The Rise and Fall of a Story-Showing Empire
By Peter Usagi
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The Transmedia Revolution has begun! Which side will you join? An empire of greedy corporate media cartels? Or an ancient and mysterious order of storytellers... Image via Panicposters |
People often wonder why there isn’t anything "new" in Hollywood. Why is it that every movie, TV show, and most popular literature, tastes like reheated "leftovers" disguised with some kind of mystery sauce? It’s because after a century of industrialization, we've become indoctrinated as a species of “story consumers.”
We’ve been raised to passively swallow the shallow narratives presented to us in our extended childhoods; schizophrenic mythologies filled with stories that have no depth, meaning, or purpose--other than to entertain (or perhaps more sinisterly, distract).
All of our modern entertainment (all of our stories) are almost entirely mono-active.
Our “entertainment industry” is simply a convenient medium for a 24/7 multimedia stream of consumer subconsciousness—peppered every fifteen minutes with commercials, product placement, and other forms of materialist propaganda. Even traditional literature has become a victim to this malaise.
The Lost Art of Storytelling
Parents who "tell” stories to their children, usually aren't really “telling” them. They’re reading them word for word from a book; an example of modern mono-active story-watching. Unless the child occasionally takes control of the narrative, thus making it interactive (I.E. "No, Red Riding Hood had a cell phone, and she called the cops on that mean nasty wolf!") the true immersive, and transitive aspects of storytelling are neutered, or even entirely absent in our modern fictions.
Is modern media a "big bad wolf" that devours creativity and imagination? Image via Wikipedia |
If you put your book down, and “tell” a story to your audience (instead of read it), something about your story will always change, each and every time you tell it. Unless, of course (as you’ll find in live theater), you have your lines memorized.
This is because even when you tell the same story (with the identical characters and plot), you’ll always be a different person each time you tell it, and so will your audience (even if they’re the same people):
If you told a story to a group of recent college grads (while they were partying around a campfire in the middle of the wilderness) the crazy things you did to get into your career field…would that story be identical to the one you told to a classroom of second graders, the day after you lost your job?
If this is the case, does "storytelling" in its interactive sense, still exist in today's society? Perhaps...
Thanks to new combinations of divergent media platforms, a new kind of storytelling is on the rise. One that recognizes the importance of engaging an increasingly distracted and impatient audience: transmedia.
Thanks to new combinations of divergent media platforms, a new kind of storytelling is on the rise. One that recognizes the importance of engaging an increasingly distracted and impatient audience: transmedia.