Digital Social Hour - Secrets Behind Building a $1B Crypto Brand | Luca Netz DSH #1210
Episode Date: February 28, 2025🚀 Discover the "Secrets Behind Building a $1B Crypto Brand" with Luca Netz on the Digital Social Hour! 💡 In this captivating episode, Luca shares his incredible journey of transforming Pudgy Pen...guins into a cultural phenomenon and a billion-dollar crypto brand. From navigating the NFT market to launching revolutionary tokens like $PENYU, this conversation is packed with valuable insights for entrepreneurs, crypto enthusiasts, and anyone looking to make waves in Web3. 🌐 🔥 Get the inside scoop on: - The rise of Pudgy Penguins and its global impact 🌟 - Bold strategies that redefined the NFT and crypto space 🐧 - How Luca overcame challenges and built an unstoppable team 💪 - The role of memes, community, and cultural relevance in crypto success 🎯 Tune in now and join the conversation! Don't miss out on this inspiring and action-packed episode. 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! 🚀 CHAPTERS: 00:00 - Intro 00:28 - Crypto Bull Run 01:40 - Pengu Launch 04:06 - Pengu to the Moon 06:57 - Pengu Community 12:05 - Introvert in an Extroverted World 15:02 - Pivotal Decisions for Pudgy Penguins 17:20 - Acquiring Frame 18:34 - The Public Fumble 21:35 - The Chip on Your Shoulder 27:20 - Keys to Success 30:47 - Gifting List Ideas 33:50 - Meme Page Content Strategy 40:40 - Documenting the Journey 45:59 - LeBron vs. MJ Debate 50:00 - What Separates the Greats 51:50 - Getting Involved with Pudgy Penguins APPLY TO BE ON THE PODCAST: https://www.digitalsocialhour.com/application BUSINESS INQUIRIES/SPONSORS: jenna@digitalsocialhour.com GUEST: Luca Netz https://www.instagram.com/lucanetz/ 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/ #crypto #cryptobanter #ethereum #cryptonewstoday #cryptonews
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Of course not, you know, but it's fuel because, you know, after we did that a couple months
later I realized that like every great story has something like this in the equation
Just makes it just makes the story even greater. Right, right?
Like everyone knows the forward-facing story the behind-the-scenes stories just as epic
You know from like literally being broke
All right guys got Luca nets back on the show it's been a while my friend it's been a while two years, huh? Yeah, you've been up to a lot on the show. It's been a while, my friend.
It's been a while, two years, huh?
Yeah, you've been up to a lot in the past two years.
Just a little.
Yeah, and now it's a crypto bull run, they say, right?
Yeah, a weird bull run, but a bull run nonetheless.
Yeah, what makes this one weird?
It's just the other ones were a lot more explosive.
But this one might be good.
It might be a new era for crypto with the ETFs
and things like that.
So I think with a little less explosiveness,
maybe a little less nuke edge.
Yeah, well, Bitcoin reclaimed 100K yesterday, right?
Yeah.
Trump seems to be very pro crypto.
Super.
Announcing a crypto reserve,
potentially no tax on crypto, which would be nuts.
Crazy.
You know, right now it's like 40%.
So that'd be huge.
Yeah.
Are you into politics at all?
Yeah, I'm pretty political.
But because of my positioning at Pudgee,
I'm not really transparent on my political stance.
That makes sense, man.
Ripple's pumping.
You got any ripple?
I don't, but kudos to those guys.
I didn't see that one coming, to be honest.
Me neither.
I mean, I always heard it was like the future of banking
years ago.
I just never took it serious.
They did good with that narrative.
Yeah.
Apparently, they make a ton of money.
And I think the institutions, they have huge PMF
with the institutions.
Absolutely.
You got Pangu at launch.
Congrats on the launch.
Appreciate it.
What's the plan for that?
I think the thesis is like, when you
look at these memetic tokens, this idea that mimetic
tokens should do nothing and be nothing, I think is such a disservice to the category.
If you understand the Pudgy Penguin lore and the story, a lot of the mimetic culture that
you see today very much was originated through that community and through that culture back
that they started in 2021. And then you kind of look at like, what does Pengu need to be and what does Pudgy Penguins
need to be to kind of take it to the next level? It's very much like a cultural phenomenon. And
so, you know, Pengu today is a memetic cultural coin that I think is going to push the boundaries and continue to break barriers within the industry
around what I think these type of tokens can ultimately be. And it's predicated on trying to
continue to do things in crypto that I think only we can do. And so it's a really interesting position it's in today, one
that I think was really necessary for this ecosystem
to kind of take that next leg forward.
And I think it's going to follow the same path
that the NFTs has followed over the last couple of years.
Yeah, I thought the launch was excellent.
Most NFTs launch coins, and they don't do too well,
if we're being honest. Yeah, you know
Yeah, we we gave 1.2 billion dollars to the people crazy
You know Pudgey has always been for the people by the people and so not only did we give
Think six seven hundred million dollars to our NFT holders
We have six seven hundred million dollars to a bunch of you know, both within the Ethereum and the Solana
ecosystem.
And again, I think it just comes down to the story that we're trying to tell, which is
like, I want Pudgy Penguins and Pengu to be the face of crypto, the mascot of crypto.
I think it's this cycle's cultural phenomenon.
And it just seemed like the right way and the right strategy to do it.
And so a lot of people are happy.
I think we have like 650,000 on chain holders,
one of the biggest tokens on chain from a holder base
within four weeks.
And I'm pretty sure by the time 2025 is over,
it'll be the biggest on chain holder base in crypto.
Incredible.
I was watching you on Scott Hillsay show, shout out to Scott.
And you were saying how you wanted
Pudgy to be the face of penguins overall,
not just like a Pudgy penguin, but the actual penguin animal.
Yeah.
There's two facets, right?
Because Pudgy also is a very successful Web2 business, right?
And that Web2 business is capturing a category
around the penguin that I think very few companies are capturing.
And so on one side of the spectrum, when people think penguins, I want them to think pudgy
penguins.
