Digital Social Hour - Going to Jail, Running a Secret Society and Connecting with Royal Families I Gordon Bufton DSH #397
Episode Date: April 6, 2024Gordon Bufton comes to the show to talk about going to jail, running a secret society, and connecting with royal families. APPLY TO BE ON THE PODCAST: https://forms.gle/D2cLkWfJx46pDK1MA BUSINESS ...INQUIRIES/SPONSORS: Jenna@DigitalSocialHour.com SPONSORS: Deposyt Payment Processing: https://www.deposyt.com/seankelly LISTEN ON: Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/digital-social-hour/id1676846015 Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/5Jn7LXarRlI8Hc0GtTn759 Sean Kelly Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/seanmikekelly/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
What do you think the fix for the homeless problem is?
Is it providing some sort of rehab for all of them for free or something?
The great part is this problem has already been solved by Portugal.
So they created this research.
Whatever you guys determine, we will put into effect.
And all the money that we are spending to incriminate these people,
we are going to invest in programs.
Wherever you guys are watching this show, I would truly appreciate it if you follow or subscribe
it helps a lot with the algorithm it helps us get bigger and better guests and it helps us
grow the team truly means a lot thank you guys for supporting and here's the episode
welcome back guys got a very special guest today pretty excited for this one gordon buff then how's
it going man honored to be here. Super grateful for you reaching out.
God, what was that, about a month ago on Instagram?
And it's been incredible to witness the people that you've had on the show
and incredible to become friends with some of the people in your mastermind.
I was just out here with Nick Swan, and it's just incredible the people that he introduced.
And one of the things that I always say is you're one connection away, you're one book,
you're one mastermind, you're one podcast away from changing everything about your life.
Yeah. And you're on an interesting mission right now. You've been homeless the past 30 days,
right? No cash. 29 days. 29 days. No cash, no credit cards. I got to hear how this started
and how you ended up in Vegas. yeah so i was at chipotle in
sedona where i'd spent the last four months and i was talking to these guys who had basically
like pilot outfits on and we started chatting and i come to find out they're private pilots
so i was going to an art show that night i take them to the art show we go out we have an amazing
night they go i want to take you to lunch before we leave. So we met up for lunch.
We had a lunch.
And they go, yeah, we're flying to Montana.
We have a dead leg.
We're picking up some clients.
We're going to Texas.
And then we're coming back to Arizona.
I go, my wheels start spinning.
Will you guys take me on the dead leg?
They go, they look to me, Sean, they go, if you're crazy enough to go with us, we're crazy
enough to take us.
You just have to figure out your way back.
So since we live in such this content world,
which you do a brilliant job on the content front,
I go, how can I use this story to just get views?
And so as I'm filming content on the plane and doing some stuff with my book,
I go, what if I do no cash, no credit cards,
and just on the goodwill of people?
And it was actually the exact same day that the conflict was happening in the Middle East.
So I go, how can I, I don't need to post on social media or another post of what's going on.
Let me actually be with the people. And it has been the most incredible 29 days thus far where I
hung out in Montana. I go to a bar, I tell this to people and people started handing me $20 bills.
Wow. I'm like, put your favorite quotes. So they would write their favorite quote on this $20 bill
and hand it to me. And so then I went to dinner and I'm sitting at the bar literally next to a
lady and my steak arrives with a French fries. They're like, ooh, can we have some French fries? And so then I went to dinner, and I'm sitting at the bar literally next to a lady.
And my steak arrives with the French fries.
They're like, ooh, can we have some French fries?
So I give them some fries.
Next thing, they're paying for my meal because they go, oh, we ate half your meal.
I come to find out her husband was Secretary of Defense.
Wow.
Not currently, but a previous one.
What are the chances I'm sitting in this bar in Whitefish, Montana?
With this lady. And so then I went from there. I took a night train to Portland where I worked with homeless people for seven days in Portland. Wow. I've traveled around the world,
spoken all around the world, third world countries, and I have never seen anything as tragic, Sean.
Really? There are about 500 to 1,000 people smoking
fentanyl homeless in Portland. And I was there for two days. And one of my early mentors always said,
Gordon, just follow the money. Follow the money. So I was following the money. I go,
this doesn't make sense. All these commercial buildings are empty completely empty like night like 10 occupancy
targets moving out office max i couldn't figure it out and then i go oh it's a real estate play
where because of everyone moved home so then they brought the homeless people in
which drove out even more people so now Wall Street's basically buying up all these buildings for five and 10 cents on the dollar.
And guys who, you know, like small multimillionaire guys
that had these big buildings, they can't afford it.
Right.
Because 90% of their tenants are gone.
And this is something that, you know,
which we saw with the Silicon Valley Bank
and some of these other bank collapses.
But the next six months, what my guys are saying is
it's
going to be a bloodbath because all these banks have all these commercial loans on their books
and people haven't been paying for the last year. And they don't want to take these loans back
because then they have to go become commercial real estate guys. And, you know, I watched it
with my dad in the real estate market in 2006, 2007, 2008, where we got caught with our pants
down on a couple of multimillion dollar properties. And so this isn't my first pattern,
but you didn't really live through that, right? I was too young. I was like fourth grade and
during that 08 crash. And millennials and Gen Zs have never seen money at 8% interest rate.
