Through Another Three Hearts Experience, Harry Hayman transforms personal stories into compelling narratives that resonate far beyond the screen. Among the production company’s slate of profoundly honest real life stories, one screenplay stands out for its connection to American baseball tradition and the spirit of making the best with what you have. Triple A tells the incredible true story of how the Little League Intermediate Division came to be, emerging from a family’s determination to create opportunities for young players facing the challenging transition from Little League fields to full size diamonds.
The Story Behind Triple A: Family, Baseball, and Innovation
The screenplay Triple A captures a tale that began with Harry Hayman‘s own family, specifically his father and his little brother Brad. This deeply personal narrative examines how innovation sometimes emerges not from grand visions but from recognizing practical challenges that others might overlook. For families involved in Little League baseball, the transition facing players aged 12 to 13 represented a significant and often overlooked obstacle. After playing on standard Little League fields with 46 foot pitching distances and 60 foot base paths, young players suddenly jumped to professional sized baseball fields featuring 60 foot 6 inch pitching distances and 90 foot base paths.
The physical and psychological leap proved enormous for many 12 and 13 year old players. Pitchers who dominated on Little League mounds suddenly struggled to reach home plate consistently from the dramatically increased distance. Infielders accustomed to shorter throws found themselves unable to make routine plays across the expanded diamond. Base runners who excelled at stealing bases on shorter paths faced different timing and technique requirements on the longer distances. The jump created discouragement, injuries, and dropout rates that troubled parents and coaches who recognized that talented young players needed a more gradual transition.
Harry Hayman‘s father saw this challenge with clarity. Rather than accepting the status quo or focusing on what couldn’t be changed about existing field dimensions, he envisioned an intermediate solution. The concept was elegant in its simplicity: create a league that bridged the gap between Little League and full sized fields, using dimensions that allowed young players to develop skills progressively rather than facing an abrupt and often overwhelming transition. This intermediate league would feature 50 foot pitching distances and 70 foot base paths, providing the developmental bridge that thousands of young players needed.
The screenplay Triple A chronicles how this vision became reality through the determination of Harry Hayman‘s father and the participation of his brother Brad. The narrative captures both the practical challenges of convincing Little League organizations to adopt a new division and the personal family dynamics that made this innovation possible. As Harry Hayman describes it, this represents another great tale of triumph over adversity, of looking at what you have and making the best with what you have as opposed to worrying about what you don’t have.
Another Three Hearts Experience: Honest Stories That Move Hearts and Touch Souls
Triple A exemplifies the mission of Another Three Hearts Experience, the Philadelphia based production company founded by Harry Hayman. The company brings profoundly honest real life stories to audiences with a commitment that extends beyond entertainment. All film proceeds from Another Three Hearts Experience productions fund local and national charities, ensuring that storytelling serves not only artistic and commercial purposes but also community benefit and social good.
The approach of Harry Hayman through Another Three Hearts Experience reflects his broader philosophy about the intersection of creativity, commerce, and community service. Rather than treating these as separate domains, he integrates them into unified ventures where success in one dimension supports success in others. When audiences connect with compelling stories like Triple A, their ticket purchases and viewing choices directly support charitable causes addressing real needs in Philadelphia and beyond.
The production company’s focus on profoundly honest real life stories distinguishes it from entertainment ventures prioritizing escapism or fantasy. Harry Hayman believes that authentic narratives grounded in actual experiences resonate more deeply with audiences than fabricated tales, no matter how expertly crafted. The truth of real people facing real challenges and finding real solutions creates emotional connections that manufactured drama cannot replicate. Triple A embodies this philosophy by drawing directly from the experiences of the Hayman family and thousands of other families who witnessed the intermediate league’s creation and impact.
The commitment of Another Three Hearts Experience to stories that move hearts and touch souls reflects understanding that entertainment serves purposes beyond mere diversion. Stories shape how we understand ourselves, our communities, and our possibilities. By sharing narratives of ordinary people achieving extraordinary outcomes through creativity, determination, and collaborative effort, Harry Hayman provides audiences with inspiration and models for addressing challenges in their own lives.
