Episodes

  • The Mouse Trap
    Feb 25 2026

    Send a text

    Up to now, Hamlet has lived inside questions.
    “Did my uncle really do it?”
    “Can I trust the Ghost?”
    “Am I being manipulated?”
    “Am I losing my mind—or pretending to?”

    Act 3 Scene 2 is the moment Hamlet says, in effect:
    “I’m done being uncertain. I’m going to test the truth.”
    In other words, Hamlet creates a situation where Claudius either sits calmly… or cracks.

    What makes this scene so powerful is that Hamlet is doing two things at once.
    One: He wants evidence.
    Two: He wants to feel power again.

    Because Hamlet has been watched, managed, and fenced in.
    So now he decides to flip the arrangement.

    Now he watches.
    Now he controls the room.
    Now he designs the moment.

    And that leads us to one of the best surprises in the play:

    Hamlet suddenly becomes a director.
    He lectures the actors about how to perform—
    not too big, not too fake, not too showy.

    Support the show

    Thank you for experiencing Celebrate Creativity.

    Show more Show less
    25 mins
  • Get Thee to a Notary!
    Feb 25 2026

    Send a text

    Master Shakespeare, are you ready?

    SHAKESPEARE:
    As ready as any man may be, entering a room where love is examined like evidence.

    GEORGE:
    That’s exactly it. Because what happens here is not romance. It’s a controlled experiment—and Ophelia is the instrument.

    GEORGE:
    Let’s start with the setup. Claudius and Polonius plan to spy. They stage-manage Ophelia. They put a book in her hands. They position her.
    What’s the moral temperature of this plan?

    SHAKESPEARE:
    Cold. And convenient.
    They call it “care for her.” They call it “care for the prince.”
    But the act is simple: they use her presence to harvest Hamlet’s secrets.

    GEORGE:
    And what’s chilling is how normal it seems to them. “We’ll just hide over here.”
    It’s like a household trick.

    SHAKESPEARE:
    Power always wishes to be ordinary.
    If it feels ordinary, it feels permissible.

    GEORGE:
    So right away, Ophelia enters a room where her feelings aren’t the point. Her feelings are the bait.

    GEORGE:
    Now—Ophelia. I want to underline something for listeners: she’s not “weak.” She’s trained.
    She has been coached to obey father, brother, court—every authority that tells her what “good” looks like.

    SHAKESPEARE:
    A young woman in that world is praised for being governable.
    They call it virtue.
    But it is also control.

    GEORGE:
    So when Polonius gives her instructions, it isn’t just advice. It’s a system:
    “Speak when told. Hold this. Stand here. Offer the tokens.”Four

    Support the show

    Thank you for experiencing Celebrate Creativity.

    Show more Show less
    21 mins
  • Spies and Players
    Feb 24 2026

    Send a text

    GEORGE:
    So right away: the scene begins with the king and queen acting like concerned parents. But it feels… staged.

    SHAKESPEARE:
    Because it is staged.
    Mark their language: they crave a cause, a label, a tidy diagnosis — “What ails him?”
    Yet their hands are already in the plot. They have hired watchers.
    Concern and control wear the same cloak here.

    GEORGE:
    And the watchers are Rosencrantz and Guildenstern — Hamlet’s old friends.
    Let me ask bluntly: are they villains?

    SHAKESPEARE:
    They are instruments.
    Not grand villains with black banners — rather men who wish to please authority and keep their place.
    In a court like this, friendship becomes employment.
    And employment demands a report.

    GEORGE:
    So Claudius says, “Spend time with Hamlet, figure out what’s wrong,” but the real job is: Find what he knows. Find what he intends.

    SHAKESPEARE:
    Aye.
    And I make it plain: they are sent for.
    They are not there by chance. They are summoned, instructed, rewarded.

    Support the show

    Thank you for experiencing Celebrate Creativity.

    Show more Show less
    24 mins
  • Short But Loaded
    Feb 23 2026

    Send a text

    Part 1 — Polonius coaches surveillance (Polonius + Reynaldo)
    Polonius sends Reynaldo to Paris with money and messages for Laertes.
    But Polonius doesn’t say, “Go check on my son like a normal person.”

    He says—basically—“Go investigate my son.”

    Here’s the tactic, and it’s nasty in a very realistic way:

    Polonius tells Reynaldo:
    Don’t ask directly, “How is Laertes behaving?”
    Instead, casually drop mild accusations and see what sticks.

    Not monstrous lies.
    Little “reasonable” hints.

    He’s teaching Reynaldo to do this:

    Talk to people who might know Laertes.

    Suggest that Laertes has been seen drinking, gambling, getting into trouble.

    Keep it vague—lightly scandalous.

    Then watch how the other person responds.

    Support the show

    Thank you for experiencing Celebrate Creativity.

    Show more Show less
    16 mins
  • The Ghost Speaks
    Feb 23 2026

    Send a text

    Today we’re in Hamlet, Act 1, Scene 5 — the scene where the ghost finally speaks.

    And I want to emphasize something from the start:
    The ghost’s message doesn’t just give Hamlet information.
    It changes Hamlet’s operating system.

