Harnessing Narrative Persuasion for Good

This essay is intended to be the first of a series that will outline a firm intellectual foundation for narrative persuasion in the pursuit of social justice and a better world. So-called “narrative change” work on the progressive left is a young practice, rapidly growing and struggling to define itself. My goal is to help shape this struggle into the basis for a multi-disciplinary practice of storytelling for good that is both rigorously scientific and richly artistic. This practice must live between the academic world and the day-to-day practice of organizing and agitating to create social change. Presently, these two worlds do not play well together at all.

The Supreme Court Declares War on the Idea of America

The five unelected right-wing lawyers who control the Supreme Court don’t care about abortion, climate disaster, rampaging gun violence or any of the lethal human consequences that will flow from their opinions. What they care about is destroying all hope of achieving the original ideal of America as a unified, purposeful nation capable of recognizing and protecting our rights.

Everybody Is Not a Storyteller

Everybody Is Not a Storyteller

Since ads don't work online and all media are moving to digital, the art of creating real narratives is something that more and more agencies claim they understand. Problem is, they don't.

The Audience Takes Charge

The Audience Takes Charge

The audience (formerly known as “consumers” or “users”) has a stunning set of digital ad-avoidance tools that puts advertising in the same boat as “real” media companies: If you don’t create stuff that really matters to people – stuff they actually want to see and hear – you will be ignored, avoided, and blocked.