Swells

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Swells

Swells

@swells_

The future is bright. Focused on the intersection of AI implementation and human-led marketing. Creative Strategist // Fractional CMO.

Austin, TX شامل ہوئے Ocak 2009
1.5K فالونگ1.2K فالوورز
Swells ری ٹویٹ کیا
Lost Internet
Lost Internet@LostMemeArchive·
NBA Jam had hidden code that made the Chicago Bulls miss last-second shots against the Detroit Pistons. The creator was a Pistons fan. So if the Bulls tried to win at the buzzer against Detroit, the game quietly sabotaged them. Petty coding at an elite level.
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Swells@swells_·
@RomanEcom New Dad here. Cosleeping is the best.
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Swells ری ٹویٹ کیا
Boring_Business
Boring_Business@BoringBiz_·
The masculine urge to have a woman watch through an entire video about a topic that she has absolutely zero interest in
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Swells@swells_·
Western Chemicals Founder video 2A: - scene opens with Jared at the kitchen table, a full bowl of duckweed sits in front of him as he grins - his younger brother colleague anxiously pours a bowl from the duckweed box but it’s empty. “Mooooommm!! There’s none left!” - (Mom looks on concerningly) - Just then, the door swings open unexpectedly as the neighbor walks in. “Y’all have any duckweed? We’re all out and our ethanol supply is at 4%.” - the scene focuses on the kitchen TV as the news anchor opens “breaking news, the nation’s duckweed supply is getting dangerously low and the President calls for a state of emergency…” - (the families stare at the TV, faces aghast, hands trembling) - the camera zooms in on Jared’s face, grinning ear to ear with a mouth full of duckweed drilling onto his spoon.” - Narrator: “WESTERN CHEMICALS. Turning duckweed into energy since 2026.”
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Cherene
Cherene@ChereneAubert·
“how many ads do I need at this spend level” Is entirely the wrong question The right question: which formats am I not running, what products need lift, how do I fill gaps? So I made a creative diversity matrix. Now I’m giving it away to whoever wants it.
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Swells@swells_·
@suekhim Hey Sue, awesome product you’re building here. As a new parent I can relate. Would love to help out with your GTM plan. I work directly with family-focused brands and founders.
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Sue
Sue@suekhim·
AI is making kids dumber. It should be making them geniuses. Introducing Koji, the first AI tutor that gets kids to actually think. 👇
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Swells@swells_·
Every kid wants a secret hideout!
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Swells
Swells@swells_·
@OldHollowTree Highly underrated addition to eggs for breakfast and beef and rice bowls for dinner
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Swells
Swells@swells_·
@jordanhill11 You have a favorite Shopify plugin for bundles and cart upsells?
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Swells@swells_·
Love this.
The Cultural Tutor@culturaltutor

I’m making a show about buildings. The concept is simple: do for the man-made world what Planet Earth did for the natural world. But, when I pitched the idea, the answer was that nobody would watch it. So I released a pilot episode on YouTube. It’s got 5.4 million views, 379k likes, and 23k comments. People are interested, and now it’s time to make the full show. Six episodes, filming in the UK, France, Belgium, Germany, Italy, and the USA, and releasing on a streaming service like HBO, Netflix, or Prime. Why does this show matter? First: we’re surrounded by buildings all the time. Look around yourself, right now… what do you see? Buildings are the logical conclusion of everything a society believes in. That’s the real focus of this show: not the buildings themselves, but what they say about us. Second: there’s global dissatisfaction with modern architecture. This feeling gets written about online, but nobody’s given a voice to it on film or TV. That’s what this show will be. But this isn’t just about criticising modernity. That’s easy. This is about learning from the past in order to understand and improve the present, for everybody. Third: there’s a drought of high-quality culture shows. When I spoke to film executives they said that only documentaries about sports, music, or true crime get funded. That’s a colossal missed opportunity. Galleries are always full, content about architecture goes viral online all the time, and people spend their precious holidays visiting beautiful cities. Why no shows about architecture, then? Tourists flock in their millions to see (for example) the buildings of Antoni Gaudí in Barcelona. But, if you asked those same people if they’re interested in “architecture”, they’d probably say no. To put that another way: not many people want to watch “a show about architecture”, but lots of people want to watch a show that illuminates the real world they’re living in, each and every day. What will the show be like? Six episodes, going chronologically through history and arriving at the present, each focussing on the architecture and design of a specific period: 1. Middle Ages 2. Renaissance 3. Enlightenment 4. The Nineteenth Century 5. Art Nouveau & Art Deco 6. Present Day But, in each case, the point isn’t just to learn about that era; the point is to learn about our modern world through those eras and what they’ve left behind. If you watch the pilot episode (included below) you’ll see what I mean. So the show’s not really “about” the past; it’s about the twenty-first century. That’s why it’s called The Modern World. When you think of a typical history show there are loads of interviews, stock footage, archive photos, historical recreations, and graphics. We’re doing none of that. Everything will be filmed on location, because we’re telling our story only through the real world that exists right now. And, rather than going to the most obvious places, we’ll focus on buildings that aren’t well-known but should be more famous. But that’s all big picture; what will it be like on screen? Buildings used to look different in every country, and now they look the same. Why? Because the weather is different everywhere, and buildings were always a way of dealing with that weather, using local materials. Now we have air conditioning and we ship concrete around the world, so we don’t need to design our buildings with regard to local weather or rely on local materials. Look at really old clocks and you’ll notice something: they don’t have a second hand… because it was only invented 300 years ago! Then you look at the present and you realise we’re surrounded by timers, by seconds ticking down and ticking up relentlessly. If we’re looking for a cause of our anxiety-inducing culture, that might be it. When you spend time with the sun-softened bricks and time-warped timbers of old cities you notice that synthetic materials like plastic have taken over. When we’re surrounded by things that feel temporary, how do you think it makes us feel? It’s only by seeing 19th century train stations, designed like cathedrals, that you realise tradition and technology aren’t enemies. New things don’t have to look boring: if the Victorians had designed AI data centres, they’d look like Medieval castles. In the 1920s, at the zenith of Art Deco, people believed technology would uplift humanity. That’s why they decorated their buildings with statues inspired by electricity. Only by seeing their enthusiasm can we realise our own cynicism, and perhaps begin to fix it. All of that… and much, much more. But, above all else, this show is about a way of seeing. If you want to understand any society then you need to look at what it creates, not what it says about itself. There’s a worldview in every single object; our skyscrapers are designed the same way as our phones. Learn to look at this world, to notice its details, and everything else starts to make sense. What now? I’ve been quiet online recently because I’ve been researching and working on scripts for six full-length episodes. Production begins when we’ve raised the funding. The Modern World is coming.

