You'll actually understand "Show vs Tell" after watching this

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  • čas pƙidĂĄn 25. 04. 2024
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    Show vs Tell in writing is one of those annoying things that everyone says but doesn't make any sense. In this video I explain exactly how and why this has to work in your writing.
    ✍ Join our next Scene Writing Workshop: storygrid.com/training
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    My name is Tim Grahl, I'm the CEO of Story Grid and I'm the author _The Threshing_, _Running Down a Dream_, and _Your First 1000 Copies_. My partner Shawn Coyne is the creator and founder of Story Grid and he's a writer and editor with over 30 years of experience.
    🧰 Additional Resources
    ‱ 'Read a Lot. Write a Lot.' is HORRIBLE advice - ‱ 'Read a Lot. Write a L...
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    ‱ Scene Breakdown: Ready Player One - ‱ Scene Breakdown: Ready...
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  • Jak na to + styl

Komentáƙe • 76

  • @miggseye
    @miggseye Pƙed 23 dny +14

    At last, a practical explanation of this old adage.

  • @kaitnip
    @kaitnip Pƙed 23 dny +15

    Co-creating the story with the reader is the single most brilliant advice I ever heard about creative writing. Thank you :)

  • @johnthom3342
    @johnthom3342 Pƙed 24 dny +12

    The best video on the subject I've seen.

  • @lyncvaldis3809
    @lyncvaldis3809 Pƙed 9 dny

    i've heard the phrase "show don't tell" for so many years and this is the first time it's actually been properly explained to me in a way that's clear and understandable, thank you

  • @chatrandibujosfelices
    @chatrandibujosfelices Pƙed 21 dnem +5

    I watched video after video of "show donÂŽt tell" and none of them was clear enough. I was still not understanding and struggling with this. Now, I finally got it. You posted this video exactly when I needed it. ItÂŽs like you read my mind! Thank you so much! You saved me!

  • @TheEccentricRaven
    @TheEccentricRaven Pƙed 6 dny

    Thank you for this video! I've wanted to scream this from the rooftops for ages! Too many experienced writers just tell new writers to "show, not tell" assuming they have the common sense to know what that means and how to do it. This is the lesson that we needed!

  • @princessmigo
    @princessmigo Pƙed 10 dny

    I'm 56, I've taken a lot if writing classes. This is the best and most helpful explanation.

  • @jamgamber0
    @jamgamber0 Pƙed 23 dny +5

    You explained it so well, that now is fully on me to do it right. I don't have the excuse of blame the teacher anymore.

  • @SnakeWasRight
    @SnakeWasRight Pƙed 18 dny +3

    I try to think of it like a movie. How would a movie depict these emotions or thoughts? Then i just describe that.

  • @annavernick1490
    @annavernick1490 Pƙed 23 dny +4

    thanks for the simple breakdown, now to check out my favourite books, see how they do it, and also practice it myself.

  • @chelle_nz
    @chelle_nz Pƙed 18 dny +3

    Jack smiled, a big wide PR smile. Still feels telling to me, though I read mostly romance. In that genre, you'd have something like:
    Jack smiled, PR style. Wide but hollow, meant to lure you into his web, and his next meal.

    • @eugenetswong
      @eugenetswong Pƙed 10 dny +1

      Yeah, it feels like telling to me, because it feels opinionated. I don't like it. I admit, though, it does save time.

    • @chelle_nz
      @chelle_nz Pƙed 10 dny

      @@eugenetswong Agreed word count can be a nightmare.

  • @dreamslayer2424
    @dreamslayer2424 Pƙed 23 dny +3

    Well-presented. Precise. Factual. Relevant. Good job. Keep going. Ignore naysayers.

  • @PhoenixCrown
    @PhoenixCrown Pƙed 21 dnem +3

    Love it. You implied this with the SKILL part I think, but basically if you can't convey the emotions by describing only what's observable, you need to IMPROVE YOUR WRITING.
    So if I get to a paragraph in my book and have the desire to add, "This made him sad." I should reconsider what came before. I've actually noticed this in my writing as I revise my book where I realize I'm selling my reader short: They should be able to understand that he was sad at that point, so I just delete that part and am good. But whenever I see that, I think it reflects a lack of confidence in my writing--which is great feedback one way or another.
    Thanks Tim!

    • @VibingMeike
      @VibingMeike Pƙed 14 dny +1

      Sometimes I note down for myself that a character is supposed to be sad and work around that emotion once I either finish the draft or think it's time for some light editing

  • @centurionstrengthandfitnes3694

    Great video with clear examples. Nice work.

  • @restlessnative9305
    @restlessnative9305 Pƙed 6 dny

    By far the best explanation of this I've come across. Well done. Thanks!

