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Changing Landscapes: Transmedial Immersedition


Transmedial Immersedition:

3 of 3 Part Article

“There is an increasing amount of interest and attention around the idea of ‘transmedia storytelling’ these days because of our increased awareness of converging and permeable media technology boundaries, but humans have always been transmedia storytellers.” Dr. Pamela Rutledge, PhD, MBA 

According to writer>digital transmedia strategist Jenka Gurfinkel, our lives are actually a series of Transmedial Experiences, and Transmedial Storytelling is just one of the ways we partner with other to share in the ‘tellin’.

From scratching in the dirt with a stick to shielding our e-book screens against the distorting rays of an afternoon sun, humans have been searching for ways with which to record and share the thoughts, events and imaginations in their lives through a media that would draw the listener and reader into the experience with them.

In the beginning our media was limited to cave walls, large rocks and tree bark. But as the wheel of time rolled forward and our imaginations and experience’s changed, we found ourselves chiseling on stone, scribbling on papyrus and pressing ink soaked blocks of wood on to sheets of paper.  Often in an effort to engage as many of the five senses of the reader as possible, these recordings were augmented by beautifully etched pictures, pressed flowers and wax – sealed impressions.

Like oil and chalk, words were used to paint images, recall childhood memories or draw forth the secret longing within the reader’s heart to be that hero, slay that villain or save that damsel in distress.

Through the use of layered media, a reader was invited to go beyond the written word and join the author in a partnership of the mind and senses. For a moment following the last word spoken or the final page turned, the audience was able to feel as though the possibility of living another life was but a word or thought away. The power of storytelling (be it verbal or written) offered even the lowest peasant a chance to be someone other than who they were for however long they could hold onto the imagined experience.

Then suddenly mankind is thrust into the twentieth century where we find ourselves viewing yet another tale or event from a variety of angles, textures and stimuli. What began on the pages of a book moved to the fabric of a theater screen, and from there we were handed tools which allowed us to delve even deeper into the characters we’d just watched through ARG’s like Warcraft,  RPG’s  such as Buffy the Vampire Slayer, and in some cases,  like Neal Stephenson’s multimedia metaver  novel  “The Mongoliad”,  made a partner  in creating alternate story>plot line and endings.

Now instead of voyeuristically imagining ourselves as part of the story from a flat, one dimensional plane of readership, we have been given the opportunity to become engaged in a partnership whereby the tellin’ is a collaboration of transmedial immersion which will bring you and I into a 360˚ storytelling experience.  An alternate reality where it is no long one person’s imagination controlling our own.

Even as recent as eight months ago,  these experiences were still ( in this literary purist’s mind,) gaudy attempts to try and get people like me to leave our celestial peaks of antiquity and come down amongst the rabble rousers of technology. And without an object shiny enough to rouse my curiosity, I remained immune to their best marketing persuasions.

That is until I came across an article in Wired.com about a young first time novelist named Amanda Havard and her visionary concept Immersedition.  The flight out of my mountainous domain was rather faster than I was prepared for and even now I am still applying dressing to my skinned ego and cold compresses to my bruised imagination.

Ms. Havard’s  bio reads like most YA author’s who have grown up living with one foot in flat land and the other in the multi dimensional world of their own imaginations. Writing and telling stories from the time she was a little girl growing up in Dallas Texas, Amanda, like so many who have gone before, followed the natural literary progression from budding elementary school author to Vanderbilt University,  where she received her MA in childhood education.

In an interview with Sally Schoss (freelance writer for  Nashville Arts Magazine), Ms. Havard said that it was while she was on her way to attend a wedding in Tupelo, Mississippi that the idea for her The Survivor’s (a first novel in a five part series) and its immersive transmedial storytelling potential was first conceived.

But in 2008, while pitching to agents  her vision of publishing The Survivor’s in a transmedial format that would retain all the appearance of a book, while still allowing Ms. Havard and other collaborator’s  to produce a story that would offer the reader an immersive 360˚ experience, she told  reporter Angela Watercut  that what those agents basically said was,  ‘That’s a really cool story you have here and it sounds like a really marketable product, if you could just stop talking about all that other stuff, let it go and realize that you’re not going to have that, sit down, shut up and listen to what they tell you, then you’re going to be fine.’

