Cleveland(CNN) Donald Trump painted a picture of a dystopian America -- and sold himself as the only one who can fix it.
As he accepted the Republican nomination here Thursday night, Trump delivered tough talk, promising to eradicate crime, build a border wall, defeat ISIS, rejuvenate the economy and prod U.S. allies to step it up or else.
Donald Trump's speech at the Republican convention, as prepared for delivery
"I'm with you," Trump said. "I will fight for you, and I will win for you."
Here are CNN's takeaways from 2016's Republican National Convention:
Trump's style of 'presidential'
Vice presidential nominee Mike Pence compares Trump to Ronald Reagan -- but on stage Thursday night Trump was no happy warrior.
Trump channeled Americans' grievances at home and abroad, pinning blame for spikes in violence and drugs on undocumented immigrants, casting the battle on terrorism as one being lost and demanding a return to law and order.
This is what presidential means to Trump. To his critics, it will come off as vacant and dictatorial. But to his backers, it's the very embodiment of they've been thinking, but not feeling welcome by society to say.
The speech that ran more than 75 minutes was signature Trump, offering America a prime-time look at his ability to channel voter anger that won him the nomination.
No wonder Trump spooks party loyalists. This was no Bush speech. Trump called for a much more activist government -- intervening regularly in international economics, cracking down ferociously on illegal immigration and even taking special care to prevent LGBT Americans from targeted attacks.
Related: Trump's divisive convention
Nighttime in America
Channeling Richard Nixon, Trump insisted that he'd preside over "a country of law and order." He pledged -- without explaining how he'd fulfill the promise -- that crime would drop as soon as he took office.
Trump cast the country as in "a moment of crisis."
"The attacks on our police, and the terrorism in our cities, threaten our very way of life. Any politician who does not grasp this danger is not fit to lead our country," he said.
Trump spent the most time on immigration -- touting his call for a U.S.-Mexico border wall (with chants of "build that wall!" breaking out occasionally) and making clear it's the issue that's reached him personally.
"Of all my travels in this country, nothing has affected me more -- nothing even close, I have to tell you -- than the time I have spent with the mothers and fathers who have lost their children to violence spilling across our border," Trump said.
"Which we can solve -- we have to solve it," he said. "These families have no special interests to represent them. There are no demonstrators to protest on their behalf."
Asked by CNN's Jake Tapper after the speech whether Trump's remarks were dark, campaign chairman Paul Manafort signaled Trump truly does see the country as desperately needing saving. "It wasn't dark," Manafort said, "it was reality."
Related: World reacts to Trump's speech
A nudge toward LGBT acceptance
The Republican Party wasn't ready this year to moderate its platform's language on same-sex marriage or transgender rights.
But some of its delegates cheered nudges in the direction of LGBT acceptance -- including one from the party's nominee -- on Thursday night.
When Trump promised to protect LGBT citizens from attacks like the shooting at an Orlando nightclub that left 49 dead, the crowd cheered, and Trump ad-libbed.
"I have to say, as a Republican, it is so nice to hear you cheering for what I just said," he said. "Thank you."
The crowd broke into a chant of "Help is on the way."
Trump's speech came after PayPal co-founder Peter Thiel told the audience he is "proud to be gay" and urged the GOP to drop its "fake culture wars."
"Now we are told that the great debate is about who gets to use which bathroom. This is a distraction from our real problems," Thiel said, getting big cheers when he read the words that were capitalized on his Teleprompter: "WHO CARES?"
It's important to note: These were moments. They could reflect a change in attitude on policy -- but it hasn't happened yet.
Related: A gay billionaire just made GOP history
An introspective Trump
The famously braggadocious and in-the-moment candidate offered a few rare glimpses inside his own head.
Late in the speech, Trump offered a rare biographical detail that wasn't about his own business history -- discussing the origins of the billionaire's working-man appeal.
"My dad, Fred Trump, was the smartest and hardest working man I ever knew. I wonder sometimes what he'd say if he were here to see this and to see me tonight," he said.
"It's because of him that I learned, from my youngest age, to respect the dignity of work and the dignity of working people," Trump said. "He was a guy most comfortable in the company of bricklayers, carpenters, and electricians and I have a lot of that in me also. I love those people."
