Bad Trader

1.8K posts

Bad Trader

Bad Trader

@bxdtrader

Bad Trader. CFC.

Katılım Mart 2022
2K Takip Edilen58 Takipçiler
vids that go hard
vids that go hard@vidsthatgohard·
POV: you’re in a John Wick movie
English
569
7.2K
51.1K
1.7M
Muffin
Muffin@SpazzmuffinHD·
@vidsthatgohard Jokes aside, the camera work and choreography are fucking amazing
English
3
24
1.5K
18.5K
Bad Trader retweetledi
Jaynit
Jaynit@jaynitx·
MrBeast: "If you knew what I knew, you could get 10 million subscribers in six months" "Your videos suck. You think your videos are good, but they suck. They just do. And the sooner you learn how to make good, great videos that people actually want to watch, the sooner you'll get views." MrBeast shares his early reality: "When I was 14, I thought my videos were the best in the world. They weren't, they were terrible. To be successful, you kind of have to have a little bit of that ego where you think your content's great. But also, if you have sub-1,000 subscribers, there's a good probability your videos just suck. They just do." He explains what to do about it: "You need to make hundreds of videos. Improve something every time. And just get to the point where they don't suck. When you make good content, you'll blow up. It's not the algorithm. It's not anything. Most people who are in my position just made terrible videos, and that's okay. Because you've got to make a bunch of videos and improve over time to be great." MrBeast uses an analogy: "You don't just pick up a baseball and become an MLB-level athlete within a year. It takes many, many, many years. YouTube's kind of the same way." On analysis paralysis: "A lot of people get analysis paralysis. They'll sit there and plan their first video for three months. If you have zero videos on your channel, your first video is not gonna get views. Period. Your first 10 are not gonna get views. I can very confidently say that. So stop sitting there and thinking for months and months on end. Just get to work and start uploading." He gives the formula: "All you need to do is make 100 videos and improve something every time. Do that, and then on your 101st video, we'll start talking. Maybe you can get some views. But your first 100 are gonna suck." How to improve something each time: "The second video: put more effort into the script. The third one: learn a new editing trick. The fourth one: figure out a way to have better inflections in your voice. The fifth one: study a new thumbnail tip and implement it. The sixth one: figure out a new title. There's infinite ways. The coloring, the frame rate, the editing, the filming, the production, the jokes, the pacing, every little thing can be improved. There's literally no such thing as a perfect video." On the algorithm: "What YouTube wants is for people to click on a video and watch it. That's what it is at its core. By studying the algorithm, you'll learn that you're more studying human psychology. What do humans want to watch?" MrBeast shares a simple reframe: "Anytime you say the word 'algorithm,' just replace it with 'audience' and it works perfectly. 'The algorithm didn't like that video?' No, the audience didn't like that video. Literally, that's it. If people are clicking and watching, it gets promoted more. The algorithm just reflects what the people want." On titles: "Short, simple, and just so freaking interesting that you have to click. If someone reads it, are they like, do they have to watch it? Is it just so intrinsically interesting that it's gonna haunt them if they don't click?" He adds nuance: "Keep it below 50 characters. Above 50 characters, on certain devices it goes dot, dot, dot, and that's the worst thing because then people don't even know what they're clicking on." MrBeast shares the extremity principle: "The more extreme the opinion, typically the higher the click-through rate. 'Fiji water sucks', that'd do fine. But 'Fiji water is the worst water I've ever drank in my life', way more extreme, would do way better. But then you have to deliver. The more extreme you are, the more extreme you have to be in the video." On the first 5 seconds: "Before you film a video, what is the thumbnail? What is the title? Then what's the first 5 seconds? Then what's the first 30 seconds?" He explains why autoplay changed everything: "On YouTube now, videos automatically play. So many people don't even see the thumbnail because it autoplays so quickly. The thumbnail is irrelevant for them. I have to visually convince you to click on the video in the first 5 seconds. Before, the hook was important because you had to convince people to watch. Now you have to convince people to click and watch at the same time, with the first 5 seconds." On matching expectations: "Your title and thumbnail set expectations. At the very beginning of the video, to minimize drop-off, you want to assure them that those expectations are being met. If you click on a video called 'Tether is a scam' and at the very beginning, he starts talking about literally anything else, you're like, 'Oh, this is BS. This isn't what I clicked on.' But if at the very start you go, 'Tether is a scam and I'm gonna teach you why,' then it's like, okay, you match the expectations. Then you want to exceed them." He emphasizes the importance: "The thing people undervalue the most is literally the first 10 seconds of the video. That 15% difference in viewership between losing 35% of viewers in the first 30 seconds versus losing 20%, that really does make the difference between 2 million views and 10 million views. You just had a more strategic intro that hooked them." On removing dull moments: "You basically want to remove every dull moment. Find the 10 most critical people you know, make them watch the video, and just roast it. If I talk to a camera for 10 seconds without a cut, a lot of people will get bored. Having a B-cam and C-cam three seconds