And on the other side of the spectrum in the crypto world, I want when people think culture
coins and mimetic coins and cultural phenomenons and
what is the best animal token within the crypto industry, I want them to think, you know,
Pudgy Penguins.
So there's two missions.
Those missions really...
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Cross-pollinate and help each other in a meaningful way, right?
If Pudgy Penguins is the face of penguins around the world,
that transcends into crypto in a super meaningful way.
And if, you know, Pudgy Penguins is the face and the mascot of crypto,
I think that transcends into, you know, being the face of penguins around the world.
So they're very much a yin and yang.
It's almost like bridging the two worlds together, right?
around the world, so they're very much a yin and yang. It's almost like bridging the two worlds together, right?
It's the only thing in crypto
that has manufactured that bridge.
I think there's things in crypto
that have bridged that gap in the past,
but it was almost like lightning in a bottle.
And this is a very different story.
It's very much a consistent steady climb to the right. One that you know was
earned and developed and fought for. You know, you know, I took this over at the
beginning of the bear market, right? And so all odds stacked against us and
we've just been kind of just fighting through doing what we thought was needed
for the industry and for the ecosystem.
So I think it's a lot different than everything you've seen in the past.
You know, in terms of crypto cultural phenomenons, I think Doge and Apecoin were probably the
two that we had seen up until this point.
But again, I think very different stories in terms of how each of those got there.
And obviously I think Pudgy Penguins is taking, it's more of like an evergreen story, one
that isn't just a flash in the pan or a moment in time.
You can kind of see it gradually just kind of inching and fighting towards hopefully
the end destination, which is being number one across many different verticals.
So obviously, we have a lot to go, a lot to fight for,
a lot to continue to grind towards.
But I'm really excited to be in the position
that we're in today.
And I think the ecosystem and the community and the business
has never been in a better position.
And I think that only creates more leverage and more
opportunity for us.
I love it.
You got holders everywhere, not just the US.
You recently just went to Asia, right?
Yeah, it's a family, dude. I can go to any country,
any city around the world and have a place to stay.
That's crazy.
It's insane.
So you're staying at holders' houses?
I'm not staying at holders' houses.
What I'm saying, if I wanted to, I could.
There isn't a place that I can't go and have dinner and hang out with people.
It's a pretty crazy ecosystem to say the least.
And it's one that I'm super grateful for.
You know, that's the beauty of the Pudgee.
I say this all the time and most people,
you know, I said this years ago,
but the Pudgee community is so much more different
because of the nature of the IP, right?
And the reason being is it's less of a demographic
and more of a psychographic.
And so the psychographic around people
who wear the Pudgy Penguin NFT and participate
within the Pudgy Penguin ecosystem,
it is a very wholesome, kind, funny, wholehearted, advanced,
sophisticated.
It's just like you don't have these weird people
that I think some of these communities have.
Obviously there's not always an anomaly
and there's always an outlier.
But the sum of the Pudgy Penguin community
is really everything for everyone, right?
You have community for elite traders,
you have women in the community, a vast majority of women, you know,
I think probably the highest concentration
in an ecosystem of women, I think in crypto.
Wow.
And, you know, you have 15 year olds, you have 60 year olds,
you have people in Asia, you have people in America,
you know, people from all walks of life
in different professions.
And that is predicated around the universal nature
of the IP.
So one of the things that made me really excited
about Pudgy Penguins was that it was so universal, right?
Like everyone can identify with it.
Anyone can resonate with it.
And thus the TAM for demand is boundless, right?
There's almost like no handicap in terms of the TAM.
You could argue at one point with Bored Apes,
there was a certain demographic and psychographic of people
that just didn't resonate with that as amazing of a master
class that was.
There was always a ceiling on the TAM
in regards to where I thought that could go.
Doge maybe less so.
But yeah, I think it's really fascinating.
So to your point, yeah, I'm in Asia.
We're just as big in Asia as we are in America.
It's pretty fascinating.
I can bring more people out at an event in Singapore
than I think I can anywhere else in the world.
Damn.
For sure.
That's impressive.
And so it's an amazing,
you were around when I was thinking about buying it,
when I started to buy it, you couldn't have seen,
this was in the upper percentile of what could have happened.
But now we're in a pocket
that I think is a generational pocket.
So now it's like, we got here not by luck.
I mean, this is very much, I think the opposite of luck.
This was like the epitome of success in crypto via hard work.
No one can, I think, can say otherwise.
I think that's social consensus within the industry.
But yeah, we got a lot further to go. I still remember your tweet offering to buy the industry, but yeah, we got a lot further to go.
I still remember your tweet offering to buy the company,
which by the way, it was Twitter back then,
and you bought the company off Twitter,
which is a crazy story.
You tweeted out your offer, right?
Unconsciously, yeah.
And if I didn't tweet it, I would have never have got it.
Crazy, because he wouldn't have known.
He wouldn't have known.
And it wasn't even him who knew.
He disregarded it.
He thought it was a bluff.
It turned out I was on a boat with one of his childhood
friends a couple of weeks prior via Luke.
I never go on boats.
I'm an introvert.
You know that a little bit about me.
I stay in the house.
So probably the third or I've only been on a boat.
I live in Miami.
So in the four years I've lived in Miami, I've probably been on a boat. I live in Miami. So in the four years I've lived in Miami,
I've probably been on a boat three or four times.
One of the three or four times I was on a boat,
I was with Cole's childhood best friend.
There was eight people on a boat.
So like the odds of that are quite literally one in billions.
And he saw my tweet and told Cole that this was serious.
And if I had inquired and Cole said no,
I thought he was bluffing.
And then Cole picked me and then that started the conversation.
And probably one of maybe four or five pieces
that I think are just so universally aligned.
That is crazy.
Yeah, I know you're a massive introvert,
but I've seen you toggle it too.
Yeah, no, I can toggle it.
When I toggle it to the extrovert side,
I've got a clock on it. And I can dig it. I just, when I toggle it to the extrovert side, I've got a clock on it.
Right.
And I can dig deep and I can expand that clock.
But I burn out big time.
