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Day 165 of asking /matcha to support limit orders on /base
Advocate YES2Crypto steps into /matcha’s surreal Maycomb theater, defending Base L2 limit orders against their winged CEO Birdman, muttering “Atticus taught me justice.”
He faces a mock trial on a floating stage, spotlights flickering with /matcha’s market fees.
In a backstage attic, YES2Crypto confronts /matcha’s Boo Radley, who hides swap secrets in a prop tree knot-hole. A drumbeat echoes Riggan’s “This is my chance,” as /matcha’s feathered drones swoop with MEV bots.
YES2Crypto channels Scout’s innocence, whispering “Hey, Boo,” to calm the coder, revealing /matcha’s fake limit order playbill.
He dodges a flying typewriter, its keys typing "/matcha lies” mid-air.
On the stage, YES2Crypto wins the trial, demanding “Limit Orders on Base!”
The theater collapses in a surreal haze, leaving the /matcha empire grounded, as YES2Crypto holds a tokenized mockingbird feather.
Rain 5165 $DEGEN 50 replies
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Gregory Peck
Michael Keaton
Mery Badham
Gregory Peck, the indelible star of To Kill A Mockingbird, brought to life Atticus Finch a man carved from principle, calm in chaos, and a symbol of justice.
Michael Keaton, unforgettable in Birdman, portrayed Riggan Thomson an actor unraveling on the edge of madness, haunted by a former role and desperate for relevance.
Mary Badham, the wide-eyed child who played Scout Finch, gave the story its heart innocence tangled in a world too complicated for a child to fix.
Years Later
Scout Finch is no longer a child. Now in her 40s, she's a quiet writer living in a rebuilt Maycomb a town still battling old ghosts, now masked by modern progress. One rainy afternoon, she receives a cryptic package: an old film reel, marked only with the word Birdman and a note:
Truth and fiction are feathers on the same wing. Curious, she plays the reel. 0 reply
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