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  • (tape rewinding)

  • (jazz bass)

  • - Well it's a very beautiful day

  • and it's made infinitely more pleasant for me,

  • by the fact, that I am going to talk to Rod Serling.

  • So many of you have enjoyed his television shows.

  • The Twilight Zone, I think,

  • is the one that everybody talks about.

  • I've just confessed to Rod that I haven't seen it.

  • - Believe me Binny, some of my best friends

  • are quite unaware of this program

  • back in the States, including relatives, I might add.

  • (jazz music)

  • - We've been given the story.

  • You and your wife travel on different planes.

  • - Yes indeed, it's that we don't have any close relatives

  • who would be able to look after two rather small girls.

  • And I suppose, statistically, this is nonsensical

  • to travel on separate planes.

  • I rather think it's far more dangerous

  • to climb into a taxi really anywhere on earth.

  • We're on our way to Japan shortly here

  • and we're told that the Japanese cabs are called Kamikazes.

  • (laughter)

  • And that you literally take your life in your hand

  • when you drive in these things.

  • I was in the paratroops during the war

  • and I have since talked to old colleagues

  • of the chutes, we call it, who have traveled in Japan

  • and they tell me that it's far easier

  • to get up in a jumpstick in a C47 Aircraft,

  • leap out into enemy territory, than it is to climb

  • into the rear seat of a Japanese taxi cab.

  • I think, probably, they're going to start

  • giving medals and ribbons for service

  • in backseats of Japanese cabs.

  • - You know Rod, for the benefit of people

  • who haven't seen this,

  • I think just a very brief description of what this series

  • is about would be a good idea.

  • - Well The Twilight Zone is, in essence,

  • an imaginative itinerary of storytelling

  • in which we utilize bases of fantasy,

  • science fiction, Neo-Cult, extrasensory perception,

  • anything that is imaginative, wild,

  • or, as in the States we call it, kooky.

  • In normal earthbound drama, if a man is on top of a building

  • and it's burning, of necessity, he has to crawl down

  • either a ladder, or go through a skylight,

  • or is rescued by a helicopter.

  • In The Twilight Zone, he grows wings and he flies off.

  • (suspenseful music)

  • But, as I say, this is a program

  • of imaginative storytelling.

  • And utilizing the idea of going back in time

  • or forward in time, this is provided considerable bases

  • of storytelling in our particular series.

  • I'm the kind of a guy who is now in that aging,

  • late 30, early 40 bracket in which suddenly

  • there is a tremendous bittersweet, poignant feeling

  • about wanting to go back to another time.

  • In my case, it would be the pre-war,

  • early teens time, which were particularly happy for me.

  • And, on occasion, I will go back to my old hometown

  • and walk through the streets and the places

  • that I grew up in and feel a sense of great loss,

  • that I wish I could recapture it.

  • And I think the answer is, much as Wolfe said,

  • you simply cannot go home again, it's quite impossible.

  • (sad piano music)

  • As evidenced by the youngsters liking the show,

  • I've always felt this is wonderful,

  • because the most unfettered imagination

  • belongs to young people.

  • And they don't walk through life, they fly,

  • and that's marvelous.

  • They defy the law of gravity, mentally anyway.

  • And that's the reason I think

  • we have astronauts orbiting now.

  • And that's the reason we're planning a trip to the moon.

  • People talk about science fiction

  • being very far out, very wild.

  • I don't think it's any of these things.

  • Everything we see in the way of space travel,

  • space concept, scientific advancement,

  • medical discoveries, was already predicted

  • by some good science fiction 25 years ago.

  • (piano)

  • - [Binny] As a little boy,

  • did you find that you invented things?

  • Did you ever get ticked off for telling fibs?

  • - Oh indeed.

  • I was, to utilize a euphemism, I'll say I was imaginative.

  • Other people would say I was a liar.

  • As a matter of fact, when I played small boy games,

  • and if a bad guy, so called, would put a gun to my head

  • and fire, I would say I had an invisible shield,

  • which I pushed a button and it got in front of me.

  • Or, for example, if they lassoed me,

  • I'd say, you didn't really lasso me

  • because I pushed a button and went through

  • a trap door at that given moment.

  • And my friends called me "Impossibility."

  • That was the name they gave to me,

  • but I think it pointed the way toward,

  • professionally, what I would do with my life.

  • Some liars go to prison, others write television shows.

  • You know, it's as simple as that.

  • (suspenseful piano music)

  • This is the nicest interview I ever had.

  • (laughter)

  • I feel warm and belonging here.

  • - [Binny] Oh, that's a compliment, indeed.

  • I find that talking to someone

  • who's creative is always inspiring.

  • - [Rod] Well it depends,

  • creativity, of course, comes at odd times.

  • And I've done so much talking, Binny,

  • in the past couple of weeks, I hope not pontificating,

  • I hope talking is the correct word.

  • I feel sort of talked out.

  • - [Binny] Well I certainly have enjoyed chatting with you.

  • - [Rod] And I with you, Binny.

  • - [Binny] Thank you very much.

  • - [Rod] Righto.

  • - [Binny] Everyone, you have met Rod Serling.

  • (jazzy piano)

  • (tape rewinding)

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(tape rewinding)

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