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Dan Wang: Silicon Valley Culture, London’s Building Crisis, and China’s Cultural Squeeze

April 21, 2026 Ben Yeoh

Dan Wang joins Ben Yeoh for a conversation about what different societies are good at, what they neglect, and what that reveals about culture, ambition, and power. Starting with Silicon Valley, Dan argues that tech has become thinner-skinned and less funny as harder-edged founder culture has replaced its more playful countercultural roots. That narrowing shows up beyond humour: San Francisco still has legacy cultural institutions, but newer tech wealth is often far less willing to support the arts unless it can see a direct return.

“You have to have a sense of which rules to break. If you break no rules ever in life, you will absolutely get nowhere.”

From there, the discussion opens out into a broader comparison of California, London, and China. London, in Dan’s view, is almost Silicon Valley’s opposite: culturally rich, socially sparkling, and full of serious artistic life, yet held back by pessimism and a deep inability to build.

“The UK has the housing prices of California and the per capita income of Mississippi State.”

 Ben pushes on whether Britain could reverse that decline if it fixed planning, housing, and energy bottlenecks. China, meanwhile, is presented as a place of extraordinary physical achievement but increasingly constrained cultural production, where censorship, weaker reading habits, and even food delivery systems are flattening parts of public life.

“The discussions on AI seem to have quasi-religious tones. Either this is going to be utopia or this is going to plunge us all straight into hell.”

They also explore why AI debate has taken on a quasi-religious tone in California, with utopian promises on one side and apocalyptic fears on the other, while more immediate problems such as propaganda, low-quality content, energy supply, and permitting constraints receive less attention. The second half of the episode turns more personal and literary: neurodiversity in Silicon Valley, cadet training and discipline, opera, Shakespeare, Tom Stoppard, writing craft, and the underrated practice of retyping great prose or reading plays aloud with friends.

“The immigrants are best able to appreciate what works and what works badly in every particular culture.”

It is a wide-ranging conversation about how people think, what institutions reward, and why culture matters more than technocrats often admit. 

Summary contents, transcript and podcast links below. Listen on Apple, Spotify or wherever you listen to pods. Video above or on Youtube.


Contents

  • 00:21 Why Tech Lacks Humor

  • 02:09 Silicon Valley Arts Funding

  • 05:28 London Versus California

  • 08:31 China Culture Censorship

  • 12:56 Food Culture US China

  • 18:58 AI Utopia Versus Doom

  • 23:04 UK Building Energy Bottlenecks

  • 30:58 Fixing UK Planning Housing

  • 34:28 Neurodiversity In Silicon Valley

  • 37:04 Cadets Discipline Rule Breaking

  • 39:15 Modern Opera: Mozart. Verdi Debate

  • 42:04 American Shakespeare Picks

  • 45:31 Book Tour Reflections

  • 48:09 Retyping Great Writers

  • 52:56 Reading Plays Together

  • 58:29 Playwrights And Prose

  • 01:01:38 Overrated Underrated Round

  • 01:10:21 Advice For Your Twenties

Transcript (lightly edited, transcribed by LLM AI, so mistakes are very possible)

Ben: Hey everyone, I'm super excited to be speaking to Dan Wang. Dan has written an excellent bestselling book on China and America called Breakneck.

Dan, welcome.

Dan: Great to be here.

Ben: In your recent annual letter, you suggest it's nearly as dangerous to joke about the top Silicon Valley venture capitalist, as is to joke about a Chinese CCP party leader.

Why does Silicon Valley have no humor? And did it ever?

Dan: at one point it probably had a little bit of a sense of countercultural humor. In the days of Steve Wozniak perhaps Steve Jobs, there were slightly playful act personalities back in the eighties up until the nineties.

And then these much harder core nerds took over. Does Bill Gates have much of a sense of humor? Does Mark Zuckerberg have much of a sense of humor? Perhaps so in private but certainly not in public. And so I think that there is this progressively thinner skin where every generation of founders loses a little bit of humor and funny points.

And then they also shave off a little bit more of their skin. And I think that is really well represented now by Elon Musk, who maybe it's not his fault now he's trolled to insanity three times a day before breakfast by all of these crazy people on the internet in a platform that he controls.

I think that this is also, perhaps he is a little bit funny. He certainly thinks of himself as being very funny, but I don't think that there are many sparkling personalities in the tech world such that it is pretty difficult. And I've tried this exercise going up to tech friends and asking who is the funniest founder out there?

It's a pretty thin list of names.

Ben: And they started off in the hippie world. I guess that wasn't necessarily the tech bro. So it is interesting that they do seem to have lost their sense of humor. Also Silicon Valley. And the CCPs seem to me to be less involved in cultural production.

Standup comedy would be one thing, but it also seems to be the case in art and music with some exceptions. So for instance, Patrick Collinson of Stripe fame seems to be very interested in beauty, but do you sense this too, of overall cultural production? And is this narrowness a big problem for Silicon Valley or not really?

Dan: San Francisco has a certain amount of elite culture. And so I am thinking about the art museums. I'm thinking about the opera and the ballet where the old rich, the old money in San Francisco has given fairly generously to the symphony, the opera et cetera. The arts, which makes it look quite a lot more like New York City.

And there is some new money that is also involved in some of these pretty traditional art forms. But generally speaking it seems like these. New billionaires that have been created over, let's say the past 10 years, have become significantly less interested in funding the arts.

Broadly speaking the movie theaters, the indie movie theaters have been closing down in San Francisco. Downtown is generally a mess. There's very little foot traffic. And even the art museums are not necessarily doing super well. And so when you combine all of these things and you have the fact that Silicon Valley billionaires are much more eager to fund the next generation of technology than anything else which has been one of the great factors of Silicon Valley success that you had, the semiconductor people funding, the telecom, people funding the internet, people funding.

Now the AI people. And so I think that has generally been pretty positive. But when creatives go up to billionaires and ask for money for the arts, the billionaires are often asking for a return as if arts could ever be productive. As if the arts could ever be profitable almost anywhere. And so you cannot possibly generate a real return on the arts, whereas it seems like the rich people in New York and LA are quite a lot more forgiving of the fact that if they give money to a documentary filmmaker, they'll never see a scent back of it.

Ben: I think it, Silicon Valley seems to understate that intangible return, the sort of cultural reputational value, social capital, or however you would put it. So do you think if you were to add a cultural institution in San Francisco around Silicon Valley, that would be a good idea and what would it be?

Dan: I'm not sure if I could add a new cultural center. I think it is. It's hard to figure out what the right format is. Could it be something in visual arts? Could it be something in the theater? Perhaps. But I think that something has to grow, probably out of the tech world out of something that the tech world really embraces.

And the challenge is that I don't think that many of these tech people want to go to the opera except as an affectation. Or really see very many plays because the play going audience in the US is generally fairly smaller. Even in somewhat larger cities like Boston or dc or la.

There is a scene, but it is quite a lot more difficult to find than in a place like London. So here's my case to you Ben, that if we had to find the polar opposite in terms of culture to Silicon Valley, is it not London? In Silicon Valley, you speak to a lot of engineers and they don't necessarily have many jokes to tell as I've established.

They don't have much culture that they want to go to in London. It is much easier to find to chat with people where those conversations sparkle. And the plays and the classical music and the visual arts are completely off the charts for even I think for most Americans, even perhaps for a lot of New Yorkers, the cultural scene in London is really amazing.

And whereas the weather in the Bay Area is pretty, pretty perfect the weather in London is by default, fairly gloomy. So isn't London the opposite end of the world from California?

Ben: I think it's, I think that's almost correct. So London or the UK as well, you've said you've argued it's very good at clever sounding industries.

But the offshoot of that is maybe we're overweighted in journalism, also accounting and legal, but we're also overweighted in theater arts, visual arts, music and all of that. So it makes us extremely happy. Culturally rich and actually there's a lot of soft power cultural events. So even nearby there's Glastonbury, you've got the tennis and the rowing and the sporting events and all of those kinds of things as well as that soft cultural power.

On the other hand, we don't build anymore. We've got poorer. Millionaires are still leaving us, although actually non millionaires are still wanting to come to the uk. So I think a lot of Chinese millionaires are leaving China and going all over the place, but some of them are still coming to the UK so that's interesting.

On the other hand, And it also means that I think London in some ways has a little bit like the US some fixable problems because some of the stuff which is around there is more fixable. Then it would seem, but I'm interested. So if San Francisco has maybe this cultural problem, it'd be interesting whether we think that's broadly in some spots of America, and I wonder whether China also has some of these cultural problems as well.

So I'm not sure whether you find, I think in your letter you did say Beijing and Singapore were, Beijing and San Francisco are a little bit similar in that respect, but whether you think that is also a problem of narrowness across a lot of their Chinese cities.

Dan: Yeah there's also something else that Californians have that Londoners and British people do not have, and that is optimism.

And so I think that there is a little bit of this sense. Even among Brits are the first people to say that, yeah, they're all very cynical. There's not that much hope for the future. I find it a little bit odd that there is just this self-professed pessimism gloom within the national culture.

And I think that is probably not a healthy trait when everybody kind of jokes about it. I think I am a little bit more constructive, at least in a lot of parts of culture, in the US relative to China. Chinese culture such as it is, has been very severely squeezed by the censorship apparatus.

Very few art house films anymore. Not that much by way of very popular groundbreaking fiction. That, there's a lot of really creative short form videos and they can AI slop with the best of them. I think in terms of broader culture, I think that China has not done super well, not much in terms of journalism because that has been the part that has been strangled the most.

And so maybe some people are really impressed by dancing robots on really big bridges. But I'm not sure if that is going to be the sort of culture that you and I are very much drawn to. Now, you and I are quite different, but I think that Chinese cultural production has been pretty disappointing.

And I think in general fewer and fewer people read and read books in China these days. That's my sense that the book sales are really falling. At least in the US the book sales have been holding steady over the last few years. Now a lot more people are reading. Romantic and fairy smut, which is fine and whatever.

But I think that it is still pretty striking that book sales are holding up in the US where they're falling in China. So at a first approximation, people are just reading far less in China these days.

Ben: And I think if China does end up stumbling, it will be because they've tried to engineer on the social side, all of their physical engineering, which you described very well in your book, has been so successful.

But the social political engineering has been such a disaster. And I know you're very critical of the one child policy, but reading it over, I wonder whether we understate how catastrophic that could be for the medium term in China. So it'll be interesting to see where that holds.

And I do think you're right that actually Brits in general are a little bit pessimistic for those who've been around, but those who come to London. Immigrants first, second, even third generation, actually remain optimistic. And this is the kind of interesting thing about where they've left and they think of all the great parts of London and the uk and just to really perplex that Brits don't really value that as much.

And I find this is a little bit in Americans as well, they don't quite appreciate what they have yet. The immigrants who come and say this is amazing. Why don't you, why don't you appreciate it? And I'm also immigrant

Dan: immigrants are the best people to assess. I think they're the best people to appreciate local cultures.

The left I think generally is too critical of cultures and the right are too critical of the immigrants, whereas the immigrants are best able to appreciate what works and what works badly in every particular culture. But I do find it a little bit sad.

Immigrants arrive in the UK feeling quite optimistic and maybe that effect persists. But generally the people, the culture around them is trying to drag down their mood or that just happens that most people are, have a bad mood or over the longer term, that feels a little bit sad to me.

Ben: Yeah, I completely agree. I do think London's a little bit of a special exception of, versus the rest of the uk. But I do think that is the general vibe and that it's

Dan: more optimistic or less optimistic.

Ben: It's more optimistic. But then London isn't, probably half of London even something like that has English as a second language or a co language.

It's every immigrant, either first or second generation. So perhaps it's a little bit different and it has such strong agglomeration effects in London, which you really don't see in any other cities, which actually is a real problem for the UK versus even Germany or France.

But particularly versus the us I was in Nashville not too long ago, and Nashville can just go and do their own thing. They're a, I think they were half a million people when I saw them last time, which was maybe 15 years ago. And now they're almost a million person city and growing with their own culture and vibe, and they can stand alone in that.

Whereas a place like Leeds can't even put in a tram or a metro system. And all the best people from Leeds, not quite all, but a lot of them end up in London. So that's one of the UK specific issues. On the other hand, the thing about the immigrants coming in is that means that the London food scene has got, amazingly better over the last 10, 20 years, even the last two or three. I was interested, do you think the differing food cultures coming back to the US and China have anything to explain about how similar or different the US and China are? Obviously China has got quite a monumental headstart on the US which I don't think America will ever close up.

But maybe it might, and I would be interested in what you think the most underrated US food is and whether food cultures explain anything around the US and China differences.

Dan: China has a monumental lead on food production. Perhaps the only other arrival to Chinese cuisine is Indian cuisine.

Now I still prefer Chinese over Indian because I find that there is more variety and better use of better ways to prepare vegetables than Indian cuisine. But I think that China is already at the peak of various ways to prepare, whether these are vegetables and greens or duck and rice and almost anything else.

We care to name the Chinese who have perfected it. Perhaps the only exception is alcohol. They don't integrate alcohol quite as well into the food, but. I think that the Chinese have represented some sort of perfection. On the other hand, if you are in a state of near perfection, it is really hard to grow beyond that.

And I think that there is a little bit of a sense among some foodies in China that food culture in China has gotten just a few percentage points worse over the last five, 10 years. There is just much greater emphasis on these central commissaries to produce food outside of restaurants and then ship it into restaurants for them to essentially reheat.

And that has grown because people value speed over taste. There is just much more of a takeout culture because it's super, super easy to have food delivery. There's something, there's some figures now that the number of people working in food delivery just part-time in China could be north of 200 million people is what I saw in the Wall Street Journal because the job market is so bad.

So what could be really amazing for getting food is not so good for the job market and perhaps not so good for the cuisine itself because people are just so optimized for making food work well inside a box and a container that could be delivered in 25 minutes or less. And as China's grown richer people are more interested in different varieties of foods.

