Don Shadden

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Don Shadden

Don Shadden

@donshadden

$CHIPPY & #AIRCOIN, NFA @fishnchipssol @BuyAircoin

Katılım Eylül 2011
4.9K Takip Edilen1.9K Takipçiler
Noah Frydberg | Tiktok Shop For Brands
Clawdbot + Kling = 550 videos per day No actors. No products in hand. No ghost creators. No missed deadlines. Just viral TikTok Shop sales — 24/7. Here’s the crazy part: This system produces 550+ cinematic, product-ready ads per day from a single prompt. And it feels exactly like running Facebook Ads in 2008 — except the CPMs are even lower, and the entire loop is organic. Here’s how the AI Creator Agent System works 👇 Each Agent runs its own TikTok Shop profile and handles an entire growth function: • Trend + angle research using Kalodata • Competitor ad cloning (paste their ad → pick an avatar → regenerate) • Automated creator outreach with Fastmoss • Daily content generation using Kling or arc ads • Localization, repurposing, and multi-format output • Compliance cleanup + optimization • Automatic posting across a Multi-Platform Swarm (hundreds of agents) No touchpoints. No delays. No human bottlenecks. Just a decentralized force of AI + UGC creators selling while you sleep. Real results: • $0.10 CPMs • Thousands of organic views daily • content that is realistic enough to actually increase sales This is the Creator Agent Method: a plug-and-play system that replaces entire creative teams and launches content at a speed humans simply can’t compete with. I packaged all the AI V2 workflow so you can deploy the exact system for your brand. Comment AGENT and I’ll DM you everything for free. (Deleting soon) P.S. Repost for early access to the complete agentic influencer stack
Noah Frydberg | Tiktok Shop For Brands tweet media
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XandersNeverland
XandersNeverland@XandersQuest_·
@RobertJSalvador @donwinslow I was brushed by a car this way while I was on my skateboard and I wasn't injured. Just fell and had to remove the dirt from my pants. I was 12. Hard to believe a grown man was injured from this.
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Don Winslow
Don Winslow@donwinslow·
THE WHEELS ARE FULLY TURNED AWAY FROM THE OFFICER. Watch in SLOW MO. No intention IMO to hit anyone. Sole intention based on wheel/steering wheel to LEAVE the scene NOT A THREAT. Look at the wheel.
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Mark E. Jeftovic
Mark E. Jeftovic@jeftovic·
@donwinslow why on earth didn't the cop grab a third-party video and view it in slow motion so he could see the orientation of the wheels before taking action?
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Nat Eliason
Nat Eliason@nateliason·
A truly terrible parenting take. Sleep training is 2-3 nights of some crying, then YEARS of sleeping peacefully for much longer than their non-sleep-trained peers. Sleep is one of the (if not THE) most important thing for child development, and helping them learn to get a full nights sleep is one of your essential early jobs as a parent. If you aren’t willing to work through a couple evenings of crying to support their development, you’re prioritizing your comfort over their health. And if you think a couple nights of discomfort can cause lifelong trauma, you have no respect for the resiliency of humans. This is without even touching on how awful it is for parents (physically and psychologically) to go for years without a full nights sleep…
Dr Danish@operationdanish

What if the “Cry It Out” sleep training (aka extinction-based sleep training) has contributed to mental health issues in young people? In some ways, it’s the most insane thing to do to a child (and is based on incredibly poor science). For centuries, families co-slept without issues, but in modern times, it has become increasingly taboo… why? How can repeated emotional non-response to a baby be healthy? What does it do to their stress calibration, attachment expectations, and self-regulation? How does it play out in their long term relationships and social connections? I’ve read the studies and they are poorly designed and weakly supported. Yet, we have an entire generation of parents that blindly follow this insane protocol without reviewing the data themselves. To be fair, the data supporting co-sleeping is weak as well, but it has centuries of precedent so I feel much more comfortable supporting that than a new approach that was largely instituted since the 1920s. For some context, in the 20th century, behaviorist John Watson (1928), interested in making psychology a hard science, took up the crusade against affection as president of the American Psychological Association. He applied the paradigm of behaviorism to childrearing, warning about the dangers of “too much mother love”. The 20th century was the time when “science" was assumed to know better than mothers, grandmothers, and families about how to raise a child. Too much kindness to a baby would result in a whiney, dependent, failed human being. A government pamphlet from the time recommended that "mothering meant holding the baby quietly, in tranquility-inducing positions" and that "the mother should stop immediately if her arms feel tired" because "the baby is never to inconvenience the adult." A baby older than six months "should be taught to sit silently in the crib; otherwise, he might need to be constantly watched and entertained by the mother, a serious waste of time." The truth is the opposite. We now know that ignoring a child raising cortisol levels and hurts trust and attachment. Yet, every young parent I know today has been brainwashed to let their child cry in silence. It’s truly wild.