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Swells
Swells@swells_·
How do I know AG1 is here? Because the AI bots are f'ing with us. 😭
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Swells@swells_·
Gold. Learned a few of these the hard way as well.
Nick Shackelford@iamshackelford

Every expensive lesson I’ve eaten in the last 10 years (in no particular order): > Cheap legal will cost you 10x what real legal would have. Lived this one and still cleaning it up > First hire should be senior & NOT cheap. The cheap one always costs more in cleanup, every single time. > Partnerships done on a handshake end badly. Doesn't matter how close you are to them. > Tax bill on profit hits before the cash from inventory does. You can owe more than you have in the bank and not realize it until april = fucked > Don’t rent your reputation, it costs more than letting them borrow money from you. Paid for this one in 2025, and I'll be paying for it through 2026 and 2027 and 2028. > Profit share sounds like a dream until you actually run the numbers and how long it will take to get it into the whole “sharing” part. > You can't out-earn a bad cofounder > The win that gets you on stage isn't the win that pays the bills. Learned this one over and over, and I'll probably learn it again. Stages are needed to share what is being worked on backstage. > 80% of your stress comes from 20% of your team or clients. Cut the 20% as fast as you can afford to > The right office costs you less than the wrong one > Product is always the most important thing. Marketing accelerates whatever quality and loyalty are already there. Bad product can't be saved by good marketing. EVER > Reasons, Seasons, and Lifetimes. The faster you categorize people and projects into those three buckets, the faster everything moves

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Anish Moonka
Anish Moonka@anishmoonka·
Finnish scientists trucked in real forest dirt and grass and laid it over the gravel at four daycare yards. They let the kids dig around in it for a month. The blood tests came back with changes the researchers hadn’t expected to see so fast or so clear. The study ran at ten daycares in two Finnish cities with 75 kids aged three to five. Four of the yards got the forest treatment: about a tennis court worth of soil and grass laid over the gravel, plus planters and peat blocks the kids could dig and climb on. Three others stuck with their normal gravel yards. The last three were daycares where the kids were already visiting real forests every day. After one month, the variety of bacteria living on the kids’ skin shot up, and the kind that helps train the skin’s immune defenses jumped the most. Their gut bacteria started to look like the gut bacteria of the forest-visiting kids. Their blood showed more of the immune cells whose job is to keep the body from freaking out at harmless stuff like pollen and peanuts, and overall inflammation dropped. The kids on the plain gravel yards showed none of this. Childhood asthma in the US doubled between 1980 and 1995. Food allergies in kids jumped 50 percent between 1997 and 2011, then jumped another 50 percent between 2007 and 2021. And peanut allergies in one-year-olds tripled between 2001 and 2017. The Finnish researchers think one of the reasons is simple: kids today don’t get dirty enough. 37 percent of American preschoolers now spend an hour or less outside on a normal weekday. Their immune systems are getting trained in environments stripped of the bacteria humans have always lived around. Aki Sinkkonen, who led the study, put it in plain words: “It would be best if children could play in puddles and everyone could dig organic soil.” The Finnish government is now helping pay for daycares across the country to make the same changes.
ChiefHerbalist@HerbalistChief

We need to apologize to our ancestors.

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Johnny Hickey🐊 🇺🇸
Johnny Hickey🐊 🇺🇸@johnhickey1970·
Returns. Last year we were using returnly. Our rate was 11.65% on gross. Down from 12.94% ‘21 We switched to @loop returns. YTD rate is 8.00% on the nose. Since switching return rate is 6.36, 8.09, 5.51 Has played a huge part in my having cash for ads. Thanks loop
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