My First Million - $100M founder predicts what will be big in 5 years

Episode Date: March 31, 2025

💰 Get the [free] Episode 692: Sam Parr ( https://x.com/theSamParr ) talks to Justin Mares ( https://x.com/jwmares ) about what’s going to be big in the next 5 years.  — Show Notes:  (0...:00) Intro (3:16) Longevity products for dogs (9:24) Toxin testing (19:55) Function and Superpower (26:19) Doctor for your home (37:25) Skin gut health (47:39) Natural fiber clothing (51:04) Justin's take on vaccines — Links: • Truemed - http://truemed.com/  • Justin’s Substack - https://justinmares.substack.com/  • Rorra - https://rorra.com/  • Light Labs - http://lightlabs.com  • Eurofins - https://www.eurofins.com/  • Function Health - https://www.functionhealth.com/  • Superpower - https://superpower.com/  • InsideTracker - https://info.insidetracker.com/  • Lightwork - https://www.dolightwork.com/  • r/moderatelygranolamoms - https://www.reddit.com/r/moderatelygranolamoms/  • Paul Saladino - https://www.paulsaladinomd.co/  • NADS - https://nadsunder.com/  • Pact - https://wearpact.com/  • ExOfficio - https://www.exofficio.com/  • Ryker - https://rykerusa.com/  — Check Out Shaan's Stuff: • Shaan's weekly email - https://www.shaanpuri.com  • Visit https://www.somewhere.com/mfm to hire worldwide talent like Shaan and get $500 off for being an MFM listener. Hire developers, assistants, marketing pros, sales teams and more for 80% less than US equivalents. • Mercury - Need a bank for your company? Go check out Mercury (mercury.com). Shaan uses it for all of his companies! Mercury is a financial technology company, not an FDIC-insured bank. Banking services provided by Choice Financial Group, Column, N.A., and Evolve Bank & Trust, Members FDIC — Check Out Sam's Stuff: • Hampton - https://www.joinhampton.com/ • Ideation Bootcamp - https://www.ideationbootcamp.co/ • Copy That - https://copythat.com • Hampton Wealth Survey - https://joinhampton.com/wealth • Sam’s List - http://samslist.co/ My First Million is a HubSpot Original Podcast // Brought to you by HubSpot Media // Production by Arie Desormeaux // Editing by Ezra Bakker Trupiano

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 So this is actually a company that I've wanted to invest in for so long. If you're doing this, like, please just email me. I feel like I can rule the world. I know I could be what I want to. I put my all in it like no days off. On a road, let's travel, never look. All right. So I wanted to have you on because you are one of my healthiest buddies.
Starting point is 00:00:19 Last time you were on, I think you've been on three times already. You didn't get into a lot of the ideas because we were just like peppering you with so many questions. And I wanted to be more focused. I think I asked you what are five or six like interesting health companies or health trends that you're interested in investing in? And you hit me back with a very detailed list and a very short amount of time. So clearly you are like already thinking and acting on a lot of these things. Can we go through each of them and you just tell me what they are because I'm crazy fascinated? Because like for the listener, you told me in 2014 or 15 that you are quitting tech.
Starting point is 00:00:58 Like you had a software company and you were going to launch a bone broth company. And I was like, oh, man, like you're like you're decided to throw your life away. That sucks. Like you were, you were going to be one of the greats. And then it just came out in Forbes, I think. Or was that, was it Forbes? Yeah. You had this amazing feature about your company, kettle and fire and how you surpassed 100 million in annual revenue.
Starting point is 00:01:23 And it was amazing. And I'm like, you definitely won. And I read the article, by the way. And I texted like five friends and I'm like, Justin does everything the right way. By the way, did I get that right? You're at 100 million run rate or revenue? Yeah, north of that, yeah.
Starting point is 00:01:39 And you said something amazing. I think you said, what did you say? We're going to be the best operating e-commerce company in America. Is that right? Yeah, I mean, basically like there are most of the big public, big food companies were started pre-1900. And so a lot of these companies are very, very, very, bloated, they're large, you know, they've been around. Frankly, I think many of them are poisoning
Starting point is 00:02:01 people and then paying lobbyists and other sort of opposition research groups to make sure that, like, soda doesn't get removed from food stamps and all these sorts of things. And so I think these are just generally bad actors. And I think that there's a huge opportunity to both out-innovate these big CPG companies and also just run a better business. Like I guarantee no one in, you know, Battle Creek, Michigan working at Kellogg's is looking at like how do we use AI to automate a lot of our workflows and process and things like that. Whereas like that's something we have live work streams going in kettle and fire to figure out like how do we apply the craziest technology, you know,
Starting point is 00:02:37 move like leap forward of, you know, certainly my lifetime to just running the, the best possible company that we can. And I think it's working so far. We have like 34 people for, you know, for our size of business, which is quite good scale. You have only 34 employees? Yeah. Wow. Is it wildly profitable or is it working at,
Starting point is 00:02:56 way to be wildly profitable. No, we're profitable. I mean, one of the things that I'm very proud of is like, we've raised only $10 million in primary capital since starting the company. And so it's been pretty capital efficient. And, you know, we've been focused on building the trend, but also building a good business since we started it like nine years ago. Damn. That's awesome that you have proven me and I'm sure many other people wrong. And you've, you've been early on a bunch of stuff. All right. So let's dive deep. What's the first one you want to talk about? Yeah. So first one I want to talk about is I think that, you know, there are, there's this huge, huge macro trend where all people are talking about Maha, they're talking about seed oils, talking about all these things.
Starting point is 00:03:33 What's a point? Make America healthy again. Okay. We're talking about all these things about fixing the chronic disease crisis in the U.S. And I think that health trends, specifically for dogs and other pets, like tend to lag a couple years behind humans. Like basically a couple years ago, you know, you saw Blue Apron, Hello Fresh, a bunch of these companies launch. And then a couple years beyond that, farmer's dog, a like fresh dog food delivery kind of company launches. And I think there are well over 100 or 200 million in revenue at
Starting point is 00:04:03 this point. It's crazy. And I basically think that you can look at the US chronic disease crisis, obesity rates, inflammation, cancer, autoimmune, all these things. The same thing is happening in dogs, like something like one in four dogs are going to get cancer at this point. This is like unique. It's new. Cancer rates among dogs are rising. And And again, this is because dogs, like humans, exist in an environment that is actively poisoning them. Like, kibble is total trash. And it is literally making dogs sick.
