My First Million - 6 under-the-radar trends (+ our ideas)
Episode Date: March 19, 2025💰 Get the [free] Episode 688: Sam Parr ( https://x.com/theSamParr ) and Shaan Puri ( https://x.com/ShaanVP ) talk about 6 under-the-radar trends. — Show Notes: (0:00) Intro (2:24) Short... Drama Apps (13:55) Rucking (22:10) Plastic-free everything (31:58) "Nervous System Work" (41:46) Biohacking plants (46:48) AI Social Networks — Links: • ReelShort - https://www.reelshort.com/ • DramaBox - https://www.dramaboxdb.com/ • GORUCK - https://www.goruck.com/ • Ryker Clothing - https://rykerclothingco.com/ • AlphaFold - https://deepmind.google/technologies/alphafold/ • Ohalo - https://www.ohalo.com/ • Suno - https://suno.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)
All right, today we're talking about trends.
So I have this list I've been keeping.
I want to bring it to you today and riff on those with you
because a lot of success and business just comes from surfing the right way.
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 looking back.
I think founders like to believe that it's our own genius that's causing our success.
And when it's failure, then it's market conditions.
And actually, often it's the opposite.
it's the market conditions that can create success or really amplify your success.
And I've learned the hard way that the most important thing is finding the right wave to surf.
Have you ever been on the inside of a product that has taken off like that?
I haven't.
But I've had friends who they'd be texting me as it was happening.
But have you ever seen that?
Yeah, a couple of them.
There's one that we did recently that I invested in my friend and they're doing a, I can't say,
I don't want to say the thing because the trend is like still going.
It's still hot right now.
But it's a health supplement.
And so like, you know, in the health world, there's just like every few years,
there's a new diet trend.
There's a new like, you know, a few years ago, a big thing was like leaky gut.
And it was like, oh, my God, gut health, leaky gut.
I got to do something about that.
And so there's these things that just come in these waves of awareness.
And so we backed one of those and it just is crazy growth.
I mean, zero to 30 million.
year. It's like just wild and profitably. Like it was just like crazy growth. We have another company
that we started that I haven't announced yet. Maybe I'll do that soon. But we have another one in
that space. That's kind of like the same thing. In one year, just doing millions in recurring
revenue profitably. It's just like, wow. And it's not because we did something so much better.
It's not because we worked harder. It's not because we were smarter. We didn't have some
genius strategy. We just picked something that was like had market pull. Inherently, the market
wanted this and all you had to do was show up. You know, it's, you're selling cold waters on a hot day.
That's, that's really what I want to do. So in any case, here's a bunch of trends. I think I have
three or four trends that I think are going to be really big. I think if you watch this episode two
years from now, a lot of this will be proven, right? And then I have some bonus ones for you.
All right. You ready? Yeah, let's do it. All right. Trend number one, short drama apps.
So what are these?
If you remember a few years ago, there's this company called Quibi.
That was started by Jeffrey Katzenberg, who created DreamWorks.
I think Meg Whitman, the former CEO of HP.
Who is she?
I don't know who she is, but she was somebody.
eBay.
In Silicon Valley.
eBay.
And HP.
So Quibi raised $1.75 billion in funding.
Pre-launch.
Pre-launch.
Pre-launch.
To build this out.
And they were like, look, the future is short form.
You see what's happening.
with TikTok. This was early days of TikTok. You see what's happening with TikTok. Well, guess what?
That's what the next Netflix is going to look like. It's going to look like TikTok content.
And they take their $1.75 billion of funding. They hire a crack team in Silicon Valley,
fancy offices. They got the executives. Dude, they came to our office to pitch you and I to like,
they wanted shot at Sam or like MFM to be like a content series. And I was like,
guys, we're behind our laptops all day. Like, this isn't interesting. They were like,
we need you guys for business unscripted.
And we were like, what?
What does that mean?
It's a category.
We're like, we're in that?
Okay, never mind.
So they wanted content.
They needed content on the platform.
Anyways, Quibi launches, fails in under a year.
So 1.7 billion, all this talent, all the resources, all the brand name,
the guy created a dream works.
In an under a year, it folds, didn't work.
And they were mocked.
And I thought that was kind of nonsense.
I thought it was a great, like, that's, you take swings.
Just in the arena, doing stuff.
Yeah, I mean, like, it was like, it was like, you know, they tried something, you know,
who might have mocked them for that?
People don't like when people with pedigree and resources go after something.
They like when you're the underdog.
So the consensus opinion since then has just been quibby equals failure, that whole category,
failure.
Well, quietly, in the meantime, a handful of apps have basically run where Quibi's crawled,
and they are doing pretty much exactly the same thing, but to tremendous success.
I don't know if you've seen any of these apps.
Can I tell you about some of these?
Tell me.
All right.
So they all started in China.
They're Chinese companies, but they're big in the United States.
So for example, here's, I'm just going to tell you the revenue of the top four apps.
Revenue of the top four apps.
150 million, that's number four, 160 million, that's number three,
275 million annual, and the top one, $315 million.
Okay, that's insane.
Isn't that insane?
Okay, so how do these work?
So I downloaded a couple of these, I watched them.
Now, what they did that was very, very smart was they realize the American consumer
is pretty much an idiot.
And what Jeffrey Katzenberg did wrong was he tried to give people what they should want
rather than what they do want.
And what they should want was
well-made
these series
that were really cool, premium.
Hey, we're not going to do that short form
just rubbish. We're going to do
Netflix original level content,
but just made for your phone
10 to 15-minute episodes
and you'll pay for it because otherwise,
how are we going to fund these things
that are like millions of dollars?
Archie shit.
So these guys came out.
I'll give you an example of one of them.
So one of them's
called Drama Box. The other one's called Real Short. And I'm just going to show you the first one on this.
Can you read the title of that? Yeah, it's called Pregnant with my brother's baby.
And I didn't just show him, you know, Corn Hub. This is a real thing, right? So these are all,
it's kind of trashy, soap opera style stuff. Now, what they did differently was the key changes from Quibi was free instead of paid.
So Quibi was a subscription you had to pay for.
This is free, but you pay to unlock more episodes.
So you get hooked on one of these little dramas.
And then you sort of buy coins to unlock the next episodes as you get, once you get hooked.
So they lowered the friction.
The next thing was they did kind of trashy TV.
They did, you know, Hallmark and Moripovich have a baby.
That's the type of content that this is.
Like I watched one.
Honestly, was it bad to be honest.
Not going to lie.
Like, it's bad.
But it's not like, I watch four episodes.
I probably only need to watch one for my research.
And the episodes are only 90 seconds long.
So it's not that big of a commitment.
Whenever I think of these, I think of on Wedding Crashers where there's Jamaican guy.
He's like the butler.
And they're like trying to like bother him.
He's like, hey, I'm watching my stories, man.
Like it says time to watch his soap operas.
And like you can't interrupt, you can't interrupt anyone when they're watching their stories because the soap operas are so good.
And you know that we talk.
about this. We talked about this in 2019 or 2020, right? What do you mean? We talked about it. What did we say?
