Storytelling, simplified:
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Anybody else miss Anthony Bourdain?
I’ve been rewatching Parts Unknown a lot.
“How would you describe yourself?” the producer said behind camera.
“I would describe myself as a lucky cook who tells stories,” said Bourdain. “And I think any other, uh…” he searched a moment, “I’m certainly not a journalist,” he said. “I’m not a chef anymore. I’d like to flatter myself by saying I’m an essayist. But I’m a storyteller: I see stuff. I talk about it...”
I took out my phone to record his quote.
“I talk about how it made me feel at that time,” he said. “If you can do that — honestly — that’s about the best you could hope for, I think.”
I love simple explanations for complicated things.
And there are plenty of ways to complicate storytelling, yes:
The Hero’s Journey: Departure > Initiation > Return
The 3-Act Structure: Setup > Confrontation > Resolution
The 5-Act Structure: Exposition > Rising Action > Climax > Falling Action > Dénouement
Other formulas, too. All proven, all good.
But there’s something refreshing (and comforting) about Bourdain’s boiled-down approach:
See stuff > talk about how it made you feel > be honest.
Simple.
And why not? Why the hell not?
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Hey there, thanks for reading. :)
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Eddie Shleyner
VeryGoodCopy, founder
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