Cool_wHip
9.9K posts

Cool_wHip
@_Cool_wHip
♫ I don't give a damn if you dont like me 'cause I don't like you 'cause you're not like me. I don't give a damn if you dont like me 'cause I don't li... ♫



Gay surrogacy and gay adoption are predicated on the idea that gay men (or women) have a “right” to become parents. This idea is not only morally insane but also logically incoherent. It’s exactly like jumping off a building and claiming that you have the right to fly. Nobody has the right to defy the laws of nature. Where would such a right even originate? Two men cannot be parents. It’s impossible. Doesn’t matter how they feel or what they want. It cannot be. The only “right” at issue here is the right of the child. And the child has a right to be raised by a mother and a father, not two men masquerading as mother and father.





TBPN is a 7k-live-viewer pod that sold to OpenAI for $200M because their average clip gets 257k views. Everyone's talking about the strategy. Here's the structure: 1. Format is engineered for clippability, not the other way around 3 hours/day, live, 5 days a week — massive raw inventory to mine Guest call-ins (6–8 per show) = built-in 5–10 min self-contained segments. Every guest segment is a pre-packaged clip candidate with a hook, arc, and payoff Hosts read tweets live on air → instant meme fodder + the tweet author shares the clip back (distribution loop) "High and low" aesthetic: mahogany desk + cinematic lighting + suits, BUT content is group-chat casual. Makes clips feel premium + authentic at the same time 2. The clip itself - consistent visual grammar Aspect ratio mix: native horizontal on X (where they're platform-native), 9:16 re-cut for TikTok/Shorts/Reels Opening 3 seconds: hard cut to the punchline or hot take. No intro, no ramp Captions: burned-in, large, two-color (speaker name + quote), word-level highlight Lower-third branding: TBPN bug + topic tag always visible → instant brand recognition even if muted Length: 30-90 seconds sweet spot. Guest clips run longer (2-3 min) when the take is meaty End frame: guest's handle + "@TBPN" — clip becomes an ad for itself 3. The caption/tweet wrapper Format: "[quote]" - @[guest] — always attribution-forward Second line: context (what show, what topic) — usually one sentence Never an explainer or thread. The clip does the work. Posted from @tbpn main account AND the guest usually quote-RTs → dual distribution 4. Volume + cadence ~8-15 clips per episode posted across the day (not dumped at once) Each clip tests a different hook/angle from same episode "Most popular clips of the last 2 weeks" recap posts = second-wave distribution on the winners Weekend: compilation content, "best of" threads 5. The real edge The clips aren't actually why TBPN wins - they're a symptom. The real skill is "timeline control": reading when a topic is peaking, coining phrases that spread, getting the right guest on the day a story breaks. Clips are the delivery vehicle for a bigger game of being the center-of-gravity account for tech Twitter. It seems like a no-brainer to at least try to figure out how to adapt this if you create content.


"Slowly but surely, the women/feminist movement is coming to realize that demonizing or dismissing men is not a good strategy." @RichardvReeves






“From Destiny's standpoint, there's no such thing as a moral fact. None. They don't exist. Everything is dependent upon stance.” What are the philosophical underpinnings behind the left–right divide? Andrew Wilson @paleochristcon breaks it down: moral relativism vs moral realism. Subjective vs objective truth. Rights vs duties. Progress vs tradition. That’s the real clash.












Paying $2600 to live near a park literally called Maria Hernandez and getting mad when Hispanic people are there












