Leap Academy with Ilana Golan - Self-Made Billionaire: How John Paul DeJoria Built Paul Mitchell with $700 | E162

Episode Date: June 9, 2026

John Paul DeJoria grew up with no connections, no money, and no roadmap. He sold encyclopedias door-to-door despite constant rejection, got fired from three consecutive jobs, and lived out of his car ...while raising his young son. Then, with just $700, he launched John Paul Mitchell Systems and built it into a billion-dollar haircare company. That same relentless spirit later helped him turn Patrón Tequila into one of the most recognized spirit brands in the world. In this episode, John Paul joins Ilana to share what it truly takes to build something from nothing, why rejection is just redirection, and why success unshared is failure. John Paul DeJoria is a self-made billionaire, entrepreneur, and the visionary co-founder behind John Paul Mitchell Systems and Patrón Tequila. Beyond his iconic business achievements, he is a passionate philanthropist dedicated to creating a positive global impact. In this episode, Ilana and John Paul will discuss: (00:00) Introduction (03:40) Growing Up in Foster Care as an Immigrant Kid (11:20) The Navy Lessons That Shaped His Leadership (15:23) Making It Through Sudden Homelessness (23:23) How Getting Fired Led Him to Start Paul Mitchell (28:22) How He Made Billions With Only $700  (40:50) Letting Go of Fear, Failure, and Yesterday’s Mistakes (46:14) Growing Patrón Against the Odds (53:30) What Meeting Gaddafi Taught Him About Kindness (56:57) The New AI Platform That’s Making Entrepreneurship Easier (01:00:15) Why Happiness, Health, and Family Matter Most John Paul DeJoria is a self-made billionaire, philanthropist, and co-founder of John Paul Mitchell Systems, the world’s largest privately owned salon haircare brand. He also co-founded The Patrón Spirits Company, growing it from zero distribution to over 3.5 million cases annually before its landmark sale. His upcoming memoir, Success Unshared Is Failure, details his extraordinary journey and his conviction that giving back is essential. Connect with John Paul: John Paul’s Website: peacelovehappinessfoundation.org John Paul Mitchell Systems: https://www.paulmitchell.com Resources Mentioned: John Paul’s Book, Success Unshared is Failure: https://www.amazon.com/Success-Unshared-Failure-John-DeJoria/dp/B0FSTBMCJ8 Leap Academy: Ready to make the LEAP in your career? There is a NEW WAY for professionals to fast-track their careers and leap to bigger opportunities.  Check out our free training today at https://bit.ly/leap--free-training

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Starting point is 00:00:00 I come on one day, my wife comes out and she says, oh, I've got to run out. So she took the only car we had and split. By the time I got upstairs into the apartment, there's my little two-year-old son sitting there in the middle of my clothes with a note on and saying, sorry, I can't help being a mom anymore. She didn't pay the rent for three months. We lasted a few days and all of a sudden where they were being evicted from the apartment. A wonderful lady had an old Cadillac, though my son and I lived in that car for a little while. John Paul DeJuria is a self-made billionaire entrepreneur.
Starting point is 00:00:35 He literally started with $700. He turned a single hair care idea into a multi-billion dollar legacy. We have $700 right now. But how the heck do you start a company with that? You got to knock on 50 doors. If all 50 doors are closed in your face, you have to be just as enthusiastic on door number 51 as it were on the first one. You're building these things, like there is no map.
Starting point is 00:01:03 So how do you roam around this uncertainty while there's still like fear of money? There's fear of rejection. Pay attention to the vital few. Ignore the trivia many. Here's how I did it at first. Welcome to the Leap Academy with Ilana Golan Show. I'm so glad you're here. In the Leap Academy podcast, I get to speak to the biggest leaders of our time about their career,
Starting point is 00:01:30 how they got where they are today, the challenges, the failure. and countless lessons. So lean in. This episode is going to be amazing. I'm in a mission to help millions reinvent their career and leap into their full potential, land their dream roles, fast-track to leadership,
Starting point is 00:01:45 jump to entrepreneurship, or build portfolio careers. This is what we do in our Leap Academy programs for individuals and teams. And with this podcast, we can give this career blueprint for free to tens of millions. So please help my mission by sharing this with every single person you know because this show has the power to change countess of
Starting point is 00:02:07 lives. Deal? Okay, so let's dive in. Our next guest shows you that the American dream is still alive. He started with $700 living in a broken down car. John Paul DeJuria is a self-made billionaire entrepreneur. He turned a single hair care idea into a more. multi-billion dollar legacy that you will recognize by the name Paul Mitchell Systems. He then continued to completely revolutionize the spirit industry with Patron Tequila, which I bet you all know. And he is one of the most respected business leaders of his generation, but beyond all the success, what inspires me is his upcoming book, Success Unshared is Failure. Again, success and shared is failure. What a brilliant name. It shows you his deep commitment to giving and to
Starting point is 00:03:19 philanthropy. Now, let's dive in. J.P., welcome. Thank you. Nice to be on your show, especially happy people that want to make life better for others. I love being on shows like that. So this is exciting. You have a smile and your happy lady, so may the osmosis lay off on everybody you touch. Oh, thank you, thank you. Well, you too. And I have to take you back in time because actually, if that's okay, I'm going to take you like way back because you as a kid were actually in a foster care. Yeah, well, my mom raised my brother and I. From the time before I was two years old, we had a deadbeat dad. It wasn't a dad. It didn't even see my dad. Never supported him my mom. Just a deadbeat dad. But my mom was very positive.
Starting point is 00:04:04 We had little to nothing living in Echo Park, California. This is the 1940s now. World War II is still going on. And we had virtually nothing, but my mom never let us know we had virtually nothing. The way that she really took care of us, and she got rather ill when I was around five years old, very, very ill. So my brother and I had to go into foster care. But we were the lucky kids because either every weekend or every other weekend from maybe Friday night until late Sunday night, we had to go back to the foster home, we could actually be with our mom. You know, on that weekend, she had to work and she was sick at the same time. And so we we were in foster care for almost five years. While in foster care, it was my brother and I together,
Starting point is 00:04:46 and we had the opportunity to be able to do things. I'll give you an example of just how a parent could really care. My mom was nothing but positive, and she always told us, boy, she could do whatever you want. This is America. She came over to boat from Greece. She was an immigrant. We're first-generation American. So it was little things, for example, like I remember she brought home a very little teeny-weeney piece of filet mignon steak. Cut in three pieces and said, boys, this is something called filet mignon. It's what the rich people eat.
Starting point is 00:05:15 These are people have lots and lots of money. We eat just like they do. We had one bite each. It was great. That was the kind of mom we had. But this was an era where we didn't have refrigerators. The ice man for a quarter will come by every week. You give you a block of ice and that's your icebox.
Starting point is 00:05:29 But it worked. It worked. You know, many things worked. Anyways, mom encouraged us. I know my first entrepreneur job was when I was seven years. old, the Varity Boys Club where my brother and I would go to. And we made this box a planter about this big, halfway around, flat on the bottom, but open on top to plant tomatoes or something in, or you could hang it up. And we did it for 25 cents worth of wood, but they gave it to us on credit.
Starting point is 00:05:54 We built it. We went on and sold it. After a couple of days, we sold it for 50 cents. Now, this is 1951, right? Sold for 50 cents. And we went back, paid our quarter, and put the other quarter into another one. Then we had 50 cents. Now, to give you an idea of how much 50 cents is in 51, 50 cents is 10 soda pops, 10 of them, right? And got those out of the candy bars. You couldn't even eat them if you wanted to. So we thought that was pretty cool. But then we really started working when we went home with mom. I was nine and a half years old, almost 10. And from 10 and a half 11 years old, my brother and I always worked. We started out having a full-time paper route with the LA examiner. That was a big paper at the time. And we would full papers, get up the morning at 4 in the
Starting point is 00:06:39 morning, full papers, deliver them, go home, get dressed for school and go to school. Monday through Friday and then Sunday with these giant Sunday papers. We could barely even put them on our bicycles and pedal away with the bags, but we did. I've been working ever since. Now, here's the big thing I love to share at the audience. In my day, when I worked and made any amount of money, we gave it to mom. We were just happy to have a job. If we didn't make any money, we would have been happy to have a job. We made about $30 a month each, my brother and I. That's all we made. But gave it to our mom, but hey, we had jobs. It was a different era. We'd love to say, hey, we have a job. We're making some money. And my mom would have a little teeny garden. We'd always have something fresh in there because
Starting point is 00:07:21 she was from Greece and they would grow their own little garden. So it was to make a cool way of waking up. You may say that, well, wait a minute. This guy woke up with no money and they had no nothing, but he was happy. And he loved to work. So did his brother. It was. was a different error, and my mom told us all about coming. Amazing. That she did, and my philanthropy started with my mom. Six years old, mom takes my brother and I down to downtown L.A. on the trolley car. We had trolley cars.
