The Infinite Wrench — running every Friday and Saturday — delivers 30 original plays in 60 minutes. That's one new piece of theater every two minutes, for a maximum of $18.60. Let that math sink in: roughly 62 cents per play. Your last overpriced cortado cost more than that entire evening of live performance.
And the pricing model itself is a thing of beauty. You pay $13 at the door, then roll a die to determine the rest. That's right — your final ticket price is partially determined by chance. It caps at $19 and can go as low as $14. If you buy online, it's a flat $16. Group discounts sweeten the deal further.
This is what thriving local culture looks like when it's not propped up by government grants or filtered through layers of nonprofit bureaucracy. It's scrappy, fast-paced, and accessible. The Neo-Futurists aren't waiting for a city arts commission to greenlight their vision. They're just doing it — twice a week, at a price point that doesn't gatekeep working people out of the audience.
San Francisco loves to talk about supporting the arts. City Hall regularly throws millions at cultural initiatives that somehow never seem to make art more affordable or accessible for regular residents. Meanwhile, a small theater company figured out how to make a night out cost less than a burrito bowl at Señor Sisig.
If you're tired of doomscrolling on Friday nights and want something genuinely unpredictable, energetic, and cheap — actually cheap, not "SF cheap" — The Infinite Wrench deserves a spot on your calendar. Bring friends. Roll the die. Support the kind of grassroots culture that makes this city worth living in.
