u/Ok_Towel4688

▲ 1 r/DrinkingGames+1 crossposts

What are the best ‘so bad it’s good’ movies for a drinking game?

I was thinking something along the lines of twilight for this but I would love to hear some more suggestions. For twilight some rules could be to drink every time:

Bella bites lip
Edward stares intensely
Unnecessary slow motion

If anyone has played this before I want to know the movie and rules you used. I’m also open to suggestions on rules to use for the twilight movie.

Thanks in advance :)

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u/Ok_Towel4688 — 7 days ago

What's the most effective hack or system you have used for language learning?

Recently I started using chatgpt to turn content I already read into Spanish (TL) and it’s been working way better for me than forcing myself through graded readers or random beginner content. I just tell it my level (A2ish) and it translates it in a way that I can understand but is also just above my level. I also have a conversation on it so I can work on my production too. I struggle with motivation and this helps because it feels less like study.

I know this isn't exactly ground breaking but it made me wonder what other systems people created for themselves that worked?

Would love to hear about them!

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u/Ok_Towel4688 — 11 days ago
▲ 16 r/Guitar

I’ve been playing guitar on and off for a few years now. I never got lessons, my main method is to find a song I like and learn it through YT tutorials. This only gets me so far though because I really am lacking the basic theory.

I can play some pretty advanced songs but I can still make mistakes on simple songs.

I think I really struggle with consistency and structure but I can’t bring myself to learn theory or just do practice, I just wanna play songs.

How are other self taught learners succeeding? Any advice is appreciated!

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u/Ok_Towel4688 — 19 days ago

I’m about a year into a startup with a few friends. We’re designers / engineers, so we’ve had to learn the business side the hard way (building before validating).

Recently we’ve been trying to do things the right way. I read some relevant books (like The Lean Startup) and I've been looking into Jobs To Be Done. It's starting to click now and we are doing things better.

We are trying to test multiple ideas quickly with interviews and reddit posts before we move to build. The problem is we feel like we’re entering validation paralysis. It's hard to know what is a good enough signal to move forward with an idea.

When is something “validated enough” to move to build?

I’m not looking for general advice, I’d love to see real frameworks people actually use, for example:

  • Step-by-step processes
  • What you test at each stage (problem / demand / solution)
  • Specific success / fail criteria (e.g. landing page conversion %, interview signals, etc.)
  • What makes you decide: continue vs kill vs build

Right now it feels like we could validate forever without a clear stopping rule.

I would love to hear how more experienced founders actually do this in practice.

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u/Ok_Towel4688 — 22 days ago