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Action Figures

Two performers do a regular scene, but they can only move their eyes and mouths. During the scene, two "Movers" (Audience
Members) can move the performers or their appendages and the performers must go with it and justify it as they perform the
scene. Tap the back of the thigh to get them to walk with that leg.
A Day in the Life
This is a free form game meant to follow an audience interview. Performers do a collection of scenes that reenact an average day
in the life of our featured audience member. All basic improv editing tools may be used.
Alphabet
This is a scene consisting of 26 lines of dialogue. The first line starts with a given letter (say `R`). The reply to that line must start
with a `S`, and so on, until the whole alphabet has been covered. After `Z` comes `A`. Players that hesitate, use the wrong letter,
uses random words or does not move along the scene are replaced by another player. The replacement needs to take over the
character of the player they replaces. The host may change the scene at their will.
Back in My Day...
Players line up, and the audience provides nouns, people, occupations, etc. One player acts as host and calls out the audience
suggestions. When a suggestion is called players need to complete the sentence with the suggestion and offer a punch line in the
following format. Example Facebook. "Back in my day, we didn't have Facebook, we only poked the Pillsbury Dough Boy!"
Because I Said So
A line of players is made just off stage. Two players start one on either side of a chair placed in the middle of the stage. The host
gets a random suggestion. The host then sits in the chair and asks that question to the player on the right somehow based on that
suggestion. After the response the player asked "Why?" to the other player. After they respond, they ask "Why?" to the first player.
This goes back and forth until one of the two players cannot come up with a response and yells "Because I said so!" That player is
eliminated and someone from the line comes and takes their place, a new suggestion is gotten and the game starts over.
Blank Walks into a Bar
Players line up, and the audience provides nouns, people, occupations, etc. One player acts as host and calls out the audience
suggestions. When a suggestion is called players need to fill in the "blank" with the suggestion and offer a punch line in the
following format. Example Duck. "A Duck walks into a bar and the bartender says, "I'm sorry we don't serve ducks here they tend
to run up a bill.""

Busta Rap
This is a song game where everyone gets in a line on the front stage. We get a one syllable word or name suggestion. Everyone
then goes down the line telling a story one line at a time in the form of a rap. Each line must rhyme with the word suggested and
must help tell the story. The rap master will be the judge and has final say. If anyone does not rhyme or slant rhyme close enough,
does not help move the story along or just freezes and does not say anything, they are out. They step behind the line at the back
of the stage. If they are in the back of the line and know the word that the sentence will end with, they may shout the last word out
with them, or they can just be there for back up. A new suggestion is taken and the same story continues. We will continue until
there is only one rapper left. They will get to pick a suggestion from the audience and finish the rap up, wrapping up the story.
Catch Phrase
This game is played with three people. Two of the people have "catch phrases", two lines of dialogue each (one question and one
statement) that are collected from the audience. During the scene those "catch phrases" are the only thing they can say. They
may change the inflection or add different punctuation, but they may not change the words or the order of them. The third person
must play the scene like normal and help bring it to a conclusion.
Centerpiece
This game is a lot like Revolver. 4 players in a square; One person stands at the front as the centerpiece. The host asks for an
audience suggestion for the 3 players in front. Then the host asks the players to turn the square (to the right or to the left). So now
we have a different player in front with the centerpiece. These 3 get an audience suggestion. Turn again and ask for suggestion
again and do this once more. Then have players take their original position. The game is played as follows: the 3 players in front
start improvising a scene. Players play until the host yells "Rotate right or Left", at which time all players rotate in the desired
direction. The 3 players in front start playing a scene based on their suggestion until host calls again. This is repeated. They can
either plainly continue it, or continue at some time in the future (a day later, a year later, a century later). The center piece needs
to remember each character and where they were in each scene.
Chainsaw
A large group of players and audience members are chosen. All but one leaves the room. Then the host gets an occupation, a
location and an object (OLO). One audience member returns and the person who remained gives clues to help the returning
member guess what the three things are beginning with the occupation. The catch is that the person giving clues cannot use
words, only gibberish and actions. When the guesser thinks they know what the occupation they clap and the clue giver moves on
to location following the same rules. When the object is guessed it is used to kill the clue giver and the guesser now becomes the
clue giver. The next person enters. When all the people who left have taken turns then they line up and tell, in reverse order, what
the occupation, location and object were as far as they know.
Curses, Foiled Again