So we talked about it in a few ways. The first was there was this massive trend of these. This was when
YouTube was obviously it was not up and coming. It was already up. But in 19 and 18, there was these
guys making these somewhat tacky dramas. And they were doing something very different on YouTube. They were making like 30
minute fictional videos on YouTube. And it was like tacky in the sense of it was like a soap opera
clearly appealing to middle America women. So it was like a little like cringy, but very
addicting. Do you remember these guys that they would get like eight million followers or they were
making Facebook videos where it was like huge dramas or it was like the kid who got bullied on the
bus and how he grew up to become president? Do you remember these like 20 minute videos? There's been some
YouTube series like this. And I get by the way, I get sucked.
down this like rabbit hole like often where like I'm on Facebook and it's like a kid getting bullied
and like it's like very unclear message market research yeah yeah like it's hard to turn away and then
also I told you the story about when I was helping Ramon he his original idea for a business
was to do erotic fiction audible stories and we we ran a test and on like 50 bucks of adspan
I think romance. It was short form romance.
It was totally...
It was totally...
It was erotic.
It was like...
No, it was like sex.
It was like...
It was four women.
So tasteful, though.
They were in love.
It was not...
It was romantic sex.
Yeah.
And basically what we did was we...
He had a friend who loved writing these stories.
He wrote one of these stories and then he had a Fiverr voice actor, read it.
And then we ran an ad and we called the...
captivating Claire, I think.
I forget what we called it, but we called it
short but romantic, and we spent like 50
bucks running ads, and we got like $100
in recurring revenue on a crappy
WordPress site.
Anyway, my point being is, like,
all signs have pointed to, yeah, this makes
sense. And so, like, for example,
this one that I watch is called Eris
Crash Lans on her husband.
And I think I lied.
I'm on episode six, actually. So what happens
is the story starts, and it's this
girl, she's so excited. This guy's
going to propose to her. He thinks she's a door dasher, but actually she's a billionaire heiress,
but she hid that from him because she doesn't want him to want her for the money. And she's so
happy that he's going to propose to her and blah, blah, blah. But then his mother-in-law is like,
she's not good enough for you. How about this other girl? And then she's like, you don't even know
who I am. And then she reveals it. And I'm like, oh, cliffhanger. Like, God, I got to see more.
So what they're doing is 60 to 100 seconds, you free to watch, you pay for more. And these things are
growing like crazy. And so they, you know, I guess half of China's internet users are watching these
what they call mini dramas. And guess what? I think that a lot of Americans are going to do this too.
I think a lot of Americans are going to watch mini dramas and these will continue to grow.
I'd be very interested to see if some, if an American company can come out and do this and do it
maybe better than, because today, the top four, I think they're all Chinese companies.
and I don't think that's going to last, or maybe it will last, like TikTok, but I think there's an opportunity for somebody to do this.
I also, not just in the States.
So, for example, my mom, for years, when she comes over to my house, it's wonderful.
We hang out, we have fun, we eat together, we talk together.
She plays with the grandkids.
Like, it's all great.
But then there's this moment at 9.30 at night where I just hear the most annoying sounds on TV.
And it's these special effects coming from what she likes to call her Pakistani dramas.
And it's basically soap operas from Pakistan that she likes to watch.
And she's India, but she's like, they make the juicier stuff.
They make the better ones.
And I'm like, where did you find these?
And how many episodes are there?
She's watched like, the series will have 650 episodes.
And she'll like finish multiple of these series.
And it's not just her.
All her sisters love this.
And they're just watching these on YouTube today.
And they're like, you know, 15, 20 minute episodes.
And I looked up some of these.
And like, if you go look at their YouTube channels, the top 10,
of these will have like four billion views.
I remember when people were talking about YouTubers,
and I just remember being like,
this was long time ago,
but I was like,
I only watch a YouTube video
when somebody sends me a link of like a funny clip
from Saturday Live or a basketball highlight.
Like I don't just go to YouTube
and browse to see what's on.
I thought that was like a wild, weird behavior
that people were doing.
And sure enough now,
I do that every single day.
I do it every day.
Every single day.
I think it's a man thing, by the way.
I think it's a young person thing
and then people are age, it's only men.
But did you think you would do that when you first saw that people do that?
No, I had like the same thing of watching video games.
I don't even play video games, but sometimes I'll watch people play.
I had a Twitter account for years before I ever tweeted a single word.
I was like, oh, why would I ever just tweet?
I'm not going to try to do that.
Like, I'll just consume.
And so like some of these behaviors actually take a lot of time to kind of propagate.
And it's sort of like in the tech world, they say like, you know,
what the nerds are doing on the weekends will all do in 10 years.
I think there's a version of that in culture,
which is like what the degenerates are doing today, right?
Like what the daytime TV watchers are doing today,
we're all going to do.
I remember hearing about musically and being like,
oh, people are doing like lip synced,
lip sync videos on their phone.
Like, that's stupid.
And then sure enough, you know, TikTok buys music when it becomes huge.
Sure enough, you're now making videos for your lip-sync.
You haven't shared it here, but we all know you do it.
What's another one?
All right, next trend that I want to do is one that you probably know a lot about.
It's a fitness trend.
Trend number two is rucking, which is, first of all, just an amazing word, rucking.
And secondly, I just keep seeing this.
And I've seen it four or five times from four or five of the right people.
And it instantly resonates when you hear it, which tells me that this is just going to spread more and more.
So what is rucking, Sam?
You want to describe it?
you put a heavy bag on your body and you go for a walk. It turns the hot girl walk into a
a workout. So, you know, how you go for walks in the morning, except now you do it with a 20-pound
pack on. You either wear a backpack or like a, I like the ones that are like the weighted
vest. It's like a bulletproof vest looking thing. Yeah, so that's the downside of all this, by the way.
I do, like, particularly when my daughter, when she was born, and it's like, you know how when you
want to get steps in when the kid goes to sleep? Because they're
sleeping all the time. That's when I really got into it. I would put, first of all, I screwed up.
I would put a 40 pound vest on because I thought that was like, well, more is better. And then
your back is like, killing. So I'm like, all right, 20 pounds is more than plenty. And then you just walk.
But if you put your heart rate, I would put my heart rate monitor on. An hour walk, it would be
120 beats per minute, which is like a pretty like hardcore walk. And it didn't feel that bad.
So it basically supercharges a walk. So you get more fitness out of a leisure.
activity.
Yeah, exactly.
There's these charts.
You can see,
like I'll put this up on YouTube,
but it's basically calories burned.
So in the same amount of time,
just walking,
but wearing the rucking vest,
you will burn about
like 200 more calories.
So,
which is enough to put you like in a,
if you did nothing else different,
you might go from,
you know,
surplus to a deficit or,
right, or break even to a deficit.
And it's not significantly harder.
It's not significantly harder, right?
And so,
I think this is going to be a big trend.
It's sort of like pickleball,
where pickleball was the much more accessible version of tennis.
I think that rucking is one of the most accessible versions of fitness.
Because my parents in their 60s will go for walks.
And I think that over time, if you realize that,
hey, if I wear this 15 pound vest,
I'm getting much more of a benefit without having to then,
without having to like go learn a new thing or do a new thing or add in an extra workout,
I think that's going to be really popular.
