My First Million - Business Brainstorm: SAT Prep Cartoons, The Onion For Millennial Moms & More

Episode Date: July 22, 2024

Episode 611: Sam Parr ( https://twitter.com/theSamParr ) and Shaan Puri ( https://twitter.com/ShaanVP ) catch up and share 3 business ideas they came up with over the weekend.  — Show Notes:  (0:0...0) Shaan's no phone weekend (5:17) Control your inputs (10:20) Life hack: Play with your kid (15:38) Business Idea: Sketchy (25:15) Business Idea: Niche Fake News You Can Trust (34:41) Business Idea: Tampons that won't kill you (40:28) An unqualified brief history of presidential assassinations (46:09) The ceaseless action of Teddy Roosevelt (55:10) MFM Required Readling List — Links: • r/regretfulparents - https://www.reddit.com/r/regretfulparents/ • Sketchy - https://www.sketchy.com/ • Babylon Bee - https://babylonbee.com/ • Manhunt - https://tinyurl.com/bdepazn4 — 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/ — Check Out Shaan's Stuff: Need to hire? You should use the same service Shaan uses to hire developers, designers, & Virtual Assistants → it’s called Shepherd (tell ‘em Shaan sent you): https://bit.ly/SupportShepherd My First Million is a HubSpot Original Podcast // Brought to you by The HubSpot Podcast Network // Production by Arie Desormeaux // Editing by Ezra Bakker Trupiano

Transcript
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Starting point is 00:00:00 But anyway, this was my Sunday brainstorm. My Sunday brainstorm was, here's three cool ideas. 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. Dude, let's do like a life update because, frankly, you and I mostly talk to each other. I mean, we spent so much time on this podcast, but don't even like talk that much.
Starting point is 00:00:20 I want to know what's going on with you and I'll feel you and know what's going on with me. I did a thing I've never really done before. It's not that groundbreaking. I'm sure you or many people have done this. but I had it. And Friday hit, and I just put my phone in a drawer, and I didn't touch it until this morning. So I had a no phone weekend,
Starting point is 00:00:38 which was pretty awesome and very unusual for me. You're not good at that. Like, you're hardcore about your phone. So tell me how that felt. It felt like it withdrawals from an addiction. Like, I would find my, there was, like, funny things, and then there was, like, little moments
Starting point is 00:00:54 where I would notice it a lot more, right? So, like, grabbing your pants all the time? I would just keep patting my pocket. I would put my kids in their car seat shut the door and I'm walking around the car to get to my side. And I instinctively, I'm trying to pat to check my, like, why do I need to check my phone in this three second break that I have walking around my car?
Starting point is 00:01:12 It's pretty crazy. And there was just like 100 moments like that where I instinctively wanted to go and, you know, just pull to refresh basically. I needed to go see a feed. It's like, I need to get my feed. And so, you know, it was nice to do that. I found myself doing random.
Starting point is 00:01:25 I was like humming a lot. I read a lot. I was just like, our kids are at, They're kind of picky eaters, and we haven't really taught them to eat very well on their own. And so, like, we feed them every meal, basically still. And so I'm sitting there and I'm feeding them. And normally, I've got my phone. They've got their cartoons.
Starting point is 00:01:41 We're basically all just cartooned up, and I'm just shoving bites of mac and cheese in their mouth. And it really slowed me down. Like, time went way slower, but not in a bad way, necessarily. It was a lot more peaceful, I would say also, was part of the upside of not having my phone. Did you use your computer or Apple TV or cable TV this weekend? So the rule was I don't have to be like without the internet or without any entertainment. I didn't go Amish. I was allowed to watch TV and I was allowed to use my laptop if the opportunity presented itself.
Starting point is 00:02:12 But on the weekends, I'm pretty much fully in dad mode. So we're not, I'm not really on the computer a whole lot. And even just the physical distance of like the computer that's in your pocket all the time versus, okay, I guess if I want to go on the internet, I'm allowed to. I'm allowed to go on Twitter if I want to. But I just have to go to my computer, open it up, type in the thing. And then, like, you know, I could only be on my laptop for so long, basically. So that was a good, a very good break and something I'm going to do a lot more of because I don't like the idea of being addicted to something.
Starting point is 00:02:41 And I would say by any definition, I'm completely addicted to my phone. If I don't have it, I kind of freak out a little bit. I'm like, I got to go get my phone. Hold on. Wait, wait, wait, whatever we're doing? I got to get my phone. I left my phone in the other room. I got to go get it.
Starting point is 00:02:53 And it's pretty crazy that that's the case, finding myself instinctively reaching into my pockets. or like really wondering like, what time is it? Did somebody text me? It's like, who cares? You know, I don't really need any of this. Did you follow the news? Well, that was, of course, the craziest thing is while I'm not on my phone, my wife was like, oh, my God, Trump got shot.
Starting point is 00:03:11 I'm like, oh, man, this is the one thing that like, the craziest news of the world happens testing my resolve here. And so I did get on my laptop a little bit later and check out what was going on and read all the crazy stuff. But I stayed off my phone, so that was good. Have you ever heard of NoFAP November? I like how you just said that as if it's like a scientific phenomenon. Like you were like, have you ever heard of mitosis?
Starting point is 00:03:36 It's when the cell split. Like, you. Like, have you ever heard of non-FAP November? So, like, I think that's a great movement. And they like mix it with humor or whatever. But there's like a reason. Whatever. And so basically for people who don't know, it's just guys who don't jerk off for
Starting point is 00:03:55 November. And I don't know if the. rules are you can't have sex or if it's just masturbation. I don't know what the rules are, but I don't know. Never made it past day two, so I couldn't tell you. Yeah, clearly not into it. We got to have a cute, funny brand for like no phone, weekend, no phone or something like that. You know what I mean? No scroll Sundays. No scroll Sundays is good, but a lot of my Jewish friends and family, you know, they do no phones from Friday evening to Saturday evening. And they all say the same thing. There's like, this is the best. Like, it's, it's wonderful. So we have to, we have to like do a take on
Starting point is 00:04:27 that and we'll have to have some type of a cute way to do like Friday to Sunday no phone. Right. Have you seen people who raw dog flights? Yeah, dude, that is so funny. So explain what it is for people who don't know. So raw dogging a flight is what I think it's mostly men. So men are like, I can't imagine a girl would ever care to do this. Raw dog.
Starting point is 00:04:51 Raw dogging a flight is when it's like when a guy goes out of like a Delta plane. And you know how like when you fly, you see the plane. going across America and that's all you see. And it's guys who will just stare at that for the entire time. No music, no phone, no books. No movies. They just raw dog it. And I think it is the funniest thing going on right now.
Starting point is 00:05:12 I love raw doggy flights. Yeah, yeah, exactly. I think it's hilarious. I'm big on this, though. There's like no, like control your inputs. I think in all all facets of life, right? Control the foods that you put in your mouth. Control the information you put in your mouth.
Starting point is 00:05:27 mind, control the people you let in your world, control the amount of, the number of problems you are willing to make your problem. I think that that is probably the most underrated skill you can have as somebody who's trying to lead a good life is learning how to control your inputs. So we're doing like a little bit of life update. And I was going to say that's one of my updates is I am not really reading the news a lot. And I'm honestly like I don't have Twitter on my phone. The newsman, particularly this weekend when a lot of crazy stuff went down, it is exhausting me. And like current events, I find it to be, it wears me out. And I'm just, I'm trying to refer like mostly to books when I want like entertainment as
Starting point is 00:06:07 opposed to just scrolling through news. It kills me, dude. It wears you out. 100%. And I used to get a lot of shit for this. I haven't, I don't watch the news. I haven't, I never have a news app on my phone. I don't follow like new social accounts typically.