Another moment designed as a nod to evangelical Christians who'd supported him came with an admission about their support. "I'm not sure I totally deserve it," Trump said, going off-script.
Trump gives no quarter to the old guard
Trump's speech came with an olive branch for evangelicals and a mention of the National Rifle Association. It was rife with "America First" themes and calls to rescue the working class.
Nowhere to be found: Anything for the Jeb Bush wing of the Republican Party.
Trump showed no interest in addressing fiscal policy. His indication he'd break from NATO unless smaller countries stepped up their efforts left neoconservatives apoplectic. His insistence on renegotiating every trade deal, and swiftly enforcing trade rules with any and every ounce of authority he can muster, would have fit in a Bernie Sanders speech.
The Republican nominee flouted conservative orthodoxy all night, betting he has little to gain courting those establishment types. Instead, he trashed their hold on American politics, promising to fight for the little guy instead -- because he's big enough himself that he has nothing to lose.
Related: Republicans ask: Are you safer than you were 8 years ago?
Ivanka, the future candidate
Trump was introduced Thursday night by his daughter-turned-confidante Ivanka — perhaps the speaker Republican delegates were most eager to see besides the nominee himself.
Her biggest strength: Trump's composed, well-spoken daughter -- a powerful figure in her own right -- could validate her father with women, who at this stage polls show holding overwhelmingly negative views of him.
Ivanka Trump touted her father as "colorblind and gender-neutral," and made a lengthy call for equal pay for women, saying her father has a personal record of promoting female figures within the Trump Organization.
"Politicians talk about wage equality, but my father has made it a practice at his company throughout his entire career," she said. "He will fight for equal pay for equal work, and I will fight for this right alongside of him."
Her speech would've fit at the Democratic National Convention in Philadelphia next week. It left social media buzzing about her own political prospects.
Trump spoke of her father more in professional than personal capacities -- though she recalled, as a child, "constructing miniature buildings with Legos while he did the same with concrete, steel and glass."
The Republican National Convention
Donald Trump, the Republican Party's presidential nominee, delivers a speech Thursday at the Republican National Convention in Cleveland. "I have had a truly great life in business," he said. "But now, my sole and exclusive mission is to go to work for our country -- to go to work for you. It's time to deliver a victory for the American people."
Trump is seen on screen as balloons fall from the ceiling of Quicken Loans Arena.
Trump's family joins him on stage along with the family of his running mate, Indiana Gov. Mike Pence.
Confetti falls at the end of Trump's acceptance speech.
Trump and Pence acknowledge the audience after Trump's speech.
Trump claps on stage with his wife, Melania.
The Trumps embrace on stage.
Trump hugs his son Barron after his address, which lasted well over an hour.
Trump, like many of the convention's speakers this week, went after Hillary Clinton, the Democratic Party's presumptive nominee. "Big business, elite media and major donors are lining up behind the campaign of my opponent because they know she will keep our rigged system in place," he said. "They are throwing money at her because they have total control over everything she does. She is their puppet, and they pull the strings."
Trump delivers his speech.
Trump said the United States will be a nation of "generosity and warmth" and "law and order."
A delegate listens to Trump's speech.
"Nobody knows the system better than me, which is why I alone can fix it," Trump said. "My message is that things have to change -- and they have to change right now."
Trump accepts the party's nomination as he begins his speech.
Trump's daughter Ivanka takes the stage Thursday before giving a speech introducing her father.
"This is the moment, and Donald Trump is the person to make America great again!" Ivanka Trump said to a big cheer. She called her father a fighter, saying now he will "fight for his country."
Peter Thiel, co-founder of PayPal, became the first openly gay person to speak the Republican National Convention. "I am proud to be gay," he told the crowd Thursday. "I am proud to be a Republican. But most of all I am proud to be an American."
Reince Priebus, chairman of the Republican National Committee, delivers a speech on Thursday. "We are the party of new ideas in a changing and faster world than ever before," he said.
Legendary basketball coach Bob Knight delivers a video message to the crowd at Quicken Loans Arena.
Motivational speaker Brock Mealer was among those who spoke on Thursday.