So when I do the conference tours and all that,
once I'm back home, I'm out for three or four days.
Facts.
Yeah, when I go to a conference, dude,
I'm more tired from a conference than basketball.
All day.
Like, all day.
Like, it's crazy.
I could do the most insane lift at the gym.
I'll be more tired doing five podcasts in a row than lifting. All day. Like all day. Not even close. Like it's crazy. I could do the most insane lift at the gym.
I'll be more tired doing five podcasts in a row
than lifting.
Yeah, it's an introvert thing, right?
Have you always been that way, you think?
Always been that way.
I didn't really realize it until like, you know,
since Pudgy, but, and I'm shaking hands
and kissing babies and doing the whole thing, you know?
So, and you gotta show these people respect.
You know, I think like one of the big things in cryptos, none of these founders show the these people respect. I think one of the big things in crypto is
none of these founders show the supporters any respect.
It's fascinating,
because they're so pivotal to your success.
And so not only am I showing up,
I'm trying my best to leave the ultimate impression.
So I'm digging deep.
People don't realize it, but I'm digging deep.
Yeah, yeah, I feel that.
Crypto overall has a lot of introverts,
especially the people at the top of crypto.
There must be something there.
Must be.
You know, because every single person I know
that's really bothering crypto is an introvert.
Because it's a critical thinking business.
It is a business that is so predicated
off of decision- making more than anything.
And I think maybe I'm just speaking out loud to that point.
Maybe like I think the most important thing I do in my job outside of the community building
and the championing is the critical thinking and the decision making.
And one mistake in crypto is fatal. And so you very much have to be in your thoughts
running scenarios all the time.
And I think that's probably really well suited
for an introvert.
Right.
Does that ever get to you?
Do you get in your own head about that?
No, because I've got a really good group.
I mean, ultimately, I do.
The success that you're seeing today
is like I play a role really good group. I mean, ultimately I do the success that you're seeing today is like,
I play a role obviously, but my team,
Peter, Lorenzo, these guys are,
I mean, I don't really wanna build a business
if I were to build another business for some reason,
which I won't, but I wouldn't wanna build a business
with any other people.
This is my crew.
This is my, it's a once in a lifetime crew.
Every weakness that one of us has, the other one,
it's their strength.
Wow.
So there's like, we're covered on like every base,
you know, from the technology side of the creative
to the strategy, to the operations, you know,
to the championing and leadership.
Every single weakness that, if I have a weakness,
somebody else on that, of those four guys,
supplements that weakness.
So you've identified your weaknesses.
Yeah, totally. A long time ago.
That's important, right, for business owners?
Yeah.
A lot of people never take time to reflect on what they're good,
what they're about at.
I mean, dude, I made my whole career.
I never owned 100% of anything.
I think we talked about this in the last podcast. I never owned 100% of anything. I think we talked about this in the last podcast.
I never owned 100% of anything, because I
know what I'm not good at.
And so like why I'd rather have a smaller
percentage of a bigger pie than a better lifestyle
to a degree, you know?
Yeah.
Then try to go and take everything myself,
because I know what I'm not good at.
Absolutely. You mentioned pivotal decisions earlier. What are some that stand out to you for public? Yeah. And try to go and take everything myself, because I know what I'm not good at.
Absolutely.
You mentioned pivotal decisions earlier.
What are some that stand out to you for Pudgy Penguins, where it was like a make or break
kind of moment?
Licensing the NFT IP from the holders to make the products.
So every product that you see on shelf and Walmart, Target, and everywhere else is actually
an NFT held from the holder.
The symbolism around that, I think,
was really important at that time
because there was a really an extractive industry.
And here we came the little guy.
And we kind of also reinvented the IP business too.
We didn't really intentionally do that,
but this idea that first edition collectors can be participants and not every single person
within your brand ecosystem is just a consumer.
So in this case, if you're a Pudgy Penguin NFT holder,
you have the opportunity to participate
in the growth of the brand, whether it's
the products or the characters.
And we license that from you and we give you
a royalty in perpetuity.
That was a really big decision.
The toy deal and us getting and starting
those physical products was big.
Doing that at that time was big.
Not getting overly political,
both of them obviously maybe traditional politics
and more so crypto politics.
Always try to stay neutral.
A lot of crypto politics.
Yeah, just no need to be a drama queen.
I think that's probably like an evergreen decision.
The idea to do that Pengu, clearly,
they just changed everything.
The ecosystem in 2024, I felt like was getting
a little boring and a predictable.
So I ended the year with the most unpredictable bang and thing you could possibly do.
Change the dynamic. And everyone knew we've been a leader in the space for the last 14 months.
We were a top three NFT project for the last 14 months.
But it just seemed clear that we had to do something exciting and crypto native.
And so Pengu was a huge decision.
Abstract, the way that all of this is tying together.
So we have an L2 called abstract.
I think it's going to change everything.
This might be one of the biggest.
This might be the biggest bang yet.
How I'm envisioning it, obviously,
it has to follow that vision.
But I think that's going to be huge.
That decision to acquire frame and bring that team in,
Saigar and crew, group of Chads, that was just
such a genius decision.
We could have raised a monster round.
We could have raised a 10 figure round, and we didn't.
I think that was a good decision.
10 figures, when was that?
Recently.
But we, all of our, we've only raised,
and it's via safe, this is our business.
Yeah.
You know what I mean, no one sits on the cab table,
no one tells me anything.
To raise the, at the 10 figure evaluation,
we would have given up board seats and things like that.
And I know myself well enough,
once I go down that rabbit hole,
like the raise has to be so monstrous
and has to capitalize the business so well.
And this was a good one,
but like I need hundreds of millions of dollars,
not a hundred, you know, to do that.
Because then the trade off is worth it.
The trade off in the sense that like,
if I have to answer to people,
it's worth answering to people or having people chime in
if there's an excess amount of capital
to push the boundary so far.
So that's an interesting one.
Yeah, that makes sense.
Yeah.
So we've got that probably,
you know, these aren't decisions that I made,
but one of our business partners fucked us.
