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The New Yorker Radio Hour

Paul Thomas Anderson, Poet Laureate of the San Fernando Valley

The New Yorker Radio Hour

WNYC Studios and The New Yorker

News, David, Books, Arts, Storytelling, Wnyc, New, Remnick, News Commentary, Yorker, Politics

4.25.5K Ratings

🗓️ 10 December 2021

⏱️ 18 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Paul Thomas Anderson first made a splash in Hollywood with his film “Boogie Nights,” a portrait of the porn industry that burgeoned in the San Fernando Valley, the much-mocked suburbs of Los Angeles. Anderson is a Valley native, and proud to live there still. “There was a terrific story right in my own back yard,” he told David Remnick. “I guess at some point, I probably read ‘Write what you know.’ I was, like, Well, that’s a good place to start.” Many of Anderson’s films—such as “Magnolia,” “There Will Be Blood,” and “Inherent Vice”—tell stories from Southern California’s past and present. Anderson’s new film, “Licorice Pizza,” returns to that terrain. It portrays the thorny relationship between a teen-aged boy and a twenty-five-year-old woman, and the pair’s misadventures in the Valley of the mid-seventies. Anderson, who could recruit any stars in Hollywood, instead cast two newcomers as his leads: Alana Haim (a musician in the indie band HAIM) and Cooper Hoffman. Anderson spoke to David Remnick from his home in—where else?—the Valley.

Transcript

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0:00.0

This is The New Yorker Radio Hour, a co-production of WNWC Studios and The New Yorker.

0:09.0

Welcome to The New Yorker Radio Hour, I'm David Remnik.

0:12.4

A Paul Thomas Anderson film is an event.

0:15.4

He wrote and directed Boogie Knights, Magnolia, The Master, There Will Be Blood, and Phantom

0:21.0

Thread.

0:22.1

And his new film is already on critics best of the year list, it's called Likarish Pizza.

0:28.1

So return to where Paul Thomas Anderson grew up and still lives, the San Fernando Valley

0:33.4

of Los Angeles.

0:34.4

Do you know who I am?

0:36.2

Yeah.

0:37.2

Do you know who my girlfriend is?

0:38.4

Barbara Strey Sand.

0:39.4

Barbara Strey Sand.

0:40.4

Sand.

0:41.4

You're like Sands, like the ocean, like the beach.

0:43.4

Barbara Strey Sand.

0:44.4

No, but Strey Sand.

0:46.6

Sand.

0:48.6

Likarish Pizza is a joyful, disconnected romp about growing up and friendship.

0:54.1

It follows the misadventures of two young people in the 1970s, trying somehow to make it

1:00.4

big and create themselves.

1:02.9

They're played by Cooper Hoffman and Alana Heim, both in their first film roles and each

...

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