Digital Social Hour - Is JD Vance Trump's Secret Weapon for 2028? | Rob Smith DSH #856
Episode Date: November 4, 2024🔥 Is JD Vance Trump's Secret Weapon for 2028? Tune in now to the Digital Social Hour with Sean Kelly and guest Rob Smith! 🎙️ Dive deep into the political landscape and explore whether JD Vance... might be the key player in Trump's future strategy. 🗝️ Packed with valuable insights, Rob shares his journey from liberal to conservative, his experiences in media, and the challenges of authenticity in the digital age. 🤔 Join the conversation as we unpack how JD Vance navigates media bias and projects authority, and what his trajectory means for the 2028 elections. Don't miss out on this engaging episode, where we also tackle the intersection of politics and health, the evolving role of social media, and the power of independent thinking. 💡 Watch now and subscribe for more insider secrets. 📺 Hit that subscribe button and stay tuned for more eye-opening stories on the Digital Social Hour with Sean Kelly! 🚀 Get ready to be part of an exclusive conversation that’s both thought-provoking and empowering. #news #cnn #foxnews #charliekirk #joebiden CHAPTERS: 00:00 - Intro 00:40 - JD Vance’s Debate Performance 03:14 - Rob's Trump Support Journey 08:19 - Rob's Political Evolution 12:27 - Rob Smith’s Weight Loss Journey 15:53 - Tips for Getting Healthy 16:55 - Politicians Discussing Health 19:56 - Kamala Harris Insights 24:30 - Censorship Issues 27:32 - The Black Vote Impact 29:35 - Kamala Harris and the Economy 34:08 - Public School System Critique 38:09 - Success in Media 40:34 - Learning the Media Business 43:18 - Importance of Followers 46:20 - Don Lemon’s Career Future 49:44 - Candace Owens vs. Don Lemon Debate 51:40 - Building a Podcast Empire APPLY TO BE ON THE PODCAST: https://www.digitalsocialhour.com/application BUSINESS INQUIRIES/SPONSORS: Spencer@digitalsocialhour.com GUEST: Rob Smith https://www.instagram.com/robsmithonline/ www.youtube.com/@RobSmithOnline 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 podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
You're in a place where, you know, my audience, like my people, like my problematics, my podcast
used to be called Rob Smith is problematic now is can cancel Rob Smith.
But like those are your people, you know, so you got to think about those people before
you start thinking about any of this other stuff.
Before you're thinking about the RNC or Trump's or Fox or Newsmax or CNN or whoever, like
you got to think about your audience first.
All right guys, Rob Smith here.
We finally made it happen.
Made it happen, brother.
Made it happen.
I'm here in Vegas.
Let's go.
Important timing right before the election.
Oh man, election is 32 days, man.
32 days is going to decide the future of this country.
A month away and we just came off a good debate last night it looked like.
Yeah, man.
So I get into this on my podcast, Can't Cancel Rob Smith.
The debate was very interesting because I think that when you
look at JD Vance, when you look at Tim Walls,
people act like the VP debate isn't important,
but it is important, right?
Because this is literally second in command.
Either one of these men could become
the president of the United States
should something happen to the president.
And I think that JD Vance had a really, really tough job.
Number one, I think that the mainstream media is always,
you know, more than a little biased, you know,
against Republicans, against conservatives.
So JD Vance had to battle that.
He had to introduce himself to people that may not know
or have any idea who he is
And he also has to project competence and authority. I thought it was beautiful performance
I literally thought is magnificent and for me even though like, you know, I'm a Trump guy like I'm fully supportive of Donald Trump
I'm fully voting for Donald Trump
Like I think that people that are on my side of the aisle and I know that a lot of people aren't like I have listeners that are independents that are libs that are
conservatives and some that are even to the right of me you know on the
conservative side but I think that a lot of people need to feel comfortable with
the fact that the next vice president could potentially be the president and
then also that JD Vance could possibly be the one to lead this country into hopefully
a new more prosperous era even in 2028.
So I think that JD Vance did a great job.
I can see why Trump picked him now.
I was a bit skeptical at first, not gonna lie.
You were.
I was.
You know, a lot of people were.
And I think that, I think that with a lot of people,
first of all, with the nuts and bolts of things
is that, JD Vance is somebody that was in venture capital somebody that didn't have the traditional
politician background even though he's currently a senator from Ohio
And I think a lot of people didn't know this person like who was he and also he was super critical of Trump
You know in his earlier, you know political years
But again, like I'm somebody that did not vote for Trump in 2016. I did not
vote at all in 2016. I didn't feel like Hillary had deserved my vote or Trump did at that moment
in time. But there are people who were staunchly anti-Trump. There were people that had a lot of
issues with Trump that came over to that side. And I think that JD Vance has been very great
at articulating his political evolution.
And so from, literally from Never Trump,
the Trump's VP candidate is quite the trajectory.
Absolutely.
So when did your support for Trump come?
Was that 2020?
So it was more around 2018.
So a lot of your listeners, man, I know who I am.
So, you know, Rob Smith, I kind of got famous
around the 2018 era for being a non-traditional Republican Republican conservative, right? Because I'm this black gay dude
that in 2018 came out for Trump. And how I came to this is I'm somebody that has a
very traditional mainstream media background, right? My graduate degrees
from Columbia University and journalism, like I've worked for CNN, NBC news, Yahoo finance, like you name it,
doing traditional media.
Now I got into the social media sort of commentary aspect of things because
just as a voter, like as a viewer, somebody that is like independently minded.
During 2018, I saw a lot of lies and a lot of misrepresentations, not only about
Trump, but about his policies, about things that he was saying and I was seeing these things come from sources that I trusted
I was seeing these things coming from ABC News and NBC News and all of these
Sources that I trusted to give me the news straight and I hopped on Twitter
I'm on Twitter at reps with online and I just started calling this stuff out.