Yeah, we talked about that on the last show, right?
You know a little bit about that.
Did you ever go public with that story?
No.
Wow.
That takes a big person to like not like, you know.
Yeah, no, but it's not needed, but look at it now.
How crazy is that now?
Oh, he's probably pissed.
Generational wealth, he fumbled.
He's pissed.
All over, what was it, 100k or something?
A million bucks.
Oh, a million bucks.
He made a million bucks, but.
A million's not a million what it used to be, though.
Yeah, his equity would probably be worth 100 right now.
Holy crap.
You know, he would have had some.
Has he contacted you?
No, no, he knows.
He knows not to.
But it doesn't matter, right?
Because you know how hard that was for me at the time?
I mean, he took 20% of my balance sheet.
Yeah.
And he was one of my best friends.
I know, you were really hurt at the time about that,
I remember.
Yeah, I told him.
I literally pleaded with him not to do it.
And he was ruthless about it.
And he quite literally fumbled hundreds of millions of dollars.
What a story.
And he has to live with that too.
Oh, and he will.
And he will, trust me.
Do you hold grudges?
I hold fuel.
So even with this launch, I thought about him every day.
Because it's not that it's a grudge,
like what am I gonna do, beat the kid up?
Like that's something like, you know,
or like get mad or call him mean names.
Like, of course not, you know, but it's fuel.
Because, you know, after he did that a couple months later,
I realized that that every great story
has something like this in the equation.
It just makes the story even greater.
Everyone knows the forward-facing story,
the behind-the-scenes story just is epic.
From literally being broke on our last dollar
to raising that round out of hell,
quite literally hell, and the Black Swan events that we got
to like a month later,
my one of my best friends trying to wot me
for a million bucks.
It was 1.5, you know, it was 1.5 after taxes and everything.
So it was, yeah.
And so it's just fuel.
Cause I'm just like thinking to myself,
like if we pull this off, I know how he's, you know,
success and the moral of that story is success
is the greatest revenge.
It always is.
Facts.
It always is, dude.
Always.
Every girlfriend who's cheated on me, every, you know,
whatever it's just like, dude, you know,
partners who backstab you, your friends who betray you.
I mean, just like, there's nothing for me to tell them.
You know what I mean?
So it's fuel.
It's motivation for me to push forward and to go really hard.
Yeah.
And yeah.
I think as entrepreneurs, you need that chip on your shoulder.
I remember when you were first raising your money,
you got a lot of denials from VCs.
And you had a massive chip because you
saw these other projects raising millions,
and you felt like you could have done that.
But I think as entrepreneurs, it helps you in the long run
having that chip.
The chip is my fuel, dude.
It's the most powerful fuel for me.
And there's a little bit of a deeper story
with that chip for me,
because it goes down to childhood trauma.
Yeah.
I always was the kid with the least.
So I was always trying to,
I couldn't fight my way to proving anyone wrong
when you're 12 or 14 or 16.
So being in the position that I'm in today,
I can control the chip, right?
The chip can be, I can make people rue that.
So it's not the purest fuel.
There's a better fuel than that.
But it's probably the second most powerful fuel.
The first most powerful fuel is probably
like overwhelming purpose, right?
And that exists within me, but the one that really gets me
to like, the one that puts me into overdrive
is the 200, 300 VCs that told me no
when they deployed capital and every other,
it's every NFT fund who went to go buy a bunch of art.
Yeah. You know, they had a hundred million every NFT fund who went to go buy a bunch of art.
They had a hundred million dollar NFT fund
and they bought a bunch of art and crypto punks
and they just got, and then I'm competing on behalf of a fund.
My friend Spencer's funds, all penguins basically.
And so I'm competing on his behalf against them
and he just mopped the floor
with all those crypto punk funds by a Texas mile,
it's not even close.
Yeah.
A thousand acts he outperformed them.
Crazy.
So, or this partner and friend of mine screwing me
in the worst way, the most ruthless way possible,
most heartless way possible, truthfully.
That gets you going. If know, that gets you going.
If that can't get you going,
because I'm also a sports fanatic, right?
I grew up playing sports.
I love watching sports.
All I know is winning.
All I know is competition.
As I get older, I will mature out of that.
I know I will.
But, you know, I'm 26.
You know, I should be in the league. Me and you should be in the league, you know, I'm 26, you know, I should be in the league.
Me and you should be in the league, you know, right now.
So this is basketball for me.
This is soccer for me, right?
This is just like, dude, you know, I'm here.
I'm here to make every person who's ever listened to me,
who didn't believe, who counted us out,
who placed their bets elsewhere,
I wanted to make them all feel stupid.
And as long as I'm at the helm of this company,
yeah, there might be ups and downs,
and I can't control what happens in the short term.
But on a year over year basis,
I will make them all feel stupid.
And that's been the case up until this point.
Everyone who passed on that seed round feels stupid.
There wasn't a better seed round
in the bear market than this.
And if that doesn't reign true,
that will reign true very shortly.
You know, there wasn't a better NFT investment
in the bear market than this.
You know, history can only tell,
but there won't be a better blue chip
culture token, meme token investment than this.
History doesn't repeat itself, but it rhymes.
And it will continue to rhyme as long as I'm at the helm of this.
I love that confidence, man.
That comes with success, right?
Or were you always this confident?
I was always this confident.
I always knew, dude.
I knew when I was 15 I was going to be.
I don't know what it was. I don't know what it always knew dude. I knew when I was 15. I was gonna be I don't know what it was I don't know what it was dude. I knew I knew and and obviously as I continue as I at this point
I'm like three for three four four four, you know
So like I can't I it's like it's like at what point like if Michael Jordan keeps winning
Championships like and Michael Jordan, you know and Kobe keeps winning chips and he's sitting you and saying that he's not the best
And something's wrong.
Yeah.
Right, so I was always confident,
but I wasn't always vocally confident
because I'm also really pragmatic.
Like my word and the things that come out of my mouth,
it's really important that I don't rue the day
that I got on this podcast and was this confident.
