I’ve found that posting my silly little experiments in AI video do two things consistently:
1. Lose me followers
2. Lead to new work opportunities
🤷♂️ 🤖 ✨
Oyl Miller
oyl@primal.net
npub1fd7y...zf5f
🎥 Writer | Creative Director
🏃♂️ Former @WiedenKennedy—crafted ads for @Nike
🏀 Bridged sports and Web3 with @nbatopshot and @dapperlabs
📌 Early @Pinterest adopter—1MM+ followers and counting
⚾️ Tried out as a pitcher for @MLB—threw heat, caught dreams
₿ Spotted Bitcoin in Tokyo, circa 2010—early observer, forever curious
Stormtrooper Greg binges the Bear and thinks he’s Carmy 😂 🐻 #yeschef
The only people who pay on time are scammers and crypto startups. Oh, wait….
Half of freelancing is making work.
The other half is convincing someone the work already done is worth paying for.
Agencies want senior talent for junior rates and deliverables built by God.
Freelancing is just “creative director” spelled with two extra jobs: therapist and debt collector.
Bitcoin is the only asset where collapse is a feature, not a bug. It’s the pressure washer for weak conviction.
If Bitcoin dying again shocks you, you were never early — you were just loud.
Bitcoin collapses. Meanwhile the dollar quietly collapses every single day and no one tweets a thing.
You think you want creative freedom. What you actually want is someone else to blame when an idea fails.
Creative directors don’t “inspire.” They eliminate everything that isn’t the idea.
If you need a moodboard to have taste, you don’t have taste.
Ninety percent of “collaboration” is people hiding behind each other.
If your idea needs a paragraph to explain, it’s not an idea — it’s an apology.
Great creatives aren’t rebels.
They just don’t lie to themselves.
The industry doesn’t need more ideas.
It needs more people with taste.
Most “feedback” is just fear wearing a polite tone.
Creative industries don’t burn people out.
Pretending bad ideas are good burns people out.
Bitcoin is only risky to people who still think the old world is permanent.
You don’t buy Bitcoin.
You exit permission.