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Pedal to the Metal: The Possibility Mindset

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    ♪ [music] ♪
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    This is a story of three guitarists
    in the 1960s
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    and how one embraced technology
    to change music forever.
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    And if you listen closely,
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    you hear a lesson
    reverberating into the present.
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    When faced with something
    new and revolutionary,
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    do you embrace it or dismiss it?
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    Our story begins in the 1950s,
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    as rock and roll
    explodes onto the scene.
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    Rock guitars of that era
    sound like this...
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    ♪ [fast rock music] ♪
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    ...or this.
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    ♪ [upbeat rock] ♪
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    But by 1967,
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    the sound of rock and roll
    is about to change.
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    That's when VOX Amps
    releases the wah-wah pedal,
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    a device that could make
    a guitar...
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    ♪ [guitar picking] ♪
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    ...sing like a trumpet.
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    ♪ [trumpet sound] ♪
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    Instead of...
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    ♪ [guitar music] ♪
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    ...your guitar can sound like...
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    ♪ [distorted rock] ♪
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    Pretty cool, right?
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    As a promotional tool,
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    VOX Amps gives the wah-wah pedal
    to our first guitarist,
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    Johnny Echols.
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    He plays lead guitar in Love,
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    ♪ [rock music] ♪
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    a popular rock and roll band.
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    Echols gives the pedal a try.
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    But instead of hearing a trumpet,
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    ♪ [trumpet] ♪
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    or even a guitar,
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    ♪ [guitar] ♪
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    all he hears is the wails
    of dying sheep.
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    (sheep baaing)
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    So he dismisses the pedal.
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    Our second guitarist
    is Jimmy James,
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    a friend of Echols
    and a backup guitar player.
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    Echols describes Jimmy James
    as a journeyman.
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    He carries equipment
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    and plays bit parts
    in Little Richard's stage shows.
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    Jimmy James
    never finished high school,
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    but he's a lifelong learner
    and an avid sci-fi reader.
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    So when he gets his hands
    on a wah-wah pedal,
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    he's much more eager
    than Echols to try it out.
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    And what about our third guitarist?
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    You might know him better
    as Jimi Hendrix.
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    Hendrix gains fame
    in the late 1960s
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    for his incredible play
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    and never-been-done-before
    far-out sound.
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    ♪ [rock music] ♪
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    Audiences can't stop raving.
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    He is the greatest guitar player
    in the world.
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    (audience cheering)
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    Echols goes
    to a Jimi Hendrix concert
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    to see what all the fuss is about.
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    When Hendrix steps to the stage,
    Echols can't believe it.
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    Yes, Jimi Hendrix is indeed,
    as advertised,
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    the greatest guitar player
    in the world.
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    But what he truly can't believe
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    is that Jimi Hendrix
    is Jimmy James!
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    The journeyman he once knew
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    had transformed himself
    into a musical powerhouse
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    by relentlessly embracing
    and practicing with new technology.
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    Hendrix was among the first
    to use the VOX wah-wah pedal,
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    the fuzz tone pedal,
    and the Marshall amp.
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    He went so far as to hire
    an engineer to modify pedals,
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    achieving even wilder sounds.
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    Echol's initial reaction
    to the wah-wah pedal is natural.
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    New technology can be overwhelming,
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    and in the short term,
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    it feels easier to dismiss it.
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    Think about new inventions
    from the past
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    and the visionaries
    who embraced them.
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    Take the steam engine.
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    While many saw it as just a tool
    for pumping water out of mines,
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    engineer Richard Trevithick
    saw something more.
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    What if these machines
    could carry us further
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    than any horse?
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    Through relentless experimentation,
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    he created the first
    steam-powered locomotive in 1804,
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    carving the path
    for the railroad revolution.
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    This same spirit of embracing
    new technology
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    emerged again
    with the birth of computing.
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    As a Navy Lieutenant
    in World War II,
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    Grace Hopper worked
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    with one of the world's
    first computers,
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    a room-sized machine
    computing endless equations
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    for naval weapons and equipment.
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    While others just saw
    a massive calculator,
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    Hopper envisioned computers
    doing much more.
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    Her pioneering work on compilers
    and programming languages
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    helped transform computers
    from specialized machines
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    into platforms
    for creating the software
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    that powers today's world.
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    As the Internet emerged,
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    another opportunity arose
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    for those willing to embrace
    something new.
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    Working on Wall Street,
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    Jeff Bezos noticed web usage
    doubling every few months.
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    While others saw a way
    to send emails,
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    he envisioned a global marketplace
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    where anyone could buy anything,
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    anywhere.
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    Starting with just selling books
    from his garage,
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    he built Amazon into a company
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    that transformed
    how the world shops.
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    Those who embraced change
    shaped the future.
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    We don't know for sure
    what a future with AI looks like,
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    but what we do know
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    is that you can either
    embrace technology
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    and work with it,
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    or you can dismiss technology
    and work against it.
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    The right mindset,
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    one of curiosity, adaptability,
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    and a willingness
    to embrace the unknown,
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    turns new technology
    into an opportunity for innovation.
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    ♪ [rock music] ♪
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    It's this mindset that transforms
    Jimmy James, the journeyman,
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    into Jimi Hendrix, the legend.
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    ♪ [rock music] ♪
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    If you are a teacher,
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    you should check out
    our free unit plan
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    that uses this video.
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    If you are a student,
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    visit the links in the description
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    for more resources
    on how to use AI to learn.
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    Or if you are just curious
    to watch more videos like this,
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    check out this playlist.
Title:
Pedal to the Metal: The Possibility Mindset
ASR Confidence:
1.00
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
Marginal Revolution University
Project:
Other videos
Duration:
06:19

English subtitles

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