
WTH with a staged conversation in a presentation. Paddle with me here:I am giving a presentation with Capn Canoe on the benefits of the JStroke vs the basic forward stroke when canoeing flat water. The following dialogue occurs:
Capn Canoe: “The JStroke seems to be somewhat technical, is it difficult to master?”
Me: “Great question, no it just requires ….”
Why are we presenting this like a conversation between us? It’s not a conversation, it’s a presentation. Stop pretending it is one. I rarely find myself confusing a presentation with a casual conversation between two predetermined individuals standing on a stage in front of a crowd of people.
I am hoping that this isn’t just a random question that Capn Canoe just thought of. What I am expecting is that this topic was prepared for prior to presenting and that the necessary info is presented. Any actual questions from the audience can be addressed in a Q&A if there is one.

Stop with the mock conversation. We’ve paddled this river before and it’s no better than the Muskingum. (Read my review of Muskingum here https://chupacabracanoe.com/2024/07/04/thats-rank-the-muskingum/)
And another thing, stop with the “Great question….” I hope it’s a great question because I would hate to travel all this way in the company of all these people to listen to a presentation with info provided to answer stupid questions. I hope you screened for that.
If you are asking “why does this bother me?”
Great question.
Thanks for listening
JStroke


Leave a Reply to Capt’n Canoe Cancel reply