(upbeat music) (upbeat music)
I'll be running the music two more minutes to see if we have more listeners. If not, I'll just get this started.
Good afternoon, good afternoon to anyone who's listening to the recording or whoever joins Welcome to the Schnuffle and Orser paradox episode 20 we won't be joined by Orser today. So it's just you and me pasta. How are you? Yo
Oh, yeah, I saw you change from the the bean to the you. What's that about? Oh, dude, I've you know before the bean that another you I sold it accidentally. I'm not gonna get into that story, but I really want it back. So I've been
You know since Monday I've been like in the middle of a trade for my bean a little bit of salt For this naked you some super super super proud and happy for this train Yeah, right that that because there are similar prices on there, right? I think
No, actually the uits are like 0.5 more expensive than a bean and a naked uits like too a little over to eat so it was an interesting trade Yeah, right the naked uits are cool
I wanted one of them, like originally. It was kind of deciding between... There were like four traits that I really wanted. It was either the naked you or the smile, no glasses.
or no hair, no head tray. And I decided in the end, the two most important ones for me were no head tray and the smile, I really wanted those. And then so I just tried to
fine. I mean I looked at so many but then I just kind of found one that I like like I don't like many of the glasses and I don't like many of the tops but that's the one I picked I feel like worked out well.
100% one of the cleanest units I've ever seen and those those those glasses are actually my favorite in the collection But I just saw this nude and I was instantly in love so look man, it's just me and you today So basically I will use spaces work. It's it work or like a 25 to 30
We'll let them up if they want to add something to the conversation and they want to ask you something or me. That's how we work. Perfect. So let's get started. I'm going to get started with a very
Simple but you know question, but I really want to get you get to know you better. That's the point of the space What got you to where you are today? You know what keeps you going and what did you do before web 3? Okay, yeah Let's see before
For Web 3, I was doing mainly music stuff. I had been for like a few years now. And then like prior to that, I was doing different types of content, just like probably like the last decade or whatever. Just for fun, just doing different stuff on YouTube.
been just a bunch of different things. So like kind of like a pretty multi-faceted like background when it comes to that sort of thing. And then yet music I was doing some uni stuff for that and and working selling like beats and engineering stuff for
people online. But then when I got into Web 3, I didn't really have time to continue doing that. So I had to kind of make a choice. And yeah, obviously I chose to do Web 3 because I found that more fully encompassing. That was probably one of the things that actually led me to the space in the beginning was how multi-file
faster than the industry is, is kind of like I was doing all these different things and felt like this is kind of annoying. I wish I could do something where like I could use all of these skills and I could touch on all of these different points and like do it all at the same time but have it make sense into one find
and all, you know, thing. And I actually, yeah, kind of found that in Web 3 just because it's all encompassing in terms of like different art and the different formats and stuff like that. So, yeah, that was really fun. And then obviously the content stuff now is, is, is fun because I can kind of mix and match whatever
want into these videos and if I want to do something like more creative I can and you know include stuff whether it be like audio production or or just something simple with like editing and all that sort of thing like I've done 3d stuff as well like I've done pretty much everything so it's just fun to utilize all those types
the skills. Yeah, what was the other, I forget maybe there was another point I missed there. Yeah, so kind of, what, you know, how did you stumble upon Web 3? Yeah, no, so I was in crypto a little bit just because of like my brother and like some
some people I saw online, I was kind of trading with different crypto stuff in like 2018, maybe 2019. I just kind of went on and off on that and I was doing some futures leverage trading at one point trying to learn how to do that. I kind of got into that but it got pretty boring
quickly and I realized I didn't want to fucking live with Shred, I didn't want to sit there on the computer all day and just watch charts. I wasn't super interested in that. I was way more interested in the outside of things which I didn't know existed yet because NFTs hadn't really popped off. And then mid 2021 I saw everything start to happen.