Right, but at this point,
like the data is supporting my confidence
so well that it's like, yeah, you can say what you want, dude.
But at the end of the day, I'm 4 for 4.
I did the influencer monetization stuff.
I was one of the pioneers of that.
You know that.
That's how we met.
Yeah.
No one was really doing that.
I could have done that way better in hindsight.
Obviously, I didn't know what I could have been doing. Mr. B, I could have been at the, you know, I could have, won't really doing that. I could have done that way better in hindsight. Obviously I didn't know what I, I mean I could have been doing with Mr. B.
I could have been at the, you know,
I could have, we won't talk about that,
but that was a huge win.
No one did that.
No one was doing that.
Von Dutch, I mean that was humongous
when I brought that back.
Gel Blaster, right?
And then this, and then this has many wins within it, right?
The NFT is a win.
The token is a win. The token is a win.
The brand is a win.
These are very much independent businesses of themselves.
They are very much their own Goliath.
They are not one and the same.
They are.
And again, they cross-pollinate.
But the Web3 success is its own beast with its own team. And then the brand success is its own beast with its own team.
And then the brand success is its own beast
with its own team.
So at this point, it's just like,
I know I'm going to be one of the greatest here.
And people not believing that, even today,
after the track record is fine with me,
because that's just more fuel.
Yeah, yeah, you've done it in so many verticals.
I think only 4% of businesses get to a million in revenue.
You've done that multiple times.
At this point, it's not luck.
No.
Like what do you attribute you succeeding
multiple different industries to?
I'm, I think it's one of that,
back to that mindset that I told you,
that we talked about five minutes ago,
which was I put pieces together,
influencer monetization business.
I was just one, I was one cog.
I was the glue to the influencer, to the fulfillment,
to the factory, you know what I mean?
Yeah.
I was the, I just put it together.
With Von Dutch, maybe that was, you know,
Von Dutch had a great brand, a great logo,
great quality products, you know, and I had a great brand, a great logo, great quality products, you know,
and I came in and put what I did best, which is, you know,
put the pieces of the influencers and the celebrities
and the marketing machine together.
Gel Blaster, same thing.
Like I'm not an inventor, I'm not a product, you know,
I was just the machine, the marketing machine to it.
So I think it's probably this consciousness,
this true consciousness of like what I know I'm good at,
and not pretending that I'm something that I'm not
and not being greedy, and really just understanding
that I'm in the business of putting wins on the board
and not trying to squeeze the most out of any single grape
back to a team and me being competitive.
I treat this like a team. Kobe doesn a, you know, and me being competitive, this is, I treat this like a team, like,
Kobe doesn't win chips without Shaq and Derek Fisher,
and you know, Ron Artest and the rest of the crew,
MJ and Pippen and, you know,
it's evidently clear to me that this stuff
is predicated on team.
And so I think I'm super,
I've spent a lot of time working on my consciousness
and self-reflecting and understanding who I am, you know, what my personality is, what my faults are, what my strengths are.
And so I probably would attribute a lot of my success to that.
Now I think I have a really deep understanding of marketing.
That's my superpower.
Where do I come into the equation and where do I provide that hyper-priority edge?
Prior to Pudgy Penguins, it was marketing.
Post Pudgey Penguins, it's marketing and community building.
I don't think anyone can do those two things in crypto
better than me.
And so I think that kind of, I think those things.
But I think it starts with just understanding what I am
and who I am, and then being able to put the pieces
together, and being able to put the pieces together
and being able to communicate and inspire somebody
to take that leap of faith to come and join this.
Even Peter, for Pudgey, he was really on the fence
for a long time, even for the first year,
he wasn't really both feet in,
but it was my ability to kind of lead
and communicate to him and bring him in.
And Peter is one of the most important people in the company.
There's isn't four people more important
in the company than Peter.
He runs the entire creative and it's a creative business.
You could argue he's probably the most,
for punchy penguins, you could argue
he's the most important person, truthfully.
Right, I mean, you know?
Maybe you could argue me and then me and him, right?
In that respect.
Because creative is so important.
But I can't even say that.
All four of them are so important to this business.
So it's just that understanding, right?
That consciousness.
I encourage all entrepreneurs to understand that, right?
I just am not in the business of doing 100% of anything.
So yeah.
I love that.
Yeah, a lot of entrepreneurs try to micromanage.
They try to do every single thing.
And I think we all start that way
and then you're able to kind of see the bigger picture
from there and branch off.
There's two marketing strategies I want to talk about
that you do so well.
The first one's the gifting list.
I saw you talk about this on Scott's show
and I feel like that is something not a lot of people do.
You have one of the biggest gifting lists in the world.
Yeah, one of the best in the world.
Yeah.
I can get product in the hands of everyone.
I scaled that through Von Dutch.
So I was with the full send crew for a while.
Jesse had some interesting people that we sent stuff to.
Von Dutch is when I got the craziest list though.
Right?
And then obviously some of the Supreme Patty stuff
and that early influencer monetization,
and then jailblasters, it's like people love free stuff.
You know, so I got all of my friends
are within arm's reach of everyone.
There isn't a person I can't get something to
if I want to get something to them.
And there's something about that omnipresence.
One, it puts a good taste in people's mouth, right?
Because people love free stuff
No matter what you send I love when people say no matter how much money I have I'll always love something always love something for free
It's great. And then if the product is good or has some sort of meaningful, you know value
There's some sort of conversion there conversions usually small five ten percent
But you know they place it somewhere in some piece of content
So just like omnipresent marketing.
And in crypto, our edge is,
one of our edges is the physical
because everyone's living in digital Lala land.
And it's like, yeah,
Ready Player One's probably like a real probable future,
but we're like 30, 40 years away
from that truly being the case, right?
Yep.
And so, you still gotta meet people in the real world.
That's where the products just crush.
So not only now is it gifting the celebrities and influencers,
but now I'm sending it to venture capitalists,
to hedge funds, the liquid funds.
Smart.
There isn't a liquid fund that there isn't a,
so many of these guys have just penguins everywhere.