Like, I want to buy one of these.
And then I looked at some of the brands that are taking advantage of this trend, right?
Because you see, you see people talking about this.
You see Huberman and others talking about how rucking is really good, how it's, there's like this thing, low intensity, steady state cardio, which is known to be like really good for fat loss.
And it's basically just like walking at a moderate pace for a lot, like 40 minutes or 45 minutes for like a longer period of time and how that's actually better for weight loss than like, you know, traditional high intensity cardio.
you. Then you go look at these brands. Have you seen this brand Go Ruck? Do you know about these guys?
No, let me look at Go Ruck. The issue that I've had with a lot of these packs is like I would do my walk sometimes at night.
And it looks like I'm wearing a bulletproof vest. And like the issue or the benefit? Because it's like the main reason I'm trying to get one.
Dude, they like like people would see me like and I, there were one walk in particular I was walking at night. And people kind of stared at me funny. And then Neville saw me out in a walk. He goes,
dude, you look like you're about to go
like on a shooting. You look like you have like a bulletproof
vest on it. I was like, man, everyone's been staring at me
because it just looks very
intimidating. That's true. You do have
I got the luck. I got the luck. I had
the look. And so I had
I actually went and bought a different one that
looked less like bulletproof vesty.
And so this company Go Ruck,
it looks like they make backpack.
They're basically backpacks, right?
They do it as the back. I think the backpack is their hero skew,
but they have the vest too.
I was interested. I probably wouldn't have even
realized they're looking at me for the wrong reason. I would have thought they all think I
look so cool. And that's why they're staring at me. Like, dude, if I can wear like a Superman cape
and get away with it, I would. Why would I not want to feel like a superhero or like a Navy
seal? So this, this brand was started by, I think, an ex-is-military guy. I don't know if he's
a Marine or what he was. And he was like, yeah, like this is like a big deal in the Marines. And so
he created this brand called Go Ruck. And he started partnering with these kind of fitness and
toughness influencers.
And he...
A toughness influencer?
That's a good one.
Toughness influencer.
David Gagins, what is he?
Yeah, you're right.
He's a toughest influencer.
That's a good one.
Jocko.
What's Jocko?
Jock's a toughness influencer.
Did you just make this up or is that the category?
On the spot, off the dome, off the cuff, that's me.
A toughness influencer.
Okay, cool.
And so, and as you can see, like, that's a trend.
And so they take off, I guess they're doing like over 50 million a year in revenue now.
No way.
really so they're doing really well
and they turned it into a whole lifestyle brand
I mean they announced it they were like 46 million last year
so you know they're they're gonna be higher than this year
so they also do shoes and shorts and like shirts
like it's a whole like lifestyle brand now
and I think this is really smart and I think a lot of people do this
now where's the opportunity I think the opportunity is
go look at the prices on their website like how
how expensive is their like rock bag
450 bucks correct
$420 for just one that I'm seeing here.
My friends, it's time to undercut.
I think if I was going to enter this space,
I would be trying to go be the lowest cost,
good enough solution,
which is never a sexy pitch, right?
The sexy pitch is where the highest quality,
most premium, most unique,
made in America, that's their pitch, right?
$450 backpack.
That's great, and there will be somebody in that category.
But guess who makes more money?
The good enough at the more accessible price point almost always makes more money.
Like when we were hanging out with Mr. Beast and he's like talking about chocolate and he's like,
yeah, Hershey's or whatever.
And all of the people there were basically like rich people who either don't even grocery
shop for themselves anymore or like only eat whole foods.
And we were like, we like huge chocolate.
It's like, I like their cashew butter, you know, like $7 chocolate bar.
And he's like, yeah, yeah, yeah, their chocolate's great.
but Americans can't buy $7 chocolate bars.
He's like, we sell at Walmart.
And look where Hugh is at Walmart.
And it was like so off to the side in this like one tiny little footprint area because
again, it's not the like mainstream price point.
So I would be trying to build the sort of like Walmart Ruck brand.
And I know that's not really sexy, but it would work very well.
Do you remember echelon?
So when Peloton was really popular, me and I don't think you went.
but for some reason I was there with Moise at the CES, the electronic show,
and there was this booth for this fitness bike called Echelon.
And it was 100% identical to Peloton.
There was only one difference is that it was half the price.
And it was called Echelon.
And I think they got sued by Peloton, but they still exist.
And everything that Peloton has, Echelon has.
It's just literally half the price.
But it's the same logo.
It's the same.
everything.
Do you, have you ever seen Echelon?
Yeah, because they're at Costco.
They are the hero fitness product at Costco, which is, again, the same thing, like
the Costco price point.
And what they did was they just like, oh, Peloton, great, okay, we got the trend.
We even got the brand.
We got the shape of the bike.
We got the whole arsenal.
Awesome.
And they literally, like, took a, like a knife and just scraped off the letters off the bike.
And we're like, here's a new sticker.
Escalon.
It's even like a chat GPT name.
Like it was, I think they even got sued.
It looks like they changed their logo.
They were literally the exact same red.
Everything was the same.
And I remember like going to the CES booth and I'm like, wait, is this, are you guys like a sub-brand, a Peloton?
What's going on here?
Sure, we're not familiar with that brand.
We have no comment and no familiarity with that brand.
Completely coincidental.
All right.
I want to do the next one.
The next one that you have is pretty cool.
Um, the, did you see the tweet that I have there for your next one? That's a good, uh, a good way to kick it off.
Okay, do it. All right. So you have plastic free everything. So you're on board with plastic free. Is that what you guys are doing at your house?
I'm, I'm, I'm not hardcore about plastic free. Like, we still have plastic stuff and whatever. I mean, I can't say, I can't with a straight face be like, okay, we're eliminating all plastic from our life. And then I'm like giving my kids craft mac and cheese sometimes. So like, you know, I'm like, common sense.
test fails. Do you have, do you go out of your way to buy cotton clothing or natural clothing?
Yeah, I try to. I try to, I try to buy the highest quality stuff for myself because I know I can,
you know, like with my kids, that's the monkey ranch, right? Like, I can't get my kids to eat
certain things yet. And so, you know, that's where we fall apart a little bit. So the trend that you
care about, you had plastic-free everything. And I had saved a tweet by this guy named Miles
Snyder. It happened March 2nd, so only 10 days ago from when we're recording this. And he said,
Lulu Lemon and Viori really sciop the whole generation, which by the way, sciop, that's a new word.
Have you noticed that word's trending?
Dude, he's trending like crazy.
Syop is it. Syop is it. Syop is it? High agency, sciop. I don't know what else is trending,
but those two are on my radar. Someone tweeted out that they sciopped me, and I didn't understand
what it meant. And so I still don't entirely understand, but I was like, is that like an insult towards
me. Yeah. So he said,
Lou Lemon of Yori really sighed up to whole
generation. $70 shorts made from plastic
and petroleum that smell disgusting
every time you work out in them and they destroy
your fertility. Meanwhile, cotton
shorts are cheaper, comelier, and better
on every metric. And so you had listed
here, plastic-free everything.