Two lines are formed on either side of the stage (Line A & B) One person steps forward from each line. Person A says "Oh no,
it's." and says the name of a super hero that person B must become. Person B becomes that hero and exclaims, "I have finally
found you." and says the name of a super villain. Person A becomes that super villain. Person A says, "You will never stop me
from." and says what crime they will commit with their super power. Person B says, "I will stop you by." and says how they will
stop them using their super power. If the super hero comes up with a good plan, the villain exclaims. "Curses, foiled again." but if
the super hero falters then the villain laughs maniacally. The two each go to the end of the opposite line and the scene starts
again.
Curtain Call
A song game done at the end of our shows, where we get suggestions and the step forward one at a time and sing a song about
it. After four people have sung one line each, we sing the chorus.
Dating Game
This is played like a Blind Date show. One player leaves the room, and the audience provides endowments for the 3 others.
Examples might be No. 1 is a celebrity, No. 2 is a egg beater and No. 3 is afraid of national landmarks. 4th player returns and gets
to ask questions of each contestant. Player 4 should try to guess what the endowments were.
Debate Club
It is a line game where a topic is chosen and someone begins to speak on that topic. At anytime, someone may challenge
anything they have said. The moderated may either accept or deny that challenge. 95% of the time the moderator accepts the
challenge unless the challenger stumbles or challenges something that is not being spoken about that very moment. As the game
progresses, the challenge come more often and more absurd. They only job of the person speaking is to keep talking without a
break or pause in thought. Anytime they do, someone may also challenge that they don't know what they are talking about.
Do Run
Several players line up and start to sing in the following pattern. A, A, B, B, B. This is best explained by example: Player one, "I
went to the store to buy some pop." All players, "a do run run run a do run run." Player two, "And on the way there I met a cop." All
players, "a do run run run a do run run." Player three, "hey and that cop was lean." Player four, "hey she started to make a scene."
Player one, "hey and she was really mean." All players, "a do run run run a do run run." Player two, "the cop pushed me up
against her car." All players, "a do run run run a do run run." Player three, "that's how I got this terrible scar." And so on.. Until the
story is told.
Everything Emporium
One player leaves the room. Audience provides an 3 object, and something not-so-obvious that they each do that make it special.

They assign each of the objects for three other players. In the game the player that is 'the shopkeeper' runs a fabulous store that
has everything you could imagine, and must help the 'customers' find what they are each looking for, without knowing what they
are. People snap fingers when the shopkeeper is close to guessing or on the right track. Everyone claps when the object and
problem is guessed.
Excuses, Excuses
One guesser will play someone late for work. At the start of the game they will be sent out of the room. The host, who will be
playing their "boss," gets three more players to act as the other player's "co-workers." The host will then get audience suggestions
for a series of crazy events that once made the "boss" late for work. Once the late employee is called back in, they must come up
with that exact series of events as his excuse for being late. His "co-workers" will help out by miming the events, in order, behind
the "boss'" back. When he gets all of it, the Boss will relate to his problem and the scene ends.
FAMily Dinner
This is a free form game meant to follow an audience interview. Performers will act out a scene, each playing a different character
(Friend, Enemy or Family Member) from the interview. The FAM will sit off to the side with a bell. If the performers are playing the
characters in the FAM's life correctly, then they can hit the bell button. If not, then they will yell the "buzz" and then the performer
will have to change their character until the FAM presses the bell. The scene will go on until the FAM feels we got their family and
friends right.
Famous Last Words
Players line up, and the audience provides nouns, people, occupations, etc. One player acts as host and calls out the audience
suggestions. When a suggestion is called players need to complete the last words of that person, place or thing. Example Famous
last words of Myspace. "Facebook!"
Follow That Action
This is a free form scene game. Two or three people will begin a scene at a location. At some point someone or some object will
leave the scene and the director will call, "Follow That Action!" We leave that scene and go to a new scene where that person or
object will enter the scene. This continues with persons and objects entering and leaving to move along the location.
Fortunately/Unfortunately
2 players tell a story, taking turns. One storyteller, playing starts with some good, positive things like, "Once upon a time Mary had
a beautiful little lamb." Then the other storyteller tells the next part of the story, but it is all negative, so, "Unfortunately, the lamb
had a peg leg." The first storyteller, "Fortunately, Mary opened the leg and the lamb produce Skittles." Other player:
"Unfortunately, Skittles were illegal in Greece, where they lived, and Mary and the lamb were sent to farmer's prison." Etc, etc. 2

other players mime out the story as it happens.


