Why Holding Back Can Enhance Your Storytelling

Published: Oct. 18, 2023, 7 a.m.

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I\\u2019m in a law class at Pepperdine, studying for my MBA. In our first assignment, we\\u2019re supposed to take this unbelievable amount of text and turn it into an outline using a very specific structure and methodology.

I\\u2019m thinking, \\u201cWhy do we need to outline? I just read all of this text and highlighted certain sections of it in detail. It\\u2019s fine. Plus, It seems like a waste of time. And aren\\u2019t all outlines the same anyway? Why is structure so important?\\u201d\\xa0

I begrudgingly do the assignment and turn it in.\\xa0

Then we get our next assignment\\u2026 more outlining! Next assignment? Alas more outlining again!\\xa0

By the middle of the semester, something dawns on me: I start to realize that I\\u2019m looking at paragraphs of text completely differently. I can pinpoint what matters most even faster.\\xa0

At the end of the semester\\u2026 I am an outlining Ninja.\\xa0

This skill that I learned in my Graduate Studies has turned out to be a tool that I use to this very day.\\xa0

Every time I read any block of text I can\'t help but condense it down to its most essential elements which has definitely helped influence my path of specializing and Short Form Communications. I love to take complex things and condense them down to their most essential elements, especially in storytelling.\\xa0

The elements we use in stories really matter\\u2013to the listener, to the memories we can create in the minds of our listener, and to the integrity of the story. Michael Stinson has an incredible career exploring and teaching the cinematic art of storytelling, in addition to many other forms. And today on the Storytelling School Podcast, he\\u2019s here to talk about how stories bind the world, share the tools he uses to explain storytelling, reveal what keeps an audience engaged, and tell us:

How can experiencing different cultures influence your storytelling? Why is it a mistake to tell everything in your story? What\\u2019s the best way to create suspense, and what other tools are essential for storytelling? And how are cinematic journeys like cathartic, storytelling labyrinths for the audience?

What you will learn in this episode:

  • How you can craft the most effective personal narrative to tell others
  • Why suspense is so effective for audience engagement (and how it differs from surprise)
  • What three flavors of conflict you can choose in your story

Who is Michael?

Michael Stinson is the professor of Film and Media Studies at Santa Barbara City College where he has taught courses in film studies, film production, screenwriting, film editing, cinematography, and directing for over two decades. He is also the author of Labyrinth of Light: A Journey Into Cinema and has co-directed the 10-10-10 filmmaking and screenwriting competition at the Santa Barbara International Film Festival for the past 20 years.\\xa0

Prior to film school, Michael spent a decade abroad as a photojournalist based in Europe and the Far East. He worked for five years as a screenwriter for the Hollywood studios after earning a Master\\u2019s degree in Film and Television from UCLA. Then, he began teaching at the University of California, Santa Cruz, and has taught courses in film and media at the University of Rome, New School University, and Los Angeles Film School.\\xa0

Michael is a Member Emeritus of the Writers Guild of America, Society of American Travel Writers, and PEN America. Currently, he directs international film programs in Rome, Paris, and Tokyo. Residing in Santa Barbara, California, he also now divides his time between a Craftsman bungalow built by the town barber in 1906 and a Cheoy Lee sailboat moored in the harbor.

Links and Resources:

Email Michael: paperhammer@hotmail.com, paperhammer@gmail.com, or paperhammer@mac.com\\xa0

Labyrinth of Light: A Journey Into Cinema by Michael Stinson

Storytelling School Website

@storytellingschool on Instagram

@storytellingSchool on Facebook

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