The Invisible People YouTube channel interviews homeless people. At the end, the interviewer always asks what the interviewee would do if they had three wishes. Usually the answers are about receiving help with money, drugs, or previous relationships. Understandably.
But in Working Actor Now Homeless in Los Angeles, the guy’s mind immediately went to things like ending deadly disease and world peace. Things that would help others, not himself.
And it wasn’t as if he debated doing things for himself vs. for others. My read is that the thought of doing things for himself didn’t even really get promoted to conscious attention. It didn’t really occur to him. It looked like it was an obvious choice to him that he would use the wishes to help others.
One of the more amazing things I can recall experiencing. It gave me a much needed boost in my faith in humanity.
Another interpretation would be that the system trains people in Los Angeles in a way where there are certain answers allowed to the question of “what would you do if you had a wish” and the allowed questions aren’t selfish things.
If an actor goes to a casting and gets asks for wishes, ending disease and world peace and the safe wishes, drugs aren’t.
The Invisible People YouTube channel interviews homeless people. At the end, the interviewer always asks what the interviewee would do if they had three wishes. Usually the answers are about receiving help with money, drugs, or previous relationships. Understandably.
But in Working Actor Now Homeless in Los Angeles, the guy’s mind immediately went to things like ending deadly disease and world peace. Things that would help others, not himself.
And it wasn’t as if he debated doing things for himself vs. for others. My read is that the thought of doing things for himself didn’t even really get promoted to conscious attention. It didn’t really occur to him. It looked like it was an obvious choice to him that he would use the wishes to help others.
One of the more amazing things I can recall experiencing. It gave me a much needed boost in my faith in humanity.
Another interpretation would be that the system trains people in Los Angeles in a way where there are certain answers allowed to the question of “what would you do if you had a wish” and the allowed questions aren’t selfish things.
If an actor goes to a casting and gets asks for wishes, ending disease and world peace and the safe wishes, drugs aren’t.
Hm, that does seem plausible. I’m curious what others think.
There’s hypertext, but there’s no link
Thanks. Fixed.