Starting point is 00:07:48 You put a nickel in, and the little trolley car takes you down. So at Christmas time, we went down there. It was a big treat to be on a trolley car. So we get to downtown L.A., and my God, we became the luckiest kids in the world. May Company was down there, the bullocks, all these big department chores, with all these things in the window. Like, you know, little toys that were playing, puppet shows. Outside was a little train going around,
Starting point is 00:08:11 and you could wait in line and ride the little train. We thought we were the happiest and luckiest kids in the world. That's all we knew. But while we were there, my mother gave my brother and I a dime each. I mean, no, just one dime, and said, boys, hold on to this with your fingers, and go over it and put in that bucket with the man, the big jolly man with the big beard that is ringing the bell.
Starting point is 00:08:31 We said, okay, so we did it. But we came back and said, mom, why did we give that man a dime in that bucket? That at that time was two soda pops, three candy bars. Why did we do that, mom? She said, boys, that is a Salvation Army. There are people that have no place to live and no food teed. And many of them have little children, and they help them out.
Starting point is 00:08:54 We could only afford a dime this year. But remember this, boys, as long as you live, there'll always be somebody needs it more than you do. Give something, even if you don't have a little dime to give them. volunteer and do some work. We got to help us plan it out because it just makes us feel good. And I never forgot that. Oh, I'm half crying here. Oh, this is amazing. This is incredible. So tell me for a second, how living in this did that shape you? It sounds like you're so positive. How did it shape you? Were you just driven? Or did you feel like you have possibilities? Did you feel like you're not the same as the other kids? Like, how did you feel? My mom was just so darn loving.
Starting point is 00:09:37 That's very important for parents to know these days. You've got to spend some time with their kids and teach them things, teach them kindness, teach them giving, be right next to them. And my mom was always positive no matter what happened. She was always just very, very positive. So I grew up with a mom that was positive. My brother and I, we didn't know about wealthy people. We had no TV says, anything like that at all. And she just created a life around us. I mean, we were so basic, but we didn't know any better. Paper towels, I don't even know if they were invented then, but we had the ragman coming by pushing his cart, and for two cents, you get a brand new rag, right? We didn't have paper towels. But then if he had all your old rags, you want to turn them in,
Starting point is 00:10:15 you got a penny back for him. So the guy at least made double his money if he cleaned him at home and just resold him again. We had the fish man, the vegetable man, all coming in the neighborhood selling stuff like that. It was pretty cool. We didn't know any better. So we were okay. In the land of the blind, the one-eyed man is king. We know any better. We just had a great mom. Incredible. And by the way, if you're not watching on YouTube, he's wearing a shirt that has hearts.
Starting point is 00:10:40 And it says love. It's so cute. Love your neighbor. Oh, that's so cool. So special. I just love your positivity here. When people ask, you know, JP, is there anything that you could say your whole career that's extremely helpful?
Starting point is 00:10:55 And I would say, yeah, just be nice to everybody. because my mom was nice. So I'm nice to everybody, but I just feel good when I'm nice to everybody. Even people that aren't so nice to you, you know, you don't need them in your life to bitch back at them or just attack them. That'll get you nowhere. It's yesterday's newspaper. Just say, hey, no problem. Love you anyways.
Starting point is 00:11:13 Have a good life and just go on. So I can't wait to dive in and to see how everything you built didn't ruin that piece of it. So you moved on. And I think you tell at some point a story about being kind of in a street gang a little bit. The teachers weren't sure that you're going to be like the best rising star. Tell me a little bit about how did you grow up. And eventually, you also decide to join a Navy, which I want to understand why. So take us there.
Starting point is 00:11:40 Yeah, well, when we were little kids, we were little kids in East L.A., yeah, we had a street gang called the Pink Rats. And we thought we were badass. It's what we weren't. We had a little push-button eyes, like little ones. You could actually buy them in those days at any hardware store. And we were, like, flip them out, like, hey, we're badass, right? But we weren't.
Starting point is 00:11:56 We're just a little kids pretending to be bad. But anyways, I went to high school, and when I graduated from high school, I went straight to the United States Navy. I didn't have the grades to get a scholarship, didn't have the money. I thought, well, let's go in the Navy. It'd be a good thing to do. So I did go in the United States Navy. And it was a great experience. So for a couple of years, I actually was on an aircraft carrier, the USS Hornet aircraft carrier.
Starting point is 00:12:18 Went to Japan a couple of times, Hawaii, Hong Kong, the Philippines. I thought, God, this is really great. I mean, I was like in heaven. You're like, well, I can travel the world. It's really, really cool. And, of course, when we landed there, because you're in the Navy, for $5, you got to go on these unbelievable tours that the Navy sponsored. So you see, the whole country what it's all about.
Starting point is 00:12:36 They take you to one of their dances. They feed you lunch. It was pretty cool. I love the Navy. And I learned something in the Navy. In fact, I was lucky enough about 10 years ago in Washington, D.C., to be the guy that received the Lone Sailor Award. It's an award giving out to somebody that was in the military that took his military,
Starting point is 00:12:54 experience and brought into civilian life, and it all really worked for them. So the admirals, there was all Admiral's General, and I got the award that year. And they said, J.P., can you please tell everybody something that happened in the Navy that really helped you be so successful, what the hell you're doing right now? I said, of course, be glad to. And it was just one statement. I won in the United States Navy. I was 17 years old. I started grammar school real early, graduated 17. But I went in the Navy, and I was like a normal person. You know, nothing special a normal person, right? But in the Navy, they show normal people like me how to work together in a team. And we commoners working together in a team achieve extraordinary results. An example,
Starting point is 00:13:37 they had me operating and charting a gyro. An aircraft carrier had two big gyros. That's what tells you where you're at, how to adjust your boat. I was helping chart a gyro. One of the gyros is one of my duties. and you would be there for four hours. Where's that at every 10 minutes, how it's position, is where we're going? I mean, they taught me how to do that. But as a team, they taught us how to achieve extraordinary results,
Starting point is 00:13:59 and I never forgot that. Ah, this is so powerful. And by the way, I was an F-16 flight instructor back in the days, so we share a lot of that, but we don't have any carriers, but that's so, so-so- cool. I've got a little sidebar on this. My daughter, Alexis DeGioria, is a race-car driver,
Starting point is 00:14:17 drag racing. She goes from zero to 337 miles an hour in 3.85 seconds, right? Her dream was to fly an F-15 or an F-17, whatever. About four years ago, the crew that flew them for the Air Force, right? One in 10 one of her events in Denver, Colorado, where she was racing. And they fell in love with her. She fell in love with all the fly that guys there. And they would follow her around wherever they were.
Starting point is 00:14:42 So she said, my dream was to do it. They passed it through the United States government because she supported them so much to be able to be trained and fly, it was either an F-15 or an F-17 to fly the plane. She took off, was her dream come true, two-passenger plane, took off,
Starting point is 00:14:59 once it was in the air, they handed it to her because they trained her because she was used to G-Force. Her car is a G-Force of six when you take off and five and a half when you stop. That's like a G-Force and airplane, right? And she had a plus, so she tattooed on her arm a picture of an F-15 or F-16.
Starting point is 00:15:15 I love it. Love this. story. Oh my God. So good. So good. I need to get to know her. This is so good. Okay. So now you're leaving the Navy and you're coming back home and at some point you actually have a big life thing thrown at you. I get on the Navy and I'm wondering what the world to do. So I get every kind of a job in the world. I try being a truck driver, which was fun, going down the freeway with the lightsaw. That was really cool. But after a while, that was nowhere to go. So I did a variety of things, my God, selling savin business machines, stick-to-phone equipment, life insurance.
