Julian Dorey Podcast - #416 - “DARK Funding!” - Baron Trump Theory, Clavicular, Peter Thiel & THE BALLROOM | Jack Mac
Episode Date: May 1, 2026SPONSORS: 1) ULTRA POUCHES: New customers get 15% off Ultra Pouches with code JULIAN at https://takeultra.com! #UltraPouches #ad JOIN PATREON FOR EARLY UNCENSORED EPISODE RELEASES: https://www.patreo...n.com/JulianDorey CLIPPERS DISCORD: https://discord.gg/8QmWEKJ3BT (***TIMESTAMPS in description below) ~ Jack Mac is a long time Culture, Politics & Social Trends Creator at Barstool Sports. JACK's LINKS: IG: https://www.instagram.com/jackmaccfb/ X: https://x.com/JackMac YT: https://www.youtube.com/@UCX6n8xOugI3IYqzhDCK8_yA FOLLOW JULIAN DOREY IG: https://www.instagram.com/julianddorey/ X: https://x.com/juliandorey JULIAN YT CHANNELS - SUBSCRIBE to Julian Dorey Clips YT: https://www.youtube.com/@juliandoreyclips - SUBSCRIBE to Julian Dorey Daily YT: https://www.youtube.com/@JulianDoreyDaily - SUBSCRIBE to Best of JDP: https://www.youtube.com/@bestofJDP ****TIMESTAMPS**** 0:00 - Trump White House Correspondents Dinner Fiasco, Alex Earle vs. Alex Cooper 7:51 - Facebook still goated, Steering the ship, Going all in, Rumination 17:44 - AI Apocalypse, AI Game of Thrones Videos, Trump “Ballroom” 29:01 - Baron Trump Time Traveler Theory, Kai Trump Erewhon Tour 37:23 - Julian & Jack Remember the Pandemic in NYC, Fauci & Dave Portnoy 47:41 - Immediate response to White House shooting, CSPAN Kash Patel Homicide 57:58 - Trump & Biden two sides of same coin, Why Kamala Lost 1:06:09 - Portnoy’s Ambition 1:10:33 How big is the corruption, Mossad Intel 1:15:33 - Middle Class death, Guardrails on AI 1:20:01 - Technocrat Elite, Trump Playbook explained 1:27:05 - R*****dmaxxing, Swalwell Scandal, Honeypots 1:30:54 - Mainstream attacks on Rogan, Podcast impurity, Thiel invests in TBPN, “Selling Out” 1:49:03 - Clavicular’s Strange Rise, Looksmaxxing epidemic in Gen-Z 2:01:03 - Is Clavicular Funded by Peter Thiel?, How Clav situation will end 2:13:50 - Prime McGregor, The “I Am You” Theory 2:26:01 - Jack on kids he went to school with, Clav & Elon Musk, Trust Fund Debate 2:36:30 - Being born in USA, Team Players, Julian & Jack on what parenting will be like 2:42:34 - Jack’s Work CREDITS: - Host, Editor & Producer: Julian Dorey - COO, Producer & Editor: Alessi Allaman - https://www.youtube.com/@UCyLKzv5fKxGmVQg3cMJJzyQ - In-Studio Producer: Joey Deef - https://www.instagram.com/joeydeef/ Julian Dorey Podcast Episode 416 - Jack Mac Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Yeah, I've always thought about like the idea of how much pop culture influences everything, including like the establishment orientation of society now.
And with you, it's like I've been seeing your videos on my feed for years, it feels like at this point.
But with you, it's like I could get a video about like the latest Alex Cooper, Alex Earl drama that I'd somehow watch for three minutes and say, I can't believe I'm invested in this, don't know why.
And then I'll get a video about like literally the bullets were not even on the ground yet from the Secret Service.
the other night and you were like, all right, here's everything that happened with Donald Trump
being shot at. I was like, what the fuck? So Saturday night, I was watching UFC card and then my friend
was watching, there was NBA playoffs on NHL playoffs. And he was like, a friend that typically isn't on
the top of the ball, he's like, did Trump just get shot at? I was like, what are you talking about?
Then I went to Twitter and obviously I saw it and it was evacuated. Then we saw it's like, oh,
was it possibly the plates falling? There was a lot of, and then we were. And then we, we, you know,
We heard, I think Caitlin Collins was the first one to say, no, there was a shooter in the Secret Service.
At first, I thought, like, we felt like he was dead, but he was not.
He was obviously alive now.
He's in prison.
But, and then I was like, oh, this is big.
And then I let a little bit more stuff come out because it was definitely a, we had to monitor the situation, as they said.
But to go back to your point initially, yeah, I think, so Barstool Sports was founded on the idea of,
we're going to cover everything that you talk about on a bar still.
Yeah.
At a bar.
Yep.
So even though, and it's an interesting point where it's, oh, what does a 29-year-old guy care
about Alex Cooper, Alex Earl?
But here's the thing.
In my group chats, people are talking about it.
At work, people are talking about it.
They may not admit to it.
And then maybe like, that's kind of silly, that's stupid.
But people watch.
And then also, you always want to, just from a marketing point of view, having more,
women on like that buy-in to your stuff and follow you is huge because they make all of the
our buying decisions across like that's just a oh i never thought of it that way oh oh well yeah
we got to get in on that if you want to have a true impact in terms of like influencer i mean all
the deals go to women because women buy things dudes you probably are wearing the same pair of shorts
that you had from 2011 that's correct you're at thousand percent
So, but women buy things every single day.
And it's not just makeup, it's everything.
So if you can somehow get both, if you can get men and woman, you're really in the,
you're really in a great spot.
So that's what I'm always trying to get both because it's, if you can get women,
you can get deals.
100%.
And women get most of the deals because they make the, like people can complain about it.
But that's what they do.
That's why Alex Earle is worth tens of millions of dollars at this point.
Yeah, I was unfamiliar with her game and everything going on there.
Obviously, I know Alex Cooper well from the industry.
I mean, I don't know her personally, but...
I know what you're saying.
You know, what was...
Huge pockets.
Yeah, friend of the show, as Tim Dillon would say.
Well, but she is.
I mean, you guys are in the...
I mean, you guys are in the same charts?
Hey, guys.
If you're not following me on Spotify, please hit that follow button and leave a five-star
review.
They're both a huge help.
Thank you.
But she's been in...
I said it in a video.
I was like, oh, she is, if you do a podcasting hall,
Fame. She's in it and people got mad at me. She's been a top 10 podcaster since 2018. Yeah.
And you know how insane that is. That's up there with part of my take and everything. Now,
part of my take's been longer, maybe a little bit higher, but she's, I mean, she's interviewed
presidential candidates. She's interviewed reality stars. She's interviewed the biggest celebrities.
So she is top of the top. She's in that podcasting Hall of Fame. Her, I mean, she's controversial
just because of like what the topic was and what she was.
coming up as and she leaned into that 100% and I would agree regardless of like whether you would
ever enjoy that kind of content I'm pretty sure a lot of people listen to this show like even on
the comedy end like it's more dudes in that case that's not really the cup of tea listening to
Alex Cooper talk about I've never listened to a full color daddy episode but there's no doubt like I
remember when that was started when it was the two of them when it was her and Sophia and it was
real like it hit this it hit a niche that people didn't even realize was there in early mid 2018
by that point and you were just like whoa and it's huge for it was unbelievably big for barstle
yeah before people just thought of barstow specifically women's thought of it as a instagram page
yeah and and she and sophia they really they just took the ball and they ran with it truly
They just, and they, they were saying things that were kind of crazy, but I mean, it's kind of like it was locker room talk for women.
And they were probably like, that's exactly what it sounds like in their rooms.
Now, I didn't listen.
I saw clips and all that.
I was an intern at the time.
So, oh, you were there.
I was there when I was popping off.
And, I mean, it was cool because when I started as an intern, they weren't there yet.
And then you were an intern.
So I started 2017 when I was still in college.
And then 2018, I was still in college too and I was an intern.
but they popped off and then oh girls actually cared that you worked at barcel before it was just only dudes
but call her daddy was like oh you know Alex Cooper you know Sophia the fact that i think Dave if i remember
correctly found them like the second upload they did and they were uploading in like 32
kilobits per second the kbps i never remember what that stands for in audio which is like extremely
low for people listening we upload it 192 on spotify and 320 on fucking youtube and that's been since day one
Yeah.
Like they were, she was literally editing it at her kitchen table and that wasn't her skill.
But it was so, it caught people so much that it didn't matter.
Like that people just, especially like so many Gen Z millennial women were just so fucking into it.
And a big moment for her, I think that really helped was before that she was at a Rangers game with Noah Cinderguard.
Yeah.
The old Mets pitcher.
And I think they were like making out at the at the game.
So when somebody present.
presented that to Dave, he was like, oh, I know her.
And they took the chance.
I mean, they didn't think, I mean, they definitely took the chance knowing, oh, it could
work out.
But I don't think in their wildest dreams, they would think it would be what it became.
And it helped tremendously to Barstle.
Yeah.
I mean, at the beginning, I think their salary was like 75K a piece or something like that.
Probably.
I mean, for him, it's like, all right, let's make this bet.
And we'll see that, yeah.
And what's funny is that it wasn't actually the first female podcast at Barstle.
The first female podcast was Chicks in the office.
I remember that.
And they are still killing it.
They're just,
they're one of the bigger success stories in our company's history, too.
So those two.
That's Fran and Maria?
Yeah.
We're huge for,
to get Barstool more in the women category.
Well,
I remember their big thing to me was I would still,
that was probably like the last time I ever really looked at Facebook.
Like in any way,
it was like probably 2015, early 2016.
And they mastered the like,
maybe it was two to three minute video on Facebook space and you would see them everywhere.
I was like, oh, wow. Yeah, and Barstall was doing like the podcast. And then, yeah, no,
Facebook. It's so crazy that Facebook is still kind of the most visited social media platform
ever. Are you guys big on Facebook or no? We just, I shit you not. I'm like, you guys,
three weeks ago, we got on. Like, we've always had a page that I don't even know how to log into.
We have never put content on there. Three weeks ago, we got on. I think we have like 25,000 followers.
already or something that's crazy no no it's it's massive and it's specifically massive with older people
and then just uh i think the Hispanic community it's still massive and international too it is
facebook is still the number one platform yeah it's it's like the most that's what people were telling me
and i for the longest time for me it's like i mean you see this is a very upstart kind of organization
if you call it so it's always been like i want to do 20 things and i have to pick one or two at a time
so it's always like all right yeah we'll get to that and then i hit up my boy aiden who knows like
a good bit about Facebook and he's like, bro, come on. It's 2026. You got to get on it. I'm like,
you're right. You're right. Let's go ahead. And I also think it would be big because you have so many
like different spectrums of guests that sometimes like you'll have people that people that are
on there will know them. And there's a lot of people that probably already watch your podcast
religiously that if you somehow pulled them, I would assume 15 to 20% of them, their number one app
used is Facebook. Number one, you think it's that much? For social media, yeah. Wow. I mean, I guess
that may be a bit high of a guess because you have a lot, a huge amount of people on YouTube.
So maybe YouTube's their number one, but it's, I, do you know. It's a separate box, though.
Yeah. Like, I look at YouTube separate, like Instagram, TikTok, Facebook, that's one box. And then
YouTube's like, that's TV. I think if, I mean, that, that's just so, like you were saying, you're an upstart,
it kind of you do whatever you do. But if you have like a true company come in and assess,
I think they would say, no, dude, Facebook is where a lot of your fans already are. And you would get
more because if there's 20% of your fans or 10% of your fans are on Facebook, that means the people
that are on Facebook may be like them and then they could become new fans. Yeah. Now that,
those are those big agencies that probably aren't worth it for you. Like just, but the nice thing is,
if you connect it and you post on Facebook or on your Instagram and you connect it, it just,
it can upload to that too and it'll get pushed into the algorithm there already it's just a cross-posting
because and instagram and this is something instagram wants you to post on facebook they do and they want you to
post on threads too oh they really want threads now and it will only help your page on who the fuck is on
threads there's people on there i'm dead serious man i know dives on there no but people are on there
yeah like it's a little bit different it does give kind of like a blue sky effect but but but
Buzzi.
Substack.
Oh, substack's like, yeah.
Do you write it all or no?
I am a writer by trade initially.
So, I mean, substack could even be something that would be fun for you.
Jack, there is so much going on in my brain every day.
You have too much. Yeah.
I'm like, I got a, you know, I always joke.
It's like you see what Stephen Bartlett's pulled off with Diary of his CEO is amazing.
He's built it for many, many years.
He built companies before that, too.
I didn't build shit before I did this.
You know, he's got like 50 people.
I got three guys in Christian to Venezuela.
villain. Now, the cool thing is though, and something that I remind myself a lot too, this is such a long game.
It is a long. I mean, I would assume I mean, I want to do what I do forever. I mean, maybe at some point I stopped, but I meant more so. I mean, think about it. You could be doing this for 20, 30, 40 years.
That's what I plan to.
And so it's such a long game.
Like you could get to those mediums at some point.
The rush is, I think some people in the content game, they try to do too much.
And then it's just, and sometimes it gets out of control.
It's even happened to me.
And then you've got to focus on what you do best.
I mean, if you don't get to Facebook, it's not the end of the world.
Yeah.
I agree with you 100% bro.
It's almost like I'm always stepping out as best I can and like looking at the big picture
and looking at it to where we've gotten, like, step by step.
And it's, I think of this, like, proverbial scene in movies where, you know,
there's one I'm thinking of right now.
I can't think of the movie, but the captain is, like, going through this fucking crazy storm
in the middle of the ocean.
And everyone's going, like, hit it now.
He's like, not yet.
Not.
And they're like, we're all going to die.
And he's like, not till I say.
And then eventually, like, they get to the last moment.
He's like, no!
And hit, like, that's kind of how.
I look at this and I'm like we're not now yet.
You know what I mean? I'm still saying shut the fuck up.
We're going to get there.
We're going to get there.
And then I'll know that, I hope I'll know that moment where it's like, fuck it just every,
I mean, I throw every dollar I have at this, but like throw every resource I have getting dead
up to my eyeballs for like a month and like just.
Just go.
Yeah.
Now the nice thing is, I mean, I know what you're saying.
The nice thing is it's, I feel like that will be there.
But you and you could drive yourself crazy trying to find one of the right moment is.
That's right.
And I will say, I mean, one thing that you kind of look back on, if you do the work,
I feel like it kind of just works out.
That's right, man.
That's why we, like, that's the thing.
I get as present as I can, and I've gotten way better at it at like today, right?
So we have up the volume and what we do so much.
We're putting out three episodes a week, two, three hour episodes.
Which is insane.
It's nuts.
And you are doing things that are, I mean, for me, not to take anything away from myself,
but this one's probably a little bit easier than a guy that's coming in.
Like I was watching the one, the guy that, forget his name, he was talking about
homeschooling and it was.
Oh, Spencer Taylor.
Just, yeah.
And you probably have to really make sure you don't sound like an idiot when, like, he
comes in there.
So you got to, you have to make sure that you're on top of it reading stuff.
I know he has that documentary that he put out.
I still have to watch it.
But it's, you're already kind of doing, you're already all in.
Anybody would say that that knows me.
Oh, yeah.
you're already all in.
But I mean, obviously, but there's always people that are going to be like, oh, we could
take it to this level, that level.
Maybe you could just like, you could just do it yourself.
Who cares?
What I mean is I've been all in since day one.
All my money goes back into this.
I've been doing it seven days a week since March 13, 2020.
But when I, when I'm talking about that moment, it's like where you hit it and suddenly those
fucking 15 phone calls you got to make to set up 15 things instead of one or two, like I said,
you just do it.
And you don't think about like how much debt you're going to go into for that minute doing it.
Yeah, I know what you're saying.
That's all it is.
But for me, the only thing money is when I get it at the end of the month is it's just
firewood.
Yeah, you just put it back in.
Yeah, I take it.
I go, oh, cool, right back in.
Yeah, you pay rent.
You pay for all the studio stuff and everything.
And then you go back in.
But I mean, that's how you probably why you've gone from where you were on April 14th,
2022 to where you are in 2026.
And but it's the present thing is probably the thing that I if I could have one skill, it's that.
Yeah.
And I try to, I try to be better at that.
I'm a guy who doesn't happen a lot, but I catastrophize a lot.
Like a catastrophize the arc.
I said that wrong.
I like that.
I'm going to use that.
But I like I spiral.
Ah.
And I think, but and you think, oh, this isn't going to work.
That's not going to work.
And it's not a negative thing.
It's just something that I.
I found out of myself throughout the years that I'm just like, yeah, I spiral too much.
What happens? What gets you to that? I'm not sure why. I try to get that. What gets me there?
Oh, let's say you try something, you do something new, it doesn't work out. You're like, oh, all of this is going to end. There's like a fear that I have that tomorrow. It's just, this was all facade.
100%. You know, and I guess you could call that, what's the term? Imposter syndrome. But I have to remind myself, no. And also you have to remind
remind yourself, I was talking to you about my buddy was a cop. He told me years ago, he's like,
oh, Navy SEALs have this rule where it's just worry about the next meal, until the next meal.
So, all right, I'm going to eat at 6 p.m. It's now until 6 p.m. Obviously, you have to think about
the future, but truly, outside of a few kind of moments here and there, it's really the presence
only that matter. So I try, that's the thing that I probably work on the most to try to be more
present than thinking too far down the line and there's always new social media.
But we were just talking about Facebook, substack.
There's always new platforms.
There's always new ideas.
But you just want to make sure that you're on top of everything and you don't lose momentum.
I was like that's a fear.
