I saw the new Super Mario Galaxy movie today with my family. It was really well made. The animation was gorgeous, the 3D was good, and the story was well told.
But here’s what got me. Nintendo layered thirty years of Easter eggs into a movie that works perfectly for a seven-year-old who’s never picked up a GameCube. Robot Rob. Star Fox. Mr. Game and Watch. Crosses from Mario Galaxy, Mario Odyssey, Super Smash Bros. A cornucopia of references that made me grin in a theater full of kids who had no idea why I was smiling.
Two audiences. One story. Both satisfied.
They didn’t have to screen-adapt the thing. They just took stories that everybody loved from the games and seamlessly wove them in and out.
Later tonight I was scrolling Facebook and stopped on a Gabriel Iglesias clip. The man literally stands on a stage and talks about his life. No props. No gimmicks. Just stories about his mom, his son, his friends. He’s old school funny — from the generation that made fun of each other and it made them friends. He doesn’t get easily offended. He just holds the audience through his delivery and brings the laughs.
A $200 million animated movie and a guy alone with a microphone. Both doing the exact same thing: telling good stories.
I know this because I’ve lived it. I spent years in Toastmasters giving speeches, and the ones that landed hardest were never the clever ones. They were the personal ones. When I talked about my wife — how we met, how she walked with me through cancer, the ways she shows up that nobody else sees — the room would lock in. Not because the story was dramatic. Because it was real.
One of the best speeches I ever gave was about the butterfly effect. In the tenth grade I threw myself into singing. Gave it everything I had. That led to a full scholarship at my hometown college. My frustration with that college led me to apply somewhere else. Another full scholarship. And that’s where I met my bride. As soon as we met, I didn’t need to sing anymore.
One decision rippled forward and changed everything. The point of the speech wasn’t the love story — it was that sometimes we have to be excellent at something and give it everything we have for that season, even if later that’s not who we are anymore. Today leads us to tomorrow. But telling it through the real story is what made the room feel it.
Whether you’re Nintendo layering thirty years of games into a kids’ movie, Gabriel Iglesias talking about his mom, or me standing at a podium talking about the awesome girl I met in college — the job is the same.
Tell a good story. Don’t deviate from your source material to impress anybody. Know your audience well enough to layer in the things that make them feel seen. And make it real enough that they come back for more.
The tools change. The platforms change. The story is always the thing.