But I think that there has also been quite a lot more standardization within the foods as more chains have taken off as well. And given that the US is so far behind China there's tremendous room to grow. And over the last two decades in the last few years, I think that all sorts of food in the US has grown better.

There is even more of a migration culture into the US where, you know. A lot more Nigerians settle around the Houston area. There's all sorts of different varieties of people bringing their cuisines to the US. I think that Americans are learning to eat better themselves.

They have greater demand for seafood or fruits and the US also has, the US perhaps has very good recreations of let's say a Parisian croissant or anything else. It is just a little bit hard to get to. And so I think that the US has this dynamic churn even though it might perhaps never quite converge to Chinese levels of perfection.

Ben: Yeah, I agree. And I would probably add to that, that I've seemed to sense China because of this. Influenced modern tradition I guess, and the food influencer, they are now slightly cooking to how it looks on the plate over taste. Yeah. So obviously presentation is something. And so that has also maybe taken a couple of points down because they are so good at engineering, like you say, this central planning of food delivery.

That means that maybe the speed and efficiency's gone up, but also at the cost of, at the cost of taste. I also think maybe the most underrated American food for me is barbecue. So they've got this huge barbecue tradition in lots of different ways of doing it. And that seems also to me obviously influenced, but quite quite American.

But do you have an underrated American food?

Dan: I like barbecue, but I think that the challenge with barbecue is that you really should not have it multiple times in a row. Yeah. And for me, that is one metric for thinking about food. I have no hesitation about having Indian food multiple days weeks in a row.

The same goes for many other types of cuisines. If I eat barbecue twice in two days, I think that would be a little bit too much for me. I think that. Probably overrated is Californian cuisine. There has been so much of this emphasis on Californian cuisine, which started with Alice Waters and all sorts of other big chefs in Northern California.

To me that is not very distinctive if we wanted to look at another sort of cuisine. I haven't spent much time in l Louisiana, but I would really like to eat much more in New Orleans which seems to have a very good local cuisine. But just generally, I think what I would bet on is, immigrant cuisines in the US whether that is, the Austin food scene getting quite a lot better, whether that is the Nigerian food scene in Houston. I think that Chinese cuisine still has room to grow. In the US there's a lot of excellent Taiwanese in the, let's say the LA area.

There are all sorts of fantastic Chinese in the flushing area in Cupertino even. I'm getting better and better Chinese food, which is not too far away from where I am at Stanford University. And so I think that there is always room for growth in the US so long as we are still welcoming of people.

Ben: Yeah. Okay. I should move on from food, which we could probably, we should do a long chat just on food. I think we could do two or three hours on that. But I have to mention ai, which is all over everything. And you even mentioned it in your latest letter, and it's interesting when I hear Silicon Valley people or maybe Americans in general they all seem to either talk about existential risk of losing jobs or everything going completely wrong.

Or they talk about a tech utopia where AI solves everything from climate to poverty to manufacturing. And there doesn't seem to be a middle road discussion and maybe not even that much thinking of the kind of economic bottlenecks and things like that. What do you make of this, and do you sense this as well and do you think central planners have any edge in AI because of the energy supply chain and Americans are just too much focused on these kinds of really strange tail risks on either side.

Dan: It is a very strange thing in California. The discussions on AI seem to have quasi-religious tones. Either this is going to be utopia or this is going to plunge us all straight into hell and the machines are going to torture our minds for eternity. And you know what, if we just get a scenario in which which will be amazing in which productivity growth TFP growth goes on for 5% five percentage points for a very long time, I think that would be a pretty positive scenario.

But, when we talk about AI safety in California essentially what that means is how do we stop the machine God from torturing us for eternity rather than, oh how are people engaging with this very strange information ecosystem in which there's gonna be. A lot more slop and perhaps a more adversarial propaganda that is going to turn us all insane.

That to me feels like a very tangible sort of product, that project that we perhaps should discuss and tackle and try to solve. But this might be doing to teenagers. And, but instead, we can only talk about the antichrist. And that feels very strange to me. But tell us about the tenure of AI discussions in London.

Obviously London is one of the big AI hubs in the world. How do folks in London talk about it? Is it more the California variety or in, is it the variety of how do we control the harms and increase TFP?

Ben: I guess there's a little bit of both of that Californian variety and there's a little bit of the harm piece, particularly the bias piece and a little bit we've got a little bit of regulation or start up in terms of regulation in terms of as of now, are there biases?

Is it just gonna do utilitarian decision making? How do we incorporate other forms of thinking in that? But I would say there's another strand which kind of leans towards what I see in Asia, all to do with energy infrastructure and supply chain infrastructure, which slightly crosses over with. The climate conversation, which obviously is really diminished in America for other reasons, but there is this kind of very self-interested saying we've got a real problem if we don't have a supply chain.

If we can't build, we don't have energy infrastructure, and if this is gen, just basically a way of turning energy into some form of intelligence how do we deal with that? Which is this kind of more European wide issue of the fact that we can't build. We can definitely see that China seems to have a headstart in that and America is forming.

So that's the other part which kind of fills in London a little bit. And maybe that's because London is a little bit more connected to old world economies that I guess everyone except the US is underweighted technology versus some of these old world things. And that particularly in the last two or three months has started to come as a conversation, as people go, oh, this bottleneck seems to be these data centers and the energy.

And then they go why can't we produce the energy? And it's not that we don't have the technology as we don't seem to have the permits. We don't seem to have the regulatory things. And they're going, why is that? And why can China build like the equivalent of all of us? Domestic energy in six months or something like that.

And America had taken seven years just to build 10% of that. So those are the questions which are starting to come up, which is intersectional with that AI question. But is coming up with that on the supply chain? So maybe that's somewhere where central planners might have an edge because of all of that?

Dan: Yeah. Generally I think every year China builds about as much as one or two UK's worth of total energy every single year. And I used to collect these figures more actively, but I think that's the rough pace at which they are going. And it, it should, we expect that London can hold on to AI leadership in the longer term if it is impossible to build much more power and really difficult to build transmission lines and really difficult to build data centers because we take a look at some of these headlines around the uk.

The FT has recently written about the fact that home building in London has essentially collapsed. And I wrote this line, which is not quite right, but roughly accurate that the UK has the housing prices of California and the per capita income of Mississippi State. And the third runway for Heath Row, which has been planned for about 20 years now.

Yes. Yeah. It's supposed to cost 30 billion pounds. And so if we can't get the basics right, how can the UK really hold on to leadership for a pretty important technology?

Ben: I think on a 20 to 30 year view, unless we fix a couple of those things leadership will definitely lag. Maybe it's okay being, I think the uk depending on how you score, it's something like.

Number 10 as a kind of power, but slipped. So 10 years ago you probably could have said it was number eight or number nine. And in aggregate it's maybe slipped a place or two, it slipped less than Italy, somewhere like South Korea. Which metric are you

Dan: looking at?

Ben: Which next? You do a blend of things like soft power, GDP education and some of these things.

And if you aggregate it, there's a soft slipping of the uk. Some of it has slipped, more cultural powers probably have probably held on. And so I would see that continuing. But on the flip side, we have got some tail optionality. I wouldn't put it as too high probability, but some and maybe things will still have to get worse to look better because for instance.

If the country changes its mind on things like mini nuclear power or also particularly onshore wind. So we've got the planning for wind, not the interconnections and not the final planning. And actually we've got mini nuclear power SMR technology through British industry. So this is a thing 'cause it can come through some of our engineering, so it won't feel like, oh, we have to rely on foreign technology.

That is possible because you could put mini nukes next to smaller data centers and London could keep up. I'm not sure it will go through with this, but there's been a nuclear power review with, puts it as a possibility. So you really rely on that coming down on the cross curve. Otherwise I Do

Dan: Do you think politically and in terms of permitting people will accept having these mini nuclear reactors spread throughout the country?

Ben: I would say at the moment it's unlikely, but not zero. So we'll have to see where it goes. But there's enough places which are maybe far enough away from cities that it's possible. And also the miniaturization is getting smaller. And there's an argument for building British, there's a couple of British companies which could do that.

So I wouldn't give it a high probability, but I would definitely say it's more than, it's more than zero. I think America's own reassuring attempts are quite Trixie. And so this is where, oh, this is where China might actually have a lead if some of their other things go there.

But there are possibilities.

Dan: Tell me more about a British optimistic case about how they may be able to, instead of slipping through these ranks, how does it regain its position?

Ben: Oh, okay. I guess you would have to have some political consensus. I guess there is a technocratic consensus.

So the number one thing is I think we would need to try and unblock planning both domestically by building buildings. Which we could do. So it's just a legal policy coordination problem. It's not a technological problem. So that's the upside. But we haven't been prepared to burn our political capital to do that yet.

So we shall see. And then on the infrastructure side as well, so this would be building power, putting data centers next to things. So those two things I think are plausible. I also think we might get a one-off. Bonus in our health system because of weight loss medicines, GLP ones coming through.

So they'll be generic in 2031. And we are now seeing there's a lot of second order cost to chronic illness of which the UK isn't quite as bad as America, but it's not brilliant. And that is actually gonna be billions of both first order and second order savings. And if we can use those savings a little bit better, both in terms of making our NHS better and putting a little bit more investment within that and on blocking some of these more pro-growth elements, I think that is actually a possible fix because we've got the capabilities to build more.

And we've all got possibilities of infrastructure and we've got an agglomeration effect of London. Some of our second cities might continue to suffer. So I'm not sure on the UK side whether that is true, but as Americans tell me, the fact that Manchester's only two hours away on, on the train or two, two and a half hours, or even driving, they're like, that's just a suburb in America.

We would, we would drive there. They don't understand why Brits don't drive to like these centers of excellence in that same sort of way. So because it is solvable by political coordination I think there is. And then because there's still a lot of cultural soft power, you've still got finance here, although it's maybe not quite as great as New York or maybe equally as great as New York.

And you've got all of these things where you're second best, maybe not the very best. Biotech, some technology and the like. That still means that you're gonna be a really important non-US hub. And because you're at such a low, because of some of these regulatory issues, you can turn it around.

So that's the optimistic case.

Dan: And are you optimistic about London's agglomeration effects? If millionaires are leaving, is it still going to be a growing city that is growing in population and wealth?

Ben: I'm a little bit more neutral on this. I probably was more optimistic and that has down rated somewhat is not quite as bad as what I think the media has said.

Some are definitely living in millionaire status. But what is also happening is that although they're leaving in terms of permanent domicile, they still come here for three to six months of the year or a few weeks anyway. And particularly actually, if you are in the a hundred millionaire status, who often don't stay in one place that long, they're still passing through London somewhere between four to 12 weeks a year, which actually is enough if you're getting all of these other things going through.

So maybe they come to an auction event, maybe they go to Henley or to. Children go to Glastonbury or they do some of these other things, or they strike a deal. And then if you've got these other things right, they only have to be here a couple of days to sign some kind of check or something like that.

And we've got huge capabilities like around Cambridge, Oxford, there's lots of fields, there's lots of empty fields, which we could build on very quickly if the regulations allowed us to do that. And Cambridge is still only a 40 to 50 minute train ride from central London.

And then that literally is a suburb of the US so you could build out that whole corridor with labs and tech and all that type of thing. And you can get the flying millionaires to visit and you're still getting. The Middle East, some Russia, some China who are still doing business in London and actually in preference to America at the moment because of the politics of the situation.

So there's some hope still for London. I haven't given up my optimism,

Dan: I wanna believe Ben. But let's get building in London started first and then we can build out the corridors. Like why has it that the home building has completely collapsed in London when it is such an urgent thing that we have more homes.

Ben: So the primary reason is our planning system works on a political veto. Actually, this goes back, this is gonna get a little bit boring and technocratic, but post-war 1948 when we put in the British planning system, and you can compare this to France and Germany, which are built more in kind of similar things or even the Nordics.

Their house building is still about double R rates and have always been higher than the British rates. But essentially what happens in France, Germany, even the Netherlands, is once you've passed the planning rules and everyone's got some sort of zoning and guidance, you basically are allowed to build, no one can stop you.

So that has crept forward in all of those nations. But essentially if you pass the zoning and you meet the pattern book or whatever you can build in the uk, not only has our regulations got a little bit quite a lot worse, as has Germany and France. But even once you've passed all the technocratic, tick boxes, you can be called in either by your local politicians, or even worse, even if your local politicians don't call you in or even if they pass it, it can be pulled in by central government. And so your builders can never have a hundred percent certainty. And that is the core is the big difference between actually the British system and all the other systems which are built more.

And I think they didn't realize in 1948 this would be the case when they wrote the law. Any government who really wanted to do this could rip up that planning law and rezone much like Germany, France, or the Nordic countries. So you wouldn't have to go and do it somewhere like Brazil does it, where you wouldn't have any sort of planning and some of that and you could at least jumpstart those rates.

Then there were other issues to do with capital and we had a big fire disaster, so some of our building regulations got tighter and we didn't give it capital. But all of that is actually secondary to the fact that we've got a political veto. The only other way you could do it is you could convince the people doing political vetoes, which are essentially local residents, that it's in their best interest.

In order to do that, you could pay them off. So there are some things like street zones and things like that, where if you give them more money to allow them to build, that is also a possibility. I actually think that's a little bit harder. Some people think that would be easier, but either of those two things could get building going again.

Dan: But the law has been there for a while and there's been like a change, which is that there's basically no new homes in London. I understand that there was this disastrous fire and maybe capital is getting tougher, do you think that, let's say two years from now, that number will be quite a lot higher than it is today of new housing starts

Ben: Not in two years, not on current trajectory.

There is some stuff actually clogged up with our current government, which might pass, in which case that might unclog. I'm currently not too optimistic about that, but potentially after that, if people really sense okay, new young people really can't live where they want to live. And old people are a little bit more willing to give up the fact that they need buildings next to them and that Vata power, again, not high probability, but certainly more than zero.

