Bright blue glasses rest on Wim Wenders’ face when I greet him at the Howard Greenberg Gallery in New York. He wears suspenders, one strap white and one black, with polka dots, that hold up chic, oversized trousers. Wenders, who’s most often known as the director of cinematic masterpieces–like 1984’s Paris, Texas, 1987’s Wings of Desire, and 1999’s Buena Vista Social Club, among many others–is also an accomplished photographer. His latest art exhibition, “Written Once,” which features images the director made in the 1970s and 1980s, opened at the Howard Greenberg Gallery on January 28 and runs until March 15.

“Written Once” features images from two series previously published in Wenders’ books Once and Written in the West, some of which have never before been made into prints. From Once, elegantly grainy, soulful black and white images tell stories of Wenders’ time in the U.S.–in one image, Martin Scorsese repairs a flat tire in the middle of the desert; in another, the actor and musician John Lurie plants a powerful kiss on a companion. Written in the West sets the landscape of the American West alive in vibrant color, turning its grocery stores and gas stations into painterly landscapes.

Wenders and I sit in a room filled with images by master photographer Walker Evans, one of Wenders’ greatest inspirations. He jokes that he keeps getting distracted, but if he does I don’t notice. For GOOD, we spoke about truth, place, storytelling, history, and self-reflection.

How did the show come together and how did you decide to put these series in conversation with each other?
[Gallerist] Howard [Greenberg] is strangely responsible. He came to my office, he went through all my drawers and got quite excited about some of the pictures. He chose the lesser-known pictures along with some exposed previously. He found some lost treasures and liked them, and just happened to be from these two series. He liked the idea that they’re both books, that some of them were unknown, that I never printed them. I liked his eye and his choices. I was happy these pictures were reanimated and that I finally was able to print them. I’m more interested in the act of taking the picture than printing it. I’ve been taking photographs since I was a little boy but for 40 years of my life, I didn’t print anything. I was happy I had the contact sheets. It was almost always more important for me that I took pictures, not that I did something with them afterwards. That changed with Written in the West, the first exhibition I had. Howard looked at my contact sheets and at my test prints [from that series], and said, “Oh, why didn’t you use that one?” If somebody looks at my stuff from 40 years ago, I’m amazed by what they see in it and I say, “Oh yeah, you’re right, not so bad. Why didn’t I ever print it?”

Lounge Painting II, 1983, Gila Bend u00a9 Wim Wenders/ Wenders Images and Howard Greenberg Gallery


Why were you more interested in the act of taking the picture than printing it?
Taking photographs for me is a very intense way of being and of looking. Photographs and my camera helped and guided me to travel, made me look more closely. My main profession is maybe traveler. In many ways, my camera feels like a recording instrument. It cannot just record a picture, but it also helps me understand a place and the story it tells me. It helps me to be somewhere and understand the light and the colors and see details, the history of a place, the history of the people [who] came through there, everything that we did to that place. For me, taking photographs is a way to be, to exist more in the moment and more intensely. Printing is not exactly in the moment. Printing is like going back and looking at something you experienced. I’ve always been interested in moving forward. Printing is almost like a nostalgic process. I’m not a nostalgic person, so I have to force myself, and I need somebody to tell me, “Wim, this picture, you better print it.”

What is it like to reflect on the work now decades later?
Photography is a medium where you’re very intensely living in the now. I’m a photographer of places, much more than of people, even if there are people sometimes. It’s really interesting to see who I was then, and who I was that saw these things, wanted to keep these moments and press the shutter. Today, if I was in the same place, I might take a very different picture. In a strange way, when I came into the gallery this morning, I encountered somebody I used to be, a young man very fascinated with America who lived and worked here in the 70s and 80s. I pretty clearly remember who that was, but I also realized I moved on. America has changed a lot. I realized that some of the places that interested me so much at the time have been either photographed to death, have disappeared, or were destroyed. The term “Americana” didn’t exist when I made these pictures. It is now such a common word to describe a certain nostalgic feeling about America, but at the time I didn’t feel it was a nostalgic journey. At the time it was truly sort of an exploration into the history of America. These places I show, especially in color, are historic places they talk about when they talk about American history. The West is an important part of American history. It’s a country full of dreams, broken dreams, illusions and lost illusions. So to revisit them 40 years later, again, is another lost illusion [laughs]. Photographs are pretty solid in representing history. I love photography for the fact that it’s so solid.

