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Week 6. Profiles Part II. This week. Group Presentation: Michael Lewis! Chris, Michael Group Edits: Roya and Dana Profiles Part II lecture: Reporting Storytelling exercise Listening exercise…..Shouting across the divide. Profile pitches continued. Next week.
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Week 6 Profiles Part II
This week • Group Presentation: Michael Lewis! Chris, Michael • Group Edits: Roya and Dana • Profiles Part II lecture: Reporting • Storytelling exercise • Listening exercise…..Shouting across the divide. • Profile pitches continued
Next week • Read David Foster Wallace readings • Bring a 1st draft of your profile for a peer edit. • Group Edits: Ken and Lucy • Group Presentations: Roya, Nicole, Anthony
Reporting your profile! • You need a strong subject. • Sometimes the story you think you are writing is not the one that is actually there. Don’t be afraid to switch angles. • Remember this is NOT a biography. A profile is also NOT a valentine. This is a story about a person, a story about a specific part of a person’s life.
You need THREE sources • One of them is your profile subject. • One is an insider. Insiders are brothers, sisters, friends, mothers. Insiders are people who know the person on an intimate level. • One is an outsider. Outsiders are coworkers, fans, experts. Outsiders provide context for the person. • It is smart to interview insiders and outsiders first because they can turn you on to questions you wouldn’t have thought of on your own. This is BACKGROUND. • Who should your insiders be? Ask your subject to suggest someone!
Peripheral Sources • Ask for specifics. Ask for EXAMPLES. • If the person says, “she’s kind of impulsive.” • Say, “How?” • Say, “Can you think of an example?” • Specificity from everyone is key. Details are telling.
Always, always think about your scenes • Ask yourself, what is happening now that I can SHOW, that I can describe cinematically. • You MUST spend time with your subject or you’ll never be able to do this.
Interviewing • An interview is necessary but NOT sufficient. If you can avoid it. Don’t interview in a neutral location. • Try to interview a person in their home or someplace the person frequents. This will reveal something about the subject. • PLAN your questions. START with background questions because they allow people to get comfortable. BUT….don’t get stuck there, keep moving.
Asking questions • Ask questions that evoke a RESPONSE. • NO double questions. Any idea why? • NO yes or no questions. Any idea why? • OPEN-ENDED questions like: -what’s your greatest struggle, what do you like most, when do you first remember….?
You aren’t stuck with the first answer! • TRY AGAIN. • Say: “I’m not sure I understand what you mean.” • Say “Can you elaborate?” • Say “How did you manage that?” • Say “What did that feel like?” • Say “What did you like about ___?
If your subject says- “I want to buy a house.” Say, “what KIND of house?” • If your subject says – “I am so busy.” Say, “what would you be doing if you weren’t busy?” • Get the idea?
ANECDOTES are your building blocks • Some anecdotes must be recreated. You can’t be there for everything. It will be a scene in your story. • You have to ask the questions that will evoke the story in a cinematic way. • Pay attention to your own boredom but don’t step on people’s sentences. • When you feel uncomfortable- blame your editor.
Recreated scenes • Get a LOT of details. • Say, “I want to understand what that was like.” • Say, “Can you lead me through it? • Ask questions to build it. Ask about dialogue. • Say, “Then what did ____say?”
Notice EVERYTHING • What the person looks like. Paint a WORD picture. • Does the person walk with a limp, tap his leg etc? Notice body language. • What is the person wearing? • What are the surroundings? • What’s on the walls? • Is it messy, busy, quiet?
Notice interactions with other people • Be a human tape recorder. • Make the reader feel like he or she was there • Get everything now and select what is important later • Stay with a person as long as possible. It is hard for a person to keep a mask on for that long. • Follow them! Blend in. • Put your notebook away. Sometimes, things come out.
In the end…. • If your subject doesn’t have a story….YOU don’t have a story. • You have to select wisely.
For next time… • Start reporting. • Write an outline. Sketch out the scenes. • Include some dialogue. • Bring in a rough draft of at least 2 scenes. • Next week we talk about writing….