265 lines
17 KiB
Plaintext
265 lines
17 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 2548
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Title: HPR2548: Single Vs Multiple Characters
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr2548/hpr2548.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-19 05:18:16
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---
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This is HPR episode 2,548 entitled Single VS Multiple Character.
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It is hosted by Lost in Drunks and in about 18 minutes long, and Karima Clean Flag.
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The summary is Lost in Drunks looks at why Single or Multiple main characters are better
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in stories.
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This episode of HPR is brought to you by An Honesthost.com.
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At 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HPR15, that's HPR15.
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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 Drunks and you'll have to forgive me for the sun quality I'm in
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the car right now.
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Today I'd like to talk to you about the concept of having one or multiple main characters
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in storytelling.
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Now most of what I'm about to say is going to focus on written works such as novels or
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short stories, but it really can't apply to other types of storytelling, be they games
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or movies or television or radio or different types of stories.
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But for me, this is more easily illustrated using the written word.
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Not that we have that in front of us at the moment, but you get what I mean.
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Now then, I'll just state it right for the record.
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In my opinion, there's only one real major advantage to having multiple main characters
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in a story.
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And that's to tell the same tale from different points of view.
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That's not to be dismissed, that's not a small thing, that's actually a very cool technique.
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But it's not perfect for every type of story.
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Multiple main characters is probably best served by complicated stories.
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Things that have multiple threads going on at the same time, stories that have extremely
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complicated events that need to be seen from different points of view or they make no
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sense.
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Or as a deliberate blind, that is to say, you're using different points of view to give
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you the illusion that you're seeing it all, just so the writer can hide something from
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the reader to spring on them later.
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It's a valid technique and it can be very, very effective if it's done right.
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However, there are disadvantages to multiple main characters.
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And it really doesn't matter if you're using first person that is to say, I did this and
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I did that.
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Or if you're using third person, Joe did this, Joe did that.
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The advantage of having these characters is so that you can see what they're doing
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and see how they're feeling and we can empathize with these multiple characters.
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And the closer we are to them, the closer we are to their thoughts and their feelings,
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the more we care about what's happening to them.
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So if you have multiples and you're able to pull off that kind of connection, it really
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can do quite a bit of good for you.
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However, naturally, if you have one story, but multiple characters in the lead that you
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keep jumping to, one to the other, you get far less time with each than you would if
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you were using only one main character.
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Sometimes that can be good if the main character is unpleasant or they might have one cool
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aspect to them, but they're not necessarily super interesting or maybe the writer didn't
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flesh them out all that well.
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Then spending an awful lot of time with one character can, certainly in those types of circumstances,
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it can be a disadvantage to spend that much time with someone who just really is either
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unpleasant or uninteresting.
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You can jump around in that case, in other words.
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And this also does give you the advantage of focusing on your villain for a while.
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Your villain who may not be the main character, certainly not the protagonist of your story,
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but your villain or I should say antagonist if they're, if you have the kind of story
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that has one.
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You can spend time with them using a technique like this where you're focused on them for
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a little while.
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Now another big disadvantage and it's related to not having a lot of time to flesh out
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the characters is that you can spend so much time jumping around that it's really hard
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to get a cohesive story going on.
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See in this case, having multiple characters that you're what they call head hopping from
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one to the other, now it's beginning to impact your story.
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Your plot becomes harder to follow, your story because it's no longer very linear, right?
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Now story doesn't have to be linear, but taken as a whole, it has to make sense.
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And if you have a certain character that responds to a particular type of situation or stimulus
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in a certain way, and you have another that does the same thing only differently, throwing
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events at them means that they're going to react to them differently.
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Because they react to them, the reader finds out what's going on.
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And these two characters, if they're not, if what they're doing doesn't complement each
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other, that is to say one reveals one thing while the other reveals something else, perhaps
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something that the other one couldn't have revealed.
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If you don't do that specifically, there's absolutely no reason to do it, right, because
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it's just going to be confusing.
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Now again, this is my opinion and there's always exceptions, there's always going to be
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people that can jump from character to character to character and keep it all straight.
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But generally speaking, those are not very complex plots.
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Usually they're pretty straightforward, which is not to say that's bad.
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Straight forward is generally preferable, it's usually better.
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Complicated plots can be sometimes complicated for no other reason than to be complicated.
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That's poor reason to tell a story like that.
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Really, it's just the author indulging themselves and there's simply no great advantage to the
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story by being overly complicated in your construction of it.
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However, you can get overly complicated by having too many characters tell the same story.
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They can all be running off in different directions and trying to keep track of everybody.
