Monday, February 29, 2016
Wednesday, February 10, 2016
Tuesday, February 9, 2016
Reflections on Lmaott, Jay and Hurn
Each of the readings, School Lunches and Polaroids by Anne Lamott and Selecting a Subject by Bill Jay and David Hurn deal with subject selection. There is one overall idea theme that stuck with me through these very different and often conflicting readings. Everything can be made interesting if it is interesting to you. The operative word being can, the subject may not be inherently interesting but, all do respect to Jay and Hurn I believe that every story can be interesting and visual.
Reading Lamott I thought of two things, first I recalled a favorite song of mine by Nirvana. The subject of this song was of an evening when a young Kurt Cobain was left as his grandparents while his parents went out for the evening. Each verse chronicled the events of the evening from the perspective of a small child in chronological order with the refrain of “Grandma take me home.” Now if you were to tell someone that you were writing a song about this subject they would not be likely to give one much encouragement. The song works because it gives the listener something that they can relate to, something that they themselves have experienced.
The second thing that occured to me was a new podcast from Gimlet titled “Surprisingly Awesome,” which uses as its subject matter things that seem to be mundane on the surface yet underneath posses qualities that make them fascinating to everyone.
My point here is that everything can be made to be interesting and visual. That said everything isn’t INHERENTLY interesting and visual. You have to find a way for it to be so. This is a task that you may or may not be able to succeed at but I refuse to believe that it isn’t possible, simply improbable. Just as Lamott made writing about school lunches interesting you have to dig deep and be creative in your approach. You must find the aspect of these subjects that others or ignorant or oblivious of.
The key here is to have a subject that you are knowledgeable about or can become knowledgeable about. You can’t tell a story that you are ignorant about. That said no matter how knowledgeable you are you can never know how that story is going to develop. A friend of mine set out to work on a story about recidivism while in graduate school. While shooting this story an incident of domestic violence occurred in front of her. This incident completely changed the story. She had no thoughts of working on a domestic violence story when she started but all of her work she had done on her original subject became a part of the new topic she found herself examining.
It is great, vital even to make a map of the path that you intend to go down but it is just as important to be prepared to take a fork in the road when it appears.
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