Starting point is 00:04:33 And so I think that there are a lot of these health trends that, like, people are getting into that you're going to see become popular now. And in two to three, four years are going to be popular for pets, especially because now it's something like, I think that millennials or Gen Z, like literally have more dogs than babies or something like that, the market is growing incredibly quickly. Although I don't have a dog. But I think there's like a lot, a lot of gold in that sort of like take human health thing and apply it to a dog like health product.
Starting point is 00:05:05 Is this true? You say here that in some cities there's more dogs than babies. Yeah. Yeah. And it's certainly true. Like the younger you go. The kibble thing is interesting. I had a dog for 15 years.
Starting point is 00:05:19 He was my best friend. and his last five years of life, it hit me, where I was giving him, so when I first got him, I was poor, so I would, like, buy the cheapest dog food. And then I got, you know, I could afford, like, whatever they tell you, you know, like the schick they tell you
Starting point is 00:05:34 is, like, only buy something where it says, like, chicken on the first ingredient. Who knows if that's true or now? But that's the more expensive thing. And then I was, like, eating kibble, like, dry dog food, it would be sort of like feeding me potato chips every day. Do you know what I mean?
Starting point is 00:05:48 Like, and, like, people's dog, are, you know, what do you do when you have a dog and you eat dinner? They all come and obsess over you. And you like, yell at them. And I'm like, if you gave me refried beans for every single meal, of course I'm going to want like be desperate for any new food. It's kind of insane, right, that we would feed them the same thing. And it's like a processed dried thing that doesn't expire.
Starting point is 00:06:10 Totally. It's insane, right? It's totally insane. And you look at the ingredient. It's like full of trash, full of artificial ingredient, you know, like all of the stuff that people are trying to remove from their diets, we basically put in kibble and feed to dogs for every single meal. For every meal.
Starting point is 00:06:26 I remember like my in-laws have a dog and he comes over and they're like, oh, don't give them table food. I don't want him to be unhealthy. I'm like, I don't know, man. I feel like this asparagus and chicken might be all right. 100%. And we had Kevin Rose on the podcast and he had funded a company called dog aging project.org.
Starting point is 00:06:44 And I believe what they are doing, the whole premise is that for some reason, I believe it was because a lot of times you don't want to see your, you're willing to suffer or you're willing to let your family suffer, oftentimes more than you're willing to let your dog suffer. And the premise, but at the same time, you're willing to experiment more. And so the premise was that they had, what's the drug that is a longevity drug that starts with an R? Rapamycin.
Starting point is 00:07:09 Yes. I believe they were doing, they were selling this to dog owners. And what they found was like, I guess there's a huge correlation between what we can do with dogs and what we'll have. eventually with humans like you're suggesting, and they have noticed that they have gotten dogs to live longer, and their premise is we are gonna start here and then eventually go there to humans.
Starting point is 00:07:28 And so, yeah, that people agree with you. Yeah, yeah, well, I think that they're looking at it as like, you know, drug and then we'll expand dog longevity and then we'll move into humans. I think what, I think that like the business opportunities exist looking backwards. Like everyone is talking about water cleanliness and water filtration and stuff like this.
Starting point is 00:07:46 And yet when they go to feed their dog, they like put their bowl under sink and the dog gets a load of like whatever toxins alcohol or not alcohols uh chlorine like you know all of these sorts of things and like that's its daily water source um and i think that there's all of these things where like why is they're not a reasonably sized company just doing like aurora like a really you know r o r a like a really high end water filter uh but geared towards dogs or something like that i don't know i think like dog saunas and dog dog cold plunges is probably a little too far. But certainly I think that there's like a bunch of peptide supplements, you know, water
Starting point is 00:08:21 filtration, things like that, that even like doing dog kennels and things like this with more natural materials that probably would do quite well for people who already think and view the world through the health lens and have not yet begun the process of applying that lens to their health or to their pets. Can you tell me what Light Labs is? That's amazing. I looked at the website. It seems like this might This is your brother's thing. It might be bigger than everything you guys have done. Yeah, yeah, I hope so. I mean, so my brother and I, we started kettle and fire together,
Starting point is 00:08:52 and we grew it. And after some period of time, he stepped back from the business. And so his new business, which he started last year, is called Light Labs. And what they're doing is basically there are so many toxins and other sorts of, like, crap in our food supply chain. And at Kettle and Fire, we spend almost half a million dollars a year testing all of the batches that we're making of bone broth to make sure that like there's no glyphosate, there's no Phaas, there's no pfoss, there's no phthalates, like all these sorts of things.
Starting point is 00:09:20 And so we as a company spend a lot of money and a lot of energy making sure that our supply chain is clean, but we're making sure that it's clean of stuff that you can't see as a consumer, yet you probably care about. And so what Light Labs is doing is they're basically building a lab testing, toxin testing company, like a modern one for consumer brands like kettle and fire, where they do two things. Like they will test for nutrition fact panel, run the normal, like heavy metals testing, things like that. But they also do a longer tail of rarer tests like Thallates, PFS, glyphosides, pesticides,
Starting point is 00:09:54 things like that. And then once they run these tests, they actually expose it and push the most recent versions of a brand's lab test to both their website or if you're sold mostly in retail. The goal is to get like a QR code that a consumer can scan and see like what is kettle Fire's most recent lab test show around like PFS and other sorts of exposures. So I think this is like one of the most interesting things happening in the health world right now is this broad push towards transparency and like getting a bunch of these things, microplastics, that people know are bad, but don't have visibility into, like bringing
Starting point is 00:10:31 transparency to that food system, which then creates the incentive and energy to make change. So that's kind of what he's doing. I have a ton of questions on this. Okay, so you and I lived in Austin together, and then before that, we lived in San Francisco together, both very much like bubble cities where Austin's like, you know, very health conscious and particularly our friend group was very health conscious. And then San Francisco was like, you know, on the forefront of a lot of tech. Do people where I'm from in Missouri, where you're from in PA, do they care about any of this stuff? not right now, but I think that that's not like not 100% of people have to care for this to make sense. Like what is undoubtedly true is people are spending more time and energy focusing on sourcing toxin
Starting point is 00:11:18 reduction. They're spending more money at, you know, companies like Whole Foods on brands like kettle and fire on their health in general. And I think that this is one of the things that people are going to start caring about when they shop. And like the minute that, yes, it may not be like people, you know, where my family's from, where your family's from, they may not be asking about phthalate load in, you know, their hot dogs that they're eating or something like that. But some percentage of people will, and you only need a small increase in order for there to be demand from the brand and consumer side to, you know, to basically have supply chains and agricultural resources, ranching, like all these practices that incorporate and think about toxin exposure, pesticide load, and the like. And so I think light labs is the type
Starting point is 00:12:02 a company that I'm super bullish on bringing transparency to the food system because I think it's just going to like once you bring transparency then there's energy to try and clean up and improve the food system behind them. And so this company from I don't know anything about the space. It's basically like putting an organic label on your food. So a food company would pay them and they would say Light Labs is a reputable brand. We have proof that they tested everything. We paid them money to do it. and we have a dashboard as well where we can like see where we are in the process of the testing.
