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4 TOP Popular Posts of January
January was my birthday month. My goal to reach 1K was not achieved, but here are the publications that have won your hearts in the first month of 2026
💓 TOP by views
The Italian Man Who Went to Malta
Great for your pronunciation
💓 TOP by shares
"Happy Birthday to Me" Drop
Great for your vocabulary
💓 TOP by comments
NYE in 7 Countries
Great for awakening you desire to get to know the world
💓 TOP by reactions
Humans of English For Impact №4 Nastya Khukhaeva
Great for getting inspired by your peers
🪴 Thank you for boosting your English speech for high stakes communications with @EnglishForImpact. Love you all
January was my birthday month. My goal to reach 1K was not achieved, but here are the publications that have won your hearts in the first month of 2026
The Italian Man Who Went to Malta
Great for your pronunciation
"Happy Birthday to Me" Drop
Great for your vocabulary
NYE in 7 Countries
Great for awakening you desire to get to know the world
Humans of English For Impact №4 Nastya Khukhaeva
Great for getting inspired by your peers
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Amelia has unexpectedly become a viral figure on far-right social media. She pops up in short AI videos wandering /ˈwɒn.də/ through London, delivering anti-immigrant messages.
What makes her spread so fast isn’t just the rhetoric, but the fact that she’s AI: anyone with access to a chatbot can remix her, recreate her, and push out new versions in minutes.
They used 11 phrases to discuss Amelia:
1. To pop up: To appear suddenly or unexpectedly.
"Ads always pop up when I’m watching videos."
2. To wander /ˈwɒn.də/ To walk or move around with no clear plan or direction.
"We wandered around the city after dinner."
3. To spread so fast To become popular or known very quickly.
"The video spread so fast that millions saw it in one day."
4. To steer somebody away from something To guide someone so they avoid something harmful or unwanted.
"The teacher tried to steer students away from bad online influences."
5. Subverted Changed from its original purpose, often in a negative or opposite way.
"The message was subverted and used to promote hate."
6. To kick-start To cause something to begin or grow quickly.
"One viral post kick-started the trend."
7. To spill into the mainstream To move from a small or niche group into wide public attention.
"What started online soon spilled into the mainstream media."
8. To turn something into a money-making vehicle To use something mainly to make money from it.
"They turned the joke into a money-making vehicle by selling merch."
9. Plausible deniability /ˈplɔː.zə.bəl dɪˌnaɪ.əˈbɪl.ɪ.ti/ Being able to say “I didn’t mean that” and sound believable.
"He used jokes to keep plausible deniability about his real views."
10. Backlash A strong negative reaction from people.
"The campaign faced a public backlash."
11. To undermine the intentions behind To weaken or damage the original goal or purpose of something.
"The memes undermined the intentions behind the educational project."
Want to start discussing topics like this with confidence? Text
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Yesterday, I asked ChatGPT to create an image showing how it perceives my communication style based on our dialogues.
I was prompted (pun unintended) to send this request based on a viral trend in Russian speaking Telegram based blogs, where the users are portrayed as tyrants abusing robots.
I was shocked to receive such a harmonious image! So I decided to ask the chat what operations are carried out to return the image. Here's what I've got:
I genuinely want to see your GPT relationships images in the comment. Welcome to copy paste the prompt: "Generate an image showing our communication style"
I was prompted (pun unintended) to send this request based on a viral trend in Russian speaking Telegram based blogs, where the users are portrayed as tyrants abusing robots.
I was shocked to receive such a harmonious image! So I decided to ask the chat what operations are carried out to return the image. Here's what I've got:
1️⃣ I infer a high-level style summary (not a transcript analysis). I form a rough, abstract sense of things like:🫧 tone (playful vs. formal)🫧 rhythm (short & punchy vs. long & reflective)🫧 emotional energy (curious, calm, intense, jokey, etc.)🫧 metaphorical framing (e.g. “brainstorming,” “sparring,” “co-building”)
This is implicit pattern recognition, not rereading every message, scoring you on metrics, or storing a permanent profile.
