Touch the firehose of ds106, the most recent flow of content from all of the blogs syndicated into ds106. As of right now, there have been 92792 posts brought in here going back to December 2010. If you want to be part of the flow, first learn more about ds106. Then, if you are truly ready and up to the task of creating web art, sign up and start doing it.
I totally wrote this whole entire post about one of the chapters of Wired for Story, analyzing whether a particular bit of advice was useful or not (it very much … Continue reading →
Five posts in two weeks. Still not awful. So, in these weeks I finished reading Jonathan Gottschall’s The Storytelling Animal with posts on: Why people tell stories How nobody knows … Continue reading →
It started, I guess, 150,000 years ago and it started in 3rd grade when I drew a jungle full of made-up animals and it started in 1999 with my first … Continue reading →
The story actually starts way back when I learned to read, but I’m on the clock, so let’s flash forward. I was sitting in The Last Word in Ann Arbor, … Continue reading →
The rest of Jonathan Gottschall’s book The Storytelling Animal is concerned with providing evidence for the argument that he started in the beginning of the book—that all storytelling emanates from … Continue reading →
CLICK HERE! THIS FIRST! NO SERIOUSLY! GO HERE! Anyway. I’m not sure that dreaming really deserves a lot of airtime in a storytelling blog. I mean it’s related, I guess, … Continue reading →
Why do we tell stories? I don’t mean, “Why do some people like getting on a stage and others would prefer to sit at home and binge watch House of … Continue reading →
This was the first week of my ongoing, poorly-defined “Storytelling 101” project, where I try to break down what storytelling is so that I can highlight—hopefully?—the connections between the history … Continue reading →
Happy Valentine’s Day! Speaking of subject changes, I used a couple of different storytelling tools this week. Here are my thoughts on them. I. 30Hands For the narrated slideshow, I … Continue reading →
Again, going from 50+ Ways to Tell a Story master list, I chose Animoto to make my second video on storytelling issues, mostly stuff inspired by re-reading Jonathan Gottschall’s The … Continue reading →
I was reading J. Gottschall’s The Storytelling Animal (like I’m doing all week), and I got to thinking about what the definition of story is. And it’s basically impossible to … Continue reading →
In The Storytelling Animal, Jonathan Gottschall’s argument seems to be something like “Stories are powerful, complicated stories are uniquely human, and there are all kinds of reasons for why that … Continue reading →
I’ve been thinking a lot about stories and storytelling, what stories are, why we like them. I’m not sure there’s a good definition out there, honestly. Narrative Theory—note the capital … Continue reading →
Okay, so I just barely got this one out. Better late than never, though, I suppose. So, first I took the phrase “August is the best time to” and … Continue reading →
This shot is from George Melies‘s amazing La Voyage Dans la Lune, my absolute favorite movie from that very first age of cinema, known to some people as Early Cinema, … Continue reading →
So there are some pretty serious problems with this as my gif submission for day 1 of the August Animated Gifpolooza Eternum or whatever the Dog and the Doll are … Continue reading →
So I had all kinds of thoughts about how I should break the news to you. The news, the news you’ve all been waiting for, is the I–Brian Short–aka The … Continue reading →
Sorry, everybody, I just couldn’t resist. After Cogdog sent out an advanced preview of the first bit of “To Serve Learners,” the satirical radio play for Ds106zone’s audio week, I … Continue reading →
This is a more personal post, a little serious. Caveat emptor you muppets. Earlier this summer (anything after the semester finishes is summer) I did a slew of blog posts … Continue reading →
Kanye Is Due on Maple Street from Brian Short on Vimeo. * After I made my last audio piece for the DS106 Zone, an audio piece that remixed snippets from … Continue reading →
“That moonglow gave me you…” Man, this was fun to make. First I grabbed the audio from the Twilight Zone episode “It’s a Good Life,” just the last 8 minutes … Continue reading →
Encouraged thoroughly by Dr. Garcia’s enthusiasm for last night’s gif poster and inspired by the awesome work going on over at Bowties and Skulls, I went ahead and re-giffed B&T’s … Continue reading →