I think that the
obvious thing that's going on right now
is plastic-free or
teflon-free pans, which is in the same
ballpark. But, like,
for example, at my house, we only have
glass Tupperware.
There's nothing more uppity
than any sentence that starts with.
At my house.
At my house.
The next, the end of that
has to be uppity.
And literally, you just spit on it
on somebody.
Every time anybody uses that phrase.
Not you particularly.
I'm just saying.
At my estate.
At the par estate,
at par manner,
it's glass only.
How dare you?
For the record,
I have Diet Mountain Dew
in the refrigerator right now.
So I think I can get away with saying this.
You're like tobacco in your lip presently.
You're worried about microplastics.
You have a hole in your gum.
Yeah.
So I think I get away with it sometimes.
But no, we don't do plastic stuff.
Plastic, like anything that goes in the microwave, it's not plastic.
But now our new thing is like my daughter has this thing.
She calls her baby.
What do they call it?
Lovi.
Lovies or whatever.
You know, like the, I don't even know what they are.
But we're doing all cotton those, which, by the way, they're like way less comfortable.
I understand why like
Do you use a plastic pacifier
in her mouth?
No, we don't give her,
we should quit taking the passifier at three months
but and we even have glass bottles
but it's like a bunch of like glass stuff
and we're not crazy.
Like we use the Teflon pan for like scrambled eggs
that's like the only thing that we can't get away with
for nonstick.
But it mostly is not plastic
and we are taking it to close.
So a company that I like,
I have no affiliation with them.
I just think they're cool as Riker clothing.
Have you seen them?
Yeah, I actually just ordered some of their stuff
because I want to try it out.
It just arrived.
I love it.
It's great.
Give an honest review.
I think they're cool,
but it's really actually hard
finding all cotton workout gear.
And so I'm on board with the plastic free trend.
By the way, I'm also so prepared
for somebody to be like,
oh my God, cotton, haven't you heard?
And they'd be like,
cotton is a lie.
Like, cotton is huge lie.
It's like when Joe Gabby had told us
that recycling was a lie.
Have you heard this bit?
I've been saying this for years.
Recycling is 100% bullshit.
It should be reduce, reuse, get rid of the recycle.
And you're saying it because what?
It all gets thrown away in the trash.
Recycling is nonsense.
But there's even more to it that he told us about.
I wanted to get him on to do his recycling rant because he's got like a great recycling rant.
But I believe that one of the core things is recycling is a sci-op.
You ready?
Recycling is a sci-op, which was that they,
the companies that make all the plastic products were like under some heat.
They're like, oh, shit, this is like really bad.
And they're like, what do we do? What do we do? What do we do? We blame the consumer.
And they were like, blame the consumer. That's brilliant. How do we do that?
And they were like, what if we made it their job to deal with the plastic?
And they're like, how would we do that? We convince them that the obligation is on them to recycle these products.
And so they funded the like recycled movement, knowing that it's like most of it's not getting recycled anyways.
it doesn't really work.
Dude, the blue bins are bullshit.
They're bullshit.
Yeah.
They're totally bullshit.
It's like they...
Cotton's next.
They convince you...
I can feel it coming.
They could...
You know what I often would do
with the blue bins and it would like freak out people?
I remember people at my office,
the hippies that like the typical like granola people at my company would like complain to me.
But I'm like, just throw the trash in the recycle bin.
It doesn't matter.
It's all going to the same place.
And they would like flip out to like...
I could tell they were like, we're loose.
sleep over this because they based their personality on this blue bin has always been my like,
it's okay to consume this and throw it away. But it all goes to the trash. And instead, we should
just reduce the stuff we consume or we should reuse what we can. The blue bin, I can't stand
the blue bin. So Joe and I are the same on this one. So I'm on board with plastic everything.
So plastic free everything, I think this is going to extend into clothes. I think it's going to
extend into like homeware pans, everything, like cups that you use. I think it's going to extend
into baby products, all baby products. I think there's going to be a, the way that honest came out
with Jessica Alba and was like, these juices are full of sugar. So they're like honest juice.
And I think that and they have, you know, they have wipes and they have diapers and they're like,
oh yeah, you know, you need to use these products. I think there's going to be a plastic free
big brand that gets built in the baby space. Well, you know what that used to be, right?
I grew up using this because my parents were a little hippie.
It was cloth diapers that you threw into a hamper and then you had to wash them.
It was disgusting.
And for that reason, I'm out.
It was honestly filthy.
But my mother-
My wife tried to propose that, by the way.
She was like, I think we should cloth diaper.
It is like, cool.
The look of disgust I gave her, I mean, I was just like, listen, you could cheat on me.
You can abuse me.
You can do whatever you want.
You will not bring cloth diapering into my life.
lifestyle. There's usually
my parents used to do, and we were
poor, and so they said it was
cheaper, but they had a service that would come and pick
it up once a week, but it's still just like
the idea of using
cloth that other kids
have shit in. It's
filthy. Like, we're animals.
So the cloth diapers are not
even just your cloth. It's a mixed
pool of cloth? It was like
a wash and fold service, except
the stuff, the clothing. They just
dung it together.
I had poop in it.
And so it was basically you throw it into this bin and they come and pick it up and then they bring you new cloth diapers that are clean and you're just like reusing them.
Yeah, it's like it's disgusting.
But that's what that's how it used to be.
Which now that I'm saying this, by the way, this is kind of an interesting, you know, we had Jake on or is that, whatever, the young guy the other day who talked about how he thinks of ideas.
Jake, Zach, same thing.
the kid we had uh what was it Zach was his name um we had Zach on and he was talking about how um
when you asked him how he comes with ideas and he's like I just think about what would be awesome in an ad
and a cloth diaper is like revolting but it is clickable and it is interesting uh so I actually am
on board with cloth diapers now I just talked myself into it
sounds good I also think by the way for plastic for everything that's there's got to be a
supplement that people are going to try to sell that's going to, like, remove the plastic
from your balls and your bloodstream. I think people are going to get on the, you know,
every category is going to try to take this angle. And I think that it's, it's sort of like
protein, you know, became a thing. It's like, great, eat more meat. And then they're like,
or take this powder. Or you want protein chips? How about protein cookies? How about protein brownies?
How about protein everything? Protein waffles, protein pancakes. And so,
protein just made its way into everything on the protein wave.
I had protein water yesterday.
It was amazing.
What was protein water?
It was basically water with like, it was a scoop that looked like lemonade mix and it was
high protein.
And it sounded filthy and disgusting and it was delicious.
That's how I drink my protein shakes.
It's just per scooped water.
Yeah, but there's something.
There's something cool where you think creamy and protein that for some reason that's okay,
but fruity and protein, that's just unacceptable.
Do you know what I mean?
So this was fruity or this was?
It was fruity.
It was lemonade.
But he said unacceptable, but you liked it.
Yeah, I loved it.
But I had to like get over that barrier.
Right.
Was that really hard for you?
Yeah.
Like I had to like like a motivational like talk to like figure out.
Yeah.
Like David Gaghan's like definitely had to hype me up.
How bad do you want it?
We fight for these inches.
All right.
