mbarker: (Burp)
[personal profile] mbarker
 Original posting May 10, 2019

Writer's Digest, June 1990, pages 18-22, has an article by J. Kevin Wolfe, about writing humor. The title is "The Six Basics of Writing Humorously." The subtitle goes into more detail. "You can write funny articles, books, scripts, greeting cards – whatever – even if you don't consider yourself a comedian. Here's how to capture on paper the wealth of humor that waits within you."Sounds interesting! So let's see…Kevin starts by telling us that "deep inside each of us lurks a Bozo." He assures us that anybody can write funny. "All that's required to write comedy is a sense of humor." Aha!Then he turns to that burning question, "What's so funny?" Unfortunately, analyzing comedy often kills it. But, Kevin recommends thinking about what's funny in yourself. Your quirks, your habits, your biases, your point of view can be great sources of material. Think about what irritates you about other people, too. You might laugh at their shortcomings, but you can also look at why that irritates you. What about the problems in your own life, the tricks that fate plays on you?"None of us is perfect; our flaws make us laughable. Write a few jokes about yourself. Humor is many times a painfully honest comment about ourselves, individually and as a species."Fairly often, humorists are the butt of their own jokes. "Our lives are filled with events that can be translated into humorous stories and anecdotes. Look for them."Pay attention to your specialties. Whatever you know best, that's also what you are best qualified to joke about."Whether the humor you write grows from within you or comments on the world we live in, we can generalize to say that people laugh at two things: surprise and misfortune."Surprise? Put together two things that don't fit together. The Pope skateboarding. "Surprise humor lead you in one direction and then takes a sharp turn. When a skateboard goes flying past, you don't expect the Pope!Misfortune? The rich and famous, the poor and ethnic, life where we are, being our self. Think about the butt of the joke. Somebody gets slammed. "There is usually an element of cruelty involved here, either verbal or physical, subtle or blatant."Sometime surprise and misfortune get mixed up. Misfortune can be surprising, and vice versa.Next, Kevin takes a look at the building blocks of humorous writing. He assures us that deciding to introduce humor into your writing is more important than exactly which kind of humor you are going to write. A book with occasional humor, a television sitcom or stand-up comedy routine with a lot of humor, the big difference is the amount of humor, the intensity and style of the humor. But they use the same techniques. "To produce laughs, use these elements."The key is the joke. Just like the sentence, "the joke is the element that humor is built from." So, what's a joke? Well, anything that makes you laugh. Pay attention, take it apart, pinpoint what made you laugh, and there's a joke!Now, jokes may seem complex, but they're really made up of two parts. The setup, and the punchline. The setup introduces the elements needed to get the joke. It makes a little bubble, that the punchline bursts. The setup introduces something we relate to. The punchline delivers the surprise, casting an absurd light on that thing. Sometimes setups present a humorous concept, and then the punchline comments on that concept. For example…Setup: Mattel has a new doll – Teenage Mutant Ninja Barbie.Punchline: She's the girl next-door, provided you live next door to a paramilitary gun shop.Sometimes there are implied setups, or punchlines that start right at the beginning and then grow. Learn to spot these concealed jokes, and then you can do it yourself. The examples he gives focus on building humor, with a repeated refrain, that then gets reversed in the final punchline."It is often said that effective humor lies in the timing, the second basic element of humor-writing." Timing? Well, compare it to music. When jokes are told out loud, the setup establishes a rhythm. Stay on topic, keep the momentum going, then… Deliver the punchline. "The timing of a verbal joke also depends on the beat in the rhythm that you skipped before and after a punchline." Pause to give the audience time to absorb the setup and get ready for the punchline. The second pause? Give them a chance to laugh!Now, how do you print or write a pause? Well, sometimes a period does the job. A comma followed by and or or might do it."The sad thing about the 60s was that the three most remembered voices of the decade were those of John F. Kennedy, Walter Cronkite, and Mr. Ed."The punchline should always be the last example."When writing a humorous story, try this method to skip a beat: place some brief action in the dialogue between the set up and the punchline." Not too long. Sometimes a he said or she said is enough. Then, end the paragraph after the punchline.The third building block? Internal logic. Admittedly, your humor is going to push situations to extremes, but the logic of the situation should remain consistent. You might start with an absurd premise, but then keep it constant.The fourth element is somewhat related, internal consistency. Usually you want to stick with one type of humor, don't mix them up. Biting satire with a slapstick food fight? No. So if you start with satire, end with satire.The fifth building block, though, is that your audience expects you to be unpredictable. If you're not unpredictable, the audience may be surprised, but they're not going to laugh. Make sure the audience can't predict where you are going. When your punchlines get stale, change. Old jokes are usually predictable. Use your own fresh material. Now, plenty of humor is based on clichés, commonplace situations, stereotypes. They're predictable, and don't take very much set up. You can make them unpredictable by twisting or parodying.Last building block? "The best humor is concise." Make it short, make it quick."As I said, all humor begins with the joke, and so must you. Search out the humorous stories you have to tell. But tell them carefully; trust your audience and your writing ability. Be confident: if your writing is funny, the audience knows when to laugh."There's a sidebar that takes apart humorous stories. He looks at four different stories and analyzes them in terms of four elements: a funny opening, colorful narration, colorful characters, and a concise plot. Let's see… nope, I'm not going to try to summarize that. He's got examples of each of these, and he points out exaggeration, reverses, quirks, outrageous parodies, humorous flaws, irony, all that stuff! It's a great introduction to humor in a very short space, but you gotta read it yourself.Okay? An exercise to go with this? Well, you could take something you've read that was humorous, and see how they've used the six building blocks, jokes with the set up and punchline, timing, internal logic, internal consistency, unpredictability, and conciseness. Or, you could take something you're working on and try adding some humor. Maybe just someone telling a joke to another person, maybe a sub plot that is humorous itself. Either way, enjoy the laughs.tink
mbarker: (Me typing?)
[personal profile] mbarker
 Original Posting Jan. 4, 2019

