Shonda Rhimes and Cyndi Stivers: The future of storytelling | TED

112,977 views ・ 2017-11-20

TED


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00:12
Cyndi Stivers: So, future of storytelling.
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Before we do the future,
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let's talk about what is never going to change about storytelling.
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Shonda Rhimes: What's never going to change.
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Obviously, I think good stories are never going to change,
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the need for people to gather together and exchange their stories
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and to talk about the things that feel universal,
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the idea that we all feel a compelling need to watch stories,
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to tell stories, to share stories --
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sort of the gathering around the campfire
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to discuss the things that tell each one of us
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that we are not alone in the world.
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Those things to me are never going to change.
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That essence of storytelling is never going to change.
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CS: OK. In preparation for this conversation,
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I checked in with Susan Lyne,
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who was running ABC Entertainment
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when you were working on "Grey's Anatomy" --
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SR: Yes.
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CS: And she said that there was this indelible memory she had
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of your casting process,
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where without discussing it with any of the executives,
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you got people coming in to read for your scripts,
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and every one of them was the full range of humanity,
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you did not type anyone in any way,
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and that it was completely surprising.
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So she said, in addition to retraining the studio executives,
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you also, she feels,
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and I think this is -- I agree,
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retrained the expectations of the American TV audience.
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So what else does the audience not yet realize that it needs?
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SR: What else does it not yet realize?
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Well, I mean, I don't think we're anywhere near there yet.
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I mean, we're still in a place
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in which we're far, far behind what looks like the real world in actuality.
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I wasn't bringing in a bunch of actors
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who looked very different from one another
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simply because I was trying to make a point,
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and I wasn't trying to do anything special.
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It never occurred to me that that was new, different or weird.
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I just brought in actors because I thought they were interesting
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and to me, the idea that it was completely surprising to everybody --
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I didn't know that for a while.
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I just thought: these are the actors I want to see play these parts.
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I want to see what they look like if they read.
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We'll see what happens.
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So I think the interesting thing that happens is
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that when you look at the world through another lens,
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when you're not the person normally in charge of things,
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it just comes out a different way.
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CS: So you now have this big machine that you run,
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as a titan -- as you know, last year when she gave her talk --
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she's a titan.
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So what do you think is going to happen as we go on?
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There's a huge amount of money involved in producing these shows.
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While the tools of making stories have gone and gotten greatly democratized,
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there's still this large distribution:
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people who rent networks, who rent the audience to advertisers
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and make it all pay.
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How do you see the business model changing now that anyone can be a storyteller?
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SR: I think it's changing every day.
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I mean, the rapid, rapid change that's happening is amazing.
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And I feel -- the panic is palpable,
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and I don't mean that in a bad way.
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I think it's kind of exciting.
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The idea that there's sort of an equalizer happening,
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that sort of means that anybody can make something, is wonderful.
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I think there's some scary in the idea that you can't find the good work now.
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There's so much work out there.
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I think there's something like 417 dramas on television right now
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at any given time in any given place,
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but you can't find them.
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You can't find the good ones.
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So there's a lot of bad stuff out there because everybody can make something.
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It's like if everybody painted a painting.
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You know, there's not that many good painters.
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But finding the good stories, the good shows,
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is harder and harder and harder.
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Because if you have one tiny show over here on AMC
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and one tiny show over here over there,
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finding where they are becomes much harder.
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So I think that ferreting out the gems
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and finding out who made the great webisode and who made this,
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it's -- I mean, think about the poor critics
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who now are spending 24 hours a day
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trapped in their homes watching everything.
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It's not an easy job right now.
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So the distribution engines are getting more and more vast,
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but finding the good programming for everybody in the audience
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is getting harder.
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And unlike the news,
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where everything's getting winnowed down to just who you are,
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television seems to be getting --
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and by television I mean anything you can watch, television shows on --
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seems to be getting wider and wider and wider.
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And so anybody's making stories,
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and the geniuses are sometimes hidden.
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But it's going to be harder to find,
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and at some point that will collapse.
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People keep talking about peak TV.
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I don't know when that's going to happen.
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I think at some point it'll collapse a little bit
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and we'll, sort of, come back together.
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I don't know if it will be network television.
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I don't know if that model is sustainable.
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CS: What about the model
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that Amazon and Netflix are throwing a lot of money around right now.
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SR: That is true.
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I think it's an interesting model.
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I think there's something exciting about it.
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For content creators, I think there's something exciting about it.
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For the world, I think there's something exciting about it.
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The idea that there are programs now
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that can be in multiple languages with characters from all over the world
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that are appealing and come out for everybody at the same time
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is exciting.
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I mean, I think the international sense that television can now take on
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makes sense to me,
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that programming can now take on.
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Television so much is made for, like -- here's our American audience.