Yes.
It's like when you start to ruminate on things that haven't happened and are out of your control,
in addition to that drive in you, I like that catastrophize.
I'm going to use that as better in spiraling.
Like it creates these catastrophes, so to speak, that haven't happened in your head.
And while you're doing that, you're not doing something.
Yeah.
And when you're doing that and you're spiraling, you're just, you get into the zone of,
you're almost ruminating on a 0.001% probability.
And there's proof in the work, but my fear and what I spiral in mind is like,
the algorithm's going to change and just boot me out.
Yeah.
But what's the value in that when you're trying to make the next thing that work?
works. Right. Not very high. But it also, you know what it does? It keeps you humble, too,
which is great. Like, I love that. That's, it's like the double entendre of this job. You're
tortured by the fact that you're like, holy shit, what if I wake up tomorrow and no one wants
to listen to us anymore. No one gives a fuck. Right? But then the other idea is like, bitch,
that's how replaceable you are. Yeah. Oh, yeah. Yeah. Oh, yeah. And I mean, and I'm, I'm definitely
concerned about the AI in its own way.
How so?
For you.
I remember last year I was at a meta conference, a meta, like their, you know, when the CEO goes
up, like Steve Jobs used to do it.
Yes.
And I was there and they invited me.
It was great.
But I was talking with this guy who was big in AI.
And he's like, he was like for the next two years, your goal should be to get this flyover
effect where you are almost seeked out.
because in two years, he feels the AI will be able,
though people will create creators.
They will take what you do and they'll be able to do it
and they'll be able to make 75 versions of you,
find one that works, and then that person just does it
and it's not a person, it's AI.
Now, this is a guy that's big in AI and maybe a bit too confident.
So I thought of that, but the flyover effect thing was he was saying,
people are going to start to not understand what's real and what's not.
That's right.
But if they know you're real, they'll seek you out.
Do you have trouble sleeping?
Do you wish you could fall asleep faster, sleep deeper, and wake up without groginess?
I certainly am always trying to improve my sleep.
You've heard me talk with many different people in here about what an important part of our lives in hell's sleep is.
And getting good sleep can literally be life-changing.
It can increase motivation, productivity, and overall well-being.
But here's the thing.
As you know, most sleep solutions have to be.
terrible side effects. Melatonin gummies are way overdosed in most cases and don't work fast enough.
Over-the-counter meds almost always create next day brain fog, and prescription meds can
make you feel more dependent on drugs just to sleep. That's why I recently started using
Ultra's new sleep pouches, and they've been a complete game changer. The idea behind this
is genius. Everyone always uses pouches for increased focus and energy. You always hear about
this one whenever we're talking about any kind of pouches. But Ultra took that idea and flipped
These ultra-sleep pouches help you wind down, fall asleep, and stay asleep.
And the best part is they use just six clean research-backed ingredients.
One milligram of melatonin, which is a way more optimal range and not overdose like many
other melatonin, which reduces anxious thoughts, magnesium to relax your muscles, and then
chamomile passion flour and lemon balm extracts, which are going to support sleep maintenance
and reduced nighttime awakenings.
Ultra-sleep pouches deliver better, deeper sleep, properly dosed, and natural ingredients.
All you new customers out there can use code Julian to get 15% off your order at take ultra.com.
That link is in my description below.
That's take ultra.com, link in my description below, for 15% off your whole order when you use code Julian.
After you purchase, they're going to ask you where you heard about them.
Please support our show and tell them I sent you.
So the flyover is that you kind of reach an exit velocity where you're above all of the AI.
And I think there's people that that's the goal.
Yeah, it's escape velocity.
I love that turn.
So you almost get above.
But the thing is, I mean, I think of people that I, it's funny.
You, we were just talking about all those, oh, it's going to go wrong.
It's going to go bad.
I think of myself as people will ask, oh, how did you do it?
And I'm just like, I'm still doing it.
I don't really even know.
And then also it's like, I just kind of got lucky.
I have confidence in myself.
For sure.
But I started making videos when TikTok was like very popular.
And I started making blog.
And I was, I had the.
the backdrop of and the kind of the blueprint of making or writing blogs.
And so I knew, oh, I know what people like on the internet.
I'll just do this in video form.
And then I just kind of got in the algorithm.
I don't know if, and what if I was five years older?
I mean, it's very hard to grow now.
I just got in at the right time.
Yeah, that's an interesting point.
Like I, you know, I'm sure you can relate to this.
There's so many messages now that I see,
maybe one or two percent of them but when I see one and and especially if I see one in a message
says like hey I'm thinking about starting something or doing something I'd love to pick your brain I
always try to take that call sometimes I dropped the ball on it but I've been on a lot of calls for people
because I never want to be the guy that was like you know someone looked up to and then acted like
they didn't believe in them or something I have a real phobia about that so I'd I talk with people
and and I ask them like what are you trying to do oh I'm trying to do a podcast oh I'm trying to
create this kind of content. Oh, I'm trying to do that. And I try to be real with them too.
Like, hey, first of all, if that's your dream, go get it. Yeah. Don't let anyone tell you not to.
Secondly, have you thought about this or have you thought about that and just like how you're going
to get started doing that? Because it was already when I moved to this in early 2020,
extremely saturated. Yes. It, especially in 2022, 2023, the saturation went like that.
I think. In everything with content. It is nuts, man.
And that's what I think they're saying too.
That AI point is it's already saturated with real people.
And so and it's going to become saturated with fake people too.
There's already fake, like it's more, it's obvious to our I where it's, I think there was
a guy that said that he was running a fake MAGA girl.
Yeah.
Instagram.
And she was just, it's very easy.
I mean, if you want to make, if you want to make some money, just be a fake MAGA girl.
And then just take Jack Posobics talking points and tweets and make them your own.
And just say, hey, chat, GBT, BT, redo this point and then make a video of it.
And AI generated Maga Girl to Griff's super dumb men.
And so, and like you put yourself in a farm or some shit.
And then people believe it.
And then, I mean, if you're okay morally with it, taking those people's money, then that's your, I'm not here to tell you.
You can't.
But it's a great thing that you can do in this.
And there was another one I saw.
It wasn't politics related.
It was there's just this chick who's like, she's a fake farmer.
But there's videos of her.
She does look real.
I know it's not because of little AI.
But I'm sure if I showed him my father, he would think it's real.
Do you see how, so there's two examples coming to my head right now.
There was a speech that Varis gave to Tyrion in like the first or second season of Game of Thrones
where he's talking about the three people, the three different types of people and who has the power.
And he's like sitting there like.
Yeah, yes.
Yes. Yes.
I said.
There are all kinds of videos that have reinvented him saying something new.
Exactly.
And they look daint.
Like I have to go like this.
Like, well, I know that's not real.
But could I tell if that's not real if I hadn't seen the show?
But here's the thing.
And that's the stuff that they're putting out there.
That's just what the exactly.
And now that goes back to like what who, what's the AI that the military has, that the government has,
people have that are really, now I was just talking about the moral morality of scamming
people in middle America that are 65 years old that think they're talking to a like a hot
maga chick. But we know that these people in high places, what are they doing that is and I mean,
I was even thinking of I was in the car on yesterday and I was thinking about how there was a guy,
he was the Uber driver and next to it he had one of those classes.
like a bank robber, kind of, but it's more a winter hat, but you only see the eyes in the face.
Yeah, but I was thinking myself, there's probably ways now to wear skin tight. Yes.
That is not even, so you can go and rob a bank or do something or try an assassin, and that's not
actually the person. I think about this often. And it's probably elite. Like, we see these makeup
artists and stuff, but there's probably stuff out there that is, and now I'm not saying I know it.
I'm just guessing.
No, no, but you're right.
There's two thoughts here.
First of all, Annie Jay, I always say this, say this one.
Annie Jacobson wrote about this five, six years ago when she was writing about DARPA, whenever that was.
If people remember what year that book came out, you know, that there was dated that
DARPA was telepathically talking to dolphins in like in 1992.
Like, what the fuck else do you think they have?
There's some of these things that they come out that they were like, we were doing this in
1965.
That's right.
So what are they doing right fucking now, dude?
Yeah, they're running this.
That's why I'm like, that's why I can't, like, I do care and I understand there's real life decisions that have to be made by politicians that get, that affect people's day to day lives.
But there's, and we're just learning about what the ruling class is doing 20 years ago, 30 years ago.
What are they doing now?
Now, I'm not saying there's, like, I hope, I don't know.
And they could be doing things that are just insane that go beyond our, I mean, even Trump talked about a, I think he called the discombobobul.
that the machine that they used in Venezuela,
where it's like they went down,
and like these people, like, they just, they pressed the button,
and these people just got violently ill.
And he called it the discombobobulator.
He loves the discombobulator.
Did he describe what that looked like?
I can't remember.
No, but if you remember, the New York Post came out
with an article about it, talking how there was,
or maybe there was somebody that worked for the New York Post
that said, the military used a new machine
that completely ruined.
Yeah.
Yeah, scroll over on that.
That's all from the ground, from what they used.
That's not public.
You see, like, these, yeah.
But, like, that's probably, like, they have access to the things.
And, I mean, I think Trump does say more than the typical president has,
but there's probably things that are being used that we're not even.
What's going on with that ballroom, bro?
Oh, well, the ballroom.
So, I think.
Is it the ballroom or is it the ballroom?
So there's always been something underneath.
the White House, right?
Yeah.
And there's always been like the bunker of sorts.
Now, are they building something else underneath there?
I'm not sure.
It's privately funded.
Yeah.
Yeah, I don't know.
I mean, this goes to what's underneath there.
I mean, I think it's more, it could be a bunker or it could be a place where it's like,
you could put, it's a modern day bunker, quote, unquote, that you could put the president
or whoever needs to be down there.
And they can just control everything, no one can get.
get down there. It's almost impossible. I don't know. It's very, because like Trump is,
you wonder how calculated he is while trying to appear uncalculated sometimes. Yeah. Right. That's the
ultimate question about that's the double entendre. But this has literally been like the weird,
reflexive talking point that he's gone to since Charlie Kirk died. Whenever he's talking about something,
could be Charlie Kirk dying, could be the Iran war, could be attacking Venezuela, could be what the
Fed did yesterday somehow in the conversation goes, but do you see the ballroom? We're working on that.
Obviously, it's a very important thing. Like, what is this about? So is that, or is that just his ego
where he wants to have a final thing? Like, he wants to build another monument. That's essentially
the Trump monument in, on the, where in D.C. And is this just his ego talking? Or is he this
brilliant? And that goes back to kind of this time traveling. There's that theory of that book that came out like in 1904, that
Bear, it's like the times of Baron Trump. Have you seen this? No. Wait, okay, this is, look up like the
theory behind Baron Trump and time traveling. And there's this, there's this book from like 1904
before Trump. I think Nikola Tesla's involved in some way. Oh, well, Tesla, his apartment, when it was
rated after his death, it was Donald Trump's uncle. Yeah, so it was all, yeah. All right, well, this is real.
You're not making this up.
The theory that Baron Trump is a time traveler stems from uncanny similarities between Donald Trump's youngest son and the protagonist of 19th century novels by Ingersoll Lockwood.
The theory suggests that Baron Trump, a character who travels throughout time, guided by a mentor named Don, predicts modern political events.
With some speculating the Trump family possesses time travel technology, the Lockwood novels written in 1890s, Baron Trump's marvelous underground journey.
and the travels and adventures of Little Barry.
Those are the things that I'm like, I'm like, do.
Wait, wait, wait.
Feature a young rich boy named Barron who lives in Castle Trump.
You can't make the shit up.
I'm like, and then you think about Barron,
and it's, and you think of all the theories with Barron.
Oh, yeah, he's seeing the fractals, bro.
And then it's, and then is Barron the next one up per se?
And then also you think about his other sons
that have kind of been forgotten, Don Jr.,
and Eric Trump.
And I mean, think about Tiffany Trump.
She's the most forgotten one.
Yeah, poor kids.
Yeah, yeah.
But she, it may be better that way.
Because Don Jr. can't walk around New York City.
No.
Nope.
But Tiffany Trump, people pointed out by the other than I mean,
Kai Trump.
That's the granddaughter.
Granddaughter.
She goes to, it was a bad timing.
She goes to Air One with her secret service.
Do you know where Air One?
Air One is.
Air One?
Oh, it's LA.
Air Force One?
No, no.
Airwan is this, it's a Instagram It place to go in L.A.
That is a grocery store.
Think a Whole Foods times 100.
And it's very expensive.
Haley Bieber has a smoothie there.
It's good.
But Airwant anyways, strawberry.
I'm a bodega kind of guy.
Yes.
$21 for a strawberry glaze.
$21 go fucking.
Dude, I can't believe you don't know Airwan.
So here, this is where I have like the end.
PC brain where I know all about all these like random things that in why you're here.
Yeah, but exactly. She goes to air. She does it. She wants to be a YouTuber. She does a YouTube and
she's like, I took my and it's a very, it's a thing. If you're not from LA, influencers go out there and
go, oh, I went to Erwan for the first time. She goes with the Secret Service and it was in the
midst of something. Could we Google that? Yeah. Oh, that's when we were. It was not in Iran. It was
something like that and people were making fun of her like how dare you do this people are starving
your your grandfather and then but she's just doing this stupid video right and why it struck a nerve
here we go but she's this 18 year old girl who isn't even in college yet oh no she she she may be
about to be she's about to be yeah yeah what was the headline deef sorry kai trump's cringy
erowan gross that's how they spell it k a i like kai sena oh what air ones are yeah yeah what in the
name of fucking medieval times is that.
Arawan grocery store hall and why it struck a nerve?
All right, let's go down.
So this is from March 11.
Kai Trump, the president's 18-year-old influencer granddaughter, went to a grocery store.
And a lot of people aren't happy about it.
That's because she didn't go to just any grocery store.
She went to Aeroon, a trendy market in Los Angeles notorious for wacky wellness offerings
and exorbitant prices.
And a YouTube video titled, I bought my, I brought my secret.
That was what I brought my secret service to Arawan posted March 9th.
She documented her experience where she bought a smoothie for $20 each and her bill came out to $233.
I'm about to go like...
She didn't.
She didn't help me.
Let me get this line out.
I'm about to go like bankrupt with this stuff, she said in the video, I'm going to need to file for bankruptcy.
No.
I feel like you're going to be all right.
Her grandfather does know a lot about bankruptcy.
Yeah.
I like this line.
The French revolted for so much less.
Straight up Hunger Games at this point, LMAO.
Let them eat.
Let Them eat cake was what came to my.
Now, she's an 18 year old kid, obviously.
Like, I was when I was 18, so.
Exactly.
But now, practically.
Now, it wasn't like she went to Airwan and someone stalked her.
She posted it herself.
Yes.
So that's where I kind of get both sides where it's like, why are you attacking an 18 year old girl?
But also, you're posting it.
Public figure, too.
Public figure.
And if you want to be a YouTuber.
Now, but yeah, she went to Airwan.
She was going to go into bankruptcy over it.
There was a lot of quote tweets about it.
It was March 8th.
So I think that's around when Trump.
Well, Iran was February 20, the night of February 27th into 28th.
So there we go.
So it was a week into it.
And everybody.
So that's what I think a lot of people.
Yeah.
It's like, this is my thing.
When you looked at the Biden administration for four years, it was like a giant troll drop, right?
You had a president who like, the lights weren't even on, forget whether or not it was home.
A bunch of unelected people running the country.
You had fucking luggage stealing transgenderers running.
the nuclear department. I mean, it was like this...
Greatest story of all time. It was...
I didn't realize people... I think people do that a lot.
That's a thing. What? The stealing luggage?
Yeah, people just show up and...
That's like a klepto thing?
No, I think people just do it because they know that like...
It's almost like a storage wars, but for free.
Because you're by, you're just taking a bag and then you're like, oh...
Well, now Palantir is taken over the airport, so maybe it'll sell that.
So, yeah. So you'll steal it and then they'll kill you...
They'll just shoot you dead.
Or if you had like, you...
shared like the wrong Benjamin Netanyahu meme.
You also, so it's either or, yeah, you're done.
But like optically, it was top to bottom.
It was like embarrassing.
And you're like, okay, it can't get worse than this, right?
The Trump administration, it's an entire, it's hard to explain, but it's like a different
language of it.
But the optics everywhere are awful.
Like they, like I, you have a lady with a fake face running fucking the Homeland
Security Department and spending, and spending millions of dollars.
while our husband's wearing fake titties out there.
In their defense, they could have never known about the husband.
You got like Cash Patel, who's one of the dumbest human beings and can't even, I mean, he's
looking at two places at the same time at all times.
We'll see you in Vohala.
We'll see you in Vohala.
You got, like, topped about it, it's a similar kind of thing.
You know what I mean?
No, it's a copy paste with a completely different actors.
It's very, yes.
Now, I, but I think, you know, what I really think my read on it is,
I think that Trump and this is what we kind of talked about before we started recording,
the Trump admin's kind of philosophy is it doesn't matter what the optics are.
We win.
Do you think that is how they've always been or do you think they got this enormous fucking big
dick from like the culture shift when they won the election the second time?
So when I say we went, that's their philosophy.
I'm not saying they're winning.
I'm not saying they're right.
Right.
No, no.
But I think and it may be like they like the COVID stuff, everything that happened.
at during COVID and then kind of the Biden administration.
I mean, he lost in 2020, even though he says he doesn't, but he lost in 2020 for reelection.
And then he won again.
It was this crazy comeback story.
But it really happened because we went through this crazy time period in COVID, which I think
he gets a lot of shit for, for like, I mean, he was the president where to start it.