Okay. Death, brainstorming, keeping creativity going while you write... and now, scenes! The building blocks of fiction. But, what do you need in a scene? Well, James recommends these ingredients...

1. Objective. What is happening? In particular, what does the POV character want in the scene? It might be explicit or just implied, but... it is going to be there. So what is the objective?

2. Opposition! What person, place, thing, or circumstance is keeping the POV character from their objective? Might be outer or inner, individual, social, natural? But what is in the way?

3. Outcome. James suggests it could be good, bad, or horrible. Usually, for fiction, it isn’t going to be good, in fact, it is going to be pretty bad. Now, elsewhere I’ve seen it suggested that this is usually either a yes-but or a no-and. Yes-but? Yes, they succeeded, but now there’s another problem. No-and? No, they didn’t succeed, and there’s an added complication. Trials and tribulations make a story strong, and a character.

4. Something unexpected. It might be a plot twist, a new character, a new setting, or something else that the reader wouldn’t expect. How do you come up with them? James suggests brainstorm for five minutes. Write down the POV character, objective, and possible obstacles. Put down a tentative outcome. Now, what is something unexpected you could put in? Make a list, and go Wild! Then pick one that you like. And... you are just about ready to write!

We’re about to dive into the beats of Super Structure. But before we get there, James has one more section, looking at emotions. Then we’ll look at the beats that Super Structure lays out for you to use...

[identity profile] mbarker.livejournal.com
Original posting 3 July 2008

Ch. 10: Dramatic Tension

Aha! Bet you thought I forgot, didn't you? No, just delayed by the rageous slings and arrows of life. And if you think there is no such word, well, what are we comparing outrageous to? Inrageous or just plain rageous? (Which reminds me of the joke about lasses, but we probably don't need to tell that here :-)

Anyway, on with the show! In case anyone has lost track, we're talking about the book Make A Scene by Jordan Rosenfeld. And we're at chapter 10, where Jordan talks about dramatic tension. He starts out by offering us a kind of visual analogy for dramatic tension. Imagine, if you will, two strong men having a tug-of-war with a rope over a pit full of snakes. First one man gets the advantage and pulls the other to the brink of the pit, teetering, almost falling in. Then the other man gets the advantage and yanks his opponent right to the edge. Back and forth they battle, with the dramatic tension cranked to the max.

