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Slate Culture

Decoder Ring: The Storytelling Craze

Slate Culture

Slate Podcasts

Arts, Tv & Film, Music

4.42K Ratings

🗓️ 17 May 2022

⏱️ 38 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

When did everyone become a storyteller? Decades after George Lucas and Steve Jobs made storytelling a big business, every company now wants to tell “Our Story.” Instagram and TikTok let everyone else tell their “stories,” and the number of people calling themselves storytellers on LinkedIn is now more than half a million. Something we have done for the entirety of our existence as a species has become just another fad. In this episode of Decoder Ring, we’re going to look at where this trend came from and where it’s going. What Willa discovered changed the way she now thinks about stories—and it might do the same for you. Some of the voices you’ll hear in this episode include Margaret O’Mara, historian and author of The Code: Silicon Valley and the Remaking of America; Michael Simon, director and producer; Francesca Polletta, sociologist at University of California, Irvine; Steve Clayton, Chief Storyteller at Microsoft; Seth Godin, entrepreneur and author of All Marketers Tell Stories; Everett Cook, Associate Editor at Axios Local; and David Paskin, Willa’s father. Decoder Ring is written and produced by Willa Paskin. This episode was edited by Dan Kois and produced by Elizabeth Nakano. Derek John is Sr. Supervising Producer of Narrative Podcasts. Merritt Jacob is our Technical Director. If you have any cultural mysteries you want us to decode, email us at [email protected]. If you love the show and want to support us, consider joining Slate Plus. With Slate Plus you get ad-free podcasts, bonus episodes, and total access to all of Slate’s journalism. Thanks Avast.com! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript

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0:00.0

Before we begin, just to heads up, this episode contains a bit of foul language.

0:13.6

Once upon a time, I knew a storyteller.

0:16.3

My name is David Pascon, and I'm Willa Pascon's dad.

0:20.4

So who are Emil and Sarah?

0:22.5

Emil and Sarah are gloves that lived in the top of our closet.

0:28.2

When I was little, my father would tell me stories about Emil and Sarah, a pair of

0:32.3

make-believe gloves on the walk to nursery school.

0:35.6

It started as a way to get me out of the apartment and into the stroller, but then it just kept

0:39.4

going.

0:40.4

A new adventure every morning.

0:42.6

I remember that they were leather, and there was one where they fell in a bathtub,

0:46.5

is that right?

0:47.5

Do you remember that?

0:48.5

Yeah, I think so.

0:49.5

They kind of mushed together.

0:50.5

I certainly remember one under the radiator.

0:53.9

I think they had been scared somehow.

0:57.0

You know, there was the hardest time trying to convince them to come out.

1:01.0

With it hard, I find it really hard to tell stories to the girls.

1:04.4

What's surprising is, it wasn't hard.

1:07.9

You enjoyed them so much, and I enjoyed inventing them.

1:12.6

Your expression on your face when I was telling the stories.

...

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