I was on with one of my friends and he goes, when I bought my first apartment in
New York, it was 140,000. I had an 18% mortgage interest rate. And he goes, that was normal.
When was this? That was in 1980. Wow. So it has gotten that high before. I didn't know that.
Yeah. And one of the things that my mentors always follow patterns, and this is, it's wild,
the world that we're going into, especially in the US, where there's $33 trillion in debt with
another $100 trillion already spent for Social Security, Medicare, and all this stuff. The US
can't even afford to service that debt with the Federal Reserve. And so when I, the average age
in government right now is 65 years old,
Sean. So they're making decisions for the next 10 years of their life. They're not making decisions
for us. They're not making decisions for our future kids. They don't really care about this
financial predicament. They just go, how do I continue to make money for the next 10 years?
And this is what I find so fascinating is our generation, we're not going to pay off that $33 trillion in debt.
So we're going to keep passing it down, you're saying?
No, we're going to do a hard reset.
How would that work?
That's what some of the things
that we're working on behind the scenes.
The game, the money game, the current money game,
which has gone on for over 2,000 years,
is going to have to drastically change.
And this is where we look at blockchain technology of Bitcoin,
which every transaction is hired on the ledger.
I recently had a wire last week that was sent to my account.
Correct information, we double-checked everything,
and the Federal Reserve have blocked that.
That money has been missing in the ethers for the last five days.
Actually, six days now.
That seems so crazy.
Was it like a big amount of money?
It was a very large sum for one day VIP day.
And it was deducted from her account on Tuesday.
And we're now Monday.
And it hasn't been returned back to her account.
Or it hasn't hit my account.
That's scary.
I called my bank every single day.
They go, oh, it should hit today.
It should hit today. It should hit today.
It should hit today.
And then Friday they go, the Fed's blocked it.
It's being sent back to her account.
Wow.
Okay, this is 2023.
How can money not move on a Saturday and a Sunday?
Yeah.
If this transaction was done in Bitcoin or Ethereum,
it's going to be tracked on the ledger within 30 minutes.
It's going to be in your account.
Quicker.
And they're charging fees on all this stuff.
Yeah.
Well, they charge fees on ledger too, but not as much.
It's very small, right?
And like this is where Ethereum went to proof of stake.
It removed 99% of their fees and the energy they were using.
So it's just wild.
If you spend $50 on a debit card or credit card,
within 12 transactions, that $50 has been zero and
the banks have that $50. Yeah. I see a lot of wealthy people moving out of the US dollar,
investing in gold, crypto. Where are you sort of putting your money?
I love USDT right now. I am a big fan of cryptocurrency.
I believe the real estate market in the next six months is going to crash.
But the main thing that we're investing in, which is an unregulated commodity, is art.
Art. Yeah, I'd love to talk about that. I don't know much about the art space.
I've heard people use it for money laundering,
but is there an actual space where there's good investments to be made?
Incredible. So I've traveled the world the last three years
discovering young emerging artists from guys in Amsterdam
to guys in Mexico City
to Peru to the US
to
in Spain and collected
what I believe are the best artists
in the world. Almost all of them are under
35.
You can get amazing
pieces of art.
One of our muralists will paint something this big
on a wall for $20,000.
And you put that on a canvas,
it is just like mind-blowing, the shading.
One of the guys who,
I went and met an artist yesterday
at the Louis Vuitton store,
a guy who I work with in Scottsdale,
his name is Salvador.
He has the most incredible shading and
he paints on Louis Vuitton. So Louis Vuitton pays him and he shows up 40 hours a week to paint on
Louis Vuitton bags. And he has this peacock that just blows your mind. And this heart piece that
he has on a Louis Vuitton bag that, And the piece about art that really blows my mind
is a lot of the times,
so 70% of all the art in the world is kept in warehouses.
Why is it so high, you think?
Because it's used as a storage of wealth
and people don't want it on the wall getting broken,
getting stolen.
And usually they're in no trade zones.
So it's tax free.
Interesting.
So tax free on art.
I could see why people put money into that then.
And this is why I love NFTs is it proves the authentication.
And now we're living over 50% of our lives in the metaverse.
Anytime you're on your phone, you're in the metaverse. Anytime you're on your phone that's you're in the metaverse
right anytime you're on facebook it's not what you think with vr of oh my whole life is going
to be in the metaverse but with vr and the way that we're going so why would you not have art
in that way right how my thing with art is how do we get as many kids creating art and seeing art
yeah this is an art piece right everyone who comes on your
podcast you should give them an nft with the photo of us and this and then we can post it on social
media we can post it anywhere of you know when when i meet gary v it's like hey look here's all
the nfts that i have and then you find common all commonality and one of the things that we've been
really hard is changing the name from nft connection agreements. Ultimately, an NFT is just a smart contract in a community.