So once the dam broke, you know,
in terms of like my trust of the mainstream media,
then I started looking at Trump
in a different lens than I had before.
At that point in time, I linked up with Turning Point USA,
an incredible organization that mobilizes conservative youth
all across the country,
and that's when I kind of got absorbed into what we'll call Trump world.
You know, being on the campaign trail for him in 2020, meeting him multiple times,
meeting members of the family multiple times.
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Starting to get to know not only who he is as a leader, but also having interpersonal
reaction about who he is as a person, and the same way
with the family members.
And so when you will see these sort of liberal activists
saying that he doesn't like black people,
or these people are racist, or sexist, or homophobic,
or whatever it is that they call people that are just
guilty of not being liberals, I knew that these things
weren't true.
You saw through it.
I saw through it, man.
I saw through it. I saw through it, man. I saw through it.
And it took, you know, not only having interactions
with him and some of the family members,
you know, interpersonal reactions,
but also being an independent thinker
and really sort of getting through these lies
that the mainstream media was telling about him.
And like, there's a reason, you know,
I was talking with one of your producers before we started doing this,
there's a reason that podcasting is a new thing.
That independent people like me on social media,
people are more drawn towards me
than the old school anchors from CBS or NBC or ABC.
It's because nobody trusts it anymore.
Nobody trusts it.
Now you're seeing these anchors leave
and get way more views.
Like Tucker, Cuomo, these guys are leaving
and getting Candace Owens, they're killing it.
Like these people are crushing it
and what a lot of people don't understand.
And I think that we'll talk a little bit
about entrepreneurship and sort of like the business
of media a little bit later.
But this is what I say all the time,
because I have friends that are
in traditional media.
I do Fox News hits every once in a while.
I love my friends at Fox News.
I have friends that are paid contributors to Fox News.
That's great for them.
But what I will say is this.
We are entering into an era in which if you don't have a social media following, if you
don't have people that are following you and know who you are outside of that mainstream
traditional media sort of infrastructure,
then that could end tomorrow.
And then where are you?
So it's always been important for me to be everywhere.
Like to do the mainstream media
and I have nothing against it,
but to also do podcasting. Like I have nothing against it, but to also, you know do podcasting like I just joined tick-tock
you know a couple of months ago six months ago tick-tock at can't cancel Rob Smith and you know got up to like
140,000 followers there and
The social media space is a space to be more authentic
I'm so less of a robot than the mainstream media space
Did you pick that podcast name because you got canceled?
You know, I picked that podcast name because man, you know,
if a lot of you guys are a lot of the Sean Kelly listeners are coming to me for
the first time, like really do get into my social media, get into the podcast,
can't cancel Rob Smith,
but I've had quite the journey in this conservative media ecosystem like,
and I called it can't cancel because there's people on the right that want to cancel me because I'm a gay guy, because I'm black or, you know,
you know,
there are people that want to cancel me because of these,
what I call immutable characteristics. Uh,
there are people on the left that want to cancel me because since I am gay and
black, then I'm supposed to, you know, toe the liberal
line. Right? So I kind of get it from all over and I've kind of started to own it and
make it a part of my brand. So that's why I call it can't cancel Robson because literally
on the right or on the left, you cannot cancel me. I will remain. I love that. Yeah. So were
you liberal growing up? Oh yeah, man. And you know, I don't know how liberal, like you know I grew up in Akron, Ohio.
You know, single parent family,
went into the military at 17 years old,
and as a you know, black working class person growing up,
like we tend to be towards the libs, right?
We tend to be more democratic.
And I think that it's something
that I didn't even really think of.
I think it's something that just always was.
And I didn't start coming over to the conservative side until, like I said, about six, seven
years ago when I started doing my research and started really thinking more.
And it actually happened even before I got quote unquote famous.
It happened around 2014.
I read, you know, illegal immigration is a hot button issue.
We don't have to go into all of that.
If you listen to my podcast,
I go into more explicitly political stuff there.
But I read a book by Ann Coulter called Adios America,
which was all about illegal immigration.
And she really, as a journalist,
she really broke it all down.
And when I first met Ann at the,
I think in the green room of Fox News, told her like you red-pilled me right so
I read that in about 2014 2015 and that kind of started my red pill journey you
know I started off I was very liberal leaning I was like oh why don't I read
this book took me on that journey to becoming more red-pilled and in more conservative leaning. But at the same time I
Don't fit into any of these boxes
I think that sometimes as a people as as Americans as world citizens nowadays
We like to put ourselves in these boxes. I am a Trump voter. So I am this I am a Kamala Harris voter
So I am this I am Republicans why I'm this I am a Trump voter, so I am this. I am a Kamala Harris voter, so I am this. I am Republican, so I am this.
I am Democrat, so I am this.
And none of us fit into any of these boxes completely.
You know, they're really tiny boxes
that we want to put ourselves in.
And so I will call myself a Republican till the end of time.
I will call myself a Trump voter, it's whatever,
but I still don't fit into that box of the stereotype
that people want to create for conservatives.
Right, because there's people that agree with every single thing that their politician is
saying.
Absolutely, and I think that if you're a thinking person, you're not agreeing with every single
thing that your preferred politician is saying or doing. I think that the most that we can all hope for is, um,
a little bit of compromise, you know,
and there are some of my conservative friends and you know,
I love and respect them and there are things that they will not compromise on
ever. And I understand that and I get that, but like, I'm not that guy.
And I don't think that I attract people in
terms of if they're listening to King Council Rob Smith or if they're
following me on Instagram or on any of the socials I don't think that that I
attract people that are looking for that guy I honestly don't even think that you
would be very interested you know in my perspective if like if I was that guy
and I don't think any of your listeners would be either.
Yeah.
Cause then you're not forming your own opinions.
No, man.
You're not forming your own opinions.
