Thank you. Am I Quinn? I am my queen again.
I'm learning to make music.
Yeah, I'm learning to make EDM music. So I went to the studio today.
What? You're making EDM music?
Mm-hmm. Mm-hmm. So yeah, I went to the studio today, got some stuff done, back home to Chile, and came to see I speak to you.
Yeah, for sure. We have a cool one today. i'm loving all these and non masks and no
um today's gonna be pretty neat i'm excited i'm gonna let a few other people come in but
i've got some neat stuff for today well let's fucking go um before we get started though and
i just i like to get people two three minutes just to get in get settled and stuff um does
anybody else have anything interesting?
Does anybody want to come up?
Did everybody get the Farcaster task done?
The Farcaster today was a bit hard, but yeah, I got it.
Nicely done. Good job job I haven't tried today but yesterday I never gotten yesterday was super hard oh Peppa add a speaker
Peppa um yeah so we have that live task right now guys um and then as soon as we are done with
this space and i give everybody
credit i'll process out payday so that will be a fun day everybody loves payday and i'm sure i'll
spend all weekend doing some tickets for people and then uh hopefully with v3 we get it to where
it's just super seamless and great hey peppa what's up hello good evening, everybody. I just wanted to let everybody know, Anon holders, if you're holding Anon,
you can stake your Anon now on Streamflow.
So Streamflow is a website for DeFi stuff,
and Kurt, you call him the dev of the coin, he's put up cube rewards.
So you stake your anon for one day to maybe a month,
and depending on how long, you get extra rewards, and you get cube.
So the rewards are good, and it'll help build anon.
It'll help you build and buy more anon if you believe in the coin
so if you're just holding it and you're letting it sit in your wallet you might as well get
something for just holding it so check out streamflow and stake it i'm gonna go find the
link and put it in the jumbotron so So just FYI, I want to thank Queen
for the Money Army website,
the tasks and everything.
Unfortunately, I can't use Farcaster
But looking forward to all the other tasks
Hope everyone has a great evening.
That's super cool. That's super cool.
I don't think that we have done any tasks that give Anon prizes yet.
All of our tasks have been USTC, but Anon is on Solana.
And we are trying to get Mr. Kurt to get Anon over to the EVM network.
I want base, but I think he's going to go main net. We will see.
However, if you would like to purchase it, it's on Phantom. I'm sure it's, I think on Jupiter now. And it should be
really cool. And in just a few days to perhaps weeks, we'll see, we should be able to do some
tasks that will pay out in and on as well and do some more kind of focused education stuff.
But yeah, I'm really excited about Anon. They're sponsoring a lot of prizes right now,
and they're also working with us just to help kind of, I don't know, teach a little bit about
internet culture. So today's topic here yesterday, or I guess day before last. Yeah, sorry for
yesterday, guys. I got overwhelmed with the internet and had to take a break. But today's
space and topic kind of branches from the first space and topic that we had, which was what is anonymous, right?
And what is this internet culture? Let me let it believe up.
And we learned all about that.
And those spaces are recorded, guys, if you want to go listen to them again.
So this space is about memetic contents, because obviously memes are very big on the internet.
And they're very quickly becoming one of the fastest ways to communicate in the space is through memetics.
And we will learn about that today.
So give me a second while I log into my computer.
I have a super long password and it's annoying and I can't talk and think at the same time.
But talk amongst yourselves for one moment.
Okay, so. Hi, Pepe. at the same time but talk amongst yourselves for one moment okay so hi pepe did i get your name right peppa
peppa yeah like spice i like the pig um oh my pardon i said my butt my butt i'm
more than you oh no it's it's uh it's not your bad it's all right um
i just was informing you.
Because a lot of people say, oh, Peppa.
I am searching for that stream flow link for you guys.
I just want to let you know, the floor for Anon consistently, if you look at the chart,
this is financial advice.
in the in the comment section and it's in jumbo train yes i'm uh i'm working on that right now
please bear with me um take your time um but uh i just wanted to let you know if you haven't bought any anon yet, it's a good time to buy.
It isn't something you should sell in a couple weeks or something.
This is something you should hold because if you look at all the meme coins, the big ones like Pepe and Doge, all these come from 4chan.
They're 4chan-inspired memes, and they are very popular.
They're worth, I guess, depends on how you view worth, a lot of money.
There hasn't been a movement or an internet meme
like anonymous you know when you see the mask you know what that means um it's uh it's quite a thing
so buying anon is being part of that and you know kurtz like i said he set up the staking
which i am trying to find and if someone else is listening and they have the link,
they want to post in the comments, that would be super helpful.
But I lost my train of thought now.
You're trying to look for the link.
It's calm, it's calm, it's calm.
And probably ask in a group chat or something.
But I'm glad that we are kind of talking about memes. And, you know, meme coins have been such a big part of this cycle. And I think it's because they are easy to understand and they're really low friction. And that's why memes propagate themselves, right?
complicated to understand. And when you see something like the mask or you see something
like Pepe, not the coin, but the meme itself, you kind of get the vibe of it pretty quickly.
