Most websites that use Flash animation tend to be little more than animated menus. Some may add sounds and rollover graphics to their menus and buttons, but by and large a Flash page does not respond dynamically (i.e. in real time) to mouse movement unless it is to entice a user to click their way towards the rest of the site. (Like most webpages, these are commercial sites, although I, too, am guilty of this.) This approach to page design becomes predictable quickly as the user learns where to look for buttons and hotspots. (It also tends to make the narrative mode centered on dramatic changes or shifts, diminishing the threads found within a single page or image.) Some Flash texts have been able to overcome that predictability, like Donna Leishman's 6amhoover.com. Most of the action in her short piece "red riding hood" relies on a user clicking into a new animated scene, and indicates through rollovers where these clicks should happen. Leishman uses the predictability of this interaction to upset the reader's expectations. The reader thinks he/she knows what each click will bring because the tale is well-known, but Leishman's adaptation brings the reader off on unpredictable tangents into Red's dreams.