The Big Kahuna: A Video Chat with Pulitzer Prize Recipient William Finnegan

INTRODUCTION: 2:10 min.
In April, 2016 WILLIAM FINNEGAN was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for his memoir Barbarian Days: A Surfing Life. For the rest of Bill’s life, whenever he is introduced or his name appears in print, he will be known as “Pulitzer Prize recipient William Finnegan.”
Finnegan has been a surfer since growing up in California and Hawaii. He was also an enthusiastic writer and reader from an early age. He became a New Yorker magazine staff writer in 1987. In August, 1992 The New Yorker published Finnegan’s masterpiece article on surfing titled Playing Doc’s Games, which most surfers I know agree is the best surfing article ever written.
I have been a surfer since 1966. I started surfing in Ocean City, NJ while I was in college in Philadelphia. When I moved to Manhattan after graduate school, I surfed on Long Island and in West End, NJ. I even squeezed in some California surfing in Santa Barbara, Malibu, and Rincon, but for most of my adult life I lived on the northern tip of Cape Cod, where cold water surfable waves never exceed ten feet.
Bill Finnegan is a much better surfer than I am, and has challenged himself on much bigger waves in charted and uncharted waters. Nevertheless, once one has attained a respectable level of surfing ability there is a common knowledge of how carving the face of a decent wave, which appears to last less than a minute from the perspective of the beach, can feel like a blissful eternity to the surfer. Truly the Zen of surfing.
We interviewed Finnegan at the Miami Book Fair, MDC. The videos below are organized by Success Factor and run between 30 seconds and 9 minutes. Tap on any video. You must be connected to the Internet to view the videos.
SERENDIPITY: 1:55 min.
VOICE DEVELOPMENT: 8:44 min.
SEIZES OPPORTUNITIES: 1:46 min.
SELF-CONFIDENCE: 7:09 min.
OVERCOMES CHALLENGES TO SUCCEED: 4:23 min.
SELF-CONFIDENCE: 3:14 min.
UNDERSTANDS THE AUDIENCE PERSPECTIVE: 2:34 min.
MIAMI OBSERVANT: 2:14 min.
CRITICAL THINKING: 2:57 min.