Like it doesn't take a lot of language to understand. It's just, it's a vibe. And that's
sort of the heart of memetics is creating this vibe. And it is hard to do. And why do we even
care about memes, right? Like why,
what makes one meme good and one meme bad? And besides just like investing in meme coins or
trying to create content, like why are memes even important in the space? And the answer is because
they propagate and every algorithm, no matter if you're on Twitter or Instagram or TikTok,
every single algorithm is optimizing right now for content
that propagates. And what I mean by propagate is spreads. It means if you post a picture of like
your dog, um, I don't know, Barky, your dog Barky, unless he is memeable, he's probably just
going to like, your friends might like it and that's it. And it's not going to spread. But if
Barky has like a really funny face or he's making a funny face and then people can add like i don't know me when i miss dinner or
something and and they retweet it and it spreads that's what makes something memetic um the anon
mask the anon mask is not just you know a fan of the opera mask or a clown mask or the mask from
the mask it's an anonymous mask it's a a Guy Fawkes mask. And it started to
symbolize something. So memetics is something that is super important to internet culture.
I see we have a question. By the way, before we get, Steph, I'm going to let you ask a question.
But if you guys have any questions and you're not a speaker, you can request or just in the
bottom right, there is a little purple button. Hit it and you can leave a comment in there and
periodically I'll go in and check it from time to time.
Also like and retweet the space please, let's get some more people in here.
That was what I was gonna say.
Oh yeah, I wasn't gonna ask a question, I was gonna say, we are almost 40 people in
this space, and we literally have several retweets, come on guys, we can do better than
Let's get the retweets to like 20. Get 20 retweets. Put in comments.
Put in the likes. Let's get more people in here.
Yeah, this is cool. Let's go.
Yeah, especially before we get started.
I really want to just get as many people as I can and learn.
The space is recorded and the tasks next week, the education tasks, will be quizzes based on the two spaces that we had
about what anonymous is and memetic content.
So unless ends and I have a
huge question bank so don't think you can just ask your buddy the answers for the quiz you're
going to have different questions than they had. So and it's really going to be important as we
move forward of like making content and in v3 tracking the memeticness of your content. How
much does it get shared? How many impressions do you get? All of that stuff. You're going to want to know how to do it or very quickly you're going to fall behind.
So the internet is offering you an opportunity here and Money Army is offering you an opportunity
and all you have to do is be generous with your capacity to learn. That's it. Just be generous
with me about it. Sound good? Easy? Yes, ma'am. Yes, easy, right? So, all right. So,
yeah, like retweet the space. Let's get some more people in here. And while you're doing that,
I will go ahead and start with my spiel here. So today we're learning about memetic content.
What is it, right? That'll be the first thing. Why it matters, how to make some, and then some tips
and some practices so your content stands out. And you want your content to stand out because that is what is
going to get you more opportunities for work if you are trying to become a content creator, as I
know many of you are. So what is memetic content? What do we mean by that? The word meme was coined
by Richard Dawkins in 1976. And what it means is a unit of cultural
transmission or imitation. So ideas, behaviors, even little tunes you can whistle and stuff.
Mimetic content is that content that is easy to spread around. So it refers to content like
images, threads, videos, text, anything that you can think of that you can make,
you can make into memetic content. And it spreads rapidly. It spreads via sharing, people remixing
it, people imitating it. It tends to be pretty funny, ironic, relatable, or it taps into something
shared, a shared cultural reference. And memes are participatory, right? That means that people
want to participate in it. Milady is a great example of something that is memetic. Milady
itself is not necessarily a meme, but it is memetic in that we have several derivatives from
it. We have Remelios, we have, I mean, tons and tons of pixelates. I have a, what is it called
when you have another collection off of a main collection? Derivative. I have a derivative of a maledion. All of that is
propagating from one place and that's remilia. And that's because remilia is very, very good
at memetic content. So one more time there, memetic content is just content that spreads
rapidly. It's easily spreadable. And why does it work?
Why do memes even matter? They work because they're low friction. People don't need to read
a bunch of like a big article about it. They don't need to understand a ton of requests and
different clarifying questions and stuff. All they need to do is see something. And when they see
that, it speaks to how they feel
or what they see in culture. There's some emotional resonance there, right? Like humor
or surprise or recognition. Like when I was talking about Barkie before, if you see Barkie
making a funny face and you think, hey, that's a funny face. I like that. You want to share it,
right? You laughed at it. You thought it was funny. So now you want other people to think it's
funny. Because you're like, hey, that's me. You're resonating with it. And because that content is
relatable and funny and timely, people want to pass it on. They want to be the funny guy, right?
They want to be the guy with the good jokes. So they share it really quickly. And it doesn't just
have to be funny. It can be things that are beautiful. It can be things that are inspiring. And we'll talk about more of what emotions you're trying to go
for here. But in marketing terms, when you make your content memetic, you are making it easy to
share and easy to build off of and easy to remix. And here's what it's not. Okay, here's what's not
memetic content. It's not just copying
memes that are already out there, right? It's not just finding like a meme on the internet,
like Pepe and posting it, because that's going to fall pretty flat, you know, unless there's
something in there that also speaks to that person. Sorry, I'm trying to add speakers and
as fast as I can, guys. It's not about just copying a meme that already exists.
It's about making your content memeable.
And it's not about a bunch of polish, right?
It's not about trying to get your highest quality pictures out there or like the best photography or your best video.
Because those things aren't really memeable.
They don't really strike a chord, right?
What they are is shareable, remixable, that kind of thing.
So before I move on, because that's my first thing of just what is memetic content there.
And one more time, just to recap, because this will be a quiz question.
When I say memetic content, I mean content that's designed to replicate, to be copied,
Before we move on to the next section, anybody have any questions, thoughts, thoughts about memes that you want to bring up?
Go check the comments here.
Nice job liking and retweeting the space, guys.
Peppa has his stream flow up.
Got the army in there. Be generous with your capacity to learn, please.
What is TIC and what does it stand for?
