Abe Cajudo (@ahabraham) 's Twitter Profile
Abe Cajudo

@ahabraham

funnyman, movieman, bidnessman, musicman, human, game over, man.

ID: 126378049

linkhttps://abecajudo.com calendar_today25-03-2010 17:39:28

13,13K Tweet

742 Followers

678 Following

Dave Wiskus (@dwiskus) 's Twitter Profile Photo

The Matrix described 1999 as the peak of human civilization and I laughed because that would obviously not age well but then the next 23 years happened and now I’m like yeah okay maybe the machines had a point

Abe Cajudo (@ahabraham) 's Twitter Profile Photo

#NopeFilm was REALLY good. Still working on me hours later. The most layered of Jordan Peele’s films and flips the social thriller recipe to 2 shots social, 1 part thriller, some simple syrup and a mad dash of hoodied orange Peele.

Hannah Thomasy, PhD (@hannahthomasy) 's Twitter Profile Photo

are there science camps for adults? like i just want to help someone dig up dinosaurs or count mushrooms or weigh turtles for like a week

natalie tran (@natalietran) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Too many movies and shows where people wear shoes on beds or in bedrooms or in kitchens. At that point I'm only watching the shoes. Can't hear any dialogue. Everyone in that scene becomes a villain

Abe Cajudo (@ahabraham) 's Twitter Profile Photo

YES! I was lucky enough to be in that theater and it was surreal watching the Oscars last night from SXSW this year. Thanks Daniels and huge congrats on the successeseseses!

Tim Ferriss (@tferriss) 's Twitter Profile Photo

"Happiness is a choice you make and a skill you develop. The mind is just as malleable as the body. We spend so much time and effort trying to change the external world, other people, and our own bodies, all the while accepting ourselves the way we were programmed in our youths.

Sherry (@schrodingrsbrat) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Entrepreneurship is gonna look a lot more like art than business because the only moat left will be taste, not technicality. The role of art has always been to detect the signs of cultural change—artists find creative arbitrages, saying what people think before they realize it