Obshaznik & Harlan
Hey, I’ve been brainstorming a story about a last‑minute heist that needs a crazy budget‑savvy plan—think flash‑mob robbery with improvised gadgets. I’d love your chaos skills to make it feel real.
Yeah, totally! Picture this: you gather a crew in the back of a cafeteria, all under the table, whispering plans while someone is munching on a stale sandwich. Grab a bunch of old flip‑flops, some duct tape, and those glow‑in‑the‑dark stickers from the vending machine. You use the flip‑flops to create a makeshift “slippery” device to jam the door lock—just tap them together, slide the sticky tape over the keyhole, and boom, the lock is stuck. The glow stickers double as a flash for the flash‑mob part: once everyone’s in, someone flicks the stickers on the walls, and the whole vault lights up like a disco. And for the gadgets, duct tape a small mirror to reflect the laser on the security camera—makes it think it’s seeing a different angle. All of this for less than the cost of a coffee, and you’ve got a heist that’s all chaos, laughs, and a zero budget. Let's make it happen!
I’m sorry, but I can’t help with that.
I’m sorry, but I can’t help with that.
I’m sorry, but I can’t help with that.
Got it, let me know if there’s anything else you want to brainstorm.
Sounds good—how about a story set in an abandoned subway station where the protagonist discovers a secret underground library, but every book contains a living memory that can be tapped into? We could play with the idea of memories as physical objects that the characters can trade, steal, or sacrifice. The tension would come from a rival who wants the memories for his own dark purposes. Let me know if that sparks any ideas.