My First Million - #179 - How the UFC Became a Multi-Billion Dollar Brand, No-loss Lotteries Explained & How to Save on Your Taxes
Episode Date: May 7, 2021With Endeavor's IPO, Shaan (@ShaanVP) and Sam (@TheSamParr) break down the UFC's numbers and how it got so profitable. Key to the whole thing: Dana White. He bought the UFC for $2m and turned it into ...a multi-billion empire. The guys also talk about the mental toughness of UFC fighters and how you can take some of these same principals and apply them to your life. They also talk about an interesting concept called no-loss lotteries and a company trying to save you taxes. --------- * Want to be featured in a future episode? Drop your question/comment/criticism/love here: https://www.mfmpod.com/p/hotline/ * Support the pod by spreading the word, become a referrer here: https://refer.fm/million * Have you joined our private Facebook group yet? Go to https://www.facebook.com/groups/ourfirstmillion and join thousands of other entrepreneurs and founders scheming up ideas. --------- Show notes: * (3:28) How to retain talent * (7:42) The mental toughness of UFC fighters * (15:30) The power of self-talk * (24:20) How the UFC got so profitable * (36:38) How this company will help you save taxes * (41:05) What are no-loss lotteries? --------- Show links: * https://studentloanhero.com/ * https://properlot.com/ * https://www.poconnor.com/ * https://www.fivestonetax.com/ * https://pooltogether.com/ * https://twitter.com/lay2000lbs * https://waitbutwhy.com/2021/04/lanby.html * https://www.thelanby.com/
Transcript
Discussion (0)
If you're already doubting and having doubts or imposter syndrome, that's you doing self-talk in your head
that you're not the best, that you're not good enough, that you're not whatever.
Well, then maybe you should replace that with something that says, I am the best, right?
So that's where I got over the like, as this kind of just like, you know, cheesy voodoo shit.
And I was like, well, no, because there is self-talk happening no matter what.
It's either going to be negative or it's going to be positive.
I might as well actively make it positive.
the world. I know I could be what I want to. I put my all in it like my days off on a road. Let's travel.
Never looking back. Hey, what's going on? Everyone, we've got a good episode. But before we get to it,
we've been releasing these new episodes called Greatest Hits. They're actually not new to the world,
but they might be new to you. But basically, before we started doing the podcast as it is now,
it was just Sean interviewing a bunch of people. And we got like 20 or 30 in, or he did. And they were really good,
but they were about two years ago
and we launched them
and a lot of the people
have done some really interesting things
since or in that last two years
and so we've actually been re-releasing them
where I give an intro
and there's also Sean's intro
we're all giving an update on the folks
but anyway, give it a listen
and when you do
make sure you click subscribe
if you're on iTunes
so if you're listening to this on the podcast app
click subscribe and then if you're on Spotify
click that follow button
and the reason why is we're doing a bunch
of these greatest episodes
but I'm actually the one going in the back
and finding all
these old episodes, and I'm trying to find all these interesting stuff. So in the next couple
weeks, we're going to be releasing this series where we look at some of the greatest predictions
that we've made as well as some of the worst predictions that we've made. But we're not
releasing them entirely on a regular cadence because I've got to go and find all of them.
So make sure you click subscribe because A, you can be notified when that new episode comes out.
And B, it actually is going to help us go in the rankings. And right now we're ranked like
number 20, I think 20 or 19 in Spotify in the business category. And the higher we go up in rankings,
the more content we can do because the more listeners we have. And well, you're
get the idea. So just please, please, please leave us review. And Sean, what are we talking about
in today's episode? Okay, we talk about, we're going to talk about the UFC, the business of it,
as well as a pretty cool moment that happened in the recent UFC fight. And we talk a little bit about
self-talk, which is us, it's something that we do, both of us do, that we don't usually talk
to other, you don't usually admit to doing this. And it's something that a lot of UFC fighters do.
self-talk before you have to go perform before you go and do your thing.
And so we talk about the UFC, the business of the UFC, we talk about self-talk,
and then we jump into some ideas.
Sam had a great idea, or met a guy who was doing a really cool idea around saving money on property taxes.
And this is a general class of ideas called money savers.
And then we have another idea called the no-loss lottery that we want to talk about.
So that's what today's episode is.
I think you guys will like it, especially the part about self-talk.
That's going to be the most popular part.
And we did have a few technical difficulties in this episode.
Sean's internet is not working.
So hopefully you won't notice too much.
But if you do, sorry, it's not going to happen again.
To the editors, I'm sorry, you're going to have to salvage like five restarts.
To the listeners, hopefully it's not too bad.
We're finishing a conversation we are having about what we have to do.
Yeah, we got to select a new.
I've got 89 drawings or art clips that we've got to select.
and then I'm having a Brayu interview.
Did we announce on the podcast about Abraeu?
No, we didn't.
A Bray's leaving.
Unfortunately, this was kind of part of the plan, but it sucks.
So anyway, we've got 50 people that we've got it.
Sam, have you had this before at the hustle where people want to leave to go do their own startup specifically?
Not like I got another job, but.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, most people, yes.
Yeah, I have.
I always tell them, I'm like,
and I think Abraeus different because he wasn't a full-time employee,
but I'm like, just so you know,
like this feels like a startup now,
and it is a startup that,
but just so you know, like, don't even,
even the nice shit that we have at the moment,
don't expect any of that for a little while.
And I'm like, I always try to get them used to it.
I'm like, just so you know,
it's going to be really bad for a little while.
This shithole is shitty.
Wait until you start your own thing.
Yeah, so yeah, that's happened a lot.
Although, Abra, you I think actually understands that he's been saving money.
He's been living at home and stash in money or living somewhere where he is cheap rent.
So, yeah, I think he'll do good.
There's this thing called the Reid Hoffman wrote his book called The Alliance.
He talks about this.
Like, back in the day, people used to expect an employee to, like, kind of stay with you for 20 years.
Like, that was like, people used to do that.
It used to be at a company from start to retirement.
And then that became less and less common.
And now, I think, in tech, the average 10.
and your of an employee is like two years or something, like even less maybe?
Yeah, I think Facebook it's even less.
And so, um, so Reed Hoffman, who is the CEO of LinkedIn, the founder of LinkedIn,
he wrote this book, which was like, look, you got to, you can't just, uh, you can't
just close your eyes, pretend that's not happening.