And from what I see in terms of, you know,
this sort of like conservative ecosphere
that's happening right now,
I think that when you start talking about different things,
when you start talking about health and wellness, which I like to talk about, like when you start talking about physical
fitness, as I'm on sort of like this constant journey to try to maintain some kind of shape,
right? As you talk about entrepreneurship, as I'm learning what is the business of podcasting,
what is the business of being a digital media entrepreneur, what is the business of podcasting? What is the business of being a digital media entrepreneur?
What is the business of all of this stuff?
And in my journey, the politics are great
and I believe in that stuff
and I'll always stand on that stuff.
But I've learned a lot about myself as an entrepreneur
during this journey.
I've learned that I'm actually a businessman
that's actually really good at making money.
And that's a part of all this. Yeah. And we'll dive into that.
I want to dive in the house stuff first. Cause you used to be fat. Oh man.
I was a fat kid. I was, I was a fat boy. Uh, none,
not a PC thing to say, but um, I grew up,
um, I grew up heavy man.
How heavy?
You know, it was, uh, you know, I, I, I don't even know if I can put the numbers on it.
The only number that I can give you is I can tell you what is it 2024.
I can tell you that about 2008, 2009, I was about 245 pounds.
If you go to my Instagram at Rob Smith online, I share some like before and after photos
because like I've been much heavier than what I am right now,
but I've also been much leaner.
So it's a process and I gotta tell you,
when I was heavier, what I can really point to
is just a lack of knowledge about food.
A lack of knowledge about the things that I should be eating,
how much of it I should be eating,
and what I should be doing in order to maintain shape.
So when I was younger,
and I was always a little bit different, right?
I was always kind of like the smart kid, the dorky kid.
You know, when you're a black kid going to high school,
you know, in Akron, Ohio, and everybody's playing sports,
and like maybe you're into books,
maybe you're into different things,
I had turned to food for comfort, for emotion. And I think that a lot of people things, I had turned to food for comfort, for emotion.
And I think that a lot of people do, and I do a little bit of fitness consulting on the
side.
And the first thing that I tell people is you have to take your emotions out of food.
Think about food as fuel, and think about what fuel is going to get me where I need
to go.
So when I was a lot heavier, there was a lot of food
as comfort food.
It's chips, it's pizza, it's junk.
And I still to this day fall prey to that sometimes.
But there is a knowledge, even when I am sort of
taking comfort in food sometimes, there's a knowledge of
what I should be eating and what I shouldn't be eating.
And I think that with the obesity issue that we have in this country, a lot of people literally
just do not know what they should and shouldn't be eating. I will tell you, you know, as a
black man, I come from a long lineage of, you know, we got the soul food, right? We
got the fried chicken, we got the mac and cheese, you know, we got the sweet potato
pie. We have all of that stuff that
is not doing us any favors health wise. So I had to learn, you know, what oil sees. I
had to learn about vegetables. I had to learn about proteins. I had to learn about protein
intake. And what I tell people when we have this conversation about physical fitness is
like, you're going gonna look at me obviously I
go to the gym obviously I lift obviously I do all that stuff but all of this
stuff starts in the kitchen yeah and what I always do to get myself back
together which I'm gonna start another one of in a couple days because I think
I'm a little heavier than I'd like to be right now although I think I you know
I'm not I don't think I'm scaring any kids right now, but you know, I could be more ripped.
I always like to do a whole 30 and a whole 30 is just 30 days of completely clean
eating, like no booze, no processed foods.
You're eating lean meats, fruits and vegetables.
And that will start changing your body.
You will lose what you need to lose,
but you will also kind of reformulate
your relationship with food.
Now you're like 10 feet tall.
Yeah, I'm 6'6".
I don't think, you know, you don't have these issues,
but look, I'm a five foot 10 dude,
and 10 extra pounds on me, you know,
you start looking a little wide,
especially when you work on camera,
especially when sort work on camera,
especially when digital video is your life.
I feel that.
And I'm coming off, it sounds crazy
that it's literally October,
and I'm talking about I'm coming off of summer,
but one of the perks and benefits
of digital media entrepreneurship
is being able to work when you want to work.
And I've taken a lot of trips this summer.
I was alcohol free for like 14 months, which was great. able to work when you want to work. And I've taken a lot of trips this summer.
I was alcohol free for like 14 months, which was great.
I came back to drinking more socially this summer.
So between the drinking socially and the traveling and all that stuff, there's a little bit that
was put on.
And so I'm going to rein it back in and I'm going to take 30 days to kill the booze, kill the food that I know
I shouldn't be eating and to refocus my energy
and efforts on health and fitness.
And when you do that, that not only changes your body,
but it changes your mind.
I love that.
It's cool to see politicians talking about health
this election.
Like RFK's stepping up big.
Yeah, make America healthy again.
And there is this mix.
There's like this, this, this, uh,
inter-ramp that's going on between the health and wellness community
and the political community.
Um, there's a, um, you have a friend that's at Turning Point USA,
like she does a podcast with them as well,
but she's all about health and wellness from kind of like the perspective of a young woman,
the perspective of somebody that wants to be a mother
one day, and you find a lot of people
that will be kind of drawn into a different way of thinking,
and you're not gonna get everybody by screaming at them
about politics all the time.
You wouldn't be as big as you are
if you were just like all about politics like all the
time.
You have to bring people in in different ways and the RFK thing and how he's building coalitions
that are about, hey, I was this Democrat, I ran for president, it didn't work out, but
you know what?
I think Trump is going to win and I want to be an asset to him when we start talking about
health and wellness.
I think that that's crucial.
Absolutely.
And it's relating with a lot of people,
because everyone knows someone in their family
that's dealing with some health stuff.
Yeah, dealing with health stuff,
dealing with obesity, or just dealing with the struggle
that is, you know, after a certain age,
you know, trying not to get above that, you know,
that 10, 15 pound mark.
