The film is set up as a series of humorous tricks on the audience, with constant doubling, and in which things are rarely what they at first seem to be. It opens with Keaton attending a variety show. In this first sequence, Keaton plays beside him and remarks, “This fellow Keaton seems to be the whole show.” This was a gibe at one of Keaton’s contemporaries, Thomas Harper Ince, who credited himself generously in his film productions.> Keaton claims he gave the director’s credit to Cline mainly because he did not want to appear too Ince-like himself: “Having kidded things like that, I hesitated to put my own name on as a director and writer.” This elaborate trick-photography sequence turns out to be only a dream when Joe Roberts rouses Keaton from bed. The bedroom then turns out to be not a bedroom, but a set on a stage. The second half of the film features Keaton’s character falling for a girl who happens to be a twin. He has difficulty telling the twin who likes him from the one who does not. An uncredited Virginia Fox plays one of the twins. Edward F. Cline co-wrote the production and appears, uncredited, as a monkey trainer, whose monkey Keaton impersonates onstage after accidentally letting the animal escape.