Eagerly awaiting Puck @MattBelloni inside scoop of the time Michael Ovitz assured Lucian Grange he was only here as a “bridge” to Ackman/board of UMG 😝 bruh game recognize game u gotta try harder than that
@willahmed@blknoiz06 You are Inspiring for sure but I find these type of posts are better suited once you return money to investors, not just take more of it. Keep it going.
this is insane AI design alpha from google:
google's lead stitch designer just showed how he turns a 1-line prompt into a site that looks like an actual design agency built it.
he walked through every decision, from the first vague prompt to a finished design with real content, real layout, real direction.
here's his full process:
the problem is most people open stitch and type something like "a road running race listing page."
stitch gives them a generic dark layout. it works, but it doesn't feel like anything.
it's effectively AI slop
his approach starts somewhere most people skip entirely.
1. he starts with empathy.
before touching any tool, he asks:
> who is this site for?
> how should they feel when they land on it?
say he's building a community marathon site.
these are historic races in world-class cities.
the site should feel prestigious, like standing in the jefferson memorial.
so now he knows the feeling he's going for.
but stitch can't build from "prestigious." it needs design language.
2. he asks gemini to translate that feeling into words stitch can actually use.
instead of vague words like "sporty" or "athletic," gemini comes back with phrases like "architectural limestone," "ink on paper," "clay on an old track."
he feeds those into stitch and the output jumps immediately.
real structure, real intent, something you could actually work with.
so now the direction is set. but the default colors and fonts stitch picked don't match the feeling yet.
3. he dials in the design system (the set of colors, fonts, and components that keep every screen consistent).
he doesn't think of colors as a matching palette. he thinks of them as a hierarchy. each one has a job:
> neutral is the canvas. ~80-90% of the screen. he sets it to warm architectural limestone
> primary is the ink. headings, body text. he drops it to dark asphalt
> secondary is more subdued so primary text keeps focus
> tertiary is the accent. loudest color, used least. he sets it to a clay red that pulls your eye straight to the call to action
for fonts he picks public sans. official but friendly.
like a prestigious journal you'd actually want to read.
so now the colors and type feel right. but the layout is still generic.
4. he fixes layout by thinking about physical objects.
"if my website was a book, what kind of book would it be?"
his answer: a coffee table book. full-page imagery, dense info, editorial headings.
he uses variants (a stitch feature that generates multiple layout directions at once) to explore editorial lookbook layouts with large typographic headings.
like a luxury travel magazine.
so now the layout, colors, and typography all feel dialed in. but scrolling through, something still feels off.
5. the content.
the headings say things like "the elite calendar." the aesthetic is there but the words are generic. it doesn't feel like a real site yet.
so he installs a copywriting skill (an agent instruction file with expertise in writing web copy)
and feeds it all his context plus the design .md (the creative brief stitch auto-generated from his prompts).
the skill drafts page copy, he reviews and edits, then pastes the final version back into stitch.
now the site has real names, real tips, real ctas. it stopped feeling like a template.
the whole process: empathy → design language → colors and type → layout → copy.
if you've been getting generic output from stitch (and AI design tools in general), start with one question:
how do you want the user to feel?
everything else follows from that.
In 2019, MIT professor Patrick Winston gave a legendary 1-hour lecture called “How to Speak.”
It has 18M+ views for a reason.
His frameworks:
• Your ideas are like your children
• The 5-minute rule for job talks
• Why jokes fail at the start
15 lessons on communication:
🚨 Google just wiped out the entire call center industry.
→ Their new voice API handles sub-second latency voice AI
→ Multi-lingual calls perfectly.
→ 90+ languages.
→ Replaces receptionists with a Python script.
Want to profit?
Do this:
#1 Target salons, clinics or similar
#2 Build an AI agent to handle FAQs & bookings
#3 Charge $1000/mo (Human receptionists cost $3k/mo).
The window closes in 6 months or less. Build it today 😏
@MorePerfectUS I was a bit dubious at first and thought this was going in mindless “eat the rich” direction, but at the end I agree. Sports is a rare category where as end consumers we don’t naturally connect it to business, which makes it all the more clear when we finally see it.