A delegate dressed as Hillary Clinton is accosted by another delegate on Thursday.
Delegates stand for the national anthem Thursday.
Young singer Heavenly Joy performs.
Trump gives a thumbs-up Wednesday after Pence gave his speech.
Trump gives an "air kiss" to Pence after Pence's speech.
Pence receives a kiss from his mother, Nancy, as his family joins him on stage after his speech.
Pence acknowledges the crowd as he walks on stage to deliver his speech.
"I'm a Christian, a conservative and a Republican, in that order," Pence told the crowd.
Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich delivers a speech on Wednesday.
Trump smiles on the floor of the convention on Wednesday.
Eric Trump, one of Donald Trump's sons, walks on stage to deliver a speech Wednesday.
Trump listens to his son's speech along with other members of his family on Wednesday.
Delegates shout on the floor of the arena on Wednesday.
U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz, Trump's main adversary in the primaries, was booed at the end of his speech when it was clear he wasn't endorsing Trump. Cruz told people to "vote your conscience."
People react to Cruz's speech.
Cruz gives a thumbs-up as he walks off stage.
U.S. Sen. Marco Rubio, another one of Trump's primary opponents, delivers a video message.
A delegate checks his phone at the arena.
Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker delivers a speech Wednesday. "A vote for anyone other than Donald Trump in November is a vote for Hillary Clinton," the former presidential candidate said.
Delegates hold up signs Wednesday.
Retired astronaut Eileen Collins waves to the crowd before delivering a speech Wednesday.
Trump addresses the crowd on Tuesday. "We're going to make America great again," he said in a video message shortly after winning the nomination. "Have a fantastic evening. I'll see you tomorrow night, I'll see you Thursday night, and we will win in November."
Ben Carson, a retired neurosurgeon and former presidential candidate, speaks on stage Tuesday. He said Trump skeptics who would vote for Hillary Clinton are "not using their God-given brain to think about what they're saying. ... She'll be appointing people who will have an effect on us for generations. And America may never recover."
A member of the activist group Code Pink protests inside the arena during Carson's speech.
Donald Trump Jr. delivers a speech Tuesday. "We need to elect a man who has a track record of accomplishing the impossible," he said of his father.
Members of the Trump family watch as Donald Trump Jr. gives his speech.
Donald Trump's daughter Tiffany addresses the crowd at Quicken Loans Arena. "Whatever (my father) does, he gives it all and does it well," she said on Tuesday. "His desire for excellence is contagious. He possesses a unique gift for bringing that out in others."
U.S. Sen. Joni Ernst waves as she stands with other first-term senators on Tuesday.
New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie delivers a speech that was heavily critical of the Democratic Party's presumptive nominee. "It is our obligation to stop Hillary Clinton now and never let her within 10 miles of the White House again," Christie said of the former secretary of state. "It is time to come together and make sure that Donald Trump is our next President. I am proud to be part of this team. Now let's go win this thing."
Delegates fill the floor of the arena on Tuesday.
Four of Donald Trump's children -- from left, Donald Trump Jr., Ivanka Trump, Eric Trump and Tiffany Trump -- celebrate on the floor of the convention, where Donald Trump Jr. announced the New York delegates that clinched the nomination for his father.
A delegate shows support for Donald Trump's wife, Melania, on Tuesday.
A delegate whistles as roll call votes are cast on Tuesday.
Delegates take a photo with Mississippi Gov. Phil Bryant, center, on Tuesday.
A Florida delegate holds a "Hillary for prison" sign on the floor of the arena.
A convention attendee wears American-themed shoes on Tuesday.
House Speaker Paul Ryan bangs the gavel to open the second day of the convention on Tuesday.
Melania Trump kisses her husband, Donald, after she spoke Monday on the first day of the convention. "If you want someone to fight for you and your country, I can assure you, he's the guy," she said of her husband. "He will never, ever give up. And most importantly, he will never, ever let you down."
Donald Trump walks to his wife after she delivered her speech.
Melania Trump claps during her speech.
Donald Trump comes out to the song "We Are the Champions" before introducing his wife.
Former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani delivered a fiery speech before Melania Trump. Among his topics was the fight against terrorists. "We know who you are, and we're coming to get you!" he said.