  • @JanineWilliams-fz5oc
    @JanineWilliams-fz5oc Pƙed 23 dny +4

    Genius! Great explanation and the examples from books make it super clear

  • @akioasakura3624
    @akioasakura3624 Pƙed 22 dny +2

    criminally underrated đŸ”„đŸ”„đŸ”„

  • @tedarcher9120
    @tedarcher9120 Pƙed 14 dny +2

    It's not show not tell, it's show then tell. Not every action is important enough to show, you can use telling to save a lot of words and improve pacing

  • @centaur923
    @centaur923 Pƙed 23 dny +9

    I love "TELLING you what I think you SHOULD think!" Reminds me of when I thought I was giving my brother-in-law options to settle a restless baby
. My suggestions were rejected as telling him what to do, how dare I! 😂

  • @drimeloca
    @drimeloca Pƙed 49 minutami

    Great explanation! Thank you!

  • @bathos22
    @bathos22 Pƙed 24 dny +3

    This was sooo good! Thank you, Tim. đŸ™đŸœ

  • @thornmollenhoff8698
    @thornmollenhoff8698 Pƙed 23 dny +1

    Thank You. This was educational, helpful and I learned something new. Will have to apply this.

  • @Caitgreenham
    @Caitgreenham Pƙed 20 dny +1

    This is a great explanation

  • @dionnemcbride1298
    @dionnemcbride1298 Pƙed 13 dny

    Thank you, thank you, thank you! I've had trouble with the "show don't tell" thing for years! Love your explanation!

  • @kevinl1669
    @kevinl1669 Pƙed 22 dny +1

    I agree, you've taught, no, deposited, no, inculcated, no, blessed our mind's eye and determination with the key to unlocking the reader's imagination in co-creating with an effective nudge using robust nouns and verbs, similes, analogies, metaphors. I want no part of a robbery. I'm all for reader's love. I value all of your videos. Thanks.

  • @eugenetswong
    @eugenetswong Pƙed 10 dny

    Thank you, good teacher!

  • @user-su3zy4mk9i
    @user-su3zy4mk9i Pƙed 24 dny +2

    Brilliant!

  • @MegsyReads
    @MegsyReads Pƙed 10 dny

    Brilliant way of teaching it

  • @mad_fleming
    @mad_fleming Pƙed 19 dny +1

    I get the logic behind this, and it's definitely one should strive for to apply as much as possible, but I have noticed something while I am reading a book: my brain seems to skip all figurative speech. It doesn't seem to want to translate the figurative language to the feeling or thought that the writer wants me to have.
    As such for me personally, books with little figurative language read easier.

    • @JamieRushing27
      @JamieRushing27 Pƙed 9 dny

      I mean no offense, but I’d argue this is a result of poor reading comprehension.

  • @zacfitzgerald9094
    @zacfitzgerald9094 Pƙed 24 dny +1

    Great video

  • @martinrutley-wk5ds
    @martinrutley-wk5ds Pƙed 23 dny +3

    Here's the thing though - you get a novel like Fight Club, which spends much of its 1st person narrative in the red and blue

  • @redwawst3258
    @redwawst3258 Pƙed 20 dny

    Helpful

  • @dameanvil
    @dameanvil Pƙed 12 dny +1

    - [00:00] 📝 "Show, don't tell" advice for writers is about depicting observable actions instead of explaining thoughts or feelings.
    - [07:08] 🎭 Writing should focus on what is observable, allowing readers to infer characters' thoughts and feelings.
    - [10:20] 📚 Use of nouns, verbs, and descriptors can convey the author's opinion while sticking to observable actions.
    - [14:40] 🧠 When delving into characters' heads, describe observations rather than explaining emotions.
    - [19:30] đŸš« Telling instead of showing in writing robs readers of the ability to co-create the story and doesn't feel authentic.

  • @johnatherton878
    @johnatherton878 Pƙed 24 dny +3

    COOLIE MULIE!

  • @mad_fleming
    @mad_fleming Pƙed 19 dny

    This is a passage in Frank Herbert's Dune series, could you analyse it?
    Discovery of the bodies intensified her sense of peril. _I should have brought a weapon._ But that would have aroused Waff’s suspicions.
    The persistence of that inner warning could not be evaded. This relic of Sietch Tabr was perilous.

  • @thefilipinojoe
    @thefilipinojoe Pƙed 20 dny

    Great ❀ new subscriber

  • @Catratio
    @Catratio Pƙed dnem

    I feel this is great advice and will most of the time elevate one's writing. But I have to wonder, sometimes for the sake of pacing and succinctness, isn't it better just to tell and keep the story moving? I have a line in mine: "After four hours, the burning of his muscles was the only warmth he felt." I feel it does not need a flowery tangent to illustrate his pain. It's a concise way to end my chapter after the character has spent all of it standing in the cold and rain. Is it really so bad to leave it?

