⭑ R ⭑🫶⭑Still in my Eras Era!

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⭑ R ⭑🫶⭑Still in my Eras Era! banner
⭑ R ⭑🫶⭑Still in my Eras Era!

⭑ R ⭑🫶⭑Still in my Eras Era!

@SwiftlyNYC

Traveler, lawyer, Swiftie. 🫶 Eras Pittsburgh, Hamburg, Warsaw, (Vienna ❤️‍🩹), London, Miami, Indy, Toronto, Vancouver

NYC Katılım Nisan 2024
3K Takip Edilen1.6K Takipçiler
Kyle Mau
Kyle Mau@KyleMau·
I have never understood the Eastern and Northern European mindset of going on vacation during summer. When your city is 75 degrees and beautiful and everything is available, you go to Greece and pay $300 a day to turn yourself into a lobster. Instead of just... going in November. You know, when your city is 40 and dreary and grey with 4 hours of "sun "a day. And Greece is 75 and you get a private beach. Make it make sense.
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Andrew Yeung
Andrew Yeung@andruyeung·
I thought 996 was a myth, but I was shocked to hear from friends at late-stage AI companies (names everyone familiar with) that their business + engineering teams are working 12+ hours a day, 6–7 days a week. In office!
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Brian Entin
Brian Entin@BrianEntin·
I could literally watch the rescued beagle videos all day long.
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𝓲𝓬𝓮
𝓲𝓬𝓮@be_like_ice·
is there ways to manage ADHD without medication?
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derek guy
derek guy@dieworkwear·
Hard to tell from that photo alone, but that tie is likely made through one of YSL's licensing agreements. While YSL itself has always been high quality, the brand began licensing its name in the 1960s and leaned into such deals even more in the following two decades. Such licensing agreements were granted to third parties who used the YSL name but diluted its quality. Oftentimes, this meant cheaper construction methods, such as machine stitching along the tie's spine or using polyester interlinings. Or they used lower-quality materials for the envelope. If you have a bit of experience with traditional neckwear, you'll find that these YSL ties lack something — they are not very satisfying to tie and may not shed wrinkles easily after a long day's wear. I agree that burgundy would be a good choice for the outfit you described. If your budget is about $20 or $30 (what I assume from the photo you posted), try looking up other names on eBay or Etsy, such as Ben Silver, The Andover Shop, J. Press, or Robert Talbott. Measure the widest point of your lapels (usually at the notch). Try to find ties that are similar in width. A three-inch wide lapel will look best with neckwear in the 2.75" to 3.25" range. IMO, a darker burgundy will look more sophisticated than something too bright red, such as what you see on Donald Trump or children's birthday balloons. Congrats on graduating, by the way!
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Kevin Jordan
Kevin Jordan@kevin_jordan__·
Nobody warns you what ADHD looks like at 40. Every year of unfinished projects and missed promotions stacks up. The question stops being "why can't I focus" and becomes "who could I have been?."
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Fin Embassy Brussels
Fin Embassy Brussels@FinEmbBrussels·
Did you know that the Finnish community here in Brussels keeps the Vappu spirit alive by placing a student cap on the head of Manneken Pis? It’s our way of recreating that familiar feeling from back home — even far from Finland. Wishing everyone a wonderful and joyful Vappu! 🥂
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Simon Squibb
Simon Squibb@simonsquibb·
Let me fund a dream this weekend! What’s your dream?
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Alexander Stubb
Alexander Stubb@alexstubb·
Hyvää vappua! Glada vappen! Vastaanotimme Suzannen kanssa vapputervehdykset Presidentinlinnalla. Kiitos tervehdysten tuojille. – Suzanne och jag tog emot förstamajhälsningar på Presidentens slott. Tack till alla som uppvaktade oss.
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Lauren James
Lauren James@forgetmenot49·
If you had found the perfect apartment that checks off everything but it was available a month and a half earlier than your lease ends would you do it? an apt never comes available in this building ever especially at this price. Like I’m sick thinking about paying rent twice
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Andrea Bosoni
Andrea Bosoni@theandreboso·
I was wondering what are the best tech cities in Europe right now. Based on what I see online I’d probably say Stockholm, Paris and…? Where is the cool stuff happening right now? I really hope to see a future when people don’t feel the need to move to the US.
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S@Likes_Nothing8·
shhhittt as someone in the commercial law field… this might be the HOTTEST consent I’ve ever read🥵🥵
