Fireside Chat Artist’s Statement
After we first talked about the Fireside Chat during class, I went and read the assignment description. It makes no mention of belief. It simply describes the performance of a (more or less) scripted story accompanied by media. So I went off, thinking of a good story to tell. I settled on one and began planning things out. Later in class we talked again, and this representation of belief came up. This threw me for a loop at first. What? I have to embed my story with some sort of belief? Crap. Then, I realized how stupid I was being. It came to my attention that nearly every story is founded around a belief of some kind or another. That’s why we tell them.
Beliefs come in all different forms. They may be large and all encompassing, or small and detailed. They can be blatant, as in the series of pictures from our reading of people praying to many different gods, or they can be subtler as in I Stand Here Ironing. In thinking about the story I wanted to tell, it became clear to me that it was laced with several of my beliefs. They were concrete, they were there, and they meant something in my life. The beauty was, the more I thought, the more beliefs I though of and realized how many things you could take away from a seemingly goofy, and somewhat crass tale.
My story was kind of inherently funny, as “bad date” stories often are. I chose to play off that as much as possible, and tried to turn my performance into a sort of stand-up comic routine. Obviously it’s a little different, and I’m no stand-up comedian, but I based some of my mannerisms of comedians I like, such as Jim Gaffigan. The thing I hesitate to reveal, as I don’t know if people would be relieved or disappointed, is that my story was not entirely true. It is in fact a culmination of multiple true experiences I have gone through. The fact that I did this could represent several of my different beliefs, the most prominent here probably being that your little experiences in life mash and collide together to make you who you are. There are others, but I’ll leave it to my audience to decide what they think the belief is… or to just sit back and laugh. That’s cool too.
Creating my story was a lot of fun, albeit nerve-wracking. As usual, the vague assignment description led to a certain lack of confidence. Was my media sufficient? Is the story beliefy enough? Is it what I’m supposed to be doing? As with most of the assignments in this class, I would come around to the feeling yet again, that I loved the vagueness; for the Fireside Chat in particular.
That vagueness resulted in a wide array of varying performances. Every single student’s presentation was different. I absolutely loved the Fireside Chat. I’ve never felt closer, or more interested in my classmates; every story, personal or not, felt like a deep glimpse into their lives, and obviously their beliefs. I have gotten to know these people over the course of this semester and this was a fantastic culmination to the whole experience. I thoroughly enjoyed it despite the fear and panic felt right before performing. But it was okay, because you knew everyone else was feeling the same way. It really brought us together, was completely entertaining and was a perfect culmination of the course in my opinion. I just hope whoever is grading me liked my story.
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