150 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
150 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 2584
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Title: HPR2584: Plot Twists In Storytelling
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr2584/hpr2584.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-19 06:08:47
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---
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This in HBR episode 2,584 entitled Plot Twist in Storytelling, it is hosted by Lost in
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Bronx and in about 12 minutes long, and carries a clean flag.
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The summary is Lost in Bronx and MAM in Plot Twist, including the different types, and how
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they can be used.
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Today's show is licensed under a CC Hero License.
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This episode of HBR is brought to you by An Honesthost.com.
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At 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HBR15, that's HBR15.
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Better web hosting that's honest and fair, at An Honesthost.com.
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Hello, this is Lost in Bronx, and you'll have to forgive me for the sound quality I'm
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in the car right now, and this will be a short episode, but today I'd like to talk to
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you about the writing or story telling, I should say, technique of the twist.
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Now the twist could be a twist ending, it could be an element within a story that causes
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the story to go in a different direction, somewhere, you know, it could happen almost anywhere,
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but they're often reserved for the ending, for the sake of having a long setup, right?
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You have the entire story to set up this twist at the very end, and also to leave the
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listener, reader, viewer, whatever, whatever form the story is taking, form edits in,
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to leave the audience at the end with that impression of that wonderful twist.
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Now it's a narrative technique, and it can be used to tremendous effect, but it can also
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be overused, especially when it comes to certain genres that we have come to associate
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with twists like thrillers and mystery stories.
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It can, strangely enough, the mere fact that it is included can often be predictable.
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You know that at some point this whole thing is going to turn around, or is very likely
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to, and therefore you start second guessing the story teller, right?
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So you're going along with this story, say it's a thriller of some sort, it's a mystery
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thriller, and there's a toward love affair going on, yet there's some sort of criminal
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enterprise happening as well, and the background and the whole thing is some sort of manipulation
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by one or more characters to try to get what they want, right?
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Now we've seen probably hundreds of stories that are like this.
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When you suspect a twist is coming in a story like this, and a genre like that almost screams
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for it, it becomes very, very hard to surprise your audience because they are looking ahead.
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They're looking at this thing wondering how it's going to twist, and they're watching
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the story unfold, thinking in terms of, okay, this is what we're being given, but this
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is not the reality of the story, or likely not the reality of the story considering what
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kind of story it is, where is it likely to turn around, and very often it's easy to predict
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these things, unless the storyteller, in whatever, again, whatever format this is in, unless
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the storyteller is very clever and hides their stuff really, really well.
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Now the movie, the usual suspects, that was a nice twist.
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Now I've talked to people who did see it coming at some point or rather in the story,
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or predicted it off a lot of it within the context of the story, but most people, that
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was a great twist.
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Even for me, when I saw it, I was like, oh, that was very clever, I wasn't blown away
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by it, but I thought it was clever and I enjoyed it, and I didn't anticipate it because I was
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letting it go, even though I suspected at some point where we're going to get some sort
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of thing going on, it was interesting to see the way it played out, and I thought it
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was handled pretty well.
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But there are other stories where the twist is not surprising in the least.
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Going back, there was a film many years ago now, it's about 20, maybe close to 30 years
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ago called Body Heat, and it starred William Hurt, it was an early role for him, and supposed
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a twist at the end of the movie was very easy to predict.
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Now this movie did really well at the box office and it had generally good reviews, as
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I recall, but the twist at the end was extremely easy to predict, and it had to do with the
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way it was set up, not just the genre, it was the sort of genre where you're expecting
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one, so they had that to fight against.
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It was also poorly handled, right?
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You know, a spoiler here, a major character walks into a building that we know is the audience,
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there's a bomb in this building, and we have suspect, or at least I did, have suspect
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that this character knows the bomb is there as well, and then the building blows up, and
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the character is supposedly dead, but we find out at the end, no, the character isn't
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dead, and did know the bomb was there and took full advantage of that.
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But it was so predictable, because boom, this thing blows up, we know there's not going
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to be a body, and sure enough, they can't find the body, because it was blown to smithereens,
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but we know just by that setup that this is no twist, it was poorly handled, it's an
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easy thing to take back, whereas in something like the usual suspects, the twist in that
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story turned the entire film on its head, so that we have to question everything we saw,
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that twist worked really, really well.
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Now I've used twists in my own stories, I do a science fiction series called Star Drifter,
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Cajin, Cajin, then you can probably dig that up on the internet somewhere, well I know
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exactly where it's at my website, but anyway, I do use them, but I won't even try to say
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that they are really great twists, they're little twists, they're little hooks, little twists,
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to make the story a little bit more compelling, but something like the usual suspects is what
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I would consider a really successful twist, a really well done twist, because it makes
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you wonder about the entire film, you literally have to go back and look at the entire film
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and reassess it in order to make sense of this twist, and that, at least to me, to my
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way of thinking, that is a really powerful twist, that is a really good twist.