Freeze Tag
This is a free form game. Two people start a scene, at anytime someone can yell "Freeze". When "Freeze" is called all players
freeze, the person who called it comes up, tags one person or more person out of the scene, takes their exact same physical
position and begins a completely different unrelated scene based on that exact physical position. That scene continues until
someone else calls "Freeze" and so it continues.
Good Cop/Bad Cop
One player is sent out of the room while the host gets what the crime committed was from the audience. The host gets
suggestions on what the crime was, where it happened and what famous person was the accomplice. 2 other players play cops
with one being good and the other being bad (Or manic, depressed, hyper, etc.). Players need to get the criminal to confess their
crime, location and accomplice.
Grand Theft Auto
This is a warm up game played with three teams and a "car" set up on stage. Each team will take turns in the car. As one team is
in the car, they will exclaim, "Oh my god we are being taken over by _____." Another team must become whatever that
suggestion was, over take the car and continue until they yell out what they are being taken over by. This continues until a high
point is reached and scene is called.
Greatest Hits
This is a musical improv game. The host will get a one word suggestion and the last text message on someone's phone. The
game will be hosted by two people telling us about the new Greatest Hits Album based on the one word suggestion. Four
"singers" will be standing by to sing the greatest hits song suggested. One, Two, Three or all Four may step up and sing the song.
Then at the end the hosts will tell us about the best song on the album, which will use the text message as the chorus line. The
whole group of singers will sing the song together and everyone can sing along to the chorus.
Growing and Shrinking
One person starts a scene based off of suggestion for ONE beat. At the beat, anyone else can clap-in and join. Similar to Freeze
Tag, a whole new scene starts with those two people in relation to the physicality at hand. After a couple beats another person
claps in. This continues until all members are on stage. At this point, you start clapping-out in the order. The last person to clap-in
is the first person to clap themselves out. The scenes go back down the line picking up somewhere near where they left off or a bit
in the future. It gets back to that first person, who finishes their first scene.

Guidance Counselor
This is a song game where one person plays an advice giver. Each "client" comes in with a problem and it is the advices givers
job to listen to their problem and provide a solution. The catch is that both the problem and solution are presented in song. This is
usually done with three "clients."
Helping Hands
Scene played by 4 players, playing 2 characters. Each character consists of one player, who does the voice, holding his hands
behind his back. Another player stands behind player 1, and provides the `hands`. The story should be a give and take between
voices and hands.
Highlander
This is a 4-Person Scene game. A short scene starts off of any suggestion. When the scene is done, the audience applauds for
the players they liked the best. Whoever receives the least applause will be eliminated. The remaining players do the SAME
EXACT SCENE, but fill in the role of the missing player. Players are eliminated one at a time, each time replaying the exact
scene and filling in the spots, until there is "Only One" who will replay the scene doing all four roles. It should be noted that a good
improviser would get out first because they would be providing good support, gifting and not trying to steal the focus.
Hoedown
This is a musical game where a subject is chosen and four performers each get 4 lines of a song to sing about the subject in a
AABB rhyme scheme. When the last performer sings the last line, that line becomes the hook that everyone sings.
Interrogation Lineup
A lineup of criminals leave the room. An investigator and witness stay in the room. A crime, location, and accomplice are gathered
through suggestion. The criminals then form a back line as if on the other side of a double-sided mirror. (Criminals pretend to not
see the investigator or witness). The investigator and witness give clues discussing the crime as criminals take turns stepping
forward to exclaim their innocence through "guessing". The audience snaps and claps if they are close. The investigator or
witness determine who is the culprit or culprits as they choose at the end of the game. The chosen criminals are then arrested.
Irish Drinking Song
4 players sing a song about a subject, given by the audience, on an Irish-sounding tune, one line at a time. 4 lines makes 1 verse;
after the first verse, a second verse is started by player number 2; and so forth. After 4 verses every player has both started and
ended a verse and the song is over.
Lines from a Cookie

Same thing as "Lines from a Hat," but from a delicious cookie!