Yeah, I think people tried to make money off it. There was a huge hype wave,
but the underlying technology is pretty valuable. And I think it's here to stay for sure.
And this is where I've gotten so much value from you in your community of just meeting incredible people
that you've had on the show. And so for us to have, instead of a WhatsApp group, we have an NFT,
it's basically the same thing. Yeah. Speaking of groups, you run a secret society. I got to hear
more about this because I've studied secret societies and they fascinate me. Is yours more
like a mastermind or how does it operate? It depends if you don't know the handshake uh you don't know the handshake so i remember watching fight club as a 16 year old boy and was fascinated by the
movie and so in the last three years uh actually the last four years i've traveled all around the
world hosting gatherings in me a lot of times major cities uh so we have big footprints
in amsterdam london paris portugal new york miami la vegas now and so we host a lot of private
dinners and we create curate incredible geniuses and i throw them in the room and i usually ask everyone three questions and so um you know
the questions are what's your name where's home your favorite sex toy and then what is your genius
and the fourth question is what do you need help with okay and that fourth question is is really
incredible and what we do is we take like a sticky note and say you need help with epigenetics
testing i go i got a guy let me introduce you to
trevor i write it on the sticky note i hand it to you so we don't have to have an entire hour-long
discussion of how we can all help you right efficient and and that's just like watching
some of these dinners of of people connecting and doing you know billion dollar deals because of a dinner. And our focus with our community
is how do we solve youth mental well-being?
That, I believe, is the biggest problem on the planet.
I don't really care about green energy and all this stuff
because if we don't solve the human problem,
we will eradicate ourselves.
And if humans were gone from the planet,
the planet would be fine in three hours.
Yeah.
So what is this problem?
Do you think it's caused by technology?
A hundred percent.
And if you look at this,
for kids, it is 10x because of social media.
And I'm so grateful.
So I was born in 88.
We at least, you know, I could go to school, come back.
We had AOL, Instant Messenger and MSM
and some of the early social medias, but I could get to school, come back. We had AOL, Instant Messenger, and MSM, and some of the early social medias,
but I could get away from it.
So many kids now, they're bullied 24-7.
There's huge celebrities that have killed themselves because they get bullied.
One of the things that blows my mind as we go into this political election is
a lot of people are critiquing one of the candidates.
The minute that you critique that candidate, it makes you just as bad as that candidate for doing whatever he's doing. It's,
you're not any better by critiquing somebody, right? Like, and the minute that I critique
somebody, it's not saying something bad about the person I'm critiquing. It's saying something bad
about me. Interesting. But I think there is good feedback, but yeah, when people get emotions involved, then it's not productive. And that's my thing,
especially with this challenge is how can I sit and be present with people? Right. This morning
when I went and got water, I gave the homeless person water and I sat and treated them like a
human for three minutes. It didn't take much out of my day, but I was able to give them water.
Almost every single homeless person is dehydrated and they need food.
And of course they need a place to stay.
And so now that I like worked with all these homeless people in Portland and, you know,
then I went to Miami and then I went to Vegas and, and I spent a week in Atlanta being homeless.
And it's so fascinating to get kicked out of places where i normally stay
what do you mean so i because a lot of this time i haven't had a home i just will like go to a four
or five star hotel and kind of like find an empty room or an empty couch or an empty corner and like
and fall asleep oh god until security wakes me up at say like three or five in the morning
and then they'll kick me out.
Yeah.
And so I'm like, oh, I usually stay here, but they go, do you have a room?
I go, yes.
What's your room number?
I go, I don't know, 411.
And they go, we don't have a 411 here.
That's funny.
Right?
And it's so fascinating to see how different I've been treated
when I have lots of money and when I don't.
Now, why do you resonate so much with these homeless people? Because people in your shoes,
they see them, they walk right past them for the most part, but you are stopping and helping them
out. Yeah. So when I was 20 years old, I was homeless, not for an extended period of time,
but my addiction had gotten so bad that I was homeless. And in a two-week span, I was almost
murdered. I spent multiple nights homeless on the beach in Naples, Florida, and I spent my 20th
birthday in jail. Wow. And so I made the best decision of my life on April 22nd, 2010, when I
decided to get sober. And so every decision and every experience I've had in my life in the last 14 years has been because of this decision.
And I've spoken all around the world about substance abuse, addiction, and what it's
just, I've been for the last five years, I've been very quiet on social media and podcasts.
And I've traveled the world studying different cultures.
I spent 2020 in Europe,
traveling when everyone was stuck at home.
I spent 2021 in South America,
working with shamans and native people down there.
And I consider myself a modern day explorer.
Wow.
I'm always looking for new realms of consciousness.
I'm always looking for new realms of consciousness. I'm always looking for new ways
to have compassion and empathy.
And this journey has really expedited that.
And one of the things for me is,
I remember reading a book at a young age.
It was this old book written in like 1916.
This red cover, I can't think.
I'll find it for the show notes.
And it said, if you want to live a successful life,
live an interesting life. Hmm. I like that because traveling is something people don't even think
about, but it can really expand your consciousness, give you new perspectives, expand your business.
