
   
  Under the
    Magnifying Glass
  Our
    Storytelling-Storycrafting Apparatus
  By Steven H. Fyffe
  sfyffe@maccompanion.com
   
  Jared’s
    Imagination
   
  Joseph said, “Come
    on, Fred”. Jared was playing with the nativity figurines and had given the
    shepherd a rather unique, albeit un-Biblical sounding name. Joseph then spoke
    to his beloved, “Come on Mary. Get the baby and come on”. Mary replied, “I’m
    coming, but I can’t stand up. I’m coming as fast as I can”. Mary was slowly making
    her way across the table on her knees. You see kneeling was a rather permanent
    condition for the nativity scene statuette of the Christ Child’s mother.
    Hearing his mom chuckling behind him, Jared became a little embarrassed and his
    imaginative story came to an abrupt end.
   
  After Jared ate
    several animal cracker cookies, his mom told him, “You better eat all of your
    dinner tonight”. His reply, “I’m not sure I can … I have all these animals
    running around in my stomach”. 
    
  I began to pen this
    column on the day one sports writer wrote, “Browns Stadium was transformed into
    a super-sized snow globe”. (1) The blizzard conditions in Northeast Ohio on
    that Sunday certainly presented challenges for sports enthusiasts and players
    alike. To add insult-to-injury, the Bills even had to stay over night in snow
    covered Cleveland, after their loss to our team. Their charter flight was
    canceled and had to “shuffle off to Buffalo” on a bus the next day.
  Although the weather
    outside was frightful, the fire in Jared’s heart was delightful. His excitement
    soared so high on that Sunday morning he could hardly contain himself. When he
    peered out the frosted window he yelled, “Look, mom, we got 81 inches of snow!”
    He immediately called his grandma to tell her he wanted us to take him out to
    play in the snow.
   
  Right after he got
    out of kindergarten the next day, I went to his house to pick him up. Jared
    asked me how much snow was at grandma’s house. I told him we must have 92
    inches … exaggeration comes naturally, you see. We rushed back to our house, so
    Jared could make snow angels and throw snowballs at Papa and Grandma, before
    having hot chocolate in front of our fireplace.
  
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
  The Lord has blessed my grandson with
    quite a creative imagination, as you can see. He is always a source of joy for
    his grandma and me. My greatest desire is to see Jared grow to be a man after
    God’s own heart. My prayer is that we and his parents can nurture and encourage
    him to develop every skill, every creative instinct, every imaginative fiber
    the Lord has bestowed upon him. He is on a great adventure in pursuit of the
    ministry God has providentially laid out before him.
   
   Indeed, we will encourage
    Jared to sharpen his investigation and communication skills, in order to tell
    the story of how the Lord has used him. I trust that someday a young one will
    crawl up in Jared’s lap and say, “Papa, tell me your story again”.
   
  Storytelling and
    Storycrafting
   
  Don’t you just love a
    good story! The art of storytelling has been valued for thousands of years, not
    only for entertainment, but also as a teaching tool. On the National
    Storytelling Network, one author writes, “Create connections between
    generations through the art of oral storytelling in order to pass on the
    wisdom, values, humor and sense of community embodied in stories of all
    cultures and all times”. (2)
   
  In his essay, Effective
    Storytelling A manual for beginners, Barry McWilliams wrote, “Effective storytelling is a fine
    and beautiful art. A well-developed and presented story can cut across age
    barriers and will hold the interest and reach its listeners. Stories will be
    remembered long after other orations”. (3)
   
  In Caitlin Fralick’s
    essay, How We Begin: Reading, Writing and Selfhood in Two Novels by E.L.
    Konigsburg, she
    wrote, “The storytelling motif permeates these books. Particular language
    furthers the author's idea of just what a story is: something that binds a
    community of like minds; a path toward inclusion in the face of difference; the
    completion of a puzzle in order to better situate oneself in the world”. (4)
   
  As you may have
    noticed in my first four columns, I have attempted to write in a storytelling
    motif, introducing you to my grandson and myself with snippets from our life
    story. Granted, macCompanion’s
    focus is Macintosh computers, gadgets, software and other such geeky stuff.
    However, even nerds and a nerd-wannabe, like myself, have a story to tell.
   
