Ethereum.org
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0/ What happens when you use Ethereum not just to fund code, but culture? Here's my journey from DeFi meme animator to building a decentralized film platform on Ethereum. Trying to disrupt the old Hollywood system because it sucks. A guest thread by @pplpleasr
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Ethereum.org
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1/ My first viral moment came when I made the Uniswap v3 announcement video in 2021, which got over 500,000 views in 24 hours. I minted it as an NFT and it sold for 310 ETH. But what made it historic was who bought it… https://x.com/Uniswap/status/1374069664297406467
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Ethereum.org
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2/ It wasn’t a whale. It was 23 wallet addresses who spun up a DAO on the spot to pool funds and win the auction. They called themselves PleasrDAO. That sale kicked off a wave of collective capital formation we still feel today
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Ethereum.org
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3/ It was a cultural moment that proved collective capital coordination on Ethereum was not just possible, but powerful. It helped inspire Juicebox protocol, PartyDAO, and more. Ethereum became a canvas for new forms of collective action.
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Ethereum.org
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4/ Later that summer, I made the NFTs that crowdfunded Ethereum: The Infinite Garden, the first feature doc about Ethereum. It raised 1,036 ETH in 48 hours, funded entirely by the Ethereum community
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Ethereum.org
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5/ It made me ask a bigger question: If Ethereum could fund one film, why not many? Could it replace Hollywood’s outdated, bureaucratic system entirely, and reshape how stories get made?
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