like, like, phase banks and stuff like that, I got into it and realized what it was all about. I remember like kind of the moment it all clicked for me in terms of like what NFTs were and what it could be in terms of just like utilizing all these art styles. So that kind of brings me back to my original point. It's like when I realized
I was like, okay, I'm gonna put the music stuff from like the back burner and just like focus on this because I think there's actual potential for me to really enjoy myself in this industry no matter what I do even I didn't have anywhere like I didn't have an objective at that point I still really don't have an objective I'm still kind of just going
but yeah naturally I just started with content so that was end of 2021 I was uploading like YouTube videos and stuff like that of private of those now like I private of them at the start of this year because I completely switched up style content I was doing I didn't like that stuff anymore I
found it boring and it didn't match the industry at this point. It's changed so much in like two years. So I did a complete flip flop on my content style in terms of what I talk about and how I talk about it. So yeah, that's where we are now.
Love it, Pasta. I was beautifully said. I want to ask another question a little bit related to this conversation. What's the reason you do what you do? Why do you do what you do? Why are you creating content? What's your goal for that? What message are you trying to convey?
What's the reason? Well yeah like at the start when I first started creating it was actually having a really interesting conversation about this with someone yesterday. I had a really specific objective and audience that I was targeting when I was making my content early on end of 2021 and
of 2022. It was because I saw a lot of YouTubers or people creating content around NFTs at the time were taking sponsors and like, underscoresing them and that was like really annoying to see and I just saw a lot of people getting burnt and it was like, I'd just gone into this space but I can look at these projects
I can look at the LinkedIn, I can look at the team, I can do even a LinkedIn for projects, well, as anything like a thing back then, most of them were non, but I can kind of discern by like the art and like the way some of these 3D art projects were made because I learnt 3D for this specific reason, I could kind of discern what was legit
what was in and what was just like a total rug. And so I got pretty good at that and started basically calling out these projects on in my videos just to educate people. So I'd go through the entire project, I'd go through the website, I'd go through the same, I'd go through the discord, socials, whatever. I'd talk about
But all the different aspects of it, good and bad, which I got a lot of flack for all, because it's like obviously shooting on people's bags if they have white list at that point, people could potentially slip a white list for literally thousands of dollars with ease. So that was really interesting. That was my main objective though, basically educating people.
and just trying to play like an unbiased as as unbiased of you as I possibly could and that was really fun and it like it actually felt it felt good doing it because I was actually trying to do something good through the space and that got pretty boring after a
a while and it got really annoying just getting kind of shit on by communities that would just obviously, obviously agreed with me they knew the project was shipped but because they had white list they would just, you know, shit on me for it because they obviously wanted their bags to go up. So it got kind of annoying and I slowly like got away from that
subject matter because it just became less educational and more repetitive and it was just like here is this project here is this thing and I got scared one mistake I probably made is I got scared to talk shit about certain projects because I didn't want to get flack which I think everyone did like no one really was talking shit about projects
in the time frame that I'm thinking of right now. Yeah, so kind of straight away from that. And then with this new style of content, I decided to just kind of like take a complete step back and say, you know, let's make, let's make content for the audience that is already here. So like purposely, I only really upload on Twitter now because that's where the Web 3
on me, people that were trying to quote unquote on board, the people that are actually building in the space, they're all on Twitter. So whether you agree or not, that's where I'm going to post the content, like it just makes sense for me because that's the audience I'm going after right now. If I'm trying to onboard new people, which I'm not trying to do, and I don't think
on boarding new people into NFTs is like really that doable right now. I could upload on YouTube and I've spoke to people about this some of the big crypto YouTubers and DeFi people who still upload and do really well on YouTube and I don't think that audience is really going anywhere. I might come back to YouTube to start doing some different
stuff in the future, but like right now I think I just set my target on creating kind of just interesting content on Twitter that no one else was really doing. Like when I started doing this in, I don't know, January of February of this year, it was like, okay, I'm just going to try to talk about really interesting topics
and stuff and do them in interesting ways. And I've just tried a bunch of different formats as well. Like if you've seen my videos, like I've done video essay type stuff, I've done green screen stuff, I've done like kind of mini vlog type stuff, I've done edits, I've done, I'm boxing recently for Pudgy Penguins. Problem is there isn't enough
cool stuff happening in the space to do cool stuff consistently, which really sucks because it's like I would love to do a video like I did the unboxing of Pudgy and completely showing off a brand's IP and what they're building and their physical product and talk about why it matters and their digital experience and all of this sort of stuff I'd love to do that.
