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Erica's first nude video (long version) 🎬 ‼️ 4-minute version – only for hardcore Erica fans!! Futanari saggy breasted Queen 🫅 #aivideo #saggybreasts #futanari #nsfw #aiwaifu

20,935 views • 1 year ago •via X (Twitter)

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Did you know‼️⁉️Drake's "Pop Style" (2016 single promoting Views)‼️Original single version featured The Throne (Jay-Z & Kanye West)⁉️Drake only wanted Kanye at first‼️ but Kanye sent it back with Jay-Z casually adding two lines⁉️"They still out to get me, they don't get it I cannot be got, and that's a given‼️Kanye was excited about the "The Throne" moment‼️For the Views album version‼️ Drake removed both features and added his own new verse‼️ He replaced Jay-Z's lines by re-recording nearly identical ones himself (with a small tweak):"They still out to get me, I don't get it I can not be got, and that's a given."‼️Drake explained that Jay “didn’t really do a verse,” fans would hate the brevity, and it “didn’t play out how I would have wanted it to as far as business goes,” ‼️so he went solo‼️But that's not really the real reason‼️ fans did not realise why Jay-Z refused to clear/be on the album version‼️until Kanye’s later Saint Pablo Tour rant‼️where he revealed that Jay pulled back out of respect for Meek Mill‼️who was in a heated public beef with Drake at the time‼️Meek had Roc Nation ties/management links, and Jay didn’t want to appear to side with Drake‼️But was that really the full details‼️⁉️Nope‼️ The bigger tensions and reason was that Drake had snubbed Jay-Z’s Tidal streaming service‼️where he was reportedly offered a co-owner/partner role‼️and instead took a massive Apple Music deal in 2015‼️which Jay viewed as disloyal‼️Kanye even tried mediating the Drake-Meek beef to make the collab happen, but it fell apart over “Tidal… political shit… percentages on songs.”‼️Therefore Jay (or his camp) refused full clearance for the album‼️, forcing Drake to scrap the features entirely‼️This is to tell you that the tension between them has been a long time coming‼️💯

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54,347 views • 12 days ago

NEW KILLER STAR HD UPGRADE “With the bubbles and action, The little details in colour...” Those of you who subscribe to the official Bowie YouTube channel will have already seen this, but if you haven’t, here’s the New Killer Star HD upgrade: When the video first aired to promote the first release from Reality, fans bemoaned the absence of the song’s creator among the colourful characters that populated the thing. Spoiler alert: He’s still not in it. However, a minute long alternate version of the video featuring an animated Bowie, was briefly available on the Blink TV website twenty years ago. That version featured a take of the song, in which the “nuclear baby” phrase is sung as “beautiful baby”, suggesting it was a demo version. Here's a bit of what Blink TV said about their NKS video in particular: “Bowie was filmed, then traced and animated - these animations were edited onto layered backgrounds to create a 3D hologram effect.” As you can see, the finished video utilises a lenticular effect, which is what they are describing above. We’ve not managed to locate the Blink TV version among a teetering tower of old hard drives, but someone out there must still have it. Do you? In the Official Reality Press Release written by David Wild in 2003, Bowie had this to say regarding the song: “I'm not a political commentator, but I think there are times when I'm stretched to at least implicate what's happening politically in the songs that I'm writing. And there was some nod, in a very abstract way, toward the wrongs that are being made at the moment with the Middle Eastern situation. I think that song is a pretty good manifesto for the whole record.” #ICGEAAlbumFocusReality #BowieNewKillerStar

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13,468 views • 10 months ago