Starting point is 00:12:36 Is that right? Yeah, exactly. So consumer brands like, kettle and fire, we already have to spend money on, you know, on these different sorts of tests and things like that. Why do you have to?
Starting point is 00:12:46 Because you're legally required to by the USDA to do nutrition fax panels. You have to do like heavy metals testing. You just, there's just a slew of tests that you have to run. Yeah, by law before you can actually just sell a product. And so that that's like a thing that you already have to do. Then what Light Labs is doing is they are bringing a bunch more transparency to the supply chain and making it so that you can look
Starting point is 00:13:12 at, you know, momentous supplements or like any number of these things and basically see, okay, beyond just metals testing and things like this, what are the other things that they've tested for? Oh, wow, I can see, you know, like no detectable thallates. I can see no detectable glyphosate, detectable atrazine, like some of these other pesticides that people care about. And so I think it's bringing that what has been like hidden in the depths of these like horrible lab tests from by companies that are like 60 years old to the forefront and making it influence consumers buying behavior. That makes me so bullish. How big is the biggest lab business now or the couple biggest ones? And when your brother was raising money or when he was just brainstorming with you on
Starting point is 00:13:54 describing how big this could be or like what his dreams were in 20 years, what was he saying? Yeah, so the biggest one was called Eurofins. I think it's like an 11 or $12 billion company. Like in revenue? No, market cap. But I mean, it pretty closely maps to revenue because it's like a service business. You know, it's like not a great, doesn't trade very well. So what he was saying is basically step one, I think that we can build a competitor and be better than Eurofins.
Starting point is 00:14:20 Like you submit to a Eurofins lab, you submit an email inquiry and you get a response maybe in like three or four days. and then when they run your tests, they don't communicate anything and they dump like 30 PDFs on you that you have to hire someone that understands food scientists to like, you know, translate this stuff. It's really like insane.
Starting point is 00:14:39 And you go to their website, Eurofins.com. It looks like you're like, you know, making a vaccine or you're doing like, you're doing like some type of embryo work. Exactly. It's like a very intimidating website. Exactly. It looks like an academic site from like 95, you know, like it's very intimidating.
Starting point is 00:15:01 Exactly. And so they're not the type of company that is going to build an incredible product for consumer brands. And they're not the type of company that's going to build the consumer-facing product. And so what he was like, my brother was thinking is he was like, wow, this is going to be incredibly interesting. We can build a Eurofin's competitor. We can do a better job servicing CPG brands. We already know how to do that from his experience at Kettle and Fire. And then we have the opportunity to build out.
Starting point is 00:15:26 this entire other business where we can build like consumer awareness of these different toxic compounds and turn, you know, kettle and fires 500,000 a year of lab testing expense into an actual revenue generating function and almost like a marketing line item. Dude, this is so awesome. Does he have any revenue now, your brother? Yeah, they've launched a couple months ago and they've started to get revenue. Yeah. Did he raise funding or did he bootstrap it? He did. No, no, no. This is definitely the type of company you have to raise money. It looks expensive to start. Yes. Definitely. It's honestly, it's the type of company that I think is it's the perfect like act to company. Like Nick has experience,
Starting point is 00:16:08 domain expertise can raise money. And when your first thing is like, hey, we have to raise, you know, millions of dollars and we're going to write a check for like, you know, multiple millions to like buy a laboratory and buy lab equipment all this stuff. It's tough to make that bet on like a 22 year old, but on a 29-year-old with some experience, like it makes more sense. Is this in Texas? Yeah, in Austin. Wow, this is amazing. All right.
Starting point is 00:16:31 Wow, first of all, this is crazy. How much does, oh, and the labels. So, like, if you go to McDonald's or fast food, they put the nutritional there, which is, like, way more challenging, I think, than, like, an M&M or a candy bar, which is more controlled. But I'm pretty sure I've always, like, believe that nutritional labels are bullshit. Like, in my head, I've always been like, it's give or take. maybe even 30% of what is presented.
Starting point is 00:16:56 That's exactly right. Is it like I would just because I weigh my food. I've tracked almost everything that I've eaten for like four years now in my fitness pal. Wow. And like you weigh it and I weigh it and now I eyeball it sometimes. But like first of all, I've noticed a few things. One, when people eyeball their food to track, they almost always overestimate or sorry, underestimate by around 30%.
Starting point is 00:17:19 And then if you go and buy like a let's just say, a Big Mac, the degree in which they are different is huge. And there's no way that those nutritional labels are accurate with just the calories, let alone like whatever else, like the macros, plus whatever else is supposed to be in it. Yeah, exactly. I mean, the FDA first, depending on the compound or the nutrient, like they'll have a limit that is often, it's plus or minus 10% for sure. Oftentimes it's upwards of like 30, 40, even 50% depending on the compound. Because as you can imagine, some of these things are fairly sensitive, like potassium or iodine or things like this that are present in minuscule amounts. Like, it's really hard to say exactly for every single cookie or piece of bread that you're getting or whatever that there's X amount of iodine in it.
Starting point is 00:18:09 And so the FDA allows for, you know, reasonably high tolerance on some of these errors, which makes a lot of this nutrition stuff even harder to figure out. who uh who owns the like is the certified organic is that a company it is a i believe it's a non-profit i think it's ward and telf is one of them um but yeah it's like a certifying body and i've always contested that that's bullshit because like i just think that when you i've like i've seen farms where they have like an organic section and a non-organic section and like it just seems like when you put medicine on one of them it inevitably will be get in the other one. That is certainly true. The thing that is good for, like, I think organic is better than nothing, but it's certainly not perfect. And I think that there is a lot of, you know, there's a
Starting point is 00:18:59 fair bit of research that organic vegetables, for example, have far fewer pesticides than their conventional kind of counterparts, but they still have some. But it's not because they're directly being sprayed. It's because of like, you know, wind, water, like all these sorts of things, moving these compounds everywhere. What's another good one? You want to do function health or skin, gut health? I'm fascinated by all these. Yeah. Let's do function. So, you know, function health, superpower, like.