TIC is the coin for my project called Cryptic,
but Cryptic did not sponsor this space,
so we're going to keep it to Anon focused.
So I'm guessing that that is no questions on the medic content or anybody have
anything particularly interesting to say about memes? Okay, I guess not. Okay, so here's why
things spread, right? In plain language, and I did some research on this, and there's basically two things that
really make something spread. The first one is emotion, and it's not just any emotion.
They're high arousal feelings, so things that get your body to react. It's not just things like,
wow, that's really powerful or that's really incredible. It's things like, in the good sense,
incredible. It's things like, in the good sense, awe and wonder and beauty and funny.
And in the bad sense, it's things like anger and anxiety. Marketing people know this very well. If
they can make you afraid of a future, you can almost bet that in the same ad, they're going
to sell you the solution. They're going to have a solution for the clouds will part and you'll get to see that this horrible future can be avoided if you only pay money to these guys.
So it's the same with memes. It's the same with memetic content. You have to get people to feel
something. And it's not low arousal feelings like sadness. If you make things sad, it just,
people don't want to share that. You have to
make something that gives goosebumps, right? Surprise, tension, and especially tension and
payoff. So you have like a setup for something and it pays off after. A meme doesn't have to be
something like a frog picture. A meme can also be content that you make around, let's say, your favorite apps,
you know, instead of doing here are my five favorite apps, right? That doesn't really inspire
very much, maybe a little bit of curiosity. But something like here are five apps you cannot miss
if you don't want to be left behind in on the base blockchain, right? That's going to make
people feel, whoa, I don't want to be left behind.
Let me go ahead and read this.
Yeah, so thank you very much.
I have seen that you are making a space on Anon, okay?
Anonymous is my favorite coins. Where is the Yannick's?
Yannick's got banned. He's trying to get his account back, sadly.
I don't think his account is going to be back because he was suspended.
Okay, so no problems. He's he's just have to manage his own
alt account i mean because it has a 106 i mean it was 1.6k i mean so anonymous is a good coins
you know i am the best operator sheila that she is anonymous from system and k to system
million market curve i am the real bitcoins ob Obama who makes the anonymous popular.
I don't know who this guy is.
We're kind of doing a little bit of a thing here.
We're doing some education.
Can you wait for the end of this and we'll talk about Yannick's?
Your accent is so happy that I made.
I'm saying that I'm doing a class right now.
I'm doing some content around memetic content.
So we can talk about Yannick's at the end.
content about the annum because if i could remember i am the only sheila that made a
special content for the annals when i wear a mask on my purse with my children's okay um
all right sorry guys we're going to have to remove that guy Sorry, Intentional, I can't hear you
Yeah, no problem, you fixed the issue already
Anyway, always good to have a small break
So, emotions, we're talking about emotions
fueling the meme. And those emotions can be things like tension and surprise and anxiety. And it's
not necessarily just about positive emotions or negative emotions. It's about activating.
So like I was saying before, if you were going to do like, here's the top five things that I like about a non coin, that's really not going to be very memetic, right?
Nobody's really going to share that.
But if you do something like, I'm going to tell you the top five ways that I've made money with a non, that's going to get people's attention.
And then because that's a little bit of tension, that's a that's like a premise that you're giving.
little bit of tension. That's a, that's like a premise that you're giving. How would you make
How would you make money with this?
money with this? And now if you deliver on it, when they go in and they click your thread or
they open your article or they click your video and click play, if you deliver on that, um, that
payoff there, not only are you going to get boosted by the algorithm for people that are looking for
that exact setup, right? Of tension and delivery, but you're also going to get
people to follow you. You're going to get people to want more of your content absolutely organically
and naturally because it's easy to share. It is understandable to people and you set up that
tension in the beginning and then solved it at the end. So just from changing the title up,
you can get more memetic with your content.
So that's the first one, right? Why do memes spread? There's emotions involved and they are
high arousal emotions. They're not just like, I feel good about this. They're emotions that are
like awe, anger, anxiety, tension, surprise, and beauty. If you can invoke a sense of wonder in someone,
that's really going to help. So the second thing of why these things spread is something that is
abbreviated with STEPS. Okay, STEPS is a social little handy checklist here to remember, but
STEPS stands for social currency, triggers, emotions, practical value and stories.
And this is recorded, but I'll say it one more time.
Steps, social currency triggers emotions, public and practical or practical value and stories.
So if you break that down, if your posts just help people look good, that's social currency.
If you make it look good for people to retweet that or to share it or to send the video to their group chat or something. And typically what does
that is like very high value stuff. But it can also just make you look funny, right? Like we
talked about in the beginning, if a video makes you laugh, you're more likely to share it because
you want your followers to laugh. You want to be the guy that's delivering this funny content.
your followers to laugh. You want to be the guy that's delivering this funny content.
So social currency. Then there are triggers tied to frequent cues, right? And it's not triggers
like you need a trigger warning. It's more triggers like you've got the same thing in
every video that you do, or you've got the same intro every time that you make an article. It's
like, hey guys, I'm Queen Wartooth. When people start to hear that and it becomes a meme, it's almost like a tune they can't get out of their head. And they start to look for
your content because it's familiar. It's recognizable. Emotion, we talked about before,
but that's pretty easily explained. You're making them feel something. Practical value is probably
the best way on Twitter to be mimetic and to have things people want to share your content.
And that's pretty self-explanatory.
You're just giving people alpha.
