is a conversation with Oliver Anthony,

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singer-songwriter from Virginia,

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who first gained worldwide fame

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with this viral hit "Rich Men North of Richmond."

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He became a voice for many who are voiceless

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with his songs speaking to the struggle

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of the working class in modern American life.

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His legal name is Christopher Anthony Lunsford.

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Oliver Anthony was his grandfather's name.

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So Chris used this name as a dedication to his grandfather

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and to 1930s Appalachia,

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where his grandfather was born and raised.

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"Dirt floors, seven kids hard times," as Chris says.

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He's happy to be called either one, by the way.

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I've gotten to know Chris more

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since the recording of this conversation.

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He truly is, as he appears online

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and in his songs, down to earth, humble

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and a good man who deeply feels the pain of the downtrodden.

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This is a Lex Fridman podcast to support it.

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Please check out our sponsors in the description.

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And now, dear friends, here's Christopher Lunsford,

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or as many of you know him as, Oliver Anthony.

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So I was texting you last night sitting at an open mic,

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listening to a guy perform "Great Balls of Fire."

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Like I told you, he was giving everything he got

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for like five people in the audience plus me.

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- Well, you were there.

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I'd have been doing it too, if you were out there like,

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oh, that's like screaming.

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- No, man.

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He was this big dude on a keyboard, just everything.

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Sweaty, long hair,

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you could tell like he was there in his own little world.

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I love the courage of that, of just giving it everything.

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I don't think he wants to be famous.

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I don't think he wants anything in life except to be there

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and to play like his heart out.

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That's why I love open mics.

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Like some people still aspire

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to be famous when they play open mics,

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but some people, maybe they've given up

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or maybe they never wanted to be famous.

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They're just there for the pure artistry of it, so.

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And you said you started out playing open mics.

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At shady bars, what was that like?

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- Well, yeah, real quick before I forget too.

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A great example of a guy who had that same mindset

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and was able to maintain it really well

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as this mandolin player named Johnny Staats

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in West Virginia.

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To me, he's one of the best

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and he's won all these awards and stuff,

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and he still works for UPS full-time.

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And like he could go out and tour with play mandolin

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for anybody he wanted to, but man, when you meet Johnny,

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like you can tell he's just got this joy in him

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that I don't think he would have if he...

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But as far as me with the open mics,

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yeah, it was just, it was, a lot of them were really,

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a lot of them were embarrassing.

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There was a couple, I remember there was times

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where I'd go up and try to do, I do like one song.

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I get like halfway through the next song

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and I'd be so nervous by that point.

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I couldn't remember any of the words.

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And there's a couple times,

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I remember there was one time in particular

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that I just walked off halfway through the song,

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put my guitar in the case and just, well, I just left.

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I didn't even, like, couldn't even stay in there,

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you know, just total freak out, but.

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- Just embarrassment.

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- And I never drank in bars either.

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Like I wasn't really a social drinker,

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so I was just there to try to do the mic.

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So it was kind of, I was a little out of place anyway.

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I feel kind of outta place in a bar to start with, so.

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- Yeah, it's back when you could smoke in bars,

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there's a whole vibe to it.

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People smoke and drinking and yeah, definitely.

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You know, bombing in a place like that

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when the audience is like,

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there's like five people and they're bored.

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- Yeah, there was one like that.

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It was in Matoaka.

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It wasn't that far from where I lived.

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The place is gone now, but it was about as big

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as the room we're in here, if that, you know.

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Like the ceiling tiles were yellow

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from where everybody had smoked in it

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since the beginning of time.

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But like, yeah, that was my little spot.

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Those little type of spots

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- You did covers? What'd you play?

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What was your go-to

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- Back then, it was like, I don't know,

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"Fishin' in the Dark," Nitty Gritty Band

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or like any of those old like Hank Jr. songs,

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like any of those bar type, David Allen Coe.

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Like "You Never Call Me By My Name,"

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any of that kind of stuff.

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And I haven't even played any of those in forever now.

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But as any of those ones

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where you get people singing along and stuff,

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that's what I'd always try to do, you know?

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- Yeah, that song you performed

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"Take Me Home, Country Road," how's that go?

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West Virginia?

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- Yeah. - It's a good song.

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- John Denver was just one of those guys that who knows

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where he would've went long term

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if he wouldn't have passed, but-

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- You know, it's a fun song that I love.

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I shouldn't, but I love is, what is it?

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Like, "Thank God I'm a Country Boy."

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- I think that's what I liked about John Denver

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was he was a little bit like,

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he let himself be a little bit corny

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in the spirit of like, having fun with it.

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Like great example, there's this older guy

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that not a lot of people have heard of named Roy Clark,

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but my farm's like a mile down the road

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from Roy Clark's old farm.

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But he used to be on Heehaw,

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I don't know if you've ever heard of that old show

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from like the '60s or whatever,

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but crazy dude, he could pick any instrument up,

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like there's videos on YouTube of him,

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but he would just sit there and just pick anything up

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and just rip it to death.

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But he would always just be real silly about it.

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He never took himself too seriously, you know.

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- Some people go to the fun place,

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some people go to the dark place.

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You know, country can do both.

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You more often go to the dark place, to the pain.

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- Yeah, well, especially some of the new songs

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that are coming out, they'll be probably not,

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I mean, I don't know what they'll be.

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I don't know what is country anymore anyway.

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I don't know that many people who listen

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to the type of music that I grew up listening to

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and probably listen to country radio anymore anyway.

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Like, I think there's quite a lot of people

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who don't who've sort of disowned that space.

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You know, in commercialized country

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you only really get what sells

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and a lot of what sells isn't necessarily what matters.

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- Well you had that whole experience where they take

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what you recorded and "polish" it, quote unquote

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try to make it perfect.

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And then so doing destroy the soul of the thing.

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And so probably that happens with these big artists.

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They're so famous. It's like a machine.

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And so, what the machine does is it over polishes things.

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And so the raw like power of the person,

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the uniqueness of the person,

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the soul of the person is gone if you do that.

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- Yeah.

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Well, I think professionalism,

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like applying the tactic, the tactics of corporate America

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to anything that is baseline artistic is not gonna end well.

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- They're all individually brilliant,

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but together, this corporate speak comes out.

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- Yeah.

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- Just the soul of the people dissipates.

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It like disappears.

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Why are you all pretending

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that like life is not terrible and beautiful

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and like you're both scared shitless and excited,

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and this guy's going through a divorce,

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this person just fell in love.

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Like you're forgetting the intensity of life

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with this corporate, like nine-to-five.

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Like, hi John, it's great to see you today.

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(Oliver laughing)

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Oh, you too.

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You as well, you as well.

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But when I look at it, I'm like, "Why am I whining?"

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I feel like a Bukowski-type character

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because like, they're all really nice,

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they're all good people,

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but like something is gone

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when you have this corporate machine.

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- Well they're there to fill a role contractually.

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And I think if they bring too many

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of their human elements into that,

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then they jeopardize losing their sense of security.

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And it's all just out fear.

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It's out fear of losing your job.

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I mean, it's the reason why all the songs say Oliver Anthony

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and not Christopher Lunsford on them.

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You know, like it's fear of, it's so difficult to,

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especially now it seems, I mean, who knows?

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I was never around in the '40s or '50s to work a job.

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I'm sure they were probably pretty miserable back then,

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but you know, they talk about now like how difficult it is,

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like the impossibility

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of having a single family household or anything else.

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