Andrew Schulz
π€ SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
Which I get, but it's not that... They're not laughing because they haven't seen it before.
They're laughing because they're like, oh!
There's a familiarity with it.
What do you mean, you people?
The Tropic Thunder, like, we saw that for six months, then went to the theater, then the moment happened, and you laughing, like, oh, that's from the, oh, that's from the, it's the nostalgia.
It becomes music.
But what if we shifted and did that with, all right, this week's gonna be this bit.
and i'm gonna drop that every day bro this has happened like and i mean that's like the tick tock music play which is like hey let me just drop the same part of the song over and over three times a day with maybe a different voiceover maybe a different thing like they change the visual stimulus but it's the same part of the song but there's a girl that blew a song up by playing it she played it she posted uh i think she said 200 or 2200 times straight this is what yeah this is what and then like
The 1700s one was the one that went viral.
It just caught the right wave.
And according to him, that was the thing that inspired the idea.
I also think when you reach critical mass,
There is an important play, which is like now less can be more.
So when you reach the point like you're already beyond it, I think that less but high quality stuff or incredibly random thing.
Like you said, there's something happened with like an amputee in a crowd or whatever like that.
It's just such a random concoction of events that it's like really special.
And I think that that does work because now you don't need to like introduce yourself to people as much.