That’s why, when I say “good question,” I thoughtfully neglect to provide an answer.
But that’s likely because I only say that when I don’t know the answer.
You don’t hear the answer because I use “great question” to stall and deflect because I don’t know the answer.
A tweet from 13 years ago. Bravo, solid shitpost.
He’s still congratulating himself to this day.
11/26/2012 … 13 years ago
😓
I’ve got tweets from the 80s

I think you mean -1180s
The 1180s BCE were the original 80s. No one cares about the 1880s CE except some young dudes maybe, I’m not judging
I did
Removed by mod
compliments are so rare, you should savour them as much as you can.
I really appreciate your username. Forgot my hrt this morning but I’m on track again
ye can’t forget yer Tit-tacs

That’s alright, because people usually say that when they don’t know the answer themselves.
When it’s a truly great question, there won’t be an answer. It’ll be at the fringes of knowledge of any expert.
I was at a panel with Joel Robinson once, and I asked how he’d compare getting started in public access stations vs doing YouTube today. He said it was a great question, but didn’t have much of an answer. He’s self-admittedly an old man who didn’t have to start from scatch on YouTube.
Edit: autocorrect corrected
Everytime you follow-up with a question to chatgpt:
“Great question “ is not a great answer





