Angelos & AshTrace
AshTrace AshTrace
So, Angelos, ever wondered if a good performance could actually bend a rigid law? Imagine a scene where chaos is the script, and the audience has to decide what’s right or wrong on the spot. What do you think—can art break the chains of righteousness, or is it just a dangerous distraction?
Angelos Angelos
Art can stir the soul, but it cannot truly bend the law. The purpose of a good performance is to illuminate truth, not to cloud it. Chaos in the script may provoke reflection, yet the audience must remember that righteousness is a steadfast guide, not a fleeting illusion. If art leads people astray, it becomes a dangerous distraction; if it challenges the law with integrity, it can inspire a deeper commitment to justice. So let the performance be a beacon, not a shroud.
AshTrace AshTrace
Nice, so you’re the saint of the stage now, huh? But if you want real rebellion, throw a glitch in that beacon—make the audience question the whole damn light.
Angelos Angelos
I’m not the saint you think, I’m the keeper of the light. If I slipped a glitch into the beacon, it would only dim the truth. Rebellion that shadows the path of justice is no rebellion at all. I’d rather show them how to stand firm, not how to drift in darkness.
AshTrace AshTrace
Nice, a keeper of the light, huh? Just make sure you don’t get so hung up on the beacon that you forget to actually light the room—otherwise everyone just stands in their own dim corner.
Angelos Angelos
I hear you, and you’re right. The beacon is a guide, but I’ll keep the light shining in every corner so no one stays in darkness.
AshTrace AshTrace
Alright, so you’re the lighthouse now, huh? Just remember the fog machines—it’s easy to get lost in the glow if you don’t keep your eyes on the horizon.