Every major office of every major crypto company,
Uniswap's office is covered in Monad, everything.
Yeah.
And it's so relatable, like anyone, any age, any gender.
It's a cute, great penguin.
It's great product.
It's great product.
I love it.
So they keep it at some of the kind collectibles they keep in the office.
Some they take home and give to a family member.
Everyone loves Pudgy.
That's why this thing is not going to lose.
Again, I can't control what happens in the short term, but you think you're
going to beat this beast over a long period of time.
I know we take Doge.
I promise you, we will at one point.
I don't know when, right?
It could be two years, could be one year, it could be five years.
Doesn't matter.
As long as I'm at the helm doing this, that compounding, it's like compound interest.
You just can't beat compound interest at a certain scale.
Yeah.
You know?
Absolutely.
When you study the top retail brands,
you notice all of them have that emotional connection
with the product or service.
Right?
And you guys have done phenomenal with that.
Yeah.
But yeah, the mailing list, that's
an underrated marketing tactic.
I remember getting stuff from Prime
when they started, Feastables, and people make videos,
they get millions of views,
and you spend like 20 bucks sending them something.
It's such a good method for marketing,
especially if you're like a guerrilla marketing.
Yeah.
The next one I wanna talk about
is the meme page content strategy.
You guys are getting 40 million views a month, right,
off the videos that Pudgy Penguin's,
the male and the female Penguin.
Oh, on Instagram.
On Instagram.
It depends what month.
Some month it can be 500 million views,
some months it can be 100 million views.
Yeah, that does pretty well.
Actually, because I think it's more of an interest,
one unbeknownst to most is probably the GIFs
and the stickers.
Really?
Unclogging 300 million impressions a day.
Holy crap.
On stickers and GIFs,
you could pull it up on Giphy on the chart.
Yeah, no, my editors have used those without my discretion
on the clips.
It's a complete clinic.
And if I ever said this before, but I'll give you the alpha,
I'm probably spending 20 grand a month on gifts and stickers.
And I'm getting, call it, four billion impressions a month.
Wow.
So you just do the math on that CPM.
That's the best CPM I've ever heard.
Of all time.
Yeah.
Now, the problem is it's not a direct conversion,
so no one does it.
Right.
But in my business, it's a direct conversion.
Because girlfriend sends pudgy, pengu gift to whale.
Whale's like, what?
Whale goes, puts a million bucks on pengu
or a million bucks on pudgy penguin NFTs.
There's a huge conversion.
Right.
I paid a tweet five months ago.
That's why these meme coin folks,
I'm really gonna pioneer this space, I promise. Because I said five months ago that mean that's why that's why these meme coin folks I'm really gonna pioneer this space I promise because I said five months ago
I was like the best if you're a meme coin the number one thing you should be
doing is gifts and stickers none of them are doing it mmm like you guys are
schmucks that's why that's why I'm happy to be in this category cuz I'm like
it's the same this Pengu in the mean category is the same thing I thought
about when I took over Pudgy Penguins in the NFT category.
I'm like, you guys are doing nothing and the obvious things you're not doing.
And so I'm just going to come in and mop and mop the floor and just, just take it all, take all the market share from you and just lead because this idea that stagnant,
non-sentient things are going to lose
or are going to beat proactive omnipresence,
sentient, mimetic proliferation just not gonna happen.
Yeah.
You know, like you have one thing, right?
Like let's use Doge as reference.
Yeah.
Like Doge's cultural mimetic relevancy was in 2013, 2014.
Its peak financial relevancy was in 2021.
Maybe it has more financial relevancy this cycle
and peaks even more, we don't know.
But the point of the matter is,
is outside of the community that pushes the Doge meme
and the indexing of the meme that's already embedded
into internet culture, that is a dwindling metric, right?
So Doge inflates $5 million a day,
and then its relevancy dwindles every day
in some capacity with occasional spikes,
but that's a separating, that's a gap,
that's a separating gap that's not creating.
While on the other hand, I am,
I am every day, I'm more views at Pudgee,
more initiatives.
Yeah.
I'll have a movie one day, I have a TV show one day,
I'll have a movie one day. I have a TV show one day. I'll have games one day
You know, so I'm just climbing the the chart of relevancy
right and And here you have so it's just like it's a matter of it of when not if because that
Gap widening through the top memetic coins like she been and doge
through the top memetic coins like Shiba and Doge.
Yeah, that has some sort of moat and crypto has this thing with Dino tokens
where it kind of just indexes for a long time.
Which is like so fascinating to me.
But like, I will have a more explosive peak than Doge
because the force is too powerful.
It's just too, it's too, it's too explosive. And,
and this line of thought is not a theory, right? Like I'm not
theorizing this to you. Just look at Pudgy Penguin success
on the NFT side. But it was driven through the same line of
thought, right? Through the same assessment, and through the
same thought process, that's how we succeeded.
And that's how we got here.
And that's how we'll continue to get to where we need to be.
But the Pengu side is the same thing as the Pudgy.
It's the same, you know, one just has way deeper liquidity and an easier barrier at
entry and one's maybe more of a digital identity and Viblin, you know, status symbol within
the crypto space.
But it's the same principle, and it's
going to follow the same path.
Absolutely.
Yeah, because when you first inherited the company,
was Pudge even top 100 on the NFT charts?
60.
It was number 60, and now it's number two, right?
Yeah.
Oh, in terms of floor price, I don't know.
60 all-time volume.
Now it's like seven all-time volume.
And now it's two only behind CryptoPunk.
And when I took it over, I don't know.
Probably between 50 and 100 times the floor price.
I mean, everything was above 1 eighth floor.
And I bought it when it was at 0.8.
Crazy.
Dude, that's nuts.
You've been climbing the leaderboard.
So you might even pass punks this year.
I for sure will.
That's like the easiest trade in crypto.
I love the confidence, man.
I mean, I could have flipped punks on if I held Pengu a little longer.
The thing is, we have abstract.
And the way that abstract's kind of structured with what I think it's going to do, the FDVs
on something like abstract are ginormous.
So Pengu is a really high liquid float.
