In this short scene, the young president of a company introduces himself as "the blind date" of his mother's niece. The blind date is LaDonna, who is the niece of the company's president. LaDonna tells the group that the company is holding a blind-date drawing party, and that she has come to the party because she wants to draw. She asks the group to give her "elegant and fair competition," and the group agrees to do so. The young president tells LaDonna that he has not drawn anything good in a while, and he asks LaDonna to help him review his drawings. He tells her that he used to collect facsimile drawings and copy sketches for others to earn money, and then he met her. She tells him that she is drawing because she likes it, but that she does not want to tell her mother about it. She says that drawing has become her "sole dream."
In this short scene, the young president of a company introduces himself as "the blind date" of his mother's niece. The blind date is LaDonna, who is the niece of the company's president. LaDonna tells the group that the company is holding a blind-date drawing party, and that she has come to the party because she wants to draw. She asks the group to give her "elegant and fair competition," and the group agrees to do so. The young president tells LaDonna that he has not drawn anything good in a while, and he asks LaDonna to help him review his drawings. He tells her that he used to collect facsimile drawings and copy sketches for others to earn money, and then he met her. She tells him that she is drawing because she likes it, but that she does not want to tell her mother about it. She says that drawing has become her "sole dream."