Starting point is 00:15:52 I tried it all in just a couple of years, and it wasn't really my cup of tea. And so now, later on in my early 20s, around 23, 24 years old. So I said, okay, I'm going to try something different. And I did Encyclopedia's door-to-door. Now, you talk about an experience. This is Collier's Encyclopedia, an unknown encyclopedia of the day, no leads, no appointments, cold calling. For five days you're in training, you make no money, then you get a briefcase you got into the field, no leads, no nothing, your crew member drops you off, you're knocking
Starting point is 00:16:24 door to door in the afternoon, trying to find the young couples or trying to make appointments for the evening, go back at five in the afternoon when the couples are there and make a pitch. But they said something there that I believe. They said, for starters, very few of you are going to make it successful. They said that right at the beginning. But those that make a successful are those so we'll understand this. You got to knock on 50 doors. If all 50 doors are closed politely or not so politely in your face, you have to be just as enthusiastic on door number 51 as it were on the first one. Well, I wasn't. It was door 100-something that I finally got through, gave a presentation, maybe it was four or five presentations after that. I finally made a sale, but I believe what they said.
Starting point is 00:17:08 so much that the average life of an encyclopedia salesman selling door to door with no appointment stole leads is three and a half days. That's the average life. You know, wait a minute, no money, they closed doors in your face. They don't want to talk to you. But I lasted, in fact, I lasted almost four years, three and a half years doing that. And I made good money. I'll never forget. And this was 19, six, into 64 and to 65. I made $12,000. And that's like what a vice president of a bank made. I'm on top of the world. But I realized after three and a half years, almost four, I didn't want to do this as a career.
Starting point is 00:17:42 So I went out to find other things to do, a variety of things. And none of it really made sense to me, okay, to do. But I learned something at selling encyclopedias. And one of the biggest lessons I carry throughout my life, be prepared for a lot of rejection. And don't let it get you down. Be just as enthusiastic going forward. Leave the past behind you, go forward.
Starting point is 00:18:04 which was one of the key things to going forward. Another thing I thought was, I thought Collier's Encyclopedia was the best encyclopedia in the world. It wasn't as hard as Britannica to read. It wasn't like too young for like a world book to be read. It was kind of a high school one in the middle. He could understand it. Had plastic overlays, 24 volumes. I thought it was the best one everyone should have.
Starting point is 00:18:26 So I thought I had the best product with the best quality and it was ready to overcome rejection. And that's what I learned during books. then I had a variety of all these other jobs. And then my friend John Capras said, JP, you have this job here that you don't like. And by the way, I was 26 years old. I was Circulation Manager for Time, Life, Fortune, and Sports Illustrated magazine. What did that mean? I ran a boiler room with 50 people that were trying to get people to continue their subscriptions or get new one.
Starting point is 00:18:54 Circulation manager in Southern California. Well, I went to my manager and I said, hey, I don't want to do this my whole life, but I'm pretty good at what I do here. How do I become a vice president like you? He said, you're 26 years old, you've never been to college. Come back and ask me that when you're 35. I was looking for another job. My friend John Capra said there's a company in the beauty industry.
Starting point is 00:19:15 And this whole scenario is going to be pretty interesting to know. But I'm going to stop at the very beginning there before I started that while I was still selling encyclopedias towards the end of that thing. Of something that happened that was a real disruptive thing in my life, but how it was overcome. So I had a child very, very young. I was a father by the time I was 22 years old and my wife was 21. I come home one day for one of my many jobs as a young sports announcer at the second annual sports vacation and recreational vehicle show in Anaheim, California, the Anon Convention Center. So I come home one day after doing it, right, for the whole weekend and then during the show. And I come home and as I drive into our driveway of our little upstairs apartment, my wife comes out and she says, oh, I've got to run out.
Starting point is 00:20:02 So she took the only car we had and split. By the time I got upstairs into the apartment, there's my little two-year-old son sitting there in the middle of my clothes with a note on and saying, sorry, I can't help being a mom anymore. I want to just be a free person. He'll be better off with you. Good luck. Little did I know. It was planned.
Starting point is 00:20:22 She, number one, took the only car. What little money we had in the bank, she'd cleaned out the day before, and it wasn't a lot, several hundred dollars. She didn't pay the rent for three months. I never saw a notice because she never showed it to me. Didn't pay the utility bill for a couple of months either. Notices to shut it off. We lasted a few days and all of a sudden where they're being evicted from the apartment and there's no power, no nothing.
Starting point is 00:20:44 It was, oh my God, and I have a little kid. No car, no nothing. And that's what I found. Somebody, a wonderful lady, wonderful lady, had an old Cadillac, a 1950s Cadillac that had busted water pump. He had put water in it every four hours. But I had a car. So my son and I lived in that car for a little while.
Starting point is 00:21:03 My dear friend Lee Myers, a biker, we used to ride sometimes with Hell's Angels. They're friends of ours, right? I never joined because I couldn't attend church with them every Thursday night. Church is the meeting, by the way, in their language. That's going to the meeting every Thursday night. I had to work, right? They loved us. So we rode with those guys.
Starting point is 00:21:20 So Lee Meyer was his name, who rode with them in the Satan slaves and other gangs of the time and said, Johnny at my house, I've got an extra room. He ran me down. You and your boy could be there, and we'll get some of the biker moms to watch them while you're working. I thought, what beautiful people they were. You never know who's going to come there and lend you a helping hand in life. And dear friends of ours, in fact, a couple years ago ran into some of the old buddies. Most of them are dead, but ran into them.
Starting point is 00:21:45 And my friend Dennis said, JP, Hell's Angels in the Valley here, we're having a Christmas party, where we're collecting Christmas gifts to give to children of incarcerated parents. I said, great. So I brought a little hot rod there, filled it full of gifts. gave it to them, they were just some of the nicest people wanting to help somebody else out. So sometimes that sheep's clothing is just a beautiful sheep underneath. We need to pause for a super brief break. And while we do, take a moment and share this episode with every single person
Starting point is 00:22:13 who may be inspired by this because this information can truly change your life and theirs. Now, I want a check in with you. Yes, you. Are you driven, but maybe feeling stuck in your career or a fraction of who you know you could be? Do you secretly feel you should have been further along in your income, influence, or impact? Do you ever wonder how to create not just a paycheck, but the life you want with the paycheck, the thought leadership, the legacy, the freedom? Because that was me, and that's exactly why I created the Leap Academy program, which already
Starting point is 00:22:45 changed thousands of careers in lives. Look, getting intentional and strategic with your career is now more important than ever. The skills for success have changed. AQ, adaptability, reinventing and leaping, are today the most important skills for the future of work. Building portfolio careers, multiple streams of income and ventures are no longer a nice to have. It's a must have, but no one is teaching this except for us in Leap Academy. So if you want more from your career in life, go to leapacademy.com slash training. Check out this completely free training about ways to fast track your career and you'll even
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Starting point is 00:24:15 to operate in your strength. And really find greater joy in what you do because confidence isn't about pretending that you're good at everything. It's about knowing where you're truly gifted. So take the working genius assessment today, get 20% off with a code leap at working genius.com. That's working genius.com. You'll be glad you did. So you went through something that could throw anybody else into a whole down and a spiral that is very hard to recover. Quick question on that. First of all, Did you ask for help? Because I think sometimes with ego, we don't even know how to ask for help, but also if you don't ask, nobody will give you. How did you recover from that?
Starting point is 00:25:04 Good question. No, my stupid pride, no. How do we make any money? I didn't even tell my mom, okay? That's we lived in the car. I couldn't even tell my mom was too proud. So how do we make money? In those days, every grocery store and every liquor store would have to buy your bottles because they were refundable. two cents for a little Coke or seven-up bottle or dad's root beer, five cents for the big one. We would go to vacant loss by son and I and pick a bowl bottles, or at night go buy a gas station. The Coke stands outside, eat the bottles, right?