  • @DeadManVlog
    @DeadManVlog Pƙed 20 dny

    Great

  • @user-kb6xn6ig7k
    @user-kb6xn6ig7k Pƙed 5 dny

    This will sound dumb, but how do you then progress the story if you are just describing ? Are all the action phases of the story progressed by "describing the observable"?
    This video is excellent, btw.

  • @mercyjoseph523
    @mercyjoseph523 Pƙed dnem

    Had a question though: what if one wrote in 1st person? Couldn't one write in all shades of blue and red that one pleases - about oneself, if one's both narrator and protagonist?

  • @StoryQuest920
    @StoryQuest920 Pƙed 20 dny

    This guy makes natural hair loss look good.
    Great beard too.

  • @karlayork877
    @karlayork877 Pƙed 23 dny +3

    ALL writing is telling. Showing is merely when the writer tells what the PoV character is sensing, whether seeing, hearing, smelling, feeling (in a touch sense, not emotional,) etc. Once I understood that, the so-called "show vs tell" made sense, even though "showing" is still telling, just in a particular way: telling the reader what the character observes.

    • @mr.e7541
      @mr.e7541 Pƙed 19 dny +2

      I heard someone else explain it as described don't explain

    • @Hello-hello-hello456
      @Hello-hello-hello456 Pƙed 16 dny +2

      ​@@mr.e7541I'd say you can also call it 'describe, don't conclude'

  • @nyxcole9879
    @nyxcole9879 Pƙed 23 dny +2

    I was thinking of Jessica Brody's The Chaos Of Standing Still. She tells her characters thoughts all over the place, it gives personality...so whats the line between representing a real voice versus writer voice?

    • @eugenetswong
      @eugenetswong Pƙed 10 dny +1

      Yeah, I don't like that passage about the man reconnecting with his estranged wife. I would prefer to see a phrase, where we are told that we are looking at his imagination, and then another phrase telling us that we are leaving his imagination.
      When done skillfully, readers can find out afterwards that we were looking at only his imagination, but it should be clear eventually.
      I'm reminded of how films portray certain actions, and then they have a way of bringing us back to reality. Maybe something like this could be written.
      Amanda said, "Well?"
      Bob blinked, and then looked at her eyes. "Say that again, please?"
      Amanda summarized the history of the Persian rug, and then asked again for advice on how to wash it.

  • @vixenvarya
    @vixenvarya Pƙed 24 dny +1

    why don't people normally do this? - skill issue XD - jokes aside, great video, thank you

  • @mcrumph
    @mcrumph Pƙed 23 dny +4

    Even when one is 'showing' it's still telling. In your first example, from Devil Wears a Blue Dress, if I were standing there observing the scene, all I would see is two people clasping hands. I cannot see the slithering nature or the coiled snakes of the handshake mentioned. Mosley is telling the reader the impressions of one of the participants. instead of the show/tell aspect it should be a bland/descriptive choice. 'Showing' is a false choice. The writer, putting pen to paper (or whatever your preferred medium), is telling the story through his words. Instead of bland, be descriptive, precise, imaginative. It's time to leave this tired show/tell dichotomy behind.

    • @nyxcole9879
      @nyxcole9879 Pƙed 23 dny +2

      Exactly, there is no personality in just directly showing what things are.

    • @carolemoore1258
      @carolemoore1258 Pƙed 23 dny

      You are correct in referring to one characters pov. This is where so many "stories" fail. The reader does not feel engaged. Deep POV negates this.

    • @mcrumph
      @mcrumph Pƙed 22 dny +1

      @@carolemoore1258 I suppose it depends upon what one prefers to read, however, I cannot agree with your sentiment. If the author changes POVs from one character to another, then yes, that can be distracting, though this type of omniscient narrator generally disappeared in the 19th C. If the author, on the other hand, sticks to one character, or if it is written in 1st person, this provides valuable insight to the reader concerning that character. I will admit that my favorite era of fiction is European Modernism (1880-1940), where things like plot & action take a back seat to the characters' thoughts, emotions, & various internal cognitive processes. I would suggest that some of the best books written follow more of the told idiom: Mann's Magic Mountain, Broch's The Sleepwalkers, Celine's Death on the Installment Plan, Hesse's Glass Bead Game (the above modernist style isn't always adhered to, please see John dos Passos' USA Trilogy); even into the latter half of the 20th C I would nominate Garcia Marquez' 100 Years of Solitude & Calvino's If on a Winter's Night a Traveller. What all of these writers' had was a clear vision, a sharp understanding of the craft & the creativity to combine the two.

