I sometimes wish every story in existence could go through some sort of This American Life ‘golden story’ machine and come out shining like the stars. I love this series of videos in which Ira Glass shares some of his secrets for great storytelling, with equal doses of humility and self-respect for his mastery of the craft. Here are a few excerpts, but be sure to watch them yourself.

On the power of the anecdote:

A story in its purest form is somebody saying this happened and that lead to this next thing and that lead to this next thing and that lead to this next thing, one thing following another. And some of the things in the sequence can be ‘that made me think of this’ and ‘then I said this’. There can be facts and ideas as part of it but one is leading to the next is leading to the next.

And the power of the anecdote is so great that no matter how boring the material is […] it has a momentum in and of itself…

On killing crap:

It’s time to kill and it’s time to enjoy the killing because by killing you will make something else even better live and I think that not enough gets said about the importance of abandoning crap.

One thing that you should know is that all video production is trying to be crap. Like, in fact our radio production is trying to be crap. Basically it’s like the laws of entropy. You know that thing where like the universe is… All the energy in the universe is dissipating and all the atoms are getting lower and lower in energy? Well basically anything that you put on tape, from the moment that you put it on tape, basically it’s trying to be really bad. It’s trying to be unstructured, it’s trying to be pointless, it’s trying to be boring, it’s trying to be digressive, much like these sentences that I’m saying right here.

And pretty much you have to prop it up aggressively at every stage of the way if it’s going to be any good. You have to be really a killer about getting rid of the boring parts and going right to the parts that get into your heart. You just have to be ruthless if anything is going to be good. Things that are really good are good because people are being really, really tough.

On the gap between your stuff and your taste:

And the thing I would just like to say to you with all my heart is that most everybody I know who does interesting creative work, they went through a phase of years where they had really good taste and they could tell what they were making wasn’t as good as they wanted it to be. They knew it fell short, you know, and some of us can admit that to ourselves and some of us are a little less able to admit that to ourselves.

But we knew that it didn’t have the special thing that we wanted it to have and the thing is … everybody goes through that. And for you to go through it, if you’re going through it right now, if you’re just getting out of that phase or if you’re just starting off and you’re entering into that phase, you’ve got to know it’s totally normal and the most important possible thing you can do is do a lot of work.

Do a huge volume of work. Put yourself on a deadline so that every week or every month you know you’re going to finish one story. You know what I mean? Whatever it’s going to be. You create the deadline. It’s best if you have somebody who’s waiting for work from you, somebody who’s expecting work from you, even if it’s not somebody who pays you but that you’re in a situation where you have to try not to work. Because it’s only actually going through a volume of work that you are actually going to catch up and close that gap. And the work you’re making will be as good as your ambitions.

Posted at 11:15am and tagged with: quotes, this american life, ira glass, storytelling,.

John Berger _ And Our Faces, My Heart, Brief As Photos

John Berger, And Our Faces, My Heart, Brief As Photos

One

Once In A Song

A singer may be innocent
never the song. With its instantaneous eyes
opened on to the world
and its heart laid bare,
the song is brazen,
the song is newborn.
Only when it has quietened
can listeners resume by habit
the innocence of their age.

Two

When I open my wallet
to show my papers
pay money
or check the time of a train
I look at your face.

The flower’s pollen
is older than the mountains
Aravis is young
as mountains go.

The flower’s ovules
will be seeding still
when Aravis then aged
is no more than a hill.

The flower in the heart’s
wallet, the force
of what lives us
outliving the mountain.

And our faces, my heart, brief as photos.

Posted at 12:01am and tagged with: one column, reading, quotes, john berger,.

This morsel from Liz Danzico via 52 Weeks of UX in her post, Makers of Frames. I’m thinking about how to create the space for a certain spirit of interaction in the context of small (actually, tiny) networks forged around interpersonal (i.e. one to one) communication. I keep bumping into Liz.

Posted at 7:44pm and tagged with: quotes, ux, Liz Danzico,.