Starting point is 00:06:20 obviously some news just brute forces its way into your world. That's kind of what happened this weekend with the shooting and stuff like that. But for the most part, I completely abstain from the news. And I used to feel somewhat ashamed of that, like kind of ignorant. That just wasn't really interesting. It wasn't very hard for me to abstain from it.
Starting point is 00:06:40 But I called you that. I called you out on that one time. When we were just hanging out off air, I was like, you're not a good citizen. And now I've done a 180. I'm like, no, it's not. important. What's going on like in most cases isn't, isn't important. Well, my trainer gave me a great perspective on it. He was like, it was one of the years
Starting point is 00:06:58 when the election was going on or maybe it was like the state elections or some shit like that. And everybody was talking about voting and every time about it was kind of getting heated as politics tends to do. And he just said something in passing. He was just like, he's like, I don't worry about the government. I'm trying to govern myself. I found that I can't even govern myself. What am I worried about what's going on across the country in Washington, D.C.? I can't govern myself yet. And so he's like, I focused on that. He's, like if we all did that, society would be actually in a much better place if we all learned to govern ourselves a little bit better. And so he when he was talking about the current election cycle,
Starting point is 00:07:28 somebody was criticizing, they're like, oh, well, you know, you're not doing your kind of, your civic duty. He's like, he's like, I don't know about, he's like, I don't know what you think a civic duty is. He's like, I'm in the grocery store. I'm helping the old lady. I'm over here. I'm talking to a friend. I see a kid doing something. I give him a compliment. You know, like there are many ways that you could be a good member of society and just being like fully up to date on the news and having an opinion on everything or like, you know, downloading today's big problem is not necessarily the only way to do it. I kind of like that of like govern yourself first, then be like a positive influence in your
Starting point is 00:08:01 grocery store, in the place around you. That seems like a much better way to actually have an effect than just, you know, siphoning off CNN all day. What else you got in the Life Update corner? Anything else good? For me, so I'm currently in Connecticut. kit where I'm staying for a little while. I go to the beach every morning and I go to the beach most evenings at 8.30 after the baby's gone to sleep. I'm nine months. Walking or what are you doing on the beach?
Starting point is 00:08:27 Dude, I have a scooter, like an electric scooter. It has an odometer. I have sand. What do you mean? No, like I ride from my house to the beach a mile away. I have 2,000 miles on this scooter. I drive it everywhere. Sometimes I'll go two weeks without driving a car. I just drive a scooter everywhere. I'm nine months into having a kid. It's the best. I'm so freaking happy. Like, it's just, I genuinely feel like a happier human being. And I had a little mini, not midlife crisis, but I've been asking myself, like, what's the point of like this or that? Like, I, you ask yourself, I've asked myself about all types of things. Like, why do I care about this? Why am I doing this? Being more intentional. And I think it's because I'm so happy.
Starting point is 00:09:06 Like, when you get happy and you have less of a chip on your shoulder, that's kind of a weird feeling if you've spent years like grinding and things like that. You're saying you're asking the question because you're happy. Yeah, because I'm happy. I'm like, why am I doing this or that? Like, you know what I mean? You start questioning things. So I'm really happy right now.
Starting point is 00:09:23 So that's kind of like the biggest update from me. I'm with you. I got two things. I saw a great Seinfeld clip the other day and it said, it was Seinfeld talking that he goes, you know why I believe in God? And the guy goes, why? He goes,
Starting point is 00:09:35 God made it so that people who don't have kids don't know what they're missing. And that's the nicest thing they could ever do for somebody. And I thought, Wow, that's a really powerful way of putting it because I'm the same way. My cup feels incredibly full just because of what's going on in my house, regardless of really anything else, which not to get too sentimental, but it's pretty awesome. And for everybody who's out there on the fence or, you know, wants to wait or whatever, it really is amazing.
Starting point is 00:10:01 And it is a it is a hard to describe phenomenon how good it feels to just especially like your your kid's pretty young, right? She's only less than a year old. Once they're like two, three, four. you can play with them, it is like such a golden period of time. I do have a life story here. Our life, life, life, life, life hack. What's that?
Starting point is 00:10:21 So we go to a birthday party, kids birthday party. And, um, you know, this is a bunch of three and four year olds running around. And it's at a park and there's a, it's like a park with like a splash area where there's like water coming out of the ground. And we show up and I noticed something. I noticed that there's like all the parents are standing on one side, kind of like standing in the heat, sweating, trying to get shade. just side on kind of like, you know, kid runs up, needs a drink of water, they give him water, and then the kid runs back in place.
Starting point is 00:10:46 And the parents are all making sort of awkward small talk with each other. And you can just see the like, they're looking at the watch. They're ready to get out of there. It's like, okay, we'll be here for an hour, then we've got to go, do the next thing. And so my kids run in and I'm like, I just see like, while we're walking up to the party, I see like a fork in the road. It's like I can take the right path and I can go hang out with these parents. Or I could just go run around with my shirt off into splash pad.
Starting point is 00:11:11 And so, wait, was this during no fat week? I chose the road less traveled. And I went down to the splash pad. And I had so much fun. And I just played with my kids. I'm up in the playground. We're going on a splash pad. We're playing tag.
Starting point is 00:11:26 We're doing like water, like kind of like water fight. And I just have a blast two hours to go by. I look over all the other parents are still just sweating and waiting. And what I realized was like the great parenting hack. Because before I had a kid, I did read. a couple of books about like, you know, what to expecting when she's expecting or whatever. Like, you know, how to be a dad. I want to be good at something.
Starting point is 00:11:47 I'll read a couple books to see if there's any good information there. I now have a book that I'll write, which has one line there which in it, which is don't worry about being a dad. Just be a kid. And the best part about kids is that they keep you fresh. They keep you playing. They keep you. You have to act like you're astonished and things are fascinating to get them excited
Starting point is 00:12:04 about things. And actually it kind of makes you excited and it makes you more curious because you're doing that for them. But the other part of it is the easiest way. to be a parent is to literally just play with your kid 80 to 90% of the time. And sure, 10% of the time you snap back into adult mode and you make sure that, you know, the train doesn't go completely off the rails. But I found that I have so much more fun as a dad if I just lean in and just like completely
Starting point is 00:12:27 play with them all day. And I don't know why more parents don't do this. Like I'm in gymnastics class. I'm doing like literally cartwheels. I'm on the trampoline. Like I'm doing all the things with them. because if I have to be there anyways, I might as well have a good time.
Starting point is 00:12:42 That's contagious for them. They have a better time. I'm in a better mood, which makes me a more patient. You know, like it's a complete life hack. Dude, I can just see you like bouncing around gymnastics and break some kids fucking femur
Starting point is 00:12:52 because you sit on it. Well, definitely not everything is built for for me. So, you know, there's definitely been some, some spills. But yeah,
Starting point is 00:13:01 it's great. Like, I woke up yesterday. I literally woke up. We go to a coffee shop, go to a hit up a, Donut shop. Go to soccer class.