But according to Ana Maria Allessi, vice president and publisher of Harper Media, due to the speed at which Ebook technology is changing, what Amanda Havard encountered was not a surprise. “That kind of reluctance to adapt and adopt new ideas in e-books is unfortunate, but it’s somewhat understandable. Tablet devices evolve at the speed of light compared to the book industry, in which a single title can take well over a year to produce. Heretofore publishers have been dependent on device makers to support any new ideas they want to execute…. One of the biggest hurdles…is creating something that will work across all devices and platforms. Currently, each enhanced e-book her company wants to put out must be altered to adhere to the specs of the Kindle Fire, the Nook Tablet and the iPad. (Nearly all tablets, however, support the stripped-down “.epub” files used in basic e-books.)

Undaunted in her vision, Ms. Havard, along with her father L.C. Havard (a former executive in the health insurance industry) created Chafie Press, a publishing company whose mission is ‘to reinvent storytelling’ by bringing several collaborators under the same roof. By bringing together a full media studio, Chafie Press book publishing, FPR music recording label, Point of Origin Music Publishing as well as a score of other in house videographers and designers, she was able to bring her dream to fruition.

Add Demibooks (who designed the Immersedition app for iPad, iPhone application) and you now have a revolutionary concept for storytelling that combines an undesecrated screen with immerseive watermarks, that when touched,  take the reader to more than 300 pages of history, backstory, character profile as well as ‘written>produced for music>video, fashion, iGoogle maps  and interative real time Twitter and Facebook accounts.

In this transmedial evolving reader’s mind, Amanda Havard and Chafie Creative have given a whole new meaning  to what it is to ‘do the tellin’ and pass on to yet another generation the ability to give greater depth and dimension to the world around us, and the ones we’ve yet to encounter.

If by the simple touch of a finger, the flick of a wrist and the push of imagination we can now extend ourselves beyond the confines of our known world, how much longer will it be before movies like Total Recall, Twilight Zone, Star Trek and Star Wars have become our past and no longer our future?

From the laptop of an uncensored dreamer,

SSpjut

If you’re an emerging author, established one or just like to read interesting content, feel free to share your thoughts on what you think transmedial storytelling is and how you see it affecting you and the future of ‘Doin the Tellin’

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Building a Community – Not a Platform


T0 blog or not to blog, that is the question.  

Whether it is nobler to continue to share my personal life in a time of financial lane changing, or to set it aside for another day….that is the question that must be asked.

Since I’ve recently found myself traveling down yet another unexplored road in the pursuit of becoming an author and writer, I decided to stop a moment and re-assess  my reasons for continuing the Writer’s Journal  portion on my blog site ( particularly when my original intent was to share the journey of writing a first novel >which is now on hiatus).

Let’s face it, it’s not like I don’t have enough things to write about. Between the Marketing Director position, the re-write on my non-fiction book, this blog and the writer’s group I’m a part of, the keys on my laptop are beginning to look in serious need of replacement parts.

But as nothing is ever permanent,  and I am always in the process of evolving and re-inventing myself,  I thought it was important that I take a few minutes and touch base with the original idea.

So I sorted through the file cabinet in my mind until I came to the drawer marked SSpjut>Writer’s Blog>Stardate, found the file highlighted  ”Why Blog?” (For those who don’t know me, almost all my mental files begin with “Why?”), and pulled it up out of the shadowy recesses of my memory. 

After carefully dusting off the cover, I flipped it open and found myself staring at the headline of the first page.  It didn’t take but a moment for the clamoring voices of indecision and doubt to stop and slither back under the murky waters of insecurity and unbelief.  With a smile and a sigh I closed the cover, slid the file back where I’d found it, went out to the kitchen where I poured myself a cup of coffee, grabbed the other half of my English muffin and moseyed back here so I could share my findings. 

I began by asking  whether blogging on my journal was still relevant to my current journey and  found instead,  that as so often happens, I was asking the wrong question. The one I should have been asking (and was so forcefully reminded of when I opened that file) was, “Why did I feel compelled to start a blog in the first place?”

Was it to have a creative outlet for my compulsion to write?

Was I trying to promote myself before the ink had even dried on the first draft of my first novel?  

Or did having a blog to call my own give me a sense of purpose and belonging? 

In truth, each of those questions might have played a part in my initial reason,  but the real headline is actually something  quite a bit different.