When Martin Scorsese had a flat tire II, 1977 u00a9 Wim Wenders/ Wenders Images and Howard Greenberg Gallery

How do those ideas and your images live together?
These are all prints that are completely unmanipulated. What you see is what you get. What you see is what I saw. It’s sort of an old fashioned idea of photography. Now the photo is no longer a witness of something that really happened, but a creation of something done with the help of a camera. There’s Photoshop and all sorts of techniques. Looking at Walker Evans’s photographs, that’s what he saw. My photos are from that tradition, like [photographer] Joel Meyerowitz, on the wall there. I love that man, so I’m in a strange way surrounded here by old friends. Walker Evans was my great hero when I was a young man growing up, maybe 15-16 years old and trying to do something with my camera. I realized you can do something so much more beautiful with it, not just photograph what’s around you, your friends, family, and journeys–you could make photographs that were a statement. I’m completely overwhelmed that we’re sitting here in a room with 15 Walker Evans photographs. For me, those are an expression of truthfulness, because it’s more an attitude than a result. The result “truth” is always questionable, but the attitude producing something truthful is not questionable.

What does making a photograph teach you about how you want to make a film and vice versa?
My photography and my filmmaking have one thing in common: an extreme interest in place, in finding out its story, what part of history is reflected in it, what stories reverberate, and what I can read in it. My filmmaking is all place-driven. If I reach that state where I know that story–Berlin in Wings of Desire, the West in Paris, Texas–could not possibly have happened anywhere else, then I feel I’ve done justice to place and story, and I’ve told a story rooted in truth because the place and the story are linked in a necessary way. I need that.

For me, the truth of a story is very much linked to its place, and the characters need to be linked to a place. I like films that specifically take place somewhere else, where there is a history, a particular language, a tradition, habits–films that are linked to a certain region or countryside or to that city. I hate, and I often walk out of, movies when I realize they don’t take place anywhere. A lot of movies take place nowhere and then you find out this is possibly Pittsburgh, but you know Pittsburgh and this is not Pittsburgh. A lot of movies are made not in the place where they’re supposed to take place, but they’re just where it pays off to shoot them because there’s a tax rebate or something. I see “tax rebate” written big over many movies, and I can’t stand realizing a place is phony. I don’t want to watch a lookalike. I want to see the real thing. Why should I see a movie that takes place nowhere? Why should I believe the story of all these characters, that character sees something I know he can never, ever in his life, see there? I can’t take it. I’m old fashioned. I need to believe that this is happening.

John Lurie, 1986, Montreal u00a9 Wim Wenders/ Wenders Images and Howard Greenberg Gallery

When you look at your work now, do you ever feel critical of yourself?
You cannot criticize the picture. You can criticize the attitude. I don’t like all of these pictures there. Some are done sort of hastily, especially some of the black and white work. I didn’t always think of myself as a photographer. I became one in the pictures I shot in America and the American West in preparation for Paris, Texas. I make a lot of journeys, only to take pictures, but not to make a movie, and then I make a lot of movies and I don’t take a picture at the same time. It’s two different attitudes. I can criticize an attitude, but I don’t want to criticize the result. Some of my pictures are a little bit half-hearted I think now, but others are right on, and I’m happy I made them. I realized how much the attitude and being in the now creates the photo. I think the attitude of the photographer is visible in the shot, and that you can sometimes criticize. Sometimes it’s a little bit superficial, sometimes it’s just en passant. Some photographs are careless, others are profound.

  • Actor shares with Harrison Ford that he was her late dad’s favorite actor. His reply was perfect.
    Photo credit: Apple TV on YouTubeMimi Fletcher acting next to her father's favorite actor.

    Mimi Fletcher has the prototypical origin of a successful working actor: moving out from the Midwest to Los Angeles to become a star. She got her start doing background gigs and now is doing recurring guest roles on television. However, one acting gig she’ll treasure forever was when she got to work with Harrison Ford.

    Ford is a part of the main cast of Shrinking, an Apple+ show starring him and Jason Segel. The show is about a therapist (Segel) who, motivated by grief, takes a more proactive and candid approach with his patients. Ford plays Paul, a senior therapist at the practice who suffers from Parkinson’s disease.

    When Fletcher met Ford

    In 2023, Fletcher got to do scenes with Ford and Segel. It would be one of the biggest highlights of her career so far. However, recently on Threads, Fletcher shared that it was also a highlight of her life that she’ll never forget.

