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Everything you need to know before Blast Mainnet launch from Remint Reality ✨ Breaking down the hype/culture around Blast, The Big Bang Competition, and alpha 👀 My attn is here: Pacmoon (Culture) Thruster Finance BLASTER 🔫 (Dexes) Blast Futures Particle (Perps) Juice Finance Timeswap ⏳ (Lending) Mangrove 🌳 (Restaking)...

79,641 次观看 • 2 年前 •via X (Twitter)

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Q: Why is company culture important? In the clip below, a16z cofounder Ben Horowitz argues that culture drives how people in your company behave on a daily basis—and particularly, how they behave when you’re not looking. Is that phone call so important I need to return it today or can it wait until tomorrow? Can I ask for a raise before my annual review? Is the quality of this document good enough or should I keep working on it? Do I have to be on time for that meeting? Should I stay at the Four Seasons or the Red Roof Inn? Should I go home at 5 p.m. or 8 p.m.? Should we discuss the color of this new product for five minutes or thirty hours? If I know something is badly broken in the company, should I say something? Whom should I tell? Is winning more important than ethics? None of these things are in your mission statement or OKRs, but they determine many important things for your company, such as how people experience your company, what you’re like to do business with, what your company is like to work at, etc. And as Ben describes, what drives the culture is all of the little behaviors and cues people take on: “this is what I have to do to succeed in this company.” Culture can feel abstract and secondary when you pit it against a concrete result that’s right in front of you, but it’s a strategic investment in the company doing things the right way when you are not looking. It’s the set of assumptions your employees use to resolve the problems they face every day. It’s how they behave when no one is looking. If you don’t methodically set your culture, then two-thirds of it will end up being accidental, and the rest will be a mistake. If you’re looking for a more in-depth guide to culture and how to build a great one, I’d recommend Ben’s book: What You Do Is Who You Are.

Michael McGuiness

180,634 次观看 • 2 年前

For the first time in my life, I feel I get to merge the 2 things that I love: production & web3. When I look at web3, the space is so rich in stories. Founder stories, product stories, user stories. I believe storytelling is ultimately what will help people see this space for what it is and to give them a different perspective on the media headlines. And it's not often that as a creative you can work side by side with brands and cos that you truly align with. So on May 24th, when I got the call from Arcade Research and Blast to see if I could help Pacman | Blur + Blast share the story and vision for Blast- I knew it was going to be sprint but it was an easy yes. Really excited to share that I had the privilege of directing and producing the Blast Phase 2 announcement video and a deep dive interview with Pacman about the vision for Phase 2. From a little campaign video to a deep dive interview- we covered it all and we ran it back ;) The last 30 days have been a non-stop sprint literally up until yesterday, with 2 productions in LA and NYC. And I’m so grateful to have been a small part of what feels like history in the making. A campaign like this does not happen on such a tight turnaround time without an incredible crew and post-production team. This would not have been possible able to do this without them. Proud of this crew and it was an honor to work alongside them. Excited to be properly stepping back into the world of production to tell the stories of Web3. We experimented, FAFO’d, and had an actual Blast. Plz gib a round of applause for these legends who made it all possible 👏🐐👇 Production Co: Remint Reality Director/Producer: RIP Director of Photography: Josh Park Production Designer: Briana Gonzales 1st AC: Wade Young 2nd AC/DIT: Che Song “Jay” Pak 2nd AC: Mitchell Schultz Editor & Sound Designer: PANDAA (delusionally optimistic era) Motion Graphics & Animation: Suffoca Los Angeles Crew Stills Photographer: Hannah BTS Video: James Cortez Steadicam Op: Jaron Tauch Gaffer: Robin Banando G&E Swing: Eddie Loera Best Boy Electric: Geoff Stevenson Key Grip: Tony Banando Sound Mixer: Ferinand Almalvez Boom Op: Matt Brodnick Set Dresser: Chris Katus H/MU: Tayla Boz PA: LJ Benet New York Crew Gaffer: John Roche G&E Swing: Jeff Cunningham G&E Swing: Kevin Hunt Grip: Huttemberg Nassar Sound Mixer: Daniel Sheppard Boom Op: EJ Markland Set Dresser: Damani Pompey H/MU: Sol PA: Vitali A huge thank you Blast for taking a bet on me and bringing me in to work on this. This is just the beginning. Some BTS from the LA production 👀