Starting point is 00:25:33 Cash it in. And that's how we made enough money to buy some gasoline and cruise around and buy a little bit of food for us to eat there. So, you know, just sometimes you're just kind of down and out, but you figure out how to do it, and you were right. 100% right. I was too proud, you know, and I shouldn't have been. And that happened another time in my life when I was homeless.
Starting point is 00:25:49 later on when I started Paul Mitchell, and that'll be another story. But anyways, yeah, I was just too proud. It was so stupid, but I was proud. Amazing. Okay, so you have this now job. You bet you. So anyways, it was for a company in the beauty industry that was called Redkin, all right? And they were a real up-and-coming company. So my friends said, they're going to pay you very little, which they did, very, very little. But you could go anywhere you want. They really need talent in that industry, because his wife had a beauty salon, and you what the people calling on salons were like so you could really fly. He was right. It took me 18 months, and I went from a salesman to all the way up the line, district manager, whatever, all the way up the line, to I became their national
Starting point is 00:26:29 manager of two whole divisions of the company, science scientific schools and chain salons. And it was a pretty good job. But after I had that, I was out working for a record for about four and a half years, I got fired from the job. Now, this is really good for your listeners to know, because I'm going to give you a sequence of jobs and firing right now. And what? why it had to be. And no, really, why it's defined intervention is a true story, okay? Rekin calls me in one day, he says, J.P., you wanted to see him.
Starting point is 00:26:56 I said, yes, and I talked to Paula Kent and me, and she was the chairman of the board and the founder of the company, Red Ken, it was Ken, Red Ken, okay? Anyways, I said, Paula, you're experimenting on these little teeny marbleset monkeys. They're in a room, the window in the room, sees a hall. Can I take them outside for a walk? She goes, no, no, no, no. I said, well, why are we doing animals?
Starting point is 00:27:16 We're making hair care products. She says, JP, we're Red Kim the scientific approach. I said, no, but we're not doing skin care products. Why would you put in a rabbit's or a monkey's eyes are injecting the skin? JP, it makes us look good. We're red Kim, the scientific approach. I said, but it's doing nothing for the products. They're poor little animals.
Starting point is 00:27:35 There's a dozen or so in there. She said, well, listen, your corporate management, now upper management, just leave it behind and be what the corporate wants you to be. I walked away. I didn't feel too good. So a couple weeks later, I went back in Balaslav. He said, JP, we've been telling you can't do that. You've already told other people.
Starting point is 00:27:52 We have to let you go. You're disrupting. You're not a corporate man. You're a free thinker. I said, I know, but the poor little, JP, we got to let you go. So they gave me a nice severance pay, I think a month or something like that, and left me with two of my secretaries,
Starting point is 00:28:06 because I ran two divisions, to get a new job. And I did, very fast. So I went to work for a company called Syntex, big pharmaceutical company that just bought a company called Fermadale in the beauty industry. They hired me to train their sales force and everybody else, which I did. In one year, I helped create a 50% increase in sales, and it's in the millions of dollars, right? 50% increase in one year, just really got out there and the whole team got excited. We were just, yay, let's set the world out fire.
Starting point is 00:28:37 Anyways, they called me in and fired me. And I said, well, Mr. Neil Wallach, what do you mean, don't have a job anymore? Look what I'm doing. He goes, yeah, he said, but you're not one of us. Very snooty guy. You're not one of the inside group. And with all due respect, a lot of people really appreciate us. You don't, meaning that I never kissed their ass.
Starting point is 00:28:56 I just tell them like it is, okay, but nicely. I'm a nice person, okay? He says, you don't fit in here. You're gone, period, right? And I wasn't getting too happy there. I said, okay, I'm gone, all right? So forget that. So I went to work for a little company called Try.
Starting point is 00:29:09 They were very, very little and really needed help. So I made a sweet deal with them. Guys, you could have me for only $3,000 a month, but knowing my own talent, 6% of all new sales, not what you already have, just new stuff I could get for you. It's a deal. I lasted there for about a little, little over a year. Then Mr. Kent Stone called me and said, JP, me, Joe Lever, we own this company here, and JP, we have to let you go.
Starting point is 00:29:36 Well, why? I mean, we're little, but I've increased your sales, I think 200%. It was amazing. He said, yeah, but we could get David Chapman, this guy, to do your job for one-third the cost. I said, well, how about this? How about you sell me 10% of your company and allow me to pay you over five years or something? No, we're not selling anything, JP. We got to let you go, sorry.
Starting point is 00:29:56 It was like that. But I thought, well, there's some reason for this, three jobs. So then I said, well, I'm cool enough to be able to be a consultant. Well, if I was a consultant for you and you were a big company and made a lot of money, I told you everything you needed in a couple of months. She didn't need me anymore. If you were a little company, I almost had to help run your company, and I wasn't paid for sometimes two and three weeks.
Starting point is 00:30:17 That wasn't working out. Okay, but this is going to lead to some really big. Then I said to my dear friend, Paul Mitchell, the hairdresser. That's why the products are called Paul Mitchell. That wasn't his name. His name was Cyril T. Mitchell. His hairdressing name was Paul Mitchell. We wanted to enhance the beauty industry.
Starting point is 00:30:33 So we call it Paul Mitchell. We sell the salons, right? So anyways, we needed a half a million dollars. Now, this is 1980, beginning of 80, and I knew for sure I could set this up in a month, and with half a million dollars, we could actually go into business. That would be like several million dollars today because of what I knew. So the backer pulled out. The backer pulled out that same day.
Starting point is 00:30:56 So wait, before that, before that, before that. So you already had confidence in your sales ability, so you knew how to sell, but now you're going to need to do it on your own or basically be an entrepreneur and start from, nothing. So taking me there for a second, was there a fear? Because again, you felt what it is to be with nothing. Was there a fear around money, around what if it doesn't work? Like, where did it take you? That is the most brilliant question. So we raise all this money we thought. The day happens. My relationship wasn't going good. I left the house, the money, the better car. I took the older car down there's my second time being homeless, which you'll see in a minute, to get the money.
Starting point is 00:31:36 Whoa, it was coming in a bank of America Universal City. Paul was older than me. He was flying over to Hawaii. He was running out of money, too, and we want to start this company. It never came in. One of my friends ran me down and found me, okay? He knew where I would be hanging out and found me and said, J.P., you got to call Dick Holt House up here.
Starting point is 00:31:54 I'll never forget the call. Something went wrong. Call him collect. And I did. It was the middle of the night. He was in England. Middle the night when I called this guy. He says, JP, the money never arrived.
Starting point is 00:32:03 And the reason it never arrived was this. This is a lesson for everybody to learn. They say, can you still do it today? Yeah. Inflation in the United States was 12.5%. Unemployment was 10.5%. Interest rates, if you could get a loan, and hardly anybody could. Minimum interest in 1980 and 81 was 17%.
Starting point is 00:32:26 And we waited in a line for gasoline. How the hell do you start a company like that? We said, okay, Paul, it did not come in. How much money do you have? And Paul said, well, I got an extra $350. I said, oh, shit, I got a couple hundred bucks in my blog, and I got to live now, right? I said, no problem. Being too proud the second time of my life, I went to my mom's house for lunch that same day.
Starting point is 00:32:49 And I said, Mom, can I borrow $350 from you? Johnny, you make a lot of money. You make a lot of money. Why? I said, Mom, I'm starting a new business. I was too ashamed to tell her what happened. I was too proud. So she loaned it to me.