And I think Nikita, the new person on Twitter, just took over and said that, hey, whatever you're good at, right, whatever you know how to do better than other people or whatever you have really deep experience on, even if that person that's following you never
ever takes you up on it, they still want to know the practical value of your post. So let's say
you're really good at painting houses, make content around that. If you're really good at cleaning,
if you're really good at painting, if you're really good at anything, you can use that to
make your content memetic. And the last thing was stories. Stories are pretty
easy, but you make things story-shaped. It's not like, here's the top five meme coins that I like
on base. It's, I started trading base yesterday, and here are the top five meme coins that I thought
were the most interesting. First, I found this coin. And I thought, you know, and can you kind
of see how that's shaped less like a list
and more like a story that you're telling? And that's naturally how humans communicate anyway,
right? It's not necessarily about like, here's the top 10 reasons that you should come and buy a non.
It's, hey, I was looking for meme coins and I found this coin and this one was interesting me
and here's why. That's how you shape things in a story. This is something that marketers know
very, very well too. So all the better if you could put your face in that story or even an
anime face or an avatar face. People really like stories and people really like faces that go with
stories. So just kind of a recap on that. What is memetic content? Memetic content is content designed to replicate and be shared,
to be copied, remixed, passed on. And why do these things spread? They spread for emotion,
and they spread from our steps, from social currency, triggers, emotions, practical value,
and stories, story-shaped posts. Before we move on, any questions on that? Does anyone have anything particularly
interesting to say? Guess not. Oh, we got one more guy requested. Let's see. Add a speaker.
And I'll check the comments here. Good job, guys. We've got 50 people in the space and only 26 likes.
Please like and retweet the space if you would. Would appreciate that very much.
And thanks again to Anon who is sponsoring the space and our education for today. Again,
you guys can go to moneyarmy.lol if you would like to make money from just being in this space. I'm
about to put the task up. There's a task right now for completing a puzzle on Farcaster. It was too
hard for me, but perhaps you can do it. That one's paying out and there's a task right now for completing a puzzle on Farcaster. It was too hard for me, but perhaps you can do it.
And there's a task just for being here in this space.
There will also be educational tasks on Monday made up of quizzes based on the content that we are discussing tonight and two nights ago.
So lots of opportunity to make money.
It's not much money, but it does add up.
And with that money, you can do things all over the blockchain,
test new apps, buy some coins, who knows. And the most important thing you're going to do is learn. And learning is going to be a bigger path to making money than you could even imagine.
This is just Money Army is making opportunities. The internet's making opportunities. Anon is
making opportunities. There's a ton of stuff to go on. How are you guys doing? How are you
hanging in? Is this boring? Let me see thumbs up or thumbs down. You could be honest. This is good,
man. I'm writing everything down. I'm taking notes. Oh, Sav, you're the best. Right now,
this is just spaces and on, oh, everyone likes it. This is just spaces and quiz questions,
but soon we're going to have more like video, more long-form content, stuff that you can study and look at.
But honestly, I think really that this is one of the best ways to learn is just to listen and think about it.
And then the space is recorded.
You can always come back to it.
So we talked about what memetic content is.
We talked about why things really spread.
Now let's talk about some practical tips, right? Let's talk about how you actually get things to
go viral. How do you actually get things to go beyond just, you know, 10 viewers and stuff?
Sadly, most of these things are going to be sort of prefaced by the fact that you need to have a
premium account. You just really need to be verified or you are not going to get much reach. Um, hold on, let me add intentional backup here at a speaker
and let me pin something to the Jumbotron really quick before I start talking about this because,
uh, Twitter released their, here we go, their algo stuff. And some people have gone fully into it
and have put out here in a very easy
share money army there we go and put in a very easy to understand thread that tells you how you
are supposed to post to go to do well on twitter and then one second i I'm going to read through my notes here.
So how does X actually distribute the post? And we'll talk a little bit about Instagram and Facebook and stuff, but really let's focus on X because that's where
most of this crypto content really lives. And that's where most of you guys are going to find,
I think, the most success in creating content and getting paid for that content, especially
in fractional work. X uses a recommendation system to pick what appears in the For You page.
And it selects posts using signals and models
that predict what each person is going to find satisfying. And the big thing that just got
released that they're talking about now is called sim clusters. And sim clusters are super important
if you are trying to make memetic content. And so sim clusters group people and posts into overlapping communities.
And then it shows you content that fits those communities.
So basically, your content spreads further if it fits into a community and sparks engagement with that community.
We have a community here that's crypto, right?
There's cryptocurrency communities, there's finance communities, there's lots of different communities.
But our community that we're sitting in is crypto communities. So if you actually tailor your posts to appeal to people who are in crypto, you get spread further amongst crypto communities. That seems really self-explanatory, right?
But that also means that when you post things that the community does not resonate with,
let's say you post a video and it's super boring.
It's, you know, it's just something that like maybe a TradFi boomer would really like it.
Or maybe it is Barky again.
It's just a picture of you and a video of you and Barky and you're feeding Barky.
And the cryptocurrency community doesn't really relate with that.
Your reach is going to get newt.
And the next time you post, you have what's called a
tweet score. And that reputation score basically tells Twitter, hey, who should we show this to
right off the bat? And if you're not verified, and you are constantly posting things like Barky
or things that are just, you know, retweeting giveaway posts, your reach goes down and down
and down and down until when you finally do post something memetic, it's got no chance to get shared because you're so far down in the algorithms list.