Starting point is 00:19:26 Explain what those are. Yeah. So function health and superpower. They're basically companies where you can go to their website, sign up, pay an annual membership fee, and they'll facilitate a telemedicine thing where they'll be like, hey, you can go get your blood drawn at, you know, a lab or have someone come to you. And you can test your own blood for, like, I think it's over 190 markers. So you can get things like P-FOS exposure, heavy metals, testosterone, you know, insulin markers, all these sorts of things that to just know are you healthy or do you have things that you need to work on? And so I think that, like, I believe that function is one of the fastest growing companies in the entire Andresen portfolio.
Starting point is 00:20:08 Like they're growing super, super fast. Yeah, I think they announced another fundraising. But I think they announced that it got to like nine figures in revenue in like two or three years. like something insane. It's crazy. So it's crazy. And like there's so much demand for people wanting to understand their biomarkers, their lipids, like all these sorts of things.
Starting point is 00:20:27 I think that rolling four or five years, are we going to know more or less about the health of our bodies and what's like going on in our systems? It's definitely more. And what I think functioned super power and the like are doing is they're lowering the friction for people like you and I to understand what's going on in our bodies and our blood and all that. And that information creates a ton of potential for action. But why are why is function growing so fast? Because I've used inside insight or inside tracker inside tracker inside tracker for years and then before that there was
Starting point is 00:20:59 I don't know like there there's these have always been a thing. Why like and now I'm hearing so many people talk about function health or I'm like I these have been cool and awesome for a decade now. Why is this one particularly awesome? I think that their marketing is great. I think that the value prop is great. It's like one price, one annual membership, get this slew of tests. Like if you had, if you went to your doctor and asked for the same test that function would give you, it would be like, dude, they don't let you. Well, well, so if you went to you, right, they either don't let you or it would be like $7,000 or $8,000. And so function is like 500 bucks a year. I had my friend tried to go get this testosterone checked and he went to the doctor and the doctor was like,
Starting point is 00:21:38 ah, you're 32. You don't, you're fine. Like, you don't need to do that. It's insane. The medical system is so patronizing. It's like, there also, there's people talking about how you shouldn't get an MRI or shouldn't get your blood work done because it'll scare you. It will cause all these questions or scare you. And you're like, fuck off. Like that stuff is such an insanely patronizing thing. Yeah, it's crazy. Like I, you know, I've done this before where I'm like, I want this test. And they're like, but you seem perfectly healthy. And I'm like, dude, just like write it on the paper. It means nothing to you and it's important to me. Just do what I tell you to do, please. Like, exactly. Like, this literally requires nothing from you and I'm just going to learn.
Starting point is 00:22:17 It's exactly right. I think that, like, the medical profession writ large, there's certainly people that do good. But I think that many of them have this like, the patient's an idiot. I know everything kind of vibe. And that is, if you look at the trajectory of American health, certainly I think that we need to change what we're doing. And I think taking like health matters into their own hands is a huge, huge thing. And so why this is an interesting trend to me, function, super power, and the like is for the first time,
Starting point is 00:22:42 think you are going to see millions and millions of people being onboarded and understanding of like what is going on in their blood, what's going on in their bodies, and then taking steps to optimize or improve that thing. And so right now, if you take supplements, it's like, you know, Sam, you probably take creatine or something like that. You're probably take it and you're like, maybe I'm a little more shredded. Maybe I'm like, you know, feel better or whatever. But you probably don't, you're not seeing any of your lab markers change. Same is true of like thyroid or cholesterol markers or lipids or other things. I think. as people get this information and start to retest over a six to 12 month period,
Starting point is 00:23:18 that we are going to see way, way, way more products and services that sprout up where people, where like there is demand for people who want to optimize their biomarkers. So sort of like today, we have personal trainers who help you get shredded because like that's kind of the only thing people can see. I think in the future, we'll have like apps, trainers, services, things like this that are specific to Sam wants to lower his APOB score or Sam wants to improve. his, you know, LDL or something like that. Sam wants to improve his thyroid. Like, I think all of these things are newly going to be marketing angles and things that people talk about because they have
Starting point is 00:23:54 this insight into their body. This company also took off. By the way, I quit taking creatine. It turned me into a gorilla. I got so big. Like, I could not, like, fit into clothing. Like, have you taken it? I have. And I stopped. I stopped because a friend freaked me out. He was like, everyone who goes on creatine starts losing their hair, which I like didn't experience, didn't know about, but I was like, huh, I'll cycle off it for six months and see what happens. I went on it. It didn't happen to you, obviously. No, not yet. But like I, like, I ballooned. Like, I just like got so, it just felt like I had so much water. Like, it was like 15 pounds in like three weeks. Wow. I got huge. Like I went from like 202 to like 215 or something. And then I was like, all right,
Starting point is 00:24:39 I got to go off it for like eight days and it just like all went away. because yeah i don't know what happened but um in this function health thing these guys took off because uh i mean what they did was smart they i don't know if mark hyman started it or if he's like considered is he like the the kim kardashian of skims where like i don't know if he had the idea or like someone else i had the idea and he was the face but like partnering up with that dude who's got two million or something followers like my father-in-law is like whatever mark says i do uh Awesome. And so, like, partnering up with a guy like this is so much better than whatever else health
Starting point is 00:25:16 influencers sell, like coaching PDFs. You know what I mean? Totally. Yeah. Like, I generally think also as a side comment, this is how creators are going to monetize more in the future is, like, owning chunks of very good businesses that rely on distribution, rather than just like, I'm Mark Hyman and I get an affiliate fee every time I refer to someone to check out function health or something, you know?
Starting point is 00:25:38 Yeah, yeah, yeah, for sure. What's this other one about functional medicine doctor for your home? That is amazing sounding. We'll explain that. Yeah. So there's increasing awareness around how your home can basically be a source of disease. Like lighting can be bad. EMFs are controversial, but like I think definitely have some health impact.