Starting point is 00:13:10 I'm playing soccer in the soccer class. And then after soccer, we just wanted to play some more. So we're playing. And now four other kids just join me. And it's me, my kids and four other random kids that are all just like playing soccer afterwards. Then we go to the pool and we're in the pool for three hours and we come home. They were playing smash cart, which is this like version of Mario cart that my kids are
Starting point is 00:13:27 able to play because they're like toddlers. We're playing that. Then we eat a little bit of dinner. We read some books. And then we go to bed. And it was like, I was just a kid for the whole day. And therefore I had a great day. Are you going to have more?
Starting point is 00:13:38 you've got three, how many more would you want to do? No, my cup runneth over. I'm full. I'm completely happy as is. I don't really feel the need to have any more kids. I've got Sarah bought into three, but in my head, I'm like, yeah, you know, like, but if we're going to go three, like five would be interesting, right? Like, you know what I mean?
Starting point is 00:13:56 I definitely am currently in the more is better at camp, but like I don't have to push it out. So it's easy for me to say, which is, but no, man. Being a dad's awesome. It has completely changed things. I tweeted this out before we had kids like years ago. And I was like, because I had a bunch of friends who were doing psychedelics because they felt lost. And some of them kind of went over the edge where they took too many. And like they started acting a little weird where I'd be like, hey, are you okay? And I just think that having a child kind of filled that void for me where I didn't feel like I needed to do psychedelics because I didn't have a lack of meaning. Right. And so it's been it's been really, it just makes me happy. But you've got a lot of interesting topics. I got a lot of interesting stuff. Okay, so I have three ideas that I want to, want to pitch you. And I'm going to basically tell you about a cool business, and then I'm going to tell you an idea. I think somebody could start that's similar to that cool business. So the first one is sketchy. Have you ever seen Sketchy.com? It is kind of an incredible business idea. I'm sort of jealous I didn't start this business. So if you go to sketchy.com,
Starting point is 00:15:02 what do you see? All right. Learning made unforgettable. Sketchy turns what you need to know into creative visual stories you'll remember forever. Oh, this is awesome. Right. Basically, it's learned to take the MCATs or the medical board exams with cartoons and drawings instead of like boring textbooks. And what they did was they created a Kaplan or like a G, you know, what are the big like test prep Princeton Review?
Starting point is 00:15:28 They created a test prep type of business, but they did two things. One, they focused on a specific niche. So basically med students. So before you get into medical school, you're, school, you want to take the MCATs or after you're in med school, you're going through your, medical classes and then eventually the boards. And second, the twist was they were like, cool, but some people will prefer to learn in a way that's way more visual and way more sort of like visual, friendly, you know, easy to remember rather than kind of traditional learning. And I love
Starting point is 00:16:01 this because, A, that's how I like to learn. That sounds more fun, sounds more interesting. And there's actually like a bunch of science around why we learn better through visuals. The same way, we talked about last time about jingles, how audio, like a catchy earworm is a much better way to remember something. So it's basically storytelling and cartoons to teach you things, specifically for doctors for test prep. And do they make all of the cartoons and you pay a monthly fee?
Starting point is 00:16:28 Yep, that's exactly. Got it. All right. And so this business, I saw this. I was like, wow, this is a great idea. So there's also just like a quick. business. It's like a cool thing to do with your life. It's kind of like Khan Academy. When the guy's like, yeah, actually like I just kind of want to make like a course for every
Starting point is 00:16:45 everything on the internet for free. And it's just me kind of talking and writing things out and trying to explain things. I'm, you know, I'm a pretty good explainer. And that's how he started just explain things to his own nephews or whatever. And then he published on the internet and people liked it. And so I really like this business. Because I think it has like a cool mission. I think it's a cool business model. And I think that it's a fun product. that I'm glad to exist. And what's the business model? Because it looks like educators use that.
Starting point is 00:17:11 So do they, how's it work? Do they work with schools? I'm sure they do a bunch of things. My thinking is that this is, it's very simple. It's your student who wants to pass an exam. That's the bleeding neck problem, right? That's the highest urgency problem. And so they're going to...
Starting point is 00:17:28 Is bleeding? Yeah, I probably can't say that anymore, huh? Is bleeding neck problem your friend? It used to be hair on fire. That's what Dave McClure said. And then somebody said bleeding neck. I like that too. Oh, my God.
Starting point is 00:17:42 All right. So I think that's the thing. Somebody wants to pass a test. They need help studying for it. They see this and they're like, oh, this seems like more fun to do than the other way. And you pay, you know, something like $25 to $50 a month for this. And you sign up for a $6, 12 or 24 month plan. And then you go through it.
Starting point is 00:17:59 You're like, wow, that was actually really useful way to study. And now the next test happens. Maybe it's your board exam. or maybe it's just a really hard course in med school. And so they have like kind of the supplemental thing for anybody on their like med school journey. Wow. And the recent,
Starting point is 00:18:16 the only article I could find about them is in 2020 where it says that they're doing, I think, $8 million in revenue. And then did they also raise $30 million bucks? Yeah, they raised $30 million. It says on their website that 500,000 students have used their thing. That's a lot.
Starting point is 00:18:32 There's a big number. But I think a business like this is, set to dominate a niche. And I think that test prep is a proven business model. This takes a 20% twist on it, which is the visual cartoon thing. And by the way, what amazing name, sketchy.com. I think that's such an awesome name for a business like this. I think this is a great business.
Starting point is 00:18:51 You know, congrats to the people who did this. I think this is really cool. So now, what's the idea? So I tried to convince, do you remember Dylan and Henry, the guys behind Clips, smart nonsense and clipped? Basically, if you don't know them, they're young guys. We met them because they came to our house and built out our podcast studio. They were fans when they're in college.
Starting point is 00:19:11 And then what they started doing was they had their own podcast and they would cut clips. They would cut clips for our podcast. Then they started cutting clips for All In. So right when All In blew up, they were the ones doing the animated clips for them. And so they got popular there. Then they created an agency called Clipped where you can hire like a video editor from them. Like a video editor in the Philippines is a really good animator who can, for a monthly fee be your animator.
Starting point is 00:19:35 And that business is doing well. So I got to kind of like low seven figures of annual revenue. And then they started using their own animators to do their own YouTube content. And they both blew up on YouTube. And so like Henry has like, I don't know, millions of subscribers now on YouTube. And he'll just do like really short form. Shorts are really good. Like I've never seen someone take shorts that seriously.
Starting point is 00:19:56 So for the listener, it's basically him talking. And he's clearly, you got a green screen behind him behind him, because you see all these weird, interesting animations pop up to interact with him and what he's saying. It's awesome. And so those guys are awesome. I really see a lot of myself in them. I don't know how old there are. I think they're like 25-ish years old.
Starting point is 00:20:15 And they remind me so much of how I was when I was 24, 25, 26. And so I really like these guys. And I think they do a bunch of dumb shit, by the way. But that's okay. I did so much more dumb shit when I was there. Is they way ahead of where I was? Like allegedly showing up to a meeting without a shirt on. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:20:32 Well, you can tell that story. That's a good story. I don't remember if it was them, but that seems like something in the wheelhouse. So their genre. The story is we got them a contract with HubSpot to do clips for us and other things. And I guess they showed up to one of the video calls without a shirt on, which is cool by me. Actually, you know, common practice where I'm from. But I guess didn't fly so well in the Fortune 500.
Starting point is 00:20:56 So maybe they lost that contract. I don't know exactly if that was the reason or maybe a contributing factor to the mind. They get a pass. They get a pass because they're like 21 and they've redeemed themselves. So I don't, I think they're doing good. I don't want to show it on. They're doing great. And so I went to them.