So next one.
Ready?
There's another health trend that I think is going to be big.
Have you ever heard of anybody who's doing nervous system work?
Our most popular retreat at Hampton is called nervous system reset.
And people go to the woods and we have a facilitator who guides these things.
It's very, this is totally a niche thing.
And it was really smart of you to call this out.
So go ahead.
Okay, great.
So you're already on this.
This was, I'm just, my spidey sense is tingling.
I'm hearing a little thing.
It's the new leaky gut.
It's the new leaky gut.
Because who, you know, who doesn't want your nervous system to be reset or to be calmed down, right?
It's like this thing that's so central.
Literally, it's your central nervous system.
It's so central to you.
You have your vagus nerve and like all this stuff.
So I first got hooked on this because my trainer was telling me about this.
He was talking about, like, when you work out, and would you eat,
it's not just about what you do,
it's about the state that you're in,
that your nervous system is when you do it.
I'm like, what do you mean?
He goes, well, you have these two modes or modalities
for your nervous system, parasympathetic,
and sympathetic.
You're familiar with this?
Yeah, I know with those,
I've heard those words before.
I can't teach a class on this, but I vaguely.
Here's my bro science, okay?
My bro science for this,
which is probably half wrong.
But basically, you have two core modes
that you could be in.
One is your fighter flight,
your fighter flight response.
So this is where adrenaline, cortisol,
you have these hormones that get released
and they're not just bad, right?
People say cortisol is the stress hormone.
Well, stress is good in certain scenarios.
Adrenaline is good in certain scenarios.
You don't want to be in that all the time.
That's the problem.
But you need it when you need it.
If there's a lion chasing you,
you want to be in fight or flight mode, right?
The problem is there's no lion chasing us.
It's just slack and email.
and scrolling on on Instagram and feeling like you're not good enough.
And like looking at your body in the mirror and feeling like you're too fat.
Then when you eat, you're stress eating or you're working too hard than you're stress eating
or you're not sleeping, things like that.
So if you're operating in that sympathetic system, which is at fight or flight,
your body is secreting certain hormones, but then also your body shuts down other functions.
So like let's say you stress heat, one of the problems with you stress heat is not only do you overeat
or you make poor choices, but your body literally digest less.
poorly, digest more poorly during that, when you're in that system, right? Because if you're in
fire or flight, the body's going to take its resources and say, guys, we're not digesting food
right now. That's not what's important. We've got to be doing these other things. The lion is chasing
us. And so then you have the parasympathetic system, which when you're in, it's more rested,
more relaxed. Your body can do things like digest, it can recover, it can do other things. And so
literally being able to shift your mood or your state from one to the other is really important.
important. How do you do that? Some people get that from exercise. Some people get it from the sauna,
from the cold plunge. Some people get it from breathwork. Some people get it from meditation.
There's a bunch of different ways. And all of these are a means to an end, which is to calm your
nervous system down. And a lot of good things happen, both health-wise, but also decision-making,
creativity. You operate differently when you're in different states. Okay, cool.
So that's the theory. That's where I first got on my radar, and I believed it, and I started paying attention to it.
Well, you've been about breathwork for like four years now or five years now.
Yeah, and the breath to me is, because I'm always like, I'm not trying to supplement or like,
I'm very skeptical of the flashy hard things.
So I always look for advice that nobody could sell me, really.
No, you're not.
You love that.
You love that.
No, no, like in the health space, let's say.
Yes.
Right?
Like, I like, why did I talk about rucking?
Because I'm like, oh, it's walking with a little extra weight.
Cool.
That kind of resonates with me.
It's, that makes sense.
Cold plunging I never really was able to get into because I was like, I just think this is like, this extreme thing that's like, seems like it's for show.
I don't know.
It didn't really resonate with me in the same way.
Breath work did because it's like, oh yeah, I could tell that literally just controlling my breath for a couple of minutes, I will feel much differently at the end of it.
And it also makes sense to me to like work on my breathing system because I'm going to do that, I don't know, 50,000 times a day.
And I went to a breath work.
class in San Francisco and I like it made me kind of high it was awesome yeah yeah well that's like the
whimhoff stuff you can you can literally hyperventilate yourself and you'll you'll get high you'll pass out
you could do a lot of things yeah it was great that goes more to the category of the extreme but okay
fair enough so our buddy jack smith had come on remember that thing he told us about on the podcast where he's like
i went in this room with 50,000 screens of different colors and he's like basically they flash things
I sit in a lawn chair and I paid these guys
thousands of dollars and it healed me
and I was like, we were both just like,
okay, so we were both like, what?
There's one down there.
Like he came to visit me in my house.
I live in a tiny suburb in Connecticut.
There's one, I'm not joking, 200 yards of my house.
And we went to it.
How was it?
It was amazing.
I forgot to bring this up.
It was insane.
So basically to everyone listening,
it's, this is like 90% of people
are going to be like,
you're crazy.
And 10% of the people are going to,
to like be into this. It's very like fringe shit. You go to a room and you're surrounded by literally
20 TV screens and it looks like it's playing white like snow, you know, like when you're...
White noise, yeah. Yeah, like where your TV wasn't working. And so, and then the room is about
the size of, let's say, it looks like a like a mini bunk room. It was like 50 feet long, 20 feet
wide. Just a plain room with reclining chairs in it. I go and I sit in the chair and I just like
fall asleep. That's all I do.
And so I go home. Are you supposed to fall asleep?
You're just supposed to do whatever you want. You're supposed to relax.
Are you supposed to close your eyes?
Close your eyes and relax. You're supposed to close your eyes and relax.
And I fall asleep. And part of me was like, did I just do like a Ron Swanson thing where
they're like where I'm just standing there meditating and he's like, this is so stupid.
I just stand here and I'm thoughtless. Like, yeah, that's a point.
I was like, is that what I'm complaining about? It's like, I just fell asleep and I actually
did achieve it. I wasn't sure what happened. But I go to Jack and I say, you know, I did
kind of like how they had vibrating chairs there. Like the vibrating massage chairs they had were amazing.
And he goes, dude, those chairs weren't plugged in. They were not vibrating. They were not,
the chairs didn't vibrate. And I was like, no, like I vibrated the whole time and it made me relax.
And I felt so calm. And it goes, brother, I talked to the owner. I saw the whole thing. Here's a photo.
It was not a plugged in chair. There was no electricity in this chair. It did not vibrate.
and I swore that it was vibrating me the whole time.
So something happened.
So that's my story with this place.
And how is it to be a Scientologist?
It was, you know, it felt crazy.
Like it did.
And I was so turned off because the guy who,
the guy who owned the place
explained how like his wife had cancer
and he went into debt to start this place
and this cured the cancer.
And I sort of felt like these people took advantage of you, man.
like, you know, you didn't use modern medicine.
You're so, like, delusional.
I feel sad for you, which is silly for me to judge,
but that was my judgment.
And yet I left thinking my body was vibrating.
And so maybe there was something there.
That's all I'm saying.
Yeah.
So I'm kind of fascinated by this.
And it does feel like something that, like,
someone would, like a YouTuber would make up
to make, like, a cool YouTube video
or something like a prank video.