Dramatic tension, then, is the potential for conflict to happen in a scene. When trouble is brewing, when the resolution balances on the edge of a page, the reader is psychologically and perhaps even physically tense, waiting to find out what happens. And that keeps them reading.

Isn't that suspense? Jordan says that suspense comes when information is withhold from the reader (so the reader doesn't know what is happening), while dramatic tension relies on the reader knowing something is happening, although not exactly when and how. Suspense is not knowing what's around the corner, while dramatic tension comes from hearing or seeing something coming and not knowing how the protagonist will get out of the way. Tension, then, keeps the reader waiting, hoping that the protagonist will somehow escape the scene alive, and maybe one step closer to achieving his goal.

[psst? If you have a clearer example or explanation of the difference between suspense and dramatic tension, I think we'd all love to hear it. This is one place where Jordan seems a bit skimpy in his explanation]

Dramatic tension is a core element. That means every scene needs some. It can be a prickly worry about where the killer is now, or an unsettling dialogue, but it needs to be there.

Tension helps make scenes bigger than life -- more intense, more unusual, and more dramatic. Trouble, or at least the potential for trouble, lurks in every scene. Let your characters feel uncertain, scared, and lost as they listen to the scratching at the door, hoping that it's just a cat and yet knowing that it could be... their nightmare.

To create dramatic tension Jordan recommends:
  • Frustrate your protagonist. Delay their achieving goals.
  • Include unexpected changes without immediate explanations
  • shift power here and there
  • blow things up. Toss in grenades of plot information that change the protagonist, his self-image, or his view of the world in significant ways.
  • use setting and senses to create a tense background feeling
On the Expository Side

Beware exposition or narrative summary. You need some to tie things together and get the reader set for the key moments of the scene, but too much bores readers.

And time passed. Most narratives don't try to show every moment. There are key moments that you must dramatize, and blocks of time that you can just drop out of the story. And there are some chunks that you will want to summarize with a dab of narrative summary. By condensing time carefully, you help to keep the dramatic tension high.

Similarly, condense necessary background information. Include elements that are likely to make the reader worry a bit about the protagonist or suggest things that are a little odd, compulsive, or potentially troublesome. Give readers a taste or insights into your characters, but spice it with that nervous edge of potential trouble.

Put Some Tension In the Narrative, Too

Foreboding? Remember the music in Jaws? Whenever it played, we knew something nasty was coming. Foreshadowing hints at real plot events that are coming, but foreboding is all about setting the mood. Sounds, smells, perhaps the dead bird in the bushes. It all adds up to a background feeling of fear and unease for the reader.

Thwart expectations. Postpone, postpone, postpone. Especially when the character isn't quite sure what the payoff or resolution will be, putting it off raises the tension almost automatically. Make sure that we know what is at stake for the character and that it is meaningful and has clear consequences, then have good reasons for not opening the letter or getting the news right now -- and watch the tension rise.

What happened? Make changes, but don't explain them - yet. Use the changes to push your character into action, into learning and taking control -- make them meaningful. But let your character skid a bit as they try to cope, don't always give them an easy explanation.

Tension. Important stakes, visible actions, and uncertain outcomes. As the rope pulls the characters towards the pit, and they struggle and flail trying to avoid going over the edge, the dramatic tension fills the air.

And... that's chapter 10. Coming up next, we'll look at scene intentions.

But right now, let's think about an assignment. Probably the simplest is to take a scene from a book or one you've written and go over it, looking for how it uses dramatic tension. When the reader looks at it, what potential for conflict is lurking there? How does the narrative summary and dramatization set up and then thwart completion of expectations? Then consider how you might add more tension to the scene. If the two key figures are about to have a fight -- have them bluster and pose, and then Officer Malarkey comes around the corner. And as the two opponents explain that nothing is happening, the tension rises. When will they actually have their fight? And who will win?

Write! And keep tightening that tension.

The thrill of creative effort grows from the mud of spelling and grammar.

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