Short, Easy Dialogues

15 topics: 10 to 77 dialogues per topic, with audio

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February 22, 2018: "500 Short Stories for Beginner-Intermediate," Vols. 1 and 2, for only 99 cents each! Buy both e‐books (1,000 short stories, iPhone and Android) at Amazon (Volume 1) and at Amazon (Volume 2). All 1,000 stories are also right here at eslyes at Link 10.


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Dec. 18, 2016. All 273 Dialogues below are error‐free. NOTE: The number following each title below (which is the same number that follows the corresponding dialogue) is the Flesch‐Kincaid Grade Level. See Flesch‐Kincaid or FREE Readability Formulas, or Readability‐Grader, or Readability‐Score. These grade levels are not "true" grade levels, because the dialogues are not in "true" paragraph form (because of the A: and B: format). However, the grade levels are true in the sense that they are truly relative to one another.


Charlie Forde Want You To Want Exclusive May 2026

In a culture of passive scrolling, Forde bets on the radical act of active wanting. And so far, he’s winning. The exclusives remain exclusive. The wanters remain wanting. And Charlie Forde? He’s just getting started. Are you ready to want what you can’t yet have? Then you already understand.

Charlie Forde, a rising strategist in niche content distribution, has built a reputation on one counterintuitive principle: This article dissects why "Charlie Forde want you to want exclusive" has become a rallying cry for creators, brands, and platforms seeking to transform passive viewers into active, eager participants. The Grammar of Exclusivity The unusual phrasing is deliberate. "Charlie Forde want you" (rather than "wants") strips away corporate polish. It feels urgent, personal, slightly raw. This linguistic choice mirrors the very exclusivity it promotes: imperfect, human, and therefore trustworthy. charlie forde want you to want exclusive

is not a slogan. It is a mirror. It asks: What do you truly want? And are you willing to admit it? In a culture of passive scrolling, Forde bets

What did the exclusive contain? A 90-second voice memo. That’s it. But because Forde had successfully stoked the wanting , recipients reported higher satisfaction than for month-long courses they’d paid for elsewhere. For creators and marketers looking to apply "Charlie Forde want you to want exclusive" to their own work, Forde has distilled his approach into three pillars: 1. Scarcity with Dignity Fake scarcity ("Only 3 left!") erodes trust. Real scarcity is temporal or relational. "This exclusive exists only for those who ask before midnight" respects the audience’s intelligence while still creating a finish line. 2. The Uncomfortable Ask Forde famously refuses to let people pay for exclusives immediately. Instead, he asks something harder: Why do you want this? That question filters for genuine desire. Those who answer become evangelists, not just customers. 3. Silence as Strategy Most brands fill every silence with noise. Forde deliberately goes dark between exclusives. Weeks of nothing. Then, suddenly: "Charlie Forde want you to want exclusive. Still?" That one word— still —tests whether desire has decayed or deepened. The Ethical Objection Critics argue that deliberately fostering "wanting" borders on psychological exploitation. Forde’s response is characteristically blunt: "Everything you buy is already engineered for wanting. Advertisements, countdown timers, 'limited editions.' I’m just being honest about it. The difference? I don't trick you. I invite you to notice your own desire." The wanters remain wanting

Within 72 hours, 14,000 people submitted personal essays, voice notes, and videos. The conversion rate from curious observer to active applicant was 41%—unheard of in an era of 2-3% email signup averages.



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