It also feels like,
like the hatch and lost,
like the Darmin initiative created this thing.
So, you know, there's definitely a part of me that's like,
oh my God, this is bullshit.
However, I do believe that nervous system work makes sense.
And who am I to say that that's not one of the methods
that would, you know, reset, rewire, calm, change the frequency.
I don't know.
I don't know all that stuff.
But people are really into grounding.
You've seen grounding goes down on the grass?
Grounding doesn't explain to me.
My college friends just to be into this.
So they would, after playing sports, all the basketball players would do it,
they would take their socks off and they would go and they would stand in the grass because
they said, they used the word ions.
Something about negative ions or negative electrons were going from the earth to their body
and that was going to heal them.
It was the same thing to me as like, do you remember Brett Favre promoting like copper, the
balance band?
The balance band.
It's, and I don't know, man.
I don't know about any of this.
I absolutely don't know about these.
and I have no, I don't know the science,
I don't know if this work.
What I'm saying is,
I think there's market demand.
I think this is a trend.
I think there's pull.
I think this is an area where when you talk about it,
it has that leaky gut type of thing
where people say, you know what,
I think I have that problem.
I think I want that improved.
And whether it's through this room with screens,
whether it's through grounding,
whether it's through breathwork,
I don't know what it is,
but that's a trend.
And I see it.
It's a wave.
And I think a lot of people
are going to go surf that wave.
You should go check out one of the,
what's the screen thing,
called the electro-magnetic therapy or something like that.
Maybe.
And let me know if you have a similar experience.
I'm a hater on it, but I'm telling you I left, my body felt different.
All right.
Let's do something that's not a health hack real quick.
I have another one for you.
Religion?
AI social network?
Which one?
Dumb phones?
Okay.
Let's do biohacking and plants.
Which I don't have a lot here.
I'm just going to say it out loud, but there's a moment in time right.
now. So this is, what is this? Trend number three, four. We did five. This is five. Okay, five. Trend
number five. So trend number five is biohacking plants. So there's a moment in time right here where I think
biohacking has never been as popular as it is now, thanks to Brian Johnson, thanks to Ozempic, thanks to
people real peptides, people realizing like, oh, I can just kind of take this, stab this, do this, eat this,
drink this, whatever, and I'm going to improve my own health.
So biohacking is a thing.
And AI has changed the game of science because AI is now doing kind of remarkable things.
I don't know if you've paid attention to Alpha Fold or some of the stuff that's coming
out of Google where it's basically like alpha fold is basically a AI breakthrough where
AI was able to predict how proteins fold, which is really important for a couple of reasons.
but I think the simple explanation is like
the shape of proteins really matters.
It matters how other things can connect to it.
It matters how it can connect to other things,
how the building blocks can link.
And it was something that we didn't as humans know how to do.
We didn't know how to show.
We knew what it was made up of,
but we didn't know how it would fold.
We didn't know the shape of the protein.
And Alpha Fold was like beat all the,
like won the competition of modeling protein folding.
And so let's assume this is only going to get better.
And the implication of this is what?
We can make new drugs?
Yeah, exactly.
Therapeutics, drugs.
You know, so you have all these different, like, these different technologies.
CRISPR.
You have, you know, protein folding stuff that's going on.
You have, in general, an interest around biohacking.
But the problem is biohacking in humans is really hard.
And when you biohacking humans, you have to worry about all kinds of health concerns.
You have to worry about, like, getting approvals for things.
It's going to be a long, hard road.
And so in the same way that I think the longevity startups that are,
focused on dogs are going to do well because who doesn't want their dog like to live longer?
I think that's like a problem everybody has.
The background of that is that we had Kevin Rose on and he was trying to create or invested
in a longevity drug company and their model, their phase one was using it on dogs because
that's an easier way to get into it.
Easier way to go to market and to test your products.
I think the even easier version of this is plants.
And I know that like David Freeberg is doing this for.
a hollow, which is basically like, it's basically a biohacking, but for different crops. So how do we make a
strawberry that does, has certain properties? Maybe it's resistant to certain bugs, or maybe it
can be riper, maybe it can be bigger, maybe it can be juicier, maybe it can grow in different
weather conditions and therefore, therefore certain places can now grow their own crops that
don't have to import, right? So it's like all these like implications if you could biohack
plants, because plants are food. And so how do you do biohacking and plants? And so how do you do biohacking
in plants. And plants for a long time, like a lot of the like the breakthroughs and people's
understanding of genetics was because of plant's experiments. Like you breed true crops with each other
and oh, this is how we figured out like, you know, the little punnet square about how genetics
can, how genetic combinations work and combinatorial effects of crossbreeding. And so I think
that there's going to be some really successful startups that take AI and the concept of biohacking
and then use plants as their focus,
as their target market,
rather than humans.
What's David Freeberg's thing?
It's called a company.
And so it's accelerating evolution
to unlock nature's potential.
That sounds like a great mission.
And so they're basically creating new seeds
or new style plants, yeah?
I don't know.
They haven't been super, like,
they're not in stealth,
but they're not like,
it's not like super obvious exactly what they're doing, but like they have this thing like boosted
breeding. So it's basically like how do you get more yield on your crops, right? Or they'll have like
value added traits, which is like how do you take a crop but then add, you know, a trait that you
want, right, gain a function, but not for viruses, but for your strawberries, for your almonds,
for your potatoes, for corn, for core crops. And so this is going to become technology that they're
either going to be able to like vertically do themselves or they're going to sell this to farms.
and be like, and that's kind of what he did with his other thing, you know, climate or whatever.
This is so much better than working on creator economy software.
Like when you're telling me about this, I'm a dumb dumb.
I will never be able to start anything in this space.
But like part of me is like if I had a friend that started something like this,
I would quit everything I'm doing to go work there because this is such an easy mission to get behind.
you know, like this is so much more important than creating a new link tree.
And so much more exciting.
And so I love this.
I think this is really a really interesting thing to call out.
Yeah, so that's a trend I'm watching.
I'll give you another one, AI social network.
So what does this mean?
Every decade or so a new social network comes out.
So, you know, you had Facebook, which was 2004, and then roughly 2012, you had, you
had this next generation of social networks,
that those were Snapchat, Instagram, and they were
taking off. And so
what did they do differently?
They took advantage of the new tech.
So the new tech was your phone.
The phone that had a camera, the phone that had a GPS,
the phone that
was with you at all times.
And so it unlocked a new
social use case. And I
think that the new social use case that's
coming out is
AI. So what is
what is AI going to be able to do here?
I don't know exactly what this is going to look like,
but I would bet with very high probability,
this is a bit of a safe bet, I guess,
but I would bet very high probability
that the next breakout social app
is going to be based on AI.
Arguably, it already happened.
Arguably that TikTok is the breakout,
it was the first breakout AI app, right?
What do you mean?
You mean that I'm following AI people
as opposed to real people?
There's a few ways that could take it.
So the most obvious one was TikTok,
which was basically everybody thinks TikTok's
big innovation was short form video,
but actually short from video was around before that,
Vine,
musically,
others.
