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ELA 3: Climaxes 25 Views
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Description:
If you came here looking for instructions for climbing people named Max...just, why? Never mind, you can keep that to yourself. We're learning about climaxes today. Like in stories.
Transcript
- 00:03
[Coop and Dino singing]
- 00:13
As long as language has existed, humans have loved stories. [Caveman and boy sitting by a fire]
- 00:17
Whether it's a fable about a princess and her missing shoe...
- 00:20
An epic tale of hobbits and wizards... [A hobbit in the shire and Gandalf appears]
- 00:22
Or even just a super dramatic retelling of that time you ripped a hole right in the butt
Full Transcript
- 00:26
of your pants at school.. [Person's pants rip in school]
- 00:27
Everyone loves a good story.
- 00:29
Lucky for us, there are endless stories for us to tell, share, and enjoy. [Man searching for book in the library]
- 00:34
But here's the thing – no matter how different they are, stories also tend to follow pretty
- 00:38
similar patterns.
- 00:39
Most notably, they all have a big and exciting climax. [Man jumps over fence and runs away and men shoot guns]
- 00:43
But let's not get ahead of ourselves.
- 00:45
Instead, let's start at the very beginning of the story.
- 00:48
It's a very good place to start. [Girl singing in a meadow]
- 00:52
You'll find one example of a common pattern in the very beginning of a story.
- 00:56
The author will usually try to “ground us in the reality” of the story.
- 01:00
What this means is that the writer will give us the setting – does it take place in space? [A view of a galaxy in outer space]
- 01:04
In New York City?
- 01:05
Two-hundred years ago?
- 01:06
They'll also introduce us to the characters in the story so that we know who we're going
- 01:09
to be hearing about.
- 01:10
After all, we wouldn't want to meet our main character on page 394. [Man reading book and a King appears]
- 01:14
That'd be…weird.
- 01:15
After we're grounded in the story, there's usually some sort of trigger.
- 01:19
This is an event that really launches the story, and it usually puts the characters
- 01:22
in an unfamiliar situation. [Astronaut floating in space]
- 01:24
Maybe the main character lost their pet dog Rupert, and must find him.
- 01:27
Or an alien spaceship crash-landed into someone's backyard. [Alien spaceship crashed into the ground]
- 01:31
Or they maybe they woke up one day and realized they've grown an eleventh toe.
- 01:34
Whatever it is, this trigger is what really starts our main character on an adventure.
- 01:38
Stories often feature some sort of surprise – and this surprise is often followed by [Coop discussing common patterns of stories]
- 01:42
a choice.
- 01:44
Maybe they're accepted into two different colleges and must pick where they want to go.
- 01:47
Or maybe, two different people ask them to the school dance and they've got to pick who [Two guys ask girl to go to the school dance]
- 01:51
to go with.
- 01:52
Either way, something unexpected usually happens and they've got to make a decision.
- 01:56
While short stories might only have one surprise, longer stories may have a ton of them, with [Short story with one surprise and long story with lots of surprises]
- 02:01
many different choices to be made.
- 02:03
But no matter what, these stories usually end up at the “big moment” when it seems
- 02:06
like anything could happen – we're talking about….drum roll please…the climax! [A drum roll and climax appears]
- 02:12
You can tell you've reached the climax because a drumroll always plays.
- 02:16
…Just kidding.
- 02:17
You can actually tell you're at the climax because it's the point in the story when the
- 02:21
biggest choice has to be made.
- 02:23
How will the princess save the prince from the dragon? [Princess stabs dragon]
- 02:26
Can the robot win the thrilling robot boxing match?
- 02:29
Will the boy be able to sing the song he wrote at his school's talent show? [Boy scared while on stage at a talent show]
- 02:33
These are the big moments that usually end in an exciting result.
- 02:37
And no matter what happens, there's usually a consequence.
- 02:40
This is a big change that leads us to the end resolution of the story. [Dino eating monster]
- 02:44
One of the most common ends to a story is....
- 02:47
“And they lived happily ever after.
- 02:49
The End.” [A man and woman walking by the sea on a beach]
- 02:50
Another really common ending to a story is...
- 02:52
“Both robots realized they should spread love instead of war, and so, they combined
- 02:56
into a super robot that could turn rocks into cupcakes.[Robot turns rock into cupcakes]
- 02:59
The End.”
- 03:00
Okay, maybe that one isn't quite so common…but it's still a nice ending.
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