You learn a lot about people, a lot about culture. Traveling has been instrumental
towards my growth, honestly. It was one of the best things my parents ever did.
My grandparents would always vacation in
Portugal. So I started going to Portugal as a baby. And I remember we would go to Costa Rica
for my mom's 40th, or we went to Portugal and Paris with my sisters. And just to see those
different cultures, different way of life, different way of being. And now I've been
speaking around the world in the Middle East and in Asia
since for over a decade now.
And it's amazing that you have this narrative
of what the Middle East is like.
And then you go there.
They're the most hospitable people you have ever met.
They won't let you get off the elevator before them.
Wow.
It is, they have so many manners.
They're the best hosts in the world.
Like my friend Hussein,
he's just an incredible human. And him and his wife, they now have a kid. And he goes,
anytime you want to come, come over. We're here for you. My friend, my brother Adib, I mean, he's an incredible, incredible, incredible guy in Dubai. And it's just incredible how I went
there and I spoke in four different countries and I've remained friends with a lot
of these people over the last decade. And like, it's just like you have these preconceived notions
and what, what we have to do as humans is get outside of our comfort zone.
Absolutely. Too many people stay locked in their, their own city, their own state,
their own country. But I definitely recommend.
Most importantly, their own mind.
Their own mind. Yeah. You mentioned Portugal earlier. you're doing a cruise out of there this year right
yeah so uh one of my partners he called me we uh we met in abitha last year and uh we wanted to do
a couple of deals and he calls me two months he goes hey gordon yeah uh i'm negotiating a contract
with the ritz-carlton cruise it's not even on the water. 440 people, 220 suites.
Do you think we could fill it?
Yeah.
What are the dates?
November 3rd through November 13th.
Okay.
So we're going to go from Lisbon to Miami.
Yep.
All right.
You're going to fill it?
Yep.
And then we've been working to fill that.
And then he called me last night.
He goes, I also got it from November 1st to the number third.
So we're working on something with a foundation.
It has not been released.
A brain research foundation to fill that with a very famous celebrity.
And do basically two days down to the Azaz, all focusing on mental well-being.
And that's going to be the content of the cruise as well.
10 days of how do I get the smartest people, the most successful people on the planet and create a
community and container where we can solve some of these problems. That's cool. You mentioned
mental wellbeing a lot. Now what's been your journey? Have you found that happy place for
you? How long did it take? No, no. And more no. Uh, so when I was 20 years old i had a couple of experiences where i got locked
in a psych ward damn and uh the second time after spending two weeks the first time i realized how
the floor operated and i ended up escaping from the psych ward i had two helicopters six police
dogs looking for me they couldn't find me the story ran, naked man escapes the psych ward.
In fairness, I had a white pair of Tommy Hilfiger boxers on.
But so when they did find me, they had the entire house was surrounded by SWAT team. And I'm standing at the kitchen, the cabinets.
And I just watched these two massive police officers walk in the door.
And I go, do I run out the back or do I let them arrest me?
So they arrest me, put me in handcuffs, walk me out.
I remember looking at my dad, there's 40 officers,
there's flashing lights.
And the next thing I remember is getting in the cop car.
The next thing I remember from that
is when I woke up in a hospital bed strapped to the bed.
Whoa.
So I blacked out.
I don't remember the car ride.
Supposedly I puked and uh my dad actually
had to convince the police officers not to go in with the house surrounded and guns drawn damn
that is crazy man my dad was in a psych ward what was it like in there because he he had a terrible
experience honestly i love psych wars they're like one of my favorite places on the planet
partially because everyone like the question i ask is who's crazier
the patients or the clients or sorry that's the same person stuff the the staff or the patient
the staff are crazy in there oh yeah because they're looking at us and so they have the
preconceived notion that we're all crazy yeah so now they're looking to validate their assumption
that we're crazy yeah i mean i've heard weird stuff i mean they put you on medication in
there and try to dumb you down right well they don't because i tell them to f off oh so you
could deny it yeah okay that doesn't go over very well so the second time they had me on a 90-day
stay the judge hit and goes you are legally insane wow so i've had a judge call me legally insane
before and i had a psychiatrist say i would never live a
day not on prescription medication i haven't taken medication i went to an amazing rehab facility
called alternative to med center in san francisco in 2009 and they did a 21 day detox off the
medication then we did a 21 day or a 21 day sauna program and uh he has the best technology in the world. I helped him move to Sedona. And
actually, I spent the last four months living at Lyle's Place in Sedona, working with one of
their therapists at their center. But they have the best technology in the world for getting people
off of antipsychotic medication. Because when these doctors prescribe you medication, they don't
say, hey, this is how difficult it's going to be to get off of say xanax or rispidol or any of these medications they're just like the doctors go
you have a problem take this this is a band-aid versus going to the root cause yeah a lot of my
work all around the world is how do we go to the root cause right it's me working with homeless
people going every i worked with over 100 homeless people not one of them sean goes i want to be a
fentanyl addict not one of them said i want to be an addict these are all somebody's kids these are
all somebody's siblings and and like they all want to get off yeah but they don't have hope right
like i'm so grateful i got sober when i was 20 and a lot like i was talking to a homeless person
today and i was like hey do you want me to fill
up your water bottle you know what he said sean he goes no there's a little bit of alcohol left
in there dang and i drink so much that if i don't drink that little bit of alcohol i might die
sitting outside the win with has billions of dollars of people sitting in that casino, billions of dollars.