in a way, you know, I'm not getting paid to do that. I went and I spent $100 just to buy the figurines to make that video because I wanted to do it because I thought it would be interesting for me to watch, which it was obviously I got really good comments on that people saying like this is awesome. I hadn't seen a digital experience, etc. But I can't do that because a lot of the projects aren't actually really
doing that much and this far I'm view between that actually have those types of experiences, especially open to the public for people that don't own the NFT. I don't even own a Pudgey or a little Pudgey or anything, but I like what they're doing. So that's kind of a goal right now with the Twitter stuff and just see where it goes.
Love it man. Well said so talking about content creation What do you think? What do you think it's a see like a secret for good content creation? Especially like video making or what do you think makes good content?
content. That's interesting. I mean, firstly, I think you need to be like authentic with it and not just try for something down that other people are doing that is like working. For me,
I've just tried to just create random stuff that I think is going to be interesting and like I'll take a random topic and then just think of an interesting way to present that in video form. So not trying to just copy anyone else. I think that's evident because no one really does the style of stuff that I've done in terms of like mixing
different formats and stuff on Twitter. Like that's very prevalent in normal video content creation in Web 2 but in Web 3 it's not. So I think just doing stuff that's authentic to you and unique, I think naturally you're just going to make better content because you're not forcing anything, it just kind of
runs and flows and it also like this content style that I'm doing is a combination of all the different types of content that I've consumed or made in the past you know decade of my life. So I'll take little bits from here and there, different vlog styles and different edit
editing techniques from all these different YouTubers that I've watched. And yeah, the final product is just something unique to me, which I think is important. And it's like, that's how you make content that isn't just drab and boring and like everyone else.
So how do you engage someone to keep consuming your content? Oh, if I knew that I'd probably be better at doing it to me honest I Honestly, that's that's tough on Twitter especially. It's really tough because you know on YouTube people when they
they subscribe to you, they want to watch more of your content and then YouTube presents more of your content to them and the subscription feed is really good for that. For Twitter, it's tough because sometimes my videos just don't even get recommended to people that even engage in my stuff. Twitter just doesn't really want to push it. I'm hoping
You know as Twitter rolls around their video stuff a bit more and maybe even adds the video like feature thing to your profile that Elon talked about recently where your videos are gonna be like in a separate spot where people can actually go view it It's gonna be easier for people to even see my content to then go and engage with it. You know
you know, again and again and again as I put out new content. But right now it's honestly, it's hard to even know if people are engaging with it again and again and again because I don't even know if they're even seeing it on their timeline, which is the really hard part. But on YouTube, like you have all of these analytics as well, like the
YouTube's video platform just as a whole is so fucking superior to anything else analytics alone. It's so useful and so easy to see like what your audience is liking what they're not liking in terms of click through red and everything like that. But Twitter basically gives you no information.
because just their platform is not really built for it. And it's like, okay, we're just going to throw you a video up on the timeline of someone's death scrolling. And then if they stop and watch it, they stop and watch it. I think like, you know, impressions and then views is like the only thing you really have to look at. And I think of you counts if
they've viewed the video for like more than actually I've read different things I think it's like five seconds or 30 seconds or something like that so that's like one of the only things I have to look at and just kind of basing like the like ratio or comment ratio on the impressions and like trying to gauge off that but to be honest
I'm not really looking at that. I look at the engagement stuff, but I don't really take that into consideration on what type of content I want to make. I just make what I think is going to be good. And if it's good, I'm happy with it. That's something I feel like everyone that makes content needs to come to terms
with is like you just need to create what you want to create and if you think it's good just put it out like it really doesn't matter what people engage with because I mean people don't know what they want either like they have a worse idea than what you do if you're creating if you're the one creating content so I mean just yeah you know
I have a second similar question to that. How do you engage someone to keep viewing your video, for example? Like, how do you make someone not click off of one of your videos? How do you engage them to keep, you know, to keep looking at their screens? You're right. Okay. Look at your attention. Yeah.