Starting point is 00:21:12 I was like, guys, you should make this, but for the SATs. So do this for the SATs or for APs or IB exams. Start wherever you run. But I was like, this is a great idea. And there's no one on earth better built to do this than you two because of their skill set. They're amazing storytellers. they are really good with animated cartoons and stuff. I don't know if you've seen their newsletter,
Starting point is 00:21:34 but they have like an oatmeal style newsletter. It's great. They created this character and they tell great stories through it. I'm like, dude, just do that. But instead of doing it for free for random subjects on the internet, charge for it and do it for something that people are willing to pay for, which is test prep. People need to pass this test and move on to the next phase of their life.
Starting point is 00:21:53 Why would they not do that? That sounds so much better than, I mean, I was in the newsletter business. Newsletter business is hard. This sounds a way better. And I tried to tell them. I was like, guys, if that's okay or good, this is what great would look like in the same genre, like the same work you're doing just applied in a different way. And they were like, we agree with you.
Starting point is 00:22:12 We just don't want to do it. We were going to have more fun doing this other stuff. Like, we don't know what, but maybe these other three ideas. And I was like, hey, honestly, more power to you. Like, you know, that's actually cool. I support you guys in that. But now I can give the idea away for free out here, which is like, I wrote them a business plan.
Starting point is 00:22:26 I wrote them like a Google Doc. And I was like, here's how I would do it. Here's how we'll go to market. Here's the here's that how we'll charge for it. I'll fund it. Like, just do this, guys. This is like, this is how you disrupt a Kaplan or a Princeton review is you take a, you take your black belt that they have in social media content.
Starting point is 00:22:43 Like, they are top 1% level content creators. But instead of competing for free views in the free market of social media, applied in this place that's like really backwards and stodgy and hasn't changed in 30 years, which is test prep for the SATs or test prep for the GMATs or whatever. And so I think somebody could still go do this. I think somebody could take Sketchy and do it in another niche. You could do it in whatever it is, dentistry, nursing, whatever. And I'm sure Sketchy will try to do some of those things. It doesn't matter. I think this is a pie is big enough. And I think if you just take the principles of what they did, I think you could have a lot of success with it. So that's idea
Starting point is 00:23:22 number one. What do you think of that idea? What was sketchy? So that's actually one of the better ones that we've talked about. But sketchy wasn't always sketchy. What were they doing before? Because they launched in 2013 or did it take seven years to get the seven million in revenue? Because that's a pretty I don't know. I don't know their full backstory yet. And then I see, of course, Chernin Group is the one who put 30 million into them. I'm like, God damn. Everything I find that I'm like, ooh, this is cool. This is interesting. I'm ahead of the curve. It's like, oh, like, you know, yeah, Chernin funded us, you know, a year ago. Right. Like, we did an episode on the guy, the gardening guy at Epic Gardening. and I'm like, dude, this guy can be big.
Starting point is 00:23:58 Actually, this could be really huge. I'm trying to tell people, they're like, well, gardening, I've never heard of that. And I'm like, I go to him, I'm like, hey, dude, I will write you a big check. Like, let me fund you. I really believe in you. He's like, we're all good on funding. Churning gave me like, I don't know, whatever, $20 billion. Like a year ago, it's like, oh, damn.
Starting point is 00:24:12 Wow. How are they ahead of me on all of these? I'm going to give this a nine out of ten. I think this is great. I think this is awesome. All right. I think this is a great one. Now, the next one, Babylon B.
Starting point is 00:24:23 Yes. have you lived under Iraq a little bit? I'm not saying this is new, but I don't think for most people they really appreciate this. So if you haven't seen this, it's a satirical news site. So it's like The Onion,
Starting point is 00:24:38 but it's just like a variation of the onion. They have been around for a little while, but they just seem to getting more and more popular. And I think a big part of it is that Elon retweets them a lot. And so if you're on Twitter, you see them because, A, they put out good content, but B, they had like a turbo boost from the most popular guy on Twitter.
Starting point is 00:24:56 And so I've seen this and I'm like, wow, this business model is really interesting to me. It's a media company, but it's got such a different approach, right? So the way a media company grows is you make content that's worth spreading. And so there's a tension there for most companies because you need to write what's going on. You want to be trusted. But then you kind of need to clickbait the shit out of everything to get people to click
Starting point is 00:25:19 and come to your site. And so you're constantly in this like too much clickbait. kind of lose trust. Too much just trust in factuality, too much dryness. Nobody clicks my thing. Nobody shares this. Nobody reacts to it. Nobody gets outraged and reposts it and says, this is bullshit. And then that's what gets people to share. So you kind of want to outrage people or you want to get them to share something, but then you don't want to be overly sensationalist. So they always have this tension. And by the way, so I ran a company that was a media company that made money on advertising. And I hated that feeling that you're describing. I thought email would solve it, a newsletter
Starting point is 00:25:51 instead of a website, which it did. It actually helped. Yeah, the news that comes to you. Yeah, it helped. But I was still mad at that, that existed. So I thought subscriptions will solve that. So we launched a subscription thing that within year one was doing like $5 million in revenue. Still doesn't solve it.
Starting point is 00:26:07 You still got to do the same game. A newsletter monetizes so much better than just a general news website. So like, you know, you could have a million subscriber newsletter. And that business should be doing five to ten. million dollars a year, I would say. Broadstrokes, a million subscribers should get you, you know, five million plus in revenue. If you do a news website and you get a million visitors a month, that ain't shit. You might not be doing anything. So like, you know, the Babylonian B or whatever, the Babylonian B, these guys are, they'll do 25 million plus visits to their site. The biggest
Starting point is 00:26:42 newsletters in the world don't have 25 million subscribers, right? So it's a, or readers. So it's a, it's a different game. It's a volume game when you're trying to get the, you're trying to make a media a destination versus a newsletter. Anyways, I guess the thing I'm trying to say is an underrated part of these media sites is this tension, this inherent tension between trust and viral kind of like spreadability. And so the beautiful thing about this category where you go and you try to be the onion, you do fake news as a service, you do satire, is it doesn't need to be factually correct. So you're only have to win on that one dimension, which is shareability.
Starting point is 00:27:16 And in this case, people will share because it's funny. and it'll share because it strikes a chord with people. And that's why this has spread so quickly. And so the backstory of this is I think it started by one guy. And then he kind of like sold it to the two writers of it. Well, you're missing a big part here, which is so the onion, which is a satire website, although most satirical websites are left-leaning. This one is right-leaning.
Starting point is 00:27:42 I think also has a Christian component to it a little bit. So whereas many of these things tend to be left of center. this is right of center. Exactly. So that's where I'm going to get to with the opportunity. So the guy who started, he calls himself a Christian entrepreneur,
Starting point is 00:27:55 right? And he started off for doing Christian cartoons. And then it became, now the guys you're right, it's more just about it leans more conservative than it does the other way.
Starting point is 00:28:05 But I think there's a lot more, like the world is not just liberal and conservative. There's like a hundred other variations and segments of the market that could be served with this same category. So I'll give you two that I think somebody should go do.
Starting point is 00:28:18 So I think, somebody could go do the far more right-wing version of this. So I think that they're like super right. So these guys, I think, are conservative, but they're still kind of like more centrist than they are full right. But like if you go read like dredge or info wars, like there's a whole appetite in the world for like really drudge. Really far, a drudge, yeah, really far right-wing stuff. So I think you could go do that. But here's another angle altogether.
