Skip to main content
Skip to content
Case File
d-18824House OversightOther

Essay on Presentation and Storytelling Lacks Concrete Leads

The document contains only abstract commentary on communication, memory, and storytelling with no mention of individuals, transactions, dates, or allegations. It offers no actionable investigative lea Discusses slide design myths and memory research Uses metaphorical language about storytelling and comedy No references to officials, agencies, financial flows, or misconduct

Date
November 11, 2025
Source
House Oversight
Reference
House Oversight #015782
Pages
1
Persons
0
Integrity
No Hash Available

Summary

The document contains only abstract commentary on communication, memory, and storytelling with no mention of individuals, transactions, dates, or allegations. It offers no actionable investigative lea Discusses slide design myths and memory research Uses metaphorical language about storytelling and comedy No references to officials, agencies, financial flows, or misconduct

Tags

presentationmemorycommunicationhouse-oversightstorytelling

Ask AI About This Document

0Share
PostReddit

Extracted Text (OCR)

EFTA Disclosure
Text extracted via OCR from the original document. May contain errors from the scanning process.
92 Are the Androids Dreaming Yet? The addition of contextual cues allows you to form a mental picture. By withholding some information at the end I have used a dramatic trick to cause your brain to free wheel and imagine what happens next. You are involved in the story. Notice the /Jonger story, with more data in it, is paradoxically more comprehensible and memorable. Ed Tufte makes the point about our ability to process information very forcefully. He believes presentation experts are wrong when they recommend you keep your slides to a few words! He points out the common advice to use only six bullets per slide and six words per bullet comes from a misconception that has blighted a generation of presenters. Studies performed on memory in the 1960s measured unrelated word recall. Six words are all you can remember if the words are meaningless. But if the words have meaning we can comprehend and absorb many pages of data. Hundreds of millions of people throughout the world read a newspaper every morning and can recall the stories throughout the day; the poems, songs and plays we memorize when young are usually long, comprising thousands of words, yet we are able to remember them verbatim for the rest of our lives. When we tell a story, we are trying to draw the reader in so they can to experience our imaginary world and be ‘ir’ the story. When I read a story — perhaps Harry Potter — 1 don't think about the grammar and punctuation, or even the accuracy of character portrayal. I’m transported to a different place. I experience a piece of the reality or ‘imaginality’ the storyteller has created. I can describe the characters, the scene, the sounds and the smells. A good author forms a complete world in our heads corresponding with the world they have in their heads. With more abstract information, comprehension and retention is harder. Often if the information does not hang together in a linear narrative it can be impossible to take in at a single sitting. However, if it forms a story and is well told so you ‘get it, you do not need it repeated. We experience something of this effect when we watch a good movie. “I’ve already seen that one,’ means you have absorbed the whole story in a single sitting. You don’t need to watch it over again to comprehend it. Comedy Finally, when you mix all the elements up, emotional understanding, body language, in-person communication and empathy; you get comedy. Humans ‘do’ comedy from a very young age and it’s vitally important to the fabric of our lives. What purpose comedy serves in communication

Forum Discussions

This document was digitized, indexed, and cross-referenced with 1,400+ persons in the Epstein files. 100% free, ad-free, and independent.

Annotations powered by Hypothesis. Select any text on this page to annotate or highlight it.