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0:00
GQ my essentials, take one, bro.
0:05
What's going on everybody?
0:09
I am Noah Centineo and I'm here with GQ.
0:07
Today we're doing my essentials.
0:09
Okay, so here I got a I got a notebook.
0:16
This was a gift from my manager actually.
0:18
It has my initials engraved in it and you see what manager gave me this because he knows that I love writing and journaling.
0:26
It's kind of a way that I can get my thoughts together because either they ricochet around a lot and I find them I like to like keep things in like I'm not really good at expressing my thoughts to other people so if I put them here then I can kind of structure and organize them a little bit.
0:42
If I'm if I'm like battling with something, you know, if I'm like really dealing with something that I'm struggling with, you know, it's just easier to write it down.
0:50
Gotta have a wallet in this modern-day.
1:00
We, uh, you know, Yuval Harari, he's an Israeli author, he's like a social scientist, if you will, he says that that money is like a mythology almost.
1:05
It's a story, it's a narrative that's been told and it's a very strong one because the world runs on it, right?
1:11
So economies form, so if you don't have money and you're in a bind, actually if you don't have money you might be in a bind, that's probably they look like a cause for it as well.
1:18
So you got to have a way to way to pay, but then again there are people that live with absolutely no money, which is an interesting alternative lifestyle.
1:26
I keep I keep my I keep a credit card, I keep a debit card, I keep an ID, I keep a a key that gets me to my manager's crib, just in case I want to like surprise him late night, imminent spam, and then I have a my insurance card.
1:47
Next item is a passport.
1:47
I mean, look, it's a good form of identification and you never know when you just want to flee the country.
1:55
China.
1:55
Yeah, I did a project in China.
2:02
It's called The Diary, hasn't come out yet.
2:04
It's a Chinese language film, crazy.
2:10
I was fortunate enough to get a 30-year visa to work in China.
2:10
Is it a 10?
2:10
I've been telling people it was 30, anyway.
2:16
My probably my favorite place that I I've been is up China.
2:21
I also went with my manager.
2:21
Me and my manager have a very close relationship, I love that dude.
2:30
Yeah, so 10-year visa to China, it's pretty pretty pretty dope.
2:30
I always keep books with me.
2:34
This book is just what I'm reading currently.
2:35
I'm reading I read a script and I love the script a lot and the character in the script reads Henry Miller's Tropic of Cancer and then he decides to move to Paris and be a writer and so I just wanted to read the book.
2:46
I was like, damn, like if this book could inspire some of them it was not a writer to move to Paris and be a writer, that's pretty dope.
2:53
Even if it's, you know, from the script.
2:55
This book was actually banned in America for a very long time, like you weren't allowed to read it and now you can.
3:23
And I'm not saying anyone should read this book, I'm definitely not being like advocating for it, but I'm thoroughly enjoying it.
3:23
So, but this is my fiction.
3:23
So I got two books, I get a nonfiction book and then I got a fiction book and the nonfiction is called The Quants Himself by Dan and Sohar.
3:23
It's a really cool book that breaks down how science and like discoveries and science can influence the way that we perceive reality and look at other people and it's like science can influence the epistemology meaning that, you know, back in Cartesian knowledge days like with Sir Isaac Newton, you know, everything is not connected so you have to separate objects.
3:37
I thought that and it impacts that one and I can also measure that however hard I throw this at the angle I throw it, I know exactly where this book will end up, which created in science when they learned that and they thought they that was the way it goes, they believed that everything was determined.
3:50
So then something called determinism and when that came about people were like, there's no point to anything, there's nothing I can do, I'm not in control of my life, there's literally I got, you know, it's determined for me and that created this like kind of dark period of modernism.
3:50
It was great because we started making a lot of technological advances, but it was bad because we kind of lost hope and being able to choose our own paths.
3:50
But then with quantum physics and new physics, when that came out it was like, wait a second, things aren't really disconnected, we just like think they're disconnected and really there's like that reality seems to be more unitary and abstract the farther in that we go.
3:50
It created this sense of connection between all things.
3:50
So how that could impact our culture and our philosophy and epistemology is maybe I shouldn't care about other people instead of just bouncing off of them.
3:50
Maybe I should actually care and take into account that I can control my own life, my own actions and instead of hurting other people or hurting myself, I can learn from my mistakes and help other people and it's cool.
3:50
It's it's a great book about about about that, not in a nutshell in a very long stream of conscious way of trying to describe what I'm reading.
3:50
So yeah, I gotta have my fiction and my nonfiction.
3:50
This is a Nikon F3.
5:10
It's a film camera, which means like it open that it opens here and then it burns an image onto film.
5:17
It's not digital, so you have to like change your settings to adjust for light, if you prep the settings you probably won't make out the picture, it won't look the way you want it to.
5:27
This is my second film camera.
5:30
I don't know, man.
5:30
I just I like being able to document things.
5:33
My grandfather had Alzheimer's and he died from it, so by the end of his life you never remembered anything, so it would be really Nami not, you know, I hope that doesn't happen to me, you know it does skip a generation so that's definitely very real fear, but more than that I would like to be able to look back on my life when I'm like 80 years old, the pictures that I took in that other people took and I like the way that film looks, so they laid over it in digital if you could figure it out, I suck.
5:58
So like all my photos don't turn out, but you know what, gotta have a phone, you know what I'm saying?
6:31
You don't have a phone, you're kind of disconnected.
6:46
I like my phone because first and foremost I can like correspond with my friends and then second, it's good, you know, you can do if you have a phone, you pretty much have an office, your mobile office is your phone, they're so advanced nowadays that you can run a business from your phone.
6:46
I love my phone dearly and then obviously social media and stuff, I think we're all super addicted to social media and I get to interact with you with fans.
6:46
Also like if you're in a bind and something's going on, you're overseas or, you know, you're in trouble, your phone, hmm, can you call help?
6:46
See, this, it's a phone charger.
6:46
You have a phone but you don't have the charger, you don't got a phone, you know what I'm saying?
6:46
You only have it for so long, so you got a charger.
6:46
And then you gotta have a backpack.
6:49
You gotta be able to put everything in your backpack.
6:52
It's the mobile office, you know, everything goes in it, you throw it on your back and there you go.
6:58
Thank you guys so much for the time.
7:02
Thank you.
7:02
This has been amazing.
7:04
Thank you for letting me do my essentials with y'all.
7:06
Hope you enjoy.