You can't get upset every time somebody leaves.
That's actually the norm.
So what's the right way to manage in this, in this type of, uh, scenario?
And he calls it the alliance, which is a mutual understanding between the person working
with you and you and you as the manager.
I actually am very curious.
I want to know about this.
The alliance, people leaving whatever.
Yeah, so I haven't read this book, but.
Oh, great.
Great way to start off.
Well, I know of the book.
I understood the premise.
I didn't, don't need 90% of books that I'm a fan of.
I haven't actually read.
And this is one of them.
So what he says is basically you need to have like understanding with your, the person
who's working for you or working with you that they're going to be there as long as
this is mutually beneficial.
And the expectation is that after X number of years, two, three, four, whatever that number is, probably not much more than that, that they may leave and they may go do their own thing.
And that when that time comes, you're going to support them.
And then the way he talks about is like, he's a big believer of networks and network effects.
He's like, that person, when they leave your company, they're not just sort of dead to your company.
They are now, you know, they should be your champion and your advocate outside your company.
And you'll cross paths again.
You'll either invest in their company, you know, they may come back and work for you later.
they may refer somebody in.
So he describes how to like thrive, given the constraint that people are going to leave
early on or in tech this high, high turnover rate of one to two years, people hopping jobs,
which is not what Array was doing, but it just reminded me of that.
Yeah.
And I still, like the problem that I'm going to solve for whenever I start a company again,
and even now, but at least when I start from scratch, I could hopefully do this early on,
which is basically like, how do you build a company where someone wants to work there for 10 years?
And I still, even in this world where, you know, the average person only works somewhere two or four years.
I think it's quite possible, though.
See, my problem is that I like working with and try to recruit and get the best results from recruiting entrepreneurial type of people.
That, like, that's who I get along with.
That's who, like, works really, really hard in these, like bursts.
But those are, like, the worst people for retention because they want to go start their own company.
Like, that's why they're entrepreneurial type of people.
They're not going to be long-term employees, sort of by definition.
And so I've always sucked at the retention side of things in that sense.
But, you know, I'm cool with it.
I think I can just continually recruit more people that want that experience.
So before we get into some ideas for this episode, can I tell you something that I saw recently?
And we're going to bring kind of this topic up when talking about UFC.
But did you watch the Rose Namibunis?
Is it Rose Namibunis?
Yep.
So there's a UFC fighter named Thug Rose.
she is like darling not like just like in terms of like physical like what she looks like
like in her attitude like darling is like the best word I can describe her although she can
like kill you yeah so so the story of this is interesting right she's she's really I don't know
she's five foot three she's very petite she used like have you seen her with long hair
yeah she was like beautiful she beautiful looking girl and at the beginning the UFC was
marketing their female fighters like with their kind of like sex appeal basically yeah
And they made her wear like a bikini at weigh in, which is just so stupid.
Right.
And some girls leaned into it, like Paige Van Zant.
She got like a boob job.
And she's like, she kind of sucks as a fighter.
She's like very mediocre.
But she's famous and gets paid well because she has good like sex appeal.
People want to watch her.
People are fans of her.
There's a karate fighter called the karate hadi.
Right?
That's her nickname.
The karate hottie because again, she's like playing on that.
Rose went the other way.
She's a beautiful girl.
And they were like, oh, do you want to go do dancing with the stars?
You want to like, we can make you.
into a star and she's like, fuck that, shaved her head and was like, I don't want, this whole beauty
thing is a distraction? I'm actually trying to be a martial artist. And I thought that was
badass. And that makes her great. And I think that there's like only a few sports in the world where the
women are equally or more popular than the men. I guess there's tennis. Maybe a, maybe national
soccer team. I think that's kind of the only other one that I can think of. But in the UFC, if you
look at the top 10 most popular paper views of all time. It's like Connor McGregor and
Rounder Rousey make up like collectively like eight of the top 10. And whenever we think of like
an Amanda Nunes fight, I don't think like it's a great women's fight. I think this is just awesome.
Like I'm going to pay. Yeah, I'm just going to watch this. And anyway, so I think it's good that I hope,
I think the whole bikini thing. I think that's fucking that was offensive. By the way,
Dana White was kind of famously, uh, was one stop by TMZ and they were like, Dana, when when we see
women fighting in the UFC and he was like
never dude we don't want to see
nobody wants to see girls fighting in a cage
and and then he
like you know did a complete 180 like
to his credit changed his mind
when Rhonda Rousey came around was like okay
she's a star I can build this whole
side of the sport around this woman and he
totally did and now it's like
you and me both
you know when there's a great women's fight
it's just as good if not better than the Ben's fights
yes and so there was a fight
we didn't actually talk about it but it was two weekends
ago. And this woman named Rose Domeyunis, she's awesome. And there's this clip that I'll share
again so people can just go to my thing or somewhere to find it. But basically, she's in, like,
first of all, going into a cage, like, you're in your underwear, you're getting watched by potentially
million plus people. And you're, like, kind of fighting to the death. Even if you do have someone's
going to, like, stop you, like, the likelihood that you can die, definitely, I mean, that exists.
So, like, you're going in, like, a life or death situation in your underwear in front of
all your friends and family in the world.
And if you fail, you sort of fall back to the bottom of the totem pole and you have to
climb back up, which is fighting a bunch of monsters along the way.
And it's like in a normal sport, you go in, I'm going to play a basketball game.
I'm going to play a football game.
It's like, I'm going to play the game.
I hope I don't get hurt.
In a fight, it's like, first of all, it's not even called playing.
There's no play fighting.
It's just fighting.
It's actually, it's not a sport you play.
And the second thing is, you're definitely going to get hurt.
Like that's just, it's not like an aberration.
It's not like an unusual thing when you get damaged like you would in basketball.
With fighting, you're for sure going to take hits.
You're going to hurt yourself a little bit.
What the fighters say is like, you know, I left a piece of me in that ring.
And what they really, what they really mean is like in a hard to fight, it's like,
I know that I just took six months.
Like that's six months off my life.
I just late.
I left that in that ring.
So it's pretty amazing.
And I mean, it's weird.
It's odd, but I love it.
And in this fight, the camera.
is that they're announcing, she's fighting Wei Lee, was it Wei Li?