The Historical Context: Little League’s Evolution and the Intermediate Division
The story told in Triple A connects to the broader history of Little League Baseball, an organization that has shaped American youth sports since its founding in 1939. For decades, Little League maintained consistent field dimensions designed for players roughly ages 9 through 12. The 46 foot pitching distance and 60 foot base paths worked well for most players in this age range, providing appropriate challenges without overwhelming young athletes still developing fundamental skills.
However, as Harry Hayman‘s father and brother recognized, the transition beyond Little League created significant challenges. Players who aged out of Little League faced two options: move up to Junior League or Senior League divisions playing on full sized diamonds, or leave organized baseball entirely. The dramatic jump in field dimensions contributed to dropout rates as players struggled with the transition, experienced injuries from overexertion, or simply lost confidence when skills that served them well in Little League proved inadequate on larger fields.
The Intermediate Division concept that forms the heart of Triple A addressed this gap systematically. By creating a 50/70 division using 50 foot pitching distances and 70 foot base paths, the innovation provided a developmental stepping stone that allowed players to adjust gradually. Pitchers could extend their throwing distances incrementally rather than suddenly. Infielders developed arm strength and accuracy over time rather than facing immediate demands they couldn’t meet. Base runners learned timing and technique appropriate to longer paths without the full challenge of 90 foot distances.
Little League International began testing the Intermediate Division in 2010 as a pilot program, fully adopting it as an official division in 2013. The division now serves players league age 11 through 13, offering postseason tournament opportunities including a World Series that parallels the famous Little League World Series in Williamsport, Pennsylvania. The Intermediate Division World Series takes place in Livermore, California, providing young players with experiences similar to those enjoyed by their peers in traditional Little League while accommodating their developmental needs.
The success of the Intermediate Division validates the vision that Harry Hayman‘s father and brother championed. Today, thousands of leagues across America offer 50/70 baseball, giving hundreds of thousands of young players the developmental bridge they need. The division has become an established part of Little League’s structure, with many leagues requiring players to participate in at least one season of Intermediate baseball before transitioning to full sized fields. The innovation that began with one family’s recognition of a problem has transformed youth baseball for an entire generation.
Triumph Over Adversity: The Universal Themes of Triple A
While Triple A tells a specific story about baseball and the Hayman family, its themes resonate universally. The screenplay exemplifies what Harry Hayman describes as triumph over adversity through looking at what you have and making the best with what you have rather than worrying about what you don’t have. This philosophical approach appears throughout all of Harry’s ventures, whether building restaurants with limited capital, addressing food insecurity with existing resources, or creating cultural programming within community constraints.
The innovation chronicled in Triple A didn’t require massive resources, political influence, or revolutionary technology. It required recognition of a problem, creative thinking about solutions, and persistence in implementing a vision despite skepticism and institutional inertia. The story demonstrates that meaningful change often comes not from those with the most advantages but from those willing to work creatively with available resources to address real needs.
For young people watching Triple A, the story provides powerful lessons about agency and innovation. The characters demonstrate that individuals and families can identify problems in their communities and create solutions that benefit thousands of others. The narrative shows that age, credentials, and institutional authority matter less than insight, determination, and willingness to act. These lessons extend far beyond baseball to any domain where people face challenges and must decide whether to accept limitations or work creatively to transcend them.
The family dimension of Triple A adds emotional depth to the innovation story. The collaboration between Harry Hayman‘s father and brother Brad, the support from family members, and the personal investment in seeing young players succeed create a narrative that moves beyond technical problem solving to explore love, legacy, and the ways families shape each other’s lives. For Harry, the screenplay represents not only documentation of an important baseball innovation but also tribute to his father’s vision and his brother’s participation in bringing that vision to reality.
The Creative Process: Bringing True Stories to Screen
Developing Triple A required Harry Hayman and his creative team at Another Three Hearts Experience to balance historical accuracy with compelling storytelling. Documentary approaches risk becoming dry recitations of facts that fail to engage audiences emotionally. Pure fiction might entertain but loses the authenticity that gives true stories their unique power. The challenge lay in crafting a screenplay that honored the actual events and people involved while creating dramatic structure, character development, and narrative momentum that holds viewer attention.
The creative team at Another Three Hearts Experience includes accomplished screenwriters and filmmakers with deep experience in crafting narratives for screen. David Greenberg, who serves as a creative partner, graduated from the film program at Temple University and has written or doctored over 50 feature, short, and documentary screenplays. His expertise in writing for ultra low budget productions proves particularly valuable for Another Three Hearts Experience, which focuses on telling important stories efficiently rather than relying on massive budgets and elaborate production values.