That's what I would say in that. Anyway, moving on from building, perhaps I'll move on to a couple of other softer things. I have a question here. So someone we're both keen on as a mentor, Tyler Cowen, he once interviewed Temple Grandin in part on the ideas on neurodiversity. And I tend to see some neurodiverse at the head of some big US companies, arguably Microsoft, arguably Tesla, arguably Palantir and a bunch of others.

So there seems to be the silicon subculture which embraces this positive nerd culture. Do you think that explains anything about the US or Silicon Valley, maybe vis-a-vis China or anything out that, or I'm interested whether neurodiversity might be a key unlock for America.

Dan: Yeah, certainly it does feel like there is a lot of neurodiversity in Silicon Valley and not just among these people who make it to the top in terms of these companies, but also just in the rank and file. I think that many more narrow neurodiverse people manage to thrive in the San Francisco Bay area relative to a place like Washington DC or Boston or London or New York City for that matter.

So there is a little bit more of a reward for neurodiversity or at least tolerance for it. But I'm not sure whether it could constitute an unlock. Maybe this has already been unlocked, maybe there are some ways in which the people are able to, people just know that Silicon Valley is a good place for them.

On the other hand, Perhaps the reason that the neurodiverse can't necessarily make it in these East coast cities like DC or New York, is that people generally don't tolerate the neurodiverse very well. Maybe there's a reason that we call Washington, DC Hollywood for ugly people.

We don't have to focus on the ugly, it is like Hollywood, which feels like a much more popular contest from high school. So if maybe most people are intolerant of Neurodiverse, and maybe this is part of the reason that Silicon Valley just isn't very funny, then who's gonna win the neurodiverse?

Throwing their culture out into the rest of America? Or is the rest of America going to engulf Silicon Valley? I'm not sure.

Ben: Yeah, I'm not sure. I guess that's maybe more of a lever for China, not necessarily on neurodiversity, but if they could just loosen up, like embrace some more of their subcultures overall, I think that would be potentially a really big unlock for them.

Obviously that's probably the nightmare of central planners to let loose what your population actually thinks. Maybe turning to a few more personal thoughts. I was interested to pick up that you were a cadet, an army cadet and quite a successful one. So I was wondering what did being a cadet of the year teach you when you were growing up?

Dan: When I was growing up in Canada, I was part of the Royal Canadian Army Cadets and it was a tremendous fun for me. And this is essentially just a big after school program. This is not that much different with Boy Scouts, although we were handed real rifles to do target practice with.

And so that part is a little bit more interesting. And I remember having to go to these drill camps on a formal army basis to run around at 6:00 AM and do a lot of pushups. And so I think that I was definitely more fit in those days than I am today. And I think what the army Cadets Program really taught me was first, you have to have a sense of which rules to break.

If you break no rules ever in life you will absolutely get nowhere if you break the wrong rules. You might be tried for treason or whatever it is. And so you have to have a sense of which rules to break and being in that sort of a formalized system in which rank matters and hierarchy matters, but also moving ahead matters.

I think it is a good thing to have to think about which is the room for creativity. Otherwise I think that it is really good to be part of the Cadets program, just to know, learn a little bit of discipline and I'll learn how to, focus on having a long-term program and figuring out what's important.

And all of these are banal lessons which most of us should not know as an adult. But I, when I say most, there are still many of us who have never properly internalized a lot of these lessons. And so it was a major part of growing up for me to figure out what is important, how do we set priorities and how do we actually work towards them.

Ben: I think SBF should definitely have done that, maybe more effective altruists, but yeah, if SBF done, that would be in better

Dan: shape

Ben: For sure. Much better shape. What do you make of the operas of Philip Glass? Can any modern opera get close to Mozart?

Dan: I guess the only opera of Philip Glass that I've seen on video not live was which is his interpretation of.

The Egyptian Pharaoh. And I've only seen licks and selections of that particular opera. Now has Mozart been superseded? I would argue yes. And I think the peak of opera is represented by Wagner and Verdi. The German great and the Italian Great.

I would say it's mostly downhill from there. And one can identify these perfect in Mozart, but perhaps Mozart is a little bit too now. I see. And perfect. And you have these superior tones of a lot of Mozart, but. But you see a little bit more in Verdi and Wagner is just this total emotional conviction in which they, there is no doubt that the protagonists are feeling as they do, whereas there are some of these climactic scenes in Mozart, which.

Don't feel quite mature. If I'm thinking about something like the marriage of Firo in which the count of ama viva confronts the Countess over allegations of infidelity. And this is a comic opera in which the count is a fearful that the Countess has hidden the page Carino in her closet, and he is trying to identify and find that page this climactic confrontation actually sounds not that he doesn't quite have the conviction in order to not make this as apocalyptic, as it could be.

Whereas there is no doubt if this was in this opera, was in Verdi's hands, the music would be quite a lot more dramatic than faintly comical. There are some things that Mozart could have done maybe a little bit better. I note that the marriage of Figueroa is the first of his three great Italian operas.

Next came Don Giovanni and then came Cozy Tuite. I think that one of these things I wonder it would be, would've been wonderful if Mozart was able to study a little bit more the techniques of Wagner and Verdi and how would he have revised the marriage of Figueroa based on that.

And one of these tragedies is that right before Mozart died for reasons unclear he was supposed to be composing an opera based on King Lear. Imagine how wonderful it could have been to a c one of the c king Lear in the hands of Mozart.

Ben: Yeah, that would've been brilliant. And I agree, Mozart, like perhaps would've been firm or more dramatic would've been really interesting. I think you wrote in your last letter that King Lear is the most Chinese of Shakespeare plays. So I was interested in that comment, but also what do you think then is the most American of Shakespeare plays

Dan: maybe a Midsummer Night's dream speaking to you from California but to be a little bit less glib about the potential drug use there?

Ben: Yeah.

Dan: What could be a very American Shakespeare play? Have you given some thought to this? I'm curious about your review. I

Ben: put it down to two, which may be a little bit more on the nose, but. Being potentially at this point in time Julius Caesar or Corey Elis. So either you've got this tension between like singly an elite or not.

And strong man politics or not. Maybe those are on the nose, but yeah, whimsical, maybe something like Matsu Knight's Dream. I guess you could also make some sort of call for the trading part with the Merchant of Venice or something like that. But as of now, I think he would maybe go for something like Caesar.

Dan: Yeah. It is quite interesting that Steve Bannon in one of his many lives produced this. Was it a Lanis movie that starred? I am Anthony Hopkins.

Ben: I didn't realize that. I'd have to look that up.

Dan: One of these major film adaptations was produced by Steve Bannon, and I believe that he was.

Really obsessed with COIs in particular. Take a look. Take a look with this Anthony Hopkins production. Now, could it be something like McBath? Could it be something like Othello, probably not this. These are not sufficiently political. These are two people. But if we take Tyler seriously, I think that Shakespeare's peak was Henri as a unit.

Now, could that, does that have a contemporary relevance for the US today?

Ben: Yeah, I guess if you take it as a unit for sure it has, for sure. It has some, I'm not sure it's an exact mapping. But yes.

Dan: That's what, and King Lear might have some contemporary relevance for the US as well, which one of the interpretations I have of King Lear is that violence can really spiral and there is no limit to political chaos.

You can have a political figure not really be aware of what he's doing. And then a lot of other people are simply bewildered at what's going on. At least in the case of King Lear. You have these two Dukes, the Duke of cornball, who is married to Reagan. And then the duke of Albany who's married to the other sister, not Cordelia.

And the Duke of Albany seems to be the good guy. He's just bewildered about what is going on and at the very, and come to a census where he has a Cornwall is just a kind of brutal and evil and completely ruthless. And there, there is no limit to the sort of political spiraling of a collapse.

I'm not sure that describes contemporary America right now, but it might, and that's part of the scary part.

Ben: Yeah, and I guess maybe that also shows the similarity between China and America, that actually maybe kingly is also an American play. And particularly you could think about the relationships between the old and young within kingly also could apply to America and actually the politicians in America particularly getting elderly as well across the spectrum.

So it's interesting to think about it from that point of view. Okay. I was also interested in coming off all the book tours and all the many amazing podcasts that you did over last year. Having done all of that, is there anything that you might have changed your mind about in terms of what you've written in the book?

Or maybe not completely change your mind about it, but maybe overweight or underweight compared to when you first rated it?

Dan: I've learned that people can be a lot more kind than I expected, and I've learned that people can be a lot more mean than I expected. There's all of these tanky who love to roast my ass on Twitter, and I think that it is just, there's all this misreading of what I say.

There's nothing an author can do about that. People might say that. Oh, I have forgotten to say that America has been ruled by lawyers forever, but I do say that in my very first chapter that the US used to be a little bit more of an engineering state, which is why I was able to build.

But people either forget to read that part or pretend that I never wrote it. And these are one of these things that authors everywhere have to deal with. And that is just one of these taxes of being of writing that there is just a lot of malicious, creative misinterpretation of one's work.

Now, I don't feel like I have it especially bad relative to a lot of other authors. And it is fine. It doesn't bother me that much. And I also have learned that there is a lot of great interest in this topic. That there are a lot of people who are, who enjoyed this book, who tell me that they enjoyed this book and who are rooting for my success.

And I think that is also a very heartening thing to have. I am surprised that people are still asking me to do podcasts. Generally now I am happy to do podcasts only with people I already know and are friends with like you, Ben. And so all of that is quite positive.

I'm curious for your feedback on my conversation with Tyler. Do you think it worked? What, what did work and what didn't work?

Ben: I thought it was great and I thought you both really enjoyed yourselves and obviously Tyler's got a really large audience, so you did have to cover some of the topics in the book again, I guess in the first half.

But for me, the sort of second half where you both talk about more personal and perhaps esoteric things maybe like this, our conversation here today where we touch obviously on China, but not for the main thing I thought was really interesting and I loved you challenging on, I still haven't heard his list of popes in order which should be, which are the best popes or which not 'cause you could imagine, you can imagine to do that, but I thought it was a very it was a very good conversation.

And I think you mentioned in that one as well as in some of your podcasts that I think maybe you still do this, that you type out. Sentences or write out sentences for writers you admire. So actually I did this with some of your own work recently this week to see what that feels like.

And it was actually pretty good, I noticed. Sometimes you have a good, very good way of using a kind of trilon, a series of three things within your sentences and when you use it, unfortunately chat has made this something that we don't see as much anymore. But you've got a very good use of M Dash generally, and actually when you write that in the pause, it's interesting.

I actually wrote this out by hand because it's not as it's not as emphatic as a, as a.in your sentence, but it is this little dash. I always think of Emily Dickinson within it, but it does punctuate another point. Normally a few words. And then again, I did think that technique was interesting.

I last generally for poems, like writing out poems is really interesting because of where you have the slashes and ate, but I hadn't done it for essays or nonfiction, and I read plays out aloud. I think that's quite interesting. But do you still type out writers that you admire and you still think it's a good technique?

Dan: Not so much anymore, but I keep a running scrapbook of my favorite phrases. And when I sometimes pick up a very nice turn of phrase and either a book or a magazine or wherever else, I paste that in. And every so often I looked through my scrapbook and it. Find some new forms of syntax that I want to play with.

I think it is good that you picked up my tricho as I myself am a Trinitarian, so anything that goes in threes would be really good. Have you tried the exercise of trying to re type rewrite play and has that what has that exercise given you insight into?

Ben: Yes. I haven't done it.

Greatly I've done it particularly on Harold Pinta work and also for some bits of waiting for Gado. And this is because both of them are very interesting, and this is where it started. Essentially pauses and silences, which are quite hard to judge. But in the writing out, and then also when you say it, it does give you this real sense of ah within that pause and what's it be?

And it gives you a stronger sense of the rhythm of language. So writing it, in fact, I would suggest if you're doing this, you actually write it out by hand as well. It tends to be a little bit slower for people versus typing. And then also to speak it, I think for essays and other things, probably not speaking it, but for plays, which will eventually be a vocal form as well, that is quite an interesting write up.

And so you, you are writing the dialogue and then you'll speak it. And it gives you the sense of rhythm and also the pausing. And another thing that shows you both in Pinta actually and in great playwriting overall is punctuation and the use of punctuation. And actually we have some unusual punctuations which have developed over the last few decades, but we use a slash quite a lot as well as hyphens and on and on dashes.

And also this is to try and get overlapping sounds and rhythms. And you only pick that up really by trying to write it or also speak it which you don't. Even just listening or seeing it on the written page isn't quite the same. I'm not sure 'cause I don't really hear music in the same way.

Maybe some people would have the same when they can read sheet music and then also have to play it out or practice it out. But there is something within that. And I also think it's interesting 'cause a lot of art students will, they will have a phase where you just copy what old masters did you, even if you're doing life drawing, you will start out with that to just see, okay, this is what drawing a Michelangelo kind of feels like.

Even though in very modern art, obviously we don't do that, but from that roots. 'cause it does give you that, that sense of feeling. So I think it is an interesting creative practice.

Dan: Yeah, I mean I think it is still a kind of an underrated practice. The reason that I started with sheet music is because I used to be very into reading music and holding a score as I listened to a string quartet or something.

I remembered copying out, I believe it was a Mahler symphony, just like writing a page or two of that out. And you really see what the choices a composer made when you do something like that. And when you retype a story, an article, whatever it is of another writer, you really become much more hyper aware of the choices that they make of particular punctuation or adjectives or syntax.

And you have to start thinking a little bit more about what might you do in that scenario? And that is actually a really good exercise. And it doesn't, it feels surprisingly underrated of a thing to just get into the minds of other people. So this kind of inspires me to ask you.

I've never played, but I haven't really been a big part of my life, although last year I attended I think just two plays. There's a David Henry Huang play on called Yellow Face, which I saw on Broadway. I also saw this new production of Oscar Wilde's importance of being Earnest on the West End, which had this very camp production starring Stephen Fry as Rael the starches of the Victorian matrix.