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Well, that's fine, but very often you are better served by giving that character an entire
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chapter in their part of the story or better yet an entire segment of the book just for
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their part of the story before you jump to somebody else.
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Stories that hop from one character to character to character within the course of a chapter,
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it can get so muddled you really honestly can't follow what's going on.
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And in order to make that clear, then you have exposition, you have a character standing
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around saying, well, wasn't that impressive when you did such and such and such and such.
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It allowed me to do such and such.
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In other words, you need someone to recap what just happened, right?
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That's a complete waste of everybody's time and definitely the authors.
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So head hopping, I am not generally a fan of it, but it really does depend on how it's
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used.
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J. R. R. Tolkien in the Lord of the Rings jumped around to a lot of different characters,
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but he gave each one adequate time.
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He didn't jump between characters in the middle of the action general.
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We got large segments of the story and we spent a lot of time with these characters before
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we went to somebody else.
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In my opinion, that's the right way to do it and it works quite well that way.
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When you're jumping from character to character within the course of a single chapter or
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worse yet, a single scene, that's a mess.
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It's almost never a good way to tell that particular story or that segment of the tale.
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It's complicated for no reason and we rather than reveal different aspects of the story
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so that we get a really rounded view of it and point a fact that muddles the story.
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It often will muddle the story because we have different character reactions to the exact
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same event.
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It's a complicated thing.
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It's also very popular now, but it's very complicated and I don't believe that most
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writers do it well, frankly.
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Good writers are often, you know, if that's the kind of story they like to tell and they
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pull it off really well, they can make it look easy, but trust me, it's not.
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It's very often a good choice to pick one character that you find interesting as a storyteller
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as a writer.
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One character that you find interesting and you just sort of stay with them.
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We get to see the world through their eyes.
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Their advantage of this technique is that you can allow the story to get a little more
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complex.
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Yet you can keep the story centered because the story can be really crazy around your
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one character, but if your one character is the focus, they can be confused without
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confusing the reader.
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The reader might not know what's going on, but they don't have to be confused because
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it is this character that's doing it for them.
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They act as kind of a proxy.
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So they can be confused or they can be certain or they can be funny, they can be all of the
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things that you need, maybe multiple characters to do, but they end up being the one center
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of the story.
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Now we're getting into the concept of a single character.
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In my opinion, the single character story, the single main character story is a lot easier
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to write.
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They're the kind that I focus on.
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They're easier to write because you stick with one character.
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It also allows the reader to grow attached to this one character.
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The disadvantage, of course, is if this person isn't very interesting or very pleasant,
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then no one wants to spend that much time with them.
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So it's important to have a character that can express the entire range of emotion and
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thought and introspection that you yourself as the writer, as the author, as the storyteller
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wants to express.
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So if you want your main character to be, say, someone with a learning disability or someone
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with some sort of intellectual disability, and that's the main character, you're not
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going to get necessarily the insight about the world around you that the storyteller
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may require.
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As a result, you can't tell that story from a first person point of view unless you
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do an awful lot of saying things that the main characters clearly don't understand, but
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that you know that the reader is going to pick up.
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And that works sometimes, but if you do too much of that, it gets really constructed.
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It gets really false after a time.
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Flowers for Algernon is a beautiful, beautiful tale.
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It's a short story and it got turned into a novel, which then got turned into a major
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motion picture many years ago called Charlie starring Cliff Robertson.
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It's a science fiction tale on the surface of it, but it's really more of a character
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drama.
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The short story, you're inside his head, you're inside Charlie's head.
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And Charlie is slow, he's mentally disabled.
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And he undergoes a process, a kind of a radical surgical process that increases his IQ like
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a hundred or a thousandfold and he becomes a super genius over the course of the story.
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And we see his arc as he becomes super intelligent like that.
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And in the short story, we're not spending so much time when he is mentally disabled
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to get too much of that wink and nod sort of thing from the author.
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That is to say, someone is doing something that the, you know, maybe they're making fun
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of Charlie and Charlie doesn't get it, but the reader does, right?
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We're not getting, we're not spending that much time with all of that stuff.
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As I recall in the novel, there was a lot more of that and it got tiresome.
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So it's something that you have to be aware of.
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You can't necessarily, when you're telling a tale, if it's a character that's unpleasant,
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you have to distance yourself from them.
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So say the main character is a hitman, they're a psycho, maybe they're psychopath.
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If you're inside their head, that can be a long, unpleasant journey in a book where
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you're inside the psychopath's head.
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There have been a lot of modern books, especially told from that point of view.
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I don't find them very pleasant.