This is what I tell all my listeners,
that if we're doing the health and wellness stuff, because I do like motivation Mondays, that you know that 10 15 pound mark this is what I tell all my listeners that
if we're doing the health and wellness stuff because I do like motivation mondays and I do fitness fridays because I've not had a perfect life I've not had an easy life but I've always
overcome right so I do a motivation mondays and fitness fridays on can't cancel Rob Smith
and with the fitness what I always tell people is like wherever you are in your fitness journey, like when you get to where you want to be, know what your goal weight is for you.
And this is not you trying to look like some six pack fitness influencer.
This is not you trying to look like the rock.
Like this is not you trying to look like anybody else but yourself, but try not to get any
more than 10 to 15 pounds above where your ideal self is
Because when you get above those 10 to 15 pounds it becomes so much harder to take off man
It becomes so much harder because those 15 become 20 that 20 becomes 30
then all of a sudden you're looking in the mirror and you're 50 pounds overweight and
That's a heavy lift now. I look at myself in the mirror right now and know that yeah, your boy's got a drop 10, you know?
But I know how to do that.
And I think that is where the knowledge
about health, fitness, wellness,
what you should be eating,
what you shouldn't be eating comes in.
And I think honestly,
it's even more important than the gym stuff.
Because the gym stuff,
no matter what you're doing in the gym if
You're right in the kitchen. You're gonna get to where you need to be. I agree
Yeah, I think people focus on the gym more than the health, but it should be the other way around. Yeah. Yeah, absolutely
I went through your Twitter, dude
You got some raw tweets. We got to go through some oh, let's do it
You tweeted out that Kamala Harris is to go through some of them. Oh, let's do it. You tweeted out that kamala harris is not black
Neither is barack obama. Oh
All right, so you're gonna okay, let's get into it
This got this got me. Um, this video got yanked from tik tok when I did. Oh it did. Yeah, man. Tik tok is very um
If you're right leaning you really got to toe the line. All right, so let's get into it
Barack obama is not black. He is a biracial man. He is equally white and black. I think that that is to be respected.
I have an issue as a black man with people that
opt into a black identity that are biracial and they use that for political reasons, right?
I don't like it. Now, Kamala Harris is even less black than barack obama because kamala harris's mother is indian
and her father is
A jamaican right and her father was also biracial because he's got some irish in his heritage as well
so you have a woman that is
Not not from black american ancestry at all
And if you want to really get into that,
and I think I should get into this a little bit more
on my podcast, a lot of black Americans
are now starting to have the conversation
about who is or isn't black,
because a lot of black Americans right now
are still dealing with some of the negative aspects
of the history of slavery in this country, right?
And like, I'm not that guy,
we're not gonna get into all of that,
but there are people that are having that conversation in the black community.
So when you see a Kamala Harris, who is biracial Indian and Jamaican, who was raised in Montreal,
by the way, and who has had by all accounts, a very privileged upbringing, use a black
American identity for political purposes.
So she goes to Howard, which is an HBCU.
She pledges AKA, which is Historically Black Sorority.
And she's doing all of these things.
It's very obvious in service
of a potential political career, right?
Wow.
This is what I believe.
Do you think it's been an elaborate plan from the start?
I think absolutely.
You look, when you get into the political world,
you meet some of the slimiest people
that you'll ever meet in your life.
None more slimy than the people that have been running
for office since they were 20 years old.
These are people that will do anything
and they have a long-term plan.
So I do believe that her plan was to eventually become,
like look at where she is.
This woman has at least a 50% chance
of becoming president of the United States. If Joe Biden dropped dead right now,% chance of becoming president of the United States
If Joe Biden dropped dead right now, she would be the president of the United States, right? That doesn't happen overnight
What I will say is that the powers that be
Kind of are projecting a black American identity onto her that isn't particularly authentic
This is why I did a video on tik- on TikTok that got like almost 10 million views, just making
fun of her different accents that she has with different audiences. You know, this is her doing,
like this is not me. So as somebody that is black American, as somebody who's, you know,
who has a lineage of slavery, and all of that stuff, I take offense to someone that is not a black American,
that someone that does not have that lineage of slavery.
In fact, Kamala Harris' family owned slaves, right?
So when I see this and I see this person being pushed
on me in a way that my identity as a black American
is somehow questioned if I do not support this person.
To me, that's completely insane.
And I call it out.
You know, it gets spicy on Twitter.
My Twitter is spicier than anything else
because that is the last bastion
of free speech on the internet.
I can't be as spicy on Twitter.
I can't be as spicy on TikTok, Insta,
like any of the other platforms as they can be on Twitter.
TikTok banned me from my Tulsi Gabbard interview.
Really?
Yeah.
Did they, they brought you back on, right?
They brought me back, yeah.
Yeah, just, it didn't even get many views,
but I think they have AI that flags the face.
Yes.
So she's gotta be on some list there.
She's gotta be.
And you know, I told the line, like, I'm very,
I'm new to TikTok, I'm not verified yet,
like I'm trying to get verified right now, and I really told the line, like, I don't go that hard to TikTok, I'm not verified yet, like I'm trying to get verified right now,
and I really toe the line,
I don't go that hard on TikTok,
I keep it very sort of like casually center right there.
And I go as hard on politics as I will go on Twitter
and on the podcast when I do the couple
of hyper political episodes a week,
because I try to make it all politics all the time.
But there is a conversation to be had about
like censorship in this country.
Oh yeah.
You know?
And I think that Elon opened up the conversation
when he bought X because I've been on X Twitter,
whatever you want to call it for years now.
And I remember even in the 2019, 2020 era as a conservative,
had done all this national media stuff,
had gotten all this press,
could not get verified to save my life on Twitter.
My tweets were going absolutely nowhere.
And I like backed off of Twitter for a really long time
because it was like, well,
if I'm going to be this suppressed,
why should I even be here?