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Don Shadden
Don Shadden@donshadden·
@JessMMoon @newstart_2024 jesus, and "let them cry it out" .. this stuff does help lazy parents who do not want to put in the daily work
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Jess 🇺🇸
Jess 🇺🇸@JessMMoon·
@newstart_2024 My daughter’s pediatrician keeps telling me to take her to a daycare to let her know how it is to be away from me 🤦🏻‍♀️
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Camus
Camus@newstart_2024·
Barbara O'Neill shares her views on children's social development and upbringing "Best friends a child can have are their parents. Children don't need other children. If other children are around, it should be for short periods, and parents should be present — a single 'naughty' child can undo training in an afternoon. What children need most is to learn work, service, self-reliance, self-sufficiency, and obedience. In homeschooling, children interact with people of all ages (2-year-olds to adults), which provides better socialization than same-age peer groups in school." 1:04 clip inside — personal perspective on parenting and education.
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Don Shadden
Don Shadden@donshadden·
@MamaGeshi @newstart_2024 I would argue that the minds today are completely lost and not many practice what is being said in this video
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Мама Геши
Мама Геши@MamaGeshi·
@newstart_2024 Yeah, and then who will they obey when they grow up and parents lose their minds? Or should they lose their minds together with parents??? Then who will grow the next generation? Lost minds through literature 🤯 yeah, they dont need friends & people of their age to continue life
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hyly
hyly@tadasana277·
Maybe this is true for children who have well-adjusted adults for parents. I was a very sick child and allergic to everything until I was 4 when I mysteriously got better once I started kindergarten and had a new baby sister. My preschool teachers had described me as “very anxious.” My parents stressed me the hell out even when I was a toddler
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Zebmea
Zebmea@hokichikka_·
@newstart_2024 Nope, disagree. Stick to health, Barbara. Children learn through play and what their parents model. By all means keep them at home though, and look into "unschooling"
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Rubo
Rubo@Rubo_89·
@newstart_2024 An obedient child is a child that doesn't think by himself
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Jochebed C. Quiñinao
Jochebed C. Quiñinao@JoQuininao77·
Parents should be the most trusted people, yes. But not the only world for a child. Otherwise, it can become toxic and damaging. Some parents step in such extreme and fanatical area of not even allowing a child to read a book that may have some data based on evolution, because "that is sinful". How then are they preparing the child to navigate to respect other people's beliefs and have a healthy conversation? I agree, although, parents are also responsible for the child safety in all manner, and should exercise wisdom and respect when letting the child socialize, but never make that child to believe that other people are bad and just the mom and dad are the good ones. I know the case of a man who was only allowed to learn to drive at 24. His mother bought his briefs because he wasn't allowed to step even into Walmart or he would be "stained" by the worldly music. This man wouldn't do anything unless his father approved, even when he got married to a girl from another country and culture. The guy grew to be controlling and a manipulator. Divorced his wife (his daddy helped) and now the guy is getting remarried. But certainly, his exclusive controlling patterns reach the mind of the child he had with his first wife. That child had a hard time socializing, saying that "if you eat eggs you don't to go heaven". The only knowledge of this child was about the Bible but not a jot of politeness and manners. So, let's just be very careful and into taking Mrs B.O. 's declaration to the extreme.