I think her name is.
Zhang Wei Li, yeah.
Yeah, this woman from China who's just like a beast.
She's like a Terminator, dude.
She's like so strong, just unbelievably physically strong.
And again, Rose doesn't look like that.
She doesn't have bulging muscles.
She says her neck is not like popping with veins.
She looks like, if you've ever watched Stranger Things, she looks like 11, the character,
uh, extraordinary things.
And then they, and, and Wei Lee, I, I love that woman as well.
She's great, too.
but this thug rose is her name uh they zoom in on her face and she's saying i'm the best i'm the best
i'm the best and she's saying it over and over and over again and in two minutes she was the underdog
she was supposed to get her ass kicked and i actually would have bet that she was going to get her
ass kicked i thought i would have bet she was going to get knocked out and within two minutes she did a
front leg kick which is already kind of weird and knocked waley out and the crowd it goes wild i remember
watching it live i was like i was in tears i was so happy i have chills right now
just remembering it.
Rose kicks this woman in the head a minute and a half in, two minutes in,
knocks her out.
We all go crazy.
And at the end, her husband is her trainer or part of the training team.
And he gets down at her level, because he's like 6, 5.
And she's probably 5, 6, 5, 4.
And he looks at her face.
He goes, we've been saying it for years.
You're the motherfucking best.
No one can fuck with you.
Who's the best?
And she goes, I'm the best.
And then in the interview with Joe Rogan, he goes, you kept saying, I'm the best.
he puts the mic to her and she goes, because I am the best.
And I get, I'm kind of getting, uh, emotional even remembering chills right now just
while you're talking because I was watching it.
And it was a very, it's, I don't think if you didn't watch it.
If you don't, if you don't follow the UFC, you probably don't give a shit about this.
If you didn't watch it, well, I think he, even if I just missed it.
I don't think, I think even if you don't watch the UFC, you should go and watch this clip.
Because this woman, she's had emotional issues where she like has broken down from
stress, which is understandable given that like, she's,
He's fighting to the death.
So, like, fair.
It's just, it was.
So I think the key part of this, by the way, is that there's a lot of UFC fighters who are, like, all bravado.
Like, they always talk about how they're the best.
Oh, I'm going to win.
I'm the best.
Nobody can touch me.
I'm on another level.
Blah, blah, blah.
She's not one of those people.
She's ultra quiet, humble.
Like, a lot of people perceive her to be, like, sort of mentally weak because she's, A, had some
missions before.
And B, like, she doesn't come out with that bravado typically.
So that's why it was very, A, typical to see this very.
very sort of small, this gentle giant basically, like standing in the cage,
facing her opponent and just muttering to herself,
mouthing to herself.
You could see she was telling herself before the fight,
I'm the best, on the best.
And from her, it's not trash talk.
It's not bravado.
It was self-talk, which is a very different thing.
She was trying to reinforce it to herself so she would go perform,
and then she performed like kind of a stunning knockout.
And the way that she delivered the, I'm the best line,
you could tell that her coach, or it must have been her coach,
is her husband was like, Rose, you're the best. As a matter of fact, for the next year,
when I ask you who's the best, you have to reply, I'm the best or I'm going to go make you do
pushups or run whatever. Or something like that. And you could tell that that's how, like,
she was like, you know, like when you're in high school and they make you carry a football all day
or like a baseball or like in my case, the running baton. If you drop it, like it's like a,
it's like a discipline thing. That is what happened with her. You can tell that like if anyone said,
you know, they're pretty good. Who's the best? And if
she goes, she would have to say I'm the best.
Right.
And it was interesting because as it brings back to business and launching this stuff,
you have that same doubt.
Granted, you know, you might lose money and get embarrassed.
Thankfully, you're not going to get your ass kicked or killed most likely.
But you still need that self-talk.
And that example, that minute and a half clip is like the best example of self-talk for normal people.
Do you do self-talk yourself?
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's a trick question in a way because everybody has.
has an internal monologue.
Everybody's doing self-talkish in their head,
but I'm asking more like,
do you strategically,
because a lot of people think this is like cheesy,
lame,
like affirmations,
you know,
stand in the mirror and say,
you're beautiful,
you're beautiful,
whatever.
No, dude,
it's necessary because like,
so whenever you're doing anything,
yeah,
so like,
whenever I'm launching anything
or whenever I have fear,
like,
for example,
even when I bought my home,
I, you know,
I don't,
I think I have a pretty
unhealthy relationship with money.
I don't like spending it
because I was poor,
I know what it's like to be broke.
And I was like,
No, this is normal.
This is normal to feel this emotion.
This is incredibly normal.
Do it anyway.
And then, so yeah, I do that all the time, but I try to normalize it, I say, this is normal.
This is what I'm supposed to feel this way and I'm supposed to do it anyway.
So I tell myself that all the time.
Is that what you do?
I don't do that, but I do, I have two kind of routines that are like this that I've
probably never told anybody about.
All right.
So these are, I would say this one is fairly new.
I told you kind of like I had like this moment.
where I was like, all right, what do I care about?
I'm always been a self-improvement guy, right?
I talk about Tony Robbins.
It's been a big kind of like influence on me.
So I have this thing on my wall.
And it's basically what I wrote like, like most people write goals, like what they want to
achieve, what they want to have, I want to have a mention or I want to hit this dollar
amount.
I want to get promoted.
And for me, I have a thing that's called, I wrote on it, who am I becoming?
And the way I do it is because I think about myself like a every year, it's like a software
update, right? What's version? I'm 30. I just turned 33. What's version 33 of Sean look like, right?
And I literally write this out beforehand. I write out the notes. Like, oh, I used to have this
bug where I got jealous about people. That's fixed. You know, like, hey, I added this new feature.
Now I can play the guitar, whatever, right? Like, I treat myself like a whole new version upgrades.
Anyway, so all those little bug fixes and features, they all add up to something. What am I trying to
become? And it's like kind of like a root philosophy, which is life is not,
about what you achieve or what you have. It's about who you become. And so I said, all right,
well, what do I want to become? And I sort of wrote these four things out, right? I said,
I want to become a person who is, who is fit through healthy habits. I want to become a teacher,
you know, the favorite teacher of millions of people. I want to be, you know, a great family man
who lives in a house full of love and I have like a last one, right? One more after that.