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We make these shows,
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and then they shove them out into the world
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and hope for the best,
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as opposed to really thinking about the fact that America is not it.
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I mean, we love ourselves and everything, but it's not i.
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And we should be taking into account the fact
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that there are all of these other places in the world
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that we should be interested in while we're telling stories.
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It makes the world smaller.
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I don't know.
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I think it pushes forward the idea that the world is a universal place,
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and our stories become universal things.
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We stop being other.
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CS: You've pioneered, as far as I can see,
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interesting ways to launch new shows, too.
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I mean, when you launched "Scandal" in 2012,
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there was this amazing groundswell of support on Twitter
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the likes of which nobody had seen before.
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Do you have any other tricks up your sleeve
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when you launch your next one?
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What do you think will happen in that regard?
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SR: We do have some interesting ideas.
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We have a show called "Still Star-Crossed" coming out this summer.
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We have some interesting ideas for that.
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I'm not sure if we're going to be able to do them in time.
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I thought they were fun.
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But the idea that we would live-tweet our show
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was really just us thinking that would be fun.
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We didn't realize that the critics would start to live-tweet along with us.
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But the fans -- getting people to be a part of it,
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making it more of a campfire --
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you know, when you're all on Twitter together
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and you're all talking together,
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it is more of a shared experience,
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and finding other ways to make that possible
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and finding other ways to make people feel engaged
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is important.
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CS: So when you have all those different people making stories
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and only some of them are going to break through
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and get that audience somehow,
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how do you think storytellers will get paid?
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SR: I actually have been struggling with this concept as well.
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Is it going to be a subscriber model?
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Are people going to say, like, I'm going to watch this particular person's shows,
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and that's how we're going to do it?
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CS: I think we should buy a passport to Shondaland. Right?
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SR: I don't know about that, but yeah. That's a lot more work for me.
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I do think that there are going to be different ways,
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but I don't know necessarily.
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I mean, I'll be honest and say a lot of content creators
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are not necessarily interested in being distributors,
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mainly because what I dream of doing
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is creating content.
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I really love to create content.
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I want to get paid for it
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and I want to get paid the money that I deserve to get paid for it,
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and there's a hard part in finding that.
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But I also want it to be made possible
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for, you know, the people who work with me,
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the people who work for me,
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everybody to sort of get paid in a way, and they're all making a living.
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How it gets distributed is getting harder and harder.
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CS: How about the many new tools,
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you know, VR, AR ...
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I find it fascinating that you can't really binge-watch,
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you can't fast-forward in those things.
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What do you see as the future of those for storytelling?
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SR: I spent a lot of time in the past year
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just exploring those,
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getting lots of demonstrations and paying attention.
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I find them fascinating,
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mainly because I think that --
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I think most people think of them for gaming,
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I think most people think of them for things like action,
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and I think that there is a sense of intimacy
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that is very present in those things,
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the idea that -- picture this,
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you can sit there and have a conversation with Fitz,
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or at least sit there while Fitz talks to you,
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President Fitzgerald Grant III,
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while he talks to you
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about why he's making a choice that he makes,
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and it's a very heartfelt moment.
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And instead of you watching a television screen,
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you're sitting there next to him, and he's having this conversation.
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Now, you fall in love with the man
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while he's doing it from a television screen.
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Imagine sitting next to him,
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or being with a character like Huck who's about to execute somebody.
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And instead of having a scene
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where, you know, he's talking to another character very rapidly,
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he goes into a closet and turns to you and tells you, you know,
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what's going to happen and why he's afraid and nervous.
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It's a little more like theater, and I'm not sure it would work,
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but I'm fascinating by the concept of something like that
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and what that would mean for an audience.
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And to get to play with those ideas would be interesting,
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and I think, you know, for my audience, the people who watch my shows,
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which is, you know, women 12 to 75,
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there's something interesting in there for them.
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CS: And how about the input of the audience?
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How interested are you in the things
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where the audience can actually go up to a certain point
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and then decide, oh wait, I'm going to choose my own adventure.
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I'm going to run off with Fitz or I'm going to run off with --
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SR: Oh, the choose- your-own-adventure stories.
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I have a hard time with those,
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and not necessarily because I want to be in control of everything,
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but because when I'm watching television or I'm watching a movie,
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I know for a fact that a story is not as good
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when I have control over exactly what's going to happen
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to somebody else's character.
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You know, if I could tell you exactly what I wanted to happen to Walter White,
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that's great, but the story is not the same, and it's not as powerful.
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You know, if I'm in charge of how "The Sopranos" ends,
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then that's lovely and I have an ending that's nice and satisfying,
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but it's not the same story and it's not the same emotional impact.
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CS: I can't stop imagining what that might be.
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Sorry, you're losing me for a minute.
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SR: But what's wonderful is I don't get to imagine it,
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because Vince has his own ending,
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and it makes it really powerful to know that somebody else has told.
