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Script Writing for Mobile: A Hands-On Workshop & Crit Room Stephanie Pau, The Museum of Modern Art Erica Gangsei, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art

Script Writing for In-Gallery Mobile Interpretation: A Participatory Workshop and Crit Room

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Slides from workshops presented at workshops presented at Museums & Mobile III (Online) and later revised for a half-day workshop at Museums & The Web 2013 in Portland. Co-presented by Stephanie Pau (MoMA) and Erica Gangsei (SFMOMA). Workshop Description: Your latest audio or mobile app is nothing without great content. In this hands-on workshop, designed for museum staff by museum staff, you’ll have the opportunity to discuss the qualities of effective in-gallery mobile content and to learn the process for developing it. Half workshop and half crit room, this session will begin with practical advice for writing audio, video, or multimedia scripts, as well as suggestions for producing such content in-house. We’ll put these principles to practice in the second part of this session -- a supportive “Crit Room” where participants may volunteer to have their script drafts critiqued in a live “surgery” environment. Throughout this intensive half-day workshop, we’ll consider as a group the qualities that make for a great in-gallery mobile experience.

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Page 1: Script Writing for In-Gallery Mobile Interpretation: A Participatory Workshop and Crit Room

Script Writing �for Mobile: �

A Hands-On Workshop �& Crit Room

Stephanie Pau, The Museum of Modern Art Erica Gangsei, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art

Page 2: Script Writing for In-Gallery Mobile Interpretation: A Participatory Workshop and Crit Room

Hello.

Stephanie Pau Associate Educator, Interpretation & Research MoMA, New York

Erica Gangsei Manager of Interpretive Media SFMOMA

Page 3: Script Writing for In-Gallery Mobile Interpretation: A Participatory Workshop and Crit Room

Why are you thinking of taking content-production in-house? a.  I think I can save $ over an existing solution b.  I have no budget to hire outside vendors c.  I would like more creative control  d.  I want ownership of content e.  I want to build up in-house skills f.  All of the above 

Page 4: Script Writing for In-Gallery Mobile Interpretation: A Participatory Workshop and Crit Room

Let’s Warm Up!

Page 5: Script Writing for In-Gallery Mobile Interpretation: A Participatory Workshop and Crit Room

Part I:�Tips for Scripting

Page 6: Script Writing for In-Gallery Mobile Interpretation: A Participatory Workshop and Crit Room

Before You Begin… •  CONSIDER CONTEXT & SETTING  

o  Is audio or mobile the appropriate medium in this instance?  o  Is the exhibit already media-heavy? Will there be a lot of ambient

noise?  •  WHAT OTHER GALLERY RESOURCES WILL BE PROVIDED?

o  Check with Curatorial/ Education about labels, wall texts, and other in-gallery didactics/interpretation  o  Some redundancy is OK, but try to stagger resources and diversify

content 

•  DECIDE ON THE PRIMARY AUDIENCE

o  Who do you want to target?

Page 7: Script Writing for In-Gallery Mobile Interpretation: A Participatory Workshop and Crit Room

Before You Begin… •  CHOOSE A MIX OF OBJECTS  

o  Baffling objects that require interpretation

o  “Sticky” objects that visitors naturally want to know more about

o  Stories that demand to be told •  AVOID & PREVENT “BOTTLENECKS”  

o  Meet around the exhibit model, whenever possible o  Think about skipping objects in high-congestion zones; spread content

evenly •  AVOID INFORMATION OVERLOAD!    

o  What’s the total running time (TRT)? o  20-25 stops / 30-45 minutes TRT / 20-25% of objects on display

Page 8: Script Writing for In-Gallery Mobile Interpretation: A Participatory Workshop and Crit Room

Step 1 • Content Audit

Step 2 •  Interviews

(Actualities)

Step 3 • Review

Audio & Transcripts

Step 4 •  Scripting

Step 5 •  Script

Review

Step 6 •  Audio

Review & Evaluation

Page 9: Script Writing for In-Gallery Mobile Interpretation: A Participatory Workshop and Crit Room

•  Take stock of what other interpretive resources will be provided •  Dig into your institutional archives

o  What media does your museum already own? o  Library & Archives o  Oral history initiatives o  Documentation of public lectures & programs

o  Repurpose existing videos and audio

Step 1: Do a Content Audit

Page 10: Script Writing for In-Gallery Mobile Interpretation: A Participatory Workshop and Crit Room

o  Research external catalogues

o  Sound Archives o  Library of Congress Recorded Sound Reference Center o  California Library of Natural Sounds o  Macaulay Library (Cornell Lab of Ornithology) o  Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution o  Skowhegan Lecture Archives ….and many more

o  Historical Societies, Libraries, Archives, Documentarians & other Museums 

Step 1: Do a Content Audit

Page 11: Script Writing for In-Gallery Mobile Interpretation: A Participatory Workshop and Crit Room

Step 2: Interviews (Actualities) Choose your subject(s) wisely

o  Will you interview experts, artists, writers, community members, storytellers, visitors, or…?

o  Are they fluent speakers? Do you have a sense of their energy,

charisma, or natural storytelling ability? 