Starting point is 00:25:58 Wait, what's that? EMS, electromagnetic frequencies basically like your cell phone, your Wi-Fi router, like all of these sort of things that are that we're surrounded by all the time. you know, water toxicity, like off-gassing things called volatile organic compounds. Basically, like the, you know, when you walk into a building that's newly painted or something like that, you can smell it. Dude, do you have so much anxiety all day? No, I'm pretty chill. I really believe in the, like, 80-20 thing on this stuff.
Starting point is 00:26:26 Because, like, everything you're describing in my house is, like, you know, like a chainsaw. And they're just going to just rip me up. Like, I saw a video. There's this guy named Carnivore. MD and he had a video on YouTube explaining like his house and Carnivore MD is like the most extreme of the most extreme when it comes to like these type of granola health influencers and like he had like a mattress that had only natural fibers which I don't I don't know what a grounding thing is but there was like this like it's grounding for electricity he had like a pole that went into the ground of his home and all the electricity had to like touch that grounding pole. is that a thing you know i'm talking about that's amazing yeah like it was like and then he had like um uh no LED light bulbs he had no Wi-Fi so there was no Wi-Fi at his home and you had to plug in if you had to if you wanted to use the internet on this one particular area of his home like it was
Starting point is 00:27:27 crazy uh and i was reading it or watching this video and i'm like that's cool and also this fucking exhausting yeah definitely it's very exhausting like when you just named all of these things I'm like, I don't know, man. Like, I kind of would just fucking kill me early. Like, you know what I mean? Like, maybe I'll just take that as a consequence. Yes. So I agree.
Starting point is 00:27:48 It's exhausting. It's a multifactorial problem. It's like a thing that people are aware of when to fix, but don't know where to get started. This is actually why I think that a like functional medicine or like trainer that makes your, you know, your house healthy is a very interesting idea. I actually invested in a company called Lightwork. It's do lightwork.com.
Starting point is 00:28:07 But they're basically doing this where they can send someone to your house and do a test around, you know, what are the things that, what are the things that are the things that are potentially causing disease or stress or other sorts of things in your home? And it's, it's like shocking what they have found. Like they tested a, you know, a billionaire's home recently. And across like all sorts of things like air quality, water quality, VOCs, EMF exposure, all of this. You know, it rated very, very badly. Like, people are not looking at the home through the lens of health and chronic disease. And when you start to, there's like a ton of changes that you want to make. Many of those are which are, you know, confusing or, you know, people don't really understand. So I think that there is a huge opportunity for people to start thinking about, you know, home health or housing through the lens of health.
Starting point is 00:29:01 And I think that a company like Lightwork or others that brings this sort of home health test, almost like function, you know, function health for your house is like a really, really big opportunity. So they have a list on their website. So water quality, I assume that includes putting some type of filter. They have lighting, which I imagine that means like no LED lights or a certain type of bulbs. They have EMF, which I guess that is the grounding thing we talked about, like basically. It's somewhat, yeah. It's more like, it's more like are you sleeping over a Wi-Fi router? Like, are you spending a lot of times in air, you know, a lot of time in areas that have a very high power, you know, electromagnetic frequency?
Starting point is 00:29:44 Dude, they're going to get so pissed at me when they found out that I sleep with the family guy playing in my ear from my cell phone when I sleep on my phone. Oh, God. I want to fail this test. They have air quality. So that means like, do you have plants inside your house or what? More like our is, what is the quality of your air? that's contributed like things that are bad are some of the paints that are doing off gassing some
Starting point is 00:30:11 furnishers off gas quite a lot you know microplastic fibers kind of like floating around in the air from your like corporate or something like that so a lot of these things do these guys make money uh they just started so the answer is sort of so far how much is it costs uh it depends on the house size but anywhere it's it's definitely a premium product like 5 000 or 10 grand yeah yeah and it's I would say that it is one of these companies that starting out is expensive, concierge, like all that kind of stuff. Over time, I think there's a huge amount of potential, especially using AI and whatnot, to have people kind of do a version of this assessment almost themselves.
Starting point is 00:30:50 Or you walk around your house with a camera and all these sorts of things. And this company just tells you, like, change this, do this. This is probably bad. This is not. Like, there's a really cool potential technology solve here, I think. And the guy who started this, does he have a background in this stuff? Yeah. Yeah, so he got incredibly sick.
Starting point is 00:31:08 He and his wife actually moved into a house. That house was on top of a power line. That house had like a bunch of bold issues that they didn't realize about when they moved in. And over the course of a year, their health on like every marker, energy, everything, just like collapsed. And so they went, you know, they went, they're healthy, they're 31. They went to normal doctors. They went to all these people. And only after a crazy amount of experimentation and talking to doctors, they realized, wow,
Starting point is 00:31:35 It's our health that it's like our home is actually making us sick. And that's what kind of got them down this rabbit hole of trying to understand the problem, which is that many people are getting sick, feeling low energy, feeling all these things, because they're being slowly poisoned by the house they live in. Dude, I feel whenever I hear this story, I think I'm broken because like, you know, I describe my family, like my, where I'm from in Missouri. We're basically, we're just mules. Like, we like, you know, you eat donuts in the morning.
Starting point is 00:32:05 You eat cheeseburgers and fries in the afternoon. And you eat steak and pizza and french fries at night with tons of beer. And you just do that every single day. And you just don't complain. And like if you were to tell me that these people, like if my house was full of mold, I would just think I have allergies. It just, uh, whatever. Like this is just how I feel.
Starting point is 00:32:24 Yeah. Do you know what I mean? And so like I wouldn't, I wouldn't know to like, do I would just think this is just life. And I, and I wouldn't ever complain about it either. I would just be like, yeah, fuck it. like rub some dirt on it, it's fine. You're not alone. I mean, this is like how most people respond to this, right?
Starting point is 00:32:41 I just think that people are becoming more aware of these things. Were you not raised that way? My mom was one of the early, like, into organic people. She was granoli? Yeah, she would buy milk in a glass drug that was like unpasteurized. So it held these nasty clumps. And you'd like pour it into your cereal in the morning and a clump would hit it. And the whole like, world would explode all over you.
Starting point is 00:33:01 It was so gross. Your mom's a freak. I know. At one point, I think I was like in fourth or fifth grade, the health food store where she was buying all this stuff literally burned down. And all the kids like through a party. We were like, yay, no more crappie milk. That's insane. You know, it is funny.