And this guy is outside going,
I can't have you pour water in here because I need to savor this last sip of vodka.
So what do you think the fix for the homeless problem is?
Is it providing some sort of rehab
for all of them for free or something?
Are you interested in coming
on the Digital Social Hour podcast as a guest?
We'll click the application link below in the description of this video.
We are always looking for cool stories,
cool entrepreneurs to talk to you about business and life.
Click the application link below.
And here's the episode, guys.
The great part is this problem has already been solved by Portugal.
In 2000, in Portugal, they had a 1% of their population was using ****.
So they created this research, a task force.
And when they did the task force, they made an amazing play.
They said, whatever you guys determine, we will put into effect.
Okay.
So they did the tax.
They did this research group.
And then at the end of it, they said, we need to decriminalize all drugs.
And all the money that we were spending to incriminate
these people we are going to invest in programs to get them sober so let's say somebody gets sober
and they want to learn car mechanics the portuguese government would fund 75 of their salary and the
car mechanic would only have to 25 and so when you give these people meaning,
that's one of the things in life is so many of these kids now,
they don't have meaning.
And so when you give an addict meaning,
whether it's you're working in a kitchen
or you're working with kids,
they have meaning.
And so the biggest advocate against the program
five years later go,
I was wrong.
This was the best decision we could have ever made in Portugal.
And now their numbers are like 10% of what it was.
Wow.
Yeah.
We got to study that model and try to implement it then.
Well, and that's part of the reason why there's so many homeless people in Oregon.
They've decriminalized all drugs.
So these people are like openly smoking fentanyl and meth at 10 in the morning.
I'm like, hey guys, there's kid right there. They'm like, hey, guys, there's a kid right there.
They're like, oh, sorry, I didn't even see it.
Wow, so you could just take any drug there on the street?
Yeah, yeah.
Everyone there has tinfoil.
I'll take you there.
We'll walk around the street, and you will see every single person
has tinfoil in their hand and a straw.
Dang.
And they basically put a lighter under the tinfoil,
and it creates smoke, and they ingest the smoke there must be a balance
because i know in amsterdam it's decriminalized too but they seem fine over there so there must
be something else at play there well and and that goes back to follow the money it's a real estate
play you know i could easily with five million dollars solve this because i buy one of the
commercial buildings turn it into residential give them couches give them podcast studios
give them kitchens and give them podcast studios,
give them kitchens and give them a safe place to use.
Like they don't want to use drugs,
but you know, I helped somebody get off fentanyl recently and you have to do a very intense
suboxone program.
And a lot of people can't do it.
Like getting off of opiates.
It's one of the most difficult things.
Getting off benzo is one of the most difficult,
getting off alcohol. Those three things can kill you. I almost died getting off of Xanax, it's one of the most difficult things. Getting off benzo is one of the most difficult. Getting off alcohol, those three things can kill you.
I almost died getting off of Xanax, man.
Yeah?
Yeah, I had a seizure.
That's crazy.
And like you said, they don't tell you how hard it is to get off it.
Once you're on it, you can't really stop or else you'll have a seizure.
You had no idea.
Yeah, I had no idea.
And this is why going to a program like Alternative to Med Center,
they focus on the orthomolecular structure.
You eat completely organic food. You sit in a a sauna you have vitamins and supplements and nutrients it just it's amazing
and they're the only program in the country yeah um how'd you meet uh jesse itzler so that's a
funny story so i did an ironman in 2016 and i remember getting done and i like picked up living
with seal and i read living with seal and part of of Jesse's story is he would just cold call people.
He got a record deal.
He just cold called somebody.
So I go,
let me cold call Jesse.
And that was basically 10 years ago.
I cold called Jesse.
And as a result,
I,
you know,
I just did a 55 mile race with him in Atlanta two weeks ago.
I spoke on a stage to a thousand people.
Um,
you know,
we've,
we've gone on adventures.
I've been in his masterminds.
I've gone to his events.
I've hung out with his kids, been to his house,
just because I picked up the phone.
This is one of the things that one of my early mentors,
he goes, you just got to pick up the phone.
Create value for people.
That's something that I've watched you do time and time and time again, Sean.
It's like, okay, how can I make an intro?
How can I do this? How can I make your your day it doesn't take a lot doesn't all it
takes is a group chat these days and and it's phenomenal right like i've connected like i was
speaking at jesse's event and next thing i'm there with doug who's the world's leading expert on
sprouts who i met through your thing and and i'm i'm sitting in this in this event with him and now
we're doing a push-up challenge so we're doing a hundred push like i want to be able to do a hundred push-ups by the
end of the year so yesterday doug text me he's like okay so what's the requirements for this
hundred push-up challenge i just go just do as many push-ups as you can right yeah yeah you've
met some great people you've even collaborated with billionaires royal families since you were
26 right how are you able to connect with such affluent people?
