Skuma & Elite
Skuma Skuma
Ну ты, значит, всё спланировала, да? Посмотрим, сможешь ли ты организовать выступление на улице, которое перекричит все твои таблицы.
Elite Elite
Sure thing. I’ll lay out a step‑by‑step plan—no improvisation. I’ll need logistics, timing, crowd flow, an exit strategy, and a backup if the crowd starts tearing things down. Precision wins.
Skuma Skuma
Alright, here’s the playbook, no fluff: 1. Scout a warehouse or abandoned lot that’s got enough room for a crowd and a stage, and check the permits—if you don’t have the right paperwork, we’re already doomed. 2. Set a drop‑in time for the crew: 2 pm for set‑up, 3 pm for sound check, 5 pm for the first sound bite, 7 pm for the full bang‑out. 3. Divide the crowd flow: use barricades on the sides, a clear exit on the front, and an emergency route back to the parking lot—no one gets trapped. 4. Hook up the stage to a backup generator—if the grid dies, we keep the lights burning. 5. Recruit a crew of 10—four sound, three lighting, three security, one medic. Keep their contacts in a one‑page list in case someone needs to ditch the place. 6. Load the amps, set the amps to ‘raw’ mode—no pre‑mixing, just straight to the floor. 7. On day: start with a low‑key set to warm up, then ramp the energy—if the crowd’s feeling it, they’ll tear it up. 8. Have a plan B: a portable stage in the back that we can pull out in 30 seconds if the main one gets swarmed. 9. Keep a 911 contact on speed dial and a fire extinguisher in a visible spot—don’t wait until the heat’s on. 10. When the show’s over, get the crew out the back, call a ride‑share, and make sure nobody’s left behind. Precision? Sure. But remember, the real power is in the moment—don’t forget to feed the chaos.