Yeah, to be honest just doing everything fast pace with the idea that everyone's got like a TikTok brain at this point my video is a pretty fast pace and for Twitter I think keeping stuff under 90 seconds is key I think the first five seconds is really important for Twitter the same as like TikTok and Asian
I think you got a treat Twitter especially. I mean every platform is different, but you got a treat Twitter almost like TikTok or shorts or Reels just like a short form platform where you need to grab someone's attention like immediately and then engage them for five, ten seconds. Hopefully they full screen the video and then they probably watch the whole thing.
So that's kind of the key. So like at the start of my videos, especially the recent ones, I've done this little animation technique that you'll see is like used on like a lot of Mr. Bass videos. I just got it from like a preset pack from Finza on YouTube and it basically has this like shake wobble animation at the start of the
video just to catch people's attention as they're scrolling. I then have a lot of text. Sometimes I rotoscope myself out of the background using Runway AI. Actually a really good technique using AI for video stuff. It's the only thing I use on there is just rotoscoping myself out. So it's like a green screen. So I can put text behind me, which looks really nice.
to the viewer, like as they scroll down the page, I did that on my Clanovid or my Nounsvid if you want to like see what it looks like. And then just having like a bunch of text and like a nice hook to bring people in at the start is always key. And then I kind of just always want to just do funny things. So like in my green screen videos, I'll just do random animations that make me laugh.#
or like just random jokes like really bad cringe jokes to just make it feel you know have kind of like a bit of like a humor like relief in the videos that people keep people engaged and it doesn't get drab and just boring and just doing interesting
stuff like that that's just going to catch people's attention. I think also doing like little unique things that are like unique to your personality is really powerful for engaging the viewer but also getting them to like want to relate to you more. Not want to relate to you more but relating to you more as a person and not as much as just an influence or whatever like you want to
call it like a creator, just like some random digital entity that they're watching, but as like an actual person. So like an example of that, I used like the Runescape font to like pop tag people in my New York videos where I had like a little yellow like Runescape font color with the Runescape font.
above people's heads and it's like a really random thing that most people aren't gonna notice they're not even gonna know what that is so they're just gonna see it and be like okay that's an interesting choice yellow with the thing you know that font that looks fine that's the person's at okay I get it it doesn't really it doesn't exclude people from the joke it's not you know where
where over here laughing and you don't understand it and makes people, makes people feel isolated, you don't wanna do that, you want everyone to be in on the joke or not even realize like it's a joke. I think that's key. So like that helps engage people 'cause they see that and they go, oh, but that's kind of funny. Like I get that, he must like, runescape type thing, which I do obviously, that#
And then I have people like replying to me or sending me messages being like, I love how you use that font for this and you know that little things like that. That's the personal things that like you may not think to do if you're just having if you're taking things too seriously acting like it's a job where you're like, oh I gotta do this, I gotta make this look right, oh this is gonna look
You know, this is gonna look like how you know, D-gods are used to their graphics because it's gonna look professional It's like not just just have fun with it and then you know people will have fun watching it as well I Love it. That was beautifully said man. I want to quickly ask you know you have in your bio kitchen
like pasta. Is there something you want to share about that? What is it? Yeah, no. So when I started making videos end of 2021, basically, well, it's probably sort of start of 2020 to more at the time, launching an NFT with like an alpha group was like a really big thing, especially for all the
like YouTubers and content creators because we had the most rage to talk to projects to get like whitelist and stuff and that was really the matter at the time. Early on, I'll just kind of like briefly go over this but like early on I kind of realized I wanted to be in the space long term so I didn't want to do anything that could like damage my reputation. I also didn't want to do anything
