Bohdan Trotsenko
6.5K posts


This is how the algorithm can completely destroy your reach over night. This is the last: Left: 3 months Right: 2 weeks Super consistent 85-95% drop on all metrics. everything after a viral post going ballistic, I tried everything, cool down, delete low quality posts, block bot accounts. Kept posting after cool down, nothing really breaks through. Short hot takes 🛑 Long form with good signal 🛑 Viral potential post 🛑 Core audience value post 🛑 What bothers me here is that 48h after posting a mega viral post I get suppressed back to the Stone Age. This follow previous situations I’ve had with the grok powered algorithm. Where it feels like tweepCred falls far below a certain level, and you’re locked into a low reach prison with every effort to break out is making it harder and harder to do so. I’m asking for transparency on what we can do as content creators when this happens. I don’t want to spam my way out of this. I’d like to know, if I did something wrong, how I can address it, take the responsibility of algorithmic suppression for what ever the length is. But this limbo is most likely going to make me leave the platform.




Yesterday, Ukrainian forces were at launch positions, fully prepared to strike the Kremlin and Red Square. They were ordered to stand down at the very last moment after Putin begged Trump for a ceasefire to avoid falling into the mud. He got a ceasefire. We agreed to no strategic strikes against Russia FOR 3 DAYS!!! And what did Russians do? They hit a high-rise building in Kharkiv on that very “parade” day. A little child is among the victims. It’s always a bad idea to pity Russians and agree to their conditions. They will always act in the most disgusting and dirty way.


How am I supposed to make satire when headlines like this are real 😭

The U.S. is setting records for fertilizer purchases from Russia In March, the United States imported more than $240 million worth of Russian fertilizers — the highest level in the history of bilateral trade. For the quarter, the total reached $564 million, up 37% year-on-year. Russian fertilizers remain competitive due to cheap natural gas used in production — which keeps prices lower. Sanctions have also had an unexpected effect: new U.S. tariffs did not hit Russia but affected its competitors, tilting the market in Moscow’s favor. The situation was further worsened by the crisis in the Middle East. Disruptions in the Strait of Hormuz pushed many suppliers out of the market, sending fertilizer prices sharply higher. Against this backdrop, the U.S. is forced to buy from Russia — otherwise the impact on agriculture would be severe.

"Hungary and russia struck 12-point plan to expand the two countries’ economic, trade, energy and cultural ties, according to documents drawn up by the russian government and obtained by Politico. They starkly underscore how close Budapest and Moscow hope to become."






