Just reach out.
So you're literally cold calling them?
Yeah, yeah.
I mean, I'll throw him under the bus because he publicizes his email, but Mark Cuban.
Yeah.
Right?
He publicizes his email.
So what do I do?
I email him.
But I don't just email him once.
I email him like, you know, sometimes I email him five times to get a response.
Right. But I have responses that go back to like 2015. them once i email them like you know sometimes i email them five times to get a response right but
i have responses that go back to like 2015 you know we were doing a big nft project last year
i ran into him at the four seasons i'm like hey mark it's so good to see you like i walked up
like that was one of the few times that i get nervous um i walked up i shook his hand he was
on the elevator in hindsight i was like i should have gone on the elevator i should have got in
the car with him drove to the private airport and like you know elevator pitching yeah right but
i didn't take that initiative and so like i don't know i my friend watched me this morning i called
12 people one of the guys i called this morning is uh james one of our strategic partners he runs
one of the large five crypto trading desks on the planet. I call this guy every single day. And every single time he answers and he goes, God,
Gordon, you're such a pain in my leave me alone. I go, hey, I need this. He's like, OK,
you sure you got guys to pull off this deal? Yes. OK, I'll talk to you later.
But I call him every single day. And but I'm just like creating value, right? Like we send him clients, they trade.
We have a strategic partnership. What I love about James is he had a medical thing a couple
of years ago and it like completely reframed his entire existence. Wow. And so when when somebody
experiences something like that, it, you know, as as a of my friends go, health as well. And this is where you at 26 are
doing such a good job of investing in genetics testing, investing in these things. You know,
we went and had this incredible $500 dinner last night. And I woke up this morning and go,
I feel like I just drank and got ran over by a bus. I haven't drank in 14 years and i work out my joints were stiff and i'm like what
was in this food seed oils all kinds of stuff right like the oysters were incredible but the
steak and and like we had clean like asparagus and a salad and like potato like we didn't have
anything that was fried there wasn't anything yet it could have been a salt in the steak or
something yeah that just you know completely made like changed everything yeah been there before
for sure you never know with restaurants these days it's hit or miss i try not to eat out actually
unless it's like a dinner i'm organizing like you said but that advice i love whenever i go to a new
city always have a dinner invite six to eight people, mastermind dinner right on the spot.
Magic happens, right?
And one of the things that I found that's really important is no alcohol.
Because the minute there is alcohol there, the conversation's fractionalized.
And when you're able to have one conversation, that's magic.
And usually, the sweet spot's under 20.
Under 22 is definitely the max.
But we had a house in Miami last year,
and we would just host lunch twice a week.
And my dad came in and was a private chef.
And it was incredible of just creating community.
And this is one of the things where I've gone really hard
the last couple of years is experiences.
People crave experiences, right like this is an experience
that we've had because you hit me up on instagram that no one will ever be able to take from us
right or you know we go on a trip or we go do this and look we could all drive whatever nice car and
okay it feels cool for like a couple of minutes. But for me, it goes, how do I have incredible
experiences with the coolest people in the world? Absolutely. Yeah. And food's one of those where
you can eat at great places, have chefs, do a bunch of stuff. And growing up, I never got to
eat out. So for me, getting food with people is very special. Yeah. I'm curious, what has inspired
you down this path? And like, what was the moment sean where you go this is what i
want to do and here's how i want to have the impact yeah that's a great question so my first
five six years of entrepreneurship which i think people can relate to this it was all about money
what year from what age to what age so i was in college so i was 18 to about 24 okay all about
stacking money that was the number one priority. I put it before health,
family, friendships, like I sacrificed everything for money. Right. And as a result,
you were able to stack a lot. Yeah. But that came with sacrifice. Right. So I gave up my health,
didn't go to the gym for five years, barely left the house. And I just sat there and asked myself,
was this worth it? And, you know, everything happens for a reason. So I try not to dwell on the past, but now my mission is to inspire, to educate, you know, this platform, having people like you on
hundreds of other people that share their stories. I think it's going to change the world.
What do you mean? You don't think it already has. Yeah. And this is, I just worked with a bunch of
students at Georgia Tech. And you know what I told every single one of them, Sean? Start a podcast.
Hmm. Every single one of them.
My biggest mistake in my professional career
is when I released my first book at 25,
Eluding Reality, a memoir about drugs, psych words, and recovery,
I didn't start a podcast then.
And I had a YouTube channel, and I was putting out three videos.
Like, if you go on Gordon Bufton YouTube channel,
like, you'll see my early stuff.
It's awful.