Starting point is 00:28:45 It's not political at all, which is just do the onion. but only for fake news articles that appeal to just like the millennial mom. And because like, you know, the millennial mom follows a certain set of news subjects. So, you know, you maybe it's a little bit less on sports, but maybe they watch The Bachelor, so they understand the Bachelor memes. Maybe it's that they are following the Taylor Swift stuff.
Starting point is 00:29:08 Maybe it's that they're following, whatever, whatever topics are of interest, do the onion for that category because it's a very valuable category. And by the way, this might exist already. I have no idea. I don't even know how you search for this. But I think that that would be a very successful version of the onion. That's not or of the Babylon B,
Starting point is 00:29:24 which is not political at all. But it's the same thing. It's poking fun at a certain set of popular subjects, but make those popular subjects a different customer than the one who reads the onion or the one who reads the Babylon B. Here's why I know that that's true about the millennial mom. So we had this couple over that have a one-year-old over to our house. And the kids start crying.
Starting point is 00:29:45 And so I go to grab a bunch of toys to, like, entertain him. and like, show them off. I'm like, oh, I bet you haven't seen this thing. And I start, like, using this puppet or whatever.
Starting point is 00:29:52 And the mom is like, yeah, we have this toy. We have that toy. In fact, all of the toys that you have, we have the exact same ones. And I'm like,
Starting point is 00:30:00 well, you guys just clearly follow like the same, like, three people on Instagram and you read the same blog. So you have bought all of the same stuff. And like, I couldn't impress this kid. I'm shocked at how the millennial mother,
Starting point is 00:30:11 like, there's probably like six buckets. And it's like just a different persona for each thing. But for each bucket, it's like, just buy all of it. of this stuff, read all of this stuff. It's so interesting. Do you know what I mean? Yeah, but I think every segment's that way, right? I think there's a Joe Rogan Broh version of that
Starting point is 00:30:26 where it's like, oh, let me guess. Your favorite podcast, Rogan, Huberman, right? Let me guess. You cold plunge. Let me guess. You do this. Let me guess. If you could kind of predict their life if you know one or two things about them and there's, I don't know, a giant cluster of people that will fit that description. Not everybody, of course, but there's a giant cluster of people. That's kind of what you need when you're doing media is you need a giant cluster of people who kind of have a taste match. And so I think you take that business model, apply it to a new segment. And again, this might already exist. It doesn't really matter. You don't have to be the first. You just have to be successful at it, which means just do a good job at it. And I think the way to
Starting point is 00:30:59 start this, by the way, would just be Instagram. You just make an instrument account. You don't even need a website and just make an Instagram account that's doing these kind of like funny news things. Like there's a version of this in sports that I follow where they're just supposed like fake sports headlines that make fun of the NBA. And I think that can be, done so many times over and I think it's probably one of the easiest ways to build a media business. You know what's interesting is the guy who started the Babylon, Babylon B, you said he sold it. His website, his personal website, it's called Adam4D.com. It's all dedicated to webcomics. It's just a web comic website, which is intriguing because that's similar to what, what's his name,
Starting point is 00:31:40 Dylan and Henry do. Yeah. Does who owns Babylon B now? I think it's those Seth and Seth and Dan, there's like these, I think the main writers now. It says in 2018, he sold it to them. He kept a stake until 2023 when he sold the remaining steak to the, to the Dylan brothers. Do you know who owns the onion? Oh, isn't it the guy who started Twilio or something? The guy who started Twilio.
Starting point is 00:32:03 So instead of like rich billionaires, you know, they liked Jeff Bezos bought the Washington Post, one of those Facebook guys bought, I forget some other one. You know, Mark Benioff, I think bought Time. Jeff Larson, I think his name is. he bought the onion, which is actually like an interesting purchase. Yeah, I think that's a great idea, by the way. That's what I like my billionaire is doing, right? Do interesting things.
Starting point is 00:32:26 Go buy the onion. Make sure the onion doesn't die because I think the onion was kind of dying, right? He's trying to save it. He's trying to like reverse it out of like pretty much bankruptcy. Yeah. So the onion has been around, I think, since 1988. So it's been around forever. And it's just like, it's a shit business to have to run for a little while,
Starting point is 00:32:41 particularly in the last like eight years where digital media has just been crap. But yeah, it's hard. It's a hard business. Because also, when you think about what's the media business, it's advertising, who's going to want to advertise on an article that's fake? Do you know what I mean? Like, maybe. I don't know.
Starting point is 00:32:59 I think that if you could curate the right high value audience and they trust your voice to talk about a subject, it's kind of like comedians, right? Why do people sponsor comedy podcasts? It's like, do these guys are vulgar? They're just saying random shit. this is not like smart information, this is whatever. But it's they have a trusted audience. The audience trust them.
Starting point is 00:33:20 And so when they do the ad read, people dig it. That people trust them because they've, you know, they've kept it real and all these other subjects. So I think you could do it there. And I think there's not that big of a gap between, you know, a comedy, you know, brand and a comedy podcast, for example. Yeah, I think the differences is that a lot of people think that the Babylon B and stuff like that. I think they're real and they share them as if it's real.
Starting point is 00:33:42 Do you know what I mean? Yeah. Like, that's actually a massive issue. Let's do the last one. Toxic tampons. Yes. So I saw this tweet about a TikTok that went viral. So there was a TikTok of a woman walking through kind of like a store.
Starting point is 00:33:59 And she's in the aisle, the tampon aisle. And she's talking about, you see all the big brains. She's tampacks. You see whatever. And five million people saw this video because Berkeley released a paper, basically saying, hey, the popular tampons all have toxic metals, arsenic, and other contaminants in them. And so that's concerning.
Starting point is 00:34:21 And so there's like a moment here where I think, I don't know who is the leading player, who's doing native deodorant for tampons? But whoever that is, they're in a good position. And whoever, if nobody's doing it, somebody should go do that. Or even if somebody's doing it, I still think it's a good idea, which is, it seems like there's a general trend of people being concerned about gut health, about microplastics, about, is your water clean or is there like,
Starting point is 00:34:44 you know, contaminants and heavy metals in your water? Well, this seems like another category. That's, I think, going to get transformed, right? I think people are not going to, if you can use the fear and uncertainty and doubt around the safety of tampons, I think you could build a new kind of like alternative clean, clean brand around it. What I'm trying to prevent here is a bunch of dudes talking about shit where like every woman's listening and they're like, yeah, we know we use these eight brands. Do you know what I mean?
Starting point is 00:35:14 So I actually, I have no idea. Could very well be and I would love to be educated. Feel free to DM me. I'll tell you what, in my home, I only see the popular stuff. And in general, like, I don't know, how many $100 million companies, how $100 million your revenue businesses are there that are doing this? There will be, trust me, there will be one. There will be two. There will be three that are in this category. Like the current incumbents will either adapt or be replaced by alternatives that are going to that are going to play on these health concerns. This is not going to go nowhere, right? Look at your detergents. Look at your soaps. Look at your deodorants. This has happened in pretty much every other category. They're going to do it here.