That wasn't going to be stopped by anybody.
I agree.
I think that was, you could have put.
anybody in it, it would have been impossible. The fact we even got to pull off the two weeks
is almost like crazy in the American spirit where it's like the two, like people, this country
really did shut down for two weeks. Oh yeah, yeah, yeah. The fact that that, like, people even
kind of agreed to that is almost insane. They eventually fought back. And now today, they would
never agree to that. It would never. If that happened again, it wouldn't. And looking back,
if I don't know what I would have done. That's why even like people get on Cuomo. People get on
Cuomo did make some pretty bad calls about the nursing homes.
But I remember Scott Adams, who obviously more of a Trump guy, right?
Yeah, rest in peace.
Rest in peace.
He was saying, like, he's like, it's very hard to say to a Cuomo, you should have done this,
you should have done that, because you're not in those meetings.
You're not in those calls.
Now it doesn't help when it's just like at the same time.
At the same time, he's going through another scandal.
and he's like, hey, I'm Italian.
It's just how I do.
I like the touch.
It's nothing much.
Yeah, he's like, I'm Italian.
And then you have de Blasio saying like, here's, get the vaccine with the shake shack fries.
So it's like, here comes the airplane.
It doesn't, it doesn't help.
So it's like, but his point was like making the calls is tough for a lot of people.
That was an impossible situation.
Yeah.
And when I talk to people about it who were from like,
outside the Northeast Corridor right here, right?
In other places of the country,
man, do I totally understand their perspective too
from the very beginning where they were seeing like very little of it?
You know, they're like no one around them was getting sick.
Why is the whole fucking world shutting down?
The weird part about here,
and I think this is why the Psiop was so effective,
is because if you remember,
the first two weeks it was kind of nuts.
And no one knew nothing.
Bro, it was insane.
It was nice.
I stay so my dad had diabetes.
He's had diabetes since he was 20, I think type 1, or whichever one used, like, genetic.
So I was a little bit of afraid to go home because at first you were told like if there is, like they were saying like diabetes is, it turned out more so that COVID was a little bit.
Like if you had type 2 and it was like if you were very overweight and all that that was where you should avoid.
But I was a little bit concerned.
I didn't want to go home.
Like imagine, I remember reading.
Someone says it's like the risk of you being alone for a month or two is for.
far is far less than what you would feel like if you gave somebody COVID. Now, and then like imagine
if you were the reason your father died, like it would be awful. Now, that's what we were thinking at first.
That's what we were thinking. Then it eventually became clear. It's like, oh, you could like,
it's bullshit. Yeah. But at first, I remember I walked around. I went to Times Square. It was in.
Yeah, I do. And then you go to Times Square right now. There was, it's not a joke. There was
literally nobody there. It was like a weird dystopian movie. Yeah, I remember one of the,
when I was really making shorts, that was a clip that really resonated. My friend Taylor Ringgold
back in episode 49, he was talking about it because he was going into WFAN to work every day. And he
would just, he would ride in it from Long Island like 9 p.m. at night. And it was just like,
I am legend. And, you know, I, it's crazy because Friday, I'll never forget this, Friday,
February 28th, 2020 was the last time I was in New York City before until like 10 months later
or whatever. I was in Madison Square Garden the night the city shut down. You were at the Big
East? Yeah. No, shit. I remember when they canceled those games. So the Big East canceled the next
morning. They were going to play that like a 12 p.m. game. Yeah, I was supposed to go to that. And I was
at it the night before with my friends. And that was the night that they, that Thunder Jazz game.
after Rudy Gobert went like that.
That thunder jazz game happened and they were like you were hearing reports.
There was like the players are like all in a circle with like their mouths tied and like it was insane.
And that I think Trump gave a speech that night too and my sister was studying abroad.
So my parents were freaking out and I was trying to be the voice series.
I was like, guys, it's fun.
But I was I wasn't even saying from the COVID point of view, I was like, guys, if you think Trump and America
Chris, not going to get a bunch of rich study abroad kids out of Europe.
I'm sorry, you're wrong.
They're going to come home.
But the parents, of course, I get it.
You're a little bit freaking out.
She got home the next day.
She was fine.
But I was there, and that was the last time.
And then two days later, everything was shut down.
Well, this is what was crazy.
I was still working on Wall Street at the time.
I was transitioning out of there.
But, you know, I'm in it because I got clients.
And the market was the February.
I remember because Kobe,
Bryant's Memorial was February 24th.
That's the craziest part.
And that's when the market started taking a shit was that Monday.
And so that Friday, the 28th, I'm in the city.
I have a meeting above Grand Central Station.
Okay, yeah.
And I was early.
So I go down into the bottom of Grand Central Station with the Bluetooth on to take some calls
with clients.
I'm like fucking refreshing the Dow and the S&P.
And it's like, like, everything's red falling through the floor.
The Dow is like down like 1700 points.
And I remember I'm getting off this call with a client and I just look around and I see, you know, thousands of people down there.
And there's, you know, there's dudes in military uniforms returning from service or whatever.
There's, you know, a missionary trip over there.
There's a commuter going to an office over there.
And everyone's normal.
And I had this moment where I'm just like looking around.
I'm like, we're going to be all right.
Yeah, no.
Yeah, we're going to be fine.
And then just.
I was firm on, oh, by Easter.
Because I think Easter that year...
This is before it even, like, shut down.
So, and crazy enough, I was in London two weeks before, like, that February, like, 18th to 25th or whatever.
And during that time, when you were around there in London, that's, it started over there a little bit more.
I was almost shocked that we, I didn't get it.
I don't think I ever got it.
I never tested positive for COVID.
I did, yeah, I remember it.
I do.
And I got a bunch after that, but it took a while.
Now, maybe, but I did test a decent amount because they made us test at work, like once every Monday.
There must have been, for whatever reason, our air system must have been really good in our, in our office.
In Manhattan for Barstool?
Because even when people would get it, no one else would get it.
It wouldn't become an office thing.
And I'm not, that's not me saying, like, oh, it's fake.
I was just like, I think for whatever, maybe it was, and we're in like a Department of Education building.
We're not in this really nice building.
Yeah.
We're in a building that's like, it's us.
Then there's eight floors of department of education and some FIT, which is a college.
Fashionist.
Yeah, fashion.
Yeah.
So this is, it's like old school New York building for whatever reason, even when people would get it, we wouldn't, it would not spread.
You know, I haven't thought about this in a while, like this era that April, May, June of the pandemic.
because this is when I was building the show around the clock.
I moved back in my parents' house, building the studio,
and I would just be working all day,
and I'd follow some content in the background.
But, like, that was the Davey Day Trader era.
That was Port Noise moment.
That's when that call her daddy shit blew up,
and somehow everyone was, like, actually paying attention to that.
And what's crazy is Dave, got to give him a lot of credit for this.
he was like such an early voice of reason on this.
He saw what this was.
I remember when he put out a video probably like early May 2020, where he talked about,
he's sitting in his apartment and he talks about this bouchy moving the goalposts over and over.
And you're just like, yeah.
And then Elon went on Joe Rogan on May 4th.
And he was saying the same thing.
And you're like, woo.
And suddenly you're looking at Elon Musk and Dave Portnoy, interesting pairing there.
And they're just saying like everything that we're being told right now is not really what it is.
And these people are just fucking enjoying this.
And that was the click moment where you're just like, oh my God, yeah.
It's crazy to think that first month, Fauci was a superstar.
Oh, yeah.
And then it all, now he's, I mean.
He loved it.
Yeah.
He loved it.
And he had that kind of northeast accent.
Wear your mask and everything will be all right.
Shut the fuck up.
Well, that's the craziest part of that COVID is how we've been.
The mask thing, then you get into the vaccine.
I mean, I get it.
I think they had the best of intentions.
Now, maybe there was some powerful rule in class above everybody that did this.
You still think they had the best of intentions after the shit we've seen?
They're fucking eating babies out there potentially.
I know, I know, I know, I know.
I just, I mean, maybe they just knew Fauci was this guy who's like,
he'll just do buy the coat.
I feel like they felt looking back, the vaccine part is crazy.
It's crazy.
And it's not because it wasn't even a vaccine.
It wasn't like the polio vaccine.
It was something that was just, how did they, how do we even know if it was safe and effective?
It looks like it.
Yeah.
And we probably don't, won't know for a while.
You need some long-term studies.
But it was a huge bet, and I get it.
But also, you look at these other countries and I know they're a little bit different,
but like Sweden just kind of let everything just go.
But it's tough because there were so many people dying.
Yeah.
They were also, that's the thing.
They incentivized the insurance companies were incentivizing hospitals to put COVID on this
certificate because hospitals were losing money hand over fist because people were afraid to go to the hospital if they had any type of problem.
And so they'd say, well, you get 13,000 bucks or whatever it was if someone died of COVID.
So some dudes had stage four pancreatic cancer.
been in the ICU and then he dies and they go, call it COVID.
And suddenly that's a statistic.
I mean, it's nuts.
The fucking incentivization.
Like when you, because now we look at this from like the post-Ebstein apocalypse and you're like,
holy shit, who was, who really was pulling the streets here?
No, I don't know.
I wish I, I wish I did.
That's what it's, and you kind of see it even more just happened this past weekend.
The immediate response is, I don't blame people for it.
Right.
It's like, oh, that was fake.
And I get why people say that.
Because there's so many.
And obviously, even putting aside some of the things that are a little weird about what happened this past weekend, I'm more saying I get why people kind of are like that.
Yes, I do.
Even if there's stuff where I'm like, all right, come on, let's relax.
Let's let's let's let things come out.
I can't sit here and let alone lecture like yell at people or get upset of people for thinking the worst when there are some of the things that people used to be called inherently crazy for saying that now are like,
provably true and you're like, guess I can't rule out this other stuff, you know?
And it's so funny because, and this is kind of, I remember I was told in just the really basic,
like AP, maybe it was US history or AP Pollyci or whatever. And they were just saying,
they said, policy is very simple. If you look back, the country goes one way and then it shifts to
the other way. And then it goes back and then it shifts the other way. And it's so funny because the
people that were mad at that were in 2020 to 2024. It's like, oh, just take the vaccine,
shut up. Like, enough with the conspiracy theories. Now, those are the same people that are saying,
oh, that was the fakesest thing we've ever seen with. But here's the thing. It will shift back,
too, in 10 years. I can, we will sit down here and then the same thing will happen. And then
the people that were the conspiracy theories are the ones that aren't even questioning things
anymore. So it's like, it's very, it's just this shift back and forth. And that's, that's,
That's where sometimes they lose me a little bit.
But I'm all for people.
I mean, if you want to ask those questions, ask those questions.
I don't know how you would recruit a Caltech mixed skin kid that had a blue sky account
that was talking with William Stensel and like.
And he's going to live.
Yeah.
And he has to go to jail for the rest of his life.
I don't know how you would recruit them, but it's crazy of your things.
You never know.
Like there's and that's where you can't just run the stuff with absolutely no evidence to go off of which to be clear people were doing about five seconds after it happened.
Of course, of course, of course.
But like the fact that your head runs to considering the idea that like maybe it was MK Ultra.
It's not crazy.
I was going to bring it up.
It's like maybe M.K. Ultras or maybe that discombobulator thing that we were just talking about.
Maybe there's a discombobulator that can just trick your brain.
Yes.
I think like I don't know.
Yeah.
I think that's a crazy thing to say.
But I get why people are like, um.
Yeah, you were talking about the masks earlier.
I forgot about this, right?
That's what I was thinking.
Like maybe, like maybe you, yeah, the mask.
John Amendez, who was like the godmother of like fucking CIA disguises, she tells the story.
And there's a picture of it.
She, H.W. Bush was at CIA, obviously.
She knew him.
Like they had a close relationship.
And then he's, I think it was at this point, he's president.
He's not vice president anymore.
He's actually president.
So maybe it's like 1990.
And she tells the story where she had come up with the new prototype mask and she's like, let's test it out.
She did a full briefing closer than you to me to him for like an hour and then went like this.
And he was like, what the fuck?
30 years ago.
35 years ago.
What do you think they got now, bro?
You see those videos of dudes putting on the mask and like tighten it up like this and then putting
the hoodie up and you're like, I, I would not know. And that's a basic, like, you know, out of,
like a Spencer store in the mall. Yeah. Yeah, they just want to steal to go get like, uh, get 50K
and jewelry. Yeah. What are they willing to do where it's like trillions of dollars are on the line?
I mean, I, I, now it's not even money. It's power because it's like at a certain point. I mean,
all these people are fine for the rest of their life no matter what. So it's, that's not what it's
about. What? It's not money.
I mean, they already made it.
Money's a way of keeping score.
Yeah.
That's it.
And then they're just power.
I mean, it's the egos.
I don't know if it's wanting their place in history.
I don't really even know.
Because I saw a tweet coming in here.
It was like, so we're talking kind of on more of the theory side.
On the real side, there's a huge chance of this guy who just got arrested.
He thought he was going to become like a Luigi Mangione figure.
And he was going to potentially kill somebody and then become a political kind of hero.
Yeah.
But no one gives a fuck because he's not that good looking.
And it's just, it's just, he's a kind of a weird, like he's an average looking guy.
And he failed.
So that, and I mean, I think it's fair as a human being to think of things from a probability
point of view.
And yeah, there's a chance it's fake.
There's a chance that this guy's just crazy.
And there's a chance that he thought he could do something.
And then also, all the indications, I can,
I can't believe they had it at this Hilton.
That's why they need the ballroom, Jack.
I know, I know, I know.
And then the first, and I will say, I mean,
when these people are saying these things,
and it's like the first time an FBI director
went to the White House Correspondents there.
That's insane.
You got C-SPAN fucking throwing,
they were throwing side shots at it.
Can we pull this up, Dave?
Before the shots rang out,
they're like, I guess C-SPAN,
this is like their, you know, Met Gala or whatever.
Yeah, yeah.
So they got the cameras for all 10,
people watching at home and they're like, and there's Cash Patel. To be clear, you need to be a
credentialed media member. I'm not really sure how he's here. He's technically not in the cabinet.
Hegeseth was there too? Hegseth is in the cabinet, though. So that's more possible. You know who I
didn't see there? Who? Howard Lutnik. I never saw my boy Howie there. This is interesting.
That's just really interesting. Howard. Howard is. It's funny because Howard is in every photo behind.
And people will post tweets.
They'll be like, who's that guy behind him?
And it's like the people that know.
It's kind of that meme.
It's like the people that know.
The people that don't know.
And it's like, yeah, yeah, the guy.
And it's like the people that know.
And it's like deep pride.
Yeah.
If you go to Twitter, I just love the initial headline.
Patel, I've never been intoxicated on the job.
Excellent.
But if you go to Twitter, type in C-SPAN Patel.
And they, like, you just hear the fuck.
The people doing this.
We're in dis...
Yeah, that's it.
That's it.
All right, let's get volume on this.
Here we go.
This is great.
This is great.
We've got to mark that because that'll be...
We'll be discussing the dinner, talking about issues, taking your calls as well.
Looks like Cash Patel is in the ballroom itself.
Do not know who invited him.
Again, you have to be a media organization and a member of the White House Correspondents Association
to have a table.
All right.
So, so, so, so, so, so, so, see spent so interesting because it's WFAN for, for, like, it's literally
WFAN for international or not, or for politics.
Yes.
But even like less so, it's almost a, because WFAN for politics was like Rush Limbaugh and all
that, like C-SPAN's kind of almost the- They're the PBS.
Yeah, of, and people call in, like they literally call in.
Who is watching?
never heard of, I know people that watch, if you go into, this is another thing that fascinates
me is TV ratings for Fox News, CNN, MSNBC are all driven by old people communities.
100%. The average, the average listeners two years ago was 68, 69, and 70. They're all around
the same. Yep. And then you hear about it's like, and then you hear from, my parents don't watch news
like that, maybe they'll turn it on if something's happening.
But like, I've never been home and then my,
there's my dad watching MSNBC or Fox News.
But they know, you talk to people,
say, yeah, my grandfather, you go home.
They have Fox News on 8 p.m. to 8 p.m.
They haven't missed the five in 15 years.
And I'm like, I'm like, I guess someone has to watch it.
I was with, uh, my,
my dad's like just old school passive.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Well, what's that playing in the background?
Yeah, it sounds about right, you know, like that.
And really smart guy.
He just doesn't have time to like actually pay that close attention.
So I'm down in Florida with him.
And I forget what it was.
He was asking about like Tucker Carlson's opinion on something with Israel that you heard about.
So we have on when the war broke out, Tucker did this like 90 minutes sit down explaining the whole thing.
Like I'm Tucker Carlson.
This is all wrong.
And so we stick it on.
And at one point he goes, obviously no one that supports this war except for.
you know, I hate to say it, but the people born between
1946 and 1964 watch Fox News and I'm just like driving the car
looking straight forward, not saying anything, and my dad's just over there
like, damn it. Got him. That's me.
Just like that is entirely accurate.
But it's a fascinating. How does Fox News handle that?
Because how do you keep your base
while also trying to get new people in it? Because where
what happens to those viewers? Is it just kind of, oh, the people that are born from 1965 to
1980 and 15, 20 years, they're the ones that are going to be watching? I don't think so. I don't know,
though. I think they're right. This is my guess. I don't know because I don't know anyone at these
networks in particularly. But, you know, when you look at CNN, when you look at Fox, when you look at
MSNBC, I am guessing it's like they realize the boomer generation is the largest, most overstuffed
generation there is. They're going to ride this turkey as long as they can, suck the last bit of the
fucking fat out of it for money and for power and to get things through like Faisa Warrants and
Palantier and wars with Iran and bullshit here and bullshit there. And 10 years from now, they don't
care if it's gone because no one below those ages is ever going back to that. So they're just
riding it while they can and sucking the rest. And do you think, what do you think happens? So that's the
big question. The people are kind of rising up now, like even right and or left.