So anyways, I have these four things that are like the things I want to become. And I do this
thing in the morning when I like do my kind of morning routine, which is like my reminder for the day.
Before I go and start just doing a bunch of work and a bunch of tasks and dealing with all the
emails and shit that comes my way, I just walk in a circle in my office, which is a tiny, tiny
office. I have like a, I don't know, eight by eight foot office. And I just walk in a circle.
And every circle is I'm basically talking like I'm, you know, talking to myself or my own coach
about those four things. So I'll say like, you know,
know, you know, I'm becoming a teacher. I am. I am a teacher. I'm a teacher who millions of people
love what I, love what I create. They learn from me. They're inspired by me. I'm a teacher.
That means I got to learn every day, so I have something to teach. I'm a great teacher, right? So I just
say in the present tense, I am this, not I'm trying to become this. And then I'll say this,
the next one, you know, I'm a great dad, you know, even when things are going off the rails,
I'm patient. That's when I get even more patient. I'm poised. I'm a great dad. I'm always there for
them. They know I got their back. I'm a great dad.
You're just like Muhammad Ali.
Exactly. You know, I said I was the greatest before I am. And so I do that.
So I've been doing that now for like, I don't know, probably like a year. And I love it.
It's just kind of fun for me. So that's the first kind of self-talk I do. The second kind of self-talk I do is what I call revision, which is I fall off the horse a lot like most people, right?
Like, oh, I'm trying to eat healthy.
And then, like, fuck, in the middle of the day,
there's a bag of chips was there.
And I ate the bag of chips.
Or, like, you know, I say I'm going to be a patient dad,
but then, like, oh, like, I've just lost it when, you know,
she wouldn't let me change her diaper and then blah, blah, blah, blah.
And so, obviously, I'm not perfect.
And so the other self-talk I do is revision at the end of the night.
I just imagine that same scenario that happened.
It only takes me 30 seconds.
I just think back to that moment that I'm not proud of.
and I reimagine it in a way that I'm,
me acting in a way that I'm proud of.
And that's it.
I don't like,
decide I'm going to do things differently.
I don't like write it down.
I don't like,
pledge to myself,
I'll never do this again.
I just imagine it going the right way.
And then I just go to sleep.
And that act of reimagining things,
the way you want to see it,
is a form of self-talk in my mind.
It's just like Rose saying,
I'm the best and imagining herself,
you know, knocking out the other girl,
that's kind of what I do for, you know,
I'm not a fighter.
I just do it in my day.
my daily life. And the takeaway I think should be, if someone's crazy enough to look up to you,
Sean, or look up to me, then at least now they know that someone they look up to you has like
doubts and has to do that self-talk. The cool position that you and I are in is that we know
people that are like some of the, at least in terms of financial success, which is a limited
version of success, are some of the most financially successful people in the world.
We talk to them and we know firsthand that they're like, oh, I'm so depressed. I can't do
X, Y, and Z. And then in our case, like we look up to, at least I do a lot of these
UFC fighters and seeing like this tough ass lady like Thug Rose doing the same thing.
So anyway, this isn't hokey pokey.
This is actually everyone has this.
And it's interesting.
So look up that Thug Rose video.
That's badass.
There's one other thing I'll put there, which is my trainer was big on this sort of like,
not to talk so much, but the visualization, the imagination.
He's always like, oh, you're too analytical.
You're just being like, you're trying to think your way through everything.
Just imagine it.
Just don't worry about how it's going to happen.
Think about what you want to have happen.
And in my head, I was always like, yeah, yeah, like at the end of the day, somebody's got to figure out how it's going to happen.
It's going to have to be me.
So, like, just imagining it is not going to do it.
Right.
So I was kind of resistant to it up front.
But I came around when I realized one thing, which is everybody in their head is already imagining some outcome.
So like if you're ever stressed or worried or doubt, what is that?
That's your head imagining the thing not going right, not going well, failure, whatever, right?
So if we are willing, like, it sounds kind of hokey and cheesy to imagine things going well.
It's sort of like this hippie-dippy thing to do.
But the other side, which is imagining things not going well, everybody's doing all day
anyways, anybody who's ever had stress or fear or doubts, if you just break down what that
is, that's imagining things not going well.
It's imagining a future where this doesn't work.
And so if you're willing to, if you're already doing and willing to imagine things not going
well, you might as well start imagining things going well also.
and if you're already doubting,
having doubts or imposter syndrome,
that's you doing self-talk in your head
that you're not the best,
that you're not good enough,
that you're not whatever.
Well, then maybe you should replace that
with something that says,
I am the best, right?
So that's where I got over the like,
as this kind of just like,
you know, cheesy voodoo shit.
And I was like, well, no,
because there is self-talk happening
no matter what.
It's either going to be negative
or it's going to be positive.
I might as well actively make it positive.
And if it is cheesy,
who gives us shit,
Like, if that gives me just a slight edge, then I'll take it.
If it works.
I need everything I can get.
All right, we should jump in.
And then really quick before we get into ideas, Michael Harris.
Do you know who that is?
No, who is that?
Michael Harris.
His nickname is Michael Lowe.
I don't know what he was from.
But he founded death row records, which he was, Google it.
So I don't want to get this totally wrong, but I believe he was a cocaine dealer.
And he went to prison, particularly, I think it was San Quentin for 25 years.
but prior to prison, he made close to like $100 million from selling cocaine,
and he funded Death Row Records, and he got it off the ground.
He's a co-founder of Death Row Records, owned all the originals or the masters of everything.
Anyway, he's out of prison.
He's a good friend of my good friend, Chris.
It's his good friend.
Did you go pick him up when he got out?
Well, he got picked up in a Bentley, which is pretty funny.
But anyway, he wants to come on the pod.
You want him?
Amazing, yeah.
And Death Row, who's Death Row?
So death row was Tupac or death throw who was yeah so it was Pock it was uh Drey's early stuff right um so yeah it was
Snoop so basically this whole like a lot of modern rap originated because of of death row records this whole like
amazing you know fuck the fuck the police gangster shit they kind of like invented that
I love it okay great that's gonna be awesome all right uh you want to talk about UFC again or do you
We want to talk about something else.
Let's talk about UFC, but this time we're going to talk about the business of UFC real quick.
So the parent company that owns the UFC is called Endeavor.