It was in the beginning and still is, my passion for doing all things through the connective wheel of relationship and community, that I found the impetus for starting this blog.

Several years ago I was part of a leadership development team in which our primary avenue of developing leaders was through building relationships. We took a look at where the company wanted to go, who we were going to need to partner with to get there and how we could invest in those lives in a way that not only helped them grow but created a community of like-minded individuals who supported and encouraged one another in the journey. 

It was (and still is) individuals like Jesus Christ , John C. Maxwell, Graham Cooke, Frances Hesselbein, Peter Drucker and George Barna who committed their lives to developing organic leadership that are some of my greatest hero’s. At every opportunity they sought to empower others by investing emotionally as well as intellectually.  

As John Maxwell ( founder of INJOY Leadership Development Group) teaches in the The 21 Irrefutable Laws of Leadership, a person can only rise as far as the lid  over their lives will allow them  to (how they see themselves), and it is the responsibility of leaders to do everything they can to lift that lid higher. 

When individuals, such as you and I, are more intent upon establishing and building relationships than we are in building our own platforms or personal empires, we not only help grow a community of individual’s whose limitations are being organically removed by that investment, but we are building a network of people who, like Jesus and his twelve disciples, may just become powerful enough to change the world.

So in the pursuit of continuing to build and invest in relationships and community, the Writer’s Journal on my blog will stay. 

Will all my postings be so altruistic as to qualify me for sainthood, I seriously doubt it. But I will do my best to stay as transparent as possible in my pursuit of investing in the development of community so that in the bigger picture of things, my success will not be measured so much in what I have bought or sold, but in the value of those I took the time to get to know.

 From the laptop of an uncensored dreamer

SSpjut

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In Search of the Perfect News Reader


In Search of ……..

In my last Intelligent Blogging post, “Where Did That Blog Go?”  I began investigating the RSS Reader board tool, its use and why you and I, as writers, need to be found on someone’s other than our mother’s. 

But between my last post and this,  I’ve discovered that my current iGoogle Reader  tool is outdated and looks like it’s on a slippery slide out the back door of discarded technology, as Google once again morph’s into its newer version  Google+ in an attempt to make themselves more appealing and user-friendly (Ouch! I hate it when I get comfy with something just about the time the techno boys and girls start changing it out for something better.). 

Yet I am discovering that not all change is bad. 

Take this switch up from the old iGoogle Reader to the newer Google+ for example.  I may not be crazy about the way the dashboard looks (too many features on Home Page that gives it a cluttered feeling), but I have to say that they’ve made subscribing to RSS feeds, creating subject folders and moving subscriptions back and forth between folders 100% better and easier than iGoogle Reader does. 

 For starters, if I want to add a new RSS feed to my Reader board in iGoogle, I have to leave my Reader, find their Widget page and create a new Widget for each feed I want to follow.  And if I forget to create an initial file folder prior to adding the feed, I have to go through the very tedious process of creating the file, going back to each subscription, opening>copying the URL  and re-adding it to my new folder all over again. 

In the great big world of drag and drop, why they’ve created such a drawn out process I couldn’t tell you. For those of us who have allowed ourselves the maximum amount of one cup of coffee per new learning curve, it is highly unlikely I will get around to cleaning up the Reader Page any time soon.

So you can imagine my utter delight to have discovered that the Google+ Reader (you can access via your iGoogle tool bars More tab) is everything I could hope for. With this new and improved version I can add new feeds by simply copying thier URL, clicking on the file I want to put it in, open the Subscribe tab, paste  and it’s done. A new feed in my sidebar.

And  if I subscribe to a feed before I’ve created a file, no problem. I mosey on over  go to the  ‘Feed Settings‘ tab, choose ‘New Folder‘, name it whatever I want, then skip on down to  the left sidebar and drag my new subscription into my new folder.  If I want to rename either my feed or Folder>Tag, I can do that to0 by simply  going to the upper right hand quadrant of my Reader Page, click the Gear drop down Widget, go to Reader Settings then click on Subscriptions or the Rename cannister to the right.  

With just a few clicks, a couple of drag and drops, and presto change-o, I’ve subscribed to my favorite feeds, created folders to put them in and had a change of mind all within the time it takes to drink that second cup of joe.

 Matter of fact, it’s so perfect I may have a donut to celebrate.

Now before I leave off, I did promise that I’d let you know how my comparison RSS feed choice Blogline, measured against iGoogle and (now of course Google+).