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Now I don't want to sound like I disparage the minor twist, as I say, I use it myself,
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but think of it like a tool, a twist in and of itself is a tool, but think of the minor
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twist as something that will build upon your plot and your story to generate not just a
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particular effect, but also to alter the course of your story during the story, so having
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a minor twist somewhere along the line of a tale turns out to have a great effect at
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the end of the tale, there was a film, again some years back, it was a Kevin Costner film
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called No Way Out, and during the course of the story you find out that one of the major
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characters of this movie is gay, now that doesn't seem to have any effect on the story in
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and of itself, and their handling of homosexuality was, I don't know, pretty primitive, in my
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opinion, but it was in there and you think, well, let's just suppose to, I don't know, let
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us know a little bit more about this character, but in the end it has an effect on the tale.
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Now this wasn't a tremendous story, but it did have a huge twist at the very end, unrelated
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to this particular detail, which was pretty clever, but it's one of those where they took
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the entire film to set up the twist at the very end, but this detail, where one character
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is a homosexual, has an important bearing on the tale itself and how the tale plays out,
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and it was an effective tool at the time, and as I say, I don't think it's the greatest film
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in the world, but with regards to twists, it did some things pretty well, so there are different
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types of twists and they can be used to either guide the story in a particular direction,
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they can be used as the payoff for a long, long setup, or they can be used, in my opinion,
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the best possible version of this, they can be used to entirely flip the tale around so that you
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have to look at everything that happened in a new light. In fact, you may want to immediately
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watch the film again, now that you know what you know, and I think that these are, they're
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certainly distinct, but I think they can also be done on smaller scales, so you don't have to
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have a giant story to have a twist ending, there are a lot of short stories that do it, in fact,
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some would argue that short stories do it best, because you don't have a lot of extraneous nonsense,
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you just have one small tale, one focused story, and then one focused twist, and that, you know,
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some people anyway, I don't necessarily agree, but some people feel that that is your best
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way to use the twist as a particular type of storytelling tool, however, there are poorly
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done tales that use twists, and effectively, there are stories where the only thing about this story
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was the twist, in fact, the story only exists, apparently, to flip the story at some point,
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with a twist, twist ending usually, and you look back on it and you realize that was all this story
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had, was that, it was like a funny payoff, or a pun, like a shaggy dog story, with a pun at the
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very end, and you're left with that feeling like, you know what, this really wasn't worth the trouble,
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it wasn't worth sitting through this entire film, reading this book, listening to this audio
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drama just for this little bit at the very end, that's because all they had was a twist, and they
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somehow confused a plot twist with a plot, and that's too bad, but you do see it from time to time,
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a plot twist, a twist ending, whatever, these are tools, they're not the story itself, and some people
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would argue that they cheapen almost every story they're in, unless it is one of those deals where
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you can re-examine a tale in the light of this revelation, many people would feel that it is
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nothing but a cheap technique, I don't think it's cheap in and of itself, but I think it's been
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used cheaply, especially in film, it's been used quite cheaply over the years, and you could
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consider a plot twist a cheap thing to do simply because it has been so poorly handled in so many
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different circumstances, not just film, television does it a lot too, you can probably look at
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it as being something you never want to touch, automatically your stuff is going to be seen as poor
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or cheap, because of it, now I personally feel like everything deserves to be judged on its own
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merits, so if you decide to include a twist where several twists in your story, rather than just say,
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well, you know, plot twist, some sicka plot twist, can we just have a story? I find myself feeling
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that way sometimes when I see something, but in the end it's how it was handled, it's how it turned
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out, and if it turned out okay, there's almost no reason not to include it, these things really do
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have to be seen on a case by case basis, and there you go, there's the thing, and why plot twist
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have been so overused, and why very often they're seen as being cheap, or just a cheap technique,
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anyway, it's because certain genres it's assumed you have to have them, and because not everyone has a
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story that supports it well, not everyone can use the technique very well, sometimes they're crammed
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in after because it doesn't seem like there's a plot twist, and we gotta have a twist, especially
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thrillers, especially mysteries, and as a result you end up with a lot of poorly done ones, and it
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doesn't have to be that way, but anyway, as I said, this was a short one, and just a few thoughts
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about the plot twist in a story, if you have any opinions about this, please feel free to leave
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them in the comments for this episode on HPR, or better yet, make your own episode talking about
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this or any other subject, you have opinions, you have interests, and we want to hear about them,
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this has been Lost in Bronx, thank you for listening, take care.
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