Starting point is 00:33:03 I said, I'll get it back to you in a month or two. and I said, Paul, we have $700 right now. But how the heck do you start a company with that? I had a car to live in, so I had a place to live. I know you go to Griff the Park to shower. I found a place for 99 cents at Freeway Cafe to have a breakfast after 9 in the morning, but before 11. You got one piece of bacon or one sausage, one egg, one piece of toast, and your choice
Starting point is 00:33:25 of a cup of coffee or orange juice. Well, I took the sausage because it was more food. I took the one egg, the toast, ate every bit of it. And by the way, that lunch with my mom, I ate it. everything. She says, you want second son? I see yes, goes, whoa, I'm so happy. And I ate everything on that plate. But I could not tell her what was wrong. I just couldn't. I was just too proud. Anyways, and we figured out a way, how do you start a business? $16 at Universal City Post Office box. I got a P.O. Box 10597. Okay, I have an address. Then in those days, we didn't have
Starting point is 00:33:56 computers. So I got type set for four or five bucks to set my type. I went to a printer, and they set my type, John Paul Mitchell's systems. Here's our address, Universal City, right? So I had an address on a piece of paper. They would sell you envelopes for two cents each, I'd printed up a dozen of them, pieces of paper for four cents each to make copies them. They're copy machines in those days, right? And then I would draw lines in it to make my invoices. So I had an address, I had stationary, and then I went out with what little money I had and bought, and I'll take the business part in a second, and bought an answering machine. I think they were $49 in those days. I'll get up your telephone answer said. And this lovely lady was a dear friend of mine. She was British.
Starting point is 00:34:36 Caroline was her name. Caroline was super. I said, Caroline, would you leave the message on my phone, please? She goes, sure. So here you call me on a phone. It was in my friend's house, right? And you hear, oh, good afternoon, John Paul Mitchell's Systems. This is Caroline. We're all busy and out right now, but we'll call you back later. Maybe I get JP to call you back, okay? Please forgive us. We're in business. This is so much fun, right? Positive message hang up. Well, of course, JP's the one that only called back. because there was no one else to go back. We had a presence, we had a phone, but now we needed business. So knowing from my business days with books, I drove up Ventura Boulevard in California,
Starting point is 00:35:13 called on salon to salon to salon. Why salons? I was in the business with those three companies, and we wanted somehow to always include salons. Paul was the top hairdresser. That's what we named Paul Mitchell after a hairdresser's name, not after John Paul, or the company was both their names put together. So I went out for a week with an unknown product.
Starting point is 00:35:32 And I got, because I'm a pretty good salesman, I think. I got 12 checks from $25 to $130 from 12 different salons, right? And I sold it, the product had in my car. Now, I'm going to tell you how I got the product also, next story. But I'm going to tell you, the distributor I'm going to go back. So I got the 12 checks, right? Now I have in my hand 12 checks. How did I get enough product to be able to do that and then get a distributor and get
Starting point is 00:35:55 money right away? That's going to be the second half. Now I'm going to backtrack. I got $700. So I already had set up with my reputation of doing good with businesses. Setco, my bottle man, my silk screening man, and my filling man, and my friend Dr. DeSalvo helped me make the formula, right? All set up for 30-day billing and 100,000 bottles. And everyone thought we were on top of the world's money coming in. We didn't have it. So I think a little bit, okay? So the first thing I
Starting point is 00:36:23 did was I went and told, because we had to have our artwork. It was $1,000 for the artwork, our black and white artwork of a couple of shampoos and a conditioner, very unique ones, though. So I said, that's all we had. It was honest with the guy. We have 700 bucks. I give you 300 now and the rest later. He goes, no. He says, I'll take the 700 because I'll never see the other 300 you owe me, but I'll take 700.
Starting point is 00:36:45 Now we're out of money. So all I had was a few hundred bucks in my pocket to live off of. So I call Setco and I say Setco. Instead of giving me the $100,000, I want a sample order of only $10,000. And I'll still pay you in 30 days. Oh, of course. 6,000 of this, 2,000 of this, 2,000 of this. Sure, told the silk screener the same thing, told the filler the same thing. So, of course, a sample, we understand all 30-day billing.
Starting point is 00:37:09 From the time, the bottles were shipped, silkscreen, and filled was two weeks. I had two weeks left to make some money and be able to pay the bills when they came in. Now, what did I have? So I had the product right to go out and sell. So it took me one week. So what do I have left? eight, nine days. I need a distributor. I needed money. I had 12 checks, but they did not fill out the top line. I did not want them to, right? Do not fill out the top line, who it's two. I went to Perse-Speed supply. The biggest distributor made my presentation, and he said, you're a wonderful, nice man, but why should I build your business? You have no sales, you have no sales staff, you have no offices, you have nothing. You want me to build your line, and I'm the big guy. I have
Starting point is 00:37:51 all the big lines that we have, the Revons, a link, I have all the big lines. I love you. You're a nice, man, but I can't do it. Unless you give me another reason. I said, I have a very good reason. I pulled out of my pocket, 12 checks and put them right in front of them. I said, it's because those are your first 12 customers already sold them for you. Those are your checks I've already delivered for you. He goes, oh, wow, I've never seen a presentation like that. I said, look, we're new. If you'll just order $2,000 worth, just $2,000 of the product, okay, you could have all of L.A. and Orange County, huge. We were really hard. He goes, okay, but you better show up tomorrow here and help my salesman sell it. I said, well, one more thing. We don't have a lot of money.
Starting point is 00:38:30 Could you pay me when the product started in Liberty? He goes, are you kidding? We're Paris Ace Beauty Supply. We pay our bills in 45 days. I said, I'll tell you what. And I already thought about him saying that. I added 5% onto the whole price of everything, the retail price, everything, way more than I wanted. I said, I'll give you a 5% discount. Your salons is the same thing. if you give me a check when it's delivered. He laughed and said, I said, that is a great deal, I'll do it. We're 46 years old now.
Starting point is 00:38:55 He went to my 25th anniversary. I brought Jim Hendrietta there to tell the story. And he says, not only that, five minutes after this guy, JP leaves, my warehouse man is calling me and saying, there's some guy putting stuff on our rear decker's sake. He wants to check for $2,000. Jim said he laughed his head off, went back there,
Starting point is 00:39:14 had me in the check, and said, I'll see you in the morning. And that's kind of how we got going, our company. Okay, but let me just go a little bit further, okay? So I would go in the field with their salesmen. They would watch me make a sale, and then after three or four, I would watch them make a sale in the field to teach them. So anyways, we grew, grew, grew.
Starting point is 00:39:32 People say, well, when did you know you make it? And here's the big story that ends all of this that is just people don't ever give up on life. Here's what happened in two years. It was the first time I could say, we knew we were successful. Well, how did you know? we had all of our bills for the first time in two years paid on time. Not paid off, paid on time.
Starting point is 00:39:55 And $2,000 each left over. Like, wow, man, it's going to be really, really easy right now. Okay, we got $2,000 in our pocket each. You know, we could do what we want to do now. Businesses is growing and it's top of the world. About two weeks after that, all of a sudden, a vision came to me in a Piff and we were like, oh my God, would they talk about the, universe works for you, there is a God, this is real. I can't believe this. It's real. And here's why. If I didn't work at Redkin, I didn't leave, they fired me. And what I learned at Redkin, what I learned at Fermedale, what I learned at the Institute of Trichology at Try, if I didn't learn what I learned from all three of them, I could have never started John Paul Mitchell's
Starting point is 00:40:39 systems with $10 million, let alone $500,000. I couldn't have. In other words, it was like destiny. my destiny. My destiny was something different. So the universe kind of galloped me out and into something else, something else. So if ever you're fired, it's because that's not what you're prepared for. What you're destined for is something else. Go with it. Don't be sad about it. Don't cry about it. Don't bitch about it. There's something else out there for you. And there was. Little did I know it was one day to start my own company. And one day, we never knew we'd be this big. Like we are today, the world's largest privately owned salon hair care company. And no matter what we do, we do, and distribution, some of the money goes right back to Bidia salons to help them out.
Starting point is 00:41:20 Just we promised them we do that and that's what we did. And at that time, I could have now money, not just time when I finally got bigger, to be able to do things for more charity and more people and not just riding with the motorcycle groups of my 20s and volunteering at Griffith Park to serve food or at Christmas time or Thanksgiving time, but actually contribute money. It was like all change and grow, grow, grow, grow, grow, grow. So like, listen here before we go on your next question is this, people, if you're you're ever fired, it's okay. Leave it behind you. That's not your destiny. If you didn't do something
Starting point is 00:41:51 to get fired, or if you did do something, it's because you, the Bing that runs that body that you're in right now, your Bing, wanted you to do it, but just couldn't tell you that, or the divine entry entered it and wanted you for something else. And that's why I wrote this book here that took so long to write the darn thing to pass on the where's house and wise and all the trials and tribulations along the way. Oh, I can't wait. I mean, this is incredible, JP. Like, I'm so excited. that it's coming in the summer, right? So actually because all of a sudden, Amazon realized, JP, you're having the first edition coming out.