Do you think these are people that can make the change?
Because I mean, let's be real.
Trump was supposed to make the change.
That was this whole thing during the swamp.
But it's not really.
Like, you could even be someone that really loves Trump.
And I think you could sit them down and say, hey, you didn't drain the swamp.
And they would kind of be like, yeah.
But is it impossible to?
Or is it just, and are, is it, do you not have enough time to do it?
And is it, he's trying to drain the swamp.
And then the courts are, there's these scores.
that stop it? I don't know. That's more saying from his point of view, or he was just lying,
he needed the money anyways. Here's the thing. Here's the thing about Trump that's so confusing to me.
When his first administration was very chaotic to me, I have political differences with Trump. I'm
going to have political differences with everyone who goes in there because I really don't identify
with either party. But like when you, when once he was gone and he was gone for a little bit,
you know, you got past all the hoopla with January 6 and all that.
you could really just think about it. I remember in like 2022 looking back on his presidency,
and yes, it was chaotic. Yes, you never knew what he was going to tweet. Yes, there were things
you didn't like. Yes, there were very dumb people hired. Yes, there were mistakes all over the
place. I'm not saying that wasn't the case. But I remember thinking about what everyone was so worried
about before he got in there. Didn't happen. And I was like, exactly. I was like didn't happen.
And I said, I completely agreed with you. I said COVID was going to happen to whoever was in there.
Like whatever. Fine. There were things mishanded.
Who cares? Before that, I'm like, was it the worst presidency I've ever seen? I was like, no.
No, George Bush significantly worse. I don't think Obama was a great president. I'm like,
Trump was, he was fine. Now, and now this is why I say this, when he was getting attacked,
attack to attack while he was out of office, they threw charges on this guy. They fucking, you know,
they fucking almost killed him like the whole bit, whatever that was. You know, it was almost like,
okay, we've seen this before.
He would. Yeah, he's a liar. Yeah, he's a New York guy. But like, it won't. It can't be worse than this, right? And then he comes in and it's opposite day on everything. And it's a different kind of bad. Like Biden's bad was a very different vibe to it like we talked about earlier. This is a different kind of bad right here. But it's bad. And it's to your point, it is whatever the opposite of drain the swamp is. They're literally building like a fucking palent.
superfest nest underneath the goddamn White House as far as I'm concerned.
Yeah, you know, I think that's a fair assumption.
I mean, what even is that?
And that's even like the 13th on the list of concerns.
Right.
I mean, I think you saw what happened to Venezuela and you're like, okay, got in got out.
In theory, you could be against it completely, but it didn't get into this endless war.
But what's going on in Iran, it could be endless again.
And then that brings us back to kind of Bush into Obama.
days and it's just, now, also another thing that I'm thinking about is, now, is this just Trumpian?
Or are we going through this, like, we're so, and we're desensitized to it, but there's so many things
happening every single day. The New York Times didn't even have the assassination attempt on their
back cover on Sunday morning. Really? Yeah. Now, I don't know if that was because Saturday night
into Sunday. What? You get the physical. No, no, I saw it on Twitter, but, but, but you, I, I,
I don't think it was on the, on the, but we're, and there's so many things that happen
and we over-criticize everything, which is great.
I think politicians should be over-criticized of anything.
Agreed.
What will the next one look like?
Does it kind of go back to the Obama thing where it's like nothing ever happens?
Or do we go back to the Biden where it's like, we have kind of a zombie running it?
Or is it kind of just the Trumpian politics exists?
And there's kind of the opposite effect of Trump that comes in.
in that whoever wins, I mean, if it's Newsome, if it's, I mean, I guess Newsom's kind of the leader now,
I guess Kamala could run again. I don't think they would run Kamala again.
I can't, right. But she wins in these polls that they put out. She does.
What polls? Well, that's another thing. The polls are a legit joke.
The fucking Soros polls? Like, what are we talking about? But she can't put a sentence together.
Don't get me wrong. I mean, I think she would be, I mean, I knew, I mean.
Newson is definitely, or Josh Shapiro.
but I mean, Josh Shapiro never win because of the Israel thing.
Yeah, that's what I was going to say.
They didn't pick them because of, I mean, picking Tim Walls is one of the all-time decisions.
Yeah.
Because you could have gotten to Tim Cain, who Hillary had, who was just whatever.
Yeah, he was white, milk toast.
Yeah, milk toast.
Tim Wall.
Tim, Tim.
When he was walking out like this and then he was like, I'm a football coach, actually.
It's like, get the fuck out of here, dude.
And he got married.
Like, his biggest, his favorite thing of all time was like the, the,
Tenement Square. He got married on the Tenement Square anniversary. He loves China. Minnesota is its own
thing. I felt it felt like a troll. That's what everything feels like it's a simulation.
But here's the thing. That's the established to an extent, I think it shifted a little bit in
2024, but still got huge money from huge donors of people that are the establishment. I mean,
George Clooney is the establishment. And there's people, there were so many CEOs that were supporting
it. So many companies, how does that decision get made? How does somebody not look at that and think
this isn't going to work? I get why the Josh Shapiro thing didn't work. But even with that concern,
I mean, she still had the same. There was a big kind of looking at why she lost and they still feel
as if her, like a lot of people said it was like people didn't come out because they were kind of
concerned about her potential support of Israel. So like if that was the concern, that's a huge.
A huge, no, a huge, if I recall correctly, they're kind of looking back on it.
A lot, they're kind of, when they went back and played Monday morning quarterback and they did the full kind of analysis, that was something that came up.
I guess to prevent some of the hard left vote from coming out.
That's what, yes.
Because that's what, like, I don't think Kamala had an issue.
I think Kamala was another peasant avante on the string who wasn't going to do a goddamn thing.
Of course. But like when you write down her policy positions, that was one place she had Trump.
Scoop. Dem's working on secret report found Gaza costs.
She didn't speak up enough.
Yeah, but even though she, like, here's the thing, you're trying to please people that,
what could she possibly say? Right. Now, I understand it, but these are people that want it.
It's like, oh, they want, the thing that she probably would have had to do there would be,
I'm going to recognize Palestine as its own state.
But then also, I mean, this is the issue with political suicide.
And then political suicide and then you should probably lose a lot of donors.
I mean, that's the kind of, that's why it's like, I can't imagine wanting to be political
to that extent.
If you just do stuff online, you talk about stuff online, it doesn't matter.
You have your own fucking home.
You can defend yourself, all of that.
You're out there.
You have to play so many games.
Yes.
And that's why I even, I think that's.
That's why I kind of feel a little bit, Kam was her own thing, but I feel bad.
It's like you can, but then again, you picked this power hungry game. You knew it. You could
have stopped after you were in California. You could have, like, and then also you can get out
and make fucking five million dollars a year being a consultant. Why do you think they go for it
when they know they're going to be owned? I think there is a power and ego desire within people that
I can't fathom. And that's probably just because like my mom
mother and father were just great.
They don't really have it.
Right.
There's some people that just,
it's inside of them.
It may be genetic.
Let me ask you this,
because I was thinking this earlier.
Like, how well do you know Dave Portnoy?
Not well, not well at all.
He's just my boss.
And I like that he's my boss,
that it's more, yeah, he's not someone that really,
unless you're an OG,
I don't think you really know him that one.
But you probably know a little bit more about him
than the average person on the street, I'd say.
Okay.
So like Dave Portnoy
Self-made
Built this whole thing
Standing, you know
On at train stops
Handing out paper newspapers in 03
After leaving his job
I respect the fuck out of it
Builds this up over so many years
Ends up taking some
Some chips off the table
Selling to Carlisle Group in 2015
Whatever that was
Part of it maintains full control though
Ends up then getting that back
But then giving up to
Penn and maintaining control
the company but not having control of the overall thing and then somehow ends up getting his
$500 million investment back for $1 and gets the whole thing back. He's as far as things are concerned
like fucking a billionaire. And yet to me, everything I hear, he still hungrily attacks every day
just like he did seven, eight years ago even like that. I think he's definitely somebody that's a little
bit more, well, obviously he's still an ambitious, hungry guy. Because if not, he would have
just went away. But he's not, like, back when I started, he was in the office every single day.
Now he's more, he goes, he's in Florida. He kind of runs like, I mean, it's kind of an operation
that's a little bit. And also, I think it's strategic. Because he knows that he's not going to
be around forever and not wanting to do everything Barcelona-related forever. So he needs,
you're almost forcing the content employees that you have to almost make it by themselves without him,
if that makes sense.
Yes, but still be, here's my question, Jack, still being so big, so involved publicly,
clearly the face of the brand and all that, he seems from the outside, even if there's some
things where he's thinking about the future like that, he seems like he is still driven to
build, build, build, get this thing bigger, get this thing bigger.
I'm not saying there's anything wrong with that, by the way, but I'm curious, like,
for a little lesser parallel here to like running the fucking country or whatever, what makes a guy
like that who's done more monetarily than are in his wildest dreams want to still have that
drive to do that? So I think it's two things. One, I may sound like a boot licker, but I think
he truly, he bought the company back. He said this publicly. He did say, he was like, I just want to
keep this company break even. We want to grow, of course, but we want to keep it break even. I think
He actually cares about the people that he employs.
He will call them names and everything.
But he's New England, Boston.
Like, he's going to call you stuff.
If he really hated you, he'd fire you, right?
He'd get rid of you.
And then also, I think there's like, I mean, he's a guy that always,
he probably would have been doing what he's doing if it never really worked out the
way that it did.
And he makes all this money.
What's he kind of, he may like kind of being front and center, but not that much.
I don't know.
why does he do it? There may be a little bit of a, but also what do you do
do once you make all that money? Do you think you would stop? Let's say I give you
$100 million now. I don't think you'd stop. Maybe you'd do one a week, but I even know,
I don't even know you strike me as somebody that would do it still two or three times a
week. Maybe there's a little bit better of a setup and it's a little bit like you would
have more options just because money is buying power literally. But I think it's also
I think about it's like if you got this money like what would you do? I don't know. I
I mean, it kind of gets boring if you just...
Yeah, I'll never fully retire.
Exactly.
You would get bored.
I think about it.
And maybe...
And he does, and I think he really likes the idea of like he can give back to people.
He did that whole Barstle fun thing.
He loves to help individuals that very sad stuff that happens with police, firemen,
when there's just awful things that happen on the job.
And of course, there's a lot of things that happen all the time.
You can't do it for every person.
But he does that a lot.
And so maybe he's...
I don't know what makes him tick.
Yeah. I don't think it's an overall power desire dynamic because he's not hitting everybody up every day and being like, make sure you do this, make sure you do that. He kind of lets you run free. That's cool. Which is really cool and especially from a creative point of view. So let's bring it back to the politicians. Did I go to the bathroom quickly? Oh yeah, yeah. We'll be right back. All right. We're back. So what I was going to ask you was you brought up the original point where we got on that tangent about, you know, Dave and power. Power.
looks at power. You brought up the point of like, what is it for these politicians that they want to do it where they're still going to be bought off, but like there's something about the power that they, they love, even though they could get out of that and go make $5 million to go give a speech somewhere or whatever. So do you think it is a parallel on a way higher scale to like, in a bad way in this case, to like Dave, like, well, I just want to keep continuing. I built barstool. So I'll just keep continuing. It doesn't matter how much money I have. And they're like, well, I became a politician. So I'll just keep continuing.
And that means I need to try to be this position instead of that position or get to the highest position.
Yeah. So maybe it's just that they continue to try to get to that next step, the next goal along the way.
But yeah, it is a good point that maybe it's just them continuing and they've done it for so long.
And maybe they've done things.
And this kind of goes to a lot of the other theories.
It's like maybe they've done things along the way that they, I'm not saying this specifically.
about Kamala. I'm saying that's just in general. Maybe they've done things long away, and maybe they
can't stop. Maybe there's a little bit of a, no, you're going to do this or else. And now,
what is that else? We expose this, we expose that. I mean, that kind of goes back to all of the
blackmailing. And I'm sure that exists. Now, my bigger question is, how big is it? Right. And is it as big
as kind of the is it not big or is it as big as the craziest thought about it is which it's in the
middle which is still pretty damn big yeah and this goes back we talked about christie noem's
husband with the the fake big booze or whatever that he's into whatever was going on there
he had to tell christy noem and the fbi or maybe cia before she started or maybe in the midst of it because
they were saying they will use it like other countries will use this as blackmail so we need to know
about this wait he told them about it i think before it became public if you look it up he had to tell
intelligence agencies because they could have like back when she got the job yes and they still gave
her the job no way i i'm pretty sure that was in those articles you could look it up like it's it's
there i mean i think the intelligence agencies were saying hey we need to
to know, they may even have even found it and said, we need to know about this.
Is it true?
If it is, we need to be prepared for blackmail about it.
Because that's how these, and where's that blackmail from?
Who knows?
Could be from our allies, could be from other people as well.
You never know.
Of course.
You never know.
That's the thing.
There's no, there's no such thing, in my opinion, as a full-blown ally in any way.
Every one-one is looking to one-up everyone around the world.
there's no such thing as that. Are there places that are certainly closer friends and friendly? Yeah,
but we still all spy on each other. Like here, uh, Kirako, how you say, Kriaku. Kriaku, he was talking
about that too. And he's talked about it in a lot of interviews. It's, it's everywhere.
And he was, I think he was referencing it's like when he worked with, I mean, he probably has
the ultimate brain for this, but it's like when you work with spies, I mean, they're spying on you
already. And even when you go and work with a specific agency, that's supposed to be your, your,
friend, they're probably spying on you too. I mean, like, I'm sure Mossad knows everything about everything.
Yes. And that's their job, though. And they're, you can hate them. They're really good at it.
The best in the world at it. And that's probably why we allied up with them to an extent. I mean,
that goes all the way back. I'm not the biggest expert on that, but I will say, I mean,
like, we send them money because they probably give us stuff back. Yeah, but they give a shit
intelligence. Yeah. And I've just talked to so many people who are like they give us the intelligence
that they want the intelligence to be so that we can go do the things that they can't do themselves.
Which by the way, let me be clear, I'd think the same way if I were them. But the fact,
I think what has pissed off Americans more than ever is the fact that our people continually go
along with that. And we're like, why is that? That's interesting. I think it's really valuable
to ask all those questions. Yeah. Why is someone an ally? And then I mean,
I even think, I mean, when I'm discussing and thinking about NATO and all of that, it's like,
we're paying all of this extra and we're doing all of this for kind of countries across Europe
to exist in their own kind of fantasy world. And then we, if anything goes wrong for them, then we have to
come in. And then we're also getting screwed on a lot of those deals. That makes sense to me
in terms of why you'd be against it. But you have to ask those same questions about a military
point of view as well. And I mean, the Middle East, I mean, we'll probably die without having answers
about the Middle East. And the other issue is that, you know, this isn't the 1980s, 1990s America.
We don't have a burgeoning middle class like we did back then. People are being left behind.
This dystopian world is shown its fucking fangs, especially over the last six, seven years more than ever.
And people are losing, they're getting apathetic and angry. And jobs are going to start.
are going away. That's right. And specifically jobs of kind of those middle class and that
may doesn't really even exist anymore, but even more so. And that goes back to kind of,
I was talking about AI from a content creation point of view, but the bigger question,
like what happens? I really don't know. Now is this going to be and this is kind of the Gary Vee
point of view? It's like, oh, there's always new technology. There's the radio. They freaked out
about that. The internet. The printing press. The, uh, the, the, uh, the, the,
the line in the in the why am i blanking like uh where they would like my can't like people used to have
jobs working in car uh factories assembly line thank you like all these things that jobs have always come
and go that's right but this one feels a little bit different if and that's and to gary v's point
that's what we say about everything this one feels different this is the new normal the question is
we've never created something that can actually outthink us.
And it's only going to get smarter.
And it's only going to get smarter.
Now, let's go back to what you were saying earlier about when you were talking with the meta AI guy, because this is fascinating to me.
Now, I just want to make it clear.
That wasn't a guy that worked at meta.
It was another influencer there.
Got it.
But they were, but I didn't hear that from a meta AI specific person.
I just want to make that clear.
But this is someone that you would characterize as being very much in that.
space understanding. Okay. So I think there's something to be said about commoditized content to
where let's say you're someone who's not necessarily like a personality. You're just a,
here's how to do this or whatever content and there's nothing particularly special or charismatic
about you that draws people to you in like an artistic communication way. Yeah, you're in trouble.
You're in deep trouble with AI. But I do think and I don't think this is the bias of my industry and
and being in this, I've thought about this a lot over the past five, six, seven years.
I do think the actual substantive communication, which has a whole range to it, topics, all different
subcategories and stuff like that, but things where people need to feel like there's that thing
where it's a person and they can relate to them and it's what it is.
While there will be some AI that I think is so good that when people first hear it, they could get tricked.
I think that the veil of companies also revealing what is AI, which is going to be important to legislate, like YouTube will have to say this channel's AI or Facebook will have to say this page is AI and stuff like that.
As long as we have those guardrails set up, I think once people know that like let's say they're listening to a show talking about current events or a guy telling his story or something.
Once people inherently know that it's not a human talking, they're not going to get into it.
That's why that Drake and the weekend AI song that was fucking fire when you first, like, hear the first bars of it that came out a year and a half ago, no one listens to that because it's AI.