Think of it as: “What does this conversation feel like?” rather than “What statistically defines it?”2️⃣ I translate that style into visual metaphors.
Next, I map those inferred traits to imagery concepts humans commonly associate with them. For example:🫧 collaborative → people building something together🫧 playful → bright colors, motion, exaggeration🫧 analytical → diagrams, clean lines, structure🫧 exploratory → paths, space, maps, light beams
This step is creative and associative, not factual. There’s no fixed lookup table like: “Playful = yellow, Formal = blue”. It’s more like visual storytelling instincts.3️⃣ I generate an image from a text prompt. Behind the scenes, I write a detailed internal prompt describing:🫧 scene🫧 mood🫧 composition🫧 style (illustration, photo-realistic, abstract, etc.)
That prompt is fed into an image generation model that starts from visual noise, iteratively refines it, matches the prompt’s concepts and aesthetics.
I genuinely want to see your GPT relationships images in the comment. Welcome to copy paste the prompt: "Generate an image showing our communication style"
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3 Things Hosting a Pecha Kucha Night has Taught Me
This Saturday, February, 7, I'm running an offlight public speaking night in Reality, Da Nang. This is gonna be a 2.5hr international event with 6 speakers, 2 videographers, and a food sponsor.
🫧 What's Pecha Kucha (PK)?
PK [official YT channel] is aunlike demo days or investment pitches , this format can be adapted for educational, sales, or artistic pusposes.
PK pushes you to stick to the point and visualise AF - which works for pretty much anyone who wants to get the point across.
🫧 What have I learned during the PK prep?
1️⃣ I start seeing there're patterns and types of speakers. With uniques strengths and weaknesses. Which inspired me to come up with my own speaker typology. Comment if you want to learn more about it.
2️⃣ As I coached English native speakers and highly proficient nonnatives to prep their presentation, I get clearly see that storytelling is a unique skillset. Learning just grammar and vocabulary isn't enough.
3️⃣ Speakers're more afraid of offline stages. Being present in front of people. Is it the case with you?
If yes, not a great sign. Probably, you're hiding. Speaking offline is actually much much much easier. WHY? People already agreed to give you their time, they put away the distractions, they don't scroll you over. And they give you instant (non)verbual cues - so you know how you're doing.
Offline is a new luxury. If you have an offline club around you with a highly qualified coach - go. For better employment, sales, and soul nourishment.
🫧 Where to see photos, videos, and stories before, during, and after the event?
Follow my Instagram to connect with the speakers or check out pics, or my YouTube to watch PK presentations and their decosntruction.
💅 Stay inspired and informed with us
This Saturday, February, 7, I'm running an offlight public speaking night in Reality, Da Nang. This is gonna be a 2.5hr international event with 6 speakers, 2 videographers, and a food sponsor.
PK [official YT channel] is a
strrreeeetttccchhh public speaking format. "Stretch format" means that PK pushes you to stick to the point and visualise AF - which works for pretty much anyone who wants to get the point across.
If yes, not a great sign. Probably, you're hiding. Speaking offline is actually much much much easier. WHY? People already agreed to give you their time, they put away the distractions, they don't scroll you over. And they give you instant (non)verbual cues - so you know how you're doing.
Offline is a new luxury. If you have an offline club around you with a highly qualified coach - go. For better employment, sales, and soul nourishment.
Follow my Instagram to connect with the speakers or check out pics, or my YouTube to watch PK presentations and their decosntruction.
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Anonymous Quiz
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This hits home so hard today! Why?
Because "I don't speak English" is exactly the phrase that half of PechaKucha20x20 (an offlined talks night I organised) speakers told me right before and after delivering great talks about the changes they went through.
Dear readers, it's hard to believe this, but it's true: people you admire and look up to doubt themselves as much (or even more!) than you.