    It changes what Hamlet thinks the world is.
    It changes what Hamlet thinks he must do.
    And it changes what kind of person Hamlet is allowed to be from this moment on.

    [Music sting]

    Segment 1 — What happens in the scene (plot, slowly and clearly)
    GEORGE:
    Master Shakespeare, let’s begin with the basic plot of Act 1, Scene 5. Hamlet has followed the ghost away from Horatio and Marcellus. What happens next?

    SHAKESPEARE:
    The dead speaks.
    The son listens.
    And the world is no longer the same.

    GEORGE:
    Here’s the plot in plain language:

    Hamlet is alone with the ghost.

    Support the show

    Thank you for experiencing Celebrate Creativity.

    Show more Show less
    20 mins
  • Follow It!
    Feb 23 2026

    Send a text

    Today we’re in Hamlet, Act 1, Scene 4.
    Act 1, Scene 2 gave us the court saying, “Get over it.”
    Act 1, Scene 3 gave us family advice that’s really control.
    Now Scene 4 takes us back to the battlements — the cold night air — where the play asks a different question:

    When truth appears in an unsettling form…
    Do you follow it?

    GEORGE:
    Master Shakespeare, we’ve moved from court politics and family warnings back to the night watch. Why return to the battlements now?

    SHAKESPEARE:
    Because the day has done its work.
    Now the night may speak.

    GEORGE:
    Let me paraphrase that for listeners:

    Daytime Denmark is where people control the story.
    Nighttime Denmark is where the story refuses to be controlled.

    And Hamlet arrives here already loaded.
    He’s grieving. He’s disgusted. He’s isolated.
    And now he’s standing in a place where the living expect the dead.

    Support the show

    Thank you for experiencing Celebrate Creativity.

    Show more Show less
    19 mins
  • Advice That’s Really Control
    Feb 22 2026

    Send a text

    GEORGE:
    Master Shakespeare, why do we go from the public court scene into this private household scene?

    SHAKESPEARE:
    Because the disease is not only in the crown.
    It is in the rooms of the home.

    GEORGE:
    Let me paraphrase that in three ways so it lands:

    Paraphrase #1 (simple):
    You’re showing us that Denmark’s problems aren’t only political. They’re personal.

    Paraphrase #2 (blunt):
    The same habits that make a court dishonest can show up in a family.

    Paraphrase #3 (image):
    We leave the palace stage — but we’re still inside the same building of power. Just a different hallway.

    SHAKESPEARE:
    Aye.

    GEORGE:
    Let’s lay out the plot of Scene 3 in plain terms.

    First: Laertes is preparing to leave for France.
    He gives his sister Ophelia advice about Hamlet.

    Second: Polonius enters and gives Laertes a long list of fatherly “rules” for life.Third: After Laertes exits, Polonius turns to Ophelia and questions her about Hamlet — and then he gives her orders.

    So the scene is built like a sandwich:

    Brother advises sister

    Father advises son

    Father controls daughter

    SHAKESPEARE:
    A neat division.

    GEORGE:
    This scene is about warnings.
    And the warnings are not only about danger.
    They are about reputation.
    And reputation is currency in this world.

    Support the show

    Thank you for experiencing Celebrate Creativity.

    Show more Show less
    23 mins
  • Get Over It!
    Feb 22 2026

    Send a text

    The scene begins with the king saying -
    Though yet of Hamlet our dear brother’s death
    The memory be green, and that it us befitted
    To bear our hearts in grief, and our whole kingdom
    To be contracted in one brow of woe,
    Yet so far hath discretion fought with nature
    That we with wisest sorrow think on him
    Together with remembrance of ourselves.
    Therefore our sometime sister, now our queen,
    Th’ imperial jointress to this warlike state,

    Now If Act 1, Scene 1 is Denmark at night — cold, nervous, haunted — then Act 1, Scene 2 is Denmark in daylight — warm, ceremonial, confident, and polished.

    And here’s the spine of this scene and the simple phrase that keeps coming back:
    The court is telling Hamlet, with polite smiles and royal authority, “Get over it.”
    And Hamlet is thinking, “I can’t. And I won’t. Because something is wrong.”

    GEORGE:
    Master Shakespeare, we begin with a ghost on the battlements — and then we jump into court ceremony and speeches.

    Master Shakespeare - how does the ghost begin speaking.

    Ah, Mr. Bartley - My hour is almost come
    When I to sulf’rous and tormenting flames
    Must render up myself.
    Pity me not, but lend thy serious hearing
    To what I shall unfold.

    Well Master Shakespeare, why place these scenes back-to-back?

    SHAKESPEARE:
    Because the world is split, Mr. Bartley.
    Night shows what day denies.

    GEORGE:
    Let me say that again in modern terms:
    Scene 1 shows you the secret weather of Denmark.
    Scene 2 shows you the official forecast of Denmark.

    SHAKESPEARE:
    Aye.

    Support the show

    Thank you for experiencing Celebrate Creativity.

    Show more Show less
    25 mins