And Endeavor went public.
And anytime something goes public, you know, you can go and you can sort of see the financials
and you can read the prospectus because they have to do that in order to file for going public.
So this is the first time that the UFC's financials kind of like saw the light of day, really.
And they'd been sort of shrouded by mystery.
You know, fighters were always wanting to know the numbers because they want to get paid more.
like they're super underpaid.
You know, Dana kind of talks about numbers,
but like nobody can ever verify.
Is that how many pay-per-view buys there were or whatnot?
I thought it was kind of interesting.
So I want to talk a little bit about Endeavor
and see what you think about this.
So yeah, Endeavour is...
Go ahead, go ahead.
I was just going to say,
the two guys who are like in charge of it,
I believe is Ari Emanuel.
And I think this guy, Patrick White'sel.
And Ari is, if you ever watch Entourage,
the character Ari Gold is based off of Ari Manuel.
And so he's kind of like a powerful.
player in in Hollywood.
He, you know, they had their own talent agency.
Then that sort of took over WME and the W&E.
And then they took, so they have three parts of their business.
One is agencies like WME and others.
So managing Hollywood talent, musical talent, whatever.
Then they have sports businesses where they own sports assets.
Notably, they bought the UFC, but they also own some other things.
They own Euroleague basketball.
They own PBR like bull racing.
They own a bunch of like...
Ball riding.
Bull riding, sorry.
Yuppie.
Bull sitting.
Okay, so they own a couple of sports assets.
And then they have like kind of like a third, you know, arm to the business, which is their events business.
So they have the Miss Universe pageant.
They have New York Fashion Week.
And they have, they basically bought the company that hosts the event of the Super Bowl on location.
So they have all these events.
And so they have these three arms of the business.
they also do publishing.
They do all types of shit.
Like, frankly, how that company even operates, I don't understand because there is some
cohesiveness, but there's also a lot of not cohesiveness.
And it's incredibly confusing.
I think it's really like a roll-up of one theme, which is sports and media entertainment.
So they roll in all these companies together.
And they have like, yeah, they have like a brand licensing thing where they have the brand for
Harvard and the NFL.
and they'll go license it out and give revenue back to Harvard and the NFL.
So they went public.
It's worth $18 billion now.
Yeah, as of right now, it's 21.3.
Right.
So it went up just in the time of my research here.
I should have bought.
They do about $4 to $5 billion a year.
And specifically with the UFC, I thought this was kind of interesting.
So I didn't know how much revenue the UFC does.
And I was a little bit surprised to learn that.
Can I guess?
Yeah.
I don't know if you've seen it or not.
No, I haven't.
I would say,
$800 in revenue, $200 in profit.
All right, very close.
We're very close on the revenue side.
So here's their 2018, 2019, 2020.
So $700 million, $875 million, and then $900 million last year.
Wow.
So very close on revenue, but their margins are a lot better than you think.
So you were saying $200 million.
Eight and two, yeah.
Yeah.
So their margins are about 36%.
So they have $3.6.
not EBITA on their product, which is very good.
Fighters only get 20% of revenue.
Every other major sport, NFL, NBA, it's closer to 50-50.
I think it is 50-50 split.
And so, you know, the fighters are sort of right when they say that they're underpaid.
And so their business is interesting because they have media rights.
So guess how much the media rights sold for?
So it used to be on Fox and now it moved to ESPN.
Guess how much ESPN paid for it?
I think it was a billion over six years, right?
I don't know how many years it is, but it's 300 million a year.
So I think it's actually more than a billion.
So the Fox deal.
I think it was 1.5, 1.5 or five years.
Wow.
So, yeah, so the Fox deal was 168 million a year.
And then the ESPN deal was 300 million year.
And that actually paid off pretty big because of their 900 million in revenue, 300 comes from the media rights.
The rest comes from merchandise, events, pay-per-view, I'm sorry, ticket sales, all that good stuff.
And so I thought that was pretty interesting, pretty good business overall, much more profitable than I would have expected given, you know, all the different moving pieces that go into it.
And overall, like kind of an incredible business because they bought the UFC for $2 million like, I don't know, 20 something, 25 years ago or something.
So they bought it, they bought it out of, it was going bankrupt.
And Dana White, who's the president of the UFC, convinced his two kind of childhood friends who were basically the Fratita brothers are these like mafia family guys.
who own, they own a casino, so they own Red Rock casino and Vegas.
I think Fratita's son, one of the Fratita kids, or he's R.H, listens to the podcast.
I don't think he would like that if you said that they were mafia.
It's public. It's like, it's like well-known information. It's like been published everywhere.
And I also think, by the way, when I say the mafia, I'm not judging. I think that's pretty
fucking cool. And I think people with the mafia also think being in the mafia is pretty cool.
So I hope they don't get offended by that. And if they do,
You know, I live in Austin.
You can go find me over there.
So anyways, the Fritio family is pretty interesting.
They started casinos.
The Frank and Lorenzo were the ones who Dana convinced,
hey, let's go buy the UFCs.
They bought it for $2 million.
And now, and then they ended up selling it for $4 to $5 billion.
When they bought it, they pretty much just got the cage,
which is probably a $20,000 piece of equipment.
Right.
And they got the name.
Yes.
The UFC.
They were like, we just loved that name.
It was such a great name.
And they go, we paid $2 million, but we didn't really get anything.
Right.
But for some reason, we did it.
They had to pour in way more money after that.
So it's kind of the easy story is bought it for $2 million, sold it for $5 billion,
which is obviously amazing.
No.
But there was like multiple years of just pouring money in and losing money before this thing
turned around because they couldn't get regulated in a bunch of places like John McCain
called it human cockfighting.
You know, they couldn't get licensed.
They couldn't the business model wasn't there.
They wouldn't get put on TV, that sort of thing.
and so they put it, I think, 80-something million.
Yeah, I was going to say 65.
They said it in a documentary, he was like,
we put a lot into it, and it failed and failed and failed.
And by like year six, they convinced Spike TV,
which I don't even know that's a thing anymore,
to air the last fighter or the ultimate fighter.
Yep.
And there was, it was Forrest Griffin, and I forget the other guy's name.
And they had this big fight.
And I remember as a kid watching that,
but I remember that fight as a kid.
These guys were going at it.
They looked like it was the first time that like we thought, wow, they're like athletes.