But if you tailor for a community, and it doesn't have to be crypto, it could be whatever you're
good at, whatever you like doing. But if you tailor for that community, it's way more likely
to be recommended to that community. And once that sim cluster similarity,
it's a hard word to say, and that just basically means the closer that the algorithm can get to
that community and your post resonates with more of that community once, the next time you post
something, they're going to show it to that group again. And if it resonates with them again, then you get posted to even more people, your reach goes up and your reputation goes up.
So practically, you should post in a way that the specific community you're trying to engage
with instantly recognizes you, instantly can retweet, can share again, can click the video and they
know something good's happening. So you can do that just by creating a little intro. Hey,
this is Seth again with top five meme coins that I cannot live without. And people start to remember
that. And the first time you do it, it's like, what? And then the sixth time you do it, it's like,
oh, I know these. And the 10th time you do it and it's really good.
And maybe that person has even bought a coin or two based on that.
Now they click the share button and they may not even watch your video.
They just know that it's Seth and Seth does top five lists and he does really good at it.
So that's how your content goes from just normal stuff you're posting to memetic.
And that's practically on X, right?
Here's some more features and stuff that you
might not know about or just little things you might do. For your text length and stuff,
premium users can post lots and lots of characters, up to 25,000 characters,
but very few people are going to read that far or that long. You're going to see initially maybe
you get some good engagement, but you're going to start to get lower and lower and lower engagement on every post that you do. And if it's one big, long wall of text, most people,
unless they already know you, most people are going to skip. And if they do know you,
if Seth starts coming out with really long articles and really long posts on his Twitter,
most people are going to like and share it before they even read it, before they even get through
all that. People really do not like to read very long. So if you can, if you've got lots and lots to say,
it's probably better to do a format like this, like a space or a video or just shorten it up,
make it much shorter. Same thing on articles. Articles are just, you know, things like subsects,
but articles is embedded in Twitter. So it doesn't nuke your reach if you're trying to put out long-form content. Videos, the only thing I wrote down on that is optimized for people not
having their sound on. People, generally, if they are just scrolling through the feed and stuff,
they might have other calls going on. They might have other stuff they're listening to.
They might just be looking through the Twitter feed, but they are very unlikely to actually play the audio of your video unless they are about halfway through it.
And then they might back up and decide to play it over or then they'll tap it.
So you can sort of make people still stay on your videos, even without audio, by adding captions.
options. Really easy. Put text on it. Put your text as you're saying words on the video. Make
Really easy. Put text on it. Put your text as you're saying words on the video.
sure that there's a hook, a nice thing for them to look at, and it'll just say the words, you know,
that I'm saying right now. You can imagine on a screen, they'd be coming up one at a time.
Okay, before we move on to some other stuff, I read through Mr. Beast's Guide to Excellence or
his PDF that he put out, and I put a few little things in here that I think we can use for this memetic content. But I want to know if anybody else has any questions,
anything interesting to say, any comments. Intentional, I know you're up and new here.
I've been part of the army for a very long time.
No, I meant up and new as a speaker. I just added you up.
Okay, 21 wants to say something.
I just added you as a speaker.
Intentionally, you've been one of my OGs, huh?
You've been here for a while.
Yeah, I thought you forgot about me.
I'm currently writing exams in school and on,
so I've been inactive in the TL and on,
but I'm enjoying the space.
I think we should put up,
we're about halfway through here,
and I think this guy, 21, is connecting,
but I'm going to go ahead and add the task.
So let's get that ready to go.
Again, if you guys are new or you don't know Money Army, it's moneyarmy.lol.
And you can get paid for just completing fractional work.
The work today is listening and learning on a space.
I'm going to put my caps lock on.
Listen and learn in the anon space.
Join the Twitter space would be step one.
Oops step two. Guys still with these screenshots you need to make sure that
your PFP is in the screenshot or I can't give you credit
So take a screenshot of yourself in the space right now if you're pretty smiling face right there your avi your PFP, whatever
Make sure that it's visible so that I can give you credit for it
Okay, join the Twitter space
PFP in the space and that's it.
Let me link it here and then the task will go live.
How many people do we have right now?
Okay, we'll do 100 prizes.
What? Let's fucking go. It's fucking good. What?
You guys should join with your alts so you can get two times the prize.
You know how quotas don't be?
Tell your friends to come in.
About to share some free money for just being in the space.
For just being in the space. And then you will know all the answers to the quiz.
And we will do that if not money, Army. Literally.
Couldn't do it without money, Army.
Okay, I'm going to make this task last for two hours,
even though we will definitely be done with the space in about 30 minutes.
Let me just link to the Twitter space file. hours even though we will definitely be done with the space in about 30 minutes.
Let me just link to the Twitter space.
And oh my gosh, we only have 20 people that tried the Letter Loops game.
I mean, it's good that we don't have cheaters, but
it is hard today. Today's a difficult
Alright, and see, this isn't so bad,
huh? It's not so bad to learn.
Okay, I'm going to give you next
step-by-step, step-by-step
stuff here to make your own memetic content.
And perhaps even next week, we may have a prize for the most memetic content by impressions, engagement, and just how well that you actually applied what it is that we had going today.
So here's our first step, okay?
How to make memetic content.
The step one is know your audience.
Who are you making this for?
What sim cluster are you trying to go for on Twitter?
What are their humor styles?
What kind of cultural references do they share?
What existing memes are already popular with them?
You guys have seen Anon popping off,
and now there's a bunch of other kind of things like Long Cat and Troll.
All of this is 4chan culture.
If you were trying to apply or make content around that, you would need 4chan memes and
But can you see how you can't just make content for internet lovers, right?
You would need to make content then for people who knew what 4chan was.
How old are those people?
