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+6 +1
Dark Passages: The Devil in the Details
To make the performance of a tedious, exacting, time-consuming task riveting to watch, it is only necessary for the activity to be illegal… By Imogen Sara Smith.
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+6 +1
Why photographers commit to long-term storytelling
For a certain type of photographer, the only way to represent the truth is to stick with a story for a lifetime... or beyond.
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+8 +1
Are humans evolving beyond the need to tell stories?
Neuroscientists who insist technology is changing our brains may have it wrong. What if we are switching from books to digital entertainment because of a change in our need to communicate? By Will Self.
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+20 +1
The BBC Halloween Hoax That Traumatized Viewers
A 1992 broadcast of a supposedly haunted house led to documented cases of PTSD in young viewers. By Jake Rossen.
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+2 +1
400 Fourth Wall Breaking Films Supercut
The Video Shop
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+15 +1
Possibilia: An interactive love story
What if you could influence someone else's breakup? By Daniels.
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+1 +1
Cookie Jar
By Steven King.
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+4 +1
When You’re Broke, Breakfast Is Hot, Buttered Hope
Dreams of biscuits, bacon, and Eggos kept me going during a dismal time. By John Devore.
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+12 +2
Games as Lit. 101 - Do Social Issues Make Art Better?
Does addressing important issues actually make a story better?
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+8 +1
The Storyteller’s Guide to the Virtual Reality Audience
As VR storytellers, we are charged with molding experience itself into story, and none of our storytelling tools have prepared us fully for that.
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+5 +1
The Disappointing Legacy of Alan Moore’s Watchmen
Adam Duke looks at the effect gritty and realistic comic book sources - like Alan Moore’s Watchmen have had a dangerous legacy on film making.
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+30 +4
Writing Sci-Fi Could Make Architects Better at Their Jobs
Architects aren't usually in the business of writing science fiction—but maybe they should be. By Margaret Rhodes.
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+26 +1
The Lost Childhood’s End
A Tale of Phil DeGuere, The Late 1970s, and Arthur C. Clarke’s Classic Novel. By James Burns.
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+9 +1
With Firewatch, Olly Moss Brings His Subversive Touch to Video Games
A self-taught graphic designer pushes back against the industry’s stale visuals. By Simon Parkin.
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+19 +5
BBC Radio - Programmes categorised as Drama, Available now
Audio Drama available through the BBC.
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+8 +1
Starring Me! A Surreal Dive Into Immersive Theater
A reporter’s unnerving plunge into 10 events across New York City involving all kinds of audience participation. By Sarah Lyall. (Jan. 7)
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+6 +1
How Wile E. Coyote Explains The World
A joke has structure. It has a central rule. Setup, punchline. The setup produces a tensed, expectant state; the punchline resolves the tension with a surprise. If the elements of the joke are not arranged into a setup and a punchline, it is not a joke. It is just a statement. By Albert Burneko.
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+14 +1
‘Orson Welles’ Sketch Book,’ marvelous British TV series from 1955
By the mid-1950s the years of Orson Welles scrambling this way and that for some money to finance his cinematic and theatrical efforts were well underway... By Martin Schneider.
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+5 +2
Fairy tale origins thousands of years old, researchers say
Fairy tales like Beauty and the Beast can be traced back thousands of years, according to researchers at universities in Durham and Lisbon.
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+30 +6
It’s about time: how sci-fi has described Einstein’s universe
A century after the publication of the general theory of relativity, sci-fi is still grappling with its implications, and still trying to explain it to the rest of us. By Damien Walter.
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