Links To My Recent Articles, A Quick Comment About Medium, and Other Updates

Here are links to a bunch of articles I’ve written on Medium but just haven’t cross-posted here on my personal site. In order of recency:

Women Are Willing To Sell Their Bodies To Pay Off Student Loans

“You Must Be This Tall To Ride This Ride”

Some Very Disturbing (And Gross) Stats About STDs, Especially When It Comes To Black Women

River Is A Solid Bitcoin-Only Exchange

Three Cold Hard As Fuck Truths For Why You’re Single

They Sang Along To Ye’s “Heil Hitler,” Now They’re Getting Doxxed, Harassed, And Threatened

She Calls A 5-Year-Old ‘N-gger,’ Now May Cash Out With A Million Dollars In Online Donations

Medium

Medium continues to be a massive disappointment this year. Due to either an algorithm change or some kind of shift in how it distributes traffic, I barely get the engagement in years prior, and substantially smaller payouts and fewer followers, consequently. Though some of my articles caught on in Google’s rankings, I see zero money for non-Medium members who read my stuff. That’s really frustrating, as some of my “stories” (as Medium likes to call them) have caught tens of thousands of views.

It’s not that I soullessly write for money. It’s just that I would like to see commensurate compensation for when I do write something that lands.

Still, I’ve kept plugging away. Either foolishly or just out of stubborn persistence and the desire to maintain stasis. Medium is a solid platform, for sure. But it has a low ceiling. Whereas a platform like YouTube will (assuming you are monetized) at least pay you for ALL the views you get, not just Medium members. As such, YT has basically uncapped potential, though it too has its issues.

YouTube

As much as I love YouTube and the idea of being a YouTuber, I don’t know that it’s the right venue for me, either. Nor do I care to contort myself into the tortuous content creation pretzel shape that YT demands if you want to have a shot at gaining traction. YT seems to favor TikTok-style shorts anymore, and such snappy, soundbite quippings are not in my wheelhouse. The few videos I’ve posted this year are long, thoughtful, and reflective, which is not really conducive to YT’s dazzling discothèque guppy-attention-span content that seems to predominate on there.

I’m a writer at the end of the day. A fiction writer, specifically. I try to be. While I like dropping spicy op-eds from time to time, Medium and this whole “content game” thing often just proves a procrastinative distraction and a futilely unfulfilling endeavor. I get so little satisfaction out of writing even a “banger” article that gets a good traffic spike it’s not funny.

Whereas, a good fiction writing session puts me on cloud nine.

I don’t care to just crank out a bunch of noise, trying to surf the trend waves. I’d rather spend the time on my books. I have a lot of them in various states of editing, and I have a lot of ideas for more.

My latest will be out soon.

Conundrum

Which brings me to the conundrum. To be a successful fiction writer, you need a platform to help market your work. But to get a platform, you have to play the mind numbing algo/traffic/pretzel twist game I just talked about. A successful writer is a successful salesman, not just a good tapper of keystrokes. Like many writers, this rustles my introvert jimmies. I hate “putting myself out there,” though I’m not a wallflower by any means.

I see many other writers, especially self-published ones, market themselves via YouTube and social media, either by book or movie reviews, or by being (usually godawful) cultural critics and posting daily ragebait commentary on whatever headline caught their ire that morning. I don’t care to waste the time being a “culture warrior.” That’s very cringy to me. And there are frankly certain audiences I just don’t care to attract.

I will never be a fucking “writing coach.” I will never sell a fucking course or some bullshit consulting like so many of those hustlers out there do. No. Just no. I will never make “writing about writing” my thing. Never going to happen. I don’t care to waste the time, and I sure as hell don’t need to do it for the money.

I could see doing long form book or movie reviews, however.

And even though some of my finance-themed articles have actually performed the best, I think I’m done with that niche. Save and invest your money. Stay out of debt. Control your spending. Slow and steady (i.e. boring) compound gains will make you wealthy, not get-rich-quick crypto/stock/real estate/side hustle schemes. Stop listening to stupid influencers and their bullshit products. There, what the hell else needs to really be said?

Conclusion

As a compromise, I’ll keep posting non-fiction stuff, but likely just focusing on books, movies, and shows. Since Medium has proven near pointless to continue with, I may just go old school and post stuff on here exclusively instead. I blogged a lot way back in the day, and I see that era of the internet returning. Content has become far too siloed on digital slave farms like Facebook and other social media. It’s time for it to decentralize like it used to be. A.I. slop has ruined a lot of content sites also. In fact, I think A.I. is part of why the algo machine has completely broken down across the web.

I’ll invest more time interacting with social media in a qualitatively productive manner. I’ll also continue to experiment with YouTube. Perhaps there are actually people out there who’d rather look at my face and hear me talk than read my stuff. Hey, it’s possible.

If you made it this far, thanks for reading. I’ll have more updates for you soon, including my latest book. See you in the sun. 🙂

I Participated in the Reddit IPO. Here’s How I Did

Did my investment get an upvote?

Source: The Reddit logo: https://www.redditinc.com/brand

Let’s face it, virtually every website nowdadays amounts to a doom scrolling time suck meant to extract your soul one qubit at a time.