So I backed off of Twitter and I focused on you know other things but I personally think that all of these
social media platforms should be broken up because the founding fathers that
have our you know that create our first minimum the right to free speech the
most fundamental right that we have as Americans they they did not know that, you know,
some shadowy people that nobody ever elected or nobody ever chose could be,
uh, in that much of a position of power over the free speech rights of Americans,
you know, and it's, it's everywhere. It's, it's, it's YouTube, it's Google,
it's tick tock. It's pretty much everywhere, but X right now.
X and parlor and rumumble, that's a-
And Parler and Rumble, absolutely, man, absolutely.
Definitely TikTok, yeah, Facebook already announced
they were doing it, so that's not even-
And you know, it's somebody that,
there's a lot of people that say a lot of stuff
online that I don't like about black people,
about Jews, about gays, about,
like there's a lot of people that say a lot of things
that I don't like,
but it is their right as Americans to say that.
And I think that when you hear speech
that can be qualified as hate speech,
if that's what you wanna call it,
let the people decide if this is something
that they wanna hear or not.
And I've noticed in particular, like,
since X has opened up,
I think that there's some very controversial figures
that were allowed to be on X.
And honestly, I think that when more people
are exposed to these people, and if they're exposed,
if they're exposing the crazy to a lot of people,
the people will tune out.
They will make their own decisions, right? But I don't think that it's up to a lot of people, the people will tune out. They will make their own decisions, right?
But I don't think that it's up to a lot of unelected shadowy people to make that
decision for the American people.
Agreed. And that's how I treat the podcast. I'll have on like Democrats,
I'll have on Republicans, doesn't matter.
Cause I'm going to let my audience decide how they feel about it.
Exactly. The people will decide. All right. If like, you know,
I joined TikTok six months ago
I can't cancel Rob Smith. It was went from 0 to 140 in six months, which was crazy, right?
and what I tell people about social media is that like 90% of social media is just showing up if
People thought I was crazy if they thought I was a crackpot if they thought I wasn't entertaining
If they thought that this guy is crazy, then they just wouldn't have consumed the content.
100%.
They wouldn't follow me, like they wouldn't listen.
So you gotta let the people decide, man.
Yeah.
Do you think for the first time ever,
we'll see the black vote go Republican this election?
No.
No?
No, I don't.
Oh wow.
And that's my actual thought about this.
And look, I'm a Republican,
I don't work for any conservative organizations I don't work for the RNC anything like
that I think the honest truth about the black vote is that it will continue to
go 90% for Democrats because what I think that people don't understand about
the black community is that voting for Democrats and liberalism is so deeply entrenched in that community I don't think it's going anywhere I think that people don't understand about the black community is that voting for Democrats and liberalism is so deeply entrenched in that community
I don't think it's going anywhere. I think that what will happen is less black people will start showing up for
Democrats in the reality of the situation and this is a non-politician answer the reality of the situation is that
when Democrat when is that when Democrats, when blacks just stop showing up for Democrats, that is
when Republicans win. Because you will have a lot of African-Americans, you have
a lot of black people in this country that know that the Democrats are wrong,
that know that Democrats have taken them for granted, that know that Democrats are
making moves in making this country, the border of this country, less secure, which
brings in an influx of illegal immigrants,
which by the way, go straight to black American communities
and overwhelm those resources, overwhelm those schools,
overwhelm those public resources.
Black people realize that.
And I think that they will stop showing up for Democrats.
But then again, at the same time,
these black people will never vote for Republicans. These black people will never vote for Democrats. But then again, at the same time, these black people will never vote for Republicans.
These black people will never vote for Trump.
They will never vote for JD Vance
because the Republican brand and the brand of Trump
and the brand of anybody that has an R next to their name
has been so tarnished in the eyes of black people
that they will step back from the process and they
will say I will never vote for Donald Trump but if he wins it's whatever.
You know I remember what my life was like you know and this is just the minds of the
average American right.
The average black American the average American in general, right? But
we'll just say black American because you asked me about black people. The average black
American can truly think back to their life between 2016 and 2020. And they know that
it was better. They know that gas was cheaper. They know that groceries were cheaper. They
know that everything was much less expensive. And so let's get into what, you know, Biden and the Kamala Harris has done.
And I think this is a very good point that our representative Byron Donalds made when
he visited the Breakfast Club a couple days ago.
The $1.9 trillion act that pretty much has thrown this economy into the recession that we're
seeing right now, Kamala Harris cast the tiebreaker vote.
Wow.
Yeah.
She cast the tiebreaker vote.
You know, the vice president has the ability to cast the tiebreaking vote in a divided
Senate.
So now, am I going to put this all on Kamala Harris?
Of course I can't.
There was a lot of poor choices that were made on
both sides of the aisle that led to the creation of that ridiculous bill that has thrown the
economics of this country into chaos. But she was a tie breaking vote. And so she is
the reason that a lot of people are hurting right now. So I think that since you asked
me about black Americans, there are a lot of people that can think to what their lives
look like in 2020 and what their lives look like now and
I think that they're gonna say some of them will come for Trump. I think that
black men in particular are coming more towards the Republican Party. Yeah. I
think black men in particular are coming more towards Trump. Black men are
becoming more drawn to the Republican Party.
And I think that they're gonna be like,
they'll vote for Republicans.
But I think the vast majority of black people,
I think the Republican brand is very damaged
and it's gonna take decades to improve that
in the eyes of most black Americans.
I truly do.
It's still 90-10, it's still dot-tastic.
It's still 90-10.
I believe that in 2020, don't quote me on this
I believe it was like 88 12 Wow. Yeah, I didn't know it was that much. Yeah, it was that much
It was still that much, you know, I really dug into the numbers
In in in 2020. I think I misspoke earlier. I meant 2020. I think it was still 87
13 that's crazy in 2020 and I'll be very interested. I think Trump's gonna win
I will be very interested to see what the breakdown of those numbers is after this election and
I'll probably do an episode of the pod where I
Really just break down the numbers because I think that what we're gonna see is I think that we're gonna see a similar split
I think that any Republican that's saying that you know Trump's gonna get you know
20% of the black vote is like living in
a fantasy world
But I would be very interested to see how that breaks down between black men and black women
Because I think that black men
are
Trending towards the Republican Party and towards the Republicans in general. I had Terrence Williams on yesterday
Yeah, yeah, yeah, Terrence is Yeah, I do see that trend but black woman
I can't think of many that support him. No, and you know what the black women vote?