And I'm thinking of getting into plays more, but is there some sort of analogy where instead of writing out a play can we scare up, let's say two, three other friends to just read out all of these parts and just read these things out and for pleasure? Do you think that is actually a good exercise or that doesn't really work?

Ben: No, it's a really good exercise. Let's do it. So particularly in pandemic times, that is actually what a lot of playwrights and actors ended up doing. So you do it across your favorite plays but it is also the one of the very earliest ways of work shopping your own work is to get people to read it out.

I do these performance lectures, so you like standup. Sometimes you just have to test it with a live audience because you've got this interaction. But certainly simply just reading it out and also reading it out as the parts of others could be can be really good. And I'm sure amongst our group we'll have some to do that.

And then you can do it also. You can go and watch the production or something like that. But yeah, it's definitely worth doing.

Dan: So let's say that I am on holiday next week with three other friends who are as interested in plays as I am. Probably Shakespeare is not the right answer.

But is there some, I don't know, stopper play or something else in which we should just read out the parts to each other? Is there a good kind of starter play if none of us are very familiar with plays to try to have this sort of fun?

Ben: Ooh, I, so with just three, it's interesting that I might start with four, four

Dan: people total.

Ben: I might start with Harold Pinter 'cause they've got really interesting pauses and they're a little bit simpler. And it's also the birth of a lot of. Where Modern Drama goes, or Samuel Beckett, I think I would do Pinter. But actually the one that you maybe do is now, and also 'cause I think it might be his greatest play, although has more characters, I don't think it really matters would be Tom Stoppard's Arcadia, maybe start with Rosen Krantz and Gilden Stern, which is his most philosophical play and actually needs less dramatization for it and has fewer characters.

Rosen Ks and Goldstein are dead, has a slight Shakespeare connotation, not really. And then do Arcadia 'cause Arcadia you get this multilayered time effect where if you are reading it out. And it's really funny and I think it will probably still prove to be as great as play. Yeah, that's why I suggest, what's

Dan: the appeal of Arcadia?

Ben: So Arcadia Whoof. I think it is just a very good reflection of humanity and thinking overall, but also has concepts of time and quantum physics, also chaos. Also maybe the complexity, and then inexplicably inexplicable, of human life. But also has overtones of this reverse of are there patterns?

Are there things which reverberate through time? Are there these narratives that we feel? And he packages up that really well. So not only touches on chaos theory, complexity and quantum ness. So the cutting edge of some science thoughts, which are not fully captured, but also has these characterizations of narrative and pattern and then puts through some of these other obscure things like the patterns of English gardens and French gardens and these other things that humans are grappling with and shows and shows some of that through time.

So I just think it's really neatly wrapped up. And obviously as he's recently died, it's probably the moment of that. So that's why I would highlight that. But it's actually quite quick to do. So Pinta plays are probably, some of them are only for an hour and a half, so you can definitely do that over an evening with some tea.

Arcadia's a little bit longer. Rosencrantz and Guildenstern [are Dead] I think is only about an hour and a half as well [Ed: actually runs 2 hours]. So you could do that quite quickly.

Dan: Let's say that the chaos and quantum and time are just a little bit too philosophical and complex for a starter group. Is there an easier stopper to play?

Ben: Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are dead. It's okay. It is philosophical. Comedic as well. So in that sense it could actually be harder than Arcadia because Stoppard  is really good at explaining these concepts of chaos theory and butterfly flaps its wings and things like that. So in that sense, I don't think you will struggle whereas Rosenstein and Gilda and have some of these more philosophical overtones.

But structurally and character wise it is simpler. So that's potentially there, but you could just flick the first chapter or two, or sorry, scene or two. And that will give you a sense

Dan:What about Leopoldstadt ?

Ben: So I think I'll have to see it again. I liked it but I wondered whether the first showing may, or may not be definitive and I think maybe we need a little bit more time as it will prove to be his last great work, whether that will prove to be greater.

I still prefer some of the concepts on Arcadia. I. Your podcast dub obviously had a little bit more of a personal connotation. So I would like to, I would like to see it again. I should reread it actually to make that sense. Maybe actually there's a really good biography of him also by Ion e Lee, so maybe putting all of that together, it would give me a more complete sense.

I think it's interesting because playwrights in general, or I guess right in general, tend to lean a more complicated left, say I know it's more complicated than that, whereas Stoppard lent a more complicated and I would say that just because he was very interested in notions of freedom and liberalism because of where he of how he grew up.

So I think that makes it really interesting. And I do think playwriting is one of those things where even. If you're successful, say leftist or rightist. Most successful plays always have very strong and nuanced arguments arguing for the other side, whatever position you have. And in fact, for some of the greatest, you're not even sure within the play where the playwright's actual position might be.

So that's one of the reasons I still think performance is really interesting on that level. And reading it out you get to inhabit a character who might not think well, almost certainly doesn't think like yourself. And so though I think that is a really good way of inhabiting something else, which obviously fiction gives you performance, gives it to you in a very live manner which I think is one step up in importance.

Dan: Do playwrights tend to write distinctive pros in terms of essays? Can you tell who is a playwright based on their essays?

Ben: Oh, I don't know about that. Some playwrights have gone on to write. Quite interesting essays as well. I would have to think, my guess is maybe yes but I can't think offhand.

Maybe more interesting or equally as like some players, like Tom Stoppard famously wrote some very successful Hollywood stuff. Like I think Steven Spielberg used to ring Stop Pod up when he had a problem in his script and sometimes Stop Pod would say, I think that was fa, I can't remember what film it was some famous film and Stoppard said, no, I'm working on this small play.

And Spielberg says what? But this is a million dollar multi thingy hit. And Stoppard was like that, but I'm more interested in this. But I think that's quite interesting in some of those crossovers. But I have to think about the essay question. I'm not sure about that in terms of essayists.

Dan: I've been reading a little bit of this Auden collection of essays called The Dyer's Hand, and this is his only collected series of his essays. And I'm not sure that one can really tell that, oh, this is a poet. I don't know if when poets write essays in prose it, I'm not sure if it usually generally turns out necessarily very well.

I was also, I also read David Mamet's Was it Three Uses of the Knife? And I thought that was pretty good, but it didn't, I also didn't feel like I learned a ton from it. So maybe we should mostly stay in our lanes. But I am still curious if there is some sort of a distinctive training that they can bring into our pros Essay writing.

Ben: Yeah, I'm gonna think about that. I'm gonna, I'm gonna look at my bookshelf and see some of the essays, because I think of more of their memoirs, things like Edward Alby or something like that. But some of them have written some essays some have written quite interestingly about. Theater, although, and now I'm thinking about Peter Brooke and Empty Space, and that was a director writing about theater in general.

So I'm not, yeah, I'm not completely sure. Unanswered. Okay. Maybe we'll do a short last, final section and then some of the things that you're working on in any advice you have, but I guess in honor of Tyler Cowan, he doesn't do this so much anymore, but I thought we should do a short section of overrated, underrated in terms of the podcast.

There's some quick hits and some on some things so we can give this a go. Overrated or underrated US suburbs

Dan: correctly rated, I think correctly. I think that the suburban life, I think that this is, I recognize that this is the dream for a lot of families. Absolutely. To have a lot of space and then to be able to try a kids swimming pool. That's great. There is a lot more culinary diversity in suburbs because the rents tend to be cheaper.

And the people like Costco and those gigantic super stores. I like Costco myself. I don't mind visiting like once every two months or so to buy a lot of Kleenex tissues or something. I think that these things are quite fine. But let's not overdo our enthusiasm for them.

Ben: Yeah. Great for parents, I think. I still think they are too boring for teenagers, but Yes. I think Tyler likes the suburbs a lot though. Great. Hedge funds, overrated, underrated.

Dan: Overrated. These are compensation schemes masquerading as an asset class. And maybe you are more familiar with this data, but I remember reading a while ago that catch fund, quote unquote hedge fund performance has been pretty bad over the last couple of years.

They're not overperforming. And I think where the energy seems to be for a lot of smart people, they're going into these quant funds, and that seems to be where a lot of them are, where the action is. Hedge funds were never very well defined up until, after you moved on from long, short.

But so it feels like it's mostly a marketing category, right?

Ben: Very good for employees. Yeah. I'm not sure about it, I'm not sure about anyone else. Okay. We, I guess we briefly covered this, but I would say AI existential risk is overrated or underrated.

Dan: Maybe correctly rated may probably be overrated by all the Californians.

If we take this view that, okay maybe we will be tortured eternally in our minds by machine, God forever that seems pretty bad. I wouldn't like that. So maybe it's good that we have some people worrying about this. Maybe it is great that we have some people worrying about biotech security, but let's also worry about all of these other things, like what sorts of harms that this might be doing just to our minds every single day.

Ben: Yeah. I think that's the problem with a lot of these things. Yeah. The people really deep into it could probably do with thinking about some other things, but the people who've never thought about it at all could probably do with at least thinking about it a little bit. Okay. Overrated, underrated five year plans.

Dan: Overrated, the Chinese don't take this all that seriously anymore. Maybe the first two or three, five year plans were important. Right after the first the conclusion of the first five year plan felt that he was being excessively constrained and then he essentially did away with much of this concept.

So the gap between the first five year plan and the second five year plan, they didn't do this immediately afterwards because Mao hated them. I think that they are overrated. The Chinese have never paid that much attention to their own five year plans. I think something like this could be more centrally planned than high-speed rail?

High-speed rail arose in reaction to the global financial crisis, which was outside of the plan. So they built this enormous rail system without even planning for it. Yeah. And so that just shows, it's just this sort of aspirational marketing statement because they have to praise marks on his birthdays and sing the internationale to after the party congresses.

But this is actually not all that serious for, at least for the Chinese. Yeah. And if it's not that serious for the Communist Party, I can't imagine that being serious for anyone else.

Ben: Yeah. Mostly signaling. I think non-Chinese analysts are probably the people who read it the most. Okay.

Dan: It's worth reading.

It's an aspirational document.

Ben: Board games underrated or overrated. Yeah.

Dan: Correctly rated. I believe in the efficient market hypothesis. I think that most things are correctly rated. I

Ben: do.

Dan: And I like board games, but I have, it's been, I think, like years since it's really been part of my life.

I think a couple of board games can be great and perfect, but one doesn't need to keep learning new board games. And so in that sense it's not a very vital industry, just like opera. No, I think that it's good for some nerds. Maybe more people should hang out and play board games.

But people just should just find some way to be more social, whether that's to go to plays or to play some board games or just to go on dates more.

Ben: Yeah. I guess I mentioned it 'cause Silicon Valley doesn't have opera, but it does have more board games. But yeah, maybe correctly rated space exploration.

Underrated, overrated,

Dan: overrated. There's. Basically nothing out there within a reasonable timeframe. It's good to serve as an inspirational device. And I think that, maybe we should go find it. I think it is a scandal that there's very likely life within one of the moons of Jupiter and maybe of Saturn as well.

We're not even really trying that hard to go look for it. Now it's like right here within our solar system. What sorts of Moby Dicks lie within the moons of the Moon of Europa. So why don't we go, why don't we, why don't we go find Moby Dick?

Ben: Yeah. But then we've got a lot of problems on Earth as well, so yeah, I guess there's difficulties on that.

And last one then, venture capital. Do you think overall it's underrated or overrated?

Dan: Incorrectly rated. I think that it has definitely been a major factor in discovering the capital market ecosystem in general. What is venture capital exactly anymore? Maybe these are just marketing agencies with an insurance policy attached.

But I think that the general capital ecosystem has been pretty efficient in the US. But also people love to say that VCs don't work very hard, so maybe they also need to be working a little bit harder.

Ben: Yeah. Okay. That's very good. Yeah, I was interested in financial valuations and BC and the, in your letter you mentioned something you've talked about a little bit for looking at, for instance, the valuation of something like AppLovin, although it's actually fallen quite a lot since you wrote the letter. 

Dan: Really?

Ben: And you compare that to something like


Dan:, I hope it wasn't  because of me.

Ben: No it, there's been this whole revaluation of what software might mean, I think might even be down about 50% since you last wrote it. Wow. But it's still got a larger market cap than Xiaomi, although not by such an incredible amount or more, or something like BYD is maybe more well known for people in terms of EV makers.

But I was thinking that. When you think about it, maybe if you think about it purely in terms of capturing consumer surplus or wealth for the nation, certainly BYD and Xiaomi are doing better for their respective nations than Afin. But that's maybe what the financial shareholder equity people are looking at is that Apple vendor's better for the equity holders, but isn't adding so much more value to the United States.

And so that's part of this disconnect that we have with the financial market cap thing. And where is the actual value going? I think about this a lot in healthcare because actually within biopharma, a lot of the value actually goes into a. Into people, into patients who live longer and some value goes back to the biopharma, but not as much as you might have thought.

And certainly probably less than in, in tech companies. But that's partly because society demands that they might need to capture more of that value. And I think that's an interesting kind of tension between who, who is really getting the value from that.

What are you working on at the moment? Any current projects or any questions you are obsessed over?

Dan: There's two books on my shelf that I really want to read. One is a history of the Royal Navy, actually by a historian named NAM Rogers. It's called The Price of Victory.

This mega long history book and the Royal Navy has inspired a lot of excellent historians. Another is a novel:  Middle March. I'm deficient for being a bad California and not having read George Elliot and I'm also, I've also just picked up Dublin nurse. So I'm starting to read a little bit of the short stories of James' Choice, which are pretty charming and not as difficult as I imagined as something like Ulysses.

Ben: Great. And then the last question for a smart 20 something, deciding where to live and what to learn and what to do, what would be your advice for them?

Dan: I think that it is really important to be with ambitious people. I think that the default is to not be ambitious people. And certainly I've felt that my own ambition has ebbed as I've entered as I've crossed into the wrong side of 30.