Starting point is 00:33:19 As my wife, you know, as we've had kids started having kids, it's so funny. Once the baby comes out of you, you automatically become granola. There's a subreddit. Have you seen the subreddit? It's called like a granola mom. Is it moderately granola? MOLA mums. Yeah, moderately granola moms. A place for almost hippies. And honestly, it's like one of my favorite places to get information because it's people who are hippie, hippie-dippy, but they're self-aware,
Starting point is 00:33:51 which is like why I like you. So like I want like someone who's like, you know, loves the extreme stuff, but can also dumb it down to me who's more like, you know, I don't really want to learn everything. I wish you would just tell me what to do and tell me like what's, like, what's, like experimental versus what's like actually proven and like you like kind of can help me as a more normal consumer figure it out and uh i've noticed that my wife the second you know we we had a kid it was like no more teflon um plastic bottles or no go like things like that and frankly i love it i love it yeah we we hung out with joe gebea recently did you know did you ever go to air bmb's office yeah so i don't know if you remember this but
Starting point is 00:34:35 They were wild. So this was back in 2000. I think they did this actually from the beginning. But they had 2,000 people working out of that office, something like that, maybe a thousand. And they made 100% of their own food. And to an extreme. So for example, they had Air Bowl, which was some type of like Airbnb Red Bull. They had, so the condiments, the ketchup, the mayonnaise was literally made on site by the staff.
Starting point is 00:35:05 And their meats were all from butchers. Every single thing they had. So they had trail mix where it was like nuts with like chocolate that they had made. It was crazy. And I distinctly remember that. And I thought it was crazy. And then I started thinking about it. I'm like, that's kind of amazing.
Starting point is 00:35:22 And we hung out with Joe Gebia. And I asked him about that. I go, why did you guys do this? He goes, man, that's how I was raised. Like my, I think he grew up in Vermont or somewhere, somewhere rural New England. and he was like, my mom was basically into this stuff, and I was raised doing all this, and I just thought it was good for the planet,
Starting point is 00:35:40 and it was good for our bodies. And so we insisted at Airbnb that we did this. And so back then, you know, I don't know how, maybe Joe's 40-something, so he was raised in the late 80s, early 90s. Back then, if you did that, like your mom, you were a freak. Now, all the young cool guys that, like, we follow on an Instagram who we're friends with all do this stuff. And I think it's, like, pretty amazing.
Starting point is 00:36:01 That is so cool. You don't remember that about Airbnb? I went there. I didn't, yeah, I went there to like meet up with friends and then see a talk. So I only went two or three times and didn't actually get that level of detail. That's so cool. It was wild. I don't know if they still have an office.
Starting point is 00:36:17 I don't know they still do that. But during the pandemic, they had to lay people off. And unfortunately, the culinary staff was probably the first to go. Yeah, that feels like the first thing that a public company like activist investor kind of yells at you for. Yeah. But, you know, I understand that. That could be tough to justify. There's like no need for an office.
Starting point is 00:36:34 But that was a story. It honestly was amazing. I tell the story all the time. And when I saw that, I was kind of on board with Airbnb even further. Because I'm like, if they sweat the details with this, they probably sweat the details with other stuff. All right, let's do two or three more. You had one on about skin gut health. What is that?
Starting point is 00:36:48 And whenever someone says gut health, it freaks me out because the, what's it called? Leaky gut is the world's greatest branding. Yeah. So this is actually a cosmetics company that I've wanted to invest in for so long. I haven't seen anyone do it. If you're doing this, like please just. email me. My email is very easy to find or ping me on Twitter. But the thing that I think should happen is like there's, I don't know how many hundreds of billions a year are spent on the
Starting point is 00:37:13 skincare kind of space. And if you look at research, there are certain things that work, like certainly there's classes of peptides and things like that that I think maybe work decently well. From a skincare standpoint, but for most people, if you're buying any sort of skincare to look younger or whatever, it's just like a waste of money or it's like marginally effective. That way, so say that again. So your stance here is that skincare is mostly a waste. Skin care is mostly a scam, yeah. Yeah, minus like a couple things, like certain peptides, sunscreen,
Starting point is 00:37:48 moisturizers, sure, if you want your skin to be like more moist, but a lot of the anti-aging stuff, anti-wrinkle cream, all these sorts of things. Is that, uh, is there one that starts with an R? Well, retinol A is one of the few things that's actually, that's actually relatively effective. It's like, all, but this is the thing. It's like basically only peptides are the things that work. Anything else. That's a peptide. Yeah. So it's a peptide. Things like, like one skin uses a peptide. There's something called like copper. It's copper GQU, I think, which is another peptide. These things seem to actually work as well as some compounds like methylene blue and whatnot.
Starting point is 00:38:24 But other compound, like any sort of. random $50 thing that you're going to buy on Amazon that is like anti-aging and uses, you know, Jojova oil or like any of these things, like just frack, like just do not work. Or if they do, they're so marginal, it's basically not worth doing, in my opinion. What does work is. And you don't wear sunscreen either, right? Mm, no. You, that's one of your like bold stances, which is that sunscreen is. Yeah, I mean, I basically think like most sunscreen is carcinogenic. Again, this is another thing in the, in the U.S. We allow things like oxybenzones that are not, not allowed in the EU. It's in almost every sunscreen in the U.S. is definitively carcinogenic.
Starting point is 00:39:02 And so like why we encourage kids to put on, put this on and like use it eight hours a day. I've no idea. So do you use zinc? So I use a non-nanc oxide sunscreen just for my face if I'm going to be in the sun for like a very long period of time. Yeah. Dude, just so controversial for a white guy. I know. I don't know. Like I feel like I'm, I am happy with my skin. So, so yeah. So the thing that I want to invest in is there is, there is a lot of research that shows the relationship and the link between gut health and skin health. And so, like, if you have a healthy gut, or if you work on probiotics or you work on, like, you know, drinking bone broth, doing things like this that are going to improve your gut health generally,
Starting point is 00:39:41 there's research that shows that that is reflective in skin. There's something called, I think it's called like bioluminescence, basically, but there's a way that you can measure how much light someone's, like, skin cells are emitting, and that improves as your gut health improves, which is kind of a wild fact. How long is the change? So, like, for example, I don't have, like, the greatest. I have dry, flaky skin. I just thought it was just because I'm just, like, a super white dude.