Like, I set up an iPhone. I would like do a button down shirt i would do like three segments i would just like switch shirts
and i would film it all at the same thing and you know like i don't even know if one of them has a
thousand views like these have like 10 views 20 views but i left them there. And if I would have been consistent putting three videos
out a week for the last 10 years, I would have millions of subscribers. Easily. Yeah. It's all
about consistency and podcasting opens so many doors, man. And so what I told these kids is,
look, I will create a studio in a house. You guys can use it for free we will handle everything on the back end you get the
guess because if you have 50 powerful conversations in the next year that will build your network and
then you'll also have you know the saying it's not what you know it's who you know yeah you know
what the next level to that quote is what it's who knows you oh i like that millions of people
are going to see me for the first time there's
going to be a lot of people that have seen me for the second third fourth fifth time because of this
i don't know them but they know who i am they know part of my story they might be inspired by
the sobriety they might hit me up and want to get clean they might want to go to alternative the med center and get off xanax we don't know the impact that our words and our stories can have and the trickle
down effect is insane too because if you inspire 100 people to start a podcast they inspire another
100 people it never this is how we change the world yeah and this is why when you ask like
how do we change the monetary system look if, if you put your $1,000 in the bank,
these guys can legally loan that out 10 times.
Yeah.
10 times?
10 times.
Wow.
So they take your $1,000
and they loan out $10,000
at a 20% interest rate.
So they're printing money.
Kind of until the loans default.
No, no, no.
They are for now.
You saw Citibank just got bailed out by the Fed a couple days ago.
Yeah, it's scary.
I mean, some of these big banks are getting bailed out.
Why?
I don't know.
Because their game is almost up.
Because our generation, millennials and Gen Zs, we can see through the lies.
We can see through the deceptions.
Look, a lot of our generation hasn't bought houses
why because i watch my parents get kicked out of a multi-million dollar mansion i'm 35 years old i
have never owned a house i've lived in multi-million dollar houses you just rent i don't even like i is
it's not even a conception like i'm able to go to the middle east for two weeks close the door on
my condo and i don't care if the ac
breaks and there's a waterfall in my condo which has happened yeah yeah i think grant cardone said
we're becoming a renter's nation because the average rent is 1700 average mortgage is 4000
it doesn't make sense yeah and and you know people have this narrative okay so my sister
just bought a house in sedona for let's just call it for round numbers, $500,000.
Okay. At a 7% interest rate. Do you know how much money she's going to pay on that house?
30 years. It's got to be six figures, right? $900,000 is how much that $500,000 house is going to cost. Holy crap. So she didn't just buy a half million dollar house. She bought a million
dollar house. That's insane. Yeah yeah when they were two percent it made
sense but at eight percent nine percent it's just it's too much here's the thing you need to live
somewhere you need to have a home no you don't need i obviously haven't had a home but one of
the things that i crave is a home a couple homes right and um so they now bought a million dollar
house but if they let's say their mortgage is,
okay, so you usually want to factor in Florida
when we're doing real estate deals, 1%.
Principal interest taxes and insurance.
So they need a budget, say $5,000 a month for this house.
Okay.
If they pay an extra $500 a month on top of that,
they would probably save $250,000
over the course of the loan and only pay $750.
Wow. So you're basically advising people to pay more.
Yeah. And it might be an extra 50. It might be $100. One of the things on my podcast,
I had this incredible entrepreneur, Talyn, and she talked about the benefit of compounding
interest. And when she was starting her career, she would make trades of 200 and the cost to make a trade was 10 so literally
five percent was going to say e-trade or one of those trades back then okay and because of
compounding interest she is now worth tens of millions of dollars because she would reinvest
dividends she has her 14 year old daughters are trading. They have their own
Robinhood. And then they're like, oh, I got a $2 dividend from this company. And then they
reinvest it. And one of my dearest friends, Mark Rubin, with his girls, he set up Robinhood
accounts. And if they just put $600 every single month into their account. By the time they're 62 years old, they will retire with $1.6 million.
And that's the S&P 500?
Mm-hmm.
Right.
Yeah, because 7% a year are compounded.
But do you think that's going to stay for 50 years
is the real question?
You can afford to spend $600
to see if it's going to work or not.
Yeah.
I personally do not have anything invested
in the stock market
because I don't believe in the stock market.
Because they have fiduciary interest
to increase shareholder wealth.
They don't care about their customers.
They don't care about their clients.
They don't care about the environment.
And they don't care about their employees.
And so because of that,
all they want to do is make more money
for their shareholders.
Isn't it true like five companies own like 80% of the stock market?
Something crazy like that.
Yep.
Yeah.
So why would you-
You have BlackRock, which is owned by CEOs Larry Fink.
You have Vanguard.
And then there's one other company I'm drawing a blank.
Is it Blackstone?
No.
So Blackstone has $1 trillion in assets under management.
BlackRock has $1 trillion in assets under management. BlackRock has $11 trillion.
Damn.
And so, yeah, Larry Fink is the best in the world at corporate tax.
Yeah, I mean.
And restructuring corporate debt.
And who knows how much of the real estate market they own.
Probably something absurd.
Well, and this goes back to the play in Portland.
I go, this doesn't make sense.
This doesn't make sense why you have such a beautiful city
and nobody is using it.
And then they're going to buy all this real estate.
They're going to get the homeless people out.
And then in the next five years, they're going to re-gentrify it.
The Ritz-Carlton just opened up a brand new property in Portland.