that I wasn't like ethically comfortable with. So I was really against launching an NFT project, which I decided not to do. I didn't do any type of project because I didn't want to commit to anything and blah, blah, blah. I also wasn't sure about like taking that much money and the pressure of taking so much money from a community. Like I know a lot of people in my same position
did and some did really well with it some didn't do as well with it You know, I could have made a lot of money if I wanted to in the forum with the reach that I had in terms of like YouTube and stuff and Instead all like Mike all my like kind of viewers on YouTube and audience on Twitter at the
time that will come into my videos or replying or DMing me and stuff will create a group. We want to talk to the other community members who watch you. We all want to see your view of things and get projects early that you might be looking at stuff like that. So I ended up doing just like a paid subscription
group, like a monthly group, instead of doing an NFT where I like get people to pay you know $600,000 or whatever, like a one-self, I just did a subscription based thing and then like hide a bunch of people and we did like alpha calls and like I'd reach out to projects and get whitelist and stuff which yeah it was good in like the bull run and
stuff, it slowed down way more now and I'm like deciding what I want to do with that in terms of how I want to restructure that going forward. But that was, yeah, that was fun at the time and yeah, it was kind of important to me that I didn't do anything that was like permanent, like an NFT, because I know with the structure of
those half-groups and stuff if you didn't do it properly. It could be, you know, left a pretty bad taste in people's mouth if you kind of like just did it the wrong way, but I think some people got around it and did it really well. Champ, for example, if you know him, I think, did it probably in the best way.
Love it my man. So quickly I want to ask you know a simple Question but again, I really
want to get to know you with this. What are your goals? Maybe long-term, short-term. Where do you want to bring pasta into the universe?
I mean like ultimate goal would be probably to build something that I'm like actually proud of and that I can like work with people that I'm friends with in the space or friends with in real life because I'm friends with a lot of like creative people that I think have a lot of potential
if given the right opportunity. So doing something like that would be really interesting within the space. I just want to do it in a way where it's a win-win situation for the consumer plus the people like on the team and just everyone involved, which I think is like, rarant's kind of hard to do. So that's why I haven't forced anything.
So I'm kind of still deciding exactly what that means, but that's kind of the goal and it would be really good to kind of educate people on this space and just figure out a way that people can get involved. Something I've been thinking about recently a lot is
So my throat kind of closed on right now. I'll be getting sick. I think something I've been thinking about right now a lot is this kind of web 2.5 thing. And you know, if, okay, let's for example, is usually use so you to what like $4,000 or whatever the case is.
So I have a friend that maybe meets the requirements of what the youth community is about and like, okay, that's interesting. He could join and maybe he is in a similar age range and interested in the same things as that community. But buying a $4,000 digital asset from zero to nothing
is like, have huge step, not only technically in terms of downloading like Metamask and like getting everything set up and going ahead and buying it, but it's a huge financial investment. Especially for someone like in that age range that I think you just like really popular in which is probably, I don't know like 20 to 26, 18 to 26, whatever it is.
maybe just 30 probably. And so I've been thinking a lot recently, is like what does that look like as we go forward and like what does like a mass adoption actually thing? What does a mass adoption on a larger scale actually look like? In a way
where people don't have such a big financial investment but can also get involved in the brand. If level 1 is buying a U20 for $60 and level 10 is buying a natural U20 in the community, what does that middle range look like? Where it's not necessarily a big monetary investment but in
involvement in the brand and just like having an experience within it. Because I think one of the really, really powerful things that you can dig out, realize and a lot of other communities are taking advantage of is not only just community, but within that, like the practice of crowdfunding something, like crowdfunding in experience.