in, cutting to a different angle, now it's more interesting even though it's essentially the same thing." On keeping viewers watching: "Give them why they clicked. Tell them why they should watch. Then just stick on topic. That right there isn't even super complex, but I would already put you in the upper echelon of YouTube. A lot of people drag it out. It's like, 'I'm going to eat $100 ice cream, but first...' and then it's them birthday shopping for their mom. That's not why I came here." On quality over quantity: "It's much easier to get 5 million views on one video than 50,000 views on 100 videos. A lot of small YouTubers just post videos that aren't bad but aren't great, and none of them ever pop off, so they never get an audience. It might be better to upload half or a third or even a fifth of the videos, but make the videos you upload so freaking good that the algorithm has to promote it." He warns against the consistency trap: "When you set a consistent schedule and you're constantly having to upload videos that aren't as good as you'd like because you gotta hit 'Oh, this Monday I said I'd upload', that's a dangerous trap. The viewers notice the quality isn't as good and it makes them less likely to watch. I think it hurts your longevity." On the real metric that matters: "A big thing that everyone underestimates, what was your experience with your last video? If people loved the last video of yours that they watched, they're more likely to watch your next one. When people watch your video, you don't want them to go, 'Okay, that was good, but that's enough of you for the day.' What you want is them to go, 'Holy crap, that was crazy! Oh my god, what's that?' and they watch 10 videos. That's how you get high view counts. People watch 10 videos, not one." On thumbnails: "You want it to be simple. When they're scrolling, you want them to instantly understand what you're conveying and feel some type of emotion. Make it so interesting, or spike their curiosity so much, that if they don't click it, they'll wonder before they go to bed what happened?" He gives an example: "If you uploaded 'I rode a skateboard with 1,000 other people on it', and people are falling off the side, it's about to go off a big ramp if you don't click that, you're gonna be so curious. Later in the day, when you're daydreaming, you'll think, 'What happened to those 1,000 people on that skateboard?' That's the mindset you should have when making thumbnails." On knowledge being the only barrier: "It's all knowledge. It really is. I could start a new channel tomorrow without using my face or my voice, without ever promoting it, and in six months have 20 million subscribers. I just could. It's purely knowledge. If you knew what I knew, you could get 10 million subscribers no matter where you are right now within six months." He addresses the skeptics: "90% of the people watching don't agree with that. Everyone has excuses. 'Nah, YouTube just doesn't work like that, Jimmy.' But I mentor a lot of people. I see it all the time. It is possible. It is simply knowledge. The second you accept that it is knowledge and you start your journey of learning figuring out what makes a good video, what does my audience want, how can I elevate and then you take that knowledge and just assume 'I will never understand what the perfect video is' and every single day be devoted to learning and improving as much as possible there you go." On money not being the barrier: "There are tons of viral ideas that don't require money. It does not require money to go viral. One of my most-viewed videos was spending 24 hours in a desert, we just grabbed a tent and some stuff and went to the desert. It got 60-70 million views. People say, 'I could be MrBeast if I had money.' A, I didn't start off with money; I was poor, I had no money. It took me seven years just to buy a camera saving up from YouTube. And B, some of our most-viewed videos literally anyone can do." On why no one will outwork him: "No one's ever gonna do what I do better than me. It's just not humanly possible. I reinvest every penny I make. I work every hour I'm awake. I devote every atom in my brain to solving this. I hire the best people on the planet. I've been doing this for 14 years. And I think in decades, not years. I'm gonna be doing this for another 20-30 years. If I thought someone was doing better than me, I'd just start sleeping less so I could work even more." But he doesn't recommend it: "I don't have a life. I don't have work-life balance. My personality, my soul, my being is making the best videos possible. That is why I exist on this planet. And I don't recommend it. You should have work-life balance. You should not devote your entire life to this one thing. I have a mental breakdown every other week because I push myself so hard. I don't recommend it." The only question that matters: "Subscribers don't matter. Views don't matter. I mean, they do. But everything you want as a creator comes from making the best videos possible and thumbnails. The video part's the hard part. Ask: 'How can I make my videos better?' Do that every single day for years. And then you'll probably get views."
English
200
785
7.6K
1.6M
Bad Trader retweetledi
Carter Wilkerson
Carter Wilkerson@carterjwm·
HELP ME PLEASE. A MAN NEEDS HIS NUGGS
Carter Wilkerson tweet media
English
32.4K
2.9M
1.1M
0
Bad Trader
Bad Trader@bxdtrader·
@Zyyon_ you can be financially comfortable o. $2k monthly should keep you comfortable in most places in Nigeria. but it won't give you your dream life, but design can be the springboard.
English
0
0
0
3
Prophet_Ikuku at #MWC2026
There are some careers that have threshold in terms of wealth accumulation except you diversify and eventually build yours. Design is one. It has the ability to make you financially comfortable but to accumulate the wealth you want? Lol nah. Maybe 0.5% Chance
𝐀𝐬𝐚𝐤𝐲𝐆𝐑𝐍@AsakyGRN