Certainly, your ambition will get lower and lower, and so it is a good thing to have when you are younger. And this is, and it seems to me like some very ambitious people are in San Francisco as well as New York City. This is where I am a little bit more glum about London, where.

If the default national culture, it's just this cynicism and cleverness about people who are absent and then there it feels like a country in a national decline, even if London is delightful. I think that it is probably a good thing from a civilizational perspective not to be super cynical all of the time.

And so I have many friends in London. I love visiting. It is a superb city, but maybe it is also good to get some optimism and get some sun.

Ben: Yes. So raise your ambition and surround yourself with great people. I will make one further plea for London, although I do think we are a great museum like the rest of Europe.

Good to visit, but not. I think maybe so percentage wise, like we said, there is some doom and gloom here, but there are. Ambitious young people and then all were young, some are a little bit older and they are forming groups. So there's a big emergent venture cluster here. So this is Tyler Cowen’s venture philanthropy.

You've got British progress, you've got abundance for London. So you have got a cluster of young people who are there. There may be absolute numbers numbering in the hundreds and low thousands as opposed to tens of thousands and hundreds of thousands. But I still think you do have it here, partly 'cause of where the agglomeration effects are.

But I do think surrounding yourself, the people you surround yourself with, you tend to go, I think, what's the quote? If you want to run faster, you run with the antelopes. So if you want to be a fast antelope, you run with them some quote like that. That's the idea. And I think that has a lot of truth to that.

Dan: Antelopes may have to run really fast because they're being chased by lions. So I've put more emphasis on the lion rather than the herd. And having a bit more of a sense of threat is important too. And I think it is really good to prepare these lists of ambitions… just in case we have to medevac them into California at some point if the gloom pervades too deeply into their hearts.

Ben: Yes. Although the California's aren't they all going to New Zealand instead? So maybe we'll come round full circle.

Dan: Okay. That's right. Just a global tour of the angles here.

Ben: Yeah. Great. With that, Dan, thank you very much.

Dan: Thank you very much. This was a lot of fun. I'm glad that I got to hear more of your thoughts, especially on place.


In Arts, Podcast, Life, Politics, Writing Tags Dan Wang, Ben Yeoh Chats, Silicon Valley, London, China, AI, tech culture, culture, housing, planning, infrastructure, censorship, urbanism, ambition, writing, Shakespeare, opera, food culture, neurodiversity, politics

Simon Kane: Performing Shakespeare on YouTube, Immersive Theatre, and Why Fun Matters

February 14, 2026 Ben Yeoh

Is walking around a fake bathroom really “immersive” theatre, or is a theme park actually more honest art?

“If you’re making a space from scratch, why make a space that already exists? One of the reasons I love Disneyland is: Walt Disney made a thing that doesn’t exist.”

In this episode, Ben sits down with Simon Kane, a writer and performer whose work spans the devised theatre world of Shunt, BBC radio comedy on John Finnemore’s Souvenir Programme, and a lockdown Shakespeare experiment where he began reading and performing the plays chronologically. Simon takes us inside the mechanics of performance, questioning what “immersive” should actually mean, and arguing for “fun” as a rigorous artistic metric.

“An idea of what theatre should be is not theatre. You can do anything. That’s the point.”

We also dive into why Richard II can be read as a story about a fallen celebrity, the difference between stage acting and voice work, and the challenge of maintaining creative intentionality in an age of streaming algorithms.

We cover

  • Story first: why Simon shifted his Richard II from “Sigma male” energy to “washed-up star” to make the play land.

  • The immersive fallacy: why “walking around a set” is not enough, and why theme parks might be the clearest form of intentional spatial design.

  • Devised vs scripted: how Shunt built worlds without starting from a text, and how that contrasts with the discipline of audio comedy and drama.

  • Yes, and no: the improv rule that a clown “must always say yes”, and how refusal can be a creative act.

  • Escaping the algorithm: practical ways to consume culture on purpose rather than letting autoplay dictate your taste.

“Do stuff on purpose. That’s harder and harder these days because it is so easy to just click the next thing on my algorithm. It’s different to go, no… what do you actually want to do?”

Summary contents, transcript and podcast links below. Listen on Apple, Spotify or wherever you listen to pods. Video above or on Youtube.

Contents

  • 00:00 Meet Simon Kane: writer, performer, and lockdown creator

  • 00:24 Lockdown Shakespeare marathon: the idea

  • 01:44 Why YouTube? From Defoe’s Plague Year to tackling Shakespeare chronologically

  • 05:02 Making Shakespeare accessible

  • 06:36 Story-first acting: motivation, ‘pretending,’ and finding the way in

  • 11:10 Cracking Richard II: reinventing the character to unlock the play

  • 15:28 Julius Caesar choices: Cassius, Antony, and playing the populist

  • 16:28 From Shakespeare to Shunt: ensemble theatre and a different kind of acting

  • 22:07 How Shunt builds shows: space as text, rewrites, and devising under pressure

  • 25:19 Audience, space, and ‘immersive’: Jonah, walks, Punchdrunk, and Disneyland

  • 34:25 Clowning 101: Saying “Yes,” Saying “No,” and the Absurdist Engine

  • 35:59 Writer-First vs Ensemble Theatre

  • 37:04 When Critics Don’t Get the New Thing

  • 39:32 Devising, Short Runs, and the Joy of Doing It Night After Night

  • 40:20 Voice & Audio Work: Fast Choices, Characters, and “Reacting”

  • 43:11 Post-Pandemic Theatre + Digital Futures

  • 47:29 What Sticks: Influences from Theatre, TV Comedy, and Low-Fi Ambition

  • 50:53 Overrated/Underrated: Criticism, Arts Council Funding, and Netflix’s Impact

  • 57:52 What’s Next: The Book, Edinburgh Decisions, and the Cost of the Fringe

  • 01:00:55 Advice for Creatives: Do It on Purpose, Make the New Thing, Have Fun

Transcript (lightly edited, transcribed by LLM AI, so mistakes are very possible)

Ben: Hey everyone. I'm super excited to be speaking to Simon Kane. Simon is a brilliant writer and performer whose work ranges from devised and ensemble theater to new writing, solo shows, audio work, and from comedy to Shakespeare. Simon, welcome.

Simon: Hello. I've never actually written any Shakespeare.

Ben: But performed in?

Simon: Yeah. I've just been re-edit, trying to re-edit on this phone, the stuff I did in lockdown projects where I was reading the whole thing. But the phone doesn't have quite enough memory. I want to make sure I, in case YouTube ever suddenly falls to pieces, that I have everything I put on there in other versions.

And I also thought I'd just to explain: during lockdown, I did an actor weekday. That's a bad way to explain it, isn't it, Ben? I read an act, a play, a day for a week, intending to do the complete work of Shakespeare a week at a time. And I got four plays in and then I came back for another play and didn't like it.

So I did that again. And basically, yeah, I didn't achieve playing every character in Shakespeare, but I'm very proud of some of the work they did. I really love the Titus, I really love the Julius Caesar, and I'm thinking of coming back to it as well. I stopped 'cause things were opening up and because I was doing the histories, and Rich II goes into Henry the Fourth, which goes into Henry the V.

And I didn't really feel like doing Henry the V at the time. And also I realized recently, another reason I did it was I didn't know how to do Falstaff, and I've worked out, 'cause I have to choose lots of different voices and it did just have to be big voice choices. 'Cause I'm, and I realized I'll do what I did for Petco, make him Australian.

Ben: What made you choose that as a lockdown project?

Simon: So I'd started the project was I've always been interested in YouTubing and then in lockdown, a lot of my friends were suddenly making stuff like John Finnemore was doing stuff as Arthur from Cabin Pressure and Carrie Quinlan was doing stuff with Andy Stanton.

And that was one aspect of the decision. Another was, as lockdown started, I thought, oh, I'd really wanna read Daniel Defoe's Journal the Plague Year. And then I realized I had that in the flat and I started reading it and it was really interesting. And I thought, oh, I can do read that on YouTube. I'll read 10 pages a day and I'll, and that'll be me reaching out to people on YouTube and by the, and I really enjoyed that.

I really liked that. Discipline's too strong a word. Structure. And already I have a blog and for some reason at the end of the year, previous year, I decided this time I'm really gonna post a thing a day, which would never be the discipline before. And then we went into lockdown. It's, oh, great.

And so that was also provided a thi, the blog was a place where I could then post an episode and a little explanatory thing. And then I got to the end of Journal of the Plague Year and thought, I'm really enjoying this. I want to rea, I'll do another book. And it had to be out of copyright, didn't have to be out of copyright, but I thought—

Ben: Preferable.

Simon: Yeah. And then I suddenly thought, oh, there's no theaters. I haven't done Shakespeare in a while. I'll do the complete works of Shakespeare. And I have, which I won for a competition. I can't remember exactly what it's called. It's the Oxford University Press, I think, which has made some controversial decisions such as Falstaff's not actually called Falstaff.

They call him John Oldcastle. So I quite look forward to being the first actor to play John Oldcastle in a while. They've got a giant magic cat in Macbeth and it's got two king Ls. And I just, anyway, I just, I've got this book. I'll perform the complete works with Shakespeare chronologically as he wrote them.

And I realized I'd get to The Tempest if I'd done that by Christmas and I started reading Two Gentlemen of Verona and really enjoyed it.

Ben: You think you are going to get to the end one day?

Simon: I don't see why not. What was great because it was locked down, there were no theaters, so it would've been a project that would seem, I don't, I actually, I'm not sure I believe in stupid hubris anymore, but it would, this actor's gonna do the complete works of Shakespeare, but if there's no theater going on, it made more sense.

But I'm so pleased with the stuff I did, and I, and it's so, for some people, for some of the people who saw it, and that's very few people, it was their first introduction to this play. And I think they're good introductions. I thought I try to make sense of it and that's, it is good for me as well to have come up with a version of a play that to me makes sense.

Where I know why everyone's doing what they're doing and they're fun and that you approach and it doesn't seem frightening. Like people know I've prepared this in the morning. I've shot it, I've edited. One of the reasons I stopped doing it again was it was just taking up every waking hour.

So by the time I got to Tamer the Shrew already, if I was actually gonna do it chronologically, I would've gone onto the histories. So I thought, save the histories and do those separately. Okay. So then I got to Titus Andronicus. And by the end of that, I was so tired. I thought, I need, I can't continue this.

I'll do, I'll just head onto Julius Caesar, which was a play I was interested in. And then stop. And that's a season, that's four Shakespeares, that's a season. And then come back to it later. So yeah, and then when I tried to do the, I don't, yeah, I tried to look at the Henry of the Sixes, part one, two, and three, which are plays I love, but there are a lot of characters in there who—

Ben: [that's tricky].

Simon: A lot of 'em talk quite similarly and especially the first one is, I think, a big spectacle. So without all the battle scenes and explosions, it's a little hollow. Yeah. It's a much harder, it's a much harder thing to do if you don't, like 12th Night, the characters are really well defined and you can have fun playing all of them.

But also history, people keep changing their names 'cause they win and lose titles. So Richard II is quite handleable because there's three or four characters in it. And also every time I do a new act, I say the story so far. And also usefully offer some content warnings and explanations.

Explanations of the stuff. And also, yeah, all the melanin hatred you keep coming across. You just go, this is gonna turn up and yeah, don't make an excuse for it, but it's good to warn people of it. 'Cause you don't want people to go, oh, watch Shakespeare, suddenly feel like they've been mugged.

Ben: It's good to make it accessible.

And I think there was a tradition even at the time of essentially throwing around your troupe of players. They had a day to rehearse and then they just put it on that evening. Oh yeah. Yeah. So there's a, there was a lot of that. I'm interested in your overall process, but maybe through the lens of this project about what's your starting unit or starting point.

Do you tend to like character or an image as a starting point?

Simon: For what?

Ben: For getting into putting on the piece or performing somewhere. Is it through image or line and speech? Is it through character? Or there's a lot of talk about directors nowadays from the US school about everything has gotta be action and want and things like that.

So I'm interested in how you mix together all of those things.

Simon: I do different things, so I don't, it's not all the same process. I've never really directed anything.

Ben: But you're directing yourself in this piece in a way.

Simon: Yeah, but I don't, I'd happily go, yeah, I'm directing, but that's not directing.

Yeah. If you're not, if you're not taking it to someone else that's not directing. It's, but it's, it is like, all writing is improvisation as well. At some point you're improvising it and then you're recording it. And that's how I worked in devised theatre often we'd be improvising stuff and then, and I'd be the one to go and write up my memory of it, then bring that in and everyone else could go, no, there's this.

And at least there, there was a text there to turn, to use, however everyone wanted to use it. But I guess I still don't, I make things in different ways, so I dunno what you're asking me about.

Ben: Yeah. Okay. I guess for this project, [. Because we'll come onto the Shunt work.]

I'm interested, perhaps when you are getting into Shakespeare, you're gonna perform Shakespeare or a play. A play where you have a written text and there's characters, so we are defining it down.

Simon: Yeah.

Ben: Do you, and maybe obviously you'll listen to the director and things, but before the director or the work you are doing alongside the director, do you approach that from a very character driven, let's get inside the head of a practice or?

Simon: I approach it from a, I approach it from a, I think, a story.

Ben: Story?

Simon: Right. So, I think the two main focuses for me, not as a manifesting, but just the thing I do, is the story and, but, and the, all the normal story things of that. What's your motivation?

Ben: So it is a motivation. Yeah.

Simon: Another way to put it is what are you pretending?

Ben: Yes. That's slightly different though, but, yeah.

Because a motivation could be just your simple want, but if you are pretending that's a kind of projection of what you or whatever you want to pretend, but it might not be the same as your want.

Simon: But how is it different, give me an example?

Ben: You could come across, I guess, as pretending to be beautiful or pretending to be ugly.

So that's the thing.

Simon: Oh, I see.

Ben: [But you are but you are wanting to do… cross talk]

Simon: I don't think in those terms at all. How do you pretend to be? Some people do are completely in, that doesn't make sense. Sorry, I'm talking over you.