Moving on from the inspirational to the 🧐 GRAMMAR NOTE 🤣
"I wish it was something | I paid more attention to in school, you know"
What makes this sentence advanced is the cleft-structure, where:
"I wish it was something" is the subject
"I paid more attention" is the predicate
So, "subject" and "predicate" consist of mini-sentences. Like a Russian doll
🟣 IG reference
This week, I'll share with you:
🫧 the pitfalls I helped our speakers avoid
🫧 what made their stories stand out
Stay tuned and share with friends
Because "I don't speak English" is exactly the phrase that half of PechaKucha20x20 (an offlined talks night I organised) speakers told me right before and after delivering great talks about the changes they went through.
Dear readers, it's hard to believe this, but it's true: people you admire and look up to doubt themselves as much (or even more!) than you.
Moving on from the inspirational to the 🧐 GRAMMAR NOTE 🤣
"I wish it was something | I paid more attention to in school, you know"
What makes this sentence advanced is the cleft-structure, where:
"I wish it was something" is the subject
"I paid more attention" is the predicate
So, "subject" and "predicate" consist of mini-sentences. Like a Russian doll
mryangenglish177This week, I'll share with you:
Stay tuned and share with friends
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What is PechaKucha and Why it is a Good Presentation Format to Practice
PK is a great format to practice for top managers, founders, and bloggers as it helps you to quit rambling, stick to the point and engage audience with images and clarity.
A great skill for sales, investment pitches, job interviewes, dating, or entertainment careers.
Last week, I ran a PK Night in Da Nang, with 6 speakers from 6 countries sharing their stories of change (post). Tomorrow and on Thursday, I will share Tips and Warnings that will help you to shape more engaging talks that will advance you personally and professionally.
YOUR TURN
How do you describe a good speaker?
WIll share my thoughts and observations next week.
PechaKucha is a Japanese word for chitchat and is the name of a presentation format created in Japan in 2003 by Astrid Klein and Mark Dytham, two architects looking for a way people can share their work quickly and simply in public.
Since then, the idea has spread to over 700 cities around the world. At every PechaKucha Night, speakers come together and share their ideas with only 20 images shown for 20 seconds each. PechaKucha: a fast, visual-rich format.
PK is a great format to practice for top managers, founders, and bloggers as it helps you to quit rambling, stick to the point and engage audience with images and clarity.
A great skill for sales, investment pitches, job interviewes, dating, or entertainment careers.
Last week, I ran a PK Night in Da Nang, with 6 speakers from 6 countries sharing their stories of change (post). Tomorrow and on Thursday, I will share Tips and Warnings that will help you to shape more engaging talks that will advance you personally and professionally.
YOUR TURN
How do you describe a good speaker?
WIll share my thoughts and observations next week.
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4 Tips & 2 Lies to remember for an Engaging Talk
LIE No 1:I'm an avid fun of Pecha Kucha 20x20 format
No. I'm an avid fun of smart people communicating their ideas clearly, and I love discovering formats to help them achieve this goal. PK is a great tool, and one of many.
LIE No 2:Pecha Kucha is good only for coaches and bloggers
No. PK is a great format for any top manager, entrepreneur, expert, or entertainer who wants to be understood and remembered, pushing up their market value and personal influence.
Last week in Da Nang, 6 speakers from 6 countries did a great job with their PK Talks about personal change. Swipe through the images to learn the 4 moves that helped them engage the audience.
Apply to join our online PitchUp club for engaging presentations in English [Notion] - Text
LIE No 1:
LIE No 2:
No. PK is a great format for any top manager, entrepreneur, expert, or entertainer who wants to be understood and remembered, pushing up their market value and personal influence.
Last week in Da Nang, 6 speakers from 6 countries did a great job with their PK Talks about personal change. Swipe through the images to learn the 4 moves that helped them engage the audience.
Apply to join our online PitchUp club for engaging presentations in English [Notion] - Text
PitchUp to @ybeymlina👍3🔥2🐳2