🚨BREAKING: Andrew Tate calls modern weddings a humiliation ritual for men 😳
"He ends up on one knee worshiping her, giving her a diamond he can barely afford, begging a woman he's been paying for to stay with him."
"And the second she's unhappy - she leaves." 💀
Toxic habits that keep you weak:
Wake up → Phone.
Prescription drugs → Symptoms, not the root.
Short-form content → Dopamine collapse.
Consume all day → No production.
10% consume.
90% produce and reflect.
Break the prison mindset.
In the 1990s we experienced:
Peak Michael Jordan.
The rise of Tiger Woods.
Gas at 99 cents a gallon.
The golden age of Hip-Hop.
The rise of The Rock & Steve Austin.
The rise of Venus and Serena Williams.
A streak of classic Disney animated films.
Sitcoms: Seinfeld, Friends, Fresh Prince of Bel-Air.
Star Trek: "The Next Generation" and "Deep Space 9"
Peak SNES, and the arrival of Sony's first PlayStation.
Marvel Comics sold hundreds of thousands of books a month.
DC Comics' "The Death of Superman" became national news.
Rise of young comics including Dave Chappelle and Chris Rock.
Elite work from established Hollywood stars, breakouts of new stars and filmmakers, classic blockbuster films (and late night TV hosts who promoted the business instead of lecturing audiences).
Nostalgia for the 1990s is strong because excellence across multiple arenas in pop culture was obvious and undeniable, and this excellence enhanced our quality of life.
Fame had to be earned, we could enjoy things together, and algorithms had yet to atomize and divide us.
It was an amazing time to be alive.
Christopher Walken has never owned a phone, an email address, or social media—and he prefers it that way. “I don’t carry a watch, a phone, or email. If I need the time, I just ask. If I need a phone, I borrow one.”
“You don’t need 20 right decisions to get very rich. 4 or 5 will probably do it…” “It’s a terrible mistake to think you have to have an opinion on everything.”
— Warren Buffett