(Qubit is a “basic unit of information” in quantum computing. You’re very welcome for a great Scrabble world.)

Of course, I know about random trivia things like quantum computing because I am an avid Redditor, and therefore am very smart.

Actually, that’s what Reddit should have called itself — “random trivia things.” What is a “Reddit” anyway? And why is an alien involved somehow? I’ve never been able to figure that out.

But speaking of quantum computers, I’d need one to calculate how many hours I’ve wasted on that website over the years. If you were to rank sites according to their “time suckage,” Reddit would have to be up there pretty high, right behind InstaGlam, Musk’s Madhouse (aka X aka Twitter), and Zuckerberg’s Personal Data Clearinghouse (aka Facebook aka Meta).

Midjourney’s awful take on the Reddit logo.

So, when I suddenly received an email one day from Reddit telling me that I, as a member, had the unique opportunity to participate in the site’s upcoming IPO, I of course jumped at the chance. Finally, a shot to claim some compensation for all the years I’ve blown on such subreddits as r/interestingasfuck, r/wallstreetbets, and r/explainlikeimfive. I’ve been on Reddit since the old days, when it was the nerdier Digg alternative, back in the late 2000s.

This was exciting.

What, you mean I get to buy a stock BEFORE the dirty unwashed masses do? I get to be an insider? I get to be treated like the elite intellectual artistocrat I am thanks to your website’s guidance? Sign me up, Reddit. It’s about time my contributions were richly rewarded.

Screenshot of my IPO offer from Reddit.

Feeling like Warren Buffet, I took the first step. I won’t bore you with all the details about IPOs and the DSPs or the RMBs (that stands for Redditors Making Bank). But there were a few steps I had to follow after winning the golden ticket.

First, I had to pre-register for the IPO with Reddit by the March 5th deadline, and then wait to see if I was confirmed as a participant. As if I wouldn’t be. I expected to receive my confirmation in the form of a telegram or a gilded letter delivered by an owl at my window. Instead, on March 11th I received just a simple email stating that I was confirmed.

Screenshot of my confrmation letter rom Reddit.

Next, I had to set up a separate brokerage account just for the IPO. I’ve been with Morgan Stanley/E-trade for almost ten years now so this was an easy process. After getting a new account going, Morgan Stanley emailed asking me to confirm my order and deposit the necessary funds. Again, just an email. No complementary top hat or secret invite to an Eyes Wide Shut sex party in Bohemian Grove. So much for feeling like an elite.

Screenshot of my confirmation letter.

$34.00 seemed cheap but reasonable. Facebook debuted at $38. Uber at $45. Tesla started at $17. I generally only invest in index funds or ETFs like SPY, VTI, VOO, and QQQ, so I was used to stocks costing in the hundreds. Generally, for my individual brokerage account, I deposit $1000+ into my investments at a time. But this was an exciting albeit risky tech IPO based on a website famous mainly for fostering neckbeard outrage and degenerate Wall Street gambling. I decided to buy just 10 shares, and put in $350 to ensure the whole cost was covered should there be some small additional fee.

So, how’d I do? Right after Reddit launched on the NYSE on March 21 the stock nearly doubled to about $65 a share. It dipped to around $39 in mid-April before rising back up to $62 just last week. And as of now, at close on May 24th, 2024, it’s $54.72.

When Reddit’s stock (RDDT) hit around $56 earlier this week I sold five shares for about $280. The reason for that was I wanted to pull out nearly my initial investment ($340). That way going forward what I have left at stake is almost all profit. If Reddit continues to move up, I capture the upside. If it crashes down and ends up floundering, at least I’ll have just about broken even and not really lost anything.

In summary, participating in Reddit’s IPO was a fun and thus far profitable experience. Do I wish I had invested more into the IPO? In retrospect, of course. Dropping $10k in there would have put me up almost $16,000 before selling half my shares. But a big part of investing is risk mitigation, not just seeking out a high return. Reddit’s IPO could have been a big fat flop to start off. And who’s to say Reddit won’t get downvoted by investors eventually?

I don’t know how long I’ll hold onto my five remaining shares. Facebook went up 5x in the first six years after its IPO. It’s now up 12x. But then Uber is barely up 50% from its IPO price in 2019. You’d have done better just holding the S&P 500 than Uber over that same time span. Will Reddit even still be popular in ten years? That’s difficult to say. The internet is a fickle place. I know I’ll (probably) still be there.

TikTok is Trying to Kill You

Photo by Mitja Juraja from Pexels: https://www.pexels.com/photo/close-up-photo-of-skull-970517/

TikTok is like some kind of fictional mind virus from a dystopian sci-fi novel. 

Except the video app with the psychedelic logo is quite real, and it often targets people with completely insane and sometimes even deadly hashtag trends. 

Like almost every social media app, TikTok operates on an algorithm, curating videos based on a user’s interests. 

But this is an evil algorithm. 

It targets the young. It targets children. The ones who make up most of TikTok’s user base. The app is quite intuitive at collating communities around addictive hashtags, which can lead users being exposed to all sorts of crazy shit. 