What TikTok did was TikTok was like,
hey,
how about this?
How about the AI just tells you what to follow instead of you?
So every social network up until that point was based on the user,
creating a graph.
So going on following people or friending people.
And that following or friending people,
this was Facebook,
Twitter, YouTube,
all of them,
that you would choose content that's interesting to you.
And then you would keep coming
back to the app because you have content
that's interesting for you. And that worked
to an extent. And then TikTok came out was like,
let's never let the user say what's interesting.
Let's see if the AI can figure out
what's interesting. At a higher
rate, almost like we were talking about this
crops thing, like what if you got higher yield
of interestingness if you used AI
for the feed instead of the human
choosing what to follow?
And so, and that's what it did.
And TikTok is super addictive.
And TikTok has a higher usage rate
than every other social platform.
because the AI is serving you the content
instead of you picking yourself.
So that was like the first breakthrough,
but it's under the hood.
You don't see it.
It's the algorithm.
Okay, cool.
And now, by the way,
everybody copied it in Instagram and others.
Everybody's moved to this for you feed.
The real innovation of TikTok is the for you page.
Okay, so what's coming next?
So now I'm thinking that the next breakthrough
is probably going to be that up until now,
all social networks were based on content that humans make.
And now I think it's going to be based on content that AI makes in some way.
That sounds a little far-fetched.
Like, why would I want to follow an AI influencer?
Well, let's first start with one example, Lil Mikaela.
We've talked about her years ago when they started this.
Lil Mikaela is an Instagram influencer that is just AI generated.
It's a girl that's like she's an AI image, basically.
And she's an Instagrammer and she posts photos.
Do you know how much money Lil Mikaela makes?
Last we talked about it, it was like interesting, but not wild.
that was like 800 grand a year,
I think we started talking about earned 20 or so.
I don't have this confirmed,
but I heard it's over $10 million now.
That's insane.
Okay, so that's a little Michaela.
Yeah, you and a few million other people like Michaela.
All right, so that's one.
But here's a more interesting version of this,
because I think people have heard the AI Flores,
but I'll even pitch you a different style of AI social product.
It's actually in the music space.
So I think there's an opportunity to create,
create the AI version of Spotify.
what I mean by this is I started listening to like a non-trivial, non-trivial amount of AI music.
So like in my pie chart of my market share of music, it used to be 100% just like artists, right, that I know.
So like Spotify or wherever, right?
Let's just say that's where I started.
And now I started adding in a little bit of AI generated music.
You go to Suno.
So Suno has a lot of music there.
But also there's these YouTube channels.
Like there's this one called Golden Age Hi.
which I don't think is AI.
I think he might use AI in the making of it.
But Golden Age Hipops, great YouTube channel.
What he does is he makes these mashups, right?
Like, if you go to the YouTube channel.
I listen to it too.
And then, like, Mac Miller Lofi or, like, main character playlist.
Exactly.
I'm getting recommended all of these.
And at first I was like, this is weird.
And lately, I'm attracted to them even more.
It's like what I listen to all day when I work.
This is my new workout track.
So Golden Age Hipop is,
If you look at the channel,
so it's got 700,000, 730,000 subscribers.
Every thumbnail is AI generated.
Yes.
All of the concepts are like things that don't even make sense.
It's like, wait, so this is,
it'll be like somebody from the like 80s
and then like somebody from the 2000s
collaborating on a song.
Or like all the top top songs are like, you know,
like if it's a sort by popular.
So this one has 11 million views.
It's Snoop Dogg, Ice Cube, DMX,
or Snoop Dogg, Eminem, Dr. Dre,
50 cent exhibit and and Ice Cube.
all on one track.
You're like,
what,
that,
that never happened.
Uh,
and that,
that song has eight million plays.
And what,
I think what the person is doing is I think they're just like a mashup artist,
more like girl talk where they,
they're just sampling from different songs and,
and overlaying them well together.
Yes.
But I think there's a little bit of sign to come.
I wouldn't be surprised if they're using AI to do this or if they're just going
to take a voice,
uh,
artist voice and just use AI to make a song from it.
Like,
I think you tweeted something out.
Didn't you tweet out that,
like the number,
one song right now, was an AI song?
It was
the Beatles won a Grammy
this year, and it didn't get
talked a lot about, but basically
they had lyrics from when
John Lennon was alive, and they
used machine learning
and AI, and they finished the song,
and it won a Grammy, and it's a great song.
Like, that's crazy.
It's crazy. Nobody's even... You're the only person I know
who talked about that. I saw it, and I was reading about this,
and I was like,
is a huge deal. Why isn't anyone discussing
this? I felt like it was a totally undercovered
story. And the song's great.
It's not that nobody's talking about,
but you're right. Under, like, less underreported
story. So, here's what I
think is going to happen. I think you're going to have
a service that's sort of like a Pandora or a Spotify
where you're going to prompt it or you're
going to tell it what songs you like. And it's just
going to start generating AI music on the fly.
And what's going to happen is, it's going to generate music
that's in the genres you like. It's going to figure out,
it's going to basically train on the songs that
exist and it's going to create net new songs.
And I think the last piece of what's going to happen there is in the same way that today
you have what's called like vibe coders.
You know what vibe coding is?
I'm still trying to figure this out.
This is the scout on my radar on Monday.
This is how new I am to vibe coding.
All right.
So there's a couple of startups like this cursor.
It's because of Peter Levels is how I know about it.
Okay.
So there's a couple of startups like cursor, which is like absolutely blown up.
I think it's become like a two or three billion dollar company or $10 billion company
in a very short a period of time.
Cursor is basically like a coding terminal, but you can, but AI is built in, right?
And so you can code, but you can basically like just tell the AI, it'll write the code for
you.
They can tell it to debug it for you.
You can tell it to build for you.
Replit is doing the same thing.
You go to replet.com now and it just says, what would you like me to build?
And you just tell Replit like, hey, I'd like an app that does blah, blah, blah, blah.
And then it starts spitting out code on the screen, just scrolling.
like huge amounts of code.
And then you'll see it thinking.
It's like, hmm, the initial screen's not loading properly.
Let me see what's wrong.
Ah, I found it.
And then it just continues on.
It's like, it's kind of amazing to watch.
And I've built a bunch of little Replut apps that way.
And so this is like, you know, basically what's happening now is that people are going to be able to make software without knowing how to write code.
Well, I think what's going to happen next is I'm going to be able to make music without knowing how to make music without knowing how to play instruments or sing.
So what's going to happen is I'm going to be, I'm just going to be able to prompt the music or tell it what I want or tell it.
or tell it how to tweak the songs,
and then I'm going to make it.
And then, by the way,
you ready for me to just go full-blown,
full-blown idiot here,
I'm going to say three letters
that you're not going to like.
NFTs, they're coming in here.
So here's the business model.
Here's where this actually pairs up.
And this is not so crazy.
Listen to this.
Do you remember when you used to say,
you used to celebrate like,
ding, ding, ding, we found a use case.
Is this that?
We did now. We found a use case.
Ladies and gentlemen, we did it.
What is an NFT?
NFT is basically any kind of digital collectible,
digital art, digital property that's unique.