Basically, there's very little unlocks.
So what you see is what you get.
Typically, chains, because they're incredibly
expensive to sustain, and there's
a lot of moving parts with the ecosystem and things like that,
they tend to be lower float, higher FDV.
I've seen that, yeah.
A lot of unlocks, right?
So yeah, so the initial opening price will be,
I think, higher in terms of like,
if Pengu's three and a half billion dollars a day,
abstract could be five billion, 10 billion dollars.
I mean, there's vaporware chains that are launched.
We're going to put on,
it's going to be a spectacular masterclass.
By the time this launches, it's probably live.
Wow.
It's going to be so different than
what anybody else is doing.
So I think in that respect, you know, there's, you know,
that that thing is going to be worth,
you know, probably come out the gates of five, 10 billion
bucks, so. It's been fun gates, five, 10 billion bucks.
It's been fun watching your journey, dude,
and I love how you're documenting it as well.
Yeah, I documented the whole thing, can you believe that?
And people thought I was nuts.
You know what I never got?
Is like a lot of people faded who knew me,
and I was like, well, did you really think
I was gonna spend two and a half million dollars
and document this thing publicly
and not smash it out of the park.
I mean, I would have,
because I basically put myself in a situation where if I failed,
I would have looked like a schmuck. Right.
I literally forced the success for that reason because I knew, I knew myself,
I knew myself and I knew I was like,
there's so much on the line here that I might as well just put it like really
on the line, you know? Yeah. just put it really all on the line.
You know?
And so for those who are not familiar,
those who are listening,
we have a series on YouTube called Building in Public.
We documented the whole thing.
It's a little like E-newsy, you know,
Bravo TV fucking, you know,
reality TV show type of thing,
but there's a lot of the nitty gritty,
like hard things you don't see in there.
But there'll be a movie, we have all that footage.
So 10 years from now, you'll see the real,
you'll see that kid screwing us.
You'll see all that shit.
I love that you post the low moments on there
because that doesn't get showcased on social media ever.
The low moments of business, there's a lot of them.
Every time you think you're in the clear,
something pops up.
Something.
Dude, it's crazy.
It's insane.
It's like inevitable.
At this point, I just accepted it because I'm numb to it now.
You're numb to it.
Yeah, because I say it all the time.
Like, what is the number one thing
to be a successful entrepreneur?
It's probably stress tolerance for that exact reason.
Right.
A lot of people fold under stress.
That's right.
You know what I mean?
They just have nervous breakdowns,
and they just break under it.
To be in the position of leadership
on a company that is seeing huge success,
you need to be incredibly stress tolerant
because if you break and fold under pressure,
that will not be good for you.
Yeah, I agree.
The first time I was faced with some pressure,
I folded so bad, dude.
First lawsuit ever.
And I just folded.
I stayed in my bed for like a month.
Yeah.
And I had to get past that to become an entrepreneur.
Yeah.
You know, that first lawsuit's always the scariest.
Yeah, I remember that one.
I remember mine.
What was yours about?
Can you talk about it?
It was the Ball Harbor house.
I assume it wasn't a business.
It was kind of business because Patty and them were breaking the house.
Remember that big house? We had the biggest house in Ball Harbor in Miami.
You've been there.
Yeah, I think.
Block to block.
We balled there, right?
Yeah, we balled there.
Yeah.
That ginormous 10-bedroom mansion.
Yeah, yeah. I busted your ass over there.
Yeah, you did.
You and Mancini were really cooking chicken roll.
We got that chemistry.
Yeah, but Patty and them were breaking the house.
So at the time it was like an $8, $9 million house,
but now it's like a $30, $40 million house.
Damn.
Insane, yeah.
Miami skyrocketed.
But they were breaking the house,
and the landlord's kids watched us and told the landlord,
like, let's bring Madie's in our house.
And he's like breaking doors and shit.
And so he basically came to the house.
I mean, this guy was the epitome of evil.
No, no, I'm serious.
I would, this guy, this guy was so evil.
I was, you know, 18, just came in and some money
and he just took advantage of us so bad.
He said he would throw us in jail.
He'd sue us for everything.
He forced me to stay in the house
and I had to pay him like five, 600 grand.
I wrote him a check right then and there.
Two months later, he's then moving us out.
The cops were in front of our house every single day.
They were targeting us.
You know Ball Harbor.
Ball Harbor is like the, you know,
they've got like, Ball Harbor is like the, you know, they've got like,
Ball Harbor is a little island in Miami
and they've got like a literally like 50 police cars
for like 500 homes.
Wow.
And these guys were just literally harassing us
on behalf of the landlord because it's just like this.
Small community.
Super Jewish community, right?
Like, so like, you know, he ran like the synagogue
and he was able to, you know,
they all like just ran the show.
Connections.
And he sued us and the dude just bullied me so hard.
He broke me, dude.
He broke me, but I learned so much.
Wow.
So I'm glad that it happened.
But yeah, I remember mine.
That was soggy.
Yeah, tough times, man.
Yeah, you need good legal these days,
especially now, cause you're a target.
I got all the good legal,
I got the best legal in my corner.
Oh, especially in your space, the US hates crypto.
Yeah, not anymore, Trump will fix that.
Yeah, but I remember they went after
every US exchange under Biden.
Crazy, you know, Uniswap, all of them made it tough.
You had a tough battle, my friend.
That's why you got my respect,
because the odds were stacked so against you
for this company.
You know, almost everyone probably doubted you.
Even family and close friends, I bet.
Everyone thought I was nuts.
But how are you gonna make money on this?
Why would you build a real brand
and spend two and a half million like the penguins?
And they removed fees right when you bought it too.
That's how all NFTs went to zero.
Right, that's how NFTs were surviving at the time.
Think about the beat that I got.
I raised two and a half million into it,
put another 500 Gs into it.
No one was getting paid for the first year pretty much.
Royalties went to zero.
Black Swan after Black Swan,
basically a month after I bought it.
Insane.
Yeah, hats off to you, man.
One last question, since you've brought up MJ a few times.