What do they think is funny?
then? And what sensitivities or limits do they have? What's taboo? What's something that you
wouldn't post? If you're trying to go into a group like cryptocurrency, right? And you come in hot
talking about how centralization is the future, and you need to be trusting these big entities with your private
keys because you really don't know what's best for yourself. That's really not going to go over
well with crypto people, is it? You're going to get definitely get people to shun you, mute you,
block you, tell people not to share you, that kind of stuff. That does not invoke the right
emotions that we're wanting. So know your audience, know who you're trying to target.
Get that in your head first.
Then the second thing you should do is watch, watch, watch, watch, observe, use tools like
TikTok, Instagram reels, go outside of Twitter a little bit, YouTube, and go see, you know,
what's going on in other areas that's cool. What's on Reddit? What's on YouTube? What's on TikTok?
This is going to help you because a lot of the times on Twitter, we're a little bit downstream from some of the
other stuff that happens and you're going to get good ideas or you're going to see something that's
like, oh my God, bro, that'd be so funny if they had just done this and it's not copying. Remember,
it's memetic and you already know it's memetic because you want to share it.
You've seen it somewhere else and you like it. So observe, go watch. So the first step was know
your audience. And the second step is watch, just watch, just look around and see what posts are
doing well and stuff. Jumping into a meme too, is not great, right? If you make something memetic,
if you see a funny joke online and other people are posting it, like right now, if you were to
make LaBooBoo content, it'd be, it'd fall a little flat, right? Cause LaBooBoo's are kind of old
news. Uh, that peaked already and meme memetic content is quick. You gotta be on it, right?
So you want to observe what's, what's getting passe, what's getting
too old news, what's not getting engagement anymore. And then yeah, analyze. So first thing,
know your audience. Second thing, observe. And then the third thing is study what doesn't work.
And we kind of touched on that a second ago, but analyze either your own content
or content that you've seen that you maybe bookmarked or you wanted to save for later and
it just flopped. Other stuff that you've seen on other platforms, maybe find what doesn't work.
And that way you know what not to do. Because what does work is always changing. And what does work
is going to be kind of dependent on the person.
What works for somebody else to post may not work for you to post. But what doesn't work is stuff
that you can definitely make note of. Things that you can just see. So you're knowing your audience,
you're going to observe other places, you're going to go look, and then you're going to study
not what works best, but what you know does not work, what falls flat.
OK, that's going to be your preparation and stuff for making this memetic content.
Now, how are you actually going to make it with your hands?
Right. This is all making it in your head, making it with your eyes.
How do you actually do this with your hands?
First, you choose whatever format that you like best.
pretty good writer. So when I like to make shareable content that I want to spread,
I like to write. I like to make articles or threads or stuff like that. I'm just now getting
into spaces. I am not so much great at doing videos. I am certainly not good at making like
funny images that are just on there, like image edits and stuff. That's not my niche
But you find what you're good at and you'll know because it comes easy to you
You'll know because other people will like it and share it and you probably will have been told at some point
Oh, you're really good at drawing or you're really good at videos or you're really good at
reaction things or screenshots or
Alpha or whatever it is that you're wanting to do,
you find whatever format or template is going to work best for your memetic content.
After that, after you choose your format or template or whatever it is you're trying to
make and you've already known your audience, you've observed things that work and don't work,
and you've really started making note of stuff that does not work. You choose your format, and then you pick a hook.
You're going to pick your emotional entry point, okay? And you need to do this intentionally.
Are you trying to be funny? Are you trying to be sarcastic? Are you trying to give people a
surprise or a twist at the end? Are you trying to be relatable? Are you trying to give educational
content? You got to come out of the gate knowing what your hook is. Humor is the easiest one. If
you can make something funny, great. If you can make something beautiful, great. Remember, we're
trying to inspire emotions. You can't inspire emotions if you don't know what emotion it is
you're even trying to go for, right?
So after you've chosen your format, after you've picked your hook or your emotional entry point, you're going to write some copy, okay? You're just going to write text.
And it doesn't even need to be ever used in your memetic content.
You're just going to get your idea out.
Get it on paper because that's the easiest way for you to understand your own idea and to really start to pick apart what you want to work and what you want to do.
And it's going to help you create more ideas. If you say to yourself, OK, I want to make a video. I want to make a funny video.
Where do I start? Right. What do I do? You need to write it down. Write down what's going to happen in the video.
You know, I open on 15 jokes that could save your life next year.
It's going to be me sitting at my desk and I'm going to add a laugh track in the background.
And then I'm going to add a bunch of laughing emojis floating all over the screen.
Right away, you might be able to go back and look at that and be like, you know what?
Maybe those emojis wouldn't be a good idea.
Maybe that's actually not. Maybe I'll add some in the beginning.
I'm going to cross that out. But you have your script, right? Even if it's a picture, even if
it's just a picture you're planning, write out your idea really quick so that you know your message
and you know how to get that message to land. And then after that, it's just design work right easy easy clean composition put some faces in
there that helps people click on faces close-ups are engaging people like to see eyeballs good
contrast make sure that it's easy to read make sure that your text doesn't blend into the
background easy stuff and then a little bit more advanced stuff if you're trying to be funny you
should be using some bright colors if you're trying to be really serious and really like, hey, this is going to help you make money, maybe use some muted colors. That's getting a little bit more into like the creative aspect of it. But the design is the very last part. Right. And all you really want it to do is be clean and recognizable and repeatable. Again, letting somebody else remix it and be able to
share it and feel good about sharing it because the quality is good. Now, the quality doesn't
have to be, like I said in the beginning, your best video ever. It just has to be shareable.
