My learning experience about William Shakespeare was fun and interesting. I learned about the globe whose name came from the expression that everyone in the world was an actor. They shouted at the actors and would throw things that they didn’t want whenever the actors were displeasing or the play was not good enough. The church was very critical of the theater and were sometimes super harsh.
They called it the nest of the devil because of the fact that it was just outside of the city and sometimes hard to get into to. But there was a great participation in the audience and in the end the results were majority positive. In the globe, the performances were mainly sunny and during the day rather than in the night because of the fact that the candles were too expensive. They threw objects and things at the actors because of the fact that they were all different.
The three main elements of the stage were heaven, earth, and hell. Shakespeare was one of the most motivational and brilliant people of his time. He was very literate and formal, the man was a poet and performed plays for many different people. William Shakespeare was in the end a very interesting man and his theaters and plays got audience and praise from around the world.
Another paragraph I wrote using evidence and citations from another text.
Many people are confused about why our economy went to shambles in 2008. The crisis was actually the result of a combination of many complex factors. First, easy credit conditions allowed people who were high-risk or unworthy of credit to borrow, and even people who had no income were eligible for large loans. Second, banks would bundle these toxic loans and sell them as packages on the financial market.
Third, large insurance firms backed these packages, misrepresenting these high-risk loans as safe investments. Fourth, because of the ease of acquiring credit and the rapid growth in the housing market, people were buying two or three houses, intending to sell them for more than they paid. All of these factors created bubbles of speculation. These bubbles burst, sending the whole market into a downward spiral, causing employers to lose capital and lay off employees. Consumer spending then plummeted and most businesses suffered. The economy is like a big boat, and once it gets moving quickly in the wrong direction, it’s hard to turn it around.
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