Video Discription |
No one in Greek Mythology is more misunderstood and misinterpreted than Hades, and, subsequently, also his wife Persephone. From wrong depictions of their marriage, to just flat out outrageously wrong depictions of Hades himself... let's set the record straight: Hades was not evil. In fact, if anyone was the bad guy in Greek Mythology it was Hades' brothers Zeus and Poseidon. The Greek God of the Underworld was actually a stand-up guy, who was simply tasked with a job that many deemed evil due to its nature: Taking care of the dead. But really... there is nothing evil about Hades, and also his marriage (or rather the start of it) with Persephone is getting dragged to the mud for no reason, so I truly deem Hades the most misunderstood god in all of Greek Mythology, which is why he is the topic of this week's episode:
Episode 3 Of Keeping Up With The Greek Gods — The Sheep In Wolf's Clothing: Hades
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Notes
Mythology is a very tough puzzle to piece together, because, let's face it, these stories are thousands of years old. Now, with Greek Mythology, we are lucky because the Athenians were very keen on documenting everything, but because of their thirst for knowledge and education, they also produced many great storytellers, and with a lot of storytelling comes a lot of embellishing and regional differences, so, over time, we ended up with a bit of variety when it comes to Hades, but a whole lot of variety when it comes to Hades and Persephone. For the sake of this video — and all my videos — I try to streamline these tales as much as possible and leave out some details that might make the videos less fun.
So... is this accurate and well researched? Absolutely. Is this the only interpretation or way of telling you about Hades and Persephone? No, this is my way to tell the story.
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I get a lot of questions about my artwork and where it’s from or rather who draws it. Well the answer is that I create it — I don’t draw it. I use AI to create the artwork, using specific prompts, specific style influences from 18th and 19th century artists, and I spend about 6 hours per video just on the artwork. Each video has roughly double the artwork of what you actually see in the video, so a lot of it is unused. The good news here though is that you can get all that artwork on my Patreon — the artwork I do use, and the artwork I don’t use. Plus, by subscribing to my Patreon you are making a major contribution to Briefed and helping me to keep this channel going, because this is my full time job and the survival of the channel and quality of the videos greatly depends on said support. In return for supporting, you get more than the artwork though — you also get exclusive videos and producer credit, as well as access to a producer group that gets to vote on thumbnails, gets behind the scenes etc.
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Sources:
A lot of people ask me about my sources, and… to be honest, they are a mixed bag. One major source is my lifelong interest in storytelling and mythology. Another is the beautiful endless library that is the internet, and, third, I read the occasional book from time to time, which I’m happy to recommend to you, but also… I’m planning to write my own book on mythology, so, in due time it will be…:
Source? Me. Yay. D_g1t9ZLsHQ |