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They're not good reads and I don't necessarily think they're telling a very good story when
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they're like that.
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However, stories that take a step back that tell this tale in the third person, even though
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he's the main character, you can get a lot more traction that way.
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It flies a little bit better.
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And the same goes with multiple characters, right?
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If you have multiple character, main characters, if some of them are unpleasant, it's probably
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a good idea not to be in their head so much.
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That's just me, that's personal taste and I guess everybody is different.
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And I'm the first to admit that I'm not necessarily a fan of every modern trend in storytelling.
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However, focusing solely on singular characters, another great aspect of that is that the author
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can lie to the reader.
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That can be a big advantage, especially with a mystery story or a complex plot of some
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sort.
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You want to hold certain facts back so that the reader isn't expecting everything.
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If you reveal too much, then obviously you're showing your hand and they'll, you know,
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especially if it's trying to be a mystery, you will have shot yourself in the foot.
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There is no mystery if you give it all away.
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So sometimes it's good to lie to the reader.
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Now you can do that with the character lying directly to them, especially if it's told
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in first person, I did this, I did that.
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And in fact, they didn't do any of those things and it can be revealed later that they
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were lying about it or you can have the author lie to the character who in turn perpetuates
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that lie to the reader and how does that work?
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By simply not letting the main character know everything as they're going along, they
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don't see it all.
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They miss maybe very important facts that are either hidden or hidden in plain sight or
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they just simply don't notice it.
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They miss the super, super important fact and that, even if they're telling the story
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first person, they can't reveal it to the reader just yet because they missed it themselves.
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That's something that the author knows is going on, but the character does not.
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The main character who is telling the tale doesn't know about it because of course these
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things generally, if they're told in past tense, these things are being told in a linear
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fashion and the character isn't going to reveal this piece of information yet, they found
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out about it later even though when you think about it, they already know about it and
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they could have told you up front, but they're telling a story, right?
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It can be overly complicated telling stories like this and there's no reason to really
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get into the fine detail of what the influence of having multiple characters versus a single
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character on a particular plot.
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I don't think so anyway because again, not only is it complicated, it is highly dependent
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upon writing style and ultimately the story you're trying to tell.
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And that is really what it's all about.
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What story are you trying to tell?
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If you are telling a classic sword and sorcery fantasy where you have a small group of heroes
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who have to solve a quest, they have to perhaps gain a McGuffin before the evil bad guy gains
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it and by doing so, they will either be able to use it to stop the bad guy or destroy it
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thereby stopping the bad guy.
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It's a story or a type of story that probably will never grow old.
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I used certain sorcery fantasy but every genre can take advantage of that format, right?
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What's the advantage of having multiple points of view in such a well-trodden storyline?
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When you've gone down this path so many times and so many different types of stories,
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why do we need 5, 6, 7, 10, 20 different people telling this same story?
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Why are we seeing it through their eyes?
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I don't personally think there's an advantage to that.
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But again, it depends on the writer, it depends on the story.
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We may be getting the same old, certain sorcery tale but maybe we're not.
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Maybe it only appears that way and then at some point or other, this thing flips around
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and it's nothing like we thought it was going to be.
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And now having multiple points of view to plug in all the facts that we've learned along
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the way, now it comes in handy.
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But you see what I'm talking about, I'm talking about an element of complexity and surprise
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that we're not getting if it's just a straight story being told by a bunch of people.
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We don't need 15 voices to tell a single tale unless only those voices could tell that
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story that way.
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And again, it doesn't have to be first person, it could be third person but we're seeing
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much of what's going on through their eyes, we know what they're thinking, we know what
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they're seeing etc etc.
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Anyway these were just some thoughts about one character versus multiple characters.
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We're talking about main characters here and maybe some of the advantages and disadvantages.
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This is a very breezy kind of random look at that concept and it's a complex one.
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I hope that perhaps it give you food for thought and if so perhaps you'll throw a comment
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on HPR under this episode or better yet create your own episode because you have opinions
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and 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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You've been listening to HECCA Public Radio at HECCA Public Radio dot org.
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We are a community podcast network that releases shows every weekday Monday through Friday.
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Today's show, like all our shows, was contributed by an HPR listener like yourself.
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If you ever thought of recording a podcast and click on our contributing to find out how
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easy it really is.
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HECCA Public Radio was founded by the digital dog pound and the infonomicant computer club
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and it's part of the binary revolution at binrev.com.
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If you have comments on today's show, please email the host directly, leave a comment on
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the website or record a follow-up episode yourself.
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Unless otherwise status, today's show is released on the create of comments, attribution,
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share a light, free dot org license.
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