Their stories, in their own voice — before they fade.
We call your mom, dad, or grandparent, get them talking about their life, and turn it into short clips your whole family can keep and share.
Old people carry a lifetime of stories. When they go, the stories go with them.
Most families never catch them. Everyone's busy. Families live far apart. Nobody sits and listens anymore. So kids grow up barely knowing where they came from. They know all about strangers online — but not the people in their own family.
One More Story fixes that. We call your mom, dad, or grandparent. We get them talking about their life. Then we turn it into short clips that are easy to play and easy to share.
Three easy steps.
Tell us about them
A few quick questions — their name, what they love to talk about, what to steer clear of. Takes five minutes.
We call them
A real person calls and gets them talking. No script for them to follow. Usually two short, relaxed calls that add up to about an hour — because nobody's at their best for a full hour straight.
You get their stories
Within a week, you get their life as short clips — easy to play, easy to text to the whole family. In their own voice. Yours to keep.
A keepsake — not a recording stuck in a drawer.
- Their stories, cut into short clips you can actually share.
- The full conversation too, start to finish.
- All in their own voice — the laugh, the pauses, the way they say your name.
- A private page for the whole family. Not public, can't be searched. Yours to keep.
Here's the trick: because we don't know your family, we get the whole story.
When your own kids ask, you leave stuff out — you figure they already know it. So the story comes out half-told. It only makes sense to people who were already there.
We don't know any of it. So we ask about everything. Who was that? Where? What year? Why did it matter? You end up telling the whole thing, start to finish.
That's what makes it last 100 years. A great-grandkid who never met you will still understand every word.
Here's the part people don't expect: they love it.
Nobody asks old people about their lives anymore. People ask if they ate, or took their pills — not who they were. An hour where someone really wants to hear your story is rare. For a lot of older folks, it's the best they've felt in months.
Don't take our word for it.
The older person feels heard
Someone finally asked about their life — and really wanted to know.
The family keeps their voice
For good. The laugh, the pauses, the way they tell it.
The kids get their roots
The grandkids finally know who they came from.
The real reason it exists: to bring the young and the old back together through their stories.
No subscription. No surprises.
You don't lose them all at once. You lose them slowly.
The stories fade while they're still here — the way Mom tells it today is the best it'll ever be. Do it early and you lose nothing. Wait too long and you lose it all.
Someday, a kid who never met her will hear her laugh — like she's right there in the room. That's the whole point.