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The Storyteller’s Art

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The Storyteller’s Art

FromWizard of Ads Monday Morning Memo


UNLIMITED

The Storyteller’s Art

FromWizard of Ads Monday Morning Memo

ratings:
Length:
3 minutes
Released:
May 5, 2014
Format:
Podcast episode

Description

Of all the things that drive men to sea, the most common disaster, I’ve come to learn, is women.I borrowed that sentence from Charles Johnson, a storyteller who begins his tale, Middle Passage, with that line. I chose not to enclose it in quotation marks because I didn’t want to alert you to the fact that misdirection was about to slap your cheek.Quotation marks do that, you know. They are animated bookends that wave like semiphore flags, shouting, “These words are special.”Misdirection is half the storyteller’s art.“Justice?— You get justice in the next world, in this world you have the law.”1The other half is resolution: We are surprised to learn that women are a disaster. But after a moment’s reflection, we are not. We are surprised to learn the law is not just. But after a moment’s reflection, we are not.“Once upon a time, there was a woman who discovered she had turned into the wrong person.”2We are surprised to learn that a woman can turn into the wrong person. But after a moment’s reflection, we are not.Every magician depends on misdirection and resolution.The comedian is a magician of laughter. The greater his misdirection, the greater the orgasm of laughter at the punch line, that moment of resolution when it all comes together.The storyteller is a magician whose stage is the page. Words are the top hat from which he extracts his rabbits and the endless handkerchief he pulls from his sleeve. They are the handsaw he uses to cut the pretty girl in half and the wheels he uses to roll those halves together again.A great communicator says things plainly and brings clarity to the mind. This is difficult. But it is not magic.A storyteller turns the heart this way and that, showing it things it has never seen, things that have not yet happened, things that never will, using misdirection and resolution over and over, touching you in places you didn’t even know were there.Every business, every person, has a story to tell. You know this, of course.But now you face a difficult choice: Will you speak clearly and win the mind? Or will you speak magically and win the heart?Roy H. Williams
Released:
May 5, 2014
Format:
Podcast episode

Titles in the series (100)

Thousands of people are starting their workweeks with smiles of invigoration as they log on to their computers to find their Monday Morning Memo just waiting to be devoured. Straight from the middle-of-the-night keystrokes of Roy H. Williams, the MMMemo is an insightful and provocative series of well-crafted thoughts about the life of business and the business of life.