abstract
| - By the 1700's The Flow Chart had become an icon. Children dreamed of growing to be just like it. Global chocolate company Big-Frosty™ began making "The Flow Bar." However, the chocolate proved difficult to write on and did not convey ideas clearly, thus the company folded and ceased production of the famous Bar. The 1800's saw the world rebel from using fridges. Thus the need for The Flow Chart became scarce. In 1879, Prime Minister and comedian Jonathan Smith led a march towards the isle of Prague, in honour of The Flow Chart. The march, dubbed The March To The Isle Of Prague, turned into something of a fiesta. Buskers, actors, retailers and musicians all joined the march, which encouraged much enthusiasm to the previously dormant flow chart. The Flow Chart was used increasingly throughout the twentieth century. Middle eastern countries used The Flow Chart in their attempt to teach animals to read and write. This angered western countries attempting to rid the world of The Flow Chart, as every dead person who had used the flow chart had died. Also, having invented animorphs, they had no need to teach animals to read and write. It was also in the Twentieth century in which it was renamed The Flow Diagram. The new millennium saw the extinction of the Flow Chart, being replaced by the Venn diagram and its more popular but mutated cousin, The Tri-Venn Diagram.
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