I know, but like that one of the top Spotify country songs recently.
AI.
But did it what happened when it got revealed to be AI?
I don't know.
I don't know.
And so I just, my response to that, even though I think I agree probably 90% is what happens?
when it gets too good.
And also what you just said,
and I actually agree with what you were saying,
but you're talking about Congress,
you're talking, like, we can't rely on those people
to make the right calls on AI.
They fucked up everything else.
How are they gonna be the ones that put the guard rails?
Now, it's kind of, it's really kind of scary,
but also like, I mean, the big people here are Elon, Zuck,
TikTok's its own thing with China,
and now it's in America, but it's like,
that's Oracle now.
And you could talk, yeah, then, and then, I mean, who knows?
Maybe these are all, these are the people that really will control it.
And how good will they be at identifying AI?
And that's also a real concern too, because it's like at some point Donald Trump
represented the outsider to places and people just like many of those people you just mentioned.
And now term two, right from day one, they're on the dais at the fucking inauguration.
And then the next day they're rolling out AI with Larry Ellison and fucking Altman.
Altman.
Like, what is that, man?
And then, I mean, obviously, Elon's involved in.
And then, like, Elon and Altman are kind of going back and forth.
But that could even be fake.
I mean, it could really be fake.
They're just showing, oh, there's different thought.
They used to like each other like a decade ago.
And they probably, like, those are two guys that probably could like each other tomorrow.
It's the same thing with Elon and Trump.
They go back and forth one day, Elon saying that Trump can't, is, that's why he's not
releasing them.
he's on the Epstein list.
And the next, or two months later, is that Marlago?
Right.
They're almost, but here's the thing, is that calculated or is, is everyone just running around
with their heads cut off?
I, I don't know.
That's a million dollar question, man.
What of it is reality TV versus what of it is really just a clown show?
I think a lot.
I think that it may be both, but even think about, you said reality TV, of course I go back,
I mean, that's Trump's bread and butter.
And that's why when I said earlier, it's like Trump, the thought process is,
behind Trump and everything in that in that administration is if people forget out about something,
it doesn't matter we go on to the next day. You just keep going. You literally, it won't matter.
And it may matter, but it's more so their philosophy is, we don't care, we continue on. That's kind
of Trump's entire thing. And you kind of see that from what he wrote in his books and everything,
where it's just, oh, I don't care. I just keep going. He learned like he really took what Roy Cohn
told him to heart. Yes. You never fucking admit defeat.
Yeah. You always change the, what are the three things?
It's like admit nothing, deny everything and keep going.
He doesn't, basically, yeah.
But he doesn't care. He just laughs it off or he's like, oh, you're wrong.
And then attacks the media member and then just keeps going.
But here's the thing, how many media members attack attack attack attack attack?
And then he just continues on.
Yeah, attack attack, attack, admit nothing, deny everything, claim victory, never admit defeat.
Yeah, and then also Trumpian move is make everything worse and then make it a percent better and then say,
look. We won. We won, exactly. We got the straight-of-Hermuz open for an hour. Yeah. It was totally
open fucking for free two months ago. No, I know, I know. Now, but here's the thing.
Trump will say it'll be, well, now look at the American oil. Like, we're going to produce more here.
Now, was that his goal and thought process when he did it? Or it's also kind of like in a weird
way. And even Democrats will admit to this. Trump somehow always comes out on top. This
feels like it may be over, like the run may be over, but he just, but think about it. Like,
January 6th happened. He denied every election result. He won the election four years later.
He came out on top. I mean, what happened two days after January 6th? On January 8th.
Forget, forget all the controversy over whatever happened. Okay, yeah. January 6th. Just ignore it.
No, no, what happened on January 8th? Remember when it was there. Yeah. Right? And it was like, oh, this is bad.
he was he was castrated on january 7th he was like even like his hardest core supporters are like
oh all right i can't just all right whatever like two weeks it's all right whatever january 8th he got
kicked off the internet everywhere and they immediately made him an underdog immediately they made him
the guy who was being attacked and he got to say look what they're doing they're doing it to the
sitting president what do you think they can do to you then a year a year a year
and a half later they raid his wife's panty drawers and charge him with all these crazy fucking charges.
Then he almost gets his head blown off and they kept it got to the point where people were like,
yo, this this motherfucker. And then he has a mugshot. Yeah. And people wear it on a shirt.
But that's the point of what I was trying to say. It's like we just win. And it's almost luck.
But it's just there's a I was talking with my friends. I was and people there it's, it's I think a Jewish
saying there's just like a north star of sorts where it's just like no it just works out and it's in like
the tour or whatever and it's in every culture too but i forget the the term but trump kind of has that
that where it's just kind of and then also like Dave portnoy gets the company back for a dollar right
and it's like he finds the collard addie yeah and then but trump and then like oh people attack
Dave, but then he just keeps going. What are you going to do? And then you find the next
Yeah, Defe Founding. Yeah, this. Camzulatova. This phrase is rooted in Jewish tradition,
specifically with the sage, Nachem, and Ishgamsu. There we go. He used it to mean that even in a
situation that appears negative, a greater good or spiritual lesson will ultimately emerge,
which there's something to be said for that, too, like in a serious way, like, you know.
There's something viral on Twitter right now. It's like the placebo effect of sleep.
Yes. Tell yourself you slept well, suddenly you feel like you did.
And then like there's just kind of, I mean, this is kind of, this goes back to, it's rarmaxing.
Like I mean, and I mean no disrespect to anybody that, but breaching max is the idea of like, no, I'm going to win.
It's like, I guess the better term is delusional maxing, but it's like, obviously if you're, if your leg, if you got shot in the leg, you can't delusional your way through it.
But it's right.
Next to, who cares?
The power.
The power of belief is real.
Oh, it's insane.
I mean, that's probably, that's something that, yeah.
And that goes beyond religion, like, or it is religion, but it's where, you know, we've had religious wars forever.
But it's the power of, and that's what, yeah, but the power of, and that's what, and this is kind of more on the crazy side.
It's like, why do you think they gave people all those wearable, like trackers?
Because when it, one new, I'm not saying it's fake, but it's like, you see that you slept shitty, then you slept shitty.
But if you're just like, oh, no, I don't sleep bad.
And you just keep going.
I shit you not because you're referring to that tweet.
I saw the same tweet.
Yeah.
People were talking about with the like the whoop, the which are great companies,
but yeah, or the or the ordering.
Well, no, no.
The first one you mentioned about the placebo effect.
Like I didn't sleep very well last night because I went to bed late.
And I shit you not on my walk.
I'm very routine.
I have the same exact routine in the morning.
It's the one part of my day I control.
And on my walk to the gym, I just told my.
self as I feel great. I slept fucking great last night and I had a really good workout.
There you go. I was like wait a minute. Wait a minute. And also the human the one thing I
remind myself the human body is insane. Yes it is. It's the, that like AI can't replicate it.
It's like it's truly like the human body think about all that's been through for forever.
You know, it's funny you say that because I was the other what what got me thinking on that the other day?
No, obviously there's things that happen. And it's not this is we're all talking within reason.
Yeah. Like you can't delusional match your way through cancer. But you may, you may be able to
really think positively, but you should, like you go to the doctor, all that. But the little thing,
like sleeping and then also kind of this idea where it's like when things go bad, it's like,
oh, who cares? Now that's really hard to do. But the ones that have perfected it,
Trump's probably one of them. Yes. I do think no matter what, there's something to be said for that.
He really, he has a delusional. And I wouldn't even call it. I wouldn't even call it.
a positive self-belief. He's always negative in how he talks, but like for himself and for winning.
He has a delusional, positive belief and reinforcement. And when you repeatedly use words like
tremendous, terrific, amazing, we went above and beyond. We won like never before. Many people
were saying it. Many, many, many people. You start to see those people. Yeah. You start to see it.
Now, that has a lot of negative effects. Yes. Yes. But for him, he's like, he buys it.
Oh, he buys it to his deathbed.
And I mean, even like in theory, I mean, not to say, I mean, we just saw what happened with Eric Swalwell.
Grom had very similar things too.
Now, but Trump just continued on.
Swalwell's dead.
Not dead, dead.
But he's maybe he'll pop up on like MSNBC eventually.
That was a hell of a fucking, he had a ditty-esque apology video or whatever that was.
It's like, all right, let's sit in a hotel room.
Let's make sure we're in front of the hotel blinds, which is totally not where they film pornoes.
And by the way, don't wear a tie.
Open up your shirt.
Act like you just fucked.
And you're finishing to talk about why you didn't fucking sexually assault.
Crazy's part about him is I think that stuff where that's obviously not good, what happened with all of the his staffers and all that.
That man dated a Chinese spy for multiple years.
Oh, yeah, fang.
That's, while he was on the intelligence committee for a long time.
That's right after.
And how often, like that may be.
happening without us even knowing. You do have to think, I'm not thinking, but the honey pot stuff?
Oh, yeah. Oh, my God. All the time. And let's be real. I mean, there's like a lot of people that
come from a lot of these countries that they could find like a very attractive woman,
send them over. I would just say how many honey pots happen in DC? Dude, I hate to say this. I hate
to be this guy. I think about it for myself. Oh, 100%. I think you should 100%. I think about it for
myself too and you have to think about it just from a like and I think uh there was a
article written probably months ago as how it happens a lot in San Francisco and because they
want to get the technology there was someone that worked I don't know if it was Oracle one of those
top tier ones there was a woman that he married that was a Russian spy he was with her for 25 years
Oh, if I could tell you some stories.
Yeah, exactly.
Exactly.
That's probably, and that's public.
There's probably, like, think about it.
There's a lot of that.
And they won't even.
Yeah, that's the spy.
The spy who married a techie
inside the rise of sex warfare in Silicon Valley.
Chinese and Russian operatives
are reportedly using attractive women
to infiltrate tech companies,
seduce employees and steal trade secrets.
And obviously this has been happening forever.
I mean, how long have operatives used attractive women
forever probably that's because that's the number one weakness of of powerful men i mean in men i mean
in men in general it's like dude i and i i hate myself for even it's an it feels like a i feel guilty
and it's like an impure thought i think of it like an ego like an ego thing too it's like why would
anyone want but i especially you dude you have an influence that is and you probably don't even
think about it because you're i don't think about it you're in this studio you're in this studio you're
And you're just like, oh, we do the podcast that did well.
Nice.
We did the next one.
I mean, I really mean this from a true point.
The impact that you have is very dangerous to a status quo that already exists.
Now, there's a lot of you, but not really.
I know you think there's a lot of you, but not really.
But you know how insane it is to be able to post a video with a random homeschool,
like I was advocating for homeschooling?
And it gets hundreds of thousands of views.
And then that doesn't include clips.
people would pay, brands would pay for that impact and people that really want the impact,
hundreds of thousands of dollars for each one.
But you don't think about it because you're in this studio in Hoboken, New Jersey.
No, no, dude, you're nailing it.
You're nailing it.
You're nail, like, and you wake up, you go to the gym.
I talk about it all the time.
Like, I'm, I'm an extremely private person.
I keep, which is so ironic because, like, you, people get to know me doing this.
Like, they just do because I'm talking with people of all different.
backgrounds for three hours at a time, multiple times a week. And like, they get to know who you are.
And that is a nature of it. But like, there's this and then there's my life. And what it's been since day
one when I had zero followers six years ago in my parents' house and press the upload button
is the same it is today. We're recording this not live right now. No one knows you're here.
We're chilling and fucking hoboken. And later, I'm going to hit this magical button that says
upload and five days later, I'm going to get back and be like, wow, people watch that.
People watched it and then people are going to and people will clip it and people will put it up and you'll put up on your own pages.
And then think about it.
You're talking to people all over the world right away.
So, I mean, and that's something that people need that impact.
I feel so guilty.
I'm thinking about that.
I know.
I know.
It's like, it's a thought when I go through some of these, especially when they're like a 12.
Yeah.
And then also, but do you think like, do you ever?
and I think I've heard you discuss this.
Are you ever thinking about that from like who you invite on?
Yes.
Yeah, people don't see what happens behind the scenes now with us talking about people coming on.
I hate that we have to have these conversations, but I got some stories for you, man.
Yeah, exactly.
And you know.
And then also you've, I think people trust you.
So you probably have gotten a lot of stuff and they know they've told you things and it's never gotten out.
So that helps.
Yeah.
But, I mean, you've talked to so many people.
And like, how many people?
And then there's the chances are.
I mean, and this isn't, we didn't talk about Joe Rogan forever, but people were posting,
they were like, oh, look at all these people that were in the Epstein files that were on Rogan.
It's not fair to him.
That's not fair.
It's not fair to him.
Also, he did say no to Jeff.
That's a crazy story that that one guy wanted him on.
But he's had like over a thousand episodes.
It's the only one where I was like, and who the fuck am I to talk, right?
I'm a huge believer in not doing stones from glass houses.
But when he had on Peter Thiel last year, and this is before the Epstein stuff came out and all that, but I was like, I was like, I don't know about that one.
Like, I feel like that's going to bite you in the ass.
But he also, from what I understand, like he put that off for a long time and then finally was like, fuck it.
Like, all it takes is being like fuck it one day and you do it.
I know.
And then it's done.
I've done that.
Yeah, exactly.
with people that no one's ever heard of.
Yeah, exactly.
Like, what the fuck?
You know?
So I think people, and it's so strange, people love to just fucking rip apart Rogan for every decision he makes now.
And I'm like, bitch, none of this exists without him.
Where were you when he was getting attacked by the whole machine three years ago?
Who were you?
I know.
You know, it's so, listen, he's not perfect.
No one's perfect.
I think it's a great point of view.
He hits upload and then he just goes about his day.
I don't know, look, I don't know him at all.
I've never talked to him in my life.
Obviously, I have 60 friends in common with him.
I don't know that it's that simple anymore, unfortunately,
because he's been so viciously attacked again and again.
But from everything I hear, the nonchalance of the actual recording
is like, just like it was.
Like he walks in, hey, where you go?
Like, let's go.
Let's go.
You know, and that is the most important part.
It's a matter of, I think what happens, and it's not just like in podcasting or whatever,
I think it's in anything.
When something starts and it's just pure and there's not bullshit and there's not people
yelling at you or whatever, there's a special upstart nature to it.
And then eventually it gets bigger.
And it's not your fault, but it gets tentacles.
And it gets all these, you know, hard stops at three emails and shit like.
that and I don't think he's gotten that but with anything you lose at some point like some of the luster
and the specialness because you're thinking about bullshit and that's something I always try to
pull back here because I'm like yo six years in this is just like it was day one I have to think
a little bit more about some people that come on but like I'm still you know I put on a shirt
about 60 seconds before you got here today you know that's that's not even normal for me I'm like
this dude that just rolls out of his apartment and talks with people and I'm
And I'm always saying, we got to keep this purity, however this is.
And if that means that I still have to, like I do all the thumbnails, right?
If that means I still have to be doing that three years from now because we retain the purity,
fuck it, I'll do it.
Yeah, the purity is definitely something that, yeah.
And once it grows even more, then it really gets out of control because then it's like,
I have these people that are working for me.
And it's like, that's probably a question you gotta really think about as an owner.
And I have to make these decisions that for me, I'm fine with the risk.
But there's people, there's 10, 15, 20 people that work for me. And then you don't want to
screw them over. Now, it's a lot easier when it's people that you know. Yeah, I got my best
friends working. Exactly. And it's like they're on, you guys are all on the same page. Right.
But once it becomes so big, you have to make these calls that are really, really difficult,
I would assume. That's also something Rogan's done an amazing job with. He doesn't have a huge team.
He doesn't have a huge team. I think the part that probably sucks for him is like all the
security that he has to do and shit like that. That's different. But like, you know, you see,
all these other podcasts, they got fucking 40 people with headsets when you walk up to it.
It's like that's not what this space was.
If I ever do that, put the back of my...
That's figured, if not literal, YouTube, don't demonetize me.
40, no, yeah, no, you go to some of these places and there's, there's, like, they have like
15 editors.
I know I get it.
It's great.
It's good for the economy.
It's good for the people that are doing it.
But yeah, yeah, it's in there, they're really on every single word that you say.
I walked in here.
You, you set up the camera.
as yourself, you were adjusting them. It's very simply, you go to the bathroom, when you have to go to
the bathroom, it's a very chill atmosphere. There's something that you go to. It's because these
businesses, these companies, they've seen what the power of the spoken word, the media holds
and new media, and they need to get involved. I mean, look, OpenAI paid how much money for
TBPN, which is the- Oh, yeah, tell people about that.
So TBPN is kind of think of if the tech world had a sports center.
And they started a year ago.
Would they get like $200 million?
Yeah.
Now, I was a little bit surprised by the number knowing how.
Now, I don't want to sound like I'm hating on them.
What am I doing wrong?
What am I doing wrong?
And I was even, I hit up and I hit up my age.
And I was like, what the fuck?
I was like, did I just do everything wrong?
And he was like, well, Open AI probably overpaid a little bit.
A little.
And then also, here's the thing.
I think Open AI could put a billion dollars in front of you.
I think you'd say no.
I'd say no.
Yeah.
I don't think you want to do it.
Because I'm an idiot.
I'm genuinely retarded.
Well, that's another thing where that is, is it better to just play the game to the max degree?
But if you don't want to, then here's the thing.
I think you would lose a lot of fans.
I would lose everyone.
And they would know I sold out and I wouldn't be able to live in my.
myself. So that's the most important thing to me. So then why is it matter? Now, obviously you want
money, but you're going to make money. Yeah, I say that as a joke, but it's also like they're
valuing, and no disrespect to these guys, but they're valuing them, you know, at 7,000 views
an episode of $200 million. So that's what I was going to say. So that's what I was going to say.
