A finished spoken-word draft is the whole unit working at once. The seed gives you something you mean. The four moves give it a shape that climbs. The breath test keeps every line sayable. And the earlier concepts give you the tools to fill it.
Everything You've Learned, in One Piece
Your job now isn't to learn anything new — it's to weave what you've got: an appeal to aim it (ethos, pathos, logos), a device to sharpen it (anaphora, a tricolon, a rhetorical question), and the authority to back it. The toy lets you slot real lines into the skeleton and watch a live checklist tell you exactly what's still missing.
The Composer Move: Build, Then Check, Then Say
Use the toy as your workbench. Slot your real lines into hook, build, turn and landing, and watch the ticks. A missing tick tells you exactly what your draft needs — no device yet? add one to the build. No clear turn? find the moment it gets bigger. Then do the thing this whole unit has been about: read the finished draft aloud, start to finish. The page can lie to you; your breath can't.
Spot It Everywhere
Once you can build one, you hear the shape everywhere — a slam poem on YouTube, a captain's speech at assembly, Severn Suzuki at the UN aged twelve, a coach's half-time spray. Every one of them is a seed, four moves, an appeal and a device, said for the ear. You're not just analysing those any more. You can write one.