Starting point is 00:42:24 That's going to be sold out fast. They have it on Amazon right now for a pre-order. Again, it's success, unsharedness failure. You could pre-ordered it on Amazon. It's hardcover. It doesn't cost that much $20, $30. That's it. But I promise you, if you read it,
Starting point is 00:42:39 you'll get something spiritual out of it and several things business-wise. But you'll see when you get it. There's a lot of things. We just don't have the time to talk. about that I'm missing. I know. It took me three years with two of the best writers in the world to get my autobiography because that would be, how do you do it today? Easier than in my day. And how do you spiritual? How do you reprimend somebody without them hating you, loving you?
Starting point is 00:43:01 How do you get just amazing stuff in there? So I had to make sure that when I did it, it would be for something good. Whatever I may make off this book is going right back to homeless people, battered women. That was all that if any money was made, it'll go right back to change the world. And that's when I'm doing it that. But the thing was to change millions of people's lives. I have so many questions about why it's private and why did you not freak out and all of this. Let me answer that, please, for your audience, because people run through problems. Yes, please. And you think all day long, oh my God, I have no money. I have bills that are due. Yeah, it's scary. Why does she need me? Why doesn't he like me? Everything you could ever think of in the world.
Starting point is 00:43:43 Okay, everything. Here's how I did it. At first, at night when I couldn't sleep, I'd write it on a piece of paper. That was my genius thought. And I put it by the sink in the bathroom. So when I go to the bathroom, I could read it. And at night when my mind went crazy, I could say, don't have to think about it anymore. It's already there, right? That was helping in.
Starting point is 00:44:01 And then the biggest thing was this, leave it behind you, leave it at the river. And it was a story that my friend James Colburn told me. It's in the book about how you leave something at the river. All of a sudden, everything in the past was left behind. You cannot change yesterday's newspaper. Thinking about it and yourself, you got to forgive yourself first. Like, I wish I would have done that at that time when I didn't. All that stuff we think about, right?
Starting point is 00:44:26 You can't change it. You can't change. So just forget about it. And all you do is this. Hey, that happened yesterday. That person punched me in the tummy yesterday. I got fired yesterday. I have no money.
Starting point is 00:44:36 My wife left me. My kid bit my finger. Whatever it might be. Okay, went to jail. Whatever it might be. You can't do a thing about it. Just say, I forgive myself. I forgive these people.
Starting point is 00:44:46 That's yesterday's newspaper. I'm a new man. Leave it behind me. This is the first day of the rest of my life. And if it pops back in again in your head, which it will, just say, wait a minute, that's the old me. It's not there anymore. Go behind me.
Starting point is 00:44:57 And keep on doing that to go forward. That is one of the biggest things you could do to overcome those things. And, J.B., like, people need to hear this so much and need to read this book because so many reasons. First of all, the corporate ladder, as we know it today, is kind of burning. There's just so many changes. there's going to be tens of millions of people that will need to reinvent themselves and figure out what can I do with my expertise to become my own economy and build whatever it is that I'm meant to build. But the question for you, JP, is like when you're starting to build these things, there is no map. There is no, oh, if I'm going to do X, Y, Z, it's going to be like the most incredible hair.
Starting point is 00:45:38 Like, there is no map. So how do you roam around this uncertainty while there's still like feet? of money, there's fear of rejection, there's fear of everywhere. How do you live in that uncomfortable? Great question, okay? To start out with, for everyone out there's not doing it right now do this, get a piece of white paper like that at a black pen and right on there. Pay attention to the vital few, ignore the trivia many, okay, and put that right on your mirror. So when you're building something, you're going to pay attention to the vital ones, and that's your growth in where you're going, not what happened in the past, right?
Starting point is 00:46:16 Pay attention to the vital few, ignore the trivia many. Under that, or on another piece of paper, write this, it's the truth. In the end, everything will be okay. Dot, dot, dot, dot. That means pause. And if it's not okay, dot, dot, dot, it's not the end.
Starting point is 00:46:31 I got that from Jonathan Kendrick, and it works every time because eventually things do work out. And that thing we know you're going to have a lot of rejection, okay? Just go forward, and you will, something will come to you. Leave yourself open to the universe. It'll come to you. It will come to you how to overcome that rejection, how to overcome your problem.
Starting point is 00:46:49 You leave yourself to the universe. If you're lucky enough to get a mentor, which I never was, but if you are other than my mom, if ever you're lucky enough to get a mentor, they could maybe help you out a bit, someone that's been in the business before. But if not, if you leave yourself up to the universe, we are amazing creatures in these bodies.
Starting point is 00:47:05 Whatever the being is in us is amazing. Leave yourself open. And all of the stuff, if you leave yourself open and don't think about the problem, think about what the solution may possibly be, solutions will start coming to you. It's amazing how that works and believe in yourself that eventually it's going to happen. Eventually it's all going to work out okay, but you just got to leave yourself up in the universe for it. And what we should all know in life is this. Sometimes we don't know what we
Starting point is 00:47:29 want to do. We don't know what our purpose is, but we know what we don't want to do. And when you know what you don't want to do, don't do it anymore and immediately start doing something else. By the way, I never gave you the aftermath about Redkin or about syntax or try. Never gave you that. I'm going to give to you very quickly in less than one minute. Number one, after five years in business, Paula Kent and me and came to me and said, J.P., how do you run – now we're in the millions of dollars, right? How do you run a company all that with so few people?
Starting point is 00:47:55 I said, you were kind to me, even though you weren't kind to animals, okay, but I'm going to be kind back to you. I showed her what we did. Within three months, you start buying all of her stock back, and two years later, sold her to L'Oreal for a couple hundred million dollars for company, right? Anyways, with the people that were at Fermadale Syntex, they were all fired within one year. Why? After I left, their sales went straight down.
Starting point is 00:48:17 So I increased their sales by 50%. They went from $8 to $12 million. They went straight down. They were all fired. And the other company, the tri company, I got a call from the owners saying, JP, if you'll come over here and help us run our company, I'll give you half the company. No money. He's gave you half the company.
Starting point is 00:48:32 And, of course, I didn't do that. I was with Paul Mitch. They're all good people, by the way. Just they had different ideas in mind how to run a company. All good people. Never were bad people. There's not bad people out there, just people that maybe do naughty things. I like the word naughty.
Starting point is 00:48:47 So tell me what made you instead of then going to the beach all day, you decided to disrupt tequila. What made you go into the spirit industry? Well, I'm one that believes in just doing what makes you happy. And making me happy isn't every single. they go on the beach or just going on vacation in your whole life. I like doing that, but not all the time. I just felt something. A lot of this was by accident with Patron Tequila. A fellow that was building a house for me told me about a friend of his. Nice man, one of the best designers in the world,
Starting point is 00:49:22 and he went bankrupt in the hospitality business. J.P., it just needs a little bit of money to get him going. Well, you talked to him, and I did. So we went to the architectural business where I would give him the money. He would go to Mexico by pavers and furniture. Come back. I was living. I was living. in L.A. at the time, come back to L.A. and sell it to restaurants or to architects for their model homes, right? And we did okay for a year, but nothing exceptional. So he was going down to buy some pavers for this house I was building. And I said, while you're down there, we were drinking tequila at the time. But we were, you know, the salt, take a shot, hold your breath and do the line. And I said, when you're down there, I'm sure the aristocrats must drink something really, really good.
Starting point is 00:50:02 When you go down to buy the pavers, bring back a couple of bottles of what the real aristocrats drink, whatever that may be. Got to be smooth than what we have here for five bucks a bottle. And he did. These two long, thin bottles and it was the smoothest that I'd ever had. He said, but JP, I met a guy named Francisco Alcarez. He's a chef of tequila. He could make it smoother.