I think is very interesting and I always bring up Ron DeSantis in Florida now
A lot of people don't realize because Ron DeSantis is so deeply popular in Florida and he's great governor for Florida
That he won his first election by the skin of his teeth. And he actually had a higher percentage
of the black female vote
than most Republicans had had before.
And I know for a fact that they pushed school choice
very hard in Florida at that point in time.
And I think that that was what flipped
the sort of the black female vote,
because you're talking about the moms.
And you're talking about the moms
that want the best for their children.
And I think that if you want to talk about
where Republicans can really make inroads among black women,
because I think that you appeal to black men
by talking about, you know, meat and potatoes,
entrepreneurship, you know, capitalism,
you know, secure the border.
But since I don't think that it's not PC to say that women are more
emotional than men, we're different. Women and men are different. And I think that an emotional
school choice appeal that's specifically directed to black women about how school choice can
positively impact the lives of their children, I think that's a really good way to bring some
women over to the Republican side. I think parents are waking up to the
school stuff too. Oh my god, you know what I mean, man you're talking to somebody that went to a
high school that was literally rated I think D or F by the Ohio Board of
Education. I never, I you know, I've never, I don't say the name of my high school publicly
because I don't want to put them out like that. But we could do a whole, another two
hours on the school system, how it trains, um, it trains kids to be robots and zombies.
I think that with male children in particular, no matter what the color is, I think that with male children in particular no matter what the color is I think that
it sort of trains them to be
You know the eat to sit still like it trains them to be just like a little bit more docile
Um than young boys are and I think that there's so many issues with that like I want to be a father one day
I would never put my children in the public school system. No shot.
Ever.
Like not in a million years.
No shot.
I got bullied.
I was in a fear-based state because worrying about grades.
And I learned nothing.
Yeah.
A fear-based state and you were a child, you were bullied in high school.
I was bullied as well.
You know, like when you're the black kid who, I think that I was kind of gay coded in high
school. You know like when you're the black kid who I think that I was kind of gay coded in high school
You know I you know I you really know my sexuality was like at that point
But I think was gay coded in high school. I was definitely like more sort of intellectual more bookish
my athleticism
Which is actually crazy that I didn't discover I didn't discover my natural athleticism until I was like literally in my 30s
Well, that's late
yeah, it was I was I was late bloomer athletically because
It just was never really brought out of me in high school
And I think that there was also a mentality in my mind and also again single single mother household, right?
Like I think that you know a male and female influence is definitely needed
You know for young kids, especially male children, right?
But um, you know that fear-based state is very interesting because you are in a fear-based state when you're in the public school system
Don't take risks study for the test know this know that and then be a good little cog
To go into the machine
so that you can sit at a desk for the rest of your life
and work for somebody else.
Yep, and they just pulled a bunch of college students.
This came out last week, I think 86% of them say
they regretted paying all that money for college.
Yeah, I mean, I was blessed enough,
I had military service.
I joined the military right out of high school,
did a tour in Iraq, did all that stuff. I was blessed enough to have the GI Bill, which took
care of a big chunk of my undergrad. I think I had something like
$40,000 in student loan for undergrad. I don't regret that. Syracuse was a great
experience, but I was blessed enough to have a military program that paid for my
graduate degree from Columbia for broadcast journalism. It's hundred fifty thousand dollar degree and I tell a lot
of people that are interested in sort of the journalism media industry the worst
thing you can do for yourself really is to oh my god is to shell out a hundred
fifty thousand dollars for a journalism program I will give you a story about
that so granted you know like I said the military program paid for my degree.
So I didn't have to shell out for Columbia.
So I've got this big flashy Columbia University master's degree in journalism,
the top journalism school in the world.
They make you think that that is just going to be your entree into the entire
media industry. And it just wasn't for me. You know, I struggled.
I got my first job after graduate school
at Columbia University by learning Final Cut Pro on YouTube.
I love it.
And working for a digital media, sort of like Chop Shop,
we did entertainment oriented videos
and all that other stuff.
I got that job because I learned Final Cut Pro on YouTube.
And I tell everybody, if you're interested in,
you know, being a commentator, journalism media, whatever,
just go do it.
Go podcast, start a TikTok, get on Twitter.
All of these tools are available to you.
Like that phone right there can literally,
like the phone changed my life
because I just started.
I worked in mainstream media for years
and it was going nowhere.
It was going, you know where it's headed?
Where?
It was headed towards
me maybe getting to the point where I was making,
like maybe I would, after 15 years of that industry, I
would maybe be making like 250 maybe as a senior like top level producer, right?
It's very hard to make it on camera, but let's say I gave up trying to make it on camera
and I just went to be producing.
It was leading me towards a path where I was like some 45 year old senior producer
at one of the networks making $180,000 to $230,000 a year
and getting chopped unceremoniously
and them hiring somebody else that they could pay
a third of that to do the same job.
Because I've seen it happen to people in that industry.
And I said, I got fired from or laid off quote unquote for my last job in that industry. And I said, I got fired from, or laid off quote unquote,
from my last job in traditional media, it was Yahoo News.
It was my first, like that was when I hit Six Figures
for the first time, and everybody thinks like,
oh my God, Six Figures is so great,
like it was like nothing, right?
Cause it was taxes and all that.
They chopped me via email the week before Thanksgiving.
Whoa.
That was my last job in traditional media.
That was the last time I've ever reported to an office.
And that was in 2016 or 2017.
I think it was 2017, my last job in an office.
And I said, I'm never putting myself in a position again
where somebody is going, I was good at that job,
I'm never putting myself in a position again
where somebody's gonna fire me via email
the week before Thanksgiving
and not think another thought about me.
