Spreading the Word About My Works (or…Maybe Not)

Despite the fact that I have been publicly uploading my crafts to a website that I host, I have not been cross posting my content to any of my social media accounts. I have an Instagram account that is under the same name as my website (jaysblankstudio), as well as a Pinterest account that is under the same name; however, I have not posted anything on either of those locations. I also have a YouTube account where I have posted videos for video projects. Most of those videos are unlisted but can be seen through my website! 

As far as plans for either of those go, I feel as though using Instagram as a portfolio of the things I have created would be a good thing for future needs regarding a job in the artistic field (or anything related to digital designing). I don’t think I would want to post everything that I have created onto my Instagram—I would most likely just post the things I am most fond of and am most proud of. For any potential videos I make, I will still put them on my YouTube…whether or not I make them public or unlisted is up for debate.

Hot Chocolate & Computers” by Martin Cathrae is licensed under CC BY-SA 2.0 .

Storytelling Over the Years (and the Modern Effect)

image of a campfire with people talking in the backgrouund

Storytelling has been a thing that has existed for years and years, and has become a tradition for many cultures. Many stories come from the act of sitting around a fire and telling a story to a group of people, who would then go to tell that same story to another group of people, or singular person; the cycle would continue, and that same story would eventually become famous and well-known—with some alterations, since the story would either be lost in translation, or someone would mis-remember a detail for something else and change some aspect of a character or concept. A well-known example of this type of storytelling comes from the epic poems The Odyssey and the Iliad, which are stories that were supposedly told verbally by the blind poet Homer.

Modernly, most of our stories are found online through the perspective of both credited sources, written in the format of physical and online books, as well as individuals who express these stories to the world. Since we have access to seeing stories online, we are exposed to a multitude of events and stories that are spread across the entirety of social media. Just as though it were told verbally around a campfire, sometimes there could be accidental misinterpretations of the story that can confuse people and make them wonder which version of the story is the truest.

Despite the different ways that storytelling has changed since the evolution and creation of technology, the effects of storytelling are still the same as they have always been. We still have emotional reactions to stories that we read or see on the internet (laughing when we see something funny or shocking, or crying when we read devastating news or connect with someone on a personal level); we still learn life lessons after reading a story about someone experiencing something firsthand, rather than learning them through fictionalized stories.

Even if we feel disconnected sometimes by how often we are on our phones looking though social media, there is still this feeling of connection when we read something that affects us to the point of gaining a reaction from it, or when we learn something new from a stranger that lives in an entirely different country. Social media is definitely exhausting in the way that we learn about so many things at once, but there is some reward when we see something uplifting, or learn something that has benefited us and helped us grow as people.

Campfire” by jeff.souville is licensed under CC BY-SA 2.0 .