Want to write thrilling stories? Nick Bilton has the playbook. He's written for Netflix and The New York Times, and this episode is a tell-all class on how to create tension with hooks, cliffhangers, drama, and conflict. Highlights below: 1. Evil characters only work if readers care about them. 2. The best way to make readers care about an evil character is to humanize them. You can do that by focusing on simple details like how they lose their keys. Or, you can write about their mother because every murderer has a mother who loves them. 3. You can't look down on your characters. You have to look out with them. 4. Rule for writing screenplays: Get into the scene as late as you can, and get out of it as early as you can. 5. Fiction stories have the opposite shape as non-fiction ones. 6. In fiction, the kicker comes at the beginning and the summary comes at the end. In non-fiction, the summary comes at the beginning and the kicker comes at the end. 7. How’d Nick learn to tell better stories? By reading murder mysteries. 8. If the story's good enough, the book will fly off the shelves. Look at the Twilight series. The books sold like crazy even though the writing stinks. 9. How do you write good cliffhangers? Show people a little bit of the future, but don't reveal everything. 10. Ask the question at the end of one chapter and answer it shortly after. The answer doesn't need to come right away, but you have to answer it soon. 11. There are two kinds of stories that work: Big ones about something small, and small ones about something big. Stories in the middle are usually terrible. 12. Nick once asked the legendary journalist David Carr for advice. The response: “Keep typing until it turns into writing.” 13. You can tell a good story without knowing everything that happened, but you do need to know enough to make the reader feel like they're there. 14. Writers often over-describe their scenes. You only need three details. For example, if you're at a campground, you might only need the sight of the pine needles on the ground, the smell of a nearby campfire, and the sound of crickets in the distance. 15. We admire characters more for trying than their successes (this is rule #1 in Pixar's 22 Rules of Storytelling).
What was the book he read on how to write murder mysteries? Also, I'm distracted in watching this - I see a manual typewriter in the corner on the bottom shelf and I'm so jealous. lol
What a great interview, I listen to it twice and will probably listen to it again. But I have two-story ideas for you, big ideas little people. The first big story is I work at a space center ever going to the moon. That’s kinda huge. The second idea in St. Louis. There’s a landfill with 80 tons of nuclear waste and the landfills on fire, he does not do about it. If the stuff catches on fire, they would have to evacuate St. Louis and everything east to New York.. that is kind of a big story, lol
Brief and Concise A RU-vid Video is Communication Be Brief and Concise Make 10, 15 or 25 Minutes Videos out of these and post the full Versions and say in the Brief and Concise Version: "If you are interested in the full Conversation, here is the full video." I am extremely Interested but I have to Stop watching this, because this is that inconsiderate of my Time I hope I can Convince You Just ask a Interview Editor to do the Brief and Concise Version of the Videos you have already made try posting the Brief and Concise Version of these Videos no extra work for you but extra Good Videos And see how Your Channel Grows these Videos have Great Information in them, its just between 55 -60 Minutes of Content
That's not creepy, it just sounds like great research! And now I have Tetris songs in my head. I haven't read the elon musk piece, but its not fun so much to read articles about people when they're bias bleeds through too much. And it's clear he cannot stand him, and is looking down on his subject and not out with them.
Just Read a few pages of nicks book *American Kingpin* Main character is _Ross Ulbricht_ Ross meaning promontory Ulbricht Meaning illustrious. Ross is in charge of a dark website called _Silk Road_ The Silk Road was a network of trade routes that connected Asia with Europe and the Mediterranean from the second century .... Reading a few pages... Seems _ok_ Thanks for the interview . A good story teller needs to have subtly.... Finness... (Hard to find these days) Happy autumn 2024 everyone
This was really interesting BUT you interrupted him and took him on a tangent and so never got the question answered : what’s on his syllabus. Seriously that was the logical question and I really wanted to know as I’m sure all your viewers did as well.
I know ideas aren't worth spit. But there's a book idea that I'm debating with myself whether or not I should put it here because I'm thinking of writing it myself.
Did you notice the change in the level of what you were getting back from Nick at around 1 hour 4 mins? I watch a lot of your content and you have fantastic guests, but you as an interviewer need to learn how to connect with your guests much earlier and your channel will be phenomenal!
It’s because David is chiming in with his opinion too much. The guest is a New York Times bestselling author, he’s probably shocked that a RU-vidr is piggybacking on his points.
With this much quality in these episodes, am starting to get worried, that we are raising the bar high for the Sam Altman episode. Am worried. Worried in a positive way...?