Monday, September 7, 2015

TedTalk-Making Me Care - with Andrew Stanton

Monique  Tyson
September 06, 2015


Andrew Stanton: The Clues To A Great Story

There are many great stories to tell but there are few that can deliver it and write it in such a ways in which an audience could visualize and capture to memory. But the few that can get to memorialize it on film for future generations to experience. I like many, enjoy listening to a great story and to read a great story. But there is a great since of delight come to me, when a true storyteller gets their voice to the words of a story or a masterpiece, to me, it becomes a sensory smorgasbord. In Ted Talks speaker, Andrew Stanton “The Clues To A Great Story  LINK
He ultimately paint a picture of how a story is graphed with many theories, but three stood out the most. He discovers the true “needs” of a story in order for it to formed, how it should end, to begin it with the end in mind, to have a singular goal for the characters, to discover real trues or the human nature about ourselves and about other’s. Andrew Stanton, stated and quoted, “The children's television host Mr. Rogers   LINK   always carried in his wallet a quote from a social worker that said, "Frankly, there isn't anyone you couldn't learn to love once you've heard their story."  Currently, that clue rings true even with the most disagreeable, angry and the most bizarre people I have had to encounter, their stories backed their character and I grew to love their novels despite their billboards. They made me care about them emotionally, intellectually, aesthetically, they just made me to care about them despite themselves. People just want to tell their stories, to be heard and to see their true selfs, to change. Andrew’s next clue was to make the audience think, give them an equation and make them figure it out. Of course, structure the story is built in such a way that they will embrace the story in the mind of the write, to challenge the story with thoughts, ideas, thinking the story through and solving the layers of mysteries. The audience get sense of responsibility of following to respond to interactivity, engage into many story possibilities and factor in many dimensions of thought. For the last clue was based on figuring out the character inner motor or what I interpret, their hearts intent in the stories details. As a writers attempt to seek the back spine to itch, it is for the sole purpose of discovering the supreme reason of what the character is unconsciously unaware of, in its journey that they, the character and the writer are currently undergoing in the storyline. 

Andrew concluded his final clues with recapping the need to use your own story or true stories that are effective and poignant to relatable live issues. Then to give the audience a chance to participate in mentally seeing the view of the storyteller and  truly engaging it with passion. Furthermore seeing the true indent of the character on or before the discovery it even make plain to the audience.

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