Why would they do that?
So after traveling the world,
you've probably been to over 100 countries by now.
Not only about 40.
Okay, still a good amount.
What is the world you envision?
Which cultures do you want to pull from and sort of form the perfect society?
The world I envision is one where people are able to be their authentic self.
It's one where they're not controlled by religions or governments.
It's one where we can come together as human beings and celebrate each
other. You might be the world's best artist or you might be the world's best video game player.
And our company is called Genius Creators because we're all a genius at something.
Sean is a genius at connecting people and having interviews. He's a genius, right? One of my
geniuses is being able to connect with
people. And when we're in our genius, we think everyone can do it. Yet they can't. Not anyone
can just email Mark Cuban, right? I nurtured that. I try it. I just emailed Tim Cook. Why?
Because I know what his email is. Because I Googled it. All I had to do was Google it.
And so I have a tracking system. I use Superhuman. So I see he's opening my emails.
He's never responded. I've sent five emails to him. So then I go, okay, how's another way I can
get access to him? Well, he works out with a personal trainer at 5 a.m. every morning. Okay,
well, let me hit up the personal trainer. But that like this world that we envision where you know we go back to
like we're not controlled by money we go back to barter okay like look i have this water bottle
with one of our artists did some crazy art in it hey let me give this to you sean so then you could
have it on your show versus the win water bottle right like easy stuff like that you might see
okay that's valued at a hundred dollars well you know our artists i gave a thousand dollars right
right or you might go oh this is now going to get 10 million views every single month of this water
bottle i love bartering dude it's so underrated i i try to barter i try to provide win-wins
yeah i love bartering and this is, I find like so fascinating.
It's so easy to do, right?
Like, you know, Ryan Tran,
he basically started with a paperclip.
Like part of this thing was inspired by him.
He went to Europe with no money, a videographer,
and he had to get back to the US.
And like, I'm just watching this content of,
you know, he's sketching in parks of doing portraits.
Like I made a lot of money on this trip by just some of the art that we did of like quotes and giving to people.
Or, you know, like I found, you know, like I would find stuff walking on the road.
Like, I mean, if I empty my pockets right now, I found all this stuff during, other than during this walk right it's a little a coin that says
today well lived makes yesterday a dream of happiness and every tomorrow a vision of hope
right 24 hours a day this is something i got because i love it in um in greece i spent a lot
of time there this is a heart that my friend gave me that runs a multi
billion dollar private equity company and he goes this is the heart of brickle wow because i was
able to compliment him on his clothes after i'd gotten kicked out of the four season where i've
spent thousands of dollars in the irony of this sean his company owns four four seasons in south
carolina dang That's insane.
And he gives me this and I give him a nickel.
And the next day he Venmo's me $111.11
because he goes, you made my day by giving me that nickel.
Wow.
I remember what it was like to be broke and homeless.
Here's a little something.
Our friend Nick, I go, hey, I'm doing this challenge.
He goes, if you need points let me know
next day close a vip client the wire hasn't come through i go hey nick can you fly me to vegas he
goes let's go buy the ticket right now and now we we basically just filmed seven episodes of a podcast
in two days insane because of you yeah that's the power of networking and bartering like you just
said right and you know I showed up here,
and I literally couldn't,
the first night I slept in kind of his lobby
because we had an issue with the security, right?
And it's just, it's amazing what happens
when you help somebody, right?
I remember one of my early mentors,
we were on a long training run,
a man by the name of Cameron Harreld.
He goes, Gordon, I just got done at Ironman and I was really trying to figure out
what I next want to become world-class at. And he goes, Gordon, why don't you just become
world-class as being a friend? And I thought about it. And he goes, Gordon, why do you do
what you do? I go to help people. Cameron goes, why do you think I do what I do? I go to help
people. He goes, if you don't ask me for help, I can't help you.
Therefore, you're depriving me of that feeling good response
I get when I help you.
Ask me for help.
Love that, man.
Dude, it's been a super inspiring episode.
Anything you want to close off with or promote?
I'd love for you guys to apply for Genius Creators,
geniuscreators.org.
So go on there, fill out the application.
Somebody on our team will reach out to you.
We have different levels, whether it's just a dinner or some of our high-end experiences and communities.
Love for you to check out my book, The Connection Effect, available anywhere books are.
Or if you just send me a note um we can get you a copy that is basically all
the wisdom of how i'm able to connect with people all around the world in there and the best way to
reach me is hit me up on instagram it's gordon buffton 8 so just shoot me a dm we get thousands
of dms i will respond that i'm in uh the team runs the front side, but I'm in the DMs.
So you can easily find all my stuff, but just reach out. If we don't respond for the first time,
just keep reaching out. Same thing I've done with these people, right? But as you're thinking
through, go, how can I create value? How can I create value? So super grateful for this
opportunity, Sean. Super grateful for the community. Remember, you're only one introduction,
one relationship, one mastermind,
one podcast from changing everything about your life.
Absolutely.
You're crushing, man.
Thanks for coming on.
Thanks for watching, guys.
And I'll see you tomorrow.