Brian Armstrong shares the Y Combinator advice that helped Coinbase find product/market fit “The first version of a product you put out doesn’t work. In fact, that’s the only thing I’ve ever seen happen in startups. I’ve never seen a startup where the first version of their product actually worked. Sometimes in hindsight people like to tell that story, but I think in reality it’s very rare.” The first version of Coinbase was a hosted Bitcoin wallet. Brian posted it to Reddit and a few people signed up but nobody stuck around. Rather than get discouraged though, he recalled the advice he got at Y Combinator: “Don’t spend your time going to conferences and trying to raise money. If you don’t have product/market fit yet, talk to your customers and improve the product based on their feedback… There’s really only two things you should be doing in the early stage - talking to your customers and improving the product. It sounds like simple advice, but people spend so much time doing other stuff that’s not actually real work.” Following that advice, Brian emailed 10 of the people who had signed up for Coinbase and asked if they’d be open to a quick phone call. One of the users liked the wallet but didn’t have any Bitcoin. Brian asked him: “If there was an easy way to get Bitcoin into your wallet - like a buy button or something - would you have stuck around and used it?” “Yeah, probably” replied the user. So Brian spent the next few months securing bank partnerships and money transmission licenses so he could build a simple buy button into the app. Then he launched it. “The minute we launched that buy button, it started to grow every day organically with no marketing or anything. And that was the minute I felt like we finally had product/market fit.” Video source: Steven Bartlett (2022)

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78,532 views • 8 months ago

Brian Armstrong shares the Y Combinator advice that helped Coinbase find product/market fit “The first version of a product you put out doesn’t work. In fact, that’s the only thing I’ve ever seen happen in startups. I’ve never seen a startup where the first version of their product actually worked. Sometimes in hindsight people like to tell that story, but I think in reality it’s very rare.” The first version of Coinbase was a hosted Bitcoin wallet. Brian posted it to Reddit and a few people signed up but nobody stuck around. Rather than get discouraged though, he recalled the advice he got at Y Combinator: “Don’t spend your time going to conferences and trying to raise money. If you don’t have product/market fit yet, talk to your customers and improve the product based on their feedback… There’s really only two things you should be doing in the early stage - talking to your customers and improving the product. It sounds like simple advice, but people spend so much time doing other stuff that’s not actually real work.” Following that advice, Brian emailed 10 of the people who had signed up for Coinbase and asked if they’d be open to a quick phone call. One of the users liked the wallet but didn’t have any Bitcoin. Brian asked him: “If there was an easy way to get Bitcoin into your wallet - like a buy button or something - would you have stuck around and used it?” “Yeah, probably” replied the user. So Brian spent the next few months securing bank partnerships and money transmission licenses so he could build a simple buy button into the app. Then he launched it. “The minute we launched that buy button, it started to grow every day organically with no marketing or anything. And that was the minute I felt like we finally had product/market fit.” Video Source: Steven Bartlett

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151,287 views • 1 year ago

Brian Armstrong shares the Y Combinator advice that helped Coinbase find product/market fit “The first version of a product you put out doesn’t work. In fact, that’s the only thing I’ve ever seen happen in startups. I’ve never seen a startup where the first version of their product actually worked. Sometimes in hindsight people like to tell that story, but I think in reality it’s very rare.” The first version of Coinbase was a hosted Bitcoin wallet. Brian posted it to Reddit and a few people signed up but nobody stuck around. Rather than get discouraged though, he recalled the advice he got at Y Combinator: “Don’t spend your time going to conferences and trying to raise money. If you don’t have product/market fit yet, talk to your customers and improve the product based on their feedback… There’s really only two things you should be doing in the early stage - talking to your customers and improving the product. It sounds like simple advice, but people spend so much time doing other stuff that’s not actually real work.” Following that advice, Brian emailed 10 of the people who had signed up for Coinbase and asked if they’d be open to a quick phone call. One of the users liked the wallet but didn’t have any Bitcoin. Brian asked him: “If there was an easy way to get Bitcoin into your wallet - like a buy button or something - would you have stuck around and used it?” “Yeah, probably” replied the user. So Brian spent the next few months securing bank partnerships and money transmission licenses so he could build a simple buy button into the app. Then he launched it. “The minute we launched that buy button, it started to grow every day organically with no marketing or anything. And that was the minute I felt like we finally had product/market fit.” Video source: Steven Bartlett (2022)

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56,857 views • 1 year ago