    Fletcher shared that her father was a big fan of Harrison Ford. Her dad was also a big fan of his daughter and very encouraging of her acting dream. She shared how her father supported and believed in her, even when she made decisions that her dad wouldn’t approve of. Her dad passed away in 2005 before Fletcher truly “made it” as a Hollywood actor. She wishes she was able to make him proud.

    Before going on set, Fletcher was waiting in the holding room with both Harrison Ford and Jason Segel. As they were all waiting, Fletcher thought of her father. She approached Ford and said:

    “You know, Harrison, my Dad was a big fan of yours. I remember him taking me to see Witness when I was a little girl. I did some things that I know disappointed him, but he still supported me. He never got to see me do any professional acting, but I’d like to think that today, he’d be proud of me.”

    Harrison Ford’s perfect response

    Fletcher tried to keep it professional, but the tears she was holding back spilled out. Immediately, Ford rushed to give her a hug.

    “He wrapped me in his arms, and held me as I cried. He then kissed my forehead and said, ‘Your dad’s here, he sees you, and he’s proud of you.’”

    In sharing the story, Fletcher expressed her gratitude to Ford and everyone on Shrinking. Fletcher felt compelled to tell this story since her father passed away over twenty years ago this June. And since June is also when we celebrate Father’s Day, he’s been on her mind. While Fletcher still mourns her loss, she treasures this happy memory.

    Fletcher was able to get comfort from a person her father respected even when Ford didn’t have to do anything more than say, “Thanks for sharing.”

    “A little bit of my broken heart was healed that day, through the goodness of Harrison Ford…” she wrote. “I miss and love you, Dad.”

  • Voice actor explains why Americans instantly trust people with British accents, even if they’re lying
    Photo credit: CanvaA traditional town crier, left, and a happy, applauding audience, right.

    Americans have this strange love of British accents—so much so that even when someone is speaking absolute gibberish, we find ourselves transfixed and absurdly trusting them.

    Tawny Platis, a professional voice actor and content creator, expertly captured the phenomenon in her YouTube video, “Why Americans Love This Accent.” In the video, she analyzes why Americans find Billy Butcher’s voice so compelling despite the character’s violent and morally chaotic behavior on the TV show The Boys.

    Americans trust and love rough, working-class British masculinity

    “So Karl Urban is a New Zealander doing a Cockney, working-class, East End London accent,” Platis explained. Regardless of how well the actor nails the accent for his character, Butcher, Americans buy right into it anyway. “That’s because working-class English masculinity is coded in American media as authenticity,” she added.

    She goes on to give examples to help substantiate her point: “Every Guy Ritchie movie, British gangster film, and working-class antihero from Michael Caine to Tom Hardy has trained American audiences to hear that voice as unfiltered and honest.”

    A 2024 study published in SAGE Journals found that listeners unconsciously form social biases based on accents. People rapidly make assumptions about personality and identity.

    decision making, accents, familiarity, credibility
    A young businessman speaks into a microphone.
    Photo credit: Canva

    Make ordinary information sound important

    The accent becomes a shortcut the brain uses to make immediate decisions about intelligence, honesty, confidence, warmth, and even competence. When it comes to characters like Butcher, the key detail isn’t so much the “Britishness” itself—it’s the association.

    “Butcher is using the working-class Brit voice to showcase honesty,” Platis said. “Butcher is a liar who manipulates Hughie, hides things from his team, and is willing to take out children. But the audience keeps forgiving him because his voice sounds like a man who’s earned the right to do all that, when he very much hasn’t.”

    Psychologists believe part of this effect comes from something called “processing fluency.” A 2023 study published in Scientific Reports found that increased exposure to certain accents reduced listeners’ cognitive effort. As a result, people made more positive social judgments about the speaker.

    Accents that feel familiar after years of movies, television, and media unconsciously influence people. Audiences automatically attach credibility and trustworthiness to them. Simply put, people mistake familiarity for truth.

    A 2024 study found that Americans rate the standard British accent most positively, strongly associating it with traits like intelligence, status, and competence. The Northern English accent is viewed slightly less favorably. Scottish accents are considered strong and friendly. Meanwhile, the Welsh accent falls somewhere in the middle, depending on how well the listener recognizes it.

    factual, educated, casual interactions, performance
    Blocks spell out the words “fact” and “fake.”
    Photo credit: Canva

    Accent bias sways people’s opinions

    The same instinct that makes one accent sound “trustworthy” can also make another sound “unreliable.” In real-world interactions, working-class accents can be perceived as less intelligent or less educated. This can affect hiring decisions and even workplace promotions.

