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TEDx@TEDGlobal | June Cohen | What makes a great TED Talk

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    What is a great TED Talk?
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    What are the elements of a great TED Talk?
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    What makes a TED.com talk?
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    (Laughter)
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    If you're thinking about that you'd like
    some of the talks from your event
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    to make it to TED.com,
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    what are some of the filters
    that we look at
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    to come to that decision?
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    Fortunately, they're really the same,
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    what makes a great TED Talk
    makes a great TED.com talk.
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    But I want to talk through that
    with you in a way you can think about both
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    as you're booking speakers
    and working with them.
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    The first thing to thing
    we think makes a great TED Talk
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    is "Tell us something new."
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    Many of us at TED come
    from journalistic backgrounds
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    and you can almost think about TED
    as a biannual magazine on stage.
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    We really think
    about what is new out there.
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    What are the new, different ideas
    we haven't heard of before?
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    Sometimes is the topic.
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    There are speakers at TEDGlobal this year,
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    who are here claiming
    that plants have brains.
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    I haven't heard that before.
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    That's a really interesting perspective.
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    Sometimes is a really
    new angle on an old topic.
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    For example, about climate change.
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    We had Al Gore four years ago,
    that was a really definitive talk
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    that climate change
    is a fact, it's a problem.
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    To talk about climate change,
    you need a new angle.
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    Think about having a material scientist,
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    or a photographer
    who photographs icebergs.
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    Someone telling the story in a new way.
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    We think about this for TED.com:
    is this new, fresh and relevant?
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    One of the great, amazing things for us
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    in working with the TEDx community
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    is that you know your communities
    and there are so many stories,
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    ideas, issues and people
    that are local to you
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    that could be presented and brought
    to an international audience
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    in ways we've never heard of before.
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    You're the eyes and ears
    in your own regional areas,
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    and we're so excited
    about bringing those new ideas in.
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    The second thing to think about
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    is evoking contagious emotions.
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    One of the things we consider
    for talks on TED
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    is "Are these talks spreading?"
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    Are people sharing them with each other?
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    Do they have a viral nature?
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    When you think about viral videos online,
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    obviously people first think
    of kitty videos, and pranks,
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    that you want to share because
    they surprise you or make you laugh.
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    But there are other kinds
    of contagious emotions.
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    People want to share something
    when it is emotional.
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    When something brings a lump
    to their throat,
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    or kind of brings butterflies
    to their stomachs,
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    they want someone
    next to them to share it.
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    But they also share things
    that teach them something new.
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    If you get an aha! moment from a talk,
    you want to share it, let others know.
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    Or if you've learned
    something important, that feels urgent,
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    you want to pass that on.
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    Not every talk needs to inspire
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    this incredible desire to be shared
    with somebody else,
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    but many of the great talks do.
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    The next thing to think about
    is to tell a story.
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    This is so fundamental
    to every great TED Talk.
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    It's not just relaying facts,
    it's not just a lecture.
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    A great speaker takes you on a journey,
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    they tell you a story,
    they pull you along with them.
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    It doesn't matter whether
    it's about bacteria or architecture,
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    fish or climate change.
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    You're pulled in
    and you go along with them.
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    That doesn't mean that every person
    has to describe their talk as a journey,
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    but it should take you somewhere.
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    Part of telling you a great story
    is being personal.
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    A great story tells you
    something about the speaker.
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    It doesn't need to be confessional,
    you don't want to know everything.
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    But you want to feel them
    inside the story.
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    A great talk that has
    a personal story at the center.
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    That personal story could be about
    their passion for certain kinds of fish,
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    or something from their childhood
    that brought them to an insight later on.
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    But the personal story, I think, is how
    we relate to an individual TED Talk.
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    We may not know anything
    about the subject matter,
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    or we may not even think we care about it,
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    but we can relate
    to that personal storytelling.
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    You can also think about it
    as a personal story with an idea inside,
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    or an idea that has
    a personal part at the center.
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    This is an odd thing to say...
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    My sister-in-law is a rabbi,
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    and she says she uses TED Talks
    all the time for "sermon fodder."
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    And she believes every TED Talk
    is kind of a secular sermon.
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    It's kind of teaching you something,
    it's giving you a lesson.
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    It's giving you a way to think
    about your own life and journey.
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    That's very subtle,
    I don't tell any of the speakers that,
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    it's not part of our speaker prep,