Never again.
Ruthless, because people don't care about you.
So you have to build your own, you have to own your own,
and you have to know, obviously, you have to own your own, and you have to know, like obviously,
who am I telling this to?
But obviously, like for the listeners,
you have to build your own, you have to own your own,
and you have to know the business.
When I got famous, quote unquote,
in this industry five years ago, you know,
it was great because there was all this attention,
I was getting all this followers and all this other stuff.
But I still didn't know the business of this industry.
Like I was still running around cable news sets
thinking that that mattered.
And by the way, not being paid by these networks as well.
Right, because unless you're a paid contributor
to these networks, like you're not getting paid.
You're just doing it for the cloud or for the press
or for whatever.
And not knowing the business of YouTube, not knowing the business of podcasting,
not knowing that you can make money, you know, via Facebook and via TikTok and
all these other things.
And so all of that is what I've had to learn, you know, over the past, you know,
five years.
And there's a lot of people that really do believe in journalism and
believe in media and I think that when deployed the right way journalism can be
very important I don't think that anything that any of these people are
doing right now can be consumed as journalism at all but I tell the people
that come to me I say start that podcast start that YouTube channel get on
TikTok get on Twitter,
figure it out and figure out the business
of all of this stuff because we're in an era right now,
and it wasn't like this even five, six years ago,
where I can fully sustain myself via these platforms,
but you gotta know the business.
That's where I'm at too.
Yeah man.
Yeah, just cause you have followers
doesn't mean you can make money too.
Man, do you know how many people that have
a hundreds of thousands of followers on social media
are broke?
A lot.
Bro, a lot.
Even millions, I know.
What's that?
Even people with millions, I know that are broke.
Millions.
Because man, it's very hard to monetize this stuff
and it's very hard to know how to monetize it.
And unless you are lucky enough to, I would say like get picked up by a large
network and I'm kind of like in the space right now where all of my stuff is Indiana.
Like I know how to make money from this, right?
I know how to budget myself and how to sustain myself.
I know how to spend on what I know how to get the sponsors.
I know how to make money.
But at the same time, like I'm in the space right now where I have so many different interests
that I'm like, okay, I need to build this up
and get picked up by a larger network.
So all of these things, the content stuff,
becomes turnkey, and then I can focus on
doing more consulting work,
and I can focus on doing more speaking work,
and I can focus on doing more books,
I can focus on even doing more stuff
in the political scene, right?
But there's a lot of people that have huge followings
and huge platforms that are not making money
from these platforms.
And that's the question I get asked the most,
how to get more followers, but that's the wrong mindset.
You need to be focusing on the content.
Bro, the thing about, it's really funny,
like, oh, how do I get more followers? Like, when I first started, and it's really funny, like oh, how do I get more followers?
Like when I first started, and it's really funny,
like 10K is like that number everybody's
when they first start, right?
10K is the big deal, right?
And you think like if I can just get to 10K,
I will just like, I'll be made, like I'll be set.
And then that 10K becomes 50, then it becomes 100,
then it becomes 30, because whatever,
fundamentally, if you just keep showing up, And then that 10k becomes 50 then becomes 100 then it becomes three because whatever fundamentally if
You just keep showing up the people will come to you
But followers don't mean anything because let me tell you there are people with
We'll say I think I have about 1.4 million followers on all social platforms
I were talking Facebook tick tock YouTube Twitter, whatever there are people that probably have
10% of my following that are out earning me right now
because they have a dedicated fan base
and they also are selling different things
to their listeners.
And that's the phase that I'm in right now
as an entrepreneur that I'm shifting into
to where we talked a lot about the media stuff
and we talked a lot about, you know,
the journalism media industry as well.
So how can I create a course where I'm like,
like digital media one-on-one?
What are all of these things that I've learned
that I can put into a 30, 40, $50 course
and really sell to people and really give them something that they can use.
Because one of the biggest categories in sales
in this whole thing is education.
People wanna use these social media platforms
to learn something.
And that's why I started not moving away from the politics,
but not that being the only thing that I do
because if politics is the only thing that you do then the only thing that you
have to sell people is your political content and your videos and your ideas
and all that stuff and like that's whatever but you also get to the point
where you want to help people and like I do a little bit of fitness stuff I think
the fitness stuff I think the fitness space do a little bit of fitness stuff. I think the fitness stuff, I think the
fitness space is a little saturated with people that are a lot better at it than me. So I don't
focus on that. But what I do focus on is I can teach you how to go from zero to 10,000 followers.
You know what I mean? If you're a journalism person, if you're a media person, if you really
want to do this, I can teach you how to do that. And so that's my next focus,
and that's one of my goals for 2025 with all of this,
because if I know anything about the political space,
is that the attention span of most people
drops off the day after the election,
like most people stop caring, you know?
So you have to have something more to give people.
Yeah, I think in November,
views are gonna be down probably at least 50%
on political content.
Oh yeah, yeah, yeah. and if all you're doing is
political content because I've seen it happen like I saw it happen last
election cycle when I was like hardcore politics and then it just drops off
like you have to give people something outside of that. Absolutely. Have you had
any conversations with Don Lemon? I have not man. You have not. I've you know I've never like I knew
Don Lemon back when I was a lib and I had a couple of interactions with him at different events.
He's a bit of a snob. You know you have to meet him three or four times before he will acknowledge
your existence. Whoa. Oh yeah he's a snob. And the Don Lemon thing has been very
interesting to see because I do believe Don will be back at CNN at some point with
the next company. Absolutely, absolutely I will be. Because he is not smart enough
to carry his own brand via digital media. He's not smart enough.
He needs the team because he doesn't wanna be open
and honest about who he is, which is pretty center right.
Like I think that Don Lemon is a pretty center right guy.