Lines from a Hat
Players get suggestions for famous quotes, lines of dialogue, sayings or even cliches from the audience by having them write their
ideas down on slips of paper. An idea is obtained i.e. location, relationship, conflict. Two players are selected and they take some
of the lines from the "hat". The scene begins and at random times during the scene the players substitute the written lines in their
pocket for their dialogue. Other players may enter but must pull from the hat and use the audience lines also. The scene runs to a
logical conclusion by calling "scene".
Madam Zelda
One player leaves the room. Audience provides an 3 things that will happen to them in the future, each one more ridiculous than
the last. In the game the player that is 'Madam Zelda::Fortune teller' needs to guess the three fortunes. The host, who will be
playing their "customer," will be coming in to ask their fortune. The other player's "spirits" will help out by miming the events, in
order, behind the "customers'" back. When all fortunes are guessed the scene ends.
Marriage Counsel Endowment
One player is sent out of the room while the host gets 3 relationship problems from the audience. 2 other players play a couple
with these problems (One problem for each and a shared problem they both have), and player one is the therapist. Players need
to get the therapist to figure out what the relationship problems are.
Meanwhile
This is a free form game. Two people start a scene, at anytime someone in the scene may mention or reference a location.
Someone from wings can cross in front of the scene yelling the line "Meanwhile at the (For mentioned location)." and a couple of
new players step forward, take their place and begin a completely different scene. That scene continues until someone else
crosses the scene resting the location again.
Movie Critics
Ask the audience for a fictitious movie title or general suggestion and you create the movie title. 2 players will do a movie review.
As the movie is discussed, certain scenes are suggested as clips (keep it vague) and the other players act out the clips. Usually
do three clips.
New Born
This is a guessing game where a lovely couple just had a baby, and they need to guess three things. Who they are and what they
named their baby. The names of each person or the baby can be a person, place or thing. They continue a scene looking into the

nursery until they have guessed all three elements. Everyone else plays people at the hospital giving them clues to their identities
and names.
Party Quirks
One player plays a character that is having a party. The other players will be the guests, and the audience provides us with who
the guests might be or what their quirks might be. Of course the host does not know who the guests are. His task is to guess who
the guests might be, based on hints the guests offer. The game is over as soon as the host has guessed all guests.
Pavlovian Response
This is a three person scene where each person is affected by their own conditional response. Each person is going to receive a
stimulus {something to respond to} and a reaction {response}. A stimulus can be anything from hearing a specific word to an
action or movement made by the other players. The reaction, again, can be anything from saying words/phrases to performing
specific actions. Example: Anytime person B or C says the word "the", person A twitches. The stimuli and reactions can be
something subtle or something big and outrageous. One player is Pavlov, and knows the other players stimuli. The other players
are participants in the experiment and so they do not know anyone else's stimuli, but if they can figure it out, they can use it to
their advantage. The scene will go to a logical ending point where we ask the two participants about the other stimuli and
reactions.
Pillars
Two people sit at the front of the stage and fill in the blanks in dialogue when called upon. Players are selected for scene and an
idea is obtained i.e. location, relationship, conflict. The scene begins and at random times during the scene the players point to the
two seated people for a word to fill in a blank in the dialog of the scene. They must make these suggestions make sense in the
scene. The scene runs to a logical conclusion by calling "scene".
Post It
Players get locations, occupations and objects from the audience. These are written on post it notes and stuck to an object in the
middle of the stage. Then two players get up and each picks one post it and they play a short scene. Then two other players take
post its and play another short scene. The scenes are quick and in rapid succession until all post its are used.
Press Conference
This is a verbal improv game, played with 4 players. One player leaves the room, while the audience provides the name of a
famous or historical person and what unrelated thing they are there to announce. The `absent` player will give a press conference,
but he does not know who they are or what they are there to announce. The other players are journalists, whose questions should
provide indications to who the mystery guest might be. Game ends when our player guesses who they are and what they are