o  If you have time and resources to record multiple perspectives, do it

o  Consider broadening your notion of "expertise" 

Page 12: Script Writing for In-Gallery Mobile Interpretation: A Participatory Workshop and Crit Room

Step 2: Interviews (Actualities)

o  Do your homework beforehand, but don’t act like you already know the answers

o  Don’t craft questions that answer themselves o  Avoid questions that elicit YES/NO answers o  Remind interviewees to rephrase the question

Q: “What did you eat for breakfast this morning?” A: “This morning I ate oatmeal, bananas, and tea.”

o  Keep your interview session targeted

§  Ask about topics most relevant to the visitor §  Ask about specific objects or topics

“INTERVIEWS ARE ONLY AS GOOD AS THE INTERVIEWER”

Page 13: Script Writing for In-Gallery Mobile Interpretation: A Participatory Workshop and Crit Room

Step 2: Interviews (Actualities) •  Transcribe with Timecode 

•  A time code is a time stamp inserted periodically in a transcript, normally

[HH:MM:SS]

•  Helps you quickly locate words and phrases in the corresponding audio

•  Preserve stutters, ums, long pauses, laughter, verbal ticks, etc. so you can be aware of them while scripting and editing; also preserves the character of one’s voice

•  Very handy for licensing content

Page 14: Script Writing for In-Gallery Mobile Interpretation: A Participatory Workshop and Crit Room

Step 3: Review Audio & Transcripts

•  Listen to check the audio quality •  Use quotes for emphasis, flow and drama; not just for factoids   •  If an interviewee says something with passion, find a way to use it   •  Let good quotes stand on their own; narration should frame, not

paraphrase However...

•  At times your narrator can say in one sentence what

your interviewee says in three; replace meandering comments with concise narration.

Page 15: Script Writing for In-Gallery Mobile Interpretation: A Participatory Workshop and Crit Room

Step 4: Scripting

The Basics Building Blocks Narrator The voice that frames the story Actuality The subject or interviewee; unscripted Ambient sound ("Buzztrack") Environmental sound, sound effects (sfx), score

Page 16: Script Writing for In-Gallery Mobile Interpretation: A Participatory Workshop and Crit Room

Classic "NPR" (American radio doc formula) Narrator                        _____          ______     (20%) Actuality            _____          ______                 (70%) Ambient sound           ______                            (10%) The formula is functional and familiar, and  there's something to that...

Page 17: Script Writing for In-Gallery Mobile Interpretation: A Participatory Workshop and Crit Room

...But what other approaches are possible? Narrator                                                              (__%) Actuality                                                             (__%) Ambient sound                                                  (__%) Listen...   Can you map the structure in this clip? What makes a program like Radiolab so compelling?

Page 18: Script Writing for In-Gallery Mobile Interpretation: A Participatory Workshop and Crit Room

Does ambient sound = background? In only 1-2 seconds, ambient sound can: •  Wordlessly evoke a mood.  •  Situate or transport the listener in time and space •  Serve as an important source of information, or accentuate a point �So…be sure to insert music and audio cues as you write   

“WORDS AREN’T THE ONLY TOOLS FOR TELLING A GOOD STORY”

Page 19: Script Writing for In-Gallery Mobile Interpretation: A Participatory Workshop and Crit Room

Writing for the Ear •  Script as you would normally

speak o  No parenthetical clauses o  One thought per sentence;

one breath per sentence o  Use contractions o  Active, not passive voice

§  Write in an order that answers "Who did what?"

o  Short, simple sentences •  As you write, read your

words aloud  o  Can you follow the logic? o  Would a narrator be able to

read it in one breath?

"IF YOU WOULDN'T SAY IT, DON’T WRITE IT"

Page 20: Script Writing for In-Gallery Mobile Interpretation: A Participatory Workshop and Crit Room

Writing into Actualities •  Create the illusion of a natural dialogue between narrator

and interview clip •  The interviewee should appear to finish the narrator's

thought

NARRATOR: Several staffers caught a good look at the moon rock. Jane Doe is with the museum's education department. She says the sight nearly scared her to death. �

� ACTUALITY: Well, I saw the thing comin’ out of the sky, straight for my Macbook. All these pieces cracked off and when they landed, I could see they were stray ideas....

Page 21: Script Writing for In-Gallery Mobile Interpretation: A Participatory Workshop and Crit Room

Beware “Moon Rocks”! •  "Moon Rocks”

"Alien" visitors from another script or story

•  Consider moving non-essential information into sublayers          (But beware excessive sublayers) •  Find an alternate platform for far out "Moon Rock" segments:         Podcast segments, blog posts, videos or audio slideshows, etc.

“ONE THEME PER SCRIPT, ONE THOUGHT PER SENTENCE.”

Page 22: Script Writing for In-Gallery Mobile Interpretation: A Participatory Workshop and Crit Room

Length Alert! Shoot for 1-1.5 minutes; 2 minutes max 200 words = 90 seconds recorded Beware “Museum fatigue” 

Page 23: Script Writing for In-Gallery Mobile Interpretation: A Participatory Workshop and Crit Room

Length Alert! •  Limit your script to "just in time"

information What's most relevant to understand here and now?

