If you don't, how do you communicate if you're
training at a larger distance (i.e., teaching directional «placing» in a noisy environment with the dog several yards away)?
If The King's Speech risks being too cute by half in its depiction of how this royal without a voice comes to find one in his nation's hour of need, Hooper and screenwriter David Seidler neatly avoid that trap by
training their sights on a much bigger subject — namely, how the wireless waves of radio affected seismic changes to the nature of politics and society
at large, turning public figures into performers, and narrowing the
distance between classes.