I used to share all this political content
on my Facebook page and one of them was a clip
that goes viral among conservatives all the time about he
made some comments in 2013, black men pull your pants up, nobody wants to smell the weed
smoke like all that stuff.
And that went viral.
So I think that who Don Lemon truly is, is a kind of like either old school lib or kind
of like a center right leaning lib.
But when you built the brand that he's built, and you're kind of like owned by the left, you're not going to be that.
And so that's why his entire digital media presence is not doing well. Because in the
age of digital media, you have to be yourself. You got to be yourself because if you are
lying and if you're phoning it in, people it people smell it and it is repulsive to people
If you are not being your true self, it's repulsive to people
Social-media Don Lemon is not being his true self. I believe that he will be back at CNN
He needs this the structure behind him. He needs that behind him and I think that he'll probably
You know absorb whatever digital media operation that he'll probably you know absorb whatever
digital media operation that he has built back into CNN I think that they
both need each other and I think that when you look at CNN they're so
obviously going back to kind of like that Jeff Zucker playbook of being very
anti-Trump look I don't want to get too overconfident but I think everybody kind
of knows that Trump is about to be president again yeah and I think that for the mainstream media a lot of people
particularly CNN MSNBC or whatever they're just gonna go all in on the
Trump hate train because this is what they know how to do like this is what
makes them money all right and so I think that Don Lemon back at CNN is a
win-win for both of them he got the bag from CNN because they I think that
Why he got shown the door at CNN?
I think that that was kind of like he got a little railroaded and I feel the same way about when Megan Kelly's
Relationship with NBC ended because the blackface comment she got railroaded there
Yeah, like that wasn't fair so I can be equal enough and say that both of these people
Got shown the door and got a big bag on the way out by the way in ways that were not fair
I think that CNN and Don Lemon are gonna make nice again. I think that he will be back there before
The midterms Wow
Absolutely like you heard it here first that is all
Diction clip that up and then you got the opposite trajectory with Candice Owens She is just blowing up man Candice is okay
Like when I look at Candice's path, I'm like man. She made now. She isn't always you know, she's controversial
she's gonna tell you what she believes but the trajectory of her career is brilliant because
She
Got the bag from Daily Wire,
she was with them for three years.
From what I hear that that was a,
we'll say multi-million dollar contract
over those three years.
So she got the bag from Daily Wire,
learned the business,
okay, learned the business of podcasting and media,
all of this stuff,
completely demolished that bridge.
Like that bridge is burnt.
Like that bridge is destroyed.
And politics, sometimes people can kind of come back together again and all that
stuff. Like look at who the vice presidential candidate is right now.
Right. Candace owns a daily wire.
Like they're done. Right.
So from a business perspective, now she's come back what people don't understand and will you understand this?
Because you independently own your podcast now
Candace Owens has come back to the tune of an a podcast that she completely owns
100% up by the way
She has learned the business from daily wire got the bag from them
Learned the business and is like now doing her own thing, and is killing it.
And would always say, look, you don't have to agree
with everything that somebody says to look at the business.
You know what I mean?
I'm focused on the business, and the business acumen
was executed beautifully.
Now, is she pissing a lot of people off right now?
Absolutely, that's what Candice does.
She got demonetized on YouTube last week.
Yeah, did she?
Did they bring her back?
I don't know, but either way,
she'll be able to sell that thing
for a lot of money when she's ready.
Yeah, man.
So like now she's going indie and she's,
and now when she decides
that she doesn't wanna do that anymore,
then that's like, it's brilliant.
There's been six podcasts acquired
for over 80 million this year.
That's wild. So she'll be next. I think Theo Vaughn will be next. I mean, it's brilliant. There's been six podcasts acquired for over 80 million this year. That's wild.
So she'll be next.
I think Theo Vaughn will be next.
I mean, there's some podcast empires
being built before our eyes.
Man, if you,
and like,
if that podcast empire is like the thing
that you wanna do,
like just, you can build it up and you can sell it.
Like, you know, we have a conversation more
about kind of like what I wanna to do with my my thing because
honestly, I
Don't you know the media thing in the podcasting thing like this is what I'm doing right now
I think that there are maybe some other things
More explicitly in the political realm that I think that I may want to do in the future
So I definitely
the future. So I definitely see the trajectory with this podcasting thing. And like a lot of people think that podcasting is saturated but I really
don't. I don't think it is. I don't think it is. I think that the people that are
blowing over now like are we gonna see like a lot of 80 million, 90 million
dollar podcast deals? No. But I think that people are so starved for
authenticity and I think that when people find their person like you know I've been doing can't cancel Rob
Smith for years at this point but it's been I will say that when I first
started you know when you have a lot of people around you and like when you're
around Trump's and when you're doing the mainstream media thing right now like I
think that sometimes you are not respectful enough
of your audience, and I think that sometimes
when you get knocked down a couple of pegs,
and when some of the other stuff,
you're just like, man, you're in a place where,
you know, my audience, like my people,
like my problematics, my podcast used to be called
Rob Smith is Problematic, now it's Can't Cancel Rob Smith,
but like those are your people, you know,
so you gotta think about those people before you start thinking about any of this other stuff before you're thinking about the RNC or
Trump's or Fox or Newsmax or CNN or whoever like you gotta think about your audience first
Of course got to Rob. It's been a pleasure man. Where can people find you find your pod and everything?
Yeah, you can find King cancel Rob Smith on on Apple Podcasts, I Heart Podcasts, wherever you get your podcasts.
You can find me on Twitter, or excuse me,
on TikTok at Can Cancel Rob Smith,
and on all other social media handles at Rob Smith Online.
So Facebook, Instagram, X,
and YouTube is at Rob Smith Online.
Man, thank you so much for the opportunity.
It's been great.
I'm just really mad, it's been a pleasure.
Check out the links below, guys.
All right, man. See you guys next for the opportunity. This has been great. I'm just really mad. It's been a pleasure. Check out the links below, guys. All right, man.
See you guys next time.
Peace.