•  Move non-essential information

into a sublayer (but sparingly)   •  And if you still can't tell the story in

1-2 minutes, how else could the story be told?

•  Use image tracks sparingly, and only if they really add value

•  Videos should be short ( < 1 minute)

Page 24: Script Writing for In-Gallery Mobile Interpretation: A Participatory Workshop and Crit Room

DO DON’T Begin with what can be seen, and keep bringing the eye back to the work; encourage close looking

Undermine the act of seeing

Leave room for interpretation Over-determine or shut out the possibility of other readings

Conduct new interviews; delve into the archives (e.g. repositories like Archives of American Art; documentaries; other museums; public programs)

Tell the story only through scripted narration

Base your script around the actuality Predetermine what the story should be; ignore actualities that don’t support your thesis

Introduce multiple voices and perspectives. If they conflict, frame it as a debate

Suggest that there is a single authority on the subject

Allow for random access and meandering Script a single, linear path (“forced march”)

Page 25: Script Writing for In-Gallery Mobile Interpretation: A Participatory Workshop and Crit Room

Step 5: Script Review

•  Have a colleague read it aloud as you listen without benefit of the

script •  Time your "walkthrough" reading to roughly estimate length •  Listen while gazing at a photo of the object (or better yet, the real

thing) •  Does what you hear ring true with what you see?

Page 26: Script Writing for In-Gallery Mobile Interpretation: A Participatory Workshop and Crit Room

Step 6: Audio Review & Evaluation •  Review audio on the same headphones or equipment as your

visitors •  Listen on an open day in the galleries, preferably in front of the

work o  Audio seems longer standing on your feet o  Environmental noise may be more than you had anticipated o  People also tend to wander as they listen

•  Listen to your visitors

o  You don't need a lot of money to do surveys or observation o  Leave a comment book 

Page 27: Script Writing for In-Gallery Mobile Interpretation: A Participatory Workshop and Crit Room

Part II:�Group Crit

Page 28: Script Writing for In-Gallery Mobile Interpretation: A Participatory Workshop and Crit Room

Let’s Give�Constructive �

Feedback.

Page 29: Script Writing for In-Gallery Mobile Interpretation: A Participatory Workshop and Crit Room

Clark Art Institute�Williamstown, MA, USA

Case study: Artwork-specific audio guide stops

Average running time: 2.5-3 minutes per stop (as scripted) Audience: General Format: Random-access / Artwork-specific Delivery method: Initially, keypad audio device. Plans to eventually port to touchscreen devices with multimedia & layering capabilities

Page 30: Script Writing for In-Gallery Mobile Interpretation: A Participatory Workshop and Crit Room

#435. A Street in Venice, c. 1880-82 John Singer Sargent (American, 1856-1925) Oil on canvas

Page 31: Script Writing for In-Gallery Mobile Interpretation: A Participatory Workshop and Crit Room

#567. Cloud Study, c. 1821-22 John Constable (English, 1776-1837) Oil on cream laid paper, mounted on canvas

#435.

Page 32: Script Writing for In-Gallery Mobile Interpretation: A Participatory Workshop and Crit Room

Part III:�Your Turn! �

Hands-On Scriptwriting�

Page 33: Script Writing for In-Gallery Mobile Interpretation: A Participatory Workshop and Crit Room

Hands-On Scriptwriting STEP 1: CHOOSE YOUR INTERVIEW SUBJECT

o  Divide into teams of two STEP 2: CONDUCT A 1-3 MINUTE INTERVIEW

o  Every object has a story. Take turns interviewing each other about an item from your purse or bag, or something you are wearing such as clothing or jewelry

o  Record using an iPhone, computer, or one of the provided devices o  Practice active listening o  Avoid YES/NO questions and observations posing as questions

STEP 3: TRANSCRIBE o  Transcribe your interview with (rough) timecode

Page 34: Script Writing for In-Gallery Mobile Interpretation: A Participatory Workshop and Crit Room

• AUDIENCE: What kind of visitor will be listening to your content?

• SETTING: What other gallery resources will be provided?   • THE BASICS

o  NARRATION: The voice that frames the story o  ACTUALITY: The interview, or media from your content audit o  SFX: Music or ambient sound to set a tone or dramatize a point

• WRITE FOR THE EAR o  Script as you would normally speak o  One theme per script, one thought per sentence o  As you write, read your words aloud

• LENGTH ALERT! 200 words = approx. 90 seconds

Hands-On Scriptwriting

Page 35: Script Writing for In-Gallery Mobile Interpretation: A Participatory Workshop and Crit Room

  • WHAT’S WORKING?

o  Is the script an appropriate length? o  Is it written for the ear? o  Are there Moon Rocks?

• HOW WAS THE PROCESS?

o  Any take-aways from the interview and scripting process? o  How would you apply this to your own museum?

CRIT TIME!

Page 36: Script Writing for In-Gallery Mobile Interpretation: A Participatory Workshop and Crit Room

QUESTIONS?