Don't make the same mistake I
did.
I'll be in New York next week, and I always see one or two shows while in town.
I've seen most of the current Broadway shows that interest me, so this time I looked off Broadway. The longest running play is Perfect Crime, which opened all the way back in 1987. It's billed as "a great night of whodunit."
OK, I got my ticket!
THEN I find out: everyone hates this play.
An article on Digg calls it "the most hated play in America." The Yelp reviews are savage: the acting is bad, they say, but the plot is even worse. As you leave you receive a two-page summary of what the heck just happened.
So I asked Michael Malice, whom I'll be seeing while in town: should I just swallow this ticket and go see a different show instead, or does the potential for sheer badness mean it simply has to be seen?
The second one, he said.
I can hardly wait.
Meanwhile, for about half of what I'm paying
to see the most hated play in America, you can get not one, not 10, not 100, but 240 eBooks in a variety of niches that you can resell as your own, or give away to build up an email list.
If you like, you can even rebrand them, edit them, add to them -- whatever you like.
At the very least they can be the inspiration and starting point for a project of your own. Or they're
240 ready-made lead magnets for your would-be online business.
While my purchase is probably going to cause me frustration, this deal is going to save you plenty of it.
Did I mention it's 240 eBooks, for half of what it's costing me to sit through off-the-charts awfulness?
Someday you'll wish you'd picked these up.
Well, today you can get them, but his very weekend the deal vanishes forever:
Tom Woods