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Blondie Thomas
Blondie Thomas@kylegthomas50·
@newstart_2024 School aged children need to interact with other children: the good, the bad, and the ugly. If they aren't exposed to the bad ones when parents are still around to explain, they'll never survive the real world, where crazy, stupid, and wrong are everywhere. Just my 3¢.
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OrangeJohn
OrangeJohn@OrangeJohn22·
@newstart_2024 Bullshit. Parents need to act like parents, instead of acting like friends.
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fantastic
fantastic@fantasticarg3·
@newstart_2024 Teach children obedience then watch them be obedient to the government.
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Dr Danish
Dr Danish@operationdanish·
What if the “Cry It Out” sleep training (aka extinction-based sleep training) has contributed to mental health issues in young people? In some ways, it’s the most insane thing to do to a child (and is based on incredibly poor science). For centuries, families co-slept without issues, but in modern times, it has become increasingly taboo… why? How can repeated emotional non-response to a baby be healthy? What does it do to their stress calibration, attachment expectations, and self-regulation? How does it play out in their long term relationships and social connections? I’ve read the studies and they are poorly designed and weakly supported. Yet, we have an entire generation of parents that blindly follow this insane protocol without reviewing the data themselves. To be fair, the data supporting co-sleeping is weak as well, but it has centuries of precedent so I feel much more comfortable supporting that than a new approach that was largely instituted since the 1920s. For some context, in the 20th century, behaviorist John Watson (1928), interested in making psychology a hard science, took up the crusade against affection as president of the American Psychological Association. He applied the paradigm of behaviorism to childrearing, warning about the dangers of “too much mother love”. The 20th century was the time when “science" was assumed to know better than mothers, grandmothers, and families about how to raise a child. Too much kindness to a baby would result in a whiney, dependent, failed human being. A government pamphlet from the time recommended that "mothering meant holding the baby quietly, in tranquility-inducing positions" and that "the mother should stop immediately if her arms feel tired" because "the baby is never to inconvenience the adult." A baby older than six months "should be taught to sit silently in the crib; otherwise, he might need to be constantly watched and entertained by the mother, a serious waste of time." The truth is the opposite. We now know that ignoring a child raising cortisol levels and hurts trust and attachment. Yet, every young parent I know today has been brainwashed to let their child cry in silence. It’s truly wild.
Dr Danish tweet media
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Leo Grundström
Leo Grundström@grundstromleo·
if i had zero skills and needed to make $5k/month in 2026, here's exactly what i'd do: first I would chose youtube automation as the vehicle to take me there basically you create videos using AI then you post them on youtube, and youtube pays you for the views you get via adsense so here are the steps I would take: step 1: find a niche open youtube on a fresh account and scroll the homepage look for small channels (under 100K subs) getting crazy views like 30K subs but 200K views per video This tells you that: there's demand but not enough supply which is great for you write down 5 niches like this step 2: make sure it's not a dead niche go to the biggest channel's most popular video copy the title, paste it in youtube search you'll see a bunch of similar channels pop up if they're all crushing it: green light. if they're all stuck at 100 views: bad niche step 3: create content without showing your face using AI use claude to writ writes scripts in under 5 minutes use ElevenLabs to generate the voiceover Pixabay has free stock footage that you can use use CapCut to put it together you don’t need some heavy editing skills here step 4: just post consistently 4-6 videos per week using topics that already worked for competitors don't try to be original yet, just recreate what's proven step 5: focus on ad revenue only forget about selling courses or doing brand deals at the start just get monetized (1K subs + 4K watch hours) post consistently until you're at $5K/month from ads alone then if you want, add digital products or affiliates honestly if you just do this and don't quit after your first 10 videos, you'll get there — if you want a more detailed guide on the exact steps i just shared (and more) i wrote a complete breakdown going deeper into: - finding profitable niches - how to avoid shadowbans when you start - what makes videos go viral - exact prompts I use for AI - when to add digital products to your monetization strategy - scaling beyond $5K/month comment "GUIDE" and i'll send it over (gotta be following tho so i can dm)