A protester flashes a peace sign on the floor of the convention on Monday.
Milwaukee County Sheriff David A. Clarke Jr. salutes the crowd before speaking Monday. He got huge applause when he started off his speech by saying, "Blue lives matter!"
Patricia Smith, mother of Benghazi victim Sean Smith, told the crowd in Cleveland, "I blame Hillary Clinton personally." Clinton, the Democratic Party's presumptive nominee, was secretary of state when the attack occurred in Libya in 2012.
President Barack Obama is seen on a screen as Smith leaves the stage Monday.
Marcus Luttrell, a former Navy SEAL who was awarded the Navy Cross for his service in Afghanistan, spoke about the need for an elite military. The convention's theme for Monday was "Make America Safe Again."
Actor Scott Baio gives two thumbs up during his speech on Monday. "Let's not just make America great again," he said, referring to Trump's campaign slogan. "Let's make America America again!"
Willie Robertson, star of the hit TV show "Duck Dynasty," promised the crowd that Trump "will have your back."
Former U.S. Sen. Bob Dole, the GOP's presidential nominee in 1996, waves after listening to a speech on Monday.
Marlana VanHoose performs the national anthem prior to Monday's evening session.
Former Virginia Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli, center, was among the delegates shouting for a roll call vote Monday on the rules of the Republican National Convention. GOP officials
dismissed the move, saying there were not enough signatures to force a roll call vote. While it's unlikely a roll call vote would have rejected the rules package, it could have been an embarrassing protest vote against Trump and the Republican National Committee.
Virginia delegate Waverly Woods protests on the floor of the convention.
Delegates from Texas protest.
Reince Priebus, chairman of the Republican National Committee, bangs a gavel as resolutions are adopted at the start of the convention.
Delegates stand and turn toward the camera for an official photo on Monday.
People walk in front of a screen displaying the American flag.
Family matters
Pence delivered a solid speech Wednesday night, and Trump's friend and fellow businessman Tom Barrack delivered a wedding toast-style stemwinder Thursday night.
But only a Trump can sell a Trump.
It was impossible to tune into the GOP convention without noticing just how thoroughly Trump's campaign is a family affair.
The most effective speeches of the week came from Trump's kids: Ivanka, Donald Jr., Eric and Tiffany all captured the audience's attention. And his youngest son, Baron, came onto the stage with wife Melania at the end of the night Thursday.
Trump's children's speeches were mostly short on personal anecdotes -- the kinds of revealing stories about their father that Trump himself often seems uncomfortable (cut with) sharing.
But their approach to the week in Cleveland -- eating dinners together, walking into the arena together, staring down Ted Cruz together -- left the feeling that voters are getting an entire clan. And voters might like the rest of that clan just as much -- or maybe even more -- as the nominee himself.
Related: Did Trump's kids save the convention?
Plagiarism controversy steps on message early
The convention got off to a rocky start message-wise when a portion of Melania Trump's Monday night remarks -- a testimonial to her husband's values -- turned out to be plagiarized from Michelle Obama's speech at the 2008 Democratic National Convention.
It was a mess made worse by the 36 hours of denials and deflections. Trump's advisers spent Tuesday pointing fingers at one another, while RNC strategist Sean Spicer invoked "Twilight Sparkle from 'My Little Pony'" in an interview with CNN's Wolf Blitzer, to attempt to demonstrate that similar phrases have come from a host of public figures.
That ended Wednesday, when Meredith McIver, a family friend and writer for the Trump organization, issued as statement saying she was the person responsible for lifting phrases for Melania's speech. McIver apologized and offered to resign, but said the Trumps did not accept her resignation.
For a candidate who's a master of stagecraft and whose selling point is his competency, it was a troubling signal that his campaign was struggling to pull off a pre-planned event over which it exerted total control.
Related: Melania Trump's unexpected moment
#NeverTrump is nevermore
The anti-Trump movement was crushed on the convention floor in one epic, made-for-TV moment.
Forget the rules fights of the last two weeks, all won by Trump's camp. The real battle began when Ted Cruz took the stage Wednesday night and refused to endorse Trump, telling delegates to "vote your conscience."