Starting point is 00:35:51 And this is a great product because high margin, repeat purchase. And, you know, like, the other thing is that it's usually women's products tend to be underserved compared to the ideas that most guys have around what businesses that they'll go start. So you kind of can completely. Pete in a less a less saturated field than you know making to do list apps or whatever whatever like the average whatever the average bro idea will be yeah and what's interesting is that with a lot of these brands like they'll they'll be like I need to come up with some innovative new thing and our friend Moy's when he was selling native deodorant the buyer of the company was like well how are you going to expand he's like well can you write the word native on some all natural
Starting point is 00:36:34 shampoo now like yeah he goes that's how you're going to expand Do you guys have a printer to do that? Would you guys be able to type this? If I give you the font, could you type it on a shampoo bottle? Yeah. All right, sweet. We should be good then. And so with a lot of these brains, you don't really need like a significantly more
Starting point is 00:36:53 innovative thing other than you have to be able to make it clean enough that you can accurately describe it as a better for you alternative. But it doesn't need to be a significant thing. And it's not like native eodorant was original. There was plenty of people selling it. they just weren't savvy go-getter entrepreneurs. They were like hippies, you know, who were selling it on Etsy.
Starting point is 00:37:14 And in fact, let's do this. Go to Etsy and look up tampons. Let's just see what's available. I like how you make me do it. So I get targeted for these ads. All natural. There we go. I'm getting some interesting results that are not exactly what I'm looking for.
Starting point is 00:37:32 Is it all natural tampon really like a cup? You know what I mean? Yeah. Not that natural. What I found, but we can take this out of it. So I find this one, right? The Honeypot Company, 100% organic, regular tampons, unscented, organic cotton with bioplastic applicator, no chlorine, no pesticide, no fredits.
Starting point is 00:37:53 I'm like, oh, great. In. In, first review. A very good coffee. I recommend it. All right. Looks like we still got some work to do with this idea. Wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait,
Starting point is 00:38:07 go back to that. What's going on with them? Why is that like that? I think it must be that the shop has other products in it, and that's for the shop. It's like reviews from the shop, not the product. Yeah, okay, the shop has verbal teas and other things too. A tampon coffee company.
Starting point is 00:38:22 Yeah. But anyway, this is my Sunday brainstorm. My Sunday brainstormer was, here's three cool ideas. Sketchy, which is doing visual learning in the medical space. The Babylon B, which is taken off as a satire news website for conservative political news. And then this TikTok that was going viral,
Starting point is 00:38:41 obviously tapped into some concerns people have resonated with the public around the toxicity and the metals and the arsenic that's in the popular tampon brands. And for each, I think you could just take a 20% remix and do it. I think for sketchy, you could do sketchy for another test, another customer segment, maybe it's AP students or it's SAT takers or it's some obscure test. Who knows?
Starting point is 00:39:05 I think you could do it. it for, I think that the Babylon B, I think could be done for other customer groups, other customer segments like the Millennial Mom is the one I would go for. And third would be this dude native deodorant for tampons. And maybe there's somebody doing
Starting point is 00:39:20 it, but this is my Sunday brainstorm of three ideas that maybe they're not great ideas, but they'll at least get the wheels turn into your brain. It's kind of the promise I have here. I think we got to keep your phone away from you from other weekends. This is good stuff. Yeah, this is what happens, but I don't have my phone. I want to talk about one more thing. I don't want
Starting point is 00:39:36 MFM to like talk about politics because I don't think that that's fun and I think this is like a little bit of an escape. I was going to start the podcast with, you know, Sam and I have both sold newsletter businesses. So we feel pretty qualified to chime in here on. Yeah. What's going on in our country and because that's how every like business and tech podcast is. They're just like, you know, as a venture capitalist where I spent my career, you know, investing in early stage tech companies, I just feel pretty qualified to talk to you about what's going on in the Supreme Court right now. It's maddening, man. that's maddening and I don't want to become that. But I saw that you're into Teddy Roosevelt.
Starting point is 00:40:12 Well, I went down this rabbit hole, right? So I'm like, the crazy Trump stuff happens and I'm like, wow, that's crazy. He got shot. I'm like, I wonder how many presidents have been shot at. So I tell you, wait, let me, and let me, don't answer that question. Don't answer that question. But let me tell you something, why I'm happy. I have read not only the biographies of all of those presidents, but also multiple books
Starting point is 00:40:36 on each assassination. And one of my, and so this is why I'm happy that you're able to talk about this. I've walked into your wheelhouse. I've stumbled into your wheelhouse. Welcome home, Sean. One of the reasons,
Starting point is 00:40:47 this is a trivia question that I would ask people all the time. How many presidents and name them who have been assassinated? Virtually no one gets the second two. The first two are easy. So, okay, easy, easy assassinations that I can remember,
Starting point is 00:41:01 let's say Lincoln, Kennedy, right? Those are easy. Yeah. Let's see, what are the hard ones? McKinley, because he died right before Roosevelt. So that was, I think Roosevelt was the VP, right? Is that how that happened?
Starting point is 00:41:17 He became president? I don't remember exactly, but they're in the same ballpark. I don't know if Roosevelt was the VP, but he could have been. Okay, so we'll leave it there. He could have been. And then. Oh, you're right, by the way. I'm looking it up.
Starting point is 00:41:29 Yes, good job. The last one I wouldn't have got, but I see it here in the notes, is Garfield, Andrew Garfield. I wouldn't have got that one. And both of those guys, when they got shot, it was a very solvable problem. So basically up until like the 1910s or 1920s, we didn't really believe or we didn't know that germs were a thing. And most of these guys, when they got shot, they got shot and then you go digging around
Starting point is 00:41:53 with a dirty surgeon's hand or a dirty instrument and they get infections. And that's how they died. Exactly. So like McKinley died like, I don't know, eight days later of gangrene caused by the wounds, not from like the bullet itself, you know, hitting him in the heart or something. Garfield died like six weeks later. So I was pretty mind-blown.
Starting point is 00:42:10 So basically I want to know how many presidents have been shot at, either hit or missed, but a gunshot has been fired at them. Do you know the number for this? I think it's seven or eight or nine, like right around there? 13. Oh, my God. And there's only been 40, what, six presidents, some of that.
Starting point is 00:42:24 So it's basically... A 10% more than that, 25% chance of being shot at if you're a president. Dangerous thing. Dangerous job. Insane, right? And then of those, you know, four have died. The crazy one that I, so there's actually two that I found pretty interesting. So I tweeted about one of them.
Starting point is 00:42:41 I didn't talk about the other one. Can I tell you about the two that I found that were pretty interesting? This is, this is me just beginner level on Wikipedia. So I know you know it was Roosevelt. What's the other one, Andrew Jackson? Jackson, yes. The Jacksonville is crazy. So here's my understanding.
Starting point is 00:42:54 Fill in the gaps for me. So the story is Jackson is going to a funeral. And he's 67 years old. He walks with a cane. He's kind of an old. guy and he's not very popular. He's walking, he's at the funeral, he's walking into the funeral, whatever.
Starting point is 00:43:09 And a guy approaches him with a pistol and the guy shoots at him. The gun goes off, but the bullet doesn't come out. It's a misfire. So the powder explodes, but the bullet doesn't leave the gun. And Jackson becomes angry, charges at him with his cane,
Starting point is 00:43:25 swinging at him with the cane, trying to beat him up with his cane. He almost beat him to death. He almost beats him death. Well, there's a conflicted approach. One is he beat him up and the other ones he misses. And so I don't know which one's true. The other, and then the guy takes out a second pistol, does the same thing, shoots him with the second pistol, also misfires.
Starting point is 00:43:43 Other politicians who are there jump on him, kind of tackle the guy, and they then take both of the guns and they're like, man, we got lucky that this guy, or maybe he didn't really mean to do it, are these fake guns? What happened? We heard the gun fire, but no bullet hit. And so then they shoot the gun again and the bullet comes out. and both guns were actually functioning and they basically said that the odds of both
Starting point is 00:44:06 pistols misfiring and jamming like this was like one in 150,000. That's what they estimated. The odds of that happening are so low. That's pretty crazy, huh? And here's what's even crazier is when up until probably the 1960s after JFK, Secret Service wasn't really much of a thing.
