Thanks @Jeremy-Ross, I remember reading that post back when you made it, and your work definitely improved from following the checklist and critiquing yourself! I wanted to make this suggestion because even with such a great tool critiquing your own work is hard, especially when you are new, and especially if your heroes stink (something that happens a lot with students, as the guys have brought up several times in the podcast).
Now that the tool is done and the guys are running monthly prompts again, I think the natural evolution of the live stream would be this sort of gentle 'Taste Training'. If the svs students were able to see a collection of artwork (the submissions) praised every month for specific strengths (if a given piece had only one strong element, or if it has most of the checklist under its belt) they would each have a stronger compass to follow because they would have an idea of what good and great look like and what resonates with them (not only a description of how 'good' works)
HTFYA is such a powerful idea, and such a powerful tool (well made, timely, etc) but I think it would be a missed opportunity if the live streams didn't evolve into something that recognized the progress of the participants to critique their own work, and thereby encourage more people to buy the course and use the tool to wrestle with their own self analysis/crit.
To think of it in that metaphor "give a man a fish and he will eat for a day, teach a man to fish and he will eat for the rest of his life" idea--If you have a fishing lesson and three fish (crits) that you give away to the lucky participants, then people will keep coming hoping to get a fish. If you have a lot of minnows to give away as well as the three fish, and everyone who participates gets a minnow and sees the fishing lesson, then the people come for the minnows because they make good bait and they can then catch their own fish. They can now look beyond hoping for the lucky fish because they have something concrete and personal to start with and build on--a reason to wrestle with the fish of their own.
do you think that fish wrestling metaphor works in your experience of wrestling with your own critique? I know your pieces have been critiqued on htfya livestream a few times, but you also work to critique yourself as you shared in that post.