there to announce. Notes - The `journalists` should really play journalist characters. They can take photographs, or have a fight
about who gets to ask the next question.
Questions
A line of volunteers is chosen. Two people get a suggestion from the audience and begin a scene using only questions. When
someone slips up and uses a statement they are out and another player takes their place. You're out for statement, repeating,
rhetorical and unrelated questions that don't help drive the scene. The scene should play to its logical conclusion.
Quick Scenes
This game is a series of short scenes {1-3 Lines or a "beat"} using a back line of players. A suggestion is taken from the audience,
and two players from the back line will step forward and begin a scene. After a beat, someone from the back line will end the
scene by cutting through and asking for a new suggestion based off of information from the scene; two new players will begin a
scene from this. A number of short and quick scenes will be seen until the game reaches a high point and ends.
Remake
The title of a fictitious movie is gotten from the audience. Two players play a scene from the film. The audience is then told that
the movie was remade in a different genre. A new genre is procured from the audience and two new players play the same scene
in the different genre. This is repeated one more time.
Revolver
4 players in a square; 2 in front, 2 behind them. The host asks for an audience suggestion for the 2 players in front. Then the host
asks the players to turn the square (to the right or to the left). So now we have a different combination of players in front. These 2
get an audience suggestion. Turn again and ask for suggestion again and do this once more. Then have players take their original
position. The game is played as follows: the 2 players in front start improvising a scene. Players play until the host yells "Rotate
right or Left", at which time all players rotate in the desired direction. The 2 players in front start playing a scene based on their
suggestion until calls again. This is repeated. They can either plainly continue it, or continue at some time in the future (a day
later, a year later, a century later).
Rope
This is a warm-up game intending to get you to not think or plan stuff out. A line of players is created. The first person in line steps
forward. The second person in line turns their back to them. The first person does any non-verbal action. Someone lets the
second person know that the first person is ready. The second person delivers a single line as they turn around. The first person
must respond verbally with a line that appropriately ties the action and the second person's delivered line together. If they are
unsuccessful, someone from the line can call out, "Rope" and they must start over with a new action and line. If they are

successful than the first person goes to the end of the line, the second person becomes the first person and a third person
becomes the second person. We continue on till someone calls "scene."
Say It Again
Players begin a scene with one player acting as director. At any time the director will ask a player to say a line differently by either
ringing a bell or saying "Say It Again". The performer must say a completely different line and then justify it in the scene. The
scene runs to a logical conclusion then someone calls "scene".
Serious Scene
This is a game based on the idea of "Don't make me laugh." A director hosts the game, and two performers start a serious scene
based on a suggestion. Other players wait in the wings ready to jump in at moments notice. If anyone laughs, chuckles, smirks,
snorts, smiles, etc at any time during the scene, the director can "fire" which ever performer he thinks caused that reaction. At this
point one of the performers in the wings must rush on and take their place. Once they do they must become the exact same
character and pick up where the last performer left off in their sentence. The scene continues until another performer is "fired" and
so on and so forth. At some point a performer may come in and add a third (usually ridiculous) character to the scene.
Short Cutz
This is a free form game similar to most improv editing. A scene will begin during that scene or any other scene edits can be
made. You can tap out, move time, change location add elements or just wipe the scene to start a new unrelated scene. There are
many other types of edits that can be used from any of the forms of improv edits out in the world.
Sing-A-Scene
This is a song game where two singers sit off the side of the stage, each singing the internal monologues or actions for a different
character on stage. The two characters on stage act out the scene. Both the singers and the characters must listen to each other
and help each other through the scene. Other characters may come on to help enhance the scene.
Sing It
This starts as a normal scene. At any time, the host/audience volunteer can yell Sing It and the player who said the last line will
sing/rap a song based on that last line of dialog. The singer is in charge of deciding the length of the song, and after the song is
complete, everyone falls back into the normal scene.
Sit, Stand, Lie Down
Host gets a situation from audience and gets three players to play the scene. At any point in time, there should always be one
player standing, one player sitting and one player lying down. As soon as a player changes position, one of the other players has

to change also to maintain the three positions while trying to justify the moves!
Six Pack
Three teams of two people are formed. Each team gets a different one word suggestion to start their scene. Group one starts a
scene, at any time either of the other groups may clap, which stops the scene. The group that stops the scene then start their
scene with the last line of the previous group. This continues and increases in speed until a common ending is reached.
Spelling Bee
A line of performers is made and the audience gives a word. The line says the word all together, then spells the word one letter at
a time...repeats the word again, then has to define it-going down the line one word of the sentence at a time. Repeat the word one
last time, then new word.
Slogans
Players line up, and the audience provides nouns, people, occupations, etc. One player acts as host and calls out the audience
suggestions. Players step out and give suggestions for Slogans to help sell the suggestions.
Sports Commentator
In this game, an everyday activity is obtained from the audience (like brushing your teeth, washing your car, etc) and then shown
as if it were done at the Olympics or at a world championship. Two players act as athletes, and two others are commentators. An
on the field reporter can also be involved. Usually, something goes wrong and the athletes fail miserably. Gimmicks may include
interviewing the athletes on the field after the win (or the disaster), asking for a replay of a particularly dramatic moment, asking for
a replay with a different camera (different angle), or seeing something in slow motion.
Story, Story, Die
Players form a line on the stage and a story title and genre are obtained from the audience. The host starts the game by pointing
to a player, who needs to start telling the story. At any point in time the host can switch to another player, who needs to continue
the story flawlessly, even if the switch happened in the middle of a sentence or even in the middle of a word. Players that hesitate,
or whose sentences are not grammatically correct or don`t make sense, are boo-ed out of the game, by the audience yelling `Die`.
The last player left ends the story. Feel free to add genres or themes to each player to increase difficulty.
Tableau
It stars with two groups of folks at either ends of the stage. We get a suggestion from the audience, and then using that as
inspiration, the first person comes to center stage, strikes some type of descriptive-action pose, and then announces what they're
doing. "I am sweeping up a dirty hallway." They then freeze, and a second person enters the scene, and adds to the scene as

