David Lynch is cool

We drove by Hollywood Blvd. and La Brea (in Hollywood, CA) and saw David Lynch and a cow just chilling, helping to promote Laura Dern for academy consideration for his new film “Inand Empire.”

Here is the video [Link]


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6 comments, add your own...


  1. jane says:

    who the hell is he?

  2. moocherx says:

    a has been movie director who did a few good movies a long long time ago (Dune, Eraserhead) and nothing of note since. People have even forgotten about Twin Peaks.

  3. Pink Moon says:

    Not true. He has made a lot of good movies and produced TV shows since “Twin Peaks”. Mulholland drive was amazing.

  4. BintBuNaz says:

    Oh, my Gosh — Lynch is not a has-been! He’s genius. GENIUS.

    And how friggin’ cute is he, chillin’ with a cow on Hollywood and La Brea? Gah, love him.

  5. BintBuNaz says:

    Oh, my Gosh — Lynch is not a has-been! He’s genius. GENIUS.

    And how friggin’ cute is he, chillin’ with a cow on Hollywood and La Brea? Gah, love him.

  6. Steven says:

    Everyone knows that David Lynch is a creative genius. And
    like many reclusive geniuses (how many times have you seen
    him on the late night talk circuit), he rarely talks about
    where his creativity comes from.

    Consider those days over.

    In a tell all book that gives the reader a rare glimpse into
    the mind of a true artistic genius, Catching the Big Fish is
    not about trout fishing, but about idea catching. To catch
    the big ones you have to “dive deep” within your own mind
    and the deeper you dive, the bigger “fish” you catch. Great
    idea don’t swim on the surface, they prowl the depths of the
    ocean (your mind) waiting for someone to snag them.

    David has been deep sea fishing for 33 years. That is how
    long he has been practicing Transcendental Meditation. He
    says that it this daily practice that allowed him to catch
    the
    big ideas that live on the bottom of the ocean.

    I have read it and I found it intriguing, fascinating,
    revealing and eye-opening.

    If you want know how one of the most creative artists of the
    20th (and 21st) century gets his ideas and then translates
    his ideas into movies that made him one of the greatest
    directors in the history of film, then read this book. You
    won’t be disappointed.


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