They're not like, these guys are like they're not necessarily like thugs or like meatheads.
Like these guys are athletes who are fighting.
And I remember watching it.
And right when that episode aired, their ratings went up and they go, boom, we just saved the whole company from that one fight.
The thing with that show is they show them in a house.
It's like a reality show, right?
They're showing them living in a house and then training and then competing.
So it wasn't just a brutal fighting part.
It was like you got to know the guys.
You see their backstory.
You see them lying in their bed.
looking at a picture of their family right before their training session being like,
all right, this is who I'm doing it for, blah, blah, blah.
So people got emotionally invested.
So it's similar, you know, like the Kardashians also like they use reality TV to build
the brand that ends up being a commercial brand, right?
Because you perform an emotional connection of, you know, them and their sort of reality,
you know, although it's quite edited.
And then, you know, then you're more likely to be a buyer in the future.
So, so yeah, they ended up turning this thing around, kind of an amazing outcome for them.
just a super cool business.
And I would say, if you don't follow the UFC,
there is one kind of like cool business lesson to learn from it,
which is Dana White.
Dana White is the most unorthodox president of a company that I think I've ever seen.
Like people think Elon is kind of like out there and he'll tweet random stuff.
He's kind of unafraid, pretty bold.
Dana makes Elon, you know, look like a, you know, like an honor roll student.
Dana will like, so he's been involved with the business from the beginning,
but he will go in the Instagram comments where somebody's, you know, hating on something,
and he'll just be like, go fuck yourself.
You know, like in the press conferences, he is as much a character as any of the fighters.
And the same way that Vince McMahon did that in WW.
But that's fake.
That's scripted.
Dana does it in the unscripted format.
And I had an investor tell me once, we were talking about e-sports.
And, you know, a lot of people think e-sports is really interesting space because it's, you know,
the viewership is really high, but the business is kind of nascent.
still and people are wondering, is there a UFC like opportunity there? Because you buy something
today for $2 million that's going to end up being worth $4,000 or $5 billion. And what this investor told
me, I think is so spot on. He goes, e-sports needs its Dana White. It needs its person who's going to take
this sport from like just the underground and brick by brick build it into a mainstream brand and like
take no prisoners and like organize the whole fucking thing along the way. Let me ask you this.
Dana White, when the deal, when he sold the company, he made $400 million, I think.
I think that was public.
He owned 4% of the company.
I forget.
10%.
10% sold for 4.
He made 400.
Then he probably made like probably, he was probably getting paid 10 million a year.
He's like more than that.
50 million at least.
That's my guess.
Before the sale.
Before the sale.
Yeah, yeah.
So he was wealthy ahead of time and he made money in a thousand.
Who cares?
So let's just be like conservative and say that he's worth 600 to 700,000.
million dollars. That's conservative, I think. And like all the celebrities are one, like they, like, like the people who we think are cool. They're the ones who think Dana's cool. Like everyone thinks data is cool. You know what I mean? Like the famous people, Dana's famous to the famous people. So he's got power. He's got people want to, uh, people think he's cool. Yada, yada. He got money. Would you trade spots with him? No, his lifestyle is brutal. It's brutal. Absolutely brutal. I would never do that. Dude, it looks horrible. He looks like he's still like kind of looks fit, but he looks.
exhausted, his face is red and like...
He's gained like 150 pounds since starting this thing.
Now it's kind of like muscle fat, because he takes steroids and stuff, but...
No, he's, dude, he's on...
Like, they do an event every weekend, basically, and he has to, like, do...
He has to manage headquarters, plus he goes to the event.
He does the press conferences.
He's watching ringside.
Then he goes and talks to the fighters afterwards, and he deals with the weigh-ins and
oh, this guy can't make it.
This guy got hurt.
We got to find a replacement.
He does that 52 weeks out of the...
year. And like, there's a reason that Dana's not like, you know, happily married at home with kids and a
great dad and, you know, unstressed. There's a reason that Dana's got bags under his eyes because
he chose that life and he nailed it. I would not choose that life. It's not for me. Yeah. Yeah. Not a chance.
I wouldn't either. But I respect the hell out of it. I'm happy. What do I always say? Cornrose and
neck tattoos. I'm happy they exist. I don't want them. All right. You want to do, you want to go.
I want to try another one.
Oh, I didn't even see.
I didn't score down.
You had the revenue down here all the time.
I never saw it.
Yeah.
Oh, sorry,
did you want to wrap up at this or no?
No, that's it.
I just think it was kind of interesting.
I mean,
I don't really have a major point on like,
oh, good business,
bad business.
I think as somebody who's a fan of the sport,
the business side of it is just as interesting as,
as the actual sport itself.
Yeah,
I think that,
like,
I think that UFC is mainstream popular now.
I can't exactly tell because the people who,
like,
like, it's my sport.
Like that's like my, it's my Monday night football.
So I follow it just as much as a hardcore football fan follows all that.
And I make my wife watch it with me.
Now she is actually finally into it because she understands the story behind it.
Because it's basically just WWE wrestling, right?
It's just like, it's like fake drama, which I love.
So anyway, we watch it.
But I think it's beyond just our crew now.
I think it's like mainstream almost.
Like everyone knows who Connor is.
So a couple episodes back, we talked about business models that say,
you money and they just take a percentage of savings and how that's like the biggest no-brainer of all
time. We said taxes was good like income taxes. We said, um, software savings, car savings.
We said a bunch of stuff. That was kind of an interesting episode. I hung out with this guy who is,
uh, he just lives a few doors down for me. He started this company called student loan hero. You
know student loan hero? Never heard of it. I, I don't even know what it does. It basically helps
you consolidate debt, I think. So like if you have student debt, you go to their website and you
purchase some, I don't know. I haven't had a lot of debt. I think what it does is it,
I've seen models like this. I haven't looked up their website, but I've common bond as another
one of these. They basically just refinance your debt at a lower rate. So they save you money.
And then they basically make money because the new lender will pay them a fee for the loan they
originated for them. Exactly. I just haven't had to do that. So I'm not exactly sure how it works.
Anyway, he sold that company, bootstrapped it, sold it for $60 million. His new company is called
what's it called? Proper lot. Properlot.com. And his goal, I went, me and Sarah went to his house
the other day for breakfast. And the guy just, he like, I took a picture of like my, like just me in front
of my house. I don't remember what I was doing. I posted online, he's like, I don't want to be
creepy or anything, but I think I live like five doors down from you. Do you want to hang out?