Not good.  I like that it offers me several options as to how I can view my Reader Tabs (or Widgets), and unlike iGoogle and Google+, the Home page is clean and neat. Also the Blogline Reader board  offers a fabulous assortment of SM Widgets that puts sites like Twitter, FB, Digg, Delicious etcetera at your fingertips (another one stop shopping experience).

But that’s where cool ended.  After copying the RSS feed URL, I then had to import it onto a separate board and look at it before I could  add it to my folder (instead of importing the subscription directly to the sidebar) .

And if I accidentally put it in the wrong folder, well I never did figure out how to delete or move it, so there are still subscriptions filed under wrong folders. 

The cool Widgets I mentioned earlier? I was only ever able to get one (Twitter) to open up on the Home Page  but it said the connection was corrupt. The rest remain a mystery.

All in all,  Blogline Reader was a disappointing experience.

 At the end of the afternoon, both iGoogle and Google+ still had my vote for Most User Friendly RSS Reader’s.  Sure I’d like to have SM Widgets available on my Home Page, and yes it would be nice to have an uncluttered look. But if I have to choose between neat and ease of use, I’m going with ease of use every time.

Like everyone else working to hone their skills and talents as a writer, I have more to do in a day than I have hours to do it in, and if I have to waste my time finding something or struggle to add it to my box of blogging tools, then it’s time to let that bad boy go and move on.

 From the laptop of an uncensored dreamer

SSpjut

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Changing Landscapes: A Multiverse of Transmedial Storytelling


Changing Landscapes: A Multiverse of Transmedial Storytelling.

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Morphing at the Speed of Light


Morphing at the Speed of Light.

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Getting It Down On Paper


Writer’s Blog Stardate 1-29-2012

Dear Bloggers and Wannabe’s:

Today’s challenge: Moving the novel from my brain onto the page or laptop. Wow! It all sounded so glorious and easy when I first started talking about it. I mean, how difficult can it be to transfer brilliancy from one space to another? In my naivety I imagined booting up the PC, opening a Word document then taking a deep breath and watching words flow miraculously from my fingers like lightening through a wizards wand. And in this fantasy like fairy tale, I imagined re-writes to be nothing more than mild corrections in grammar and punctuation with possibly a chance of an occasional change in the chosen adjective or adverb.

Boy does the reality ever suck.

Just learning how to take the story from my imagination and getting it down on paper is an art form in itself. I can’t tell you how many times I’ve gone back over what I’ve just written and discovered that I have suddenly developed dyslexia. I think “How in the heck did my fingers type that?” Or how at the end of my writing session I’ll print off what I’ve just written, with the sole intent of just doing a light edit, and discover that what I’m reading isn’t anything like I thought it should be [thank God some of it was actually better - not worse].

Then there’s the whole; ‘getting lost in the forest because I got so caught up in the trees I forgot where I was going to begin with’ dilemma. It’s not easy keeping track of the story when all these great, unsolicited ideas keep popping into your head and you find yourself embellishing on things to such an extreme that they no longer resemble the original idea. Often costing you time, ink and paper because like all good things that should have been deleted at birth, you discover in the re-read just how badly off course you actually got.

“MERCY DELETE”

Thank God there is tons of really good advise out there on some of the ways other writers have discovered how to keep track of plot lines, scene and information so they don’t lose track of where they are and where they need to go, or how to keep from giving Peggy Sue red hair on page 12 and green hair on page 36. Thankfully, my A type personality thrives on information [I am secretly an information junkie and am currently attending Type A anonymous meetings 3x per week] so I devour as much information as possible. And like any good filtration system, I keep what I can use and discard what I can’t.

As a result of this painful – yet still fruitful learning curve is that in the future, should I come across such web sites or books, I’m going to try and remember to list them here on my blog site so that other wannabe writer’s can make use of them as well. I figure if you’ve invested ten minutes of your time reading this, then the least I can do is reciprocate with a little free info.

From the laptop of an uncensored dreaming writer.

SSpjut

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Can Your Work Ever Be Too Perfect?


Writer’s Blog Stardate 1-28-2012

Good morning blogger’s and wannabe’s

The other day I was sharing with a friend how I found myself re-writing several sections of my novel and that it was probably the umpteenth million time I’d had to do it. They were aghast! How can you call yourself a writer if you’re continually re-writitng what you’ve already written. It was actually suggested that I might be trying too hard to be perfect and that I should cut myself some slack and not try so hard.