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You know, if you could decide that, you know,
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in "Jaws," the shark wins or something,
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it doesn't do what it needs to do for you.
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The story is the story that is told,
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and you can walk away angry and you can walk away debating
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and you can walk away arguing,
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but that's why it works.
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That is why it's art.
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Otherwise, it's just a game,
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and games can be art, but in a very different way.
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CS: Gamers who actually sell the right to sit there
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and comment on what's happening,
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to me that's more community than storytelling.
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SR: And that is its own form of campfire.
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I don't discount that as a form of storytelling,
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but it is a group form, I suppose.
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CS: All right, what about the super-super --
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the fact that everything's getting shorter, shorter, shorter.
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And, you know, Snapchat now has something it calls shows
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that are one minute long.
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SR: It's interesting.
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Part of me thinks it sounds like commercials.
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I mean, it does -- like, sponsored by.
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But part of me also gets it completely.
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There's something really wonderful about it.
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If you think about a world
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in which most people are watching television on their phones,
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if you think about a place like India,
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where most of the input is coming in
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and that's where most of the product is coming in,
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shorter makes sense.
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If you can charge people more for shorter periods of content,
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some distributor has figured out a way to make a lot more money.
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If you're making content,
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it costs less money to make it and put it out there.
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And, by the way,
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if you're 14 and have a short attention span, like my daughter,
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that's what you want to see, that's what you want to make,
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that's how it works.
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And if you do it right and it actually feels like narrative,
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people will hang on for it no matter what you do.
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CS: I'm glad you raised your daughters,
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because I am wondering how are they going to consume entertainment,
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and also not just entertainment,
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but news, too.
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When they're not -- I mean, the algorithmic robot overlords
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are going to feed them what they've already done.
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How do you think we will correct for that and make people well-rounded citizens?
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SR: Well, me and how I correct for it
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is completely different than how somebody else might do it.
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CS: Feel free to speculate.
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SR: I really don't know how we're going to do it in the future.
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I mean, my poor children have been the subject of all of my experiments.
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We're still doing what I call "Amish summers"
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where I turn off all electronics
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and pack away all their computers and stuff
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and watch them scream for a while until they settle down
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into, like, an electronic-free summer.
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But honestly, it's a very hard world
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in which now, as grown-ups,
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we're so interested in watching our own thing,
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and we don't even know that we're being fed, sometimes,
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just our own opinions.
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You know, the way it's working now,
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you're watching a feed,
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and the feeds are being corrected
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so that you're only getting your own opinions
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and you're feeling more and more right about yourself.
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So how do you really start to discern?
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It's getting a little bit disturbing.
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So maybe it'll overcorrect, maybe it'll all explode,
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or maybe we'll all just become --
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I hate to be negative about it,
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but maybe we'll all just become more idiotic.
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(Cyndi laughs)
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CS: Yeah, can you picture any corrective that you could do
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with scripted, fictional work?
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SR: I think a lot about the fact that television has the power
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to educate people in a powerful way,
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and when you're watching television --
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for instance, they do studies about medical shows.
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I think it's 87 percent, 87 percent of people
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get most of their knowledge about medicine and medical facts
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from medical shows,
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much more so than they do from their doctors,
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than from articles.
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So we work really hard to be accurate, and every time we make a mistake,
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I feel really guilty, like we're going to do something bad,
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but we also give a lot of good medical information.
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There are so many other ways to give information on those shows.
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People are being entertained
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and maybe they don't want to read the news,
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but there are a lot of ways to give fair information out on those shows,
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not in some creepy, like, we're going to control people's minds way,
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but in a way that's sort of very interesting and intelligent
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and not about pushing one side's version or the other,
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like, giving out the truth.
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It would be strange, though,
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if television drama was how we were giving the news.
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CS: It would be strange,
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but I gather a lot of what you've written as fiction
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has become prediction this season?
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SR: You know, "Scandal" has been very disturbing for that reason.
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We have this show that's about politics gone mad,
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and basically the way we've always told the show --
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you know, everybody pays attention to the papers.
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We read everything. We talk about everything.
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We have lots of friends in Washington.
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And we'd always sort of done our show as a speculation.
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We'd sit in the room and think,
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what would happen if the wheels came off the bus
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and everything went crazy?
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And that was always great,
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except now it felt like the wheels were coming off the bus
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and things were actually going crazy,
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so the things that we were speculating were really coming true.
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I mean, our season this year
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was going to end with the Russians controlling the American election,
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and we'd written it, we'd planned for it,
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it was all there,
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and then the Russians were suspected of being involved in the American election
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and we suddenly had to change what we were going to do for our season.
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I walked in and I was like,
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"That scene where our mystery woman starts speaking Russian?
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We have to fix that and figure out what we're going to do."
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That just comes from extrapolating
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out from what we thought was going to happen,
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or what we thought was crazy.