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CRAZY DAYS AND NIGHTS
CRAZY DAYS AND NIGHTS@CrazyDaysPoster·
Saturday, April 25, 2026 Blind Item #6 This former Disney actress wanted her own headlining tour but it would have been really small venues and not what she envisioned for herself. So, now she is taking the one gig no one wants which is opening for the mood spelled incorrectly.
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𝕏 Travels, Hotels and Resorts
Am I the only one who didn’t know San Sebastián was the food capital of the world? This is your how to guide on where and what to eat in San Sebastián, Spain. At this point, I feel like the Spanish are excellent at making their meats juicy. Watch for your self, it’s incredible 🎥 eatingwithtod | IG
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Alessandro Palombo
Alessandro Palombo@thealepalombo·
Cagliari is magical. Capital of Sardinia: - clean, safe, excellent infrastructure - 300+ days of sunshine per year, mild winters - stunning beaches (Poetto right in the city, Chia and Villasimius nearby), tennis, sailing, golf, hiking - young energy thanks to the University of Cagliari - affordable - world-class seafood, serious food culture - international airport 10 minutes from city center Have you ever visited Sardinia?
Alessandro Palombo tweet mediaAlessandro Palombo tweet mediaAlessandro Palombo tweet media
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⭑ R ⭑🫶⭑Still in my Eras Era!
@helloparalegal Total AI slop from an alleged paralegal. 15 attorney “shops” don’t have “associate teams.” Finding a company’s public trademark filings isn’t some genius move. And there’s no way Claude did everything/anything you’re alleging.
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Ann Srivastava
Ann Srivastava@helloparalegal·
A friend of mine from Harvard Law set up his own firm last year. Solo practice. No associates. No paralegals. Working out of a co-working space with a laptop and a coffee habit. Last month a mid-size business owner reached out looking for outside counsel. Three firms were being considered. Two of them were 15-attorney shops. The kind with pitch decks, associate teams, and glass-walled conference rooms that smell like fresh carpet and overbilling. My friend was a one-person firm with a WeWork membership. He almost canceled. He thought there was no way he could compete with that. I told him to try one thing before he walked away. Open Claude Code. Give it the owner's name, the company name, and 45 minutes. Ask it to build a complete intelligence report using only publicly available data. He did not think it would work. He tried it anyway. Claude came back with a 13-page report. He read it over coffee. Took 28 minutes. By the time the Zoom started, this solo attorney knew things about the prospect's company that the owner's own in-house team probably had not assembled in one place. The company was incorporated in Delaware but registered as a foreign entity in Texas 14 months later. That is expansion. A second member was added to the LLC in 2024. Claude pulled the operating agreement implications from the state filing and flagged what a new member meant for governance, profit distribution, and decision-making authority. Three active trademark applications filed in the last six months. Two were in a product category the company had never publicly announced. Nobody on the website knew about it. The trademark filings did. PACER hit. The company had been named as a defendant in a vendor dispute 18 months ago. It settled. But the complaint was public and Claude read every page of it. The core issue was a supply agreement with no termination clause. My friend now knew this company had been burned by a bad contract. They would care deeply about airtight vendor agreements going forward. He did not have to guess. It was in the filing. State court records. The owner had a dissolved LLC from 2019 with a different partner. A business divorce. Which meant this owner would value clear partnership terms and buy-sell provisions this time around. People who have been through a bad breakup want a prenup for the next one. Same principle. Hiring activity. Four job listings posted in 60 days. Head of compliance. Operations manager. Two warehouse roles. They were scaling fast and hiring operational infrastructure. That is exactly when companies need outside counsel the most and know it the least. They think they need a lawyer when they get sued. They actually need a lawyer when they start hiring a Head of Compliance. Glassdoor. 11 reviews. Every positive one mentioned culture. Every negative one mentioned the same thing. "No HR. No handbook. No process." A company growing faster than its internal policies. An employment claim waiting to happen. And a business owner who probably had no idea what his own employees were writing about him. Google reviews. 