But you can, yes. You yourself projection is a thing. But you're so, yeah. You're doing it in character, I think, oh, actually. Yeah. I guess a lot of the work I have hasn't really relied on me finding a character because it is so much about my interaction with the audience or my, or my interaction with the story.

And it's just, and I think actually now you bring it up, one of the wonderful things about doing full Shakespeare is I could really do characters and immediately play people who weren't me. Yeah, no you are right. You're right to make that distinction.

Ben: Yeah, I guess this is because I probably want to go and start with the Shunt work and then come forward at this time, and I, this is obviously taints everything in a really simplified bucket, but you could say that some people would approach something purely from get inside the head of the character and from the character.

Play, pretend, or however the extreme, which you may not think works or not, is I'm not gonna think about the character, all I will just dress up like this character, everything on the outside, clown nurse or something. And from that external point of view, everything might flow. And then you have potentially a third blob of work, which is where you don't have a text or anything to working from and you're working with a bunch of other people.

And from that, and then I'm interested, what might be the thing from flows from that. And it's interesting when you're working with a text from Shakespeare, you think I can get inside and think about a character and do that. And so that's why I was interested about coming to that and how that might contrast for when you are devising work or doing ensemble work when you might not have a script or you're trying to do the script or you're making the script and how that all works.

Simon: Yeah. So I've put, I've got a few things to put a pin into for the Shakespeare, I think. The, it's the absolute best illustration of that for me is the fact that I played Rich of the, I did two Richard IIs. So when I came back to it, I thought, I'll start with the histories. And by the time I got to like the fifth act, I was like, I still don't get this play.

Ben: Yeah.

Simon: I still don't. I've made, I've make, I'm making and putting some something out, which is a story that I don't understand what the story is. And I thought, and I think round about Act four when I was recording, I thought what's one of the things we know about Richard? We know that Elizabeth the First saw Richard the Second and thought that's me.

And I thought I'm definitely not playing that. I am giving a very naturalistic, slightly odd book as every, I, I lean into the oddball nature of myself when I do Shakespeare. I've a lot of experience of, of doing Shakespeare when I was young, and it was really nice to be playing that kind of, I might be using this phrase wrong, sigma male, but like the Jaques and the Lucio and then Hamlet, like the, the underminers, the outsider intellectuals.

I, I really, and who don't fit in but have their own authority. And that's how I've been playing Rich II and that's how I often see Rich II played. And I thought, but that doesn't make sense. That's not who e, if you look at Elizabeth the First, did I say first or second? Elizabeth the First, there's a very clear on that. And I was thinking, I'd seen photos of Ian Richardson.

I thought what if I play Richard II as Ian Richardson, complete full old school, absolutely delivering every line like you love the poetry, like it's a proper performance. And I thought I'll, I'm gonna redo Rich II, but with a completely different characterization of Rich II. And that changed the whole thing and it made sense to me.

By Act four of this second one, I realized I've been playing, I'm Thatcher, this is, I'm playing amongst other things, and I'm also Norma Desmond, because we don't really have a concept of majesty, but we know what a fallen star is.

And Richard II was as, as a story about a fallen star, about a story about someone who absolutely was the thing they projected themself at, and then loses that because it's built on nothing and then has nothing to replace it with.

That changed the play and also changed how every other character behaved. And that, and it suddenly became a story. I understood what I was telling, and that was specifically because I changed the characterization, Richard the Second, and similarly when I came to and I'm—

Ben: Just gonna pick on that.

Simon: Yeah.

Ben: And that makes sense to me now that you say it's story first, because from understanding the story—

Simon: Yeah.

Ben: The character changed. And from the character, everything else changed to make sense of the story. Yeah.

Simon: Yeah.

Ben: Whereas you could have gone, someone could have gone the other way, I'm just gonna make sense of the character.

Yeah. And then whatever story comes out of that, comes outta that. But you weren't satisfied. 'Cause the first time around you, you had a character. Yeah. But it's like, when I play this character the story doesn't seem to make sense to me anymore. So I think that's a really interesting way of approaching it.

Simon: Yeah. I, and you know that, that's why talking about character and motivation and story are interlinked. But often, especially with a well-worn text, especially with part of the canon, I'll see productions where it doesn't make sense. I don't understand what the story is 'cause the characterization doesn't.

And, but with the great classics, you can change what a character is and still tell a different story. Yeah. And I think Hamlet's the, the best and worst example of this. I've seen so many Hamlets way that work so well, yeah.

Ben: Great character.

Simon: For the first, for the first act, and then come the second act it is, but why isn't he killing Claudius?

Ben: Yeah.

Simon: What, there is this huge gap in Hamlet where you… I think you have to know what's, you have to tell the story of why Hamlet then doesn't kill Claudius.

Ben: Yeah.

Simon: And it's not, well because he is pretending to be mad.

What is he, why is he pretending to be mad? Yeah. And I think yeah, it's what's the, so great to be told a story and it becomes, there, there could still be lots of great stuff, but I'd also like, Polonius, what's going on with Polonius. That's a great thing. One of the great things about Shakespeare is just, there are stories there if you wanna—

Ben: Yeah.

Simon: And what's the story—

Ben: We're telling.

Simon: And oh yeah. I, and one of the reasons I'm so proud of my Julius Caesar is I'd always sensed this version of Cassius and Mark Antony. I loved the character of Cassius. I loved how right he was about everything and how he kept deferring to Brutus because he also knew that he was a hothead.

He also knew that he was not a born leader and that dooms them. And I'd always wanted to play that. And then when it came to Mark Antony, I just, I dunno why, is bloviating the right word, sort of Boris Johnson, him, I don't dunno. It was just, he had a very few lines in the first act, but they were so obsequious, Dees, I thought, just go B.

And then by the time you get to his oration, to the Romans, I love doing that so much, even though it's such a sort of classic scene. It was just playing a total populist as a total populist. Without any. Without any, yeah. Without any, yeah. And anyone you play is charming. I could, this is really what you would talk about, but yeah.

It was, it just felt so good to be getting it.

Ben: And let's contrast that then. Do a little potted history. There was a collective called Shunt, which I think was one of the most influential theatre collectives, call it almost a movement, particularly within the London theatre scene.

And so arguably global. And you did a lot of work with Shunt and a lot of their work comes from an ensemble basis. Yeah. Although it often does use a director, but doesn't have to, and we can talk about how ensemble works differently, but often when you start, there isn't a written text. There might be one by the end.

So that's quite different from doing Shakespeare and you might not even start with some characters. But you might do, and I was looking at some clips 'cause I still remember, I don't actually remember the details very well, but I definitely remember the feeling of Dance Bear Dance.

Simon: Yeah.

Ben: [Cross talk: All the way back then. So I'd be interested in, did you—]

Simon: [See the one with me in—]

Ben: Yes. I think I saw it twice. I saw it in the arches. And your one with—

Simon: [Yeah.]

Ben: Yeah, because it was so extraordinary for the time. So I'm gonna let you talk a little bit maybe about your experience of that and then relate it back to making work.

So we just talked about Shakespeare and going through story and then into character and then performing. And then you've got this whole other way of working. And so with contrast, and obviously it's performing, but you start ensemble, you might not even start with much more than an idea or a character, and then you produce this other kind of work.

So why don't you talk about that?

Simon: That's the other thing I want to put the pin in. 'Cause for me there's, the really interesting journey for me was even before I was working with Shunt I knew Shunt through Gemma Brockis, who I knew at Cambridge. And towards our last years at Cambridge, we started working with a guy called Jeremy Hardingham.

So the journey for me is like at the end of my first year at Cambridge, I played Hamlet and I, and it was an amazing company. And then I watched and there it was an amazing company.

I thought I've played Hamlet. I'm gonna… unless there's touring or unless… a friend wants me in something… I don't really wanna act anymore. And Jeremy asked me to be in King Lear, and I said, I don't wanna do King Lear. And I saw his King Lear. And it wasn't like how I imagined, how I had imagined putting on Shakespeare before…

This was not about casting actors who have a really interesting take on the character and bringing them all together and telling the story. This was a completely different kind of piece of theatre, but it was complete, absolutely King Lear. And there were brilliant actors in it. But there were also performances that on their own might be seen as quite wooden, but weren't about people pretending to be that character.

And it was, excuse me, it was just a phenomenal room to be in. For three hours where this thing was happening. And then I started working with Jeremy. We did a thing, we did a version of A Midsummer Night's Dream, which I loved being in, and, but this type of theatre. And then I stayed, I've been making work with Gemma ever since, but this kind of theatre made me usefully self-conscious about just playing a character and what else an actor does in a company on stage.

And when I watched Shunt’s first show… watched Shunt’s second show, actually, The Ballad of Bobby Francois, which was quite a silent piece, quite a clown show. All the performances were great, but they were not really playing characters. And similarly, a lot of this devised stuff, immersive installation.

It wasn't about seeing someone play another character. It was just about someone interact with an audience. And I, and so I became… really, I saw that the thing I wanted to learn to do was absolutely just deal as myself in character with an audience, with a situation, but not present a character that was an interpretation of someone from a story.

And that's what went into when I did my, it's still my head, my solo sequel to the Shunt work, Jonah Non Grata. It wasn't about, I'm presenting my characterization of Jonah, it's about what is this person doing on stage? What are they trying to be? How are they interacting with an audience? It wasn't about me putting on a voice or doing stuff like that.

And in terms of the ensemble I made a piece with Gemma where I played two very different characters and that was an adaptation of, or inspired by, the book Invitation to a Beheading. And a lot of Shunt’s works are inspired by books. There's always some kind of text, but then you improvise scenes within the situations in those texts.

And I think normally when you're improvising it's normal anyway to improvise without actually coming up with a character. You're, it's about the situation and the back and the forth. And so I play two very different characters. I was a nervous lawyer and then a sort of weird surrealist alpha male executioner, but I used my own voice for that.

It was just, the situation was different. And the look was very different. If you put on a costume to be a person, you still need a mirror, otherwise you dunno what you're wearing. It might help you stand or move differently. But I, yeah, I have, I think I have at least those two strings to my bow, if that's the metaphor.

Like I can, like being present with other actors and with an audience in a space and interact with that. And also going away and finding a character and going, doing the whole Antony Sher thing, which I loved growing up. Seeing him draw the characters he was going to be and then transform into that.

I think the visual aspect is really important. And that, and also fun.

Ben: And how did you make decisions within the ensemble? So you're improvising, you're going back and forth, people are playing, however they're playing, all the scenes develop. How does a group of people then decide this is the most interesting way forward?

This is the best way forward. There is no way forward. Let's argue about this for a while. How do decisions within a rehearsal room start to form? Can you articulate that?

Simon: Yeah. Although I'm an associate artist, I would never be involved at the very beginning of a process. The time I would come on board, there would always be a set. The set is the text. What Lizzie designs. And the basic idea, which can change, that the collective has of the audience's journey through that space, or just within that space, is already in place and the text is already in place.

The one slight exception to this was Tropicana, where I came in mid-run. And so there was already a show there, but when I came in as the lift operator, I was allowed to rewrite my stuff. And that rewriting inspired other people like Hannah to rewrite their bits and yeah, I could work on everything I did and it was really useful to have a show in place and for me to be allowed to come in and go, oh, I think this might work, and do this.

And so there's always some kind of thing already there when I come into a Shunt show, and it really varies. It's always down to the wire, at least down to the wire.

And I think when I was first brought into Dance Bear Dance, it was as someone who, working with Gemma on Invitation to a Beheading, it was someone who had experience of coming up with text for a devised show.

Bobby Francois, there wasn't really much text, but because this was gonna be a council meeting, that this was gonna be a much more text-heavy show than they'd done before, which at least I think is one of the reasons I've been invited to come in as early as I did on it.

And I think one, definitely something I literally brought to the table in Shunt was an idea of how to create text that worked within an immersive environment that wasn't just like delivering a lecture, say. Like how you present information to an audience and give them the information to present audience back as well.

And you play games and one of the best bits about the devising process was just, oh, every hour go away, come up with something to present. And the presentations are so important. And when they were doing the cabaret, that was also people would present a thing, a scene.

Ben: Just make the work and see—

Simon: See where it goes.

Yes, it was very much that, yeah. That improv thing of just do it and then see.

Ben: I'm gonna try and pick up on quite a few things and we see where we go here. So I think it's really interesting. I guess it's always been within performance, but there's emphasis, first of all, on audience or audience experience.

And second of all, where the audience and the performer is within the space. And this idea that, and actually it's influenced my more recent work around the show starts immediately. Or in fact my last show, it even starts when you're not in the space, within the bar. Yeah. I'm speaking to people.

You're inviting them in, you are already telling them about what it is, and then you're invited and go through the space. And I've been very much more interested in how much the audience has agency within a space as opposed to in a very traditional, or some traditional, where the audience just sits and watches something and, or you go further back and they're always rowdy.

And I'm interested in how your line of work here thinks about having an audience pay attention, how you think about audience within space, and maybe you can do this with reference to your latest work or even some of the Shunt work, with how that works in terms of thinking about the audience where they're not simply a passive piece of the performance, but a more active piece.

Simon: Yeah. It's obviously about that, but I guess why I become, why I get antsy is I don't wanna start, as I hear often, suggesting that a passive audience is unengaged.

Ben: To do with attention.

Simon: [Not even that attention. Yeah.] No, I thought you said tension.

Ben: [No.]

Simon: All engagement, all art is about holding someone's attention and I think so much of it for me, in terms of doing immersive work, is you're doing this every night. For me, it's really about making the experience I'm going through night after night a proper experience, and that means different from the one before.

And so I was thinking about this on the way here, 'cause I'm thinking about making another, a second solo show finally after Jonah, and what I'd forgotten, one of the things I loved writing about it and when I took it to Edinburgh last year and all the things I was refining about it, but one thing I hadn't really, at least I don't remember acknowledging, is how it's so much a show about a performer in a space.