Starting point is 00:44:27 So the Secret Service wasn't a thing. I don't think it was a thing when Garfield got shot, which I think was at 1900, even or so, maybe late 1800s, when JFK got shot, there was only like 150 Secret Service agents. It was not big, and the budget was tiny, and they were overworked and tired all the time. And when Andrew Garfield got shot, after a look at the date, 1881, Lakin was shot 20 years prior. You could still, after Lincoln got shot, you could walk into the White House and schedule an appointment. anyone could go see these guys.
Starting point is 00:45:02 And when Garfield got shot, he was walking from the White House to a train. Him and a buddy were just walking and someone walked up and shot him. It was insane how you could get away with all this stuff. And it's wild to think about that. So the Teddy Roosevelt story was the one that just blew my mind. So the Teddy Roosevelt story goes as follows.
Starting point is 00:45:24 He's supposed to give a speech. He's having dinner. He leaves the dinner. He's getting into his car. And as he's walking up to his car, his car, a guy comes up to him and shoots him and hits him right in the chest. And Roosevelt got lucky for
Starting point is 00:45:38 two reasons. I'm sure you already know. What are the two reasons? I believe the first one was he had his speech in his chest. A 50 page speech printed out and rolled up into his jacket pocket. And the second reason I think is that he was strong. His chest muscles were just like he was a buff
Starting point is 00:45:56 dude. The second one was he had his glasses case, was made out of steel. I was making that up. The bullet went through both of those. So it went through the speech, goes through the glasses case, but it kind of took a lot of the heat off of it.
Starting point is 00:46:08 And it still hits him in the chest. And the story's crazy. He's like, so his secretary was an ex-football player and just tackles the guy. And then he's like, you know, people are swarming.
Starting point is 00:46:21 He's like, no, no, bring him to me. Bring him to me. He's like, I want to look him in the eyes. And he brings the,
Starting point is 00:46:26 they bring the guy up to his face. And he goes, why did you do it? And the guy doesn't answer. He's like, all right, forget it. Take him away. He's like, but no violence on this guy. Like, I don't want this guy hurt in any way.
Starting point is 00:46:36 Like, I want him, you know, through the judicial system. So I put him in the car. And I guess he's like a hunter and like an anatomist, like, casual anatomist. So he's like, you know, I'm not, they're taking him to the hospital. He's like, I'm not coughing up blood. I don't think it's hit my lung. So I think the bullets lodged in there, but I think it's okay because it didn't,
Starting point is 00:46:57 it didn't puncture my lung or my heart. and so he's like, take me to the speech. So he goes and he still he goes and he delivers something like a 50 to 90 minute speech and they have the shirt that he wore and the blood is just soaking out of the shirt
Starting point is 00:47:12 Kurt Schilling style with the sock just as he's giving the speech. They now have this like whatever in a museum and he's giving the speech and he's like, he says, ladies and gentlemen, I don't know whether you fully understand
Starting point is 00:47:24 that I have just been shot, but it takes more than a bullet to kill a bull moose. And that was the line that he gave during the speech. After the speech, he then goes to the hospital. And they're like, they take the x-ray. They see the bullets in there. But the technology wasn't that good at the time.
Starting point is 00:47:40 They're like, look, we could try to take it out, but it's risky. I think this is how McKinley had just died. Well, the technology for the x-ray basically was sort of invented for Garfield. So I forget what the scientist's name was, but around the world's fair time, they were trying to invent x-ray and Garfield got screwed up. and they were like, dude, we've heard that you have this thing.
Starting point is 00:48:01 Can we be your test patient? You've got to find this bullet on Garfield. And so like the x-ray basically, it kind of was being developed because of, yeah, because of this one or two examples. Well, in the end,
Starting point is 00:48:15 the doctor decided just to leave it in because they're like, it's too risky to take it out. And so he lives with it for the rest of his life. And people asked him, they were like, do you feel, do you still have pain from that?
Starting point is 00:48:24 And he's like, it doesn't bother me more than if there was a bullet sitting in my pocket. what a badass. Did you know that he was partially blind because Roosevelt was a crazy person. So he liked to box and he was a man's man. And like there's a story where I think it was one of his aides, but he would a professional boxer would come in and he'd be like, oh, you like the box? No, he would invite people to spar him in the White House. He'd be like, prove it. Let's see. Like, you like the box? Let's box. And he would box with these guys like professionals. And he would like make people get out and they would spar. Well, one time, you know, a guy, I think it was his aid or a partner of his, like, damaged his eye. And so one of his eyes was blind. And during the boxing match, he was like, hey, look, we can't tell anyone about this.
Starting point is 00:49:09 Like, no one could know that we were fighting it here. Otherwise, I'm going to get in a ton of trouble. So he didn't tell a lot of people, but he was blind in one eye. Yeah, he had a detached retina from the boxing match. And then he switched to judo jujuice instead. He couldn't get up. There's also, I guess, some story. It was hard.
Starting point is 00:49:29 I guess when he was born, he was born like with some condition where his organs were like too small for his body or something like that, right? Isn't there something like this? And that's why he was so active. So he was born with like a bad. They were like, you're probably going to die young. They told his parents he'll probably die as a teenager and he'll be in bed most of the time and he'll die as a teenager. And so that's why he was so invigorated with life because they were like, a, he expected to die. And B, his father was like, we have to get you strong.
Starting point is 00:49:57 You have to be strong so you can survive. And so he wanted to exercise and do all the stuff so he could live. And so that's one of the reasons why he was so active. Yeah. There's like, this is like the tip of the iceberg. I think there's a bunch of other crazy stories about Teddy Roosevelt. Also, the teddy bear named after him. Didn't know that.
Starting point is 00:50:15 I believe it's named after him because he was known for hunting, bears and stuff like that. And so one group was like, hey, we'll take you hunting. Turns out they had a bear like chained up to a, uh, a tree. tree or something. And Teddy like sees his poor bear. He's like, no, guys, this is not how we do this. You got to release that bear. And so it was something involving that story involved him having the teddy bear. They call him a bear or teddy bear. He didn't like being called Teddy either. Yeah. I don't think people call him to his face. But there's a whole book called the River of Doubt. And so basically the River of Doubt, you hear that title and you think, oh, that has to do with you
Starting point is 00:50:50 making good decisions or bad decisions and doubting your decisions. No, there was a river called doubt. I think in Brazil that had never been explored after he was president. He was like, well, I'll go, I'll go figure out what's, and let's like, we got to like map that out. Let's make a map. I'll do it. And so he goes and he does this river for weeks or months or something like that. And he almost dies. And this is just him wanting to explore.
Starting point is 00:51:12 There's all these crazy stories about him like a lot of people accuse him of starting a war just so he could go and fight because he had, it was called the Rough Riders. It was his own crew of like these military folks. but no him DMX who else had their own anthem Teddy was pretty hard Teddy was an interesting guy and by the way
Starting point is 00:51:33 he lost the election after the guy does this gives his speech during with a bullet in his chest he ends up losing to because I guess he had his own third party candidate at this stage which is pretty crazy
Starting point is 00:51:45 he was an interesting guy his he also his wife died giving birth and so the same day that his daughter was born his wife died and then in the same house that day his mother died. And he has this story where he said,
Starting point is 00:52:03 he used to journal every day. And that was one day where he wrote in this journal. He goes, The light has left my life. And that's all he wrote. And it's a very touching story. And then he goes on this tear where for the next year he's crazy active. And they go,
Starting point is 00:52:15 why are he being so active? And he writes, ceaseless action outruns depression. And so he was basically like doing all these amazing things in order to outrun the same. sadness of that day. That's wild. Are his journals, like, published anywhere or his diaries or whatever?