As designers, as people, adjust the boundaries of your place. It is there you’ll see new meaning emerge, the behavior you designed for, and stories you never could have predicted.

Life will get harder. And life will get better. I don’t just mean a swing between the two. They go hand in hand.

David Rawlings, Method Acting / Cortez the Killer from the album, A Friend of a Friend:

‘Cause I don’t know what tomorrow brings.
It’s alive with such possibility.
But I know that I feel better when I sing.
Burdens are lifted from me.
That’s my voice rising.

I’m also reminded of Jeffrey and his dirty little secret:

Only a restless, broken heart can drive you to do what is necessary.

It’s Sunday. Life is complicated. Life is bright. And I’m working.

Posted at 3:35pm and tagged with: video, david rawlings, gillian welch, jeffrey zeldman, quotes,.

Jaron Lanier _ You Are Not a Gadget

Tonight I began reading this in tandem with The Timeless Way of Building, and there’s an unmistakable dance between them that has my mind fizzing. Written three decades apart and in completely different contexts, both serve as manifestos for richer human experiences; one in the physical world, the other digital. I look forward to unraveling the rest of the conversation between them.

Posted at 12:23am and tagged with: reading, quotes, humanistic, digital,.

The central mistake of recent digital culture is to chop up a network of individuals so finely that you end up with a mush. You then start to care about the abstraction of the network more than the real people who are networked, even though the network by itself is meaningless. Only the people were ever meaningful.

Liz Danzico’s bobulate has become, for me, a regular destination for waking up and thinking about things worth a damn, which hopefully translates into making things worth a damn. And it really does feel like I’m singing when I try to make those things. Thanks for sharing this Liz.

William Zinsser on finding enjoyment in making things:

You should paint like a man coming over the top of the hill singing. —Robert Henri

That’s a quote he took down in a commencement address given by David McCullough in a small Connecticut town. He continues:

Amen. That’s also how you should write, sing, dance, draw, sculpt, act, play an instrument, take a photograph, design a building, live a life.

That’s also how you should design, cook, map, teach, drive cars, present things you make, consider, run, study, walk dogs, invent, eat, get lost, travel, chart, think. At least.

Posted at 6:35pm and tagged with: inspiration, quotes, bobulate, zinsser,.

I have been reading and re-reading Christopher Alexander’s The Timeless Way of Building for over a month now and am thinking about the implications for digital world building. I just got another copy of the book (after returning one that I had borrowed previously) and don’t expect to put it down anytime soon. Today’s excerpt:

The search which we make for this quality, in our own lives, is the central search of any person, and the crux of any individual person’s story. It is the search for those moments and situations when we are most alive.

We know, now, what the quality without a name is like, in feeling and in character. But so far, concretely, we have not seen this quality in any system larger than a tree, a pond, a bench. Yet it can be in anything - in buildings, animals, plants, cities, streets, the wilderness - and in ourselves. We shall begin to understand it concretely, in all these larger pieces of the world, only when we first understand it in ourselves.

It is, for instance, the wild smile of the gypsies dancing in the road.

[…]

And I am free to the extent I have this quality in me.

Posted at 5:21pm and tagged with: reading, quotes, christoper alexander, two column, dancing,.

Posted at 1:01pm and tagged with: quotes,.

For many years, I have been moved by the blue at the far edge of what can be seen, that color of horizons, of remote mountain ranges, of anything far away. The color of that distance is the color of an emotion, the color of solitude and of desire, the color of there seen from here, the color of where you are not. And the color of where you can never go. For the blue is not in the place those miles away at the horizon, but in the atmospheric distance between you and the mountains. “Longing,” says the poet Robert Hass, “because desire is full of endless distances.” Blue is the color of longing for distances you never arrive in, for the blue world.
Christopher Alexander _ The Timeless Way of Building

Posted at 12:36pm and tagged with: architecture, design, planning, quotes,.

To you, mind of no mind, in whom the timeless way was born.
Ben Ehrenreich _ The Suitors

Posted at 10:06am and tagged with: quotes,.

Pull this one loose thread. Pull hard, and pull again.