It's what I'm doing in a space. It's about a person in a space with an audience. And that, which sounds redundant, but I was really thinking about what to do next. I realized, oh, my problem is, I dunno the way in because sort of everything I wanted to play with about the idea of what it is to be, to go into a room and then have someone talk at you, was there in Jonah.

And so I'd be thinking about, oh, maybe the character of this new piece, we sit at a table, it'll be a date. And I'm like, but that's, so you're losing something. It's about the less I have to pretend, the better. Unless there're bits where I suddenly really do have to pretend. And that's a great bit.

So when, although the audience may never be conscious of this, when I'm in the whale and there's just a blue spotlight, there's loads of theatre happening in front of you. And I am covered in stuff, and I am playing a person in the belly of a whale. And that's, and I love it.

And that's something mystical going on, but I always thought a theatre's like a church and a church is set up a bit like an airplane and just all these spaces where an audience come in and that's the contract, and they understand the contract, and you can play with the contract, but that's also something I don't have to pretend.

Ben: Yeah.

Simon: That allows me to come in and be as alive as possible in front of them in this show. In the same way that with Shunt where we had these incredible play spaces designed by Lizzie, you could just come in and play that game in that space. What do you want to do in that space with those people? It was a huge inspiration.

And so I was, yeah. I think this was inspired by a bit of a documentary about Punchdrunk last night on Sky. And I've never seen a Punchdrunk show, but someone was saying about, oh, the audience coming in and they're in a space. But also that space has been designed, like yeah, that's just pretending.

I was like, I don't want to detract from their incredible work 'cause I've never seen it, but I was just like, just a set. You're just walking around a set. What's interesting about being either in a, sharing a space with someone and realizing that, oh, maybe if I do go to Edinburgh with a show, it should be in Edinburgh, it should be a promenade thing.

I do a lot of Jack the Ripper walks. And my friend Ben Whitehead, who came up with them, also came up with ghost bus tours. And I've worked at Phantom Peak and so much of my, so many of my day jobs are within a space. I relate to a very specific space. So Jonah was really good because it was people coming to listen to a man in a box.

Ben: And that's why the label immersive is slightly mislabeled in that sense.

Simon: It's why I think you can call it an immersive work even though it's an audience watching a person on stage. That's why I think it is an immersive piece, yes.

Ben: Oh, so I guess I was saying that for instance, the Jack the Ripper walk is immersive in a way that people might not think it's immersive.

Simon: Yeah. Yeah. But although, everyone knows you're walking around the streets.

I think if you say you don't use it as immersive theatre 'cause you haven't created the space, I think normally immersive suggests to me a creation of a space. And it's some form of installation.

Ben: And which isn't just a set.

Simon: No, it can't help but be a set.

But I think, I guess like I was watching the footage of Punchdrunk and they go, oh, you've walked into a fake bathroom. And it's that, how, it's this dreadful, 'cause I haven't seen the show, but it's like, how interesting is it ultimately to walk into a fake bathroom? And yet, and this is the thing I had to deal with.

I love theme parks. I love theme parks. Okay. And that's just walking around a very created environment.

Ben: Yeah. But they're very honest. It's if you are not pretending to be a bathroom, you're not, theme parks aren't pretending to be something other. So where if you get a very detailed piece of set, which is trying to be naturalistic, but somehow misses a thing, it then feels, oh, it's because you're not the very best fake person.

Simon: That's not the problem for me. Okay. 'Cause everyone makes mistakes. It's not about, it's about the intention.

Ben: I see. Okay.

Simon: I think if you're making a space from scratch, why make a space that already exists? Why? One of the reasons I love Disneyland. Does it exist? Walt Disney made a thing that doesn't exist.

Ben: Only exists. Yeah. Imagination on some points.

Simon: It's such a realization of his very specific idea of what is good, which you don't have to agree with at all, but it's absolutely… he lived there as it was being made.

Ben: Yeah. It's a real—

Simon: I get that. Here's Main Street, USA and here's, there's a steamboat and there's a mountain, and there's the world, and there's all of Africa in a boat. Although that came later, I think.

Ben: Yeah. And even more amazing. Maybe he's the only one who could make it.

Simon: Yeah, absolutely. Singularly, yeah. That's why David Hockney said he is the most important artist of the 20th century.

But it's a very singular vision of a space. And I also love walking around fake environments.

Ben: Yeah.

Simon: So I dunno what it was about that bit of the documentary. It's not just artifice, it's something else. I'm sure I'd find it huge fun to see one of their shows.

Ben: If it's not too controversial. I'm interested that you haven't been to a Punchdrunk.

Simon: They used to be too expensive.

Ben: Okay.

Simon: When I was watching the bit of the documentary going, why am I seeing the Punchdrunk show? And I think I would be too scared of not enjoying it.

Ben: And in some ways I think, maybe it's not quite fair to say, but I would say Punchdrunk… there's an argument saying some of Punchdrunk couldn't have existed without some of the stuff that Shunt and Shunt-adjacent work had done earlier.

Simon: So I have not seen it. I wouldn't say that. Because I think there's a huge creative crossover.

[Cross talk]

Simon: BAC was an incredible building and they were using it. And I think that's huge fun. And I think similarly when Shunt moved into underneath London Bridge, it's what do we do with this? And I think the approaches to space are very different. And the approaches, hard to put a show in a space.

Shunt made a clown installation. There's something very absurdist about it. And one of the great things about absurdism is it can be done quite cheaply because there's a slight post-apocalyptic sense of the comedy of scarcity.

Ben: On clowning. I had a very short clown question, which is, should a clown always say yes?

Simon: Oh yeah, that's a very interesting question, but it's not interesting because I feel I have to answer it. It's one of the things that put me off when I was in twenties, I was doing clown school.

I'm rediscovering Dylan Moran. I'm just rewatching Black Books. Dylan is a hugely negative figure. But also there's a real innocence to him when he falls in love.

Even if you're saying no, you're saying yes to no. Instantly you're developing it. But just to be given that lesson, because the very first time I heard that was a weekend workshop, that's such, it's such an important question, which is why it's an interesting one.

Yeah, because also like Jonah is like Hamlet was my investigation of refusing the call to adventure.

Ben: Yes.

Simon: And I did my English dissertation on the early work of Woody Allen, who again is like three films in a row about political assassination with a clown who doesn't want to go on with it.

Absolutely. Obviously a clown can refuse.

Ben: This other absurdist things… I was interested in your audio work, which I'm gonna come to as well as a kind of almost separate strand in how it feeds in. But before that, I was just gonna pick up on the BAC, the space, Shunt…

Because at the same time as that was happening and I'd been theatre blogging a little bit around there as well, there was an ongoing argument from a more traditional writing school which would put the writer first. So you have a writer first, a well-made script.

You get a director and actors and you put things on, versus an ensemble school, of which we touched on various ways that you could do that. I guess I was a theatre maker, but I wasn't doing it full time. I had a whole other job and still was making some bits of theatre.

I found that was a really exciting argument, which was played out in performances. It was played out over blogs. And I guess still to some degree plays out now. David Eldridge, who was from very much the writer school has got some great stuff on at the moment, but I'd be interested if you had any reflections on, did you feel that was an ongoing debate then, and how that fits into the liveliness of theatre now?

Simon: I think the only stakes of that debate really were that theatre critics were suddenly being sent to things that they had no experience of. I'm a theatre critic and though I'm watching this I don't know how to process the thing I'm watching because it's not, not the job I signed up for.

Ben: Interesting.

Simon: I'd already gone through that one. My experience of watching Jeremy's King Lear was like that. One of the things was also really great about that was because he was a student. He was a student who was not trying to be a journeyman director.

He was using the resources that we had to try something new and it killed and it completely transformed or broadened my idea of what doing a show could be. And it wasn't just an idea, it was the brilliance of the execution. It was that Jeremy was so good at that. And I think that's a hugely important part.

It wouldn't have happened if he wasn't so good at that.

Ben: Yeah.

Simon: Sometimes as we were talking about, you make the thing that doesn't exist. Often the best artists are artists who are good at something that doesn't exist. Some who are brilliant at something that doesn't exist.

And so they make the thing and then it exists.

Ben: And the critics didn't understand it at the time.

Simon: Yeah. Do you know Nicholas Craig, the Nigel Planer character?

Ben: A tiny bit.

Simon: There's the only credits to, is The Naked Actor show is such a perfect sort of snapshot of black box, him in different costumes doing things and some science fiction and some, but the point I'm getting at is someone brilliant will come along and do something completely new and people go, oh, there's this.

And then a whole bunch of people who don't really get it at all will come along and go, oh, now we're doing this. You go if you don't do it, if you don't get it. And that sort of theatre of the seventies and eighties, which has huge talents doing incredible stuff, but also the sense that quite a few directors were coming along.

In their twenties and going, oh, this is what theatre looks like now. An idea of what theatre should be is not theatre.

Ben: Yeah.

Simon: You can do whatever you like. That's the point. What is it you want to do? That to me is what theatre is.

I think what annoyed me and some of us in, was the idea that we were doing this because we couldn't do text.

Ben: Yes.

Simon: It was, no, we've done text. Yeah. We fucking kicked Shakespeare's ass and now we want to see what else we can do.

Ben: Yeah.

Simon: And it's not necessarily a transferable skill. We're coming back to that idea. The main attraction is that you're doing it night after night, so you're doing something slightly different.

Ben: Yeah.

Simon: And so I don't have that much experience of a long run of a play.

Ben: Yeah.

Simon: I really don't. And that's not 'cause I don't want to. And I don't want to get back to that but yeah, in the first half of my adulthood, it's been mainly devised work.

All very short runs, different things.

Ben: And maybe now be interesting to touch on your audio work. Do you think audio work is essentially your form of theatre as well? You don't necessarily have a set or a space, although you can definitely engage or have an audience pay attention. You don't necessarily get the feedback.

From that. Do you see it as a separate strand?

Simon: There's lots of stuff I'm not good at with voice work, but what I'm good at, I'm good at sight reading, and I'm good at making quick decisions that aren't dumb.

And I also really enjoy working with other people. So most of my voice work that people will know is in a sketch show, where you get to do a lot of voices and use characters very quickly. And it gets me, it allows me to mimic some old school kind of acting because a lot of John's sketches deal in old school genres.

But John's a brilliant performer, a brilliant writer, and everyone in the company's a brilliant performer, brilliant writer. So I'm very happy just sitting and listening. But that kind of work. And then the work I've been doing with Audible and with Big Finish, it's making quick decisions and letting them play out.

The thing that always, and also when I was doing John's show, that's the first sketch work I did. So I wasn't a sketch comedian and a bit like talking about devising, I didn't have a default persona that I could just bring to a sketch and that I didn't have a default voice, but both John and I had been writing for David Mitchell, Robert Webb, and David has a very clear default voice where you could just play it.

I didn't have that. And I certainly hear that in the first two series going I dunno what I am if I'm not playing a specific character. Oh I'm a little awkward about that. I can't remember what's going on and it's all quick decisions.

Ben: Is it just more natural?

Simon: It's just, that's natural. I'm very happy at pretending. I like that game. I like, it's the story, it's the storytelling thing. And I don't always make the right decisions.

There are jokes I don't get. Acting is reacting. You can't react in voice work.

Ben: Yeah.

Simon: I did occasionally. I went, oh, oh. But listening to people, the thing I enjoy a lot about acting you just don't do on the radio, but then you're reading a script, so you're not even looking at the other performer.

Your eyes are basically always on the words. But it's a really nice thing to come in and have recorded. But…It's at the far end of the pretending to be other people spectrum.

Ben: Yep. That's fair. And what do you find exciting or the other side challenging about performance today?

Maybe we could say London theatre performance, but you might have views globally or just about performing arts or culture in general?

Simon: You mean as an audience?

Ben: Either.

Simon: In terms of me watching stuff or?

Ben: Either watching or even doing, maybe in terms of doing actually, and I could frame it as a couple of thoughts I had is I had thought that maybe the pandemic might change things more than they have.

We've got back to a state where I don't think it's maybe changed that much. The little bits around, but that's interesting. I still think there's a big question mark on how we approach digital work. Although I think we're getting more, becoming more interesting still, I feel.

Simon: What do you mean by digital work?

Ben: So digital work is essentially, I'm thinking about digital work as digitizing live work or putting the digital—

Simon: Oh, I see.

Ben: Like video archiving or partly archiving or a little bit. So your YouTube or performing Shakespeare is a kind of form of digital work, right?

Simon: Yeah. .

Ben: Rather than just video cameraing,... So that's one element. Or you go the other way where I think Katie Mitchell's done more of this work, or there's been others around it, where you have much more digital within your live performance.

So using video and things, that's maybe one end of the spectrum of where digital could land. We'll see what these LLMs, AIs bring or not to the process. So I'm interested in what you find exciting, either from a performance view or indeed it could be on the other side in terms of watching, and also what you feel is challenging or boring or is we should really just do less of that and do more of something else.

Simon: I don't necessarily find anything as a performer exciting, otherwise I'd go and do it. Again, I was thinking on the walk here how much easier it was making a show like Jonah when I had so many friends and contemporaries who were also making works in small rooms and presenting me with options to copy or being inspired by.

And now I am, I'm seeking it. I'm still seeking out not beginning artists, but artists working in that space. And I'm really excited by their work. I've met a few people who are doing, yeah, just brilliant stuff in a way that brilliant stuff has always been brilliant.

But less that I can take away and go, oh, I wanna do that.

Ben: Yeah.

Simon: Which is one of the reasons I made Jonah was I wanted people to watch it and go, oh, I could do something like that. Yeah. That's another thing I like about the affordability of a piece of theatre.

And as an audience, like the last three big shows I've seen, two at the Globe and then one at the National, I've all really loved. I saw Pinocchio, I saw a fantastic Troilus and Cressida, which is not something I thought I would see. And then I sat at the front row for The Bacchae, which I think is the place to see it.