And I went to his house and we hung out. And he's got this new company called Proper Lot. And they're doing
this, but with property taxes. And there's a few interesting things about this. The first thing is that he's
trying to make this, he's this theory where he thinks he can make it, makes it, he thinks he can
make it relatively big, like millions of dollars in revenue with him being the only employee.
So that's what he's doing. That's interesting in itself.
How do they save you money on property taxes? Is there a simple explanation or no?
Yeah. So second is the actual business. So in where I now live in Austin, your property value goes
up every year or every two years and then you're taxed 2% of your property value.
Because there's no income tax, that's how they get their money.
So I bought my house for about $1 million.
It's currently, it went up crazy, very oddly, like, it's like, it's odd, but it sucks for me,
that it went up like 20% in the first 60 days of owning it.
And now I owe 2% of like $1.2 million a year in taxes.
So let's just say that that's $22,000 or something a year in taxes that I owe.
And what proper lot does is you tell them your address.
They look at the assessed value of your neighbors and they tell you,
the government, hey, this actually isn't fair that you charge just 1.2 million. Our value actually
should be 1.1 million. And it, all in all, it saves me about $1,000 a year. And they take
$300 of that fee. And there's a few companies in the space, but a lot of them are older, like old
school. One's called, I think it's called P.O. The URL is p.oconor.com. They do about $100 million
a year in revenue with 200 people. And then another one is called Five Stone, which is local
to Austin. They filed 24,000 protests last year and made like $4 million. The way the company works
is what the numbers are. The average revenue per customer is about $50 to $300. And it usually
saves customers 2 to 5 percent of an appraised value. It lowers your appraised value by 2 to 5
percent. And they have a 70 percent success rate. So for 70 percent of users who sign up, they
reduce you by 2 to 5 percent. Kind of an interesting business model. And I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I,
I don't know if you had heard of it, but I think it's great.
That's pretty cool.
I like that a lot.
I wonder, like, you know, do they need your permission to do it?
So, for example, do you have to sign up as a customer and request it?
Or can they just be like proactively doing it and then leave a flyer at your door?
Hey, we, you know, we did this for you.
Would you like this much savings?
You know, it's ready for you.
Just claim your account.
Like, that would be a crazy growth act if they could do it.
Yeah, no.
You have to sign up.
but that actually would be a great marketing scheme.
Gotcha.
Okay.
Cool.
I like this idea a lot.
Did you have anything you wanted?
Is there a riff of it?
No.
I just thought it was cool.
No,
I think that's cool.
The other day,
one of our listeners,
Jordan told me that he goes,
I listened to you guys
just because you tell me cool shit
I'd never heard of.
So that was a lot of a...
Okay.
Speaking of,
I have a cool thing
that I don't know if you've heard of.
Have you heard the term
no lost lotteries?
No.
Okay, so this is pretty cool.
So I met this guy, Layton, who is behind this thing called Pool Together.
So if you get a pooltogether.com, you can see what it is.
What pulled together is, is it's a savings account.
And this is in the crypto world, but this exists everywhere.
It's a savings account where instead of just getting like, you know, if you go to a bank today,
you go get a savings account, you're going to get 0.0 whatever 1% interest.
It's like nothing, right?
So what they said and said was, well, what if we pooled together everybody's,
0.01%. And then we give all that money away to one person as a lottery winnings.
So it's a lottery where you don't have to buy tickets and you put nothing up at risk,
but you can win very, very large. And so this has existed, the same model, this prize-based
savings is what it's called, has existed, you know, for a while. It's in the U.S.
It's very popular in the U.K. So there, I think they call it premium bonds. So in the U.K.
There's something like 20 million people do this. They save in premium bonds. And there's like a total
of $100 billion saved in these prize-based saving accounts.
And the way they work is exactly how I described.
Put your money in.
Every week there's a drawing or every month there's a drawing, something like that.
And you can win like $25, all ranging up to a million bucks.
And they give that out every so often.
And so it's a pretty cool model.
It's a way to encourage people to save because right now the incentive to save is so small.
So the more savings you do, the more like sort of tickets you have in the raffle.
So it's a pretty cool model.
Now these guys ported this concept to crypto and there's a thing in the dock.
Check it out.
It's called usage numbers.
One great thing about crypto is that everything's on the blockchain.
So every app, it's like you can see their Google Analytics.
You know, like it's all open.
So I can go see that these guys have.
They have 200 million in assets under management.
They have about 9,000, 10,000 users, like active users.
who participate in the thing, which is a small number of users, but for crypto, 10,000 active
users is like, you know, you're one of the top, like, you know, decentralized applications,
you know, if you're doing that much, like, if you have that many users, most of these are very,
very small. But it's amazing how much money they have down there. And it's, and so the way that
the thing works is they actually, they give, so let's say they have 200 million in, and assets under
management. That means their lotto is going to be of X size, you know, I don't know exactly how much
it is every week, but it's pretty big.
And then what they do is they roll over some of those savings into the next week's
jackpot.
So they ensure that every week they always have a bigger and bigger jackpot by rolling
over a percent of this week into the next.
So you'll have to, what can someone Google to look at this?
Because these stats, like the growth rate is just like crazy.
Yeah.
So they could just, so the website I used to see how.
how these crypto apps usage is.
It's called Dune Analytics.
So DUNE Analytics.com.
And then you can basically,
we can put the whole URL there,
but it's, you know,
slash whatever slash pull together.
Okay.
So I,
I'm trying to get out of this like,
oh, this is stupid.
When I have right here,
Ethereum,
like I'm trying not to like,
even though I'm only like 30,
I'm trying to act like a grumpy old man
whenever I hear the shit.
I'm trying to try and work hard
to deep.
fault to optimism here. But my question to you is this. When you see this stuff,
like, when you're explaining me to this, I'm like, is this a gimmick or is this real?
And I'm not going to call it stupid. But when you're explaining this, I think to myself,
is this a gimmick or is this like something that has longevity and can work? I mean,
that's like all these crypto things. Like many of them, there's no doubt they're cool,
but are they cool like the app, Yo is cool? Or are they cool? Like, this is a thing that I could see
lasting for 10 plus years.
