Send us a text SHAKESPEARE: Aye. The mind loves threes. Beginning, middle, end. Birth, life, death. Knock, knock, knock. GEORGE: I knew you’d do that—three examples to explain the “rule of three.” SHAKESPEARE: Would you have me offer four? That way lies chaos. GEORGE: So why does three work so well? What’s the magic? SHAKESPEARE: Because one is a point. Two is a choice. Three is a pattern. GEORGE: That is… annoyingly perfect. SHAKESPEARE: I have practiced. GEORGE: Okay—if ...
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Send us a text SHAKESPEARE: Aye. The mind loves threes. Beginning, middle, end. Birth, life, death. Knock, knock, knock. GEORGE: I knew you’d do that—three examples to explain the “rule of three.” SHAKESPEARE: Would you have me offer four? That way lies chaos. GEORGE: So why does three work so well? What’s the magic? SHAKESPEARE: Because one is a point. Two is a choice. Three is a pattern. GEORGE: That is… annoyingly perfect. SHAKESPEARE: I have practiced. GEORGE: Okay—if ...
Send us a text NARRATOR: It’s Christmas Eve at the Metropolitan Museum of Toys and Childhood Artifacts— after the last visitor has gone, after the gift-shop lights click off, after the lobby wreath stops smelling like “busy” and starts smelling like “quiet.” [SFX: KEY RING JINGLE. DOOR CLICKS. FOOTSTEPS ON TILE.] NIGHT WATCHMAN (GENTLE, CONTENT): All right, everybody… Merry Christmas Eve. (beat) Now… let’s have a peaceful night. No surprises. No— NIGHT WATCHMAN (LOOKING UP): …No surprise...
Celebrate Creativity
Send us a text SHAKESPEARE: Aye. The mind loves threes. Beginning, middle, end. Birth, life, death. Knock, knock, knock. GEORGE: I knew you’d do that—three examples to explain the “rule of three.” SHAKESPEARE: Would you have me offer four? That way lies chaos. GEORGE: So why does three work so well? What’s the magic? SHAKESPEARE: Because one is a point. Two is a choice. Three is a pattern. GEORGE: That is… annoyingly perfect. SHAKESPEARE: I have practiced. GEORGE: Okay—if ...