Discover this podcast and so much more

Podcasts are free to enjoy without a subscription. We also offer ebooks, audiobooks, and so much more for just $11.99/month.

33. The Secrets of Persuasive Legal Storytelling

33. The Secrets of Persuasive Legal Storytelling

FromMay the Record Reflect


33. The Secrets of Persuasive Legal Storytelling

FromMay the Record Reflect

ratings:
Length:
45 minutes
Released:
Aug 9, 2022
Format:
Podcast episode

Description

Legal communications specialist David Mann joins the podcast to encourage listeners become masters of persuasion through storytelling. In this episode, David explains that legal case storytelling is not just for trials, tells how to flip the narrative script and align the fact finder with your client, and reveals a trove of writing techniques that help sharpen your writing and storytelling skills.Content Warning: Mention of sexual assault. A brief, non-graphic discussion of a defendant’s sexual assault case occurring from 20:35 to 22:03.Topics2:52     Why boring opening statements are boring  7:08    The Seven Basic Plots and the stories we tell 10:38  Orienting the “characters” in your legal case story 12:04  Unifying the fact finder — counterintuitively 19:03  Defending the unsympathetic client 23:11  Building context through storytelling 27:16  Where facts and technical information fit into persuasion 29:01  Differences between telling the plaintiff’s story and the defendant’s  31:42  A daily practice to become a better writer33:19  Brainstorming and self-editing38:44  Workshopping your legal case story42:10  Signoff questionQuote“This is the fundamental difference between a legal case story told to, say, a jury versus narrative fiction that we watch in movies or read in books. The fundamental difference is that the narrative fiction that we’re used to watching in movies is a finished story. It has a beginning, middle, and end. The credits roll at the end, you walk away – that story is complete. In a legal case story, it isn’t complete because the jury is the end of the story. The story hasn’t been completed yet. They will complete the story.” David MannResourcesDavid Mann (website)Story Power: Building Persuasive Case Narratives (course)Presentation and Oral Advocacy Skills for Any Lawyer (course)The Seven Basic Plots: Why We Tell Stories (Wikipedia)The Artist’s Way: A Spiritual Path to Higher Creativity (book)Engaging the Jury in the First Two Minutes (free webcast)Winning Cases with Better Storytelling (free webcast)Give ‘em the Ol’ Razzle Dazzle, with Dominic Gianna (podcast)Metallica (v. Napster) and (v. Guerlain) litigation
Released:
Aug 9, 2022
Format:
Podcast episode

Titles in the series (53)

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.