These will be about things I enjoy. Perhaps there will be an article about a game of badminton. Perhaps about a nice view I saw. Perhaps about some music I have been enjoying. Perhaps about a funny instagram reel. The possibilities are endless!
The extended intro and Kendrick verse hit so hard on this. The way Kendrick inflects his voice, especially on "i fuck around and crash a brand new bugatti in the mothafuckin' lobby so you know i'm in the building" and the proceeding bars hit so fucking hard. Designer goes hard on his verse too, but he's already on Pt. 2. This song put me on a different plane of existence. Give it a try. I hope the same happens to you. Unfortunately, the song is not on spotify, but if you were to say, convert a the youtube video into a mp3, and say, upload it to spotify as a local file, nobody would stop you.
Adam Ragusea has been my favorite cooking Youtuber for a long time. I find that his views and morals generally align with mine, and if anything, I've shifted my own views on interpreting and conveying information to align with him. His previous career was in journalism, so he therefore understands the value of academia without relying on it so much that he alienates his audience. Adam's also a home cook, not a former professional chef, so he understands that what works in the professional kitchen won't necessarily work in the home kitchen. Once in a while, he'll decide to do a video on a food topic with broad social/philosophical significance, and those projects are his very best. See "cooking internet and lifting internet have the same problem" In my opinion, his very best video is to the left, where he uses some excellent allegories to convey how his career success has allowed him to take a step back and focus on mental health issues that he didn't realize he had. I haven't had career success, but I do empathize with taking a step back and realizing you have some things you can work on to have a calmer life.
As someone with little programing experience, Tom Scott makes it extremely digestible and intriguing. In this video, he uses the slowly eroding White Cliffs of Dover as a metaphor to explain how every program ever built will eventually cease to work. He also brings up some cool internet history with Web 2.0 and how exciting/eventually disappointing parts of it were. This is his most viewed video (largely due to it's clickable nature), but all of his other videos are just as digestible, and cover a wide array of STEM topics, from radio telescopes to the holes in Swiss cheese. In my opinion, he is an "ideal" youtuber. Yes, he probably makes an obscene amount of money, but he doesn't get obsessed with growth and turn into a manager like Mr. Beast or Mark Rober. I guess he just feels genuine. Love Tom Scott.
I love this song because it combines two opposites. The track consists of an argument on a New York subway car overlaid over soft saxophone. It's one of those scary three-plus person arguments where everyone is screaming, but the people are also sober. The saxophone has some reverb? on it that makes you feel like you're inside of the subway car and some guy is playing despite the chaos around him.
This has to be the most beautiful diss track ever. The beat feels heavenly. When it chanes at the one minute mark... oh my. oh my oh my. The lyrcism falls in line with the rest of his discography, so I won't really get into it. I feel like this song is lost in the sauce when people look back at the Kendrick/Drake beef because it was never released on streaming services, but it's one of the best songs to come from it. 6:16 just has a positive vibe while still dissecting the opponent.
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