I know people have sat further back, had a very different experience of it, but everything that went into it seemed so engaged in what they were making and the idea that it should be fun, but that fun's not an embarrassing— that's made by people who get fun, made by people who seem to genuinely be able to have fun.

Ben: Fun, yes.

Simon: And communicate that, but that not be done incredibly intelligently and argumentatively as well. Yeah. Presenting an argument and that's a run of three of those is not something I'm used to.

Ben: Pretty good.

Simon: I really came away from Pinocchio thinking, yeah, everything's fine. People get it. Don't overthink it, but do think it, and have fun. And be fun and don't, yeah.

Fun's not a genre. Yeah. A lot of things are feelings that you genuinely want to inspire in people, and they're not, and then they're a genre. You can't fake it. It's working out what in the medium you have to fake and what in the medium you shouldn't fake. And I think I've never really had that much respect for criticism.

'Cause I always think it lets people get away with absolute murder.

Ben: We'll come to that when we do a little bit of overrated, underrated. But maybe the last one on this. Is those are recent pieces, which are all done well.

I was wondering if there are any particular pieces either that you've seen or maybe that you've been in, which have stayed with you in the sense that you come back to it from time to time. So actually Dance Bear Dance is one of those. I'm not saying I think about it every month, but I'd probably say once a year something comes along and reminds me of either the feeling of the piece or what it's, ah, this is something there.

There's a few other pieces for me and it might not even be theatre. It might not even be performance. It could be, I sometimes have it on visual work or words or things.

But I'd be interested if there is a piece of performance, either as an audience or as a performer, where maybe once a year or something it refloats back in your mind and go, oh yeah, this has influenced how I think about the world or art.

Simon: There are lots and I, but I can't, immediate, nothing immediately comes to mind.

But when I was, I had a brilliant PR for Jonah Non Grata, which is a 20-year-old show that I did at Edinburgh last year, and I had to write a lot of pieces about it. And so it was interesting to me at least going, what did inspire it? Where did that idea come from?

And so some of it was books by Alasdair Gray and Stan, and all the idea of Stanley Spencer and the idea of the importance of religious art, even as an atheist, just how handy that is dealing with old stories.

But if I think of when I was in Edinburgh I started watching a lot of rewatching, a lot of National Theatre of Brent, and I'll happily put forward that— do you know the National Theatre of Brent? Brent, Desmond Dingle, and then Jim Broadbent and up into Raymond Box.

And I was rewatching them going, oh no, this is really influential. Not even in a, it's a, they're a comedy, but also the lo-fi-ness. But the fact that within this joke, the human scale they gave to history, which is often missing from how history is talked about, was so genuinely pertinent and moving.

And I loved the cleanness of that idea and I loved just the clown-ness of it. And I loved, we are going to stage the biggest thing imaginable, but we don't have the resources. So it's not something I've seen live. But I watched a lot of television, Black Books.

Watching Black Books just 'cause I thought it was about time and every, everything Dylan Moran does, I don't, again, this isn't necessarily really, we talk about, I just go, oh yeah, that informed me so much.

Ben: I haven't re-watched it recently, but there's probably been a series that I've watched—

Simon: Even before Black Books, when he was doing, How Do You Want Me? Just his performance. This is, yeah, I think I saw it in Edinburgh. Yeah.

But that doesn't really… just when I'm, a lot of my writing for comedy, writing for Mitchell & Webb was inspired by the way Dylan Moran wrote. So there's one sketch about Queen Victoria that, where this is sort of David Mitchell rant, and I thought I wasn't intentionally writing a David Mitchell rant, but it was a Dylan Moran rant that David Mitchell then said, and that it sounded like a David Mitchell rant.

But again, so yeah, television is a huge influence and that's I guess why when I'm doing theatre I want, it's based on stuff that isn't screenable.

Ben: Yeah. Okay.

Simon: It's based on being with the audience.

Ben: Great. Let's do a little bit of overrated, underrated, and then into last couple of questions on current projects or any advice.

So I'm gonna say a short thing or word, and you can say whether you think it's an underrated thing or an overrated. I guess things can be correctly rated as well, whether we want more of or less of. So I'll start with one, which we touched on.

Simon: At what point in this should I say I'm absolutely against ratings?

Ben: At the—

Simon: Beginning.

Ben: We could say—

Simon: Because everyone likes different things. This would be underrated, I think, rating. I think I'm really, I don't think, I think in print, I think criticism has stakes with the employee. Yes. And so I don't necessarily trust that people who say they like stuff in print necessarily like stuff.

But I think outside the media, outside journalism, just outside, like in personal interactions, if someone likes something, they like it.

Ben: Yeah. Oh, I don't mean in terms of that sort of rating. So I'll see. So like whether we want something more of or less. So I would say reviews and criticism.

Simon: Right.

Ben: And you are saying we should probably have less of it.

Simon: No but we've now it's, but it's a zero. It's not a zero. I'm game, is it? No it's, no, I've, dear God, I got some amazing writeups from Jonah and genuinely amazing. Not, oh, I've won this prize, but oh, you got it.

Oh, and you taught me something about my show. So if you try, I, I don't just try to see the good in stuff in a kind of self-policing way. I try and see the good in stuff because why wouldn't you find good stuff? Like no, the only benefits your life to find the good in it. But I'll try to not, not answer the question.

Ben: Yeah. Yeah. And what about the Arts Council? Do you think we should have more of it or less of it?

Simon: I don't, I've never had interactions with the Arts Council. So neutral. Not even neutral. I don't understand. Maybe more. I'm very, I'm very, okay.

I've never, one of the reasons I've never applied to council funding—

Ben: Is a good thing.

Simon: State funding for lottery funding less. I think that's why I've never applied. I've always been [uneasy with] poor people gambling and funding me. And also I'm a very privileged person. I went to Cambridge. … I should be able to find a way to make a thing.

I get it. That, yeah, exactly….  I've don't think I've been around long enough to deserve a bit of that pot now. But I think  like with the blog and the lack of a financial incentive makes it much easier for me to do what I want.

Ben: …I've done the same, done a podcast, never gonna be commercial. My blog, actually, it is on Substack, but only because they email it out. Never gonna be commercial. My very early work, I did get some Arts Council money, but then I didn't have any money then.

Now I do have money. I wouldn't ever, I would never say never. But I don't foresee a path where I would take Arts Council money. And there's just an interesting, legitimate question about what level you do arts funding, particularly in this country where you wanna fund the NHS, you wanna fund education and things like that.

Simon: Yeah, there's so much money in this country. We do give money to take whatever money …that's my feeling about it's not what it was 25 years ago.

Ben: That's fair enough.

Simon: So have you seen what they're giving money to? If they wanna give something to you, take it.

Ben: Yeah. Okay. And the last one on this, influence of Netflix, do you think it's more influence, less influence? Do you think it's been a good thing, bad thing, or just a thing —

Simon: On what?

Ben: On writing and performance, culture stories, maybe broadly. So I guess there's one argument that it has brought more stories and more funding and maybe more global stories and more funding.

And then there is also a critical argument saying it has maybe narrowed us. It's also taken away attention from other forms. Arguably social media and things are the worst, but there is that sort of argument as well. And then there's in the middle.

Simon: I dunno. I need some actual stats. This is just vibes on what, yeah. Because like sometimes something can get an audience that's not taking away someone else's audience. It's not zero sum. It's like building an audience.

This is a non-answer, but one of the things that intrigues me is how just before the Me Too movement started, like two of my favourite shows on Netflix were Jessica Jones and Kimmy Schmidt, and there were all these massive narratives being made about a woman living in a nightmare world completely controlled by an evil man.

Oh, okay. Yeah. That and yeah, when I, that time, so that would've been 2016, I think, 2015, it was brilliant to see such huge narratives that then played out. And it is extraordinary that Netflix has no money. It just keeps spending more and more money, billions, companies…. I don't understand how that works.

… I still watch. I do stream more than I watch television, but I watch a lot of YouTube. I watch a lot of YouTube channels. Yeah.

Ben: You have a favourite?

Simon: Yeah, I have a few favourites. A few of my favourites don't exist anymore. They've gone on to, is it, and there's a real gender divide by who's stayed on YouTube and who's been driven off.

Theme parks. I love all theme park YouTube. Defunctland doesn't do much now but was an incredible channel. Jenny Nicholson was incredible.

Ben: Do you have a favourite theme park…?

Simon: Hm…

Ben: Every theme park is a great theme park.

Simon: Yeah. Not every, but I do just love theme parks, but Disney, Disneyland is absolutely my favourite. I went as a kid. I went at exactly the right time, right? It was a, for those who dunno, it was a futurist series of rides in the eighties where futurism was still really exciting.

There'd be underwater schools and you can go on, I think you can go on YouTube and see a version of this ride Horizons, which was as responsible as anything for me thinking about the future up until I realized what the future would actually be like and that you can't see underwater 'cause light doesn't travel, which is a huge disappointment.

And I don't, yeah. And so I follow, I really enjoy Red Letter Media. Again, it's really interesting to see people who have started off just putting stuff on YouTube and then have thrived very much within their own scale.

So these now middle-aged friends in, is it Milwaukee, getting together and watching terrible films and getting drunk and talking about them. That is, that, is that now a business model? Matt? Men? I love, I love.

And you couldn't have done that without all of that. Putting that on BBC One, there's no way. And Vlogbrothers, both John and Hank Green, I think, although, and it's a great— Hank videos are now more than five minutes long and I don't follow them so much, but the people who use— I was really interested where suddenly anyone could be a presenter, what they chose to preserve.

Ben: And it gives you a real slice of humanity. Even human flourishing I think is a form of human flourishing. Okay. Last couple of questions 'cause we're running up in time. So one is current projects. Any current projects that you are working on, current or future projects that you'd like to?

Simon: Yeah I'm going back to, I'm writing, am I? Yeah, no, this, I'm writing a book…  First I took to Edinburgh was the first three chapter adaptation of the first three chapters of a book, which at the time was the whole story. It was never meant to be the story. And then someone said, oh, that's the story. I went, oh yeah, it was, 'cause it's a sort of a hero's journey.

But now I realized, no, I wanted it to be a bigger, a proper, children's short novel. And so I'm now thinking about that and it involves thoughts about theatre and stories and lies and fantasy and, but it's also just, yeah, really fun to think about and occasionally write.

I won't make the self-appointed deadline for getting a draft done by the end of this month. But that's an unpaid project, but that's what I'm writing on.

And we're towards the end of January now, thinking about whether or not to go to Edinburgh with another show. I've got two in mind as starting points.

But now I'm thinking about venue and how important that is. That sort of completely, and it all starts with as you said, at what point does the audience start feeling like they're in the show?

Ben: Yeah.

Simon: And you, that, and I do, I want an audience to be excited and I want to maintain that feeling of excitement.

Ben: And you think that's 'cause it's something particular about an Edinburgh audience, or why wouldn't you do it in a London venue somewhere?

Simon: Because Edinburgh has, oh, just, oh, guess this. Oh. That's really, that's a really good question, 'cause that's how we're taught to think.

Fair. But also because you can win prizes, Edinburgh. Yeah. If you wanna go, oh, actually I'm a theatre maker. Yeah. I've got a class, that's where you, that's the deadline you set yourself. That's the best place to show new work.

Even though I've long weighed it in my mind and gone, I live in London. I don't need Edinburgh. But yeah it's different. Which just, it's just, you have to think now, am I gonna do Edinburgh? Yeah. I haven't done a big advert that can definitely pay for it, so probably not. And I'm just moving to a new flat. Financially it does take a bite.

Unless I do free fringe and I do something and that's another thing to think about. Who am I going up there with?

Ben: Just to say most people may not realize that the vast majority of Edinburgh shows don't make any, in fact lose money. Not only do they not make money, they will lose money from— Oh, do they?

Simon: Yeah. If you dunno that. Yes. Yeah.

Ben: Tens of thousands.

Simon: That sort of magnitude. Yeah. Yeah. I, yeah I lost 10,000 and that goes in your rent while you're up there because there's a lot of rent. And it goes on a producer if you have a producer and it goes on a PR if you have a PR, which is a good idea.

And what else? What else other things?

Ben: It depends on how many people you've gotta pay for actors and set and things.

Simon: If it's not just you. You have to pay for technicians, certainly. 

Ben: Okay. That sounds a great range of current projects. And then obviously audio work and other things running by.

Simon: That keeps coming up.

Ben: Do you have any advice for maybe wannabe creatives or you could have life advice in general? I guess you've had a portfolio career of different parts of creativity across everything. Have you reached a stage where you would offer any thoughts to others—

Simon:  Get out, see work you like, meet the people who make work that you like. Do stuff on purpose. That's harder and harder these days 'cause it is so easy.


Ben: Purpose is an intentional thing you're doing?

Simon: Yes. It's so easy. Because I have a lot of time off and I might just click the next thing on my algorithm and it's different to go, no, intentional, what do you actually want to do?

Watch something on purpose, not because you are in a position where you're watching things and you want to go, I could watch this next. But that's maybe something more for my generation. Maybe people deal with stuff easier.

My other advice is you can do anything. There are a lot of dialogues about, or conversations about what is it you can do. 

See what you can do. And that I've been very lucky to be surrounded by creatives who really do stuff that I never saw exist before. But even before that, I knew that was a common factor in a lot of stuff I loved was that it was stuff that was being done for the first time.

So I shouldn't imitate it. I would see who's doing stuff I've never seen before. I really like that. That seemed like an obvious idea once I'd seen it and work out what's going on there. … And have fun.

Ben: Yeah. That sounds amazing. Have fun, do things with purpose, make things which haven't existed before. Great set of advice. With that, Simon, thank you very much.

Simon: Thank you, Ben.

In Podcast, Arts, Theatre, Writing Tags theatre, immersive theatre, devised theatre, Shunt, Simon Kane, Shakespeare, John Finnemore, creativity
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