And I'm not even trying to hate on them in any way because I really think I hate when you see
other content people, hate on other content people, because it's like they're all doing
their own thing. Everything is valued different ways. And also, maybe they have this grandiose plan.
I look at that and I see the views that you do on every single podcast episode. So that,
but that would throw the entire thing out of whack. But here's the thing. A lot of people aren't going to
say yes, the open AI. And that's another thing. Pretend it was an open AI, though.
Like, I'm a big believer in what have people done versus what do they say. And it takes time.
You got to, you know, you come out into the world. You got to develop a reputation. And that is the
only thing you die with and you're still forgotten about a week later. But like... Which is so sad.
We were just talking about Kobe and Kobe gets talked about, but like... Not like you should.
I mean, that guy's like one of the most impact. And you can, you can discuss Kobe in a lot of
different ways. But yeah, I mean, there's people that dying. Like, you could die now in the president
could tweet about you and say, I'm glad you're fucking dead. Like, think about that. But think about
that. Now, that's Trump, but just in general. People die. That's the sad. That's probably in one thing I try
to work on alone. It's like you shouldn't be, you should be okay with your morality. But yeah, no,
that. I remember when I was five years old, I remember, I remember thinking about like,
what happens when you die? And it's never left me. What do you mean it's never left me? Like,
I always think about that. Not always. That's the wrong way to say it. But I remember,
I was like five years old. And I remember, I like, I just, maybe I cried out. I remember asking my mom.
It's like, what happens when you die? What she said? She was like, oh, your grandma's in heaven.
and that's what happens
and that's what's going to
and if you're a good person
I was five but I've always thought and it's just
kind of death in general. I'm always thinking
about like your morality it's like
damn and what this place goes on forever? What happens after that? It gives me
anxiety in a way that's
I can operate with it's not like a
deathly anxiety but it's something
that's probably been in humans forever
like that kind of like not in your stomach
where you're like wait what happens after this but
the people that I envy the most
are the guys that
like modern day
people that just don't care
the guy that goes into the boxing ring
or an MMA cage
says fuck it I don't care
I'm gonna go
I'm gonna go fight and yeah
I could really like something really awful
could happen lock that cage
just me and another man
and we're gonna fight until the end
now obviously there's a ref
there's rules
but those are the people that I look at
I'm like holy shit those are guys
that don't give a fuck
yeah you have to have a like a certain thing
within inside of you
that's just, and I'm talking even people that do it, not even like, oh, you can talk about
Ilya, you could talk about Terence Crawford, you could talk about Floyd Mayweather,
but I'm talking, even people that kind of just do it.
To do it?
Yeah, everyone's wired differently.
And there's two things I always remind myself, because I want to take a step back for a
second and go back to a question you asked a minute ago.
But like, number one, I've only ever lived between my two years.
I can psychologically look at data and see how other people think, but I can never fully
know how each individual thinks.
And number two, and this is why I want to go back to your question.
One thing I always say is people, and sometimes I get caught doing it too, and I just did,
people throw around the term, if I were blank, then I would blank about very serious things all the time.
And the fact of the matter is you never fully know until you're faced with that decision.
So no one has ever put anywhere near a billion dollars in front of me to be very clear.
Okay, yeah.
What I can say, though, is that I have had a lot of money.
and default test to this, unless you'll test this. I've had a lot of money put in front of me
from people. And I have instantaneously said no because I, whatever that thing is, and maybe that's why
I'm not well capitalized, maybe that's why I don't own a house. Maybe that's why I haven't made nearly as much
money on this show as I have. But that thing that exists in people to wear like the ultimate scorecard
is how much money they're making at all times, I don't have that. I never have. I am a fulfillment guy.
I'm a guy that when I go to bed at night, if I look in the mirror, I'm like, do I enjoy what I do?
Like, I think Gary V used to have a term about this.
There's people who are romantic about how they make money.
And he wasn't necessarily complimentary in saying that.
But I realized early on, you know what?
I am romantic about how I make money.
I only want to make money on things that I really actually value in things that make me feel good.
And if that makes me weaker than other people and being able to move forward with a bank account like other people can.
and I can't, I'm fine with that.
Yeah.
I also thinking, this is probably something,
and this is what friends tell me,
my parents tell me they're very supportive,
they're great.
I feel like that's one of the luckiest things you can ever have
is like really supportive parents or even just won.
But both of mine, I just lucked out.
I won the lottery with that.
Me too.
And this is what I'm going to tell you,
like the impact you have is like,
I mean, I know you don't believe
this, it's otherworldly. You're probably of, I mean, it's tough to say, but of people in media,
like, I mean, there's not a lot of people doing what you're doing. I think you ever think of it.
I know, but like, I really truly mean that. It's like, I mean, you're, we could pull up your numbers,
but like having consistently six figure, seven figure views on podcasting episodes just on YouTube,
we don't see the audio numbers. We don't have that publicly, but like, then you add those up and you can, like,
calculate, you think about it, that's an impact that, like, you can't, you can put a monetary value
on it, but it's, it's, you, I don't think that really matters for you. And you may even have a
reputation, because I know how all these places work. Every fucking talent agency in the world knows
who you are. Every UTA, CAA, WM, but in every company, not every company, because marketing,
there's people like, and that's another discussion for another time where it's like, who runs
marketing, that's another discussion for another time. But these people know, but they
also probably know it's like oh he doesn't want to do it they know like it's so strange but like drew
like and then they're like i'm at w i've been at w me for a long time i love my agent he's great yeah but
like those are people that there's even because then we get to the discussion of and this kind of goes
back to peter teal it's like they've always tried to have those types of people in their back
pockets and you go and this goes to jd vance and then it goes into it's like it's like
like, oh, when did he start to have a connection with this person that turns out to be,
what's Peter Thiel, top 10 most powerful person in the world, if we had to guess publicly?
That we know of.
That we know of.
How big is, then it's, but how do they get these new people?
And that's where, I don't know.
That's a great question, man.
And that, I don't know.
Because they would start these, and it's always interesting when I hear it.
It's like they would run these newspapers in these college towns.
And they would.
Like Peter Thiel, or they would invest in them.
And they would find, and there was other people, there was people out, this is how they would find specific political people.
I forget the name.
They would invest heavily.
And these are people that would kind of be hand selected to be the next, because they see how they write.
And like there were people underneath these powerful people reading all these and they would find.
Is this it, thief?
Yes, the Stanford Review.
In 1987, Teal co-founded the Stanford Review,
a conservative and libertarian student newspaper at Stanford University.
Ongoing support.
Teal has maintained a relationship with the paper for over 35 years,
providing financial donations and acting as a mentor to staff.
And Peter Teal is not unique in this.
There's people that throughout specifically,
this is how, like, rhinos kind of worked
within like the Republican Party,
words, they would find these people that are politically active in college. And then, obviously,
if they're writing for the right wing newspaper within the college or the review, whatever it is,
then they would find and see who they thought was really talented. And then they would kind of take
them under their wing. They would get a really good job. They would get a, or not even a really good job.
They would say, hey, you want to come work for us? And then this person who has these grandiose ideas
in college gets told, we want to help you run for, uh,
somewhere in a small district.
And then before you fucking know it, you're a senator and they come back and say, hey,
remember me or hey, we've been with you the whole time.
This needs to get through.
And then along the way, if you're thinking really crazy, I mean, think about all the things
that we've done as like throughout my 20s to 39.
Oh, everyone can get got in a ways.
Oh, my.
And like, get gotten in ways.
It's just like even just a conversation you had at the bar with your buddies that you didn't really mean or anything
You get got you get got so and then it's this search in Peter Thiel's not unique in this
I'm sure somebody will point it out in the comments there's other people that have been doing this for a while
I think um I forget the name but there's people if you can tie back a lot of politicians and this is kind of the chicken or the egg
because if you're writing for a public or for a newspaper in college,
you're probably likely to get involved in politics.
But they also kind of like they are always keeping an eye on it.
And then I wouldn't be surprised now if they're always keeping an eye on people that are making videos.
That's the new newspaper.
They find the 18, 19 year old and they say, hey.
Yeah, you're taking the words on right.
Dave just said it clavicular.
Okay.
He's funding him.
Well, so I interviewed him.
You did.
Yeah.
What's he like?
Really neurodivergent.
Yeah.
Finally had no shit Sherlock.
You know what's crazy?
He went to Seton Hall prep.
Yeah, he did.
He's from Hoboken.
Yeah, I think I know some kids who went to school with him.
I don't know if anyone's funding him.
Now, he did just open a club with people that are like a little bit more like on like a Jewish mafia side.
A little bit of Israeli mafia side, which I've heard some things of the that aren't great.
Like what?
I just think it was more so I, not that I heard it specifically, but it was more like, look them up.
Hmm.
Like, um, here, I could get the name.
When did you interview him?
Right before he shot that alligator.
He told me like tipto-maxing shit.
Tipto-maxing.
Wait, let me find.
Oh, my God.
So I?
What did Channel 5 report, Thief?
Yeah.
So I, was that more of like a conspiratorial type video?
Like, I think they were a little bit more of, uh, so that's always been the thought.
Um, where is...
There's like a guy like Uncle T or something like that who gives them all these donations.
Yeah.
And here's where the thought is.
Peter Thiel talks about like transcending, which is dangerously close to ascending the human race and creating like a second digital race and basically like promoting transhumanism ideas and whatever.
And I'm just saying here, Jack Mack, if I wanted to hack culture to create that, I would convince an entire.
generation of men that they got to take fucking 60 million drugs and look smacks and not reproduce
and fucking castrate themselves into perpetuity whatever it is you know just to try to keep up
with the joneses and create that standard i mean the when you listen i i actually feel
as much as i joke about it and whatever with with clavicular i i empathize with the kid and
more specifically like i i feel i don't know if this is
the right word, but like, pity for him, you know, because he's been, he clearly is very neurodivergent,
as you said. So he's got, he's, and I think he was a nonverbal autistic for a couple years when he was,
when he was a child. So like, he has some actual rooted health issues and society was able to
torture him in such a way that he feels like this is the only way to be able to exist among people.
And unfortunately, at age 20, he doesn't have, he's just out there trying to make.
money and doing his thing. He doesn't understand what he's being used for, in my opinion. And there's
people who would be like, he knows damn what he's do. Maybe. But like, I think he's just a really
dumb fucking young kid. And he's been just thrown into this spotlight out of nowhere. And I feel
bad for him. Yeah. So he was, he's a smart guy as a lot of neurodivergent people are. He knows,
I would say if you IQ tested him, it would be very high.
You know he's from Hoboken.
Yeah.
And I think he's just...
I mean, it's a great question.
I mean, and you have to think about it.
We're talking about all of these newspapers and college newspapers,
and I was telling like, oh, they found that JD Vans and all that.
Yeah, they probably are doing with TikToking too.
I mean, but here's the thing with collab.
I've known about him for a while.
When did you first find out about him?
Two summers ago.
And for people out there, a lot of...
of people listening do know who he is because he's been astro turked all over the internet,
but for people out there who don't know who he is and what his thing is, can you give a full
context on that? So clavicular has risen to fame recently for specifically streaming and being a
looks maxer. And also the looks maxing is essentially the, if you're a looks maxer and you're a guy,
and it's just essentially just trying to become better looking, but he uses very aggressive
techniques. So that would be that would be like hammering your face to try to break small bones
within it and then it regrows and gives you better cheekbones and jaw feature. That's apparently
pseudoscience. Yeah, that may be. I don't know if this is, I do not, I'm not endorsing this.
But this is a guy that was like, yeah, like I think he took like H-GH, like steroids when he was
younger. I don't know if that's confirmed, but this is like what a lot of the looks maxing community
is saying. And then you are, especially when you're younger, it's the chance to really,
like you can do things that you're, because your body is morphing into what it's going to be,
so you can be a lot more aggressive. You can't, his thing, I don't know if this is true,
but you can't get taller once your growth plates close, of course, but you can be a little bit more
aggressive when you're younger, he says. And like also, you can be aggressive with all of
drugs but also you can really fuck up your endocrine system and it can be really really bad now he's
risen because he's kind of funny in his own way he he has this weird way of talking yes which is
terms like jester which is just clown uh gooning which is was already pretty popular but like
jester maxing um looks maxing uh and he adds maxing to the end like we're podcast maxing right now he went up to a
girl once on stream when he was having a party and she was sitting alone he's like oh are you okay
you're alone maxing right now but he says it and so i was talking to him and was like don't you find
the comedy in this he was like no anyone that thinks that's funny is retic and i and i was like and i and i was like
i don't want to be disrespect with you i just like do you really mean it's like no i think that's
just how i talk and anyone that thinks it's funny is or is just wrong that's just how i talk and i don't and he
He says, I don't get why people clip it and it gets hundreds of millions of views and all of this.
But also, this is a guy that that's why he's popular.
And I've said, do you think you've created kind of, because his whole thing, I asked him.
It was very apparent.
You and I are having a conversation right now.
We take joy in this conversation.
I was like, it feels like you don't take joy in anything.
And he said, he's like, yeah, that's just how I'm wired.
And then I said, what gives you joy?
And this is crazy, but he said without, and within a second he said meth.
And he, I was like, are you still take meth?
And he's like, no, not anymore.
But I was like, but that's what fires you up?
He's like, that's what fires me up?
And I was like, what about helping looks max?
And he's like, yeah, but no one really wants to do that anymore.
And I said, well, do you think you've kind of created this community that doesn't really value anymore?
It's like, yeah, that's definitely a possibility.
Just because he has such a big, I mean, this looks like, this is a very, this is a
very, these should be a very small community. 0.000,000, 1% of the internet. Now what are the effects
of this? Dude, I, and that's the thing. I was so fucking stupid when I was 20 years old. I was
stupid when I was 25. Exactly. You know, so I have always felt bad for these kids at any level
of attention when they're thrown into the spotlight and then they have to look stupid in front of the
world and then maybe they convince everyone else to be stupid too. So that's where I empathize with him.
But like, you know, he's 20 now, but he was starting this stuff when he was as far as I've seen,
like when he's like 16, where the fuck were his parents? You know, your kids in the bathroom,
your neurodivergent kid, by the way, is in the bathroom hammering his face. I remember I saw
clips of him talking about his mom would like try to take away his hammer or whatever. Yeah, he would
take away her at the room. But like, clearly, something.
things off here, maybe get some help. Well, they took them, they took away his passports too,
because he wanted to go to Turkey to get double jaw surgery. And double jaw surgery for those
that don't know would be to like a sensuate. But here's the thing. If you, if you look at this kid,
I mean, the kid is a good looking guy already. But he says there's our, you know how, bro,
he's on 12 milligrams of redatututide. Of what? Reda, it's a peptide. What does this one do?
Ep, it's like, you know how GLP ones?
It works on one receptor.
Then there's like, not Montero.
There's another one that works on two receptors.
Reda works on three.
But it's a peptide.
It is not approved by the FDA.
You get it from China or Mexico.
It's gonna, my prediction is someone may be watching this by the time that it gets approved
because these pharmaceutical companies like Hymns, like Lilly, all of them.
They see, bro, if you look up Google Trends, Reda gets searched.
like no other.
People are obsessed with it, so that means they want that to come in.
RFK Jr.
has talked about it on Rogan saying that he's going to get some of them in.
This is all the peptide craze.
But here's the thing about Clav.
Clav's been around.
Clav was a part of this weird thing on the internet called the Cookieverse.
Cookieverse.
So this is when I get very just like, this is cookie.
So there was this weird.
That's why you're here, Jack, Matt, keep cooking.
Yeah.
So there's this guy, and he's still popular online.
You can look him up. His name's Cookie King.
Big on TikTok, specifically for kids, probably 14 to maybe 21.
But usually, like, a lot of his fans were very young.
And his name's Cookie King.
And he created this cookie verse where he had a lot of people that he would just, he posts like 20, 25 times a day.
And a lot of them, these cookie verses, he meets all these people.
Clave was a part of it.
Here's Cookie King.
This is real.
And you know Santa Cruz.
Cruz, Medicinals?
Yes.
He, he does this locked in.
And he's tried to help.
He, I would say, is a great guy who's older.
That's not the Peter Thiel.
He's helping truly.
He's like, guys, just go to the gym.
You don't know, to take all these crazy things.
Your hormones are through the fucking roof already.
Just go to the gym.
You're 18.
You can put on all the muscle in the world.
And he does these locked in events.
And he did it with Cookie King once.
And he did it.
And Clav was there.
And this is, this was,
this past summer. That's when I really got and saw Clav for the first time beyond just kind of
some random videos. But looks maxing became very popular on TikTok in 2022 to 2023. And then Clav was
kind of doing that and he was already big. There was these forums that exist. And then he did
it on TikTok and then he kind of, he is what he is now. But he's been around. Do I think he was
funded? My guess is no, but nothing would surprise me. That's what I'm saying, dude. When I look at
different ways. Tyler Alvara and I were talking about this in episode 363 when he was in here.
But like, when I look at different ways as to how I would destroy collapse society upon itself,
there's a hundred, maybe a thousand different broad variables you need to do that.
This is one of them. Now, this is how you destroy it. When you start making people destroy who
they are as a person to try to win the affection and appeal of other people strictly on that metric.
And then you mainstream that and make that the popular thing so that other kids who are highly,
you know how impressionable.
I was impressionable when I was 27.
I'm impressionable now.
Yeah.
Absolutely.
But like on a whole other level.
And then you look at these 18 year olds, bro, I was an only child.
I was on an island.