Starting point is 00:50:23 I said, really? And I was doing pretty good at this time with Paul Mitchell nine years later. So I said, okay, let's do this. Why don't you go back down there and let's find a recycled bottle. And he can't find this bottle. It's a patron bottle today. made out of recycled glass, but found the bottle. So I said, okay, we're in order a thousand cases. That's 12,000 bottles. And my thinking was this. I know it's expensive, but if nobody wants to buy it,
Starting point is 00:50:47 it's so good that for the next 10 years, hey, if you had a baby, here's a bottle of tequila. You got married, have a bottle of tequila. I mean, I don't care what religion ratio were you got tequila, right? It was so good. So it's pride. Anyways, nobody would take us. We couldn't get one distributor to carry us. Why? Number one, they said, guys, it's 37. $195 a bottle. That's what we had to charge in 1989. It was expensive to make. The average tequila was $5 a bottle. The most expensive one that we could find the time was about $14 a bottle, period. If you can even find it, this was, J.B. is just too expensive. So no one said, yes. Another good lesson, by the way, for people to learn in any business you're in, okay?
Starting point is 00:51:26 So we found a wine guy who only sold wine and talked him into and said, look, if we could get Spagos, which was the number one restaurant in Beverly Hills, and bought a canteen and to raise a customer, will you be our distributor? He goes, can you get those? Of course. Are you kidding? Yes, we will. Well, Wolfgang was a friend of mine. Said, I want to take it anyways. Okay. And Bon Cantina was a friend of Martins. I want to take it anyways. We knew we had it. But after one year, they only sold about a thousand cases. So we had to drop them. We went to a big company, I mean a big one, Jim Beam. So we had to bring in another layer. So we would sell to Jim Beam. They would get a piece of it. Now, they would sell it to distributors, and they would sell it to the on-premise and all.
Starting point is 00:52:05 premise. So one more layer, they got a piece of it. After being with them for about maybe a year and a half, they came to us and we just talked and we said, guys, we're only doing 12,000 cases a year. We believed our line was so good, we can maybe do 50,000 cases a year or more. They said, guys, we're to be honest with you. You have the best tequila ever in the United States. There's no question. Nothing comes spare. But it's too expensive. You'll never do more than 20,000 cases a year. Guys, that's it. Cases of 12. that's it. So we thought we could do better. So we dropped them. What gave you that conviction to keep going versus giving up? Because we thought we could do at least 50,000 cases a year, because we could sell that ourselves. So we knew if we could do that, and if enough people tried it,
Starting point is 00:52:51 they would really like it, if enough people tried it. And I did it at a Paul Mitchell convention that we had for hairdressers, 3,000 of them, free patrol. They went home and asked for it. That stuff is so good. But most of the distributors that they had out there didn't have it. So they would help build it a bit. We said, man, we know if we took over, we'd market it differently. So going back to Seagrams, they took it up to 50 or 70,000 a year. But we knew we could do better. They wanted to do different things.
Starting point is 00:53:20 We didn't want to do, right? So we went to Cork because we had an agreement and we bought them out of the agreement. We actually paid money and bought them out of their agreement. And we said, we're going to do this ourselves, okay? We know we could do really good and we did. and then a short time later, my partner, Martin Crowley, died, and our executive vice president, unbelievable genius. Okay, Ed Brown was his name.
Starting point is 00:53:40 I made him president CEO of the company immediately. He was qualified. And we changed her ads instead of Playboy models, which were beautiful as our ad, Patron was the ad, simply perfect Patron. It was just the bottle. And we did all the things I wanted to do. Special promotions. Let's do with the hairdress.
Starting point is 00:53:57 Let's do all this really cool stuff. So I'm going to make a real long story short run. right now, okay? And Martin had died. Ed took over. Obviously, I contributed, but Ed did most of in our team. And we took off like a rocket. When I sold Petron about eight years ago, the company that was never supposed to do, more than 20,000 cases a year, we did in Petron alone, about three and a half million cases. And over and above that with other rum we invented, or we had in other, you know, vodka we had. And it was the biggest sell ever in the history. industry, but we like to give back. So we took out of that cell, it's in the billions,
Starting point is 00:54:35 way in the billions, right? It's common knowledge. It's printed on the Wall Street Journal everywhere. But what we did also, what I did was I took millions of that, and I shared it with my staff. So many of the staff walked away as millionaires and multimillionaires. They gave me so much money I could share with my people because there's just beautiful people. Everybody benefited because of it, right? And it gave me the money and I'm not going to do other things like, oh my God, I want to go to the hospitality business. And they gave me a five-year non-compete. Before I sold it, I was working on the world's next generation of tequila.
Starting point is 00:55:10 They said it hasn't been bottled yet. It's yours. Keep it. But you can't do anything with it for five years. Let your daughters have it or something. And I did, right? And little it did nothing happened. But when the five years was up, which was two years ago, approximately, then I got involved.
Starting point is 00:55:24 It's called Bandero. It is when the gold medal in Mexico a little over a year ago has a smooth. this tequila, the gold medal. Wow, for all of South America, Central America was there while a lot of Mexico. And we're only selling it now in seven states. Okay, that's all. We're going slowly to see where our best distribution is. But it's Bandaro, B-A-N-D-E-R-O. So came out with Mandarro. So now I'm in hospitality. I'm having fun with that. And I'm in many other businesses right now, many other businesses. I'm a virtual entrepreneur and I love being around people that helped change the world. And my purpose is to help the world with millions of people as many
Starting point is 00:55:59 ways I can. Millions and millions of people. And that's just what I'm just going to throw one thing at you that's in the book. We don't have time to explain it. There's so much in the book. It's one thing I had to put in there. I got the okay to put it in there. But back around the year 2000, just shortly thereafter, I'm the guy, and I'm not a CIA agent. I'm not an FBI agent. Never was. I just want to contribute to my country. And it's welfare. We had problems. We wanted to go into Libya. We needed the oil in Libya because oil was getting very expensive. Our oil comes. Our oil comes. We're companies already had concessions, but Gaddafi took them all the way. Now, they wanted to be friends with the United States. We wanted to be friends with them, okay? But they gave up their weapons
Starting point is 00:56:39 of mass destruction, which were biological. They gave up their training camps for terrorists, but they did not give up their two suspected terrorists of Pan Am Flight 103 over Scotland. They did not do that. That was a requirement. So I heard about it through friends, let's put it that way, that were kind of, you know, very connected. They said, JP, we think you can make a difference. and we have a guy that'll get you next to Gaddafi and maybe convince him that what we want to do is going to be really good for him, right? It's going to be okay.
Starting point is 00:57:06 I could not fly there, so I arranged on my own ticket, flying in Tunisia. Gaddafi sent me his agents to meet me him in Tunisia. We drove for eight hours into Tripoli, was there for a day, no Gaddafi.
Starting point is 00:57:18 They set me into Surty afterwards, was there for two days. Finally, a knock on the wall, but a long story short, it's in there how I convinced Gaddafi, after he got really pissed off and accused me in the world of very,
Starting point is 00:57:29 everything, right? How I convinced Gaddafi to release it to suspect terrorists of Pan Am Flight 103. And they did within three months. I went back to the United States, told our government about everything, showed him, I even have a picture in the book of me and Gaddafi hugging like that. We're smiling, right? It changed his attitude with kindness, but you got to read the book to see what it's all about. Because he was very apprehensive when I got there. By the time I let this all within a matter of half an hour and talking to him, his mind was changed. And he was. happy, just felt something in his life that was, yeah, this is a thing to do. Let's do it. I never took credit for it. I didn't want to. I did not want to. It was the same when I went into
Starting point is 00:58:09 North Korea in 1996 to help convince Kim Jong-il to get out of the four-way talks. Never took credit for it at all. Did want to? Locate. They offered me $50 million in Libya. If I got it done, I said, I don't want your money, Gaddafi. What do you want? I said, let me and my family come in in a couple years when things settled down, and we'll have a meal with you and your family. Done. It was done, right? Very low-keyed. I didn't talk about it very much at all.
Starting point is 00:58:35 Now I could talk about it. All I want is perfectly okay. Use pictures at all. But it's showing you that you could do so many things to even help your country and people out by just being a normal person that's happy, knowing you could do something and listening to the other guy and having a sense of humor. And that was one of the things that I got Gaddafi after he was ready to kill me. I mean, this guy was ready to kill me after I said something to him.