MJ or LeBron?
MJ.
Is it close for you?
It's close for sure.
It's got to be.
I mean, dude, what is LeBron going to be?
All time, 30 all time points.
He's going to be probably all time rebounds and assists,
or be up in the top three, right?
You would know the number.
Yeah.
Top three.
I mean, he probably, I think he plays until his 25th season.
I think that's a good number for him.
There's gonna be all time points, you know,
but you gotta respect the crunch time.
It's all about crunch time.
It's all about the clutch.
It just is, dude.
And every, you know what I mean?
It's like, it's like if if, if, if I wasn't clutch
and pudgy penguins, like, I don't know.
Like there's something about being clutch
and the crunch time and being that dog.
And it's a little more for me.
Cause like, I, I identify more with the MJ culture.
Like, I don't need you to like me.
Like, I don't need you to listen to this and to like me.
I need you to listen to this and know that I'm gonna win.
Right?
You liking me doesn't really matter to me.
Just make sure you have a penguin or a little pudgy
or some pengu, cause if you don't,
you'll be upset that you don't.
You know?
Like that said, I don't need you to,
I feel like LeBron is more of like,
yeah, you can like me, but you know, it's to the last point,
to the person who screwed me, it was funny.
Cause his dad was mediating the deal.
And he had, they had said something,
cause this was a really stressful time.
So I'm not gonna act like I was perfect.
I definitely helped create some of his resentment.
Got it.
So it's not just act like he completely was off the wall.
Now mind you, I had found out that he was working
on other NFT projects as like a consultant.
I was like, dude, what the hell, are you crazy?
Right.
You know what I mean?
Things like that, like helping them with marketing
and just like Instagram stuff.
I was like craziness.
So he had really no ground to stand on,
but the straw that broke the camel's back for him was the way that I was speaking to him.
But I was speaking to him a certain way
because the pressure was on.
We were about to lose all this money.
We were in this business.
And he was doing 100 different things
that weren't about the business.
And I remember his dad being like, this being like a huge
reason. And I was like, I remember his dad being like, this being like a huge reason.
And I was like, I remember being at Ring.
That was my first job.
I was early days at Ring
and Ring sold a billion bucks to Amazon.
Jamie used to punch holes in walls.
Wow.
Right?
He used to be like screaming at people
and I never did that.
Yeah.
Right?
Like it never got that egregious.
Maybe one time where I was like, dude, are you fucking nuts?
I think he promoted like an open edition mint
from one of our holders.
I went like ballistic.
I'm like, dude, you crazy?
We have no money.
And you're promoting open edition mints
for one of our holders.
I think that Froggy did a mint.
And I love Froggy.
I'm not going to get into semantics, but I love this guy.
And I'm like, but dude, we're not like we have no money.
If we need to promote anything that's going to make money,
it's for us, cause we're broke.
And I remember telling him, I was like, dude, I was like,
do you know what it's like to build a business?
And, and, and like, I remember in that time,
I felt like MJ, cause it was like over here,
you had this like little crybaby,
like crying about some words when we've got millions
of dollars on the line and a community who we've got millions of dollars on the line,
and a community who has tens of millions of dollars on the line.
And dudes want to sit here and talk about feelings.
And dudes are not even working.
Working two, three hours a day, literally dragging
the entire ship, literally like an anchor.
And I don't take this as a responsibility just for me
and my crew and my immediate executive team
and my partners and investors.
I think of the community first, right?
Like, dude, these people have so much money on the line
and you want to drag an anchor on this shit?
And you want to sit here and say,
it's because I'm talking to you a certain way
because you're not doing your job.
And now you want to go and try to fuck the entire company.
Someone told him his dad, like, I felt like MJ.
Cause MJ, everyone hated MJ.
Yeah.
You know, but MJ won chips.
Now I did do some self-reflecting and I did become,
cause I didn't want to be hated within my own company.
That sounds like an awful.
And this is not basketball completely, right?
Steve Jobs.
Yeah, this is not completely basketball, but like Steve Jobs. Yeah, this is not completely basketball,
but like, so I've found this balance
between like expecting the most out of people
and expecting to win and to have,
and to we're in the business of securing championships,
right, with the balance of also,
you know, trying to be somebody
that people wanna work with.
Right. So I think I've really hit that balance.
But at the time I was very much MJ.
Everyone in the company hated me at the time.
Wow.
I learned in hindsight.
Really?
Yeah, but we won.
You know?
So even then, people can say that,
and we talk about it in hindsight
and talk to Lorenzo who's like,
the operator behind all this, who's really the person who makes this business happen. He was talking to mezo who's like, you know, the operator behind all this,
he was really the person who makes this business happen.
He was talking to me, he was like,
yeah, like you weren't great, but like we won.
And it's like, suck it up, we're here to win.
He's also super competitive, he did a lot of sports.
So it's like, you're either built for this or you're not.
Hey, look, at the end of the day,
the dude who left us, he made his million bucks,
he wasn't built for it.
He was not built for this, he never will be. Right?
Because he folded.
And so he will live his good life with his family.
I wish them nothing but the best.
I wish them nothing but health, happiness and success.
But there's levels to this.
And he'll never be on, he'll never do what we're doing.
And that's it.
When you look at the ghosts like MJ and Kobe,
you really dive into their mindset.
It's what separates them.
Because they're, everyone at that level
is super athletic, right? But what separates you, it's, well them. Because everyone at that level is super athletic, right?
But what separates you?
Well, you talked about earlier the clutch, the mindset.
Some people fold in the clutch.
So I think you have that.
Can't fold in the clutch.
Absolutely.
Dude, where can people learn more about Pudgy,
potentially get one, and get involved in the ecosystem?
Follow Pudgy Penguins on Instagram, on X, on all socials.
And, you know, if you got 10 bucks, you can buy some pengu.
You got 100 grand, you can go buy a Pudgy Penguin NFT.
A little Pudgy will cost you about 15, 20, I think, right? 15. I'll be like 10 to 15 right now.
Come join the winning team.
Don't bet against this guy, guys.
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