Well I gave that all of about a nanosecond of thought and responded, “Can your work ever be too perfect?”

So my question to us as writer’s is, “Can our work ever be too perfect?”

I am a voracious reader and I  try to mix up the genre’s in order to learn from other author’s. Unfortunately something I’ve discovered doing that  is,  that there are alot of new authors with a lot of  work out there, but there aren’t that many that are good. There are even some you have to ask the question “How in the world did you get published?” [and that was after the third book in the series]

Sorry, but its true. It’s not that they had a bad idea for a story – but rather that they were allowed to do a poor job of telling it.

We are surrounded by every type of media  and resource to be able to create imaginable [and some unimaginable], but that shouldn’t be an excuse for us to do something poorly. If we expect others to spend hard earned cash on something we’ve created, then don’t we owe it to them to make it ‘perfect’? Shouldn’t the effort we put into creating a story, poem or play be with the expectation that when we have finished the work, it is as near perfection as is humanly possible for us to make it?

But even more importantly – don’t we really owe it to ourselves? Do we really want to leave a legacy of garbage for other generations to judge us by? We only have one life to live, so why don’t we choose to live it with excellence rather than mediocrity? Wouldn’t it be better to have created one thing that was truly brilliant, that two or three hundred years from now people are still using it as a measuring guide of greatness than a lot of not so brilliant things that won’t be remember six months after they were published?

So what does this mean for me?

That I’m in this for the long haul, for that one brilliant piece of creative work that will still be on a bookshelf a hundred years from now instead of the bargain table of .50 books that no one wants to read the first time let alone twice. It means that I’m back at the key board writing and re-writing something until I just can’t squeeze out one more ounce of perfection. It also means that I’ll be getting up in the middle of the night because I’ve suddenly realized that yesterday I  may have had a great idea , but the reality on page isn’t worth the time it took to type it out and I won’t rest until I’ve given it the ’mercy delete’ that it truly deserves.

From the lap top of an uncensored dreamer

SSpjut

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Writer’s Blog Stardate 1-27-2012


Writer’s Blog Stardate 1-27-2012.

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No Writer Is An Island


Good morning bloggers and wannabe’s.

There’s an old saying, ‘No man is an island.’ I think that this is especially true for writer’s as well. As much as we’d like to be able to  writer whatever, whenever we’d like and not be accountable to anyone else for what we put on paper, in my opinion,  this is not only highly narcissistic, but unprofitable to boot.

When I first began this adventure, I tried to read as much as I could about how to get an agent, find a publisher and the fastest tract on becoming the next Anne Rice or Terry Brooks. [What can I say, I have illusions of grandeur just like the rest of you.] But much to my growing disappointment, all roads led back to the same place: find a group of people who will read your work, give you their brutal yet helpful opinion and help you write, re-write and re-write again and again until your flowery prose either becomes a fine tuned, pared down version of the original or slips into the watery grave of ‘mercy deleting’ that it should have been sent to in the first place.

In other words, you can’t truly ever become a great writer  if your the only one that ever sees your work. It takes a village to grow a writer. So, being the over achieving A type personality that I am, I set out to find myself a writing group that would be brutally yet helpfully honest.

Your probably thinking the same thing I was; with all the current cultural emphasis on believing that its ok to blurt out whatever thoughts happen to  pass through our minds - with no regard for the consequences -  that my search would have been easy. Not so.

In the  hunt for the perfect writing group with which to share my heart and soul, I realized that they, like a  new pair of shoes, have to be worn for a while before you truly feel comfortable bringing them along on anything more than short trips around the block. If these individuals are truly to be trusted with bits and pieces of our souls, then just like those new shoes they must prove themselves a wise investment and not just another compulsive pairing to assausage the advise of agents and publishers. These are the men and women who are investing in our futures. They are the individuals standing silently beside you as you type ‘The End’ to your last re-write, send off that two hundreth literary query to the one hundredth agent and  eventually find yourself being asked to write the The Acknowledgment’ page of your first published work,

Finding the perfect writer’s group is as hard as finding the perfect life partner. It takes time, it takes mutual investment and it takes alot of Kleenex.

From the lap top of an uncensored dreamer.

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