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A man and a woman communicate through the medium of a board game, briefly wondering, "Is there more to life than this?"
Read the full description.
- Playing
- Trivial Pursuit
- From
- Conrad Bishop
A module from "Family Snapshots," sixty-five 90-second dramas about family life, broadcast from 1994 to the present on more than 70 stations.
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Also in the Family Snapshots series
Jazz
(01:37)
From: Conrad Bishop
A family operates on the same principle as a jazz combo: improvisation on a theme.
Warren Upstairs
(01:37)
From: Conrad Bishop
A woman reveals her terror when her recently-retired husband is suddenly in poor health.
Phone Message
(01:38)
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The adult daughter hasn't called; the parents are desperate; but at least there's a message on the machine.
Twins
(01:37)
From: Conrad Bishop
Twin sisters are torn between the fear of losing each other and wanting to break away from each other now that one of them is getting married.
Entrepreneur
(01:38)
From: Conrad Bishop
An ingenuous young taxi driver applies for a bank loan, inspired by his father's vision of American opportunity, to start a steel mill.
Born Smiling
(01:38)
From: Conrad Bishop
An adult daughter, bringing flowers to her mother's grave, imagines what her mother would say to her, both condemning and loving.
The Arrangements
(01:38)
From: Conrad Bishop
A sister reminds her accusing brother who held the household together when the mother was abusive and alcoholic in their growing-up years. The score is even.
Armsted
(01:37)
From: Conrad Bishop
An elderly man prepares to take his senile wife to the nursing home, trying inarticulately to express his love.
Joellen & Willie
(01:38)
From: Conrad Bishop
A woman questions her 15 year old daughter about going out with an older man and being busted. "The grass was Chuck's."
Burke & May
(01:38)
From: Conrad Bishop
A grandmother-to-be is departing to visit her daughter who is having her first baby. Her husband assures her, yes, he can take care of himself.
Piece Description
A module from "Family Snapshots," sixty-five 90-second dramas about family life, broadcast from 1994 to the present on more than 70 stations.
Hans Anderson
Posted on June 07, 2004 at 04:50 AM | Permalink
Review of Trivial Pursuit
An interesting short piece that could spice up an hour, but it might take some explaining. Or, you could throw it in there during a fundraiser and let people try to figure out why it's playing. I think pieces like this, instead of announcers talking endlessly during a fundraiser, trying to raise money might make a stronger impression and lead people to go to their phone to give not from exasperation at having their favorite shows withheld or interrupted, but from being inspired by something unusual or offbeat.