It has to make people feel something. And that's it, guys. That would be the only steps that you
would have to do that. And one more time to go over that. Know your audience. This is a part
with your head. Know your audience. Observe meme cultures and the cycles on other places,
and then study what does not work. After that, you choose whatever format that you're going to
go for, be it an article, a video, an image, a screenshot, anything that you
want to do. You're going to pick your hook. Define your emotional entry point. Are you trying to be
funny? Are you trying to be surprising? Are you trying to deliver value? Remember those steps
from before of what actually makes memetic content. Keep going back to that. Then you're
going to write out some copy, just a little bit of text, get your main idea out,
get your message to land, make sure you define what's going to happen so that you can execute
on it. And then last step, put the design in. Use clean composition, good colors, text that's easy
to read, faces if you can guys, faces, faces, faces, people click on faces. And other than that, make sure in an advanced tip here that your colors kind of match.
Maybe you are trying to do something that's a trigger.
So every single time that you make a video, like let's say Believe is making a video series.
Every single time that he does a video, he needs a trigger in there.
This is video by Believe.
Believe in something, guys.
Some little catchphrase like that. If you
guys remember, I don't know, a long time ago, they used to do jingles in commercials. They used to all
have little jingles with them. And that was very much intentional. It was because those jingles
helped people recognize, you know, when you heard any kind of little song like that, now you knew,
oh yeah, that's that gum. That's that tool. That's that store.
You had that going for you. So you're going for the same thing here, just something repeatable and something people start to associate with you. And that's it. After that, it's just practice.
It's just practice and it's just getting appealing to your right audience and knowing the algorithm
where you are working. If you see the thing that is posted up there of how X actually decides what
content gets spread or not, I'll tell you right now, no blue check mark,
anything you can do to get that blue check mark, anything at all.
If they, if you find contests for it,
I think we might start offering that and money army for people that do really
well with their content. But if you've got the,
I don't remember how much it is, 11 bucks or something a month,
get you a blue check mark
because it's definitely going to be the difference
between your content spreading
and you being able to be seen
Oh, that's a lot of information, huh?
Big shout out to you, Quinn.
Shout out to you. That's all all i have that was the whole thing guys
that was my whole spiel i've been cutting it fine because there's going to be only 10 minutes left
for questions but um yeah and make sure to go on money army moneyarmy.lol and get credit for being
in the space we have 196 pending um i'll leave it up for a little bit more i'll leave it up for a
little longer and let you guys get in.
And then I'm going to start processing payday.
But I wanted you guys to learn about memetic content, how to create memetic content, what it was.
And I know this was a ton of info, so you'll be able to go back and listen to it.
And you will be a better content creator for it.
So be generous with your learning.
That's my whole thing I have today.
I don't know if that was a prayer or some kind of chant or something,
but we couldn't understand you there.
Thank you guys for staying up late with me.
I know that it's late for you guys.
I'm going to try to do these a little bit earlier.
Again, big shout out to Anon.
Anon is the original meme from long, long ago.
I don't know about the original meme, actually,
but the original internet culture meme.
And it is the sponsor of our space tonight and the sponsor of our education,
which again was all about creating memetic content. Any other questions? Let me go down in the top or bottom right here and see if we've got anybody that's asking.
We've got 21. Oh, 21 made some content there. Let's see. 21's got his mask on.
It's hilarious. It looks great. Yeah. Are you tweeting that? It's goofy. Perfect example,
guys. Perfect example of memetic content right there from the Bitcoin 21 Savage who sounded
very sleepy, but might actually be the actual 21 Savage who sounded very sleepy but might
actually be the actual 21 because he speaks
questions, comments, interesting things to
I think I'm just going to have to put
my practice and put that to use because I'll be
really sleeping as a content director.
It's the future though, man.
You know, like half of Gen Z interviewed said that that was their dream job, content creator.
It's going to become a thing.
And there is so much money out there for content creators right now.
Because like it's the same with anything, right? It's so easy to consume and share this stuff. It's actually really hard to make
things. And you have to have practice to make things. And to have practice to make things,
you have to suck at it first. And that's embarrassing and hard. And most people do
not do embarrassing and hard things. They do easy things like like and share or be a hater.
That's super easy. Harder is to actually study these things and to be generous with your capacity to learn and to participate and to try.
Those things are difficult, unpopular, and profitable.
yeah yeah yeah yeah let's say hello that if i was less um shameless and i was like
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
very very out about my craft maybe i'll be more popular person than i am right now
yeah definitely and you're verified too you got that verification badge on you have everything
you need that is going to be the biggest thing that stands in the way of a lot of people from
money army which is very unfortunate is that verified accounts simply do better. Verified accounts have a bigger reach. You guys
can see it up there for yourself. That person went through the whole code of the Twitter algorithm
and pulled out how you actually get reach here. You may not go viral. Going viral usually takes
having a bunch of friends that are also really large accounts and stuff boost your posts
and going viral is a whole nother story but just making memetic content content that is easy to
share and quick to spread um I've given you the tools for it now all it takes is practice
and then I have one more thing I wanted to pin up here I bookmarked it earlier and I don't
remember what it is now let me go back and and look. And then we shall go off.
I wanted to pin this picture here because this is just a super simple picture of a cheesecake, right?
Look how that picture is shot and look at how many likes are on that.
291,051 million views on that.
That's going to be real money there.
elon only because it looks really cool looks like the ocean the water the light the the
uh what is it composition of this is really neat to look at that's something that you can do you
have a piece of cheesecake at your house do you have anything at your house that's cool like that
do you have anything that you could get really close to and take a picture of?