Jenn

94,302 次观看 • 2 年前

American Nurse Quit Her Job & Is Speaking Out “If I knew then what I knew now, I would have never went to nursing school. You're a graduate of Big Pharma and helping Big Pharma. That's why I quit nursing” “They're not looking for cures. They're looking for customers” “I realized what BS was being said to the patients. I remember having a patient and they were saying that the only way that she could get better was to take all this medication. And I actually knew of some herbal remedies. And I was like, they're just f*cking lying at this point. So many other things that could have been done. So whenever I see these nursing graduates graduating, I'm like, yay, you got a graduation from big Pharma. —If I was gonna be a nurse, I'd be a holistic nurse, which you don't need a degree for so to all you nurses out there, be careful because that profession is very depressing. They're not looking for cures. They're looking for customers. They'll teach you everything incorrectly. I remember when they told me that you could not pray for a patient. I Was like, okay, we'll stop my mind because that's what I'm gonna do. Let me tell you something else, My dad's a doctor and I was a nurse, my mom was a nurse, my sister is a nurse and doctors don't know everything. It's literally 10% doctor, 90% God. Do not tell somebody that this or this or this is going to happen. You're not God. I've seen people get cured when they're like, nope, they're going to die. So, and let me tell you something, it wasn't off Big Pharma either. — The medical field, all the things I could tell you from that place”

Wall Street Apes

1,039,286 次观看 • 2 年前

In the beginning, Jenny McCarthy said she was flooded with appreciation. Parents from all over reached out, thanking her for speaking up and helping them feel less alone. “I had about six months of just enormous amounts of parents going, ‘Thank you. I’m looked at as not crazy now.’” But that support didn’t last. Public praise quickly turned into public backlash. Rumors swirled, critics piled on, and soon, people began calling her crazy. Then something even more sinister happened: Someone showed up at her organization, Generation Rescue, with a private warning that stopped her in her tracks. “I had someone come to my organization… and say to me, ‘Listen, I was approached by, let’s just say a government agency to be hired.’” The man said his job was to craft PR campaigns designed to discredit voices like hers. “What I do is I set up PR campaigns to go against the narrative. And I’m telling you privately because I turned them down, but I wanted to give you forewarning that it’s happening because they’re going to hire someone else.” He told her the only reason he said no was because his own child had experienced the same thing—and he couldn’t be part of silencing someone who was just trying to tell the truth. McCarthy was floored. “Hold on, hold on, hold on. I have chills all over my body. I need you to tell me that whole thing all over again,” she said. “Because the shock almost didn’t let everything sink in.” The man confirmed it once more. “I basically am a PR agency, a very high echelon one, and I was approached by a government agency to create a narrative against you, and it’s going to be called you’re anti-vaccine.” McCarthy remembered asking how they could go after her when she’d made her position clear in every interview. But the man said, “doesn’t matter… they’re going to come after you with everything they’ve got. And they’ve got the media on their side.” The attacks eventually hit her where it hurt—her ability to make a living. “It didn’t really hurt me until it started taking jobs away from me,” she said. “I was a single mother still trying to heal my son.” Companies pulled McCarthy from campaigns. Opportunities vanished. And this backlash came before the term “cancel culture” even existed. “I was the beginning of that cancel culture,” McCarthy said. “Cancel culture wasn’t even a phrase yet.” Despite everything, she didn’t back down. “I just heavily relied on still writing my books and not giving up,” she said. “You can try to cancel me, but I’m still going to be here.” “And now looking back,” McCarthy said, “my son is 22 years old and I’m still here.”

The Vigilant Fox 🦊

62,230 次观看 • 1 年前