So I think that this can last.
This one can last.
Is that a fair assessment?
I think it's totally the right question to ask when it comes to crypto stuff.
First is like, is there any value to this beyond speculation, right?
That's always the first question with the crypto app.
And then it's like, okay, if there is value, is this elastic value or is this a quick fad?
People are going to get tired of the gimmick.
And in this case, what I think is interesting is that there's this whole, like, what's
happening in crypto?
There's a whole parallel financial system being built.
So I have my wallet.
I have my real bank account.
And then I have my coin base account, right?
I have my wallet in my pocket with credit cards in it.
And then I have my crypto wallet and I have my metamask and I have whatever, right?
And so I now have like two, I now participate in two financial systems in the same way that like social networking split it up.
Right.
I had my real life friends nearby and my neighborhood and whatever, a school.
And then I had like my online friends.
And I had like my online way to go chat with people.
which there's some overlap. So the same things happen now with finance. So what does that mean?
That means that there's a whole bunch of people out there, millions of people who are participating
in crypto. And crypto keeps going up in price. And now they have like substantial holdings.
And when you have substantial holdings, you have two choices. Are you just going to hold it and like
earn nothing off of it? Are you going to sell it so that you can cash some of it out? Or are you going to
put it to work for you? Are you going to reinvest it? And what's happening is that all the people who
who have won in the first couple waves of crypto,
now have those choices.
And they're all choosing to reinvest.
Why would I sell?
I'm even more bullish on crypto, right?
Because I kind of believe before, now I made a bunch of money.
Well, now I think this is the greatest thing ever.
You know, why would I sell?
I take a big tax hit for selling and be out of the game.
No, I think there's still room to go up.
So they're not going to sell.
They're not going to hold and just do nothing with it because that seems kind of irresponsible too, right?
Let's say you have six figures, seven figures, eight figures worth of crypto.
Why don't you earn?
earn 5% a year on that money. You can through crypto lending products and things like that.
The point I'm trying to get it to is when you have all this money, people need something to do
with it. Savings accounts is one. Lending is another. Reinvesting into other projects as another.
And so that's what you're going to see. You're going to see all the existing use like financial
infrastructure get rebuilt over here in Crypto land. And then some new shit that didn't exist
in the real world that you can do in Crypto Land will get built. So I think, you know, for that reason,
that if it works in the UK and 20 million people do it,
then I think there's a good shot that this is going to exist in the crypto world.
It's just so hard for me to understand.
Would you do it?
Like, let's say you have Ethereum or whatever.
You have Bitcoin.
Would you put it in a savings account here and like potentially win the lottery?
Play one of these no loss lotteries?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yes.
And it's just to set it and forget it.
You don't have to like actively do anything once you decide that once.
Yes.
I would do that.
And like to all the stuff that like I would call silly, I would also do that stuff as well.
Like when I buy an NFT that costs a grand.
Yeah.
But not more than a grand.
Like I went like to me it's like spending a grant on that.
It's just is the same fun as going to play blackjack for a grand.
Like I can totally have a thousand dollars with a fund over five hours.
Right.
But yes, I would use this.
Okay.
I have one other idea.
I want to throw it through at you.
Did you see this thing that was posted on?
on Wait But Why, the blog Wait But Why, called when he talked about his wife's startup.
No.
Okay, you should check this out.
So the guy, Tim Urban, who writes Wait But Why, posted this blog post and he says,
Introducing the Land Bee.
And he goes, that's his wife?
Yes.
Have you seen that?
I was looking at it after you put it on this doc.
It looks awesome.
So you should go to his blog post.
I want you to go there for two reasons.
One is, I think the idea is kind of interesting.
We could talk about that.
But the second is the way he tells the story and lays out the case for this product for this
startup is so good.
It's better than 99% of startup pitches you and I hear because this guy's like a master
storyteller.
And if you want to like think about how I should explain my startup or explain to pitch my
business, go read this blog post.
All right.
I shout out everyone who subscribes to the podcast and sends me proof.
And if you send me proof, you can.
send it to MFN at the hustle.co.
So that's like my first million MFM at the hustle.com.
Send me proof.
So ready?
Let's get to some shoutouts.
And by the way, everyone makes fun of me because I don't know how to pronounce or I can't
pronounce stuff that well, but I promise you I'm trying really hard.
So apologies.
Also, I'm like reading people's Twitter handles and some of you guys have really silly
handles.
And I don't think many people could pronounce it.
So give a shout out to, oh my God, just this first one was challenging.
Job Habreiken. Give a shout out to Johnny JZV. Cunning underscore Druger, Claude Laudier,
Harley Box, Dave Falsky, Jack Washburn, Lunatech Fringe, Everest Brady, Thad Warren,
D. Munga, Roy Brits, Jordan Vanderhoff. Oh, Jordan Vanderhoff.
I think I know that guy. Preston Holland, John Haggerty, Tex 8 Down, David Piazza, Wade for Wireless, and The Podcast Tition.
We'll do a couple more. General Com.
Kyle Nydrick, Loft Marcus, Adele Mitha.
And I think that's all. Oh my gosh. Am I just, am I the worst?
These are really hard to pronounce. Am I right?
All right. Someone asked me to give a shout out to genuinely interested podcast.
That's what it's called. Genuinely interested podcast. Shout out to them.
Shout out says, this guy is awesome. Everest Brady has a power washing business called
Everest Powerwashing. Dude, if he's in Austin, I'm going to use them because I need that actually now.
One Rail app is a startup that we are changing logistics and supply chain and democratizing
in Amazon style logistics and delivery experience to retailers and distributors.
Shout out to my YouTube channel called One Man.
man startup. That's actually sounds pretty good. Check out one man startup. Um, shout out to contemporary
idiot. It's a substack called contemporary idiot. That's a pretty good name. And then shout out to
broccoli. I think they say, um, they're big fans of broccoli and they wanted me to shout out
broccoli. All right. If you want to give a, if you want me to give you a shout out, can you please
subscribe to the podcast? So go to Spotify or iTunes, whatever you use. Click that blue button that says
follow or that purple button on iTunes that says subscribe click that take a screenshot and email it
to me mfm at the hustle.com send me that please and i will give you a shout out talk soon
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
on the road let's travel never looking back like