  • @RickMusick
    @RickMusick Pƙed 20 dny +1

    Great teaching, however, I do not appreciate foul language.
    It’s just my ears burn like someone is dripping hot wax into them. and my teeth grind together like my head is being squeezed in a giant vice when the F bomb is dropped upon my Christian convictions.

    • @StoryGrid
      @StoryGrid  Pƙed 20 dny +4

      I can’t tell if you’re joking. If you’re not
 well your head is going to fucking explode if you keep watching my videos.
      I swear to God
 grown people that are walking around in life this sensitive is both terrifying and sad.
      - Tim

    • @Hello-hello-hello456
      @Hello-hello-hello456 Pƙed 16 dny

      I think you should just stick to CZcams kids

  • @Faolandia
    @Faolandia Pƙed 17 dny +6

    I wish people would stop trying to make that silly piece of advice make sense... "Objective", "opinion"...? There is nothing objective about a story, it is fiction, and if the author gives his character an emotion, it is not his "opinion" - this IS what the character is feeling. The whole thing is really about *distance*. And that's the author's choice. Do you want to step back and let the readers make their own minds, as they would when actually encountering such people, or do you want to open up the character's inner world for them in a way that is not possible in reality...? Your choice. Personally, I love the books that do the latter.

    • @GuyHayes
      @GuyHayes Pƙed 11 dny

      This 100%

    • @futurestoryteller
      @futurestoryteller Pƙed 5 dny

      Step back and let readers make up their own minds is the purpose of "show don't tell"

    • @Faolandia
      @Faolandia Pƙed 5 dny

      @@futurestoryteller Step aside and let the writer decide is the purpose of my comment. The "writer as reporter" approach is a choice, not a requirement.

    • @futurestoryteller
      @futurestoryteller Pƙed 5 dny

      @@Faolandia You should try to find my solo comment. I'm actually in disagreement with the channel host about what "show don't tell" means
      The short version is you create immediacy and intimacy between character and reader by refusing to dictate anything that can easily be inferred.
      If your character is asked to sit, and you immediately follow that up with how the chair feels, you don't even need to say "she sat down." You can, but not only is it not necessary, it's probably a waste of words.

    • @Faolandia
      @Faolandia Pƙed 4 dny

      @@futurestoryteller But you see, my point is that "show, don't tell" really means *nothing*. First, it is hopelessly vague (as all those disagreements show). And second, it suggests a very rigid and limited view of the craft. To use your example: you are right that "immediacy and intimacy" can be achieved in the way you describe. The question is: do you, the writer, WANT this kind of "immediacy and intimacy" in this particular moment, with this particular character...? You might; and then again you might not. Some minor characters are not important enough to waste valuable space on. Sometimes you want the story to move briskly - and descriptions of sensations slow down the narrative. And sometimes the "telling" might actually provide additional insight, for instance into the interpersonal dynamics: "Sit down - he said. She sat down." I have this motto: there are no rules, just tools. Not: "do this", but: "do this, IF you want to achieve the following effect".

  • @scottjackson163
    @scottjackson163 Pƙed 24 dny +9

    Hmmm. Yes. Show, don’t tell, but also don’t forget to inject your opinion into the story, even though such injection requires telling. Contradictions abound.

    • @StoryGrid
      @StoryGrid  Pƙed 23 dny +17

      No
 that was the whole point. The skill is injecting your opinion without telling. - Tim

    • @scottjackson163
      @scottjackson163 Pƙed 23 dny +1

      @@StoryGrid Counterintuitive nuance abounds too.

    • @t0dd000
      @t0dd000 Pƙed 20 dny

      ​​@@StoryGridExactly. And, just letting you know, you explained this well in your video. This is just one of those topics that needs to be revisited time and time again. I feel that I am a reasonably advanced writer, but I still learned something from the video and dusted off other things I hadn't thought of in awhile.

  • @rachelthompson9324
    @rachelthompson9324 Pƙed 23 dny +1

    if she trips so easily on underwear her balance and dexterity is shown poor. It would be better if he had left a pile of dirty clothing on the floor. That would make better logistic sense.

  • @jeshus_deus_est
    @jeshus_deus_est Pƙed 20 dny +1

    Show is bad writting, be cause it s much too long and it steels the Reader the Imagination whan everything ist described. By Tell there's something happening. It s so boring to read Show.

  • @aidenignition
    @aidenignition Pƙed 18 dny

    I really like DESCRIBE DON’T EXPLAIN.

  • @roberttonner3131
    @roberttonner3131 Pƙed 24 dny +1

    Brilliant!