Alone on stage, with a ball representing the world, a dictator recounts his day of propaganda, consensus, and absolute power. Between rallies and condemnation, his voice invades everything. Next to him emerges Bernardino, an ordinary man who asks questions and undermines the dominant narrative. The result is a tragicomic monologue, inspired by Chaplin's “The Great Dictator,” which traverses past and present to reflect on populism, the media, groupthink, and democracy. A direct, ironic, and necessary play, performed by Filippo Carrozzo.