Notes tagged “Primitives”
2024
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Jul 2
Beginning, middle, and end part 7: Event stories The key change in an event story about the protagonist’s situation and circumstances. The beginning introduces an outward goal, the middle shows the struggle to obtain it, and the ending shows success or failure.12 min
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Jun 4
Beginning, middle, and end part 6: Character stories part 2 The key change in a character story is about worldview and beliefs. The dilemma and decision show how the protagonist grapples with change, and the ending demonstrates that her change was genuine.11 min
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May 7
Beginning, middle, and end part 5: Character stories part 1 The key change in a character story is about worldview and beliefs. The beginning establishes the protagonist’s ‘lie,’ and the progress and disaster phases show how that lie is challenged.9 min
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Apr 2
Beginning, middle, and end part 4: Idea stories The key change in an idea story is about understanding. The beginning introduces a question, the middle shows the pursuit of an answer, and the ending reveals it.10 min
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Mar 5
Beginning, middle, and end part 3: Story types The three key types of change in stories are revelation, character decision, and external action. These map to idea, character, and event stories in Orson Scott Card’s MICE quotient.4 min
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Feb 6
Beginning, middle, and end part 2: In search of a useful framework Beginning, middle, and end can be framed as the cause of change, the process of change, and the consequence of change. Scene-sequel format helps illustrate the process of change.8 min
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Jan 2
Beginning, middle, and end part 1: Aristotle misinterpreted Aristotle’s claim that a story should have a ‘beginning, middle, and end’ seems to be more about wholeness than structure.2 min
2023
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Sep 21
Thesis, antithesis, and synthesis Storytellers can use a thesis-antithesis-synthesis story structure to illustrate change and convey a story’s thematic argument.11 min
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Jul 23
Storytelling, neuroscience, and the rule of three: prediction and reward The most satisfying execution of the rule of three hooks into your audience’s brains’ reward systems by perfectly fulfilling the promise of the setup, but doing it in a way that subverts their expectations.9 min
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Jul 4
Storytelling and the rule of three: trajectory and payoff The rule of three is a powerful storytelling mechanic that leverages human psychology to set up and pay off audience expectation in a satisfying way.11 min
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Jan 12
Creating story arcs with three-unit brackets Bracketing is a three-unit story structure following an A - B - A form. It’s often used to illustrate transformation by returning to a familiar image, motif, setting, or situation where something has changed because of the intervening story.5 min
2022
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Dec 19
Creating meaning with two consecutive story units Human brains can’t help but look for patterns, even when nothing’s there. Storytellers can leverage this tendency, juxtaposing images in order to create rich and layered meaning.10 min
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Dec 7
Story structure and theme in Ira Glass’ anecdote and reflection One of the most basic story structures is two parts: anecdote and reflection. A series of meaningfully related events, and a thematic argument explaining what it was all about.8 min
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