Weekly Unfinished Tales and Short Stories from our Dataset
This batch of narrative extractions represents specific data points derived from the ongoing “Unfinished Tales” creative arts and research program. These stories, ranging in genre and thematic focus, provide a rich, granular view into constructed scenarios exploring interpersonal dynamics, community engagement, and the complex interplay between individual and collective agency within various professional and social contexts. Each narrative contributes to our evolving dataset, offering distinct perspectives on human interaction under pressure.
The extracted narratives are instrumental in furthering the project’s dual objectives. For AI-Assisted Scriptwriting, they offer nuanced examples of character development, conflict escalation, and thematic resolution, serving as valuable input for training generative models to produce more sophisticated and emotionally resonant story arcs. Concurrently, their exploration of collaboration, leadership, and ethical dilemmas in knowledge translation provides critical case studies for Talent Development, highlighting essential skills required for creative professionals navigating AI and immersive technologies, particularly in managing complex project dynamics and stakeholder relationships.
Today’s Unfinished Tales and Short Stories

Lines of Retreat
Category: Knowledge Translation | Genre: Western Style Boys Love
The morning after a tense, rain-soaked encounter, Simon, feeling the weight of the project’s escalating danger, confronts George in their makeshift office. The air is thick with unspoken history and professional friction, complicated by the raw, confusing intimacy of the night before.

Static and Spruce
Category: Expository | Genre: Slice of Life
A group of teenagers and a researcher gather in an aging community center during an autumn evening to discuss a new project.

Projector and Proof
Category: Expository | Genre: Slice of Life
A town hall meeting, usually sparse and tense, is unexpectedly packed. A large screen dominates the stage. The air crackles with anticipation and a hopeful, nervous energy as Leo, Sam, and Jordan prepare to present their project.

The First Real Question
Category: Expository | Genre: Slice of Life
In a quiet community center classroom, Sarah, a researcher, faces a group of indifferent teenagers. Disillusioned by her previous attempts to connect, she abandons her carefully crafted lesson plan and poses a spontaneous question that unexpectedly ignites a raw, honest conversation about their town’s failings.

Human Cost
Category: Knowledge Translation | Genre: Western Style Boys Love
Picking up in Simon’s office after a charged moment between him and George, the quiet tension is abruptly broken by news of a violent act against Mia’s family, forcing Simon to shed his reticence and act decisively.
Design Notes and Applied Research
This batch, featuring Western Style Boys Love and Slice of Life genres, directly reflects the project’s exploration of skills development and digital transformation within the arts. Western Style Boys Love demonstrates how niche narratives thrive and evolve through digital platforms, fostering creator skills in audience engagement, digital publishing, and genre-specific storytelling techniques. Similarly, Slice of Life content frequently leverages digital mediums for episodic distribution and community interaction, showcasing adaptability in content creation for online consumption. These genres underscore the critical role digital environments play in enabling new forms of artistic expression and cultivating diverse creative skill sets.
The inclusion of Knowledge Translation and Expository subject categories further illuminates the project’s focus on skills development and the digital transformation of the arts. Knowledge Translation emphasizes the crucial skill of making complex artistic processes and theoretical frameworks accessible, often facilitated and enhanced by digital communication tools and platforms. Expository approaches are fundamental for documenting, explaining, and instructing within the rapidly evolving digital arts landscape, requiring clarity and logical structuring for online dissemination. Together, these categories highlight the intellectual skills vital for navigating and contributing to a digitally transformed arts sector, alongside the digital tools that enable their effective application and sharing.
About the Project
The Unfinished Tales and Short Stories collection was an interdisciplinary arts and narrative storytelling experiment in 2025. It was part of a creative arts and participatory research project by The Arts Incubator Winnipeg and the Art Borups Corners collectives. It focuses on two key areas: AI-Assisted Storytelling and Scriptwriting, exploring AI tools for generating ideas, plot structures, and story arcs; and Talent Development and Training, studying digital skills, literacy and training needs for creative professionals by experimenting with AI and immersive technologies to inform future projects. Funding and support were generously provided by the Ontario Arts Council Multi and Inter-Arts Projects program and the Government of Ontario. We thank them for supporting the arts, digital transformation, and applied Artificial Intelligence (AI) research.