Leo Grundström tweet media
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Shane
Shane@boostar83·
@JackPosobiec @BenSasse I could never imagine writing this response to someone who has just posted they’re dying, regardless of our past. Be better
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Ben Sasse
Ben Sasse@BenSasse·
Friends- This is a tough note to write, but since a bunch of you have started to suspect something, I’ll cut to the chase: Last week I was diagnosed with metastasized, stage-four pancreatic cancer, and am gonna die. Advanced pancreatic is nasty stuff; it’s a death sentence. But I already had a death sentence before last week too — we all do. I’m blessed with amazing siblings and half-a-dozen buddies that are genuinely brothers. As one of them put it, “Sure, you’re on the clock, but we’re all on the clock.” Death is a wicked thief, and the bastard pursues us all. Still, I’ve got less time than I’d prefer. This is hard for someone wired to work and build, but harder still as a husband and a dad. I can’t begin to describe how great my people are. During the past year, as we’d temporarily stepped back from public life and built new family rhythms, Melissa and I have grown even closer — and that on top of three decades of the best friend a man could ever have. Seven months ago, Corrie was commissioned into the Air Force and she’s off at instrument and multi-engine rounds of flight school. Last week, Alex kicked butt graduating from college a semester early even while teaching gen chem, organic, and physics (she’s a freak). This summer, 14-year-old Breck started learning to drive. (Okay, we’ve been driving off-book for six years — but now we’ve got paper to make it street-legal.) I couldn’t be more grateful to constantly get to bear-hug this motley crew of sinners and saints. There’s not a good time to tell your peeps you’re now marching to the beat of a faster drummer — but the season of advent isn’t the worst. As a Christian, the weeks running up to Christmas are a time to orient our hearts toward the hope of what’s to come. Not an abstract hope in fanciful human goodness; not hope in vague hallmark-sappy spirituality; not a bootstrapped hope in our own strength (what foolishness is the evaporating-muscle I once prided myself in). Nope — often we lazily say “hope” when what we mean is “optimism.” To be clear, optimism is great, and it’s absolutely necessary, but it’s insufficient. It’s not the kinda thing that holds up when you tell your daughters you’re not going to walk them down the aisle. Nor telling your mom and pops they’re gonna bury their son. A well-lived life demands more reality — stiffer stuff. That’s why, during advent, even while still walking in darkness, we shout our hope — often properly with a gravelly voice soldiering through tears. Such is the calling of the pilgrim. Those who know ourselves to need a Physician should dang well look forward to enduring beauty and eventual fulfillment. That is, we hope in a real Deliverer — a rescuing God, born at a real time, in a real place. But the eternal city — with foundations and without cancer — is not yet. Remembering Isaiah’s prophecies of what’s to come doesn’t dull the pain of current sufferings. But it does put it in eternity’s perspective: “When we've been there 10,000 years…We've no less days to sing God's praise.” I’ll have more to say. I’m not going down without a fight. One sub-part of God’s grace is found in the jawdropping advances science has made the past few years in immunotherapy and more. Death and dying aren’t the same — the process of dying is still something to be lived. We’re zealously embracing a lot of gallows humor in our house, and I’ve pledged to do my part to run through the irreverent tape. But for now, as our family faces the reality of treatments, but more importantly as we celebrate Christmas, we wish you peace: “The people walking in darkness have seen a great light; on those living in the land of deep darkness a light has dawned….For to us a son is given” (Isaiah 9). With great gratitude, and with gravelly-but-hopeful voices, Ben — and the Sasses