It's a way to say that this is unique.
And I own this. I made this.
And if you bought it, now you own this.
And it shows who made it and the royalties are attached to it.
This is kind of a cool thing.
If I make art in Photoshop,
which I think both of us would agree is art, right?
I think being able to say that I made this
and nobody can say that they made it, that's important.
being able to sell my art also important.
And if you sell it, me being able to capture a royalty of subsequent sales, also cool.
So I think we all agree that's actually pretty cool, as obnoxious as NFTs became to be.
Now, what's going to happen in the music case is I'm going to be generating music with AI,
and I'm going to be able to mint that song.
So I'm going to be able to say, that song, I helped create that by prompting it.
I'm going to create it.
All of the artists whose music was used, I think they're going to get personal ownership of that.
And now I'm going to be able to upload that track.
a musician, but in the same way that, like, you know, a lot of musicians today, they're using
like, uh, auto tune and like, you know, just like basically digital pro, they're not, they're
not sitting there with a guitar strumming.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
They're in a piece of software making the computer strum the guitar and they just type in the notes,
A, B, C, D, and then they, you know, they'll type in the chord and the guitar just plays it.
It's kind of like to a pure musician, they're like, that's not music.
That's, you're just cheating.
I think that's what's going to happen next.
I think with AI.
And so I think the next version.
of Pandora or Spotify.
So the next big social product that's around music is going to be about creating
music using AI, being able to mint it as a curator saying, oh, this is cool.
I like this.
I'll pay to create this and to own this.
And then I'll share that with other people.
And then I will get like the way this golden age hip hop guy is getting 10 million
streams on his songs, I think somebody who's a non-musician would go to get that.
Did I just go crazy or what just happened?
No, I think that's very smart.
I think you're doing a good job of looking ahead
and I agree with the future that you're painting.
I think that I'm shocked so far that music has been as not...
With AI, it's been...
I guess this makes sense because the guy is making AI
are also into this other stuff.
But AI has been, like, coding and, like,
just a variety of other tools.
And I'm shocked that it has an impacted art,
particularly in music as much as...
as little as it has.
And I think the future your painting makes a lot of...
sense. I think that if you were to play me like an AI post Malone song and a real post Malone song,
I don't think anyone would know the difference. Which is unbelievable. We're already there,
right? Yeah, we're already there. And also, if I were to go to a concert, like, I would be into going
to a concert of a fake person. Like, do you remember the guerrillas? I loved the guerrillas. I listened to
the girl. What's their story? I mean, I've only heard their songs, but never been to a concert.
The guy who created the gorillas is a genius.
So the gorillas, for those listening who are below the age of 30, the gorillas was a band.
It was created by, do you remember Blur?
Remember the band Blur?
So it, like kind of a punk-rocky guy, but he created the guerrillas as like a weird, like a hobby, like a side project where he wrote, and this was in the 90s.
He wrote songs, and then he had a music.
And he sang it.
He was the musician.
He played all the instruments.
And then he had a music video where it was cartoons.
and it was animations.
And so for years, and this was before the internet was popular,
so we couldn't, like, Google who was behind it.
It was, like, rumors.
And, like, you know, you didn't actually know, you know, in that age how it was.
You didn't totally know.
You're like, I heard it was this guy.
I heard it with this guy.
I don't know who it is.
And the guerrillas was the band that he made.
It was a fake band.
It was all cartoons.
They went so far as to being on talk shows.
And so they would, like, at the time, the tech wasn't great, but they would do hologram.
So they appeared on David Letterman and shows like that.
And then eventually they would do concerts where they would play.
At first, it was simple and Janky.
It was basically just a movie theater.
And then eventually they figured out how to hologram it.
And then now he'll go out and perform.
Now we all know who the guy is and he'll actually go and perform.
And it's like amazing.
But he did all of this before all this technology was a thing.
And I loved the guerrillas.
I loved him before I knew who the person was.
I just thought, like, I knew like the characters and I like actually liked them.
And I got to know the personalities.
It was very strange.
but because I was into that when I was a kid
and even as an adult I like it,
I can now see how it doesn't seem crazy
that I'm going to like the AI stuff.
Totally, totally.
I mean, dude, I was so into like WWF growing up, right?
It's like you get into these things that sound on the surface,
silly, stupid, illogical, why would you care?
It's all fake, right?
It's fake wrestling.
And then guys are like, you know,
paying thousands of dollars to sit front roads
scream their heart out to like watch it, right?
It's like these things seem on the surface
If you just described it to somebody, it would seem like it wouldn't work, but it does.
And I think the point I'm trying to make with this episode is that these are all trends that today
sound small, sound weird, but I think in the future are going to be bigger.
And knowing that is good for two reasons.
Either A, you're the type of person who just likes to be in the know.
You like to know things before.
You maybe like to try products early on before they become cool.
I like to do that.
That's one reason do you want to know these.
And the other reason is jumping on trends early is the way to make a lot of money, right?
There are as riches in these niches if you actually like go pursue them.
Or you're just going to be the guy that always waits for something to be proven out.
And then you're going to feel like you're too late every time.
Right.
So like those are your options as an entrepreneur.
And so I think being early to trends is trends that are going to last or be big is a great way to get rich.
All right.
So the ones we mentioned, number one, short drama apps.
So mini-dramas, these apps that basically are like Netflix,
but the episodes are 90 seconds long.
They're taken off for apps that are doing over 100 million a year in revenue.
Today, they're all Chinese apps.
I think there's an opportunity for somebody to make this,
both like made in America, but also for really every geography,
like make the biggest one of these in Brazil,
make the biggest one of these in India.
These are going to be very, very big.
The next one, fitness trends.
So rucking we had, which is walking with weighted vests,
Go Ruck, doing over 50 million a year in revenue.
you.
Shirtless rip guys
are going to
just tear you up
in the comments
saying,
Sean, we've been
here.
Of course.
And I say,
congratulations on
being early.
Plastic-free
everything.
So I think just
microplastics
being something
that people,
the next thing
people are going
to be afraid of
and then
figuring out
how to sell
solutions to
that fear.
Nervous system work
we talked about.
So the
perisepthetic nervous
system,
people who
create solutions
that are
marketed towards
calming or
tuning or resetting your nervous system, a reboot for your nervous system. We talked about biohacking
for plants. So AI plus biohacking, but using plants as a go-to-market because it's a lot safer.
You can kill plants and nobody cares. And ultimately, there's a huge market of improving crops
and the food that we all eat. And then the last one that we talked about is the AI social network.
So every decade or so, there's a new big hit social product, Facebook, then Instagram, Snapchat,
now TikTok. It's time.
We are due for a new one, and the twist will be that the content is somehow generated with AI.
I pitched a music one, but there's probably many other variations of that.
That was very educational. Good job.
You came with the goods.
You carried us on this one, and I think you did a wonderful job, so thank you.
Thank you.
Let us know in the comments, which trends you like in the YouTube comments, and I'll be replying to all of them.
All right. That's it. That's the pod.
I feel like I can rule the world. I know I could be what I want to.
I'm out all in it like no days off.
On the road, let's travel, never looking back.