    A 2024 study focusing on “Americanness” found that accented speakers were perceived as “less American.” In simulated hiring scenarios, they were less likely to be hired, demonstrating that an accent can override other judgments.

    When a person speaks, people instantly begin building a story about who they are. Many decide whether a voice sounds trustworthy long before consciously realizing it. Platis points out that a lifetime of exposure to social media, movies, and television has shaped that perspective.

    “Butcher’s accent is the most effective because it’s the only one many viewers don’t even recognize as a performance,” Platis said. Which basically means somewhere out there right now, a confident British accent is talking nonsense that feels totally believable.

  • Italian man claims to be ‘human cheetah’ with lightning-fast reflexes
    Photo credit: CanvaA man with fast reflexes.

    At first glance, this probably looks like a camera trick. Ken Lee, an Italian content creator, has built a massive online following by doing something that doesn’t quite feel real. Viewers refer to him as the “human cheetah” because it appears he has near-instant reflexes.

    Grabbing objects out of the air with uncanny precision, flicking clothespins and lighters, and throwing a blur of punches and kicks at impossible speeds, it is easy to call him unbelievable. Half the audience thinks his viral speed videos are fake. The other half is just as convinced they are watching something incredibly rare.

    Hands so fast they blur time

    In the video above, a timer runs to confirm its authenticity. In what looks like half a second, he reaches out and snags the lighter from the table. To prove it is real, he does it twice.

    Having amassed millions of followers on his TikTok page, the identity behind the mysterious influencer remains largely unknown. Active since around 2022, with almost 100 million accumulated likes, Lee has cultivated a fandom around his self-proclaimed “Superhero per Hobby!”

    Do you believe it is real? Is this person the fastest human alive? Many followers cannot wait for the next video to be posted. Plenty of his fervent fans are Italian, so sifting through the remarks takes a bit of hunting. Here are some comments that sum up how much people enjoy the fun and the spectacle:

    “Ken lee the fastest and the best”

    “Most dangerous human”

    “Is this what the lighter sees before my homie steals it”

    “It was sped up during he grabbed the lighter, if u count up with the timer u would be off by like 0,5 seconds whenever he grabs the lighter.”

    “If the flash were human”

    “How is it possible to get such powers ?”

    “I blinked and I missed it”

    People love good entertainment

    The awe of peak performance attracts people to watch elite athletes, musicians, or even dancers. There is something that deeply satisfies all of us when a human appears to push a skill to its limit. Whether it is real or fake seems to matter less than the opportunity to chime in on some good entertainment.

    How far could any of us go by practicing and repeating a particular motion over and over until it is mastered? Beneath the flashy nickname and his viral speed videos, Lee’s content has a way of drawing people in. This is not a superpower. Just repetition. Focus. Obsession. And maybe some digital wizardry.

    Testing the science of speed

    If you wish to question the validity of Lee’s performances, maybe some basic science can help. Human reaction time is not just a reflex. A 2024 study found that the nervous system can fine-tune responses in real time. Practice can make movements appear almost automatic.

    It has been well established in research that the gap between seeing something and responding has a limit. A 2025 study concluded that the most elite extremes allow for reaction times of 100 milliseconds. At that speed, the human brain can barely process that something has happened.

    Science explains Lee is not necessarily moving as fast as we might perceive him to be. And therein lies all the fun of it. We cannot prove it is real, nor can we actually prove that it is fake.

    Maybe Lee is the “fastest man alive” or the so-called “human cheetah.” Or maybe he is just a remarkable entertainer. Either way, he has clearly tapped into something strange and fascinating: a blend of human ability and fantasy that people do not want to miss.

    To give context to Lee’s videos, watch this performance on Tú Sí Que Vales:

Explore More Culture Stories

Film & TV

Actor shares with Harrison Ford that he was her late dad’s favorite actor. His reply was perfect.

Culture

Voice actor explains why Americans instantly trust people with British accents, even if they’re lying

Internet

Italian man claims to be ‘human cheetah’ with lightning-fast reflexes

Culture

Despite all the likes, literallys and dropped g’s, English isn’t decaying before our eyes