  In my storytelling
    motif, I have also introduced you to inductive learning as we explore the power
    of the Macintosh. I have turned to the mystery stories of the great detective
    Sherlock Holmes. He has been our mentor in the joy of inductive discovery.
    Notice in the quote above, McWilliams states, “Stories will be remembered long
    after other orations”. (3)
   
  Orations, lectures,
    and sermons are all deductive in nature and have great value. There are many “Tips” articles
    and “How to” books which are purely deductive in nature which will certainly
    give any true nerd a shiver or two. Indeed, I devour them myself. I was in the
    front of the line to lay my hands on David Pogue’s Mac OS X Leopard: The
    Missing Manual (5)
    as soon as it hit the shelves. Based upon his past works, I highly recommend it
    to your consideration. 
   
  Oh, but when you
    combine a good story and the joy of self discovery, and then season your soup
    with the desire to tell your own story … WOW! … your creative juices and memory
    neurons are really stimulated then.
   
  Going hand in hand
    with storytelling is storycrafting. “in the art of storytelling and
    storycrafting, a very important way to learn is to simply listen - to many
    different stories told by many different tellers in many different ways”. (6)
   
  Liisa Karlsson, in Storycrafting
    with children A key to listening and to sharing, wrote, “Human being is homo narrans, born as a teller. The storycrafting
    method is based on the idea that everybody has thoughts, information, and tales
    which no-one else has. Every person’s thoughts are valuable, worth listening
    to, interesting, and relevant to storycrafting. ... Storycrafting is a
    reciprocal method for sharing and listening to the thoughts of other people”.
    (7)
   
  Segue
   
  Now, what does all
    this have to do with Macintosh hardware and software?
   
  When discussing oral
    storytelling, McWilliams went on to comment, “I have observed that our
    audiences have lost some of the skills to follow a narrated story and see
    things in their minds. Storytelling has become more difficult. Attention spans
    are shorter and more demanding, more sophisticated, yet less able to
    independently imagine or visualize. People seem to need more visual
    stimulation”. (3)
   
  If that is the state
    of our culture, we need a little kickstart for our storytelling and
    storycrafting. Steve Jobs once described computers as “the equivalent of
    bicycles for our minds”. (8)
    
  Steve Jobs, the driving
    force of both Apple and Pixar, certainly knows what storytelling and
    storycrafting is all about. The person who nominated Steve Jobs for an honorary
    degree at The University of Kings College in Nova Scotia wrote, “Journalists
    must first be storytellers. Since our ancestors’ earliest days, we’ve told
    stories about our dreams, our heroes and villains, our struggles, our lives and
    deaths. If we are to live together and understand our commonalities, we must
    have stories..."
   
  "Jobs’ true legacy is that Apple technology empowers writers,
    photographers, artists, songwriters and filmmakers so they can create works of
    enduring beauty and tell our true stories. At both Apple and Pixar, Jobs …
    enjoys working with innovative minds who challenge and seek perfection, and
    artists recognizing the virtues of storytelling. … This visionary has given
    each of us an opportunity to change our lives. And in doing so, Jobs has given
    us the opportunity to change the world”. (9)
   
  Storytelling-Storycrafting
    Apparatus
   
  In this visual
    communication age, our storytelling and storycrafting are greatly enhanced by
    the digital magic of Apple computers and software. No artisan uses a single
    tool in his craft. What we need is an orchestra of tools both to tell our story
    and to record and share the stories of others. The on-board dictionary in OS X
    suggests the appropriate term: “Apparatus refers to a collection of distinct instruments, tools, or
    other devices that are used in connection or combination with one another for a
    certain purpose”. For example, the Lord gave us a “breathing apparatus” which orchestrates the passage
    of oxygen from the atmosphere into our blood stream. Likewise, the finely
    integrated digital apparatus of our Macs and Apple software pumps a breath of
    fresh air into our life stories.
  
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
    
  It all begins with
    Keynote 4
   
  With what does our
    storytelling-storycrafting apparatus begin. Keynote 4 (10) is at heart a storytelling tool. I
    have often recommended Keynote to my friends. However, they often respond by
    saying they do not do presentations. Keynote is so much more than just a
    “presentation” program used by a teacher or business person.
   
  Let’s ask ourselves
    what we need to visually tell our story. A good place to begin is to set the
    mood for our story. Keynote themes does this for us and even allows revisions
    along the journey. 
   
  Next, written words,
    not just for titles, communicate the details of our story. Text entry and
    placement are easy on our visual story board. If you do choose to orally tell
    your story before an audience … yes, that might be called a presentation, but
    don’t be scared off yet … you can include not only text for the audience to
    read, but also notes which will serve as reminder as you speak. You can even
    export your story as a self-presenting Quick Time movie with either the speech
    synthesis of OS X reading your notes or recording them yourself. 
   
  What else do we need?
    How about photos? Smart Builds in Keynote 4, allows you to add several photos
    on each slide.
   
