360 Degree Story - Telling Video

If your family is like mine, everytime you get together you tell stories. No matter who starts the story, before long, everyone is adding bits and pieces of what they remember until you have a group-telling of the story.

The world of business does something like this. There is a performance evaluation tool called a 360 Degree Review where a person's performance is evaluated by her peers, employees, and customers, instead of just her boss. The idea is to get a well-rounded view of her work by asking people who have different relationships to them to evaluate her performance. We can adapt this idea to make a fun video.

Let's create a video project that captures a 360 degree group-telling of a shared story. Fancy lights, expensive tripods, and complicated video editing systems are not required for this one (although, if you have them, feel free to use them!)

What You Will Need:

What To Do

Set-up the video camera on the tripod, hook up the microphone, and set-up or adjust any lights you want to use. Ideally you want to do this in an area where each person will be away from the group when they tell their version of the story.

One-by-one, bring each person into the recording area and ask them to tell the story as they remember it. Keep the camera zoomed out wide enough so the subjects can move around freely without going out of frame - a medium shot should do the trick. Also, don't interrupt unless the subject is nervous and needs reassuring. You want a quick snapshot of what they remember right now and you want them to come across comfortable and natural on camera.

Pause the camera and bring in the next person. Repeat the process until everyone who was a part of the story has spoken. Rewind the tape, connect the camera to the nearest TV, and let everyone watch the story be told all the way around - 360 dgrees!

Don't be surprised if everyone wants a copy of this video!

Suggestions

This is a great project to do at family gatherings and parties. Since it requires so little setup you can bring your camera and, if the opportunity arises, quickly prepare and record.

Consider a 360 degree story as a birthday or anniversary gift. Have people tell the story of a couples wedding day and give it to them on their first anniversary (you can even make this at the reception and save it for them.) Or, get children to remember the day dad got his new boat and present it as a birthday present.

Best of luck with your Reel History project!

Andrew Seltz has been producing film and video projects for more than 10 years. His work has included many documentary projects which inspired him to begin documenting his family's stories. He is now helping others do the same through his website http://www.ReelHistories.com