Like I was looking around going, all right, what are we supposed to do?
like it makes me so sad and it's and it's and it's and it's also pushing men and women away from each other
because that's another thing that and I put a tweet out about this you know and maybe some of
it's maturity and I'm a little older and I've been where I need to be and I know what I want in
women but like when you look at all these women that he's hanging out with and fucking and
glorifying and to be clear what he does what does he do all of those women are like a lot of
them are her, his only fans models, and he makes money off of them.
So it's like, it's like the internet pimp and it's on my way.
You're making my point for me.
He, when you see what is now being glorified, all these girls are like the most, I was going to
say, the most prototypical club girls.
Well, now you're telling me they're even like fucking only fans models.
And like, just getting back to our basic evolution, when I see these clips of these women,
they do not possess a single trait that you look for in a mother of your.
child. Not one. Yeah. Not one. Yeah, he, but here's the thing. I don't think he thinks about it like
that. Of course he doesn't. That's the point. I, what would go, if I was to make a case for why he's not
what he is, are not funded, is his PR guy was this guy by the name of Mitchell Jackson.
Mitchell Jackson runs, and this was a famous tweet, he runs like the Arkham,
um, jail. What's the Arkham?
Asylum. He runs an Arkham Asylum of people. He runs. If you look up Arkham Asylum, Mitchell Jackson,
you should see who is his PR people. This guy's the nicest guy in the world. I love this guy,
Mitchell Jackson. But I'm going to show you his list of people that he represents. He represents
the Arkham Asylum. Kansas Owens. Yeah, I got to see this. Deif, we can use, he's going back and forth.
We can use the camera too a little more. That's good. Yeah, I want to see what you're talking about here.
I'm not familiar with this.
Yeah, so Mitchell Jackson, but he dropped him recently.
Mitchell did.
Drop clouds.
Because he was concerned about his drug usage.
Look up.
Mitchell Jackson.
Type in on Google.
If you look it up on Google, if you just type in Mitchell Jackson, Arkham Asylum,
the first tweet will pop up.
Because I looked it up, I think literally yesterday.
All right, we got it.
So, bro is running Arkhamassad.
Described quote-unquote interloper,
the 33-year-old PR Pro is accustomed to working behind the scenes on behalf of high-profile
and frequently shits-stirring clients, such as Candice Owens, Brett Cooper, Adam Friedland,
Caroline Calloway, and Adam 22.
Quote, I gravitate towards clientele that have something to say because otherwise I'd be bored,
Jackson tells me, adding, oh, this is from Taylor Lawrence.
So Taylor Lorenz.
I also interviewed Taylor Lawrence.
Wait, is he at an agency, or is he just a PR?
guy. Just a PR guy. This is not like a CIA guy or something like that. Okay. Now, maybe Mitchell
Jackson is fucking bought off. You never know. But Mitchell Jackson, and here's the thing,
when I interviewed Clav, I got asked. They asked the company, I was like, I'll do it. And then I
should, and do it. And then I showed up. He showed up, like, Clav was still sleeping. And then
Mitchell showed up with food he was eating. And we were just shooting the shit. He's like,
yeah, Clav will be up in a few minutes. And then he would, you have to pay for it?
No. Interesting.
And then I think some people have, but they asked.
And this is when he's doing this 30-day stream where he ended up eventually getting arrested.
But he, but in the midst of it, they needed stuff to do.
And that was when I was the day after, two days after, Andrew Callahan interviewed him.
And Klapp ended the interview early.
And Mitchell was like, oh, can you just not do it about politics?
And I said, yeah, I don't really want to talk to him about it.
I know you could definitely talk to him about all.
I mean, he was a part of an international incident with Andrew Tade and Nick Fuentes
when they played Hale H.
In the club.
Oh, yeah.
And so, but I was, I don't really, I would rather talk to him about, I'd rather talk to him
about his, like, I want to get inside the mind of what makes him tick.
Right.
And I want to talk about the looks maxing stuff.
And I mean, I, the saddest part was when he was like, yeah, I was like, does anything
fire you up?
He's like, not really.
Math.
which is kind of sad.
That's so sad.
But Mitchell Jackson dropped him and he said,
you need to get help and I won't return to helping you until...
It's very funny because Mitchell Jackson,
he's this centric gay man.
He's just very...
He's...
He is, you know he's gay.
And he...
His relationship with Claf's pretty funny.
It's like, Clavis is gay PR person,
but Clavis really liked him.
And ever since, Mitchell said,
you have to get sober.
Clavis claimed he's been sober
Claimed
Yeah I mean
What did he do?
He just like OD'd on a stream or something
Yeah but he was to he takes these like beta blockers
And then he adds alcohol in the mix
And then he adds a bunch of other shit
Boy he's not isn't he 20
He's not even drinking age
He just turned 21
Okay
That is fucking
Ziz okay so yeah
He's the kind of the original OG
Looks Max or YouTube like remember Rich Piana
Rich Piana.
Show me a picture of Rich Piana.
Sometimes the names don't do it.
He was like an eight-hour dumbbell session.
You'll recognize this guy.
This guy was OG Internet legend.
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
He unfortunately died, a rest and peace to him.
I loved his videos.
He was so funny.
What?
Died in Clearwater.
Yeah.
Rich Piana, 5% nutrition.
He was unbelievable.
But Zizz, he was huge.
Clav is kind of like him, too.
but then there was another guy.
I forget his name.
Do you see this ending, not tragically?
Well, they people.
I know, that's what I'm saying.
Do you see, and, like, I don't mean to be morbid around here.
I wish clavicular, nothing but the best, and I hope he comes off all this shit he's doing.
But like, do you think we are sitting here five years from now talking about someone who is still alive?
Yeah, you do.
You think he'll live the next five years.
I think he's so neurodivergent that it.
if he gets help from off of drugs, he's so focused in a way that could be valuable for him.
He doesn't like going out.
That's why he took drugs.
That's why he told me.
But he kind of has this weird kind of bad feedback loop where good content for him is being out in public.
He said he's a guy that he's told me, and when we were interviewing, it's like,
He's the guy that could go and be in a house for two weeks,
not talk to a fucking single person,
and it wouldn't matter to him.
Yep.
Maybe he'll talk to people online, but not really.
But he's the guy that, and he says the reason
that I take these drugs is, because literally the day
that I interviewed him, he tried to go out to a club that night
without any drugs and he ended up panic attack.
Yeah.
So it is, that's the sad part.
I feel bad for the kid.
I feel bad for the kid.
And then he has this bad feedback loop where it's like,
the content that my people want is not me talking about looks maxing,
but want me to go out to the club and be mean to like a blonde chick, you know?
Let me tell you some, man.
I don't know anything about the type of content he does.
I don't know anything about the streaming world or the instantaneous reaction like that.
So I have to speak from a separate address here, if you will.
But if you fall into that trap of just giving what you think, I won't even call it people,
what you think the algorithm wants at all times, you will completely lose yourself.
And this is where I give myself a little bit of grace
for maybe starting later than I should have.
In the years when I was trying to find myself
and figure out what I wanted to do with my life,
when I should have had the answers in front of me,
one of the things I did, unbeknownst to me,
this was gonna be useful, is I watched people online
and across all different sectors
and how they would change and what would change them
and what the crowd would do to them
and how they would react and how they would live through it.
And there were so,
many valuable, it's not to say I'm perfect by any stretch, but there were so many valuable
lessons I learned before I ever even bought a fucking camera that I had all these examples of like,
ooh, remember when that guy did that thing because he thought that was going to be, don't do that.
Yeah. And you want to be really, you want to be very careful, especially about just,
yeah, just be yourself. And also, it happens in a lot of different ways. It can happen with
you the fame becomes too much or you try to seek out something that you thinks owed to you
where it's like oh I have this amount of views followers I should be this that or the other
and then also there's a lot of people that if you can't take like you need to be able you have to
have a weird thick skin in a way that I think there's I know people that have thick skin but they
can't take criticism online and it kills them online I've kind of I'm like beyond
past that. I'm kind of good. But I still have it. Like you're human. You hear things and you don't want to,
you don't want to, but the person that can kind of just continue on and not, but there's a lot of
people that just the criticism eats them alive. I've seen it happen. And they just are never the same.
And maybe that's good for them. Maybe that wasn't, it wasn't, the internet wasn't for them in
their own way. But, and then people change a lot. And to be willing to accept it, man. And also,
I think there has to be a grace for yourself.
that is I'm going to figure it out.
But it's tough.
I mean, I'm still, I spend so much of my time feeling like I haven't figured it out.
That and that's probably, that's the catastrophizing and the spiraling, which isn't valuable for the day's tasks.
That part's not valuable, but the idea that you, you are operating under the assumption at all times that your shit does stink.
Yeah.
Is a huge asset.
Now, spiraling, I agree.
you got to find that middle ground but like the alternative of like i can't do shit wrong bitch you're
done when you do that like there was an old quote ironically from connor mcgregor who ended up living
this in the wrong way where he goes people get comfortable with a win they get real comfortable with a
win and when you get comfortable with a win that's how you get a loss you know what's so interesting
and this is probably like mhm a UFC so much i also heard from somebody i don't know if it was this guy
but I think it was Kamar Usman he said he lost two or three in a row for the first time and like ever
and he said it's easy you can get used to losing so it's also both sides it's so funny how life is
just both sides but McGregor I watch old McGregor clips I'm like this guy was the one he was the one
he was in a way that he was going to lose and like he was going to lose the guys like Habib but
He even handled Habib pretty well.
He took a round off him before he got finished,
which is insane to say.
He could have went back to the lap.
He was there.
He was alive.
There was a time where he would have.
The money, we lost the McGreg.
And he could have been in like a movie-like.
Yeah.
And even if it was, now it's just, it's sad.
I mean, the drugs got him.
Yeah, I agree.
And I think he's a little bit better now, but it's just, it, we lost,
we lost a prime of his.
he went on a run that is unlike,
it doesn't happen a lot.
There won't be, and I say this a lot.
I talk about MMA and UFC.
We'll never see another Connemouth.
Once I think what did it,
and I've said this for a long time,
was the Mayweather fight.
He went eight rounds
with a still brilliant Floyd Mayweather,
the best boxer in the world,
the greatest defensive boxer,
probably defensively of all time.
And, you know,
made fucking $60 million in front.
one fell swoop and it was like how do you top that it's it's like it would be like fucking
what's a really good example here like Patrick Mahomes deciding to play in the NBA one day and
dropping 35 they don't win but he drops 35 in a game where he's lined up against prime
lebron and duran right like that's what he pulled off and it's almost like that old haggler quote
where he's like,
it's really hard to get up at 4 a.m. and work
when you're sleeping in silk pajamas.
He got into the silk pajamas
and he couldn't recreate that,
you know, I was out there with the plumbers
and the morning, my friend, you know, I was making nothing.
So the only, and I think what also contributed to it
was he had this rivalry right after it with Habib
that was happening throughout
that brought out that instinctual kind of warfare
that every man kind of has
and then once it was over
like he had it against Dustin
but then Dustin knocks him out
and then he fights Dustin again
Dustin's beat him up his like
his leg is
and then he's finished
but even then he's finished like
he was
and also
it was it was such a unique
I mean he came from a place
it wasn't like he came from this family
or gym that was known for iconic
there's guys so right
now, one of the best fighters in the world, I'd argue, probably best.
Islam Makachev, he, he, he was trained by Habib's father.
He was in Habib's gym, best friends with Habib.
We've been hearing about him forever.
McGregor came onto the scene.
No one knew who the fuck he was.
He was fighting at Ireland, never had anything from an MMA perspective.
They had some great boxers throughout the years, but MMA made the fuck up.
And also, he had, he had this.
innate ability to turn people's lights off in a way that not a lot of people have.
It's a gift.
But it's not like he was an athletic freak, dude.
No, he was up here.
Yeah.
He had it.
That was just, and you know what, have you ever, because, like, by the way, I was really
humbled, you were telling me before camera, like, you've listened to the show for a long time.
That's always wild to me when that's the case.
But have you ever heard me talk about the IMU theory that Charlie Rocket came up with?
Possibly continue on.
Yeah.
So sorry to people who have.
this before but I ended up having Charlie in here he's a friend now awesome fucking dude for
episode 352 one of my favorite podcasts of all time but Charlie had this theory called the I
am you theory that he came up with about seven years ago and I remember it was at the beginning of
2019 and to 2018 and I remember seeing it and I remember just being like oh my god oh my god
this guy just figured out life like I I never have that reaction to something but it made sense
And basically, he sat down one day and he was just curious.
If you know Charlie at all, he is exactly what you see on camera.
He is genuinely the most curious.
Like, I want to wonder about that question right there.
Let's find out kind of guy.
And he goes, I wonder who the highest grossing by revenue superhero of all time is.
That's comics, movies, TV, everything in between.
And he's thinking it's going to be Batman or Superman or something like that.
And to his surprise, it was Spider-Man.
He's like, that's interesting.
Spider-Man's the one whose face you can't see.
He's not particularly good-looking, doesn't have a chiseled chin,
came from like a lower middle-class background.
Parents were dead, wanted the girl, couldn't get the girl,
had a weird talent, wasn't flying through the air.
He was a fucking spite.
That's interesting.
He was relatable, though.
Okay.
What is the biggest religion by following in the world?
All right, Christianity.
All right, who's the hero of Christianity?
Jesus Christ.
this was a carpenter he didn't wear you know in a time where you could have worn gold-plated armor
and come in on a white horse you know as the god king if you will and everyone would have bowed down
to you he didn't do that he wore regular clothes as i said was a carpenter a basic you know working man's
kind of job you can say that about mohammed as well for sure yeah this just happened to be the one
i know i know i know yeah yeah but it's like very similar like it's like they're and and mohammed was the
that fought in battles.
Like it was like,
like, with everybody, yeah.
That's right.
And he went around and instead of having, you know,
all these fucking armies following him,
he had 12 friends and then sometimes he would give a sermon.
And, you know, he was just kind of,
he hung out with poor people.
He was like the average person.
So he goes, all right,
if this can work with a corporation,
we're really on to something.
He goes, what is the most famous corporation of all time?
And he goes, holy shit, it's apple.
Everyone's got this in their hands.
Who founded Apple?
Steve Jobs.
The first corporate guy to say, fuck the suit.
He looked like your dad.
In a time where people were coming up with technology and naming things in Spiron 6,000 or Zenix 4,500, he named his products Lisa, iPod, iPhone.
He named the products after you.
And he goes, holy shit, this whole time where we're living in this culture where Instagram comes up and social media comes up and the paradigm becomes, oh my God.
I'm not like you. I'm not like you. I'm better than you. I'm above you. I'm clavicular. I'm ascending or whatever. The people that we actually most relate to. Forget all the clicks. Forget all the things where people run short term. The people we relate to over the long time of the people that are just like us. So what about sports? And he goes, all right. LeBron James is amazing. And at the time Kobe was alive and he's like Kobe's amazing. And they're beloved. No doubt about it. And think about Kobe before he died where like it's an extra level legend after he dies. But he's like,
The athlete that is unlike that has transcended everyone is Michael Jordan.
And yes, Michael Jordan now is a reclusive billionaire.
But think about when Michael Jordan was coming up through his career and his rise.
He was cut from his high school basketball team.
He was the scrawny kid that wouldn't get a shot.
Then he gets to UNC, wins a title, does all these amazing things, grows into his body.
And they say, bitch, we're still going to draft Sam Bowie above you.
Comes into the NBA, they ignore him, ignore him, ignore him over and over again.
And then he can't get over the top, finally gets over the top.
finally gets over the top in Year 7, wins the title, wins three in a row, loses his dad
tragically, throws his life away, goes and plays baseball, makes an idiot of himself in front of
the world to some people because he wasn't as good at it at basketball, comes back, wins all
these titles and everything, had the song, because I'm like you, he's like me, and you know what
I want to be like Mike. Like he had that thing, that passion, he's like everything, sports, religion,
corporations fucking superheroes people over time are going to go to the people that they most relate to
and that's why when you're marketing to people and you shouldn't even think about it from like a
marketing perspective but he's saying in general speak to people like you are just like them not like
you are above them and i think we have gotten to a point where we have sold society a lie that for
some reason we have to be better than people or this different thing and it ends up creating
all those tentacles we talked about earlier
where the people come around and headsets
so you feel more important and it's like the thing
that makes things special or the fact that something
like this starts with a backwards hat
in your parents' house and you've got to keep that energy.
There's something else here now. Something new.
From exclusively on Paramount Plus,
it's the series Stephen King calls Scarious Hell.
Everything here is impossible, but it's also real.
Sci-fi vision calls it the best show streaming right now.
We're running out of time and we still don't know.
Don't lose. Don't miss what the movie blog calls something you need to watch.
Saving those children is how we all go home.
From binge all episodes exclusively on Paramount Plus.
And I mean, even to go off of that, I mean, kind of how Trump won is that, yeah.
100%.
And even though, but that's the craziest part about him is he was born with the Golden Spoon, New York real estate, all of that.
But he was, he somehow related to that because he talked like them.
What do you do?
he put on the hard hat and he walked into West Virginia and said, I fuck with you.
You fuck with you all.
You're like, you guys got fucked.
Yeah.
And they, I think that's something that a lot of the politicians need to think about in ways
that like obviously Trump is taking multiple wrong steps, but how do you do it a little
bit like him and do it the right way?
Yes.
Because, because even though you think of it.
And I would even say Obama did it too.
Obama had the, oh, I would love to have a beer with him.
I may disagree with him politically, but he's a guy that I could have a conversation.
conversation with. You don't have that with Tim Wals. You don't have that with Kamala. You don't have that with,
like you didn't have that with Mitt Romney. You didn't have that. Like George Bush a little bit too.
