Connection Quotes
Connection: Hollywood Storytelling Meets Critical Thinking
by
Randy Olson101 ratings, 4.05 average rating, 12 reviews
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Connection Quotes
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“Although the mind may be part of your target, the heart is the bull’s-eye.”
― Connection: Hollywood Storytelling meets Critical Thinking
― Connection: Hollywood Storytelling meets Critical Thinking
“being relatable is so incredibly important. Important, and hardly new. Philosopher David Hume stated as much in the 18th century when he said, “Reason is the slave of the passions.” Let’s put it so my regular folks will relate: “Smarts lose to Feelings.”
― Connection: Hollywood Storytelling meets Critical Thinking
― Connection: Hollywood Storytelling meets Critical Thinking
“Man is many things, but rational is not one of them.” — Oscar Wilde, The Picture of Dorian Gray”
― Connection: Hollywood Storytelling meets Critical Thinking
― Connection: Hollywood Storytelling meets Critical Thinking
“Keith Johnstone, author of the seminal improv work Impro: Improvisation and the Theatre, offers a brilliant quote on the subject: “There are people who prefer to say ‘Yes,’ and there are people who prefer to say ‘No.’ Those who say ‘Yes’ are rewarded by the adventures they have, and those who say ‘No’ are rewarded by the safety they attain.” Will you attain your message objectives by playing it safe?”
― Connection: Hollywood Storytelling meets Critical Thinking
― Connection: Hollywood Storytelling meets Critical Thinking
“Story is a set of details about a person’s (or persons’) experience, arranged in a deliberate structure, which gives it specific meaning and universal appeal. Story structure is a process in which a hero does something challenging in order to gain something crucial.”
― Connection: Hollywood Storytelling meets Critical Thinking
― Connection: Hollywood Storytelling meets Critical Thinking
“Popular writers like to tell big stories. Scientists like to tell the truth.”
― Connection: Hollywood Storytelling meets Critical Thinking
― Connection: Hollywood Storytelling meets Critical Thinking
“when there was familiarity with the story, it was the superlatives that had more impact than the specifics. But once the familiarity was lost, the need returns for the power and specifics of the individual narratives. And the more detailed and specific, the more powerful.”
― Connection: Hollywood Storytelling meets Critical Thinking
― Connection: Hollywood Storytelling meets Critical Thinking
“Rule of Replacing.” He says, “I sort of always call it the rule of replacing ‘ands’ with either ‘buts’ or ‘therefores,’ and so it’s always like ‘this happens’ and then this happens and then this happens—whenever I can go back in the writing and change that to—this happens, therefore this happens, but this happens—whenever you can replace your ‘ands’ with ‘buts’ or ‘therefores,’ it makes for better writing.”
― Connection: Hollywood Storytelling meets Critical Thinking
― Connection: Hollywood Storytelling meets Critical Thinking
“Robert McKee, the uber-guru of Hollywood screenwriting, in his masterwork, Story, describes what he calls “The Law of Conflict for storytelling,” which is that, “Nothing moves forward in a story except through conflict.”
― Connection: Hollywood Storytelling meets Critical Thinking
― Connection: Hollywood Storytelling meets Critical Thinking
“In 2009, I attended Book Expo in New York City, where they had three editors of bestselling novels on a panel discussion. At the end of the discussion, the moderator asked the editors if they could make one prediction about the future of novel writing. They all thought for a moment, then one of them said that in the future, you won’t have forty to fifty pages of set up in a murder mystery before the body is discovered. To the contrary, the dead body will have to appear in the first few pages, as people’s attention spans are clearly waning.”
― Connection: Hollywood Storytelling meets Critical Thinking
― Connection: Hollywood Storytelling meets Critical Thinking
“One woman in communications talked about the cultural divide between the communicators and the scientists, which turns out to be almost a universal dilemma at scientific institutions. The rift in cultures was brought home by a simple example. She said, “We go to the scientists and ask them what they would like us to communicate to the general public. Almost invariably they reply, ‘We want you to tell the story of the CDC.’ We say, ‘Great, but what is the story of the CDC?’ They look at us with frustration bordering on anger and reply, ‘You know, it’s all the diseases we cure here, the amazing teams of researchers, the drugs we develop…’ But, we cut them off and say, ‘That’s all great, but that’s not a story. That’s only information. A story begins when something happens.”
― Connection: Hollywood Storytelling meets Critical Thinking
― Connection: Hollywood Storytelling meets Critical Thinking
“It really does make you feel like a better person to be able to answer the question, “What do you do for a living?” with a story that fascinates people, instead of a ramble that ends with, “… um … that kinda thing, you know.”
― Connection: Hollywood Storytelling meets Critical Thinking
― Connection: Hollywood Storytelling meets Critical Thinking
