Depending on the situation, that could be the best possible "yes and" one could do. I don't think the words alone can determine whether it's a denial or an acceptance of an idea -- the scene is much bigger than that.Jastroch wrote:I would classify that as an outright denial. A block, as people define it, is moreHerrHerr wrote:"Check out my new Pat Benatar album."
"That's a toaster, not an album."
"Let's go to the store."
"Naw, I don't feel like doing that."
Suggestions: they aren't necessary, but I always take one. I do not think they need to be used literally and I think using them literally is limiting for the players and the audience. I don't believe in obscurity for obscurity's sake, but I believe in looking at all facets of a suggestion and using that. "Hair. We'll take the suggestion of Hair." Sure, one facet may be a literal interpretation of the suggestion ("Wow, I like yr hair mom.") but look at what hair represents, culturally, socially, personally, etc. A scene on conservatism vs liberalism, a scene commenting on late 60's hippie culture (and disillusionment). A Sampson-esque scene on hair = male power. A scene with a couple that can't stop having sex enough to really get to know each other. My slow loss of hair might represent my reluctance to aging, so maybe a scene about that. Shows that take the suggestion literally and only literally bore me to tears, as a player or audience member.
I'm being a cranky contrarian. Fuck y'all.