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CS: That's great.
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So where else in US or elsewhere in the world do you look?
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Who is doing interesting storytelling right now?
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SR: I don't know, there's a lot of interesting stuff out there.
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Obviously British television is always amazing
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and always does interesting things.
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I don't get to watch a lot of TV,
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mainly because I'm busy working.
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And I pretty much try not to watch very much television at all,
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even American television, until I'm done with a season,
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because things start to creep into my head otherwise.
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I start to wonder, like,
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17:23
why can't our characters wear crowns and talk about being on a throne?
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It gets crazy.
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So I try not to watch much until the seasons are over.
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But I do think that there's a lot of interesting European television out there.
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I was at the International Emmys
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and looking around and seeing the stuff that they were showing,
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and I was kind of fascinated.
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There's some stuff I want to watch and check out.
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CS: Can you imagine --
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I know that you don't spend a lot of time thinking about tech stuff,
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but you know how a few years ago we had someone here at TED
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talking about seeing,
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wearing Google Glass and seeing your TV shows essentially in your eye?
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Do you ever fantasize when, you know --
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the little girl who sat on the pantry floor
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in your parents' house,
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did you ever imagine any other medium?
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Or would you now?
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SR: Any other medium.
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For storytelling, other than books?
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I mean, I grew up wanting to be Toni Morrison, so no.
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I mean, I didn't even imagine television.
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18:21
So the idea that there could be some bigger world,
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some more magical way of making things ---
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I'm always excited when new technology comes out
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18:29
and I'm always the first one to want to try it.
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The possibilities feel endless and exciting right now,
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18:36
which is what excites me.
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We're in this sort of Wild West period, to me, it feels like,
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because nobody knows what we're going to settle on.
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18:44
You can put stories anywhere right now
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18:46
and that's cool to me,
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and it feels like once we figure out how to get the technology
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18:52
and the creativity of storytelling to meet,
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18:55
the possibilities are endless.
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18:58
CS: And also the technology has enabled the thing I briefly flew by earlier,
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binge-viewing, which is a recent phenomenon,
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since you've been doing shows, right?
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And how do you think does that change the storytelling process at all?
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You always had a bible for the whole season beforehand, right?
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SR: No, I just always knew where we were going to end.
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So for me,
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the only way I can really comment on that
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19:24
is that I have a show that's been going on for 14 seasons
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19:29
and so there are the people who have been watching it for 14 seasons,
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19:32
and then there are the 12-year-old girls I'd encounter in the grocery store
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who had watched 297 episodes in three weeks.
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Seriously, and that's a very different experience for them,
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19:42
because they've been inside of something
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19:44
really intensely for a very short period of time
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in a very intense way,
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and to them the story has a completely different arc
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and a completely different meaning
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because it never had any breaks.
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CS: It's like visiting a country and then leaving it. It's a strange --
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SR: It's like reading an amazing novel and then putting it down.
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I think that is the beauty of the experience.
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20:05
You don't necessarily have to watch something for 14 seasons.
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It's not necessarily the way everything's supposed to be.
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CS: Is there any topic that you don't think we should touch?
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SR: I don't think I think of story that way.
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I think of story in terms of character and what characters would do
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20:22
and what characters need to do in order to make them move forward,
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20:25
so I'm never really thinking of story in terms of just plot,
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20:28
and when writers come into my writer's room and pitch me plot,
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I say, "You're not speaking English."
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20:33
Like, that's the thing I say.
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20:34
We're not speaking English. I need to hear what's real.
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20:37
And so I don't think of it that way.
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I don't know if there's a way to think there's something I wouldn't do
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because that feels like I'm plucking pieces of plot off a wall or something.
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20:46
CS: That's great. To what extent do you think you will use --
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20:49
You know, you recently went on the board of Planned Parenthood
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20:52
and got involved in the Hillary Clinton campaign.
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20:55
To what extent do you think you will use your storytelling
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20:58
in the real world
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to effect change?
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SR: Well, you know, there's --
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21:07
That's an intense subject to me,
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because I feel like the lack of narrative
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21:11
that a lot of people have is difficult.
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21:17
You know, like, there's a lot of organizations
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21:19
that don't have a positive narrative that they've created for themselves
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21:23
that would help them.
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21:26
There's a lot of campaigns
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that could be helped with a better narrative.
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21:31
The Democrats could do a lot
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21:34
with a very strong narrative for themselves.
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21:36
There's a lot of different things that could happen
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21:38
in terms of using storytelling voice,
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21:40
and I don't mean that in a fiction way,
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21:42
I mean that in a same way that any speechwriter would mean it.
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21:46
And I see that,
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21:47
but I don't necessarily know that that's, like, my job to do that.
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21:51
CS: All right.
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21:53
Please help me thank Shonda. SR: Thank you.
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21:55
(Applause)
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