that all of these people will enjoy because they all have something in common and creating that experience as kind of like a unique thing because it's crowdfunded. And I think that that practice is being done for the past forever. It's not something new, but doing it in the digital age can kind of
I think there's merit to that that hasn't been fully looked into yet. For example, you may know this website. It was called Mass Drop. It's called Drop Now, where you'd basically be able to get a discount on certain
a lot of computer products like headphones keyboards, mouse, and stuff like that, or mice, whatever it is. By committing to buy something or just saying you want to buy something, and basically this company would wait, you know, it would market, it would sponsor YouTubers or whatever, everyone would come in and say, you know, I want to buy this game chair. So let's all come
it's buying it and because a thousand of us are going to buy it, they're going to go out like Master Drop is going to go out and get it at a lower price. So because everyone is buying it now, not everyone needs to spend a thousand dollars on it, everyone can spend 800 dollars on it. And it's just kind of like community-funded crowdsource thing that gets a better experience
being the cheaper product is the better experience in this example. And just using the internet as the way to actually get that done. It's a really interesting thing and it's actually a popular company I think that have kind of built more into just like an online store at this point now. But I think they still do stuff like that.
And like, I don't know, there's different examples, even like music festivals, festivals, especially here in Australia. Um, it's really expensive to get like, um, rappers out here in terms of flights and accommodation, all that sort of stuff. So it's almost like this crowd-funded event, um, where everyone gets together and they, they
source all the money for the tickets and then they go out and get these artists. It wouldn't be possible if we didn't have thousands of people come together and commit $100 to raise this fund basically to bring people together to buy this thing and have this experience altogether because they have
this common interest. I think that's another example that probably fits better to something like what an NFT project is trying to do. And so I've been thinking a lot lately, it's like what does a digital asset in like a Web 2.5 type experience where maybe someone doesn't actually need to touch blockchain full stop. They don't need to do anything like that.
But they can just like have a better experience, whether that be digitally or physically, but maybe digitally, and kind of be a part of a community online without needing to spend like a shit ton of money to do it. It's just like getting all of these people together with like-minded ideas and like having a like-minded goal, whether that
to do with like clothing or music or anything like that. It doesn't matter what it is. And just, you know, making that actually happen, maybe there's some use of blockchain on the back end. But I don't think it's necessary for like that to actually happen. So I'm really interested with that idea right now and I'm trying to kind of work out what that
looks like. So that's kind of like a short to medium term goal that I have right now is what does that look like and then maybe how can I help in bringing that to the masses because I think that's a lot more of a digestible idea and kind of action plan that I could be a part of especially with content and like content is going to be the forefront of that in terms of marketing and just like
educating people on what's going on and how it works and what's happening and why I can benefit them and You know, and then I think that's actually a really good stepping stone to getting people more involved in NFTs and eventually getting to that stage where they may want to buy you you know buy whatever the NFT But I think it's it's a big ask on
If you want someone to go from level one to level 10 and just straight up go from zero to zero to 100 in terms of joining this space and having like a huge financial deployment of capital, whatever you want to say. So yeah, that's kind of what I'm working on right now.
Love it man. I really I really like how you speak your your mind You know in these spaces we really like to talk about habits and the power of habit So I want to ask what's the day in the life of pasta? um
Yeah, I mean right now I kind of just like wake up at I'm like eight to nine a.m. or something like that I mean Australia so the time zones like pretty much flipped for the US so like when I'm waking up it's
maybe it's almost like 6 pm or 4 pm or something like that in America which is really interesting because I kind of miss everything but also when I wake up everything's already happened so I kind of can just digest things in a bit of a different way than other people.
the majority of the people that I communicate with online. So I wake up, I'll make like a coffee, I'll kind of check my email or whatever, or maybe watch some YouTube videos, I'll go on Twitter, and answer any like immediate urgent DMs or anything like that.