someone or something with its own distinct action. They then announce who or what they are, and then freeze. We continue to
build the tableau in this fashion until we have 4-6 complimentary actors on stage. The host will then either call upon one of the
actors to sum up the scene with some sort of tagline or quick song, or simply call "break" which signals the folks on stage to clear
out so that those waiting in the wings can start a new tableau based on some inspiration from the previous one.
The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly
3 players form a line upstage. The audience provides questions or problems for which they need advice, and the 3 players provide
good, bad, and really bad advice. Good advice should be good, bad should be opposite of the good and ugly should be an even
worse version of bad. Once one set of good, bad and ugly advice is given, performers come up and act out a quick 3 to 5 line
scene based on the advice. Then they quickly leave and the advice givers return to giving new advice for a new problem. The
game ends at a high point.
The Quickest Minute
Two people get a suggestion from the audience and perform a scene which is timed and completed in 60 seconds. The same
scene is performed in 30 seconds and then again in 10 seconds. The results are hilarious. Can also be done in ascending time
order.
Timmy in the Well
Timmy in the Well is a guessing game. One player leaves the room, and a person, action, and location are acquired from the
audience. For example, Timmy fell in a well or Lady Gaga brushed her teeth in the library. The person who left the room must try
and guess what the three things are. All other players act as dogs, speaking in dog speak and miming actions to try and get the
player to guess the correct answers.
Trolley Stop
Trolley Stop is a warm up game that works with mirroring characters. One person starts on stage at a trolly stop. A line of other
players is made off to the side of the stage. The first person in line steps into the scene with some kind of large character. It is the
job of the person who has been waiting at the stop to act, look and speak like the character who just entered. One they are a
mirror image of each other the person who started on stage will find a character reason to leave. They leave the stage and join the
end of the line and the process starts over again.
Try That On For Size
This is an association game, where two people go head to head at a time. The first person starts an a very repetitive motion and
then says what they are doing. They follow it up by saying, "Try that on for size." The second person does the exact same action,
but says they are doing something completely different that make sense with the action. Then it goes back to the first person with

the same action. This goes back and forth until one person cannot come up with something for that action. They are then
eliminated and a new person comes and takes their place and a new action is chosen.
Two Headed Monster
Three people are playing in this scene game. Two players play one person, each holding each other and each saying only one
word of a sentence at a time. The other one helps maintain the scene. The scene ends at a high point.
Typewriter
This is a nice handle to structure scenes. One of the players is the Narrator. He has a (mimed) typewriter and starts the scene by
reading aloud as he types. As soon as the Narrator has given a few elements, the players take over and start playing the scene.
At any point, the Narrator can take over again, perhaps switch to another location, introduce new character, provide tilts or
flashbacks. Variations - When a scene goes bad, the Narrator can mime ripping a couple of pages of his story apart, and restart
the scene (or the story).
Welcome Song
After doing a FAM interview, we will each sing a stanza of a song devoted to the FAM.
What Are You Doing?
This is really a dissociation game, but fun to play. Form two lines. The first player of line 1 steps into the center and starts miming
an activity. As soon as the activity is clear, a player from line 2 approaches the player from line 1 and asks "What are you doing".
The first player answers something that has nothing to do with what he's actually doing. E.g. if player 1 is cutting someone's hair,
when asked what he's doing he might say "I'm reading the newspaper". First player moves away, and the second player starts
miming the activity stated by the previous player. A third player comes up to player 2, asks what he is doing, and so on. Play until
everyone has mimed something, and has answered the question.
World's Worst
Players line up, and the audience provides nouns, people, occupations, etc. One player acts as host and calls out the audience
suggestions. When a suggestion is called players need to complete a punchline with the worst example of that. Example: Doctor
"Oops, I'm sorry, that was a rectal thermometer".

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