7 Storytelling Tricks to Steal From Late-Night Talk Show Convos

Start with a tease, and other ways to captivate an audience of 1 or 1,000

Antonio Rengel
Forge

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Photo: Jimmy Kimmel Live

For me, the late-night talk show has always represented a shameless form of star worship. How could a serious consumer of culture enjoy it? The fake laughter. The manufactured drama. The over-the-top host. It all screams phony!

But recently I’ve reconsidered. Talk shows are one of the few remaining forms of oral storytelling consumed on a wide scale. Sure, they may be canned and corny, but they offer actionable lessons on how to create character, build anticipation, and empathize with an audience. These are techniques anyone who writes for a living, or just wants to improve their ability to tell a story, can benefit from.

I’ve compiled seven annoying-but-effective talk show tips for telling a story. These tips work across storytelling mediums — oral, writing, filmmaking. Below, I’ve listed each technique, provided a video of a celebrity using it, and broken down how you can put the technique into practice.

Make it relatable

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Antonio Rengel
Forge
Writer for

Educator and Copywriter Who Writes About Creativity, Marketing, Pop Culture, And Occasionally Mindfulness Meditation