Starting point is 00:40:06 And, like, in the wintertime, my skin gets destroyed. In the summertime, I'm great. But, like, you know, I always thought that it was just, like, the lack of sun. Because, like, my scalp will get, like, so dry during the wintertime. And I, like, need to get under the sun. Yeah, yeah. So if I. Like, red light chicken lamps.
Starting point is 00:40:26 Does that do stuff? Yeah, it's helpful. Dude, like, during wintertime, I feel miserable. Like, I, like, I'm like, I need, like, the sun to, like, burn off everything on my head and on my face. So if I started drinking, what's the routine? If I started doing that, how long would my skin, it take from my skin to get better? I bet it would take, like, six months, basically. Oh, fuck that.
Starting point is 00:40:48 It's going to be summer by this, by that time. Start now. You'll be great in December, yeah. But I think that the macro, like, business. opportunity is people treat skin care as just a topical thing that you apply to your skin, not like an expression of your gut health and skin health and all these sorts of things. And so I think there is an opportunity to build an incredibly large cosmetics company, you know, and skincare company combining topical applied skincare that's actually effective
Starting point is 00:41:17 with gut-based interventions that are going to like improve your skin from sort of the inside out. And I've like wanted this company to exist for seven years now. But isn't that bone broth? I mean, what does this look like? Yeah, so I think it would be like a combination of specialized probiotics that are geared towards, you know, improving skin health. I think it would be probably a crash diet of like 30 to 60 days where you're removing a
Starting point is 00:41:41 bunch of like toxins and other inflammatory foods from your diet, incorporating bone broth and then some sort of like effective topical skin care. And I think that regimen would outperform basically anything that exists in the skincare world today. Do you eat any processed foods? I try not to But like do on a weekly basis How often?
Starting point is 00:42:01 Probably very Probably none Zeroed and yeah One thing maybe That's easy for I understand that for meals So you probably do you probably cook or do Leftfordovers
Starting point is 00:42:11 What about for a snack? What's an example? I use these Actually I just had one earlier So it's a Maui Nui Venison stick Oh I have one as well I got my my kettle and fire
Starting point is 00:42:23 collab with them There we go Oh, hell yeah. Yeah. Dude, they're so, you guys sent me a bunch of them. I think, like, each stick is like $3. Yeah, it's like $3 or $4. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:42:33 I have, like, $1,000 for these at my house. Amazing. So I do those, like, meat sticks. I'll do fruit, a couple bone broth. Like, those are kind of the go-to snacks. I've kind of been addicted to dried mangoes recently, which. But that's a process, no? Like, is that not considered, is that considered process?
Starting point is 00:42:50 I wouldn't consider a process. Like, if you're sourcing it, you know, sourcing it from a good, place. Like, it's not going to have a bunch of additives. It's basically just, like, meat that has been dried and then some spices. Yeah, I do dried mango. I do it from whole food, but the problem is, is that, like, I'll eat. I can do, like, a bag, a day, which is like... It is a problem. 800 calories, and, like, it's basically, like, four Cokes. Yeah, yeah. Although, I don't know. I've been eating, like, there's this interesting diet online that I'm currently trying. It's called the honey diet, but basically you just eat fruit and honey before noon each day. And then,
Starting point is 00:43:25 and have like a high protein meal in the afternoon. Why are you doing this? Just to experiment, frankly, and to see how I feel. But so far, I feel pretty fucking good. And so the mangoes fit within that diet. I've been doing my snack lately has been dates and butter. Have you ever had that? No.
Starting point is 00:43:44 Oh my God. It's the great, I think I saw Cardivore MD do it. And I was like, let me try this. Because I got a sweet tooth. Like I have a very addictive personality. And when I quit drinking alcohol, it totally went to sugar. I'm always having to combat that, but I think everyone is. And so a half a tablespoon of butter in a date, it's like the greatest thing on earth.
Starting point is 00:44:05 I'll have to give it a go. Actually, Carnivore MD is very into this like meat and fruits thing. Like honey, fruit, and meat is basically his diet. And he's very into this. So I don't know. I actually think that there is a good chance that honey fruit, like, we're on the very early stages of like people realizing that sugar is not that bad for you when it comes in fruit or honey form. That's an interesting take because I would have thought you would have said the opposite,
Starting point is 00:44:30 which is like glucose is glucose. No. Oh, that's interesting. So you do high sugar fruit as well, not just low sugar. This is something I'm just starting to experiment with. And so like I'm not even sure. So I literally got my labs done recently. And then like last week started this honey diet thing.
Starting point is 00:44:49 So I'm going to test again in like three months and see how I see how things look. That's pretty fascinating. I would not have thought that that's something you would do because I like I've read about like bananas Sam Corkos actually told me he said this in passing so I don't want to like attribute this to because I could have I could have be listening to him wrong but I believe he said that a modern banana is candy
Starting point is 00:45:08 and the way it used to be was like a carrot he was like they were not like this as delicious but we've like genetically you know it's kind of like a honeychrist apple like you know like it's basically like genetically predisposed to be like you know waste wheat yeah yeah like it's I think the new apple that's popular is called a cotton candy apple. That's funny.
Starting point is 00:45:30 They have that at Central Market. It was called a cotton candy apple. I'll have to try it. I've not seen that. So like you would eat that? I mean, I would experiment with it for 90 days for sure. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:45:40 Like I don't think a lot of this stuff like, yes, if you're optimizing for sweetness, I understand that you could argue maybe it's bad. But I think that nature tends to like keep tradeoffs within a certain band. And so I don't know if you're having organic produce or whatever. Like I think that this stuff is like not, it's not bad to experiment with it and just see how you feel. Do you eat vegetables? Yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:46:06 Yeah, I do. Well, Ari's laughing at me. And so are you. But like a lot of, some of these guys are like I think Carnivore MD in particular is on some parts anti-vectivate. On something anti-vectival. He's come off that a little bit. I mean, like to me. I think that you just have to have a macro lens on this, which is like, what have humans been
Starting point is 00:46:26 eating for hundreds of thousands of years? It's not like, you know, in the year 1900, you're rolled around or 1970 when like the chronic disease crisis really started ramping up, that all of a sudden people are rampantly eating vegetables and getting sick all the time. It's like obviously, in my view, not like we are in the midst of a vegetable eating epidemic that is making everyone sick. It's like clearly like the ultra-processed foods that are new to our food system. And so does he have some good points? Like maybe our vegetables is less good than most people think, like, I could believe that. Do I think it is a thing that is, like, worth optimizing and to never eat vegetables?
