Academy Award-winning actor Kevin Costner joined The Will Cain Show to discuss his new three-part series, “From Yellowstone to Yosemite,” on Fox Nation. of will. ”
“While we're all having fun [the Yellowstone national parks]rarely do we really understand how they turned out,” Costner told host Will Cain. And when you think about the things in life, are you planning to make a difference in our lives? So I ask myself that. Everyone does it. So there are billions of people on this planet. What do we do? But it's a story about how men and women can truly make a difference through willpower. ”
The series follows the steps that President Theodore Roosevelt and environmental advocate John Muir traveled to Yosemite for three days in 1903, and the third and final episode was dropped on Fox Nation on Wednesday.
Muir's journey with Roosevelt begins at Yosemite National Park, signs the law that launches the National Park System, starting with 150 national forests, five national parks and preserving 230 million acres of land. This led to the president.
Outside the duo's journey, Costner emphasized the importance of including Native American history in the project. “From Yellowstone to Yosemite” is notable for its focus on the “natural beauty” of the land, Costner added.
Kevin Costner previously told the story of the American West in “Horizon: An American Saga.” (Warner Bros.)
“What's important to me was to deal with the story before John Muir appeared. This is Native Americans have this whole country, Yosemite, and what happened to them was It was a tragedy,” Costner said.
“It's not talked about much, but we're dealing with it in documentaries,” Costner explained. “It's not just to beat people in their heads, but to educate them. But America has found ways that the land can use it other than exploiting it. People come and saw it as children. Things will be seen by your own children.”
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When Cain asked Costner about the value of a particular script, the actor explained a less appealing version of Hollywood's typical “heroism concept” when everything is on the line .
“The concept of heroism when no one is watching,” Costner replied. “You are a child or a young woman, or a young woman, and when you see it, you think you know it, you know, you know, you know, you do three jobs It is a female heroism, you see four of her in the morning at the bus stop every morning and by the end of the evening, when she is so tired and eats for a child, she sometimes does it You can draw. Who is important? She is the hero of her family and she will work that way to make the lives of her children better.”
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