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Jack Posobiec
Jack Posobiec@JackPosobiec·
@BenSasse We have had our differences, but I will certainly pray for you, Ben
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Tommi Pedruzzi
Tommi Pedruzzi@TommiPedruzzi·
following your passion is keeping you broke. instead, create a 90-page ebook and sell it on amazon for $9. it's boring, but it made me $39,000 in the last 29 days doing exactly that. here's why people buy my ebooks (and how you can do the same to create passive income): 1. i solve painful, unsexy problems. people don't pay for your dreams... they pay for solutions to their urgent problems. my books target specific pain points like: "how to start an LLC" or "ADHD parenting tips." boring? yes. profitable? absolutely. 2. i don't compete on quality, i compete on clarity. most authors write like academics. i write like i'm texting a friend. readers don't want fancy language; they want fast answers they can apply today. 3. i treat my books like products, not art. every ebook has a clear promise, a simple structure, and a price that feels like a no-brainer. if it doesn't solve a problem in under 100 pages, it doesn't ship. 4. i let amazon do the heavy lifting. i don't waste time building an audience. amazon already has millions of buyers searching daily, i just place the right book in front of them. 5. i stack reviews early and fast. the first 10–20 reviews determine whether amazon pushes your book or buries it. i use facebook groups and reddit communities to collect early feedback and social proof. i double down on winners. not every book will hit. that's fine. i publish 3–5, see which ones sell, then reinvest in creating similar titles around the winners. that's the system. if you want the full breakdown, including the exact ai prompts i use to create these books in under a week... comment "System" and i'll dm you my free guide. (must follow to receive.)
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Tommi Pedruzzi
Tommi Pedruzzi@TommiPedruzzi·
ChatGPT + 1 Hour = $2300 per month. • No team • No website • No following You just need 1 hour every day to create your second salary. Here's how I used it to create a 90-page eBook that's bringing me $2,300 every month👇 (Don't skip step 7) 1/ Find Demand I didn't choose to create a book that I like. Instead I went on ChatGPT and asked it to give me 5 non-fiction niches that people need urgent solutions for. Go ultra-specific. Your short story? no one would read it. A book titled "How to setup an LLC" is making $6,000/month 2/ Outline Next, prompt ChatGPT to create an outline for your topic. Make sure these outlines look tempting, people check the sample while browsing on Amazon for books. 3/ Switch to Claude AI Once the topic and outline is ready, it's time to finally create your eBook. And when it comes to writing long-form content, Claude AI is 10x better than ChatGPT. Make sure to keep your book between 100–150 pages The last thing you’d want is to bore your readers. 4/ Polish Now it's time for fixing mistakes. Use Grammarly. Then use Hemingway editor, make it readable for 7th Grader. 5/ Design Here's an unfortunate truth: People do judge books by their cover. So make sure your eBook cover is attractive so it gets picked. Use Canva + Ideogram. 6/ Publish List your eBook on Amazon KDP. It's free and Amazon already have an active readers database of 200 million+ 7/ Bonus Early sales and reviews decide how well your book ranks on Amazon. For that you can use Facebook groups and other social media communities to collect 10–20 reviews. Most of the people who fail at eBook miss this part. That's it. Your book is live now. Upload 2-3 books, analyse which ones are performing and double down on that. It costs almost $0 to do this process. But if you could invest $100 to $800, the ROI is huge. More than stocks, cryptos or even real estate. This exact process built me a $50k/month eBook publishing business. If you need a detailed explanation about my strategy, and AI prompts to get you started quick... I created a few page document that can help you. I use this doc exclusively to train my paid students, but now I'm finally making it public due to the demand. To get it just: Like this post + comment "DOC" and I'll send you the link to my personal document. (Make sure to follow so I can DM.)
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