Sometimes, this can be a productive thing. For example, “BookTok,” TikTok’s highly active army of book worms, is transforming the publishing industry. I wrote about it in article here.

But goodness on TikTok is purely accidental. There’s also a very dark, very deadly, and very weird side to an app that seems to have sprung straight out of Satan’s asshole. 

Here are just a handful of ways TikTok is trying to kill you:

The Blackout Challenge

Originally known as the equally ominous “Choking Game,” this viral self-strangulation trend has claimed the lives of numerous children over the last few years. 

The idea is simple as it is ghastly. Participants are encouraged to choke themselves in order to to get high, or to fall unconscious, all while on video. People have used belts, ties, ropes, and other devices to purposefully hang themselves in the hunt for internet points. And it’s costing them their lives.

Last July, 2021, an eight-year old girl named Lalani Erika Walton hanged herself with a rope from her bed after absorbing hours of TikTok videos of others attempting the challenge.

Earlier that February, a nine-year old girl named Arriani Jaileen Arroyo also fell victim to the trend. She had used the family dog’s leash to hang herself. Her father found her unresponsive.  

Then later in March, there was a 12-year old boy named Joshua Haileyesus who was rushed to the hospital after being disovered unconscious by his twin brother. He spent 19 days on life support before finally passing away. 

As a child growing up in the ’90s, I remember learning about how you can purposefully choking yourself to get high. But back then you generally only found out about that stuff word of mouth, and usually from some weird kid in a torn up Metallica t-shirt who sat in the back of the class. 

But with TikTok , a bizarre and risky trend like that can spread faster than Covid on a NY subway. For many kids, who are highly impressionable, it seems thrilling and fun. They do it without knowing the enormous risks. And it’s killing them or injuring them for life.

The Fire Challenge

Scratch what I wrote above about TikTok being a dystopian mind virus. It’s more like a digital demon that possesses people.

This trend started from a user who sprayed hairspray onto a mirror, and then lit it on fire to create different designs. Imitators quickly spawned, including Nick Howell, another 12-year old, who wound up burning 35% of his body in March of this year, when he accidentally ignited a bottle of rubing alcohol.

In June of last year, a 13-year-old Oregon girl wound up in the hospital with severe burns on her body due to exploding a bottle of isopropyl alcohol in an effort to mimic the mirror trick. 

But if manipulating people into lighting themselves on fire isn’t ghastly enough, how about — 

The Eye Challenge

Which got people to put bleach in their eyes, which supposedly changes eye color. 

This one, like many of these TikTok fads, started off as a joke from some kid named Greg Lammers trying to show off his cool video editing skills. In his video, Lammers instructed viewers that if you fill a plastic bag with jelly, hand sanitizer, bleach, or shaving cream, and place the bag against an eye, it can change their eye color. After performing the deed, Lammers then cut to a new shot, showing off his supposedly changed eye color. Except he had actually used a contact lens (duh). 

While Lammers never expected his video to go viral, it did. To the tune of 300,000 likes, 25,000 chares, and 3,000+ comments. Imitators then started posting their own attempts at the technique, which only resulted in them burning their eyes. Big surprise. 

The Milk Crate Challenge

This trend blew up about a year ago. People made videos of themselves trying to scale pyramids of milk crates they had cobled together, which often resulted in them falling down and getting injured. Hospitals saw an influx of patients with cracked ribs and other broken bones over the course of the hashtag scourge.  

Like in all the previous deadly and dangerous trends, TikTok made sure to issue a statement about how the app supposedly:

Prohibits content that promotes or glorifies dangerous acts, and we remove videos and redirect searches to our Community Guidelines to discourage such content.

Right. “Prohibits.” Totally. 

The problem is that by the time a trend has become big enough to cause real damage, it’s too late. TikTok was the most popular app in 2021, having been downloaded 3 billion times, and having garnered a mind-blowing 1 billion users. 

One freaking billion! That’s one seventh the world population. 

About a quarter of TikTok users are children or teens ages 10–19, and the kiddos are spending roughly 75 minutes per day on the video-sharing app. Another statistic of note is that the majority of TikTok’s successful ads communicate their message or product immediately. As in like 3 seconds. 

In other words, TikTok is custom built for short attention spans. And because of its ravenously-obsessed youthful users base, a trend, however absurd or dangerous, can spread at the speed of human stupidity (which is WAY faster than light, contrary to Einstein’s Theory of Relativity). Millions of clips are posted daily, and users are often sucked into a rabbit hole of algorithmically curated videos designed to keep them hypnotized. 

There’s no logistical way TikTok could realistically govern or filter out a questionable trend because of the speed at which they grow through the app’s multiverse-sized ecosytem.

So, what is the solution, if any? 

I’m reminded of the thematic summation in the classic Mathew Broderick-starring 1983 film War Games about the Cold War threat of MAD (Mutually Assured Destruction.”

“The only winning move is not to play.”

The only way to beat TikTok is to delete the app, and make sure gullible kids can’t see it in the first place. 

Yeah, good luck with that. TikTok and all its poison, is here to stay.