“Show me one graphic designer in Nigeria that has a car and got the car from graphic designing and not teaching. I dealt with UK, Haiti, Dominican Republic, US clients and none paid me ₦1 million for a logo.” — Man says.

English
1
0
1
216
Bad Trader retweetledi
𝐀𝐬𝐚𝐤𝐲𝐆𝐑𝐍
“Show me one graphic designer in Nigeria that has a car and got the car from graphic designing and not teaching. I dealt with UK, Haiti, Dominican Republic, US clients and none paid me ₦1 million for a logo.” — Man says.
English
325
200
2.5K
457.6K
Bad Trader retweetledi
Jordan Belonwu
Jordan Belonwu@JordanBelonwu·
When you need to quickly put your life in order, read Proverbs.
English
7
63
365
8.4K
Bad Trader
Bad Trader@bxdtrader·
@BoldOG_04 it has four plates. it takes longer for head chest and hand shots to get to you. plus realistically, most players do not aim for your legs deliberately. (I use eaglewing though, but have won a 1v2 without plating up because of a free blackape I got).
English
0
0
1
49
Bold 🇮🇳
Bold 🇮🇳@BoldOG_04·
Why people use blackcape armour?
Bold 🇮🇳 tweet media
English
8
0
19
1.9K
Bad Trader
Bad Trader@bxdtrader·
@samthewriter_ @jetskitosway2 in the future, maybe get potplayer. there's a simple popup toggle thingy to speed the subtitles or slow them down in increments of 0.1
English
0
0
0
20
Sam
Sam@samthewriter_·
@jetskitosway2 I once downloaded multiple subtitles for Garden of Words but no one was in sync. I checked the timing myself manually and uploaded the srt to Chat GPT and told it to make me a new srt file with the new timing and it worked.
English
2
0
5
982
Master of the Flying Jetski
Master of the Flying Jetski@jetskitosway2·
downloaded like 10 subtitle files for a Hong Kong movie and somehow found one that actually had the correct timing
Master of the Flying Jetski tweet media
English
53
632
10.5K
798.8K
Bad Trader retweetledi
Aakash Gupta
Aakash Gupta@aakashgupta·
She just reverse-engineered the psychology of every high-performer who can't turn off. You can't tell a firefighter to nap. Their entire identity is built around staying alert when everyone else is asleep. Telling them to rest triggers the same resistance as telling them to quit. "Let's watch a show" works because it reframes rest as togetherness. He didn't agree to sleep. He agreed to spend time with her. Sleep was just the side effect. The best people in your life don't argue with your stubbornness. They just build a trap you walk into willingly.
emily may@emilykmay

he was up fighting a fire *all night* and is notoriously bad at resting and so i said i wanted to relax and watch a tv show with him to trick him into napping at 1 pm ✅

