39: Off Broadway and Into Court, with Kevin Newbury and Kate Douglas

Theatre wunderkinds and storytelling specialists Kevin Newbury and Kate Douglas join the podcast to tell stories about telling stories. Kevin and Kate discuss how universal themes, conflicts, and archetypes can be used as formulas for brainstorming; suggest some practices you should borrow from writing for the stage; and reveal which pandemic-era guilty pleasure can actually make you a more engaging storyteller.Topics4:27    Translating events into a story  6:11    Why good storytelling is essential to your trial8:25    Unleashing your creative beast10:49  Summing up with loglines and taglines 12:57  Classic conflicts for framing your client’s case 14:36  Evoking an atmosphere to begin telling a story16:50  Universal story themes 20:26  Nourishing your creativity23:07  Importance of your elevator pitch24:14  Dramaturgy in trial 27:59  How a trial is like a tv show30:10  Defending the unsavory client33:15  New Orleans Trial program40:17  Signoff question Quote“When we come [to NITA programs], it’s always so much fun to sit around the table with these incredible lawyers and judges and hear all of their stories. I love to ask all of them, ‘What’s the wildest, strangest case that you’ve had this year?’ and [with] every single one of them it’s like, ‘Well, that’s a good idea for a tv show,’ ‘Well, that should be a movie,’ and I find that a lot of lawyers and judges are good storytellers when they’re recounting the adventures of something they just went through.” Kevin NewburyResourcesKevin Newbury (bio)Kate Douglas (bio)Deposition Skills & Trial Skills: New Orleans (NITA course) Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind (book)The Seven Basic Plots: Why We Tell Stories (book)Adam Gopnik in The New Yorker (article)The Secrets of Persuasive Legal Storytelling, with David Mann (podcast)Give ‘em the Ol’ Razzle Dazzle, with Dominic Gianna (podcast)

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If you’re a litigator or trial lawyer, your life is full—in and out of the courtroom. May the Record Reflect is the podcast of the National Institute for Trial Advocacy, and we know that if something related to lawyering is interesting to us, chances are it’s interesting to you, too. Trial skills, office life, personal development, and more—it’s all fair game on May the Record Reflect.