Call for new teams, Week 4

Editorial

In a stunning display of organization or computer skills The Mouse that Roared, well, roars to a huge first place victory.

Surprisingly, the first two week winners, Alan Berks & Company and A Johnny Midtown Stunt, drop like hot rocks out of the top three--proving that it's hard for any theater company to keep the audience coming back for more. Week 3 competition also shows that people want to see an all-female-and-all-adult version of Annie, and they want Craig Johnson to create a one person adaptation of The Importance of Being Earnest--both of which seem like they could easily move from Fantasy to Reality.

Experiment with your own fantasy teams below. Post a show. It's quick and painless. You could start a conversation. Click on the "POST YOUR OWN FANTASY TEAM" below. See the new teams as they're submitted so far this week at the end of this article.

In other exciting news: The Commissioner's Office has been asked to investigate whether all those votes for The Mouse That Roared were come by honestly, or at least honestly enough. See the following official statement: "The Fantasy Theater League believes that all marketing tactics, including padding the house a little, exaggerating ever-so-slightly your total ticket sales, and emailing your uninterested friends and forcing them to vote for you--or see your show--are allowed in FTL. However, we do and will continue to discourage any automated voting should we discover it. Punishments will be severe and range from having to sit through tech for two consecutive years or or watching a restaging of HamletMachine by 12 high school students from Kansas, in German, that somehow incorporates balloons, unicorns, Hello Kitty, and excerpts from all the Saw movies. It will only last for four hours but it will seem like forty years."

In less than four weeks, we already have an administrative/rules controversy! How much like sports!

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