Posts Tagged ‘Fundamentals’

How to Kick Ass

Tuesday, February 19th, 2008

One of the beautiful things about improv is its abundance of folk wisdom — sayings and stories handed down over the years from group to group, teacher to teacher, polished and honed in the telling and retelling until they shine with the luster of truth. Periodically I’ll post a few of these priceless gems, and why I think anybody interested in getting deeper into the improvisation of business should take note.

The following list appears in my book, GameChangers. It was handed out at the beginning of a class I took at I. O. West in Los Angeles, by our teacher, Jason Pardo. The list came to Jason by way of improv legend Mick Napier, under whom Jason had studied in Chicago. (Napier is Artistic Director of the Annoyance Theater in Chicago and author of Improvise: Scene from the Inside Out. ) The GameChangers translation of each tip appears in italics .

TIPS FOR BEING A KICKASS STUDENT AND POWERFUL PERFORMER

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An Homage to The Coach

Friday, December 14th, 2007

Wooden1

COACH JOHN WOODEN PASSED AWAY TONIGHT AT THE AGE OF 99. THIS IS AN UPDATE OF A POST WRITTEN TWO YEARS AGO.

Coaching is one of the most honorable professions there is.  A few money- and headline-grabbing exceptions distort the fact that the fast majority of sports coaches are motivated by factors other than money.  No team can reach its potential without good coaching, and no coach brought more teams closer to realizing their potential than John Wooden, the best basketball coach, and one of the best coaches of any game, who ever lived.

Wooden’s teams changed the the sport of basketball, from a polite Hoosiers-style half-court square dance, to a baseline-to-baseline rampage of disruptive defenses and extreme athleticism., and they have the championships to show for it.  As someone who grew up in Indiana like Wooden did, I always related to how The Coach used basketball as an allegory for life.  That’s how it was for a high school kid in Indiana.  Basketball was life.

Coach Wooden’s teams showed how the game, and not just the game of basketball, any game, should be played.  He was an educator who just so happened to use a basketball court as his classroom.  The players who had the good fortune to play for him got gifts that lasted long after their playing days were over.  Here are some of Coach Wooden’s fundamentals: (more…)

Writers Guild Strike – Grades Are Posted

Thursday, November 8th, 2007

A GameChanger sees every business scenario as an opportunity for improvisation, and improvisation as the key to a successful outcome for the scenario. The current Writers Guild of America (WGA) strike against the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers (AMPTP) has gotten lots of media play — it’s a media story, after all. It has already been sliced, chopped and processed like fois gras in Ratatouille’s kitchen. But this, right here, is the only place where players in a business story like this one get graded on their ability to improvise. It’s still early in the scene, but let’s analyze it to this point in terms of some fundamentals…sort of like scoring Kristi Yamaguchi for her compulsories…

WGA Strike

SUGGESTIONS FROM THE AUDIENCE

In business, a ‘Suggestion From the Audience’ consists of data from the marketplace. The big suggestion in this scene is clear: the audience is migrating from a couple of entertainment formats to many — or to one ubiquitous web-enabled metaverse, depending on how you look at it. Either way, it ain’t just about your TV and your motion pictures any more. Money is being made elsewhere, lots of it, and both sides are angling for their slice of the new pie. (more…)

Crewing vs. Sailing

Tuesday, November 6th, 2007

Suppose you want to learn a profession. Let’s say it’s sailing. Imagine if the way you set about learning to sail is by crewing. You do your job well and fit in smoothly with your fellow crew members. You grew up near the ocean, enjoy being on the water and welcome the drama that comes with treacherous weather. You stay fit. You love the lifestyle. You learn how to tie the hell out of many different kinds of knots. But…you don’t read the weather; that’s someone else’s job. You don’t pick the brains of other sailors for anything except bawdy stories of good times past. You don’t keep up with developments in keel and sail construction; the owners look after that. You don’t plot your course; they decide that down below and you’re a topsider. So you never really learn how to sail. You learn how to crew. (more…)