RondoThaGodd

50.4K posts

RondoThaGodd banner
RondoThaGodd

RondoThaGodd

@rondothagodd

Katılım Temmuz 2012
804 Takip Edilen1.6K Takipçiler
RondoThaGodd retweetledi
𒉭Xavi𒉭
𒉭Xavi𒉭@BlacktyonteXavi·
Douglas Bullet Vs Luffy & Other Supernova! When it comes to Douglas Bullet. I feel he a movie character, that truly deserves to be Canon in the story & someone that could even match prime Kaido & admirals.
English
15
77
1.1K
59.8K
RondoThaGodd retweetledi
UberFacts
UberFacts@UberFacts·
Spending just 20 minutes outside in a park or a green space will make the average person happier
English
19
115
611
46.8K
RondoThaGodd retweetledi
OnePieceVoyager
OnePieceVoyager@OpVoyager·
Luffy declaring War on World government Robin finding the family she deserves Absolute peak 🔥
English
12
383
2.4K
52.5K
RondoThaGodd retweetledi
One Piece Daily
One Piece Daily@strawhats·
Luffy's first encounter with Blackbeard
English
25
254
3.8K
93.9K
RondoThaGodd retweetledi
Nostalgia
Nostalgia@NostalgiaFolder·
Nostalgia tweet media
ZXX
58
275
2.2K
66.3K
RondoThaGodd retweetledi
solé
solé@layxsnv·
Why did they stop making these? Can we bring them back?? 😭😭
solé tweet mediasolé tweet media
English
97
3.2K
60.8K
833K
Nostalgia
Nostalgia@NostalgiaFolder·
What was the first controller you ever held?
Nostalgia tweet media
English
332
115
805
62.8K
RondoThaGodd retweetledi
Alex Groberman
Alex Groberman@alexgroberman·
It is rare for social media to agree on anything these days. That said, literally everyone can agree that Edwin Diaz's Dodgers entrance is the greatest intro in all of sports history. Even better than it was with the Mets I haven't even seen a single New Yorker disagree. Yesterday he made his Dodgers debut with a live trumpeter playing "Narco" at Dodger Stadium. New team. New city. New stadium. Same entrance. Same reaction. The trumpets followed him because the depth underneath them was real. In case you missed how this entrance became the most iconic moment in baseball: In 2018, Edwin Diaz was the best reliever in baseball. He led the league with 57 saves for the Seattle Mariners, posted a 1.96 ERA, and struck out 124 batters in 73 innings. He was 24 years old. That offseason, the Mets traded their first-round pick Jarred Kelenic, two more prospects, and two veterans to get Diaz in a blockbuster deal. Then it all fell apart. In 2019, Diaz posted a 5.59 ERA. Deadspin called it "arguably the most dramatic and most surprising collapse" of any player that season. The closer the Mets had traded their future for looked like a completely different pitcher. He rebuilt. Quietly, over three years, he rebuilt everything. By 2022, Diaz was back. 32 saves. A 1.31 ERA. 118 strikeouts. NL Reliever of the Year. All-Star. All-MLB First Team. Not just back to where he was. Better. And that is when the entrance became something else entirely. Diaz had been using "Narco" by Timmy Trumpet and Blasterjaxx as his walk-out song since his Mariners days. But in 2022, with Citi Field at full capacity and Diaz pitching the best baseball of his life, the entrance turned into a cultural event. The lights would go down, the trumpets would hit, and 40,000 people would lose their minds. Every single night. On August 31, 2022, Timmy Trumpet flew to New York and played "Narco" live from the third-base line as Diaz walked in from the bullpen. Diaz earned the save in a 2-1 win. The opponent that night was the Los Angeles Dodgers. "Narco" hit number one on the Spotify US Viral chart. The song had been released five years earlier with almost no attention. Diaz's entrance turned it into a global phenomenon. After that season, the Mets gave Diaz a five-year, $102 million contract. The largest deal ever given to a relief pitcher. Then he tore his patellar tendon celebrating at the World Baseball Classic in 2023. Missed most of the season. Came back again. Pitched through 2024 and 2025 with the Mets. And this offseason, he signed a three-year, $69 million deal with the Dodgers. Last night, Diaz walked out of the bullpen at Dodger Stadium for the first time. A live trumpeter played "Narco" from the field. The crowd erupted. Three thousand miles from Citi Field. Different team, different uniform, different fans. Same entrance. Same energy. Same result. The entrance followed him because it was never the Mets' entrance. It was never Citi Field's entrance. It was his. Built on the back of a 1.31 ERA and 253 career saves and the kind of dominance that makes 40,000 strangers in a new city stand up before he has thrown a single pitch. Here is the part most people miss about why the entrance works: The song was the same in 2019 when Diaz had a 5.59 ERA. Nobody was losing their minds then. "Narco" did not change. The trumpets did not change. What changed was the depth underneath it. When the product on the mound was genuinely elite, the entrance became legendary. When it was not, the entrance was just a song. The distribution only works when the depth is real. This is exactly what is happening across most marketing budgets right now. Most businesses are spending on distribution without building any depth underneath it. Paid ads: the distribution runs, the budget depletes, there was never anything underneath it to begin with. Social media: the algorithm gives you 48 hours of reach, but there is nothing behind the post that compounds. Email blasts: one send, one open rate, nothing underneath. PR placements: one news cycle, gone. Influencer deals: one burst, no residual depth to carry it forward. All distribution. No depth. The marketing equivalent of playing "Narco" with a 5.59 ERA. (If you want to see where your site stands across Google and AI search, start here: seo-stuff.com/free-audit) SEO and AI search visibility is the only marketing channel where the depth IS the distribution. You build one genuinely authoritative piece of content. It ranks in Google. Then ChatGPT cites it. Then Perplexity references it. Then Google AI Overview pulls from it. Then AI Mode surfaces it. Then an AI agent retrieves it on behalf of a buyer who never even opened a browser. One asset. Every surface. The depth travels with you the same way Diaz's entrance traveled from Seattle to New York to Los Angeles. Because the thing underneath it was genuinely the best. The entrance works because the product is real. Every new surface that launches is just another stadium that plays the trumpets for content that earned it. The businesses that only buy distribution are Diaz in 2019. Same song, same trumpets, same setup. But nothing underneath it. And everybody knows the difference. That is the gap SEO Stuff was built to close. seo-stuff.com Edwin Diaz walked into Dodger Stadium last night and 50,000 people who had never seen him pitch in person stood up the moment the trumpets hit. The entrance followed him 3,000 miles because the depth behind it was real. The question is whether your marketing has the kind of depth that follows you everywhere or just distribution that disappears the moment you stop paying for it.
The Athletic@TheAthletic

Absolute cinema. Edwin Díaz makes his Dodgers debut with a live trumpeteer 🎺 🎥 @TalkinBaseball_

English
58
38
395
146.6K
RondoThaGodd retweetledi
The Figen
The Figen@TheFigen_·
Golden times. They don’t make animations like this anymore.
English
140
2.2K
19.9K
402.1K
RondoThaGodd retweetledi
Quiet Zone ☾
Quiet Zone ☾@3xRepeatSong·
Please Don’t Go is a top tier begging song. If you know you know
English
16
1K
3.2K
86.7K