DiscoverKing of the MiddleEpisode 6: Incorporating Real Life Experience into Our Work: Where Do We Draw the Line?
Episode 6: Incorporating Real Life Experience into Our Work: Where Do We Draw the Line?

Episode 6: Incorporating Real Life Experience into Our Work: Where Do We Draw the Line?

Update: 2020-11-11
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Michael and Chris grapple with the moral implications that arise when artists draw on their observations of real life experiences, relatives, and acquaintances.




-- Intro: Creating Characters: Where do we find inspiration?




-- Choosing a subject can reveal secrets (intended or not) about the artist: her ideologies, grudges, etc




-- Michael discusses Thomas Wolfe’s early ‘fiction’ work that was actually an expose on the brokenness of his town




-- Michael mentions a memoir he wrote 10 years ago; he struggled with the decision to reveal dirty laundry about someone he knew




-- Chris talks about whether it’s acceptable to use other people’s real life stories in our own fiction work / Accountability to God on this




-- Michael explains how he analyzes his work to determine whether he’s giving the subject matter a fair shake / How he handles telling stories about his family’s past




-- Chris discusses the intersection between sharing stories from his own past in his work and the accountability he has to his parents / How being a dad himself has altered his view of the past




-- Chris asks Michael to discuss a negative event about his brother and whether he would use it in his work




-- Chris shares a crazy story about his own youth that might show up in a story some day




-- Michael supposes that family members don’t care very much about retelling stories from their immature youth but do if a tale is critical of an adult relative




-- Chris shares the circumstances under which he would be concerned if a relative wrote about him negatively in a published story




-- What about writing our own life experiences into our characters? / How many characters can you harness from your own life experiences? / How do you imbue dark characters with a part of yourself?




-- Humanizing characters we’ve created based on our own life observations / Chris reveals why he failed at writing a believable flesh-and-blood character in one of his stories some years back




-- How far will Michael go to sync his psyche with a fictional dark character / How does a Christian resolve the tension between sharing the Good News and writing such dark characters?




-- How turning 40 changed us as artists / How 30 also changed Michael




-- Michael asks Chris how he would write a young troubled character (mentioned earlier in this episode) if he re-wrote the story today / How to apply our honest, raw, observational gifts to our creative storytelling




-- Pop culture often feeds our desire to be distracted from this truth: we have limited time on earth. Yet believers can express truths about God’s purpose for humanity while entertaining them




-- In the next podcast, we'll discuss ‘Bill & Ted Face the Music’




------------------------------


Youtube Channel


https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCYhB_T8K03t8WO1XyvjaKWA




Facebook


https://www.facebook.com/kingofthemiddle/




Link to Michael’s Natter book, memoir, and other books:


https://michaeljoelgreen.wordpress.com/


https://www.amazon.com/Michael-Joel-Green/e/B007SCU7DS/ref=dp_byline_cont_pop_ebooks_1




Chris’s Website


http://www.cmobmo.com

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Episode 6: Incorporating Real Life Experience into Our Work: Where Do We Draw the Line?

Episode 6: Incorporating Real Life Experience into Our Work: Where Do We Draw the Line?

Chris Mohr and Michael Joel Green