“Nostalgia isn’t rational, and just like Warrant’s 1990 song “Cherry Pie” reminds me of 1989 more than the recorded sound of my own voice from 1989, watching the movie Dazed and Confused for the first time literally made me long for a time in life that was less happy than the time I was living in when I saw it.” — Rolf Potts
In this essay episode of Deviate Rolf talks about four recent factors in his life that have changed the ways he views nostalgia (4:00); how he may well could have been killed in a motorcycle wreck in Asia in 2019, and how the accident affected his way of seeing the world in the months after it happened (8:30); how the word “nostalgia” has conventionally been defined, in both the modern and premodern sense (18:45); Rolf’s complicated memories of youthful interactions with movies like Star Wars, Dazed and Confused, and Before Sunrise (23:00); how Rolf met a traveler named Kristen Bush (aka “Kiki”) in Kansas during the pandemic, and what factors made their connection unique (34:45); how Michel de Montaigne made sense of his near-fatal horse accident in the 16th century, versus how Rolf has come to make sense of his motorcycle accident in Asia (40:00); how Rolf has trouble intuiting his own past when he listens to his own voice on old cassette tapes (43:30); and how Rolf and Kiki have come to make sense of their past, present, and future together, and how this pandemic moment will one day feed its own nostalgia (48:30).
Kristen Bush is an actress, known for Paterno (2018), Liberal Arts (2012), and Synecdoche, New York (2008). Her TV credits include The Affair, The Good Wife, Elementary, and Law & Order: SVU. She has performed onstage at Manhattan Theatre Club, The Public, the Old Globe, Goodman Theatre, and Lincoln Center.
Notable Links:
- “Turkish Knockout,” by Rolf Potts (essay)
- “Laos in the time of cholera,” by Rolf Potts (essay)
- Jonathan Yevin on no-baggage travel (Deviate episode)
- Schadenfreude (experience of joy in the misfortunes of others)
- Hyposmia (reduced ability to smell odors)
- Marguerite Yourcenar (French novelist)
- William Faulkner (American novelist)
- Starship Enterprise (fictional spacecraft on Star Trek)
- Woodstock (1969 music festival)
- Grunge (rock music genre)
- Bumble (dating app)
- “The Dark Side of Travel Romance,” by Rolf Potts (essay)
- Ceylon lesser albatross (butterfly species)
- Howard Cosell (American sportscaster)
- Joan Didion (American writer)
- John Muir (naturalist and author)
- Josh Radnor (actor and filmmaker)
- Embracing “slow travel” by trekking (Deviate episode)
Books, movies and TV shows mentioned:
- Slaughterhouse-Five, by Kurt Vonnegut (novel)
- Stranger Things (TV show)
- Mad Men (TV show)
- Epic of Gilgamesh (ancient Mesopotamian poem)
- The Odyssey, by Homer (ancient Greek poem)
- Star Wars trilogy (first three films of the sci-fi franchise)
- The Wonder Years (TV show)
- Dazed and Confused (movie)
- Before trilogy (travel movies directed by Richard Linklater)
- “The Lady with the Dog,” by Anton Chekhov (short story)
- The Essays, by Michel de Montaigne (book)
- Monday Night Football (sports TV show)
- Liberal Arts (movie)
- Vagabonding, by Rolf Potts (book)
Music used in this episode:
- “Cherry Pie,” by Warrant
- “Perpetuum Mobile,” by Penguin Cafe Orchestra
- “Where is My Mind,” by Maxence Cyrin
- “Breathe Me,” by Sia
- “Ndima Ndapedza,” by Oliver Mtukudzi
- “We Move Lightly,” by Dustin O’Halloran
- “At the Hop,” by Sha Na Na
- “Gnossiennes,” by Erik Satie
- “”Comptine d’un autre été,” by Yann Tiersen
- “All the Small Things,” by Blink-182
- “Svefn-g-englar,” by Sigur Rós
Note: We don’t host a “comments” section, but we’re happy to hear your questions and insights via email, at deviate@rolfpotts.com.