Venger's Card: The Choate Museum

Abishai100

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Sep 22, 2013
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Has capitalism molded the nature of civilization diadem storytelling? This commerce trophy diorama was inspired by the Barry Levinson film Toys and examines the storytelling value of capitalism and commercial diaries. Thanks for reading!


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Venger was an eccentric genius and race car driver from Holland. He was also a diamond thief mired in Antwerp highways. He wanted to make a museum collection of capitalism trophies. He wanted to be cool about American magic.

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He admired most his Ken Griffey Fleer rookie American baseball card. It wasn't the most valued Griffey card, but it wasn't a very cool baseball item for avid fans of sports memorabilia. Venger considered this Fleer trophy a symbol of capitalism arms. Perhaps it's because Fleer had become a company of serious commercial value.

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Venger kept his Fleer trophy in a Swiss safe box along with diamonds he sought to keep pure from warlord blood diamond matrices. Capitalism trophies were threatened by modern piracy in many forms, and Venger kept his safe box reflective of his keen interest in intellectual investments.

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Venger made an anthropological inventory of his safe box treasures for a new museum collection presented in the new exhibit at the Choate school in the USA, and the exhibit represented a focused education of commercial diadems in modern civilization. You see, students today care about the quality of capitalism collections, so Venger's contribution to Choate symbolized a concentration of network achievements in the world of merchandising. This would prove to become an educational time capsule for archaeological enlightenment. Would his Fleer trophy represent the very best of modern historianship?

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"Money is everything" (Ecclesiastes)
 

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