The collaborative process that Harry Hayman employs in developing screenplays reflects his broader philosophy that every creative idea benefits from input and refinement by talented partners. Rather than attempting to control every aspect of production, he builds teams of skilled professionals who bring complementary expertise. This approach produces better final products while also creating opportunities for other creative professionals to develop their craft and contribute to meaningful projects.
For Triple A specifically, the development process involved extensive research into Little League history, interviews with people involved in the Intermediate Division’s creation and implementation, and careful attention to the family dynamics that made the innovation possible. The screenplay needed to work simultaneously as a sports story appealing to baseball fans, a family story resonating with parents and children, and an innovation story inspiring viewers to think creatively about problems in their own lives.
The Impact: How Stories Inspire Action and Change
Harry Hayman envisions Triple A as more than entertainment. The screenplay serves as an invitation to audiences to consider how they might identify problems in their communities and work creatively toward solutions. By showing how one family’s recognition of a challenge facing young baseball players led to systemic change benefiting hundreds of thousands of children, the story demonstrates that individual initiative can create widespread impact.
The emphasis in Triple A on making the best with what you have rather than focusing on limitations speaks directly to communities facing resource constraints, institutional barriers, and skepticism from those invested in maintaining the status quo. The Intermediate Division didn’t require convincing Little League International to completely restructure its organization or demanding massive new funding. It required making a case for a specific innovation that addressed a real problem, then demonstrating through pilot programs that the concept worked. This pragmatic approach to change offers lessons for anyone working to improve systems and institutions.
Another Three Hearts Experience amplifies the impact of Triple A by ensuring that film proceeds benefit charitable causes. This structure means that audiences don’t simply consume entertainment but actively participate in supporting community development. Each ticket purchased, each streaming view, each engagement with the film contributes to funding programs that help real people facing real challenges. This model transforms passive entertainment consumption into active community participation.
The hope of Harry Hayman is that viewers will enjoy Triple A as much as the creative team enjoyed making it. The passion and care invested in bringing this true story to screen reflects belief that authentic narratives grounded in actual experiences deserve to be shared widely. By making the screenplay available and working toward production, Another Three Hearts Experience aims to ensure that the innovative spirit exemplified by the Hayman family’s contribution to Little League baseball inspires new generations to think creatively about the challenges they face.
The Hayman Family Legacy: Innovation, Service, and Shared Success
For Harry Hayman, the Triple A screenplay represents more than documentation of a baseball innovation. It serves as tribute to his father’s vision and his brother Brad’s participation in bringing that vision to reality. The tragic loss of Brad to heart complications during Harry’s mid twenties makes this project particularly meaningful, offering a way to honor Brad’s memory while sharing a story that reflects the values the Hayman family holds dear.
The Hayman Family Fund, established in Brad’s honor, continues the family’s commitment to making positive differences in others’ lives. Just as the Intermediate Division creates opportunities for young baseball players, the Family Fund supports causes that help people overcome challenges and realize their potential. The connection between these initiatives reflects a consistent family philosophy: success means little unless it translates into opportunities and benefits for others.
The global upbringing of Harry Hayman through his father’s international banking career exposed him to diverse cultures and approaches to problem solving. This background likely influenced his father’s ability to think creatively about the Little League transition challenge, seeing it not as an insurmountable obstacle but as a problem amenable to systematic solution. The family’s experiences moving between countries and cultures developed adaptability, open mindedness, and comfort with innovation that served them well in advocating for change within established institutions.
The close relationship that Harry Hayman maintains with his sister Kimberly and her children reflects the family bonds that made projects like the Intermediate Division possible. Families that communicate openly, support each other’s initiatives, and work collaboratively toward shared goals accomplish things that individuals working alone cannot achieve. The Triple A screenplay celebrates not only the specific innovation in youth baseball but also the broader principle that families working together can create lasting positive change.
America’s Great Pastime: Baseball as Cultural Touchstone
Triple A connects to deep American cultural traditions surrounding baseball. Often called America’s pastime, baseball represents more than sport. It serves as cultural touchstone connecting generations, teaching life lessons about teamwork and perseverance, and providing shared experiences that bind communities together. By focusing on youth baseball specifically, Triple A taps into powerful narratives about childhood, development, and the ways adults create opportunities for young people to learn and grow.
