If you're not using or learning about AI right now, you are falling behind
And every day you wait you're making it much harder on yourself to ever catch up
I wrote a quick email about this today https://t.co/vxfi73Qo7j
Introducing Parker: The world's first AI Creative Director.
100+ brands like Grüns, Lume and Legends use us already.
RT + Comment "Parker" and I'll send you 100+ AI prompt engineers for hire.
Claude, GPT and Gemini are exactly like a 39-yr-old dad about to play pickup basketball...
If you don't grease the joints up a bit, the performance is embarrassing and frankly dangerous
Ease into a prompting session by asking for one task at a time to stack context...
...before asking it to do 13 things at once.
It's basically a dynamic warmup for your LLM
Thank me later.
i found a way to make AI videos that don't sound like AI...
example below....
sora 2, veo 3.1, kling 2.6 are decent but they all have that robotic AI accent that everyone can detect immediately
and when people try replacing the voices with elevenlabs, it always sounds way too professional
like it's recorded on a professional mic in a studio
but if i'm making a UGC video of someone in their room, i don't want studio quality
it should sound like it's actually in that room
the workflow i use completely removes that fake AI voice sound
why this matters:
when your AI voices sound too polished or robotic, people notice. their guard goes up. they disengage.
but when your voices sound like they're coming from a real person in a real room, that's when they work the best
i created a guide breaking down exactly how:
> to create voiceovers that sound completely real
> to replace fake-sounding voices in AI videos (not elevenlabs)
> to make voices sound like they're in the actual environment, not a studio
RT + reply "VOICE" and i'll send you the FULL guide (must follow so i can DM)
most people are pussies. they keep waiting for the "right time" to start. they're "preparing" and "researching" and "getting ready" while the years slip by. sartre nailed it - you're reserving yourself for later and then one day you wake up and realize later never comes. the teeth are gone. the window closed. you spent so long sharpening the axe that you forgot to swing it. i see this constantly. guys who've been "about to launch" for 3 years. founders who need "just one more feature" before they can ship. people who won't post content until their brand is "ready." ready for what? ready for who? nobody is coming to give you permission. nobody is going to tap you on the shoulder and say "ok now you're qualified." the market doesn't care about your preparation. it only cares about what you put in front of it. the difference between people who make it and people who don't isn't talent or intelligence or connections. it's the willingness to look stupid in public. to ship something embarrassing. to fail where people can see you. most people would rather protect their ego than build something real. they'd rather be a "future founder" forever than an actual founder who shipped something mid. but here's the thing - everything is mid at first. your first product will be bad. your first content will be cringe. your first sales calls will be awkward. that's the point. you're not supposed to be good yet. you're supposed to be in the arena getting punched in the face and learning. the guys winning right now aren't smarter than you. they just started earlier and failed more times. they have scar tissue you don't have because you've been on the sidelines "preparing." every day you spend waiting is a day someone dumber but more aggressive is taking your market share. the best time to start was 5 years ago. the second best time is today. not tomorrow. not next week. not when you finish that course or read that book or save that money. today. send the cold email. post the tweet. ship the landing page. make the call. you will be bad at it. you will feel like a fraud. you will get rejected and ignored and laughed at. good. that's the curriculum. that's how you earn the skills that actually matter. the people who "made it" aren't special. they just refused to stay on the sidelines. they bit into life with whatever teeth they had left instead of waiting for a perfect set that was never coming.