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Showing posts with label TEDTalk. Show all posts
Showing posts with label TEDTalk. Show all posts

Monday, March 12, 2012

Choose your own TEDTalk: Sebastian Wernicke at TED2012

Photos: James Duncan Davidson

Sebastian Wernicke thinks there’s something missing from the Full Spectrum of TED2012: The audience has had no influence over the talks.

This is in the vein of the old Choose Your Own Adventure books, invented by accident by Edward Packard. Wernicke is going to tell us that story, but he needs some help deciding how to tell it. The audience has been given two cards, “A” and “B” and he asks them to vote on how the talk should proceed. (He practices by asking the audience to accept a license agreement.)

Should he tell it through eyes of Edward, or his two daughters? (Audience says: Daughters.)

Packard told stories to his daughters. They were about a guy named Pete who had adventures on an island. But one fateful night, he ran out of ideas. Packard asked them what Pete should do next. His daughters had ideas, but they disagreed tremendously, and forced him to tell two different stories. That led him to the idea of Choose Your Own Adventure. The books became highly successful.

Should he talk about the success through the lens of facts or emotion. (Audience says: Emotion).

Packard received tons of letters from children who loved the books. Even the endings in which characters ended up dead. Children were perfectly able to cope with dark endings, a fact that fascinates Wernicke.

Oddly, this format has never spread beyond children and teenage books. It’s never spread to TED, but Wernicke thinks it should.

Should he continue the talk with the slides colored mauve or jade? (Audience says: Jade).

For instance, Wernicke thinks there could be a TED pre-talk, where we ask you what you prefer. For instance, quiet or expressive? (Audience says: Expressive); idealistic or detailed? (Audience says: Idealistic); personal or analytical? (Audience says: Personal)

That produced the title of next year’s TEDTalk: Here are the undiscovered hype generators.

Now, of course, there is a real danger in replacing serendipity with fulfilled expectations. Is there an inherent contradiction here? Are you not in fact coming here by choice?

How to visualize the talk, with circles or trees? (Audience says: Trees)

Wernicke shows several trees to visualize the map of Choose Your Own Adventure books. The early ones were very complicated; the later ones much simpler, often with only one good ending. In one of the later Choose Your Own Adventure books, where you’re looking for a planet of paradise, Packard included an ending you can reach, but not from any other chapter. To get there, you have to violate the rules, and make your own choices.

And with that, Wernicke asks the audience which TED commandement he should violate: “Don’t sell books”, or “Have good slides.” But he then refused to let the audience choose, and showed the worst-designed slide in TED history.

The final question:

Should there be more interactive TEDTalks? (Audience says: Yes, but barely.)

See also: Sebastian’s previous TEDTalks on how to summarize 1000 TEDTalks in six words, and his (silly and wonderful) analysis of how to give the perfect TEDTalk, Lies, damned lies and statistics (about TEDTalks).

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Sunday, August 14, 2011

What TEDTalk would you play to open the school year? We counted your (almost 1,000) responses …

Over the weekend, we asked the TED community on Facebook this question:
“If you wanted to show a TEDTalk to open the school year, which one would you choose?” It’s inspired by a question tweeted from the #jed21 conference. On Facebook, almost 1,000 responses flowed in. The job of tallying the results — given in freeform comments — fell to our writer/editor Ben Lillie, as shown:

The pick of a good half of the commenters? Sir Ken Robinson, with more than 400 nods. However, as you can see, dozens of other TEDTalks got multiple mentions …

The full (long) list follows after the jump …

PS: The original poster on Twitter, @edtechworkshop, wrote in: “wow! I posted this ? on twitter last night and got about 10 responses. that I can handle… 599 comments in 1 hour is overwhelming! so far I am leaning towards Julian Treasure’s “5 Ways to Listen Better” for our teachers. Last time showed them Adora Svitak. I love Sir Ken, but feel like most people have already seen him. Want something new.”

Photo: TED/James Duncan Davidson

Ken Robinson 421
Salman Khan 30
Elizabeth Gilbert 21
Julian Treasure 21
Jamie Oliver 20
Jill Bolte Taylor 20
Brene Brown 19
Chimamanda Adichie 17
Sarah Kay 16
Benjamin Zander 15
Pranav Mistry 12
Hans Rosling 10
Thandie Newton 10
Tie Your Shoes 10
JK Rowling 9
Kathryn Schultz 9
Richard St. John 8
Temple Grandin 8
Adora Svitak 7
Aimee Mullins 7
Barry Schwartz 7
John Hunter 7
Neil Pastricha 7
Brian Cox 6
Grever Tulley 6
Steve Jobs 6
Sugata Mitra 6
Dan Arielly 5
Jane McGonigal 5
Mike Rowe 5
Phillip Zimbardo 5
Randy Pausch 5
Sam Richards 5
Simon Sinek 5
Tony Robbins 5
Wade Davis 5
William Kamkwamba 5

— Research Assistance by Shawn James, Jr.

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Sunday, July 3, 2011

New stats! Sebastian Wernicke’s TEDTalk analysis updated

In his legendary presentation “Lies, Damn Lies, and Statistics (About TEDTalks),” stats head Sebastian Wernicke breaks down the phrases that make up the highest- and lowest-rated TEDTalks — offering a foolproof blueprint for creating a can’t-possibly-fail TED moment of your own.

To celebrate TED video’s 5th birthday, he’s updated his research to include the first 970 TEDTalks published. Above: note the new optimal duration for your TEDTalk, sorted by keyword. Below: The list of top 10 “good” and “bad” words, based on the highest- and lowest-rated 50 talks in the 970-talk archive. Next, the previous version of this analysis, containing the best and worst possible sentences to say onstage based on the first 525 talks posted to the site. And at bottom, the optimized sentences now.

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Wednesday, January 19, 2011

Watch Carolyn Porco’s 2007 TEDTalk re-created shot for shot in LEGO

From the great blog annals of spacetime: This. Plus a lovely essay on the how and why.

The behind-the-scenes page is pretty wonderful too.

In a promising development, some other TEDTalks stars have also been modded into LEGO minifigs: Jane Goodall. Prof. Brian Cox. Richard Dawkins. More >>

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Sunday, January 9, 2011

How do I cite a TEDTalk?

To cite a TEDTalk, use APA Style for video Weblog posts:

Author. (Year, Month Date). Title [Video file]. Retrieved from URL

For example:
Sandberg, S. (2010, December 21). Sheryl Sandberg: Why we have too few women leaders

[Video file]. Retrieved from

http://www.ted.com/talks/sheryl_sandberg_why_we_have_too_few_women_leaders.html

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Sunday, December 26, 2010

How do I cite a TEDTalk?

To cite a TEDTalk, use APA Style for video Weblog posts:
Author. (Year, Month Date). Title [Video file]. Retrieved from URL
For example:
Sandberg, S. (2010, December 21). Sheryl Sandberg: Why we have too few women leaders
[Video file]. Retrieved from
http://www.ted.com/talks/sheryl_sandberg_why_we_have_too_few_women_leaders.html
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