Starting point is 00:52:31 He was a prolific writer. So his first book was actually, I think he was in his teens or early 20s. His first book was on zoology. So he used to collect animals and take him apart and explain. Like, he loved Darwin. He was like, he tried to discover species. And he wrote, I think dozens a book. Or if that dozens of book, books like six or eight books.
Starting point is 00:52:50 So he wrote many, many books. So yeah, he was really prolific. So you can go and read all of his writing. He was a really impressive guy. What's the best book on him that you've read? I would read his biography. His biography is amazing because he had a lot of bad shit happen to him in his life. And he was very optimistic.
Starting point is 00:53:05 Wow. What a guy, Billy of the Week, I guess. Well, he was. His father started MoMA. The museum? The museum. His father, James Roosevelt, like, founded that because he was a wealthy guy. No way.
Starting point is 00:53:16 But Teddy Roosevelt, by the way, horrible businessman. He was a horrible businessman. That was the one thing that he sucked at. He, like, would invest in, like, horses and stuff. and he would start ranches, really bad businessman. He blew a lot of money. Was he a good dude overall or a bad dude, right?
Starting point is 00:53:31 Because he's definitely like a sort of man's man in all these interesting ways. It has like legendary feats. He really lived a very interesting life. But character-wise, was he a good guy? I mean, I've never read anything about besides this. I think he had strong character. I have one massive critique of him. And this is kind of where the phrase,
Starting point is 00:53:48 all great men can be bad men. For example, he wasn't, I felt like the most present father. So when his wife died, he goes to North Dakota or whatever to do his thing, the bad lands to do his thing.
Starting point is 00:53:58 He left his newborn daughter for like a year and a half. And you could say like, maybe he was like suicidal and depressed and he's like, I got to get away. And you could argue that. But he kind of wasn't always around
Starting point is 00:54:08 for his daughter, I felt. But in general, he had high character. Yeah, he was a good dude. Interesting. All right.
Starting point is 00:54:15 Well, I think that's a fascinating podcast. I'm so glad that you have this. You and Shane Gillis, by the way, why is Shane Gillis like such a history like PhD? He has a history major. He studied history.
Starting point is 00:54:29 I'm a biology major. Couldn't tell you three things. How does he know? He knows a lot about history, like too much about history. Yeah, he knows way more than me. He has a good series of history podcasts and he's really talented at it. I think it's really fun to read stories. So like you'll read in the biography about Andrew Jackson,
Starting point is 00:54:50 beaten up this guy and you're just reading it, but then you can take this other thing of like, put yourself there and you're like, that's hilarious. Or not hilarious, but that's wild. That's someone who would do that. And so it's fun to read in between the lines and actually imagine some of these stories. I think it's fascinating.
Starting point is 00:55:04 I think it's also cool to avoid the mistakes that people make and just copy the winnings that they do. I don't read any biographies. But I read a lot about people. And I don't know what a word for this is, but I basically will study the ideas and the ideas and kind of like core plot lines, but I don't care where they grew up, how they grew up, who they grew up with, what the scene was like, what their family life was like.
Starting point is 00:55:33 I don't really care about a lot of those things. And so I find myself fascinated by people, but I really want to know their philosophy and then the action of how they implemented that philosophy, like the stories of them implementing that philosophy, or living up to that philosophy or failing on that philosophy. That's really all I care about, which is like a very weird subgenre of studying history or these people. Well, let me give you two recommendations.
Starting point is 00:55:58 So the first recommendation is a book called Manhunt, The 12-day chase for Lincoln's Killer. The reason it's interesting is because you've heard the name John Wilkes Booth. That's the guy who assassinated Lincoln. He's an intoxicating character. He was sort of like a cult leader. He was a famous actor, not quite, but almost like Brad Pitt at the time. where everyone recognized him.
Starting point is 00:56:19 He was a celebrity? He was a celebrity. And he was a bad dude, like crazy racist. He was a horrible guy. But he definitely had this intoxicating, like, I want to follow you to the death type of vibe where he was really charismatic. And he entranced people. And so the Lincoln assassination, by definition, was a conspiracy.
Starting point is 00:56:36 It was a group of like 30 people who worked together to make this happen. Conspired to do this. Yeah. And he was gone for 12 days. So they assassinated Lincoln. And he escaped for 12 days. And he almost got away. with it. He was very closely getting away with it.
Starting point is 00:56:50 And so the 12 day, Manhunt, the 12-day Chase for Lincoln Killers is a book about the 12-day Manhunt. And it's a very good page-churning read. It's very easy. The second one is hellbound. And it's about the assassination of MLK. A lot of people don't know this, but James Earl Ray, the guy who shot MLK, and MLK was a great dude.
Starting point is 00:57:07 He had some downfalls. He cheated on his wife a bunch, but he was a net positive. He was a great guy in general, but he had flaws. James Earl Ray shot MLK and he not only did he escape he escaped for months so basically when he shot MLK he escaped to I think he shot him in Memphis and then he drove all over America then he went to Quebec and then he went to Europe and when he was in Europe he was flying around from country to country and the only reason he got caught was he was in London on his way to Rhodesia Redisia which is basically South Africa at the time
Starting point is 00:57:39 it was run by a racist regime and he was like they're going to accept me with like wide arms because I just killed MLK they're going to love me he gets through security. Once he walks through security, the security guard who lets him in, he says, thank you, sir,
Starting point is 00:57:53 and looks down. And he sees that he has an additional passport in his pocket. And they're like, whoa, whoa, whoa, dude,
Starting point is 00:58:00 why do you have two passports? And they pull it out. And they're like, oh, shit, the one you gave me was fake. I just got the real one. And he was seconds away
Starting point is 00:58:08 from getting away from all this. He was gone for roughly six months. He was gallivanting all over Europe. He was all over Canada. He was very close to getting away. it. And a lot of people don't realize that about that story. And that book, I believe is called Hellbound. Also a Page Turner. So if you want to read about
Starting point is 00:58:22 assassinations, those are my two favorite assassination books. Dude, we should make a, you know, like Blue Ribbon when you were a kid or whatever. She's just have our own list of like books that we think are awesome that and some commentary around them. Like I wish we just had our own.
Starting point is 00:58:39 We should just make a separate YouTube channel of just us doing like a book club or doing like read a book, talk about it. and curate for people like the books that we think are just like really unbelievable books for the year. Yeah, I would love to do that. Those two rank really high. Those are some of like I go through series. So like I got obsessed with shipwrecks. So I read like 10 books all on shipwrecks. I can tell you like, in my opinion, what is something cool of shipwrecks? And then I did assassinations of famous people. And the reason why I love these books and the reason why I think you don't like biographies. Biographies don't have a very good beginning and a middle and an end. Whereas I try to read books that are about an event
Starting point is 00:59:16 Because an event typically has a beginning in the middle and an end Where it's more succinct as opposed to 1,200 pages And so I like books that are on events, Particularly events in America So I can relate a little bit more All right, this was fun I'm glad we did this at the end here That's the pod
Starting point is 00:59:33 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 Black line.

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