Starting point is 00:58:58 It was like, an Omar Montaust. His chief of staff was going, oh, my God, like that. The guy next to me spilled his tea in his pants. He didn't pee his pants. He didn't pee his pants. He said, oh, shit, we're dead. You know, his own mind. We talked about it afterwards, right?
Starting point is 00:59:11 But then all of a sudden, within a few seconds later, it was, I told him something that was extreme because I broke out laughing when we were talking about something, and he was ready to kill me. And then I told him something of, you know, why it was so funny. And then he broke out laughing. And then we took the picture. I love that. I love that.
Starting point is 00:59:30 JP, it sounds like you're on to some big things also about AI and everything. So tell us what's going on. Oh, so proud of it. This is so good. I invested in the company is so good. It's recent. It's called Global, like Global S-KU, like S-like-S-L-L-K-U, like Sam, K like Kentucky, you like universe, globalSKU.
Starting point is 00:59:49 It's just happened a couple of months ago. It's now on the market, right? it'll cost you $15 to get into it. That's it, only $15. Here's what it is. I talked about how to sell products. Here I had to go and take orders, hand them in. How does somebody today that has any kind of a product
Starting point is 01:00:05 or they have products, but they're overstocked? How do you sell that? How about you have no products, but you have old clothes in the closet or half a bicycle in your garage? How can you get money and sell these things? GlobalSkU.com. Here's what you do.
Starting point is 01:00:19 You take your camera. You take a picture of anything. Anything. It could be a bicycle, an old-used t-shirt in your closet, anything. Instantly, it's AI. It tells you in a second what it is that you took a picture of when it was sold and when it was sold last and how much money they got for it. Then you push a button and you're on either eBay or one of the other platforms out there and it's sold for you. $15 month. I think you get 10 or 20 sales you get out of that. If you need more, maybe it's $20, $20, $25. but on the first sale you make. We wanted to test this. So one of the guys went in the office, went down to a thrift store,
Starting point is 01:01:00 went to this strip store, took a picture of this t-shirt with the name of a state across it. It was a funky t-shirt. The letters were almost falling up, but not quite. And of another t-shirt, just a cool t-shirt, but it's sold from a thrift store.
Starting point is 01:01:12 $2 each. Took a picture of it, right? One out, and they paid for the two bucks and sold it. One got close to $100, the other one got $28 or something like that for it almost immediately. It's not a guarantee he's going to sell, but you have for so cheap, an audience out there.
Starting point is 01:01:27 Now, if you're a big company and you have like big stuff you want to sell, like cars, tractors, you know, big giant generators, whatever, you're overstocked from one of the big stores, and you just can't sell it back, and you don't want to go through five warehouses and discount it to finally get rid of it. Then there's something called Van Did It. Van Did It is the same company, but a different name. That company Van did it, like Van V-A-N. He did it. Who did it? I didn't do it. Ben did it. Ben did it. Okay. Anyways, it puts you online to hundreds of thousands,
Starting point is 01:02:00 millions of people out there that'll buy your product. And you bypass all the warehouse and go directly to the bees or directly who's going to buy your product. Now, instead of losing money on your return or having overstock, you know what the hell to do with, you made some money. And the person of the other end made money because they saved a bunch of money buying something that was almost like brand new or brand new right away. I love this. My daughter actually used an app to sell like $450 in her first week. Like I'm totally getting her on Global SQ. Like, let's go. That's so good. Oh, yeah. It's amazing. Instantly, instantly, when you take the picture, the AI tells you not only it, but what it's sold for last.
Starting point is 01:02:39 Your daughter can take some she wants to sell that's used and all of a sudden find out the last time it was sold used and what it's sold for. Just one more question. Where can they find out, the memoir and all of this, but also if you met JP at your 20s or, you know, right when you're kind of at the bottom, like, what would you wish somebody told you? That is an excellent question or what would I have changed in my life? That is a beautiful question to ask, okay? And my answer is this. And I really thought this one, I was asked to me years ago, absolutely nothing.
Starting point is 01:03:16 If it wasn't for my up and down experiences, which are a lot, by the way, okay? if it wasn't for the up and down experiences, I wouldn't be who I am today. I wouldn't change the thing. Even though we all say, God, if only did that definitely be a lot easier, a lot better, I'd have more money, I'd have my sweetheart, no matter what it might be, nothing. I would not be who I am today if it wasn't for all those experiences. And that's what we do on the planet Earth. You're sent here in a body to learn.
Starting point is 01:03:40 You're here to learn. And in order to learn, if it's all sweet and gravy and perfect, you're going to get bored or your life's not going to be as, I know a lot of really wealthy people that were, born with silver spoons in their mouth, as the saying goes, that weren't the happiest person on the planet, okay? But you're here to learn different things, the ups and downs, to experience life and learn different things. So when you do leave these earthly bodies, whatever you're going to do next, you're a little more prepared for it because you've experienced it. And whatever you believe happens after you die, that's up to you. I won't even go into that
Starting point is 01:04:13 with you right now. They'll be up to you, okay? But I know. We need like another episode to go into all of this, like I feel. But J.P. This is so far. Maybe when my book is out, uh-huh. Yes. Yes. Then I'll get your book and I can interview you on and we can talk about things together, maybe some similarities. What is more important in life? Many people say if only had a million dollars or even more, I'd be as happy as can be. I'm going to tell you a story. In the 1950s, the richest man in the world, you could look this up, was Jay Paul Getty Jr. He was from Oklahoma, lived in London because he made so much money, started Aramco, the big oil company in Saudi Arabia, okay?
Starting point is 01:04:54 Riches, he was the first real billionaire we knew about. Anyways, big time. This guy was so cheap that in his castle in London, he had a pay phone installed when he found out a lot of his people were making toll calls, meaning he called across town, and he had a 200-pound phone bill, which is like about 500 U.S. dollars. Richest man in the world, put a phone booth in there, right? Anyways, he's getting older. One of the rarest interviews he ever had.
Starting point is 01:05:19 He didn't like interviews, but he had this one interview when he's getting much older. And the lady asked him this question, John Paul Getty Jr., you are the richest man in the world. Is there anything you would have done differently in your life? Because you are the richest man. He goes, no, ma'am. I'm not only the richest man in the world. I'm the most powerful man in the world. I could change governments with the money and influence that I have.
Starting point is 01:05:42 He says, but yes, there is some I would have changed. He says, I would give up. I would have given up the majority of all my power, of all my money, the majority of it all, to have been happy in my life. I've never been happy. I've been married seven times, didn't love any of them, even had a grandkid that cut the ear off, sent it in for the mafia to get a ransom. And by the way, they made a movie on that I think with Leonardo DiCapri or somebody says,
Starting point is 01:06:07 I was never happy. She asked him, well, Jay Paul Getty, why don't you start now? He says, it's too late for me. I'm too old. I've already just laid everything out. There's hardly any time left for me. Okay. So what's more important in life? Happiness, I say number one, and health is number two. If you're not happy, you're not going to be healthy. That happiness is going to help you be healthier. And everything else comes after that. But be kind to people, love your family, have good family values, take care of them. They're the closest thing to you. And just do whatever you have to be happy in life.
Starting point is 01:06:37 And don't be mean to other people. Leave a good record behind you in life. Like while I was here, I made life better for other people, not just me. Oh, I love this. This is so good. J.P., this is such a beautiful story. And it's true. Like, I know a lot of multi-billioners, big investors, they're just miserable. So I love that. That's such an important reminder for everybody. J.P., where can they find you or you can't find everybody by you, but your story. Yeah. It is called success, unshared is failure. Very important word. Success and shared is failure, okay? You can get it right now, and I suggest you order right now on Amazon.
Starting point is 01:07:18 They're taking pre-orders for delivery in late, May, early June that'll be delivered. You want the first edition. Then they're going to be sold out of the first edition. They've already told us. So pre-order it right now. Success and shared is failure. And it's my story. It's pre-ordered on Amazon.
Starting point is 01:07:33 Oh, we guarantee we get to love it. There's so many stories here that it's, like, unbelievable. And we're going to have the links and everything in the show notes. And JP, thank you. This was so fun. Thank you. Remember this episode. It's not just for you and me.
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