Cruz was booed off the stage in a dramatic moment of political theater.
Trump's counter-attack during the speech was carefully orchestrated. Cruz had showed Trump's campaign his speech two hours before he took the stage, and on the convention floor, Trump floor whips were seen actively encouraging the booing that helped drown out the end of his remarks.
Trump also walked into the arena as Cruz's speech concluded, pulling the national television cameras off the Texas senator and onto himself.
Cruz had been outmaneuvered one final time in the 2016 campaign, and opponents of Trump were out of options to block his nomination or even voice their opposition at his convention.
Outside the Republican National Convention
A cut-out of Donald Trump seems to welcome Republicans to the Republican National Convention in Cleveland. CNN sent photographer
Peter van Agtmael into the crowds of downtown Cleveland to get a handle on what it's like away from the politicians and delegates.
People heckle protesters from Westboro Baptist Church, the controversial congregation known for its anti-gay views.
A scene on East 4th Street, outside the convention. The man at right is wearing a T-shirt in memory of Tamir Rice, the 12-year-old boy killed by police gunfire in November 2014.
A protester wears a Hillary Clinton mask outside the convention.
"Open carry" gun laws allow Ohio's licensed firearm owners to wear their weapons in public. With the exception of a small "secure zone" inside and around the arena, people are legally permitted to walk around the city with any firearm not explicitly banned by the state.
Members of a church group pray with a wheelchair-bound man and try to convince him that he will stand if he keeps praying with them.
Two men hold firearms in Cleveland's Public Square. "I've seen open carry before but not quite in these numbers," van Agtmael said.
A lizard on a leash in Public Square.
People have a conversation about race in Public Square.
A woman climbs onto a plant stand outside the entrance to Quicken Loans Arena, the scene of the convention. The arena is home to LeBron James and the NBA champion Cleveland Cavaliers.
A "hug patrol" embraces passers-by, including police officers.
Public Square is one of the few public spaces open to licensed demonstrations. The convention is "not something you come to and look for subtle validation of the democratic process," van Agtmael said.
"I would say, generally speaking, it's been more calm than I expected," van Agtmael said. "The police have been very mindful of funneling the different groups away from one another and mindful of any potential tension and nipping it in the bud before it spills over. They've struck a pretty fine balance."
Young men sell Donald Trump merchandise and apparel on East 4th Street.
A woman breaks for lunch at a bar near the convention.
A man takes a photo outside the protective perimeter of the convention.
Federal, state and local law enforcement have taken over the city's downtown as iron and concrete barriers throttle typically bustling thoroughfares and choke off pedestrian outlets in the "event zone" surrounding the arena.
Two officers sustained minor injuries, and several people were arrested, after a protester attempted to light an American flag on fire Wednesday outside the security barrier surrounding the convention.
Police move in on foot and then horseback to secure an intersection.
People watch the arrests from their window.
Two people take in the convention scene from a window in a bar.
Vendors line the street near the convention, selling everything from paintings to Trump apparel to Cavaliers memorabilia.
A convention-goer sits inside a restaurant during lunchtime.
Police patrol Euclid Avenue before the convention started on Wednesday.
A calm conversation takes place in Public Square with a man wearing a gun.
Amnesty International USA said in a statement that their "delegation noted a heavy police presence that sometimes outnumbered protesters."
A party-goer enjoys an event hosted by BuzzFeed called Red, White and Blacklisted. It was for the media outlets blacklisted by the Trump campaign.
Philadelphia, here we come
With the RNC over, the political circus heads to Philadelphia and the Democratic convention.
Hillary Clinton and a vice presidential nominee to be named shortly will have four days of theater to respond to Trump.
The plan for Democrats is clear. The party's two most recent presidents, Barack Obama and Bill Clinton, will tout Hillary Clinton's ability to carry their party's torch.
Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren, meanwhile, will fire up the liberal base -- talking about some of the fear and economic uncertainty Americans feel.
Related: Trump's midnight in America
Everyone will hit Trump as dangerous to the future of America.
But as wild as the Republican convention was, Democrats might have just the opposite problem. Their challenge: finding ways to make things unpredictable.
CNN's David Chalian contributed to this report.