English
125
4.2K
33.3K
2.6M
Bad Trader
Bad Trader@bxdtrader·
@Travisslim5 the real advantage is seeing enemies through smoke and they can't see anything. the speed while receiving damage is just a plus.
English
0
0
0
4
Mr Nwachukwu
Mr Nwachukwu@theZeeEffect·
@AduratheArtist I’m a designer too, so I do very much understand our plight. I’ve just seen some unnecessary comments and tweets that is very different from addressing “design challenges” which is what I was trying to address. So it’s not about shifting goalposts. I hope you get me?
English
4
0
1
676
Mr Nwachukwu
Mr Nwachukwu@theZeeEffect·
When organizations do “design challenge”, it’s not a problem. But cos he’s a minister, then it’s a problem? Lol do you know the price of fuel now?? 😂 And Moses Bliss is your problem… okay ooo
English
17
0
23
12.6K
Bad Trader
Bad Trader@bxdtrader·
@nnvictory001 never attribute to pettiness what can simply be explained away by naïvete.
English
0
0
0
444
victory
victory@nnvictory001·
Chaiii. insane levels of pettiness o
FO@FOjebiyi

Hi guys, I built an open-source alternative to @pewbeam_ai in one week. github.com/openbezal/rhema Started coding during a Sunday church service. By the following Sunday, we were using it live during our church service. Wild. Here's what Rhema does: it listens to your pastor's sermon in real-time, detects Bible verse references as they're mentioned, and displays them on screen instantly. No manual clicking, no dedicated slide operator needed. The tech stack: - Tauri 2.0 with a Rust backend handling all the heavy lifting: audio capture, transcription pipeline, verse detection logic, and system tray integration - Local AI embeddings using Qwen3-0.6B so everything runs on-device with zero cloud dependency. Your sermons never leave your machine - Real-time audio transcription paired with semantic search against a full Bible verse database The Rust backend was a deliberate choice. We needed low latency audio processing and efficient memory usage for running an embedding model locally, and Rust delivers on both. Is it perfect? Probably not. But the core functionality works and we're already using it in a real church environment This is where you come in. Rhema is fully open source and we need contributors to help take it to the next level. Whether it's improving the verse detection accuracy, adding multi-language support, building a better overlay UI, adding support for more Bible translations, or optimizing the transcription pipeline, there's real work to be done and real impact to be made. If you're a Rust developer, a frontend engineer, an ML enthusiast, or just someone who loves building tools for the church, come build with us. Star the repo. Fork it. Open a PR. Let's make this the go-to open-source solution for live Bible verse display in churches worldwide. github.com/openbezal/rhema

English
10
1
51
15.8K
Bad Trader
Bad Trader@bxdtrader·
@e_emmrex also I think you're a catfish. just can't prove it yet.
English
1
0
1
2
Emmrex
Emmrex@e_emmrex·
BR 1v1 done COD mutuals. If you want to challenge Tap in lets go Drop your username below 👇👇👇
English
37
10
89
4.3K
vfr750
vfr750@ddlock7416·
@Travisslim5 That lag in br. Is deadly .. and quickly. If u aim rite. Lol. I know h do. Most spray and pray
English
1
1
2
127
TravisCOD🎮
TravisCOD🎮@Travisslim5·
It's even way better without the red dot, I think I just fell in love🫂 I'm never touching the ak117 again🤌🏽
TravisCOD🎮 tweet media
English
9
1
46
2.1K
Bad Trader retweetledi
Elvis Obi
Elvis Obi@TheObiLeonard·
“Don’t buy a car, it’s a depreciating asset.” Brother, I myself am a depreciating asset. I won’t be here forever.
English
824
17.5K
100.3K
1.6M