Amplified target
@allen_explains
- Score
- 33.32
- Inbound RTs
- 1
- Amplifiers
- 1
- HHI
- 1.000
- Repeat-crew
- 0.0%
- Within 15m
- 1
Top amplifier @themagus2022100.0%
Amplifier breakdown
1 unique retweeters · 1 total inbound from retweet_edges.csv.
| Amplifier | Retweets | Share | Role |
|---|---|---|---|
| @themagus2022 | 1 | 100.0% | amplifier_suspect(0.60) |
Cascades originated by @allen_explains
1 cascade(s), sorted by retweet count.
| First retweeter | Retweets | Within 15m | Within 60m | First at | Sample |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| @themagus2022 | 1 | 1 | 1 | Apr 17, 2026, 04:04 UTC | Every salary you accepted, every price you agreed to, every negotiation you walked out of thinking you did okay The person across the table wasn't guessing. They were calculating. You were improvising. They were running a system. That system has a name: Game Theory. And one Yale professor named Ben Polak taught an entire course on it. The same frameworks that get drilled into students paying $150k for an MBA — laid out clean, in one hour, completely free. After watching it you'll never sit across from someone in a negotiation the same way again. You'll start seeing the hidden logic behind why people make the moves they make — in business, in hiring, in pricing, in everyday decisions most people treat as instinct. This is the kind of thinking that separates people who react from people who position themselves three moves ahead. Yale put it online for anyone willing to spend 60 minutes on it. That's the most asymmetric trade you'll make all week. |