Stylistic writing and delivery go hand in hand as we finish our discussion of stylistic delivery, just a few reminders here. First, great lines can honestly be ruined with lack luster delivery. So the devices that we've work on work in sound, you have to give them their due. You can have stylistic writing on the page and it's not going to go anywhere unless it's performed stylistically. You can murder any great line from history with bad delivery. That this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom. And that government of the people, by the people, and for the people, shall not perish from the earth. So that hurts to hear, that hurts to do, please don't do that. If you have a stylistic line, you have to commit to performing it stylistically. You need to hit the rhythm of that style. I have worked with many people who get nervous about sounding too speachy or something, and so they swerve sort of at the last moment away from a great line. So maybe they wrote a good line, they practiced it as a good line, but when it comes time they swallow the style. Great writing's just going to sail by unnoticed if you don't commit, to the musicality of that style. What else? I do think on the sort of the flip side, a hokey line or a cheesy line can be saved with good delivery, or at least it can be propped up a little bit. Now when pressed for time, I have written plenty of lines that look pretty goofy on the page, stuff that looks cheesy. Now that line may need to be cut, but before you cut it out, maybe try to give it a good delivery attempt with some serious delivery. So, for example, let's say I'm working on some education funding talk for playground equipment. I might come up with a capital line like this, it's up to us to save this playground. It's a small action, but saving a playground helps preserve play. Preserving play helps us cherish childhood. That my friends is a corny line, I am not proud of that one, there's lots of shame kicking around in me for that and for other things, but really for that. Cherish childhood is trite, okay that's trite phrasing. But let's say I'm in a rush, and I don't have time to really come up with a new line there. I can keep that style and maybe deliver it in a more serious way. So it might sound more like this is me really trying to pull it out, but saving a playground helps preserve play. Preserving play can help us cherish childhood and that's something we should all be doing. Okay, so there I try to play down the cheesiness and all. Maybe throw in an extra line to pull some of the attention away from that final alliteration. So you know what? Maybe the line gets rewritten, maybe it gets tossed. But some serious delivery can at times help you patch over some cheesiness. Why talk about this? Stylistic writing and delivery are usually what people remember. If you pepper in a few lines into your next speech, I think you're going to be pleased. But if you do, commit to its delivery. [MUSIC]