Even George Bush seems like a guy that even though, like, I don't know if I would have a beer with him,
but he did have that like and fuck it like now watch this drive. Like we're after so, but the
relatability. And I was going to say, what is everyone's favorite MBA story of the 21st century?
NBA story?
NBA.
I'm gonna say it and you're gonna be like, yeah.
What was the one that transcended the NBA more than anything else?
Of the 21st century, like recently?
Yeah, yeah, yeah, it happened, yeah.
I would even say it was past 15, yeah, past 15 years.
It's gonna hit you.
What is the best story?
Of the Warriors?
No, Jeremy Lynn.
It was short-lived, but yeah.
No, that is, that, it was short-lid, you're right.
I would say, but even like Steph Curry is more like,
You and I then LeBron James.
I would never guess to Jeremy Lynn, but you are right.
I see exactly what you're saying.
That's who Connor.
We started this tangent, though.
That's who Connor was.
Connor was the son of working class Irish people who then had to work as a plumber for 18 hours
a day and commute an hour to work over these bumbling hills who had nothing and would train
with every amount of energy he had left at night.
And he had the girl who stood by him and fucking when he had nothing.
would sleep on the floor with him and built himself up and came out of nowhere and he was that
dude and then it's like when he crossed that Mayweather Rubicon suddenly he became I'm not like you
I'm this thing and he lost the whole magic of what put him there in the first place and that is a
lesson one of my favorite sports moments ever is he took over like the MMA world and Jose
Aldo was this unstoppable force.
No one thought anyone could beat him.
He knocked him out in 15 seconds with what he predicted.
I saw his left hand.
It twitched.
Like, you can't.
Unreal.
You can't.
And I talk about it, it gives you chills.
I remember where I was when I watched it.
And it's just like, holy shit, he did it.
And it doesn't, it wasn't even like, there's always been great moments where there's
been upsets and all that.
It wasn't really even an upset because they were very well matched.
No one thought they could beat.
He could beat Jose Aldo, but people did to an extent.
No one thought anyone would beat Aldo, and he knocked him out in 15 seconds.
And he was bigger than life, and then it just lost them.
Yeah, no, it's sad.
It's, it's, you have to, but that's got to be hard when you, you own a Maybach yacht,
where you want to, you own a, how do you relate with the regular person?
I like my Honda.
I like my flip-flops.
Yeah.
I like my chicken cooked in bulk.
But maybe that's the key.
That's the key, man.
Don't lose it
And also like a lot of these people
That end up a little bit more than that
Don't get me wrong everyone wants to elevate
But a lot of people there's a lot of people that
Doesn't make them happy
And also you see their
Their kids too
That's right
I went to boarding school
You went to boarding? Where'd you go?
Kent school
Where's that?
Kent, Connecticut
It's probably 15, 20 minutes outside
Poughkeepsie
So it's up on like near the Hudson
Right on the border of upstate New York
working in Connecticut.
I just saw a lot of people, parents where they had everything.
Now don't get me wrong, I'm incredibly lucky, but it was a different level.
Right.
And there was a lot of people that have every advantage in the world could never get it together
to this day.
There was people that, like, before I went to boarding school, I went to another school,
very similar, not as privileged but privileged people.
And they were 98% of people also graduated college.
I went to a school with like, it's more prestige, more money, more everything.
A lot of people never got through college.
There's a lot of people, like, and it's just because, and it's goes back to like what I said,
like, my parents are my, yeah, it's like if I, like, that's, that's why it's like,
and that's kind of when I was talking about earlier, where we were discussing the
videos and TikTok and all that.
It's like I kind of just got lucky.
But, and that's the same thing with my parents.
And it happens.
and you kind of see these people that go to get kind of lost in the sauce, literally and figuratively,
and like they kind of just lose it.
Yes.
But there are people that can do both.
There's a lot of people that have done.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah, I don't want, by the way, I don't want to vilify how people make decisions and stuff like that.
What I am vilifying is the people who do it strictly to be able to say they do it, to hold something over other people.
The people I always identified with the most of the people that I would meet have a three-hour conversation with them about life.
not know what they did and later find out they were like that.
Yeah.
And have, and, you know, they didn't walk in with Rolex this and chain.
I fucking love that.
Well, that Kirakal story with, I was talking with Elon Musk and he didn't even realize
it.
It kind of, but now Elon's his only thing we had discussed about Elon forever.
But, I mean, Elon at his core is obsessed with the idea of space and kind of technology,
and he'll die with that.
That's right.
So that's why I kind of think, like, maybe clavicular can work in.
out because there is that Elon that like but it looks max and it's a little bit different
you compare Elon Musk to clavicular oh they're gonna love that in the comments
in deep's like yeah I would do it too nah you but no it's just like I but that's what I'm taken
but you know what that's what popped into my head now that's probably why sometimes like it's
sometimes I'll say stuff and I'll do these videos and like it's kind of silly in theory
clavicular to Elon Musk, but it is kind of like that conversation.
That's my goal.
It's like you're having the conversation and like if the video is good enough and you're
explaining something or talking about something, but the ones that work the best or
where they were, and that's why and that's why some of them work and some of them don't.
But no, it's a, yeah, and I even think about it.
I think it's like, if you had all this more money, what would really change?
Life would get a little bit easier, quote unquote, but like the best thing that you could
probably do. It's like it would be sick if you had a house, a private chef, a nice gym at home,
and then the ability to be able to travel or go anywhere you want whenever. Now that's
an insane amount of money. But if I had to say it, that, but after that, I'd be like,
I don't know. Like, I don't mean you, like, how many places of like houses can you own?
That's, I don't under, you know. Do you really need one?
In California, Texas, New York, and then on Long Island,
and then in Florida, I don't, I don't know,
but maybe you have so much money,
you have to park that money somewhere.
Maybe, but like my whole thing is,
there's things that I, over time,
I would have said at some point, like, oh, I regret being there
instead of knowing I should have been here or whatever.
And then I realize and get the grace of like, whoa,
look what I was able to learn
because I went into the wrong thing, right?
Like I came out of college,
like well I got to get a job and I got a fucking job on Wall Street that was not a fit for me at all
love the people I work with didn't like the work but it taught me so much about life because I was
helping manage the money for like the ultra the people that had I would make one bullshit trade
and it would be more money than I've ever seen in my life like at any point ever and I got to learn
I don't want to make it all sound like it was bad examples I saw good examples too
of people who had a lot of money and you'd never know it, know it, and they were happy as could be,
their family was happy as could be, the next generations were doing their own things and had purpose.
And then I would see the opposite examples of the quote unquote, more money, more problems,
invented problems, where those kids you talk about at boarding, so I saw a lot of those,
and I felt bad for them because they were dead.
They were dead from the time they were born because mommy and daddy wanted to make sure they had all the money,
and they never had to do anything, they never had to work, and they lived these purposeless lives,
where they could pay for anything, but they were never happy and they were never going to be.
And like, it made me realize because, like, I got big dreams. I started this day one. I want to be
the best to ever do it. Anything less is a failure. Well, guess what? Even if I'm not great at making
money, I know a lot of money comes with that. Yeah. I need to find a woman that is cool with not
owning a fucking 12-room mansion. I need to find, be able to build a family to where like my kids,
they do their own fucking thing. I don't want to trust funds or bullshit like that. I've never understood
You may want trust funds.
Dude, I've never understood the generational wealth thing.
I've never understood it.
I have, now, I don't have a trust fund, but I think if you can help your kid buy a house and not have to think about it, it can be huge.
But zero to 18 is one the biggest, like, it's not.
Because when you think about trust fund, because you think about the uppity.
But it's like, if you have your kid.
It's why wouldn't you give them the ability to not have to worry about rent?
Now, it can cause more bullshit and maybe you learn lessons along the way.
But also, the other option is usually it's like giving the money the fucking government.
So it's like maybe you could put it at other places.
But if you have this money, you have three kids.
You trust them.
You've spent your time raising them to make sure that, yes, they have nice things.
But this isn't like, they're not bullshit rich kid stereotype.
They have, like, why wouldn't you?
Now, maybe it's required.
Hey, you have to have a job.
You have to do this.
You have to do that.
I'm going to buy, this is your apartment now.
But like, I don't want to hear about you spending all your money on like going out every week or like, what you walking.
I'll tell you why.
Because I think you have to have drive and I don't think that you can coerce drive.
I think it has to be something that comes from within that has the environment to build
itself into being able to happen in the first place. And here's what I mean by that. I would totally
let my kids after college live in the house so they don't have to pay rent and stuff like that,
which I think is a huge advantage. By the way, that is the only reason this podcast exists.
Exactly. My parents, like I went and lived on my own for five years, had all these rent bills and
shit. And then the pandemic happened. And my dad let me move back in. And I built a studio there.
I could never have afforded a fucking rent on a studio to build this show for years. I would totally let
my kids do stuff like that. But the whole concept of like paying for your kids' lifestyles and things
like that, there needs to be, I don't know, maybe my opinion would adjust on this, but it never
has to this point. There needs to be some level of like actually creating something yourself,
having drive, going out there and getting it without having the backstop of like mommy and daddy
you'll pay that bill for me. You know what I mean? Like there's, dude, I've never carried debt in my life.
I remember 2022, I literally had $0.
And my computer snapped.
And it was a whole thing.
And I was like, oh, my God.
And this is when I was making crazy shorts.
And it was like reliant on growing the show.
And I had to go to someone really close to me and very sheepishly say, you know, you think you could spot me a few thousand dollars to get this laptop.
They're like, Julian, are you fucking, of course.
Yeah.
Yeah, you don't even have to pay, but I paid that shit back in 28 days.
Yeah, yeah.
Like, I don't want to owe anyone anything.
Of course.
You know?
And there's just something about that and not, and gamifying it so that you don't know that you have that or something that's so special.
Yeah, I think you, like, I completely get your point of view.
I guess I'm just trying to think now.
I mean, like I pay right.
I don't, it's not like my parents gave me an apartment that I live in.
But I think to myself.
if like you had that ability wouldn't you do it for your kid but I'm not a I'm not a father so I don't know
and I think you but like and that is right how do you make sure that he doesn't or she doesn't
lose that drive and maybe the eye of the drive because it's like I have to pay rent at the end of the
month and I've been very lucky and I've made it far enough where like I'm not thinking about rent
at the end of the month. But you are theoretically. It's like, no, I have a job. I have to do this,
that, the other. But I think giving the kid the advantage and knowing that you raised them
right for the first 18 years, they're going to take advantage of it. But I also hear your point
of view. It's a tough question that I'm going to have to actually answer and really live through
and understand when I am a parent. And that is the thing. We are talking about a hypothetical here.
I have some strong opinions on that because I've seen both sides of it to where like I see other
kids where it goes really bad or the parents do it right and it goes really well and the ones where
I see it go really well are where the parents are like, oh, you're on your own. And, you know, that doesn't,
when those kids have the advantage of growing up and they have things that other kids aren't blessed
to have, roof over their head, food always there, clothes on their back, no questions asked. They don't
have to go get a job when they're 11 or something like that. I mean, that's crazy that, like,
even that, and that's something that I remind myself, but like even that is like you're in top 2%,
and three percent of the world.
Absolutely.
And I think that's enough.
And that is a necessity.
That's like almost like it feels like that's required in America.
And I think it should be.
But the privilege that exists in America, even,
and that's easy for me to say.
But I just mean just in general.
Like we are like you don't,
and that's why I try to expose myself
to watching things and hearing stories.
Like we don't understand if you've never been there and you,
like I mean probably Kiarica.
knows a lot more. It's like, oh yeah, there's tens of millions of people that are born,
are hundreds of millions of people, billions that are born into a life. They won't make
$10,000 in their life American dollars. Yep. It's insane. But we like, that's why, and that's not
to say you shouldn't ask for more of the society that you live in, but it is crazy that. I mean,
that's another thing. It's like, your zip code that you're born in is so important. Yes.
And it's very, and I, that's one other thing that I locked down on. That's why I'll always,
We say you have privileged, but I don't know what I would do.
And maybe along the way you kind of answer those questions and you get to, because you answer
questions right now with people that you trust, those people will have kids, they'll go through
things.
That's right.
You'll see things.
I also think there's very important things along the way.
If you know it's not that ability to make sure that you have to make ends meet to get food
on the table, maybe it's like you're gamifying it.
And that's why I think sports are so important.
And even if you're not that good, like, my kid's probably not going to be fucking very good at anything in terms of like, he'll high school.
But like, it's very important to get involved with it.
Yeah.
And also, I think the camaraderie of it, the teammates, the, no, that's a huge thing.
Yes.
Because you get to know, especially as a guy, I'm sure it's important for girls too, but as a guy, if you were never a part of a team, you're fucked.
I agree.
Even if you weren't even that good.
but like if you're in like you kind of get a camaraderie with like oh this sucks but it's very important
and so that's what but again i don't know but we're going to find out yeah yeah i'm going to find out
but you and i'll have this conversation 20 years you're like what are you thinking pal but then i mean
like i think about it's like my parents are from brooklyn and they elevated themselves in ways that
their brothers and sisters did as well.
But I grew up in a way that was very privileged.
And I feel like they made sure to make that that I was not somebody that thought,
like, I'm not here sitting here with the quote unquote success on social saying to myself,
oh, I deserve that.
I'm someone that's thinking about, oh, like, what could go wrong?
And I think they did in a really good way.
probably and I'm sure you could do that and that's something that happens throughout their younger years
and if you can help them in their years when they're out of college especially in this weird economy
that we're living in it's only going to get worse it may be valuable but it may not yeah and I guess
that's probably the question that you ask as yourself the parent as a parent every single day when you
have decisions should they know and it's like should you be very strict about who they hang out with or not
Is it valuable to have them like fall on their face?
And it's like, oh, is it valuable for them to be in the wrong group?
And then like that group takes advantage of them.
And then you're like, hey, this is what happens.
Or do you try to, yeah, I don't know.
Yeah.
I mean, look, like I said, I have like these ideas that are stolen from ideas of seeing things
that worked or didn't work in the past that I feel strongly about.
But I'll know when I'm in the position.
And hopefully I make the right calls, you know what I mean?
But it's the hardest job in the world, but it's most important job too.
And it's something I really look forward to doing.
But you also, the number one thing is you have to find the right woman.
Holy shit, do you got to find the right woman because you guys aren't going to agree on everything.
That's not life.
Like you're going to have disagreements.
But you have to have a similar, at least philosophy on life and North Star in a way.
You know?
And it sounds like your parents had that.
My parents, I was lucky.
they certainly have that. And like, I think that's a huge advantage in and of itself. When you have
parents who like get it and, you know, again, no one's perfect, but like they get all the important
stuff right. Like that's like being halfway down the third baseline in life. Yeah. Oh, yeah.
And I can only imagine what those discussions are like, but you have to be very clear,
especially with the person that you're, fuck yeah. Yeah, you like if you're having a child with,
you have to be really. And I mean, you hear nasty, nasty stories.
and it's sad.
But, and you see it.
It's like, it just like it and it fucks up for the, the child as well.
I mean, we all know kids that went through divorces or like parents went away, all that.
And you see the effect on them.
And it's like that kid was a, was a star.
And then his parents got divorced.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's a very sad.
And you try.
And you stay friends with them, of course, but they go through things that you can't, like, you can't relate.
I can't relate to it because I'm my parents.
didn't. That's right. Jack, Mac, you're a smart guy, bro. Oh, well, this is a lot of fun. I mean,
I enjoyed it. I'm, I feel like I didn't even know how this would go in terms of what we talked about.
Obviously, the shooting at the White House correspondence and it was big, but I really appreciate you saying
I'm a smart guy. I'm trying to be, I've made some stupid calls along the ways along the way.
That was very funny. I made some stupid calls along the ways. I was stupid in that sentence.
But I'm trying to be somebody that makes the next right call.
That's all that matters, pal.
You're doing great work.
And thank you.
And as a fan of the show, I've appreciated this show in a lot of ways.
I love listening to it, even if it's something I know nothing about or know a lot about.
And I learn a lot.
And it's been awesome to see it grow, too.
Because I think that's something that's very inspiring.
And also hearing what we talked about today, betting on yourself and really believing in it.
And then also knowing what the future and thinking about it.
It's really, really special to see.
And it's cool.
It's kind of like watching a basketball player evolve his game.
I appreciate that.
And I can't wait to see what's next.
And I don't think we know.
Like, you never know what your next thing's going to be.
It really is one video or one story.
And then you're, it's, that's it.
And then you're in it.
Hopefully you're not Diana Rossini.
Yeah, yes.
On that note, just leave with the coach.
do not do that
but you could be that story
if you want to go in that way
and then you could go a different route
Jack Mac we're going to link your
X and your IG down below
and YouTube if you want to watch that collab interview
and YouTube
you just look up Jack Meg
check all the links to make sure I have everything
but everyone go follow Jack
Taylor Lorenz I'm going to do some more
in the future as well see ya
all right
I think I'm going to do one with you
I'm going to actually
I would love to do it with you
so we'll do that sometime
in the summer
maybe somewhere in Hoboken
Anytime, bro. You let me know.
We'll link that down below.
Everyone go follow.
Thanks guys for watching.
Give it a thought.
Get back to me.
Peace.
What's up, guys?
Thanks so much for watching the video.
If you have not subscribed, please hit that subscribe button before you leave, as well as
leaving the like on the video.
It's a huge huge help.
You can join my Patreon via the link in the description.
And you can also join my clipping community via the Discord link down below.
See you for the next episode.