  Multiple audio clips
    may be added to each slide, also. For example, as I tell of my fathers roots in
    the hills of Kentucky in the 1920s, I can add sound bites from the era. You can
    also include a musical score behind your story.
   
  Since we are using
    visual communication to tell our story, video clips are a natural. Keynote is
    unique in allowing multiple video layers on the same slide. You can even have
    one movie play on top of another movie. Imagine showing a movie of your train
    ride through Colorado or your bus ride through the Irish countryside, while in
    a corner of the screen you narrate the adventure with a video clip. Your story
    is so much more engaging with Picture-in-Picture narration. Now, you can
    accomplish with an application costing less the $100, visual techniques often
    seen on television. 
   
  Our
    Storytelling-Storycrafting Apparatus on Steroids
   
  However, Keynote
    alone does not make up our storytelling-storycrafting apparatus. The digital
    resources for our story and the mechanism for digitally sharing our life story
    are orchestrated by several other integrated applications. 
   
  The new and enhanced
    features in Leopard (11) such as Spaces, Spotlight, Quick Look, Preview, and Quick Time make the organization of our digital
    resources a breeze. 
   
  Likewise, iLife
    ‘08 (12) works in
    conjunction with Keynote. In iPhoto,
    we can create Events and albums of the photos which we plan to use in the
    Keynote tale of our life adventures. iMovie will facilitate moving your Keynote
    story to the web after exporting it to a Quick Time movie. iMovie can also be
    used to publish the Quick Time movie to iTunes for streaming to your HDTV over Apple
    TV (13). iWeb allows us to include our Keynote story
    on our own personal web page.
   
  Apple’s .Mac (14) allows us to put our stories in Web
    Galleries to share with family and friends. Unlike similar services, .Mac is
    fully integrated with iLife. 
   
  There are several
    other applications which give you a truly elegant storytelling-storycrafting
    apparatus with Keynote. For example, I have used Apple’s Final Cut Express which includes LiveType (15), Adobe Photoshop Elements 4 (16), The Printshop (17), Comic Life Deluxe (18), Amadeus Pro (19), Snapz Pro X (20), Photo-to-Movie (21), and Photo Presenter (22) to empower my Keynote stories.
   
  Apple hardware and
    software all work together as an integrated mechanism … talk about a bicycle
    for our minds … our own storytelling-storycrafting apparatus.
   
  To be continued
   
  I have not abandoned
    my quest to discover Leopard which I started last month in Under the
    Magnifying Glass (23) and will share more with you in coming columns. However, I hope you
    enjoyed our trip together down this rabbit trail. After all, when you think
    about it, storytelling and storycrafting is at the center of why we so enjoy
    our Macs, is it not?
   
  I’m sure you have
    family and friends who would love to hear your story. Likewise, I want to leave
    my grandson, Jared, with the rich story of his roots. Besides, I want him to be
    able to tell his grandchildren the story of his silly old Papa.
   
  Please come back next
    month and sit a spell. You all take care now.
   
  References
   
  (1) http://www.sportingnews.com/yourturn/viewtopic.php?t=319302
  (2) http://www.storynet.org/Resources/LinksList/
  (3) http://www.eldrbarry.net/roos/eest.htm
  (4) http://www.slais.ubc.ca/COURSES/libr559f/04-05-st1/portfolios/C_Fralick/media/konigsburg.pdf
  (5) http://www.oreilly.com/catalog/9780596529529/
  (6) http://www.thestorytreecompany.com.au/workshops.html
  (7) http://www.edu.helsinki.fi/lapsetkertovat/lapset/In_English/Karlsson.pdf
  (8) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ob_GX50Za6c
  (9) http://smartlikestreetcar.com/?p=65
  (10) http://www.apple.com/iwork/keynote/
  (11) http://www.apple.com/macosx/
  (12) http://www.apple.com/ilife/
  (13) http://www.apple.com/appletv/
  (14) http://www.apple.com/dotmac/
  (15) http://www.apple.com/finalcutexpress/
  (16) http://www.adobe.com/products/photoshopelmac/
  (17) http://www.mackiev.com/print_shop.html
  (18) http://plasq.com/comiclife/
  (19) http://www.hairersoft.com/AmadeusPro/AmadeusPro.html
  (20) http://www.ambrosiasw.com/utilities/snapzprox/
  (21) http://www.lqgraphics.com/software/phototomovie.php
  (22) http://www.arizona-software.ch/photopresenter/
  (23) http://www.maccompanion.com/macc/archives/December2007/Columns/UMG.htm