Longform journalism site Byliner has sold over 100,000 of its “Byliner Originals” since launching the program in April, says CEO John Tayman in the newest issue of Nieman Reports.
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Ellyn Winters's curator insight,
June 19, 8:33 AM
Great article on brand storytelling offering up some very beginning points for your storytelling journey.
Karen Dietz's curator insight,
June 19, 10:29 AM
Thanks Gregg Morris (fellow curator) for finding and sharing this article! Here are 6 simple questions to ask about your business to help identify its brand. Actually, these are 6 story prompts that will help you distinguish yourself in the marketplace. And there are handy examples to explore also. The tricky part is crafting the stories. And then analyzing all the stories to determine your brand qualities and characteristics that you can then leverage. Happy branding!
Andrew Melville's curator insight,
June 19, 6:46 PM
Getting interested in other people is at the heart of revealing great stories.
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RainboWillis's curator insight,
June 14, 1:20 PM
The Kuleshov effect. I didn't know this term, but of course it is true: Context plays a defining role in how we interpret narrative. This would be a useful video for my Creative Writing students.
Ariana Amorim's curator insight,
June 17, 11:48 AM
This article tells us about the Kuleshov Effect and its implications on brand experience. I think there's more to it and that's why I rescoop it here.
The Kuleshov Effect is a film editing (montage) effect demonstrated by Russian filmmaker Lev Kuleshov in the 1910s and 1920s.
In the dawn of the 20th century, cinema was a new art form, comprising many techniques that hadn’t been developed. The elements of editing were among the ones that had not been studied to the needed extension. Lev Kuleshov was among the first to indicate the power of film editing and to dissect the effects of juxtaposition.
Kuleshov put a film together, showing the expression of an actor, edited together with a plate of soup, a girl in a coffin and a woman on a recliner. Audiences praised the subtle acting, showing an almost imperceptible expression of hunger, grief, or lust in turn. The reality, of course, is that the same clip of the actor's face was re-used, and the effect is created entirely by its juxtaposition with other images.
Through his experiments and research, Kuleshov discovered that depending on how shots are assembled the audience will attach a specific meaning or emotion to it.The implication is that viewers brought their own emotional reactions to this sequence of images, and then moreover attributed those reactions to the actor, investing his impassive face with their own feelings.
So, can we recognize emotion without context? How do we reframe the stories we tell others and ourselves?
The stories that we tell ourselves are powerful. And yet, if you think about it, they are, in fact, just stories.
Once we realize that, it then becomes possible to conclude that we could, tell ourselves other stories – stories that make space for our own growth, stories that build us up instead of break us down.
(You can read more about the Kuleshov effect here http://io9.com/5960035/can-the-kuleshov-effect-really-control-your-perception-of-other-peoples-feelings) Delete the scoop?
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Ariana Amorim's curator insight,
June 12, 7:20 AM
Main ideas here:
Show, don’t tell is about conveying a message so that the lessons learned are personalized, rather than a list of laws. How can you teach someone something that isn’t teachable? 1. Create An Experience 2. Tell A Story 3. Use A Metaphor 4. Set An Example 5. Reward The Best Examples
... our job is to educate, inspire, talk to and listen to people. We’re often inclined to do this by lecturing but the most effective way is a less direct route that has more impact and better staying power. Show, don’t tell. Delete the scoop?
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Christi Krug's curator insight,
June 10, 7:04 PM
Sometimes I tell writers, "I can't hear the author crying in this supposedly heartbreaking scene . . . ." Delete the scoop?
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