Re: Pink's Six Competencies and Screenwriting
good discussion thread you've started here professor.
i believe years from now, we will look back in books and such and realize we aren't actually entering the conceptual age, but rather, we're in the process of leaving it. history shows sociological patterns are occurring in ever faster mini-stages.
we entered the industrial age on a global level and with the end of the cold war communication took on larger context. then the technology we began to explore in the industrial age got a major boost from the internet. that put us firmly into the information age as it grew and developed a life of its own.
we entered the conceptual age as the over-abundance and easy access of information made every person a potential closet genius and a way to express themselves and relate that to others; ie blogs began to take form; webpages for businesses began to offer review sections for their products to enhance sales based on communicated information; immediate human communication jumped with visual communication and began to rise through things like facebook, im, social bookmarking, etc.
then communication began to move even faster through twitter, and is now expanding communication and visual communication exponentially through 3g networks as global businesses work to keep up with the demand and curiosity they have created. the conceptual age is characterized by enhanced mental stimulation (visual/auditory/mental acuity, etc.) and we've been in the midst of it.
personally, i think we are just now beginning to see the ephemeral edges of a new age rising; the age of meaning. a parallel result of the over-abundance of the information age and the over-stimulation of the conceptual age. people asking themselves what we're supposed to do with all the information excess. what does it all mean that we know so much?
i think simple human stories are going to rise as hw strives to fulfill public need and blockbusters will be forced to depend more on resonating stories in order to sell their visuals in order to meet the demand. films like avatar sold because the story resonated with people and it had incredible effects. the effects didn't supersede the story, they were there to enhance it, and the public responded on an unprecedented level.
anyway, i think the rising trend is there if we just take a step back.
good discussion thread you've started here professor.

i believe years from now, we will look back in books and such and realize we aren't actually entering the conceptual age, but rather, we're in the process of leaving it. history shows sociological patterns are occurring in ever faster mini-stages.
we entered the industrial age on a global level and with the end of the cold war communication took on larger context. then the technology we began to explore in the industrial age got a major boost from the internet. that put us firmly into the information age as it grew and developed a life of its own.
we entered the conceptual age as the over-abundance and easy access of information made every person a potential closet genius and a way to express themselves and relate that to others; ie blogs began to take form; webpages for businesses began to offer review sections for their products to enhance sales based on communicated information; immediate human communication jumped with visual communication and began to rise through things like facebook, im, social bookmarking, etc.
then communication began to move even faster through twitter, and is now expanding communication and visual communication exponentially through 3g networks as global businesses work to keep up with the demand and curiosity they have created. the conceptual age is characterized by enhanced mental stimulation (visual/auditory/mental acuity, etc.) and we've been in the midst of it.
personally, i think we are just now beginning to see the ephemeral edges of a new age rising; the age of meaning. a parallel result of the over-abundance of the information age and the over-stimulation of the conceptual age. people asking themselves what we're supposed to do with all the information excess. what does it all mean that we know so much?
i think simple human stories are going to rise as hw strives to fulfill public need and blockbusters will be forced to depend more on resonating stories in order to sell their visuals in order to meet the demand. films like avatar sold because the story resonated with people and it had incredible effects. the effects didn't supersede the story, they were there to enhance it, and the public responded on an unprecedented level.
anyway, i think the rising trend is there if we just take a step back.
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