Ira Glass on the building blocks of storytelling — from Common Craft

Quote from Lee LeFever:

We’re big fans of Ira Glass and the This American Life radio show/podcast.  We listen to every show on the podcast and there are few broadcast storytellers that I respect more.  Via an older post on the Explainist blog, I found these videos of him describing the process of researching and crafting stories from back in 2006.  He names two building blocks of storytelling and how they work together. Really great perspectives that you can hear in every story he tells.

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Storymaker

story maker

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What makes a company creative?

Dr. Ed Catmull, Ph.D. is a computer scientist and is the current president
of Walt Disney Animation Studios and Pixar Animation Studios.


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Creative Live -- CS5

  

CreativeLive -- free online courses

  

Also see:

  

New Media Webinars

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Campus Channel

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===================================
WRITING IN (AND ABOUT) THE FUTURE
===================================

The journal-turned-magazine CREATIVE NONFICTION celebrated its
transformation by organizing a one-day symposium, held at the Writer’s
Center in Bethesda, Maryland, focused on how writing, reading, and
publishing may be transformed in the decade ahead.

On the program were two futurists: Jay Ogilvy, co-founder of the Global
Business Network, who described the usefulness of scenario thinking for
weighing both optimistic and pessimistic visions of the future, and Dan
Sarewitz, director of the Consortium for Science, Policy and Outcomes
at Arizona State University, who warned of the unexpected consequences
of human enhancement that many enthusiasts are hailing as a golden age
of prosperity, pointing out that the greatest example of that
enhancement is the soldier.

The bulk of the conference focused on how writers fit into this future,
a time when people may be reading fewer books but communicating with
one another and, yes, reading via a wider variety of platforms–e.g.,
blogs, Twitter, Facebook, and the multimedia digital Vook (video book)
described by Jack Sallay, the company’s vice president of marketing.

Writers of the future will bear more of the responsibility of reaching
their audiences, as publishers’ economic models become less supportive
of traditional functions like marketing and promotion, many of the
symposium participants argued. The good news is that there are more
innovative new ways of doing-it-yourself, like building a community of
supporters around an author’s blog.

As long as the written word is still valued (whether it is ultimately
read, viewed, or listened to by the audience), writing has a future.

DETAILS: CREATIVE NONFICTION, http://www.creativenonfiction.org
The Writer’s Center, http://www.writer.org

PHOTOS FROM THE CONFERENCE:
http://www.wfs.org/April-May2010/Update/photos.htm

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Toontastic -- digital storytelling for

From Startl:

ToonTastic is a storytelling and animation tool that empowers 5-10 year-old children to create their own cartoons and share stories with other kids around the world. Using a multitouch screen, kids can draw characters, objects, and settings and then animate their creations through simple gestures and real-time audio recording. The system is designed to not only scaffold the storytelling process, but to seamlessly capture the visual and narrative nature of play – thereby enabling even the youngest computer users to share ideas, art, and stories with friends and family worldwide on our “Global Storytelling Network – for Kids, by Kids”.

Resource from http://spotlight.macfound.org/blog/entry/toward_ecosystem_learning_reflections_first_digital_media_learning_conferen/

From DSC:
Wow! You talk about the power of creativity, of multimedia, of combining multiple/powerful/engaging technologies! I look forward to seeing how this project grows and what it can produce for today’s students. Check out the scenarios on their site.

It will also be interesting to see how this relates to trends within publishing (iPad, interactive magazines) and the continued convergence of technologies. The learning ecosystem continues to move, morph, grow, connect, engage.

© 2025 | Daniel Christian