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    but it's an interesting lens
    on what makes a great talk.
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    One more thing about the personal.
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    You want to guard against people
    going too far in that direction
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    and just a quick example.
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    One of the trends we have to fight at TED
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    is every speaker wanting
    to replicate Jill Bolte Taylor's talk.
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    Bolte Taylor was the neuroscientist
    who observed a stroke from the inside out.
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    Incredible talk,
    our most popular of all time.
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    But it's very unique,
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    and people sort of misinterpret
    what was great in that talk.
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    It's great because it has science
    combined with emotion,
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    draws in your left and right brain.
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    It's an incredible story.
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    She shows a human brain,
    she almost cries.
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    It's an incredible journey,
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    but often people will interpret that
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    as just the part
    about her crying at the end.
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    They'll forget about all the other pieces
    that went into it along the way.
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    Guard against that.
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    (Laughter)
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    The next piece
    is don't lose the audience.
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    I've found this image by searching
    for the word "'chase" on Flickr.
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    But my idea is often times,
    speakers who are such experts
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    in their own area,
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    will kind of race ahead of the audience.
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    Many of the speakers that we bring
    are experts in their own field
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    and are used to addressing
    people in their own field.
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    Scientists that talk to scientists,
    businesses to businesses audiences.
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    Architects and artists are sometimes
    the biggest culprits.
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    They all use the jargon of their own field
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    and that's incredibly alienating
    to the audience.
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    One of the things you want
    to talk through with the speakers
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    is this idea that they are speaking
    to a general intelligent audience.
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    That's something you can help them with.
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    When you're inside your field,
    you don't know what your jargon is.
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    You don't know words like
    "postmodernist structure"
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    is not really accessible
    to the average audience.
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    That's something you can help
    your speakers with, reviewing their talks,
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    helping them understand.
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    "I went to college
    and I don't understand that word."
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    Or "I'm tracking with you,
    but you really lost me there.
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    Can we think of another way
    of explaining that?"
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    That will be really helpful to them.
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    Often times we'll see talks
    that are such interesting topics
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    but they are just addressed in a way
    that the general audience can't follow.
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    It's just too specific for us to use.
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    The next thing is start strong.
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    For us, this has to do both with editing
    and also with the talk.
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    On TED.com, we think you all know,
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    or maybe some of you might not,
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    we edit, of course, all the talks
    that go on to TED.com
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    No talk was as perfect on the stage
    as it was when we put it online.
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    We really work to bring
    the speakers' best selves out,
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    while staying extremely true
    to what they actually delivered.
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    But we edit out their "umms,"
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    if they trip or spill water on themselves.
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    All these things have happened
    and won't appear on TED.com.
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    What we also do, and it's really important
    in TED Talks' success,
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    is we edit the very beginning.
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    We don't begin with the opening remarks,
    the "hello," "Thank you for having me."
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    Or even their opening jokes,
    people like to have one.
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    But their opening joke distracts.
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    We edit the talk so that it begins
    right where it takes off.
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    We do that online because people online
    are very vulnerable to distraction.
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    We all know this.
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    You start watching a video,
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    and at the beginning
    there's a host's introduction,
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    something slow, and you don't mean to,
    but you just got distracted.
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    You start an email, or a web search,
    and you're just gone.
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    So we start our talks that way
    and we edit them that way,
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    but it's good to keep it
    in mind for the talk itself,
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    when you're hearing the person rehearse.
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    We've had speakers at TED who wanted
    to read two paragraphs out of a letter
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    at the beginning of their talk.
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    Or start with something
    that really doesn't grab us,
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    but two minutes in,
    they get really interesting.
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    It's just something for you to think about
    as you're helping the speakers,
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    to start on something
    really compelling and interesting.
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    Another thing to think about is focus.
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    18 minutes is a very short
    period of time, as you know.
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    And there are talks even shorter.
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    There is time for one idea.
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    Only one idea.
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    And it's so hard for most speakers,
    and I'm guilty of the same thing.
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    They want to tell everything.
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    Or they want to have multiple ideas
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    and get them all in 18 minutes.
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    And they do that either by rushing
    through things or leaving things out,
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    or simply just by not quite making sense.
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    Or not fulfilling
    the potential of the talk.
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    The more you can focus in, the better.
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    This one is particularly for TEDx talks
    coming onto TED.com
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    In curating most of your events