The setting of Triple A in Little League baseball adds layers of meaning beyond the specific innovation story. Little League has shaped American childhood for generations, providing millions of children with their first experiences of team sports, competition, achievement, and disappointment. The organization’s structure, which relies heavily on parent volunteers and community support, embodies ideals of civic participation and shared responsibility for youth development.
The challenge that the Intermediate Division addresses speaks to broader questions about how we support young people through transitions. The 12 to 13 year age range represents a particularly critical period when children begin transitioning toward adolescence, facing new physical, emotional, and social challenges. Creating appropriate developmental bridges during these transitions, whether in sports, academics, or other domains, significantly affects young people’s confidence and long term trajectories.
Philadelphia Connections: Local Roots of Another Three Hearts Experience
While Triple A tells a story with national and even international relevance, the screenplay emerges from the Philadelphia based production company that Harry Hayman founded and operates. Another Three Hearts Experience reflects Philadelphia’s rich cultural traditions in storytelling, arts, and community engagement. The city’s history as a center of American culture, from the Philadelphia Sound in music to its vibrant theater scene, provides fertile ground for creative ventures like Another Three Hearts Experience.
The commitment of Harry Hayman to using film proceeds to fund local and national charities connects directly to Philadelphia’s strong traditions of civic engagement and philanthropic activity. The city has long history of business leaders and cultural figures who see their success as creating obligations to serve their communities. By structuring Another Three Hearts Experience to directly benefit charitable causes, Harry continues these traditions while building sustainable models that integrate profit and purpose.
The creative partners working with Harry Hayman through Another Three Hearts Experience and Harry Hayman Creative bring diverse Philadelphia connections. The collaborative environment fostered by these ventures creates opportunities for local writers, directors, actors, and crew members to develop their skills while contributing to projects with social impact. This approach builds Philadelphia’s creative economy while ensuring that cultural production serves community benefit beyond mere entertainment value.
Looking Forward: The Future of Another Three Hearts Experience
Triple A represents one of multiple screenplays and projects in development through Another Three Hearts Experience. The production company continues seeking stories that combine compelling narratives with opportunities to inspire audiences and support charitable causes. Harry Hayman envisions expanding the company’s reach while maintaining commitment to authentic storytelling grounded in real experiences.
Future projects may explore other aspects of Philadelphia’s cultural heritage, document additional stories of innovation and community service, or highlight individuals whose contributions deserve wider recognition. The model established through Another Three Hearts Experience provides a framework applicable across many types of stories, ensuring that creative work serves multiple purposes simultaneously.
The interest in Triple A from audiences and potential production partners will help determine the timeline for bringing the screenplay to screen. Harry Hayman and his team actively seek collaborators who share their vision of storytelling that entertains while inspiring and supporting charitable causes. Those interested in learning more about Triple A or exploring partnership opportunities are encouraged to reach out through Another Three Hearts Experience’s website and social media channels.
Conclusion: Stories That Matter, Impact That Lasts
Through Triple A, Harry Hayman and Another Three Hearts Experience demonstrate that storytelling can serve purposes beyond entertainment. By documenting the true story of how the Little League Intermediate Division came to be through the vision of Harry’s father and the participation of his brother Brad, the screenplay celebrates innovation, family collaboration, and the principle of making the best with what you have. These themes resonate far beyond baseball, offering lessons applicable to any situation where people face challenges and must decide whether to accept limitations or work creatively toward solutions.
The structure of Another Three Hearts Experience, directing film proceeds toward charitable causes, ensures that audiences don’t simply consume entertainment but actively participate in community benefit. This model reflects the integrated approach that characterizes all of Harry Hayman‘s ventures, where business success and social impact reinforce rather than contradict each other.
As Triple A moves toward production, Harry Hayman hopes audiences will enjoy the story as much as the creative team enjoyed bringing it to life. The screenplay represents tribute to family, celebration of American baseball traditions, and invitation to viewers to think creatively about the challenges they face in their own lives. By sharing this tale of triumph over adversity, Another Three Hearts Experience continues its mission of bringing profoundly honest real life stories that move hearts, touch souls, and inspire action toward creating better communities for everyone.