Perhaps I was a story teller in a past life because despite not being involved in the story telling community, one of the things I immediately noticed* about Plurk was its suitability for just that.
*Actually I believe @philcampbell mentioned it first and I agreed.
I tried it out once on Twitter but it didn’t really work. Plurk’s self-contained conversations are much more suited to it though.
Knowing that there was a small team of folk online and ready to go I began with:
Once upon a time on a dark night, something stirred in a Birmingham side street… what happens next plurkers?
It was greeted enthusiastically and a handful of people began contributing to the narrative.
The story was location-based so I thought it could be fun to plot the locations on a Google map. Someone on Twitter suggested the Birmingham side street could be ‘Needless Alley’ which is a real place in Brum. Perfect!
In creating the map I was inspired to add satellite co-ordinates into the narrative as a plot device so these were discovered engraved on the back of the protagonists watch in chapter one.
Quite how the map element evolves, and whether other web elements are invoked remains to be seen but I like the notion of layering the narrative in this way.
Because he’s a master of such things, @philcampbell suggested creating a podcast out of the story but I’m not best qualified to take this on.
What I do think could be fun though would be doing a live reading, with two or three voices and possibly someone ‘operating’ the google map etc. But we need to see how the story evolves first. What particularly excites me about this is that the story might be being ‘performed’ as it is being written by the audience.
We’ll have to see about that. For now though, come to Plurk and help write Jonny Snake’s destiny.
I have wondered in the past how Twitter etc could be used to generate SMS novels, which are so popular in japan etc.
Add in the collaborative story telling aspect, and it could be really exciting.
Really interesting! Have you seen http://wetellstories.co.uk? There’s a story there told within Google Maps I think you’ll find interesting.
@Michael Leis
That Google Maps story is fantastic – thanks for the link.
It would be fun to do one using activity captured in the satellite view to form the narrative – or better still, use street view activity.