That's what you're looking for. It makes people
And then they share it because they don't want to be left out.
They want to be part of the whoa.
0x, Basit, VR, what's going
Hello? Cousin with your hand up? Who is going gonna help us pronounce his name bro
can you help us yo yo yo i'm good i'm good damn damn everyone uh dm queen dm everyone
on the speaker on this section on the listener section and everyone thanks for joining
I just feel like speaking on this
here for a while too I've been here for
a while thank you Corinne we appreciate
thank you I'm so happy to be here this is
doing it right now guys this. I'm living my dream.
Miss fucking girl. Shout out to you. You're helping me live my dream, queen.
I love you, Seth. I'm so happy you're living your dream.
Yeah. Thank you very much. Always.
All right. All right. Big shout out to everyone once again i just have uh closing remarks but
before that i don't know um seph sounds like a cool guy i mean i think all queen's friends are
cool so i'm hitting seph for follow i i just i feel like he's a cool guy anyway shout out to
everyone here um big shout out to you queen for for this space because like while listening i
realized something my community isn't here and like i'm not like no no no no we're gonna we're gonna work on the time so that okay it
can be convenient for both of us because i do have a community i'm a co-founder of a community
of web3 um okay let's call them web3 newbies because we're training them we're taking people
from web2 and bringing them into web3 over 200 people you know large but yeah we're doing something so this is the kind of spaces that people needs
to come because I learnt a lot I'm not I only learn one or two I learnt a lot on
how to create a massive content so big shout out to you Queen thank you so much
for this and shout out to the army I'm just gonna give you a simple advice if
you yeah you don't have a verified blue checkmark here,
I can guarantee you that you can get the money to get a checkmark from the Army.
Have fun on our Twitter page.
The Army is the place to be.
You're definitely going to want to be part of it.
Big shout out to you, Queen.
And big shout out to the Army.
Thank you so much. And I know these spaces are still
I think it's 1am right now.
Nigeria, which a lot of my people are in Nigeria.
I'm going to try and do these earlier in the day.
I'm really going to try and do that.
But they are recorded, shared around,
spreaded around. We've made our own
And I hope you guys really liked it. I hope you guys enjoyed.
Be sure to ask for a few sure to um i loved it it was fun so fun yeah it's all right now i see i have a question right
now uh there is a post on the there's a post on the money hand like how does it how does he help the army how does he help the army i want us i want you to
uh quickly give us a maybe a small explanation on that okay so do you want me to take that coin
he's asking what money army is yeah i think so no no no no i'm not asking what money army is
because i'm not i'm not a newbie of money i mean i'm just asking
about there's a bot on the like an ai bot that you can ask question on it like can just explain
like what are the answers the ai can give like what are the limits that the ai can go like i
just want a quick explanation on that. I'm so sorry.
You can literally ask the AI anything.
I don't understand what you're asking.
Are you asking about the AI?
Under the training section in the website.
Yeah, under the training section, you're talking about the bot?
Yeah, yeah, that's what he's talking about.
Yeah, so it's just a chat bot that we have set up,
and you can ask it little questions and stuff.
We haven't really done a lot on that one right now, to be honest with you.
So let me see here. Let me test it out for myself.
What is crypto? But it's hooked up to OpenAI and you can talk to it.
You can ask it questions and it's called Dio.
And yeah, I just asked it, what is crypto?
or cryptocurrency is a digital currency that uses cryptography to secure transactions and control
the creation of units, blah, blah, blah, blah. Basically under training, you can ask there.
It's a training assistant and you can ask it questions. It's just a chat bot that is powered
by AI. We also have our own chat, our money army chat there. We have some rankings on the leaderboard,
which are pretty cool. And then you have, of course, you can hire the army if anybody wanted
to hire them. But for now, guys, please look out for V3, which is coming soon. V3 is going to be
super slick. Very, very well done. This site is vibe coded and we do our best. But right now,
I really have wanted something with more structure before we start to scale up any bigger.
We are almost 7,000 strong in the army. What used to take days to get tasks completed,
now they finish out in about an hour, sometimes less even. So I'm really, really grateful for
that. That means that there's a ton of adoption. All of you guys keep showing up. All of you guys are awesome. And everything
that you learn just gives you more tools in your tool belt to eventually work for people besides
just Money Army. Money Army is going to help you get your initial portfolio. It's going to help you
learn the very first lessons that you need to make content, to moderate, to host spaces. You're just going to learn. You're
going to be in a community of people that want to learn. And eventually, hopefully, you can get jobs.
This is the goal and the dream, I guess, of Money Army. But again, thanks guys so much for tuning in.
Thank you again to Anon for sponsoring the space and for just being culturally cool and for making sure that we have
plenty of prizes to give out to you guys. And if there are no more questions or comments or
anything else, great job on liking and retweeting. We've got a lot of good engagement here.
Then I'm going to go ahead and end the space and let you guys re-listen to it
guys re-listen to it to learn more about momentum content. Alrighty. Tune in again. I don't think
to learn more about momentum content.
we'll have a space this weekend. We'll probably have our next one on Monday. But Monday is going
to be all about videos, how to create videos. What should you use? What is AI? What are we doing with
that? How do videos do well? What do we do with that? So if you want to learn how to create videos, Monday is going to be the space for you.
And I'm going to try my damnedest to get it on a little bit earlier.
Thanks guys for showing up.
This has been another space from money army and an on, and I'll see you guys.