Guest Post: Pete Shelly

Guest Post: Pete Shelly // @peteshelly

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"But what's the story?"

I hated that question. We were ten weeks deep in a documentary film class at Syracuse and the professor had repeated it ad nauseum for every class of the semester.

Each week, we came in with a new reel, a few more scenes that eventually led to our final semester project, a short documentary. After each team finished showing their clip, carefully put together during all-nighters tucked away in the school's crowded edit bays, he would ponder carefully and then give his response: "Maybe I'm just not seeing it. But what's the story?" It was obnoxious and frustrating.

The next time we met, we'd bring a new interview that we swore focused on story and story only.

"But what's the story?" he'd ask.

That. That was our story, we moaned.

That was somebody talking, that wasn't story, he'd say.

It was the hardest class to get out of bed for — and I took an environmental science class once. Eventually, though, as we began to finally bring out the stories in our projects, it started making sense. He was holding our feet to the fire because that was the only way to get us to understand what real story was. Eventually, we bought in. We saw what he meant about capital S Story (the craft) as opposed to little S story (the anecdote). We knew we wanted to create the former and we saw that to do so, we'd have to become passionate about it. We had to devote ourselves to quality and craft.

That's not to say that passion is a flipped switch. It's learned, it's nurtured. Most of all, it's recognized. It's knowing what's crap and what's good, and not wanting to settle for anything less.

We'd tweak and re-edit and still he'd ask the question.

"But what's the story?"

We pushed ourselves to create something that would finally shut him up. But he never relented, always pushing us further.

"But what's the story?"

We didn't realize it until later, but he wasn't teaching us how to make a documentary film, he was teaching us craft. He was teaching us that no matter how much time or energy or coffee or whatever we put into storytelling, we would keep producing crap if we didn't have passion for what we were doing. We started asking ourselves, "But what's the story?" It was relentless, obsessive. Obnoxious, even.

But it was the difference between doing and dabbling. Between asking yourself the hard questions and waiting for someone to ask them for you. It's the difference between good and "good enough."

At the end of the semester, we had a screening to show the short films we labored over. Every single group had found their story. And over beers later, we gushed.

A few weeks ago, a friend sent me an article he was writing. "Is it any good?" he asked. I read through it, pondered carefully, and shot him an email back: "Maybe I'm just not seeing it. But what's the story?"

Guest Post: Pete ShellyGuest Post: Pete Shelly

Guest Post: Pete Shelly

Guest Post: Pete Shelly // @peteshelly

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Stories come in all shapes and sizes, they cover the x, y, and z planes, and they're told with varying frequency, but mostly, they're pretty familiar to us. And it's good that they're familiar, because stories were created to provide accounts of our origins, and they were created to teach lessons, and they were created to simply entertain. They've been told in books and on movie screens and at bedtime and around campfires. They're told over beers and after funerals and during baseball broadcasts.

We all know what a story looks like: it's got a beginning, a middle, and an end. It generally teaches some sort of moral lesson or haa a "purpose." There's usually buildup and then a climax where everything comes together (and in some cases breaks completely apart).

Because stories are so familiar, we can generally tell where they're going long before we get there. We know how a fairy tale is going to end or that the guy and the girl are going to get together at the end of the movie. We know that the underdogs are probably going to win, that the bad guys are probably going to lose. And despite that, I'm inspired by storytellers. I'm inspired by craftsmen and craftswomen who continually weave new tales and tell stories in ways that feel refreshing and new.

I'm inspired by songwriters who put their stories to music and filmmakers who create worlds out of their stories, authors who put their stories into words on a page and speakers who keep our attention without a script.

I'm inspired by Austin Kleon, who creates stories by blacking out extraneous words, and Jonathan Safran Foer, who weaves parallel storylines together. I'm inspired by Reif Larsen, whose chronicle of TS Spivet was made vibrant by his illustrated parenthetical asides. I'm inspired by Borbay, whose "headline paintings" tell a much more detailed story from up close than they do from across the gallery.

Stories come in all shapes and sizes, and they have for a long time. But every day, we're coming up with new shapes and new sizes, new stories that have never been told.

That inspires me.

 

Images via Austin Kleon and Borbay