    you always want a mix
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    of local and global ideas.
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    One of the things with many
    of the TEDx talks we've looked at
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    is that they can often be very local
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    without addressing the audience in a way
    that can be expanded beyond that.
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    And we have this issue at TED as well
    as we work with speakers.
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    I think that many of your events
    will have local talks
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    that are really interesting
    to the people in the room,
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    to the local community.
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    But those talks aren't
    quite appropriate for TED.com.
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    For the ones we'd use, we want
    to be able to extract wider.
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    If it's a local idea,
    have it presented in a way
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    that a wider audience can see relevance.
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    Part of the things that go into that
    is being aware of regional knowledge.
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    If you're talking about something local,
    if there is an issue in Houston
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    or a new building going up in Sao Paulo,
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    everyone in the room might know
    that this is happening,
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    but just helping the speaker
    give a sentence of context
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    about what it is they're talking about
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    will help the talk transcend the room
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    and move into and be applicable
    to the wider world.
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    This doesn't mean you shouldn't be
    covering certain local ideas,
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    but should think about it with an eye
    towards the people who aren't in the room.
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    And this is something we've really had
    to train ourselves on in TED.
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    We are not addressing
    a thousand fairly wealthy people
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    in a room in California anymore.
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    We're just not.
    We're addressing the world.
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    And that really shifts
    how we think about the program.
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    Our obligation to be broad,
    our obligation to diversity.
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    And to think about things more deeply.
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    I'll give you one example
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    of a talk that really
    made us rethink things.
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    We often had audience talks at TED,
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    both at TEDUniversity and on stage.
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    One talk that was just great in the room.
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    People like to show vacation photos
    and we've had a couple of talks like that.
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    One of them was about a trip
    that someone took to North Korea,
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    and his perspective
    and what he learned in this trip.
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    It was fascinating
    to the group in California
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    that was listening to it.
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    But it really sounded a bit offensive
    once you put out to a global audience.
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    And it wasn't actually
    that there was anything...
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    There's nothing wrong with the talk
    in the context it was given,
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    but it really had the wrong tone
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    once you've opened it up
    to the wider world.
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    That's the type of thing
    you have to think about
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    when thinking about taking talks
    from TEDx to TED.com.
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    That they're going
    to a much wider audience.
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    Finally, I think the biggest secret
    to the success of any TED Talk
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    is practice.
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    It's rehearsing.
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    It's working with the speaker
    from the first moment
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    that you talk to them
    and getting them used to the idea
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    they're going to have to practice
    and rehearse to get it right.
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    There's sort of heartbreak,
    with both TED and TEDx Talks...
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    "That's such a good talk, but it's not
    the best that person could give."
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    They had a really good talk in them
    but they didn't quite get it out.
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    And honestly, the difference
    between a medium talk and a great one
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    is often just practice.
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    It's having the person commit
    to actually rehearsing.
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    This is something that speakers
    will often resist. Also our speakers.
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    And I'm sure this happens
    with your speakers.
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    They feel they're above it
    or they think it's kind of silly.
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    Or they think they don't need it.
  • 12:35 - 12:36
    Everyone needs to rehearse.
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    It was interesting when we did
    the Cannes advertising festival,
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    one session was for TED
    and Hans Rosling was speaking.
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    He's the Swedish professor.
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    Global health issues,
    statistics on the screen,
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    he narrates them crazily
    and he's a fantastic speaker.
  • 12:52 - 12:55
    He has five talks online.
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    I think he has more views
    than any other speaker on TED.com.
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    The other speakers were furious with me
    because I had put him on first.
  • 13:03 - 13:05
    So they all had to follow him.
  • 13:05 - 13:07
    But one of the things they noted to me
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    is how much he rehearsed.
  • 13:10 - 13:13
    From the second we opened up the room
    and we were still setting it up
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    for hours and hours, he had
    this table and all these props.
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    He kept going over it for hours
    with a countdown clock.
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    Moving the things around, practicing,
    getting his phrasing right.
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    And he's one of the most
    successful speakers on TED.
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    So that's one of the things
    you could really integrate
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    into your own practice
    as a TEDx organizer,
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    and really impress on your speakers:
    the best talks are produced by practice.
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    That is what I had to share
    with you today.
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    I'm incredibly impressed
    with all the work you're doing,
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    and so looking forward to seeing
    all of your talks come in.
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    And to talking to you over the next week.
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    Thanks.
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    (Applause)
Title:
TEDx@TEDGlobal | June Cohen | What makes a great TED Talk
Description:

June Cohen, executive producer of TED Media, asks, and answers what makes a great TED Talk, what are the elements of a great TED Talk, and what makes a TED.com talk. Watch it and find out!

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDxTalks
Duration:
14:01

English subtitles

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