Starting point is 00:47:00 Like, definitely not. Here's one for some of these health trends. I think that polyester clothing is going to, there's going to be, I mean, there's already a niche of people. I'm one of them where I don't wear, where if a clothing has polyester, I tried always to avoid it, unless it's like, you know, like special or particularly amazing. But in general, it's got to be all natural fibers. Are you on board with that? Oh, yeah.
Starting point is 00:47:31 I mean, polyester clothing is like the number one contributor to microplastics, basically. They like shed like crazy when you're washing them. And there was some studies that have been done around, they basically took dogs and had them wear polyester underwear. And their sperm count went down like 60 or 70 percent. And then they switched them off of polyester underwear. And like it came right back up. No shit.
Starting point is 00:47:53 No way. So what underwear do you wear? Do you wear underwear? Yeah. So there's a company called NADS that does like organic, organic stuff. There's another company called PACT P-A-C-T. And I usually wear those. How interesting.
Starting point is 00:48:08 Is women's, I mean, I don't know. Does this matter to women? So it's unclear to me right now. I would say potentially, but it seems like the thing that is causing the loss of sperm is like there's some sort of electrical charge thing that happens between polyester and the skin that seems to impact like, you know, sperm generation. And so it's not clear to me yet.
Starting point is 00:48:34 I haven't like gone super deep on it. How fascinating. So yeah, pretty wild though, right? That dog thing is crazy. So are you... It's crazy. There you go. That's another great dog health idea.
Starting point is 00:48:44 You know, dog, all-natural dog. underwear. That's insane to me. So I use ex-officinato and I loved it because it was, it like would dry quickly after you cleaned it and they never stretched out. But I think it is highly synthetic. Oh, almost certainly. And so, but honestly, cotton underwear for the most part sucks. But there's some companies that are making like really good cotton workout gear and cotton underwear that I really appreciate. So like, for example, what I like to do is a lot of my workout shorts, I just get sweatpants, like all cotton sweatpants and I'll cut them. But like, I'm a big fan of like all cotton workout gear because Lulu Lemon and like it has like
Starting point is 00:49:28 underwear in the shorts. So your junk is just on the polyester even harder. Do you know what I mean? Totally. There's actually a company. There's a company called Riker. I love Riker. I love their stuff.
Starting point is 00:49:41 I love Riker. Yeah, it's so good. It is so good. It's the only short company for men, and they have shirts and stuff too, but it's the only, but the shorts are particularly, particularly are hard to do because you, like, if a workout short doesn't have the underwear, then you're just kind of like flopping all over. You know what I mean? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:50:01 But it's hard to do with cotton. Totally. Yeah. So their stuff is great. I really, really like what they're doing. And I use their stuff for all my workout clothes. That's great. Can you tell me really quick.
Starting point is 00:50:14 I just want to know what Justin does. Are there any other, do you have any other stances like this? So this is like so fascinating to hear some of your stances that might be controversial or uncommon. I feel pretty confident that like our current vaccine schedule is very much not good from a chronic disease standpoint. I don't like make any claims around autism or whatnot. But from a food allergy standpoint, certainly the U.S. is like the worst chronic disease issue and is the most vaccinated and has like the most egregious vaccine schedule. of any developed country. So what are you suggesting?
Starting point is 00:50:47 Spacing it out or not taking them? Yeah, I basically think like fewer shots, more spaced out is like what I'm planning to give kids. I wrote a very long post on this. It is pretty incredible. Like, for example, they give a kid a HEPB shot like literally five minutes or less, like two minutes out of the womb. And I was like, well, I don't, I don't know if she's going to be around like someone with Hep B anytime soon. So the only way you can get a HEPB is through sexual, you know, sexual activity and blood transfusions.
Starting point is 00:51:14 And they test the mom for Hep B before birth. And so, like, you're just vaccinating a kid against something. And the immunity wears off after a decade. And also not that many people have. I don't think Hep B is, like, particularly common. No. Like, it's basically drug users, I believe. Totally.
Starting point is 00:51:29 I mean, and the other thing is, like, my view is that our health organizations have been captured. And, you know, by large companies. And I think, like, you look also, the COVID-MRNA vaccine was added to the infant childhood immunization schedule this year. It's like that is not a scientific position. That is purely something else is going on. So I think that's like a relatively controversial take that I have that I wrote a very long piece about that I think is defensible. Any other last ones?
Starting point is 00:51:57 Yeah. So against like the health tribe, I think that the, yeah, the fruit and sugar one is probably like the biggest one that I'm focused on right now. And then I also think that this like demonization of, I think that the tribal stuff, tribalness of like food cultures. is something that I think is not good. Like I basically am much more into nutrient density. And I think if you're eating nutrient dense like pizzas and carbs and all that stuff,
Starting point is 00:52:24 as opposed to like conventional, you know, vegetables, fruits and meats all the time that are like maximally sprayed and processed and all this stuff, like I actually think that eating a bunch of carbs that are from a very, very good source, probably your health outcomes will be better. That stuff's like impossible to find. Like for example, in order to do that, you'd have to do that. to find someone that mills their own grain or something like that. Yes. Like that's like it's virtually impossible or not virtually impossible, but it's a job.
Starting point is 00:52:56 Yeah. Yeah, it is. I very much agree. Dude, you're the man. Thank you. I just like, you know, I text you these questions anyway. And so it's fun just to get now every time just to pepper you with all types of questions that I have, but I appreciate you.
Starting point is 00:53:11 Yeah, no, this has been super fun, man. Thanks for having me on as always. And we didn't even promote your company. Yeah, so my company, Kettle and Fire is a bone broth company, which we talked about. My company now is called TrueMed. We're basically making it so you can buy exercise, healthy food, supplements, using tax-free HSA or FSA money. So if you go to TrueMed.com, you can see a bunch of the brands where you can spend tax-free dollars.
Starting point is 00:53:35 And then if you are interested in some of the health stuff I talk about, I also have a newsletter, which is Justin Merr's Substack. and a new podcast. TrueMed has a podcast. It's great. I like it. Yeah, yeah. We're doing like a couple episodes on, you know, movement, exercise, nutrient density.
Starting point is 00:53:52 Dude, I appreciate you. Thank you so much. God bless. Thanks for having me on. That's it. That's the pop. I feel like I can rule the world. I know I could be what I want to.
Starting point is 00:54:03 I put my all in it like no days off. On a road, let's travel, never looking back.

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