You are free to choose whatever genre and format you want to use for your remixed story. The only requirements are that your project needs to be digital, it needs to be published online, and it should use multiple modes of communication.
Because the options are so open, I wanted to provide some example ideas for you. This is not an exhaustive list, just a collection of ideas.
- a series of cartoon animations
- a series of comic strips or a graphic novel (Shakespearean Web Comics)
- a video
- a digital scrapbook
- a documentary video
- an online museum display
- an infographic (Shakespearean Infographic, Peter Pan enters the job force)
- a Harry Potter-style newspaper (with embedded animated gifs/videos)
- a Facebook-style profile and timeline (If Facebook existed during WWII)
- a series of text messages or Tweets from characters in the story (28 Snapchats From Harry Potter, Hamlet: The Meme Edition)
- “live” blogging/reporting of an event from the story by a character/participant (Rep. John Lewis Tweets Dramatic Recounting of Selma March)
- a pinboard by a character, author, historical figure, etc. (Pinterest Ideas)
- a collection of digital artifacts found on a character’s USB drive (e.g., letters, “to do” lists, data, and poems written by the character for his or her eyes only)
- an episode of a reality TV show
- a video of the story told in a different genre (like this example for The Shining or this version of WILLY WONKA – Recut Horror Trailer or If FROZEN Was A Horror Film)
- a photo essay
- documentation or instructions
- something amazingly hard to predict (like A Guinea Pig Pride and Prejudice trailer)