that. I'll check if I like I have anything on today like like this space I then might make lunch at like 12 or whatever. It's pretty structured my day because I like I kind of need it to be I feel like almost to do what I want to do. I then might like research to do like a video of some
So I think I was thinking of this thing today. I might actually start trying to script my videos and have like basically the framework of a video done before lunch before 12 p.m. I think that's something that I want to start doing. So that's kind of knocked out and then like that's half the video done and then I can
just film and edit and upload it after that. So that's something I might like after I get off this space that's probably what I will do. So then after that I'll probably like make the video I might talk to some people in the space like have a call, hop on a space, watch some editing tutorials,
it's something that's usually what I'm doing in like the afternoon. I don't usually walk my dog Frank, my dog's name Frank here, and then I will maybe gonna run and then have dinner and then probably do some more like what
book and then maybe either go to bed or if I have time play some sort of video game maybe with one of my friends or a couple of my friends maybe like league or I just got caught recently but I'm shadow bands that's a whole other story and I can't play it but um yeah
Love the men. So I'm gonna ask the last question, but I do want to invite the listeners up if they want to add anything to the conversation. So before we end this pasta for the people who listens to
the recording or the people listening right now. Is there any advice you want to give them? Maybe is a content creation advice, even life advice. Any piece of advice you'd like to share?
I don't usually give too much advice because I don't know how useful it is to other people to be honest, but I guess I would just say for me, probably the biggest thing
Also two things. The biggest thing for me is kind of just trusting your gut and what you think is going to work and doing and kind of like listen to what other people are saying and take criticism and take feedback but just do what you want to do because if you
take to many other people's ideas and just do what they want you to do. It's not going to be you anymore, especially with content, but like majority of everything that you do, I think listening to other sides of the story and just other perspectives is really, really, really important. I try to listen to everyone's
perspective and understand what they're saying. It doesn't mean I need to agree with them or do what they say. I think that's really important for me especially. And then another thing would be that it just take accountability in everything that you're doing in life.
I think a good way of putting it is everything is your fault in life. Everything is your fault but that doesn't mean just bad. That means good. So it's like if you lose $100 at the casino gambling, that is your fault.
If you don't get a certain job that you wanted, that is your fault obviously, but when you do get that job that you wanted, or you accomplish something that you want to accomplish, that is your fault.
It's not that your fault doesn't just mean bad like take accountability for the good and the bad because I think that's gonna like help with people that are maybe not super confident in themselves It's like when something goes good. It's not luck like
That wasn't luck. You may want to just say it was luck because you're not confident in your abilities and you're just like, you kind of get this imposter syndrome. But it's like, no, like you were putting that position because you did what you did to get there. So, you know, just just take accountability. Everything is your fault. Good or bad.
Love it pasta. That was beautifully said everything you said so far was amazing. I like I said I love how you speak your mind. It was an amazing episode man to to end these episodes we like to you know get the guest to choose an outro song so go ahead
Did you choose anything you'd like your favorite song? Is there anything special you want me to play? Actually, I found this song, I don't know how I'd never heard of it before. It's not on Spotify though.
is that fine? What's the name? Well, you need to look up on YouTube. But it's called, if you type in from the heart, from the heart one word, or it doesn't really matter, and then just type in, losing it without a G.
and just probably just played the first one from the heart losing it. I found this the other day, I don't know why I hadn't found it, it was actually the most random thing because I listened to all of the artists in the song but it was never released on Spotify because there's some controversial thing that happened a few years back.
And but I listen to most of these artists like Daily, they're some of my favorites. A lot of these like young underground like hyperpop people and yeah, I was randomly watching a cod edit tutorial because I'm learning like time remapping and after effects because I think it's going to be really good for IRL events and like editing stuff and
a cool way. Kind of alpha there. I'm going to hopefully learn how to do that probably soon and then start to implement it. I think it's going to be really, really insane for IRL stuff. But yeah, Renely watching this cod edit and then the guy started the video, had like an example at it and he used this song and I heard the person's voice, one of the artists
Queen and I went no I I immediately knew it was them I've never heard the song before how because I've listened to everything of hers but it's really hard to find the music because it's always deleted and under different names anyway yeah really random but I finally two days ago so perfect let me know if it's this song
Yeah Perfect man, I am really appreciate your support today
♪ I've been losing composer ♪ ♪ I feel it shorter to shorter ♪ ♪ Summer's never been colder than one ♪ ♪ It's like when I'm older ♪ ♪ You'd see the song letting go ♪ ♪ I've never been a bad guy ♪ ♪ I'm a simmer I'll be home ♪