4.3 stars. But Claude flagged a pattern in the 1-stars. Three different customers mentioned the same issue. Product delivered late with no communication. The biggest operational liability was not product quality. It was fulfillment. That is a breach of warranty problem, a customer retention problem, and a potential class issue if the pattern scales with the company. Then there was a section Claude titled "Founder Mindset." It pulled a transcript from a podcast the owner appeared on and analyzed his communication patterns. One quote stood out. He said "I have spent more on lawyers fixing problems than I ever spent on lawyers preventing them." That one sentence told my friend exactly how to position his entire practice. Not as a litigator. Not as a fixer. As the lawyer who prevents the problems in the first place. The pitch wrote itself. Claude also analyzed the owner's communication style across LinkedIn posts, podcast answers, and X replies. Based on patterns it flagged what mattered for the meeting: this person values substance over rapport. He distrusts anything that feels like a pitch. Lead with what you know. Skip the small talk. Show your work before you ask for the engagement. My friend adjusted his entire approach based on that analysis. The Zoom started. No pleasantries. No "let me tell you about my firm" warmup. The owner gave his overview. What the company does. Where they are heading. What they need. Then my friend said "I noticed you filed two trademarks in a new product category last quarter. Is that the line you are launching in Q3?" Silence. "How do you know about that?" A solo lawyer working from a coworking space just earned more credibility in one sentence than the 15-attorney firm earned in their entire pitch deck. He walked the owner through everything. The vendor dispute and what it meant for future contracts. The hiring pattern and the compliance risk it signaled. The Glassdoor reviews pointing to an HR exposure. The fulfillment complaints that were one bad quarter away from becoming a warranty liability. He did not pitch his services. He showed the owner his own blind spots using the owner's own public data. Then he said which ones he would fix first and why. The owner said "the other firms sent me a brochure. You just showed me you already understand my business better than they do." He hired my friend that week. A solo practitioner over two 15-attorney firms. No associate team. No paralegal pulling research. No marketing department. One Harvard Law grad with Claude Code, a 13-page report, and 28 minutes of preparation that the other firms did not think to do. This is what I keep telling solo lawyers and most of them do not believe me until they see it. The advantage is not firm size. It is not headcount. It is not a fancy office or a partner track or a receptionist who offers sparkling water. The advantage is showing up knowing things the prospect did not expect you to know. That is what wins the engagement. Every time. And right now it is easier than it has ever been. Because almost everything about a business is public. It is just scattered across 15 different sources that no lawyer checks before a pitch meeting. Claude checks all of them in one run and hands you a report you can read before your coffee gets cold. Secretary of State filings. Incorporation, officers, registered agents, foreign qualifications. PACER and state court dockets. Every lawsuit, motion, and settlement. USPTO. Trademark filings tell you where a company is going before they announce it. LinkedIn job postings. What a company is hiring for reveals what is broken inside. Glassdoor. What employees say when nobody from management is reading. Google reviews. The 1-star reviews are where the legal risks hide. Podcast transcripts. The founder's own words analyzed for how they think and decide. UCC filings. Who they owe money to. What assets are pledged. Property records. Leases, liens, ownership structures. Communication pattern analysis. How this specific person talks, processes information, and makes decisions. So you know exactly how to show up. All public. All free. One report. Under 30 minutes to read. The solo lawyer who builds this into their pre-meeting workflow will win clients over firms 10 times their size. Not once. Every time. Because nobody expects a solo to show up that prepared. And that gap between what they expect and what you deliver is the most valuable asset in your practice. My friend is a Harvard Law grad. He has no team. He works from a coworking space. He is winning over 15-attorney firms because he spends 45 minutes doing what they never bother to do. The playing field was never about resources. It was about preparation. And preparation just got automated.
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Kush ❤️‍🔥
Kush ❤️‍🔥@kush07_·
2 weeks until my dream trip 🇬🇷🥹🫶🏼 I’m so excited! Its been a long time coming 🩷
Kush ❤️‍🔥 tweet mediaKush ❤️‍🔥 tweet media
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