My First Million - The guy who gets paid $80K/yr to do nothing
Episode Date: October 2, 2024Episode 634: Sam Parr ( https://x.com/theSamParr ) and Shaan Puri ( https://x.com/ShaanVP ) talk about Shoji Morimoto, the Japanese guy who’s making $80k/yr renting himself out to friendless peopl...e, Autopilot’s viral marketing stunt, PLUS how to make $1M in 8 weeks. — Show Notes: (0:00) The Do Nothing Man: $80K/yr for doing nothing (4:23) The new male situationship (11:24) Setting long term intentions (14:06) Non-sexual companionship-as-a-service (21:52) Professional grievers (24:18) Autopilot’s badass marketing stunt (32:37) Blue Collar Side Hustle: Porch Pumpkins ($1M in 8 weeks) — Links: • Rent a Friend - https://rentafriend.com/ • Papa - https://www.papa.com/ • Sugar Daddy - https://www.sugardaddy.com/ • Autopilot - https://www.joinautopilot.com/ • Porch Pumpkins - https://porchpumpkins.com/ — 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 — 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 The HubSpot Podcast Network // Production by Arie Desormeaux // Editing by Ezra Bakker Trupiano
Transcript
Discussion (0)
All right, Sam, I got to tell you about this.
There is a guy in Japan, who I read about, who is making $80,000 a year for doing nothing.
I feel like I can rule the world.
I know I could be what I want to.
They called him the do nothing man.
Have you ever heard of this guy?
No, what did you read about this?
Well, I originally saw it, I don't even know where.
I saw it somewhere.
and I was fascinated because what happened is this guy was at work and his boss called him a do
nothing man and he like was insulting him as like dude you just do nothing you don't really add
anything you don't provide any value and he says that he thought to himself and he goes
hmm is there value in society for a man who does nothing and he went online and he posted a tweet
saying I'm car I'm starting a new service it's called rental
people who do nothing.
And it's basically was like, I will be a companion, a friend who will do nothing.
So what this guy does is you rent him out and he'll go hang out with you and he says
nothing.
It's pretty much a silent companion, completely non-physical, non-sexual, basically an introvert
for hire.
And so what people do is they will either they have a task, they need to go do like an errand,
they need to run or they just feel really lonely and they just want somebody to have some
tea with them.
And he'll come and he'll sit.
and he'll sit and he won't really say anything.
And if you ask him a question,
he'll give you a simple answer,
but it's really just the presence of another human body.
And this guy made $80,000 in a year,
renting himself out.
Then he wrote a book, a memoir called
The Man Who Did Nothing or Rental People Who Do Nothing.
And he's continued to do this now for years.
So he did it before COVID.
Did COVID hit so he couldn't do it.
And then he started it back up again.
And now he doesn't even charge for the hangout.
he used to charge $68 for a session.
And now he just says,
just cover the food and travel,
and then I'll hang out with you for free.
And so he travels around and he gets paid for his food
and his event tickets and all the things that people want to do with them.
And this is what this guy does.
Isn't this fascinating?
I'm reading the comments on his Goodreads account for his book.
What were the reasons why people wanted to hang out with him?
Well, so this was pretty fascinating.
So I was wondering this too.
I was like, why is there a need for this?
And I guess in Japan, there's a loneliness epidemic.
It's kind of crazy.
They have words for this that we don't even have words for.
So have you ever heard this term like Heikikomori?
You know, I haven't.
I've not heard that term.
Has it come up in Connecticut?
No, I've not heard that word before.
That's a new word for me.
So it's a word that they have for severe social withdrawal.
It's total withdrawal from society.
So typically, it's kind of like in cell in the states.
So typically it'll be, it's mostly men who are living at home, still in their parents' home,
but they are completely recluse.
They don't work.
They don't socialize.
And there are like estimated two million men in Japan that are in this category.
For six months, they basically have not engaged with anybody in society.
So that's like kind of one problem is this growing trend of Hikikikomori.
And then there's another word, I think Kodokai.
Kushi, which is, it's basically death without being cared for.
So it's like older people who are dying and then they find their bodies like five months
later because they were so socially isolated that nobody knew that they passed away.
And this is like a number that the last 10 years has doubled.
I think 70,000 people died this way where they're found weeks or months later.
And these trends are all like very concerning.
So like in Japan, single person household.
So, you know, no, no wife, no family members, no friends.
just living alone by yourself is now 38% of the population,
which is,
that's like triple where it was like five or seven years ago.
They appointed a minister of loneliness in Japan because this has become such a big problem.
And so this guy doing this is almost like an art statement in a way about this
to bring awareness to this huge problem that people are just really freaking lonely in Japan,
everywhere, but really in Japan, it's even more heightened.
Dude, let me explain something to you that's very similar to this.
and I want to hear your opinion of this premise that I have.
And I also, I think it's a good premise that I think a lot of people can learn from.
So I don't live in Austin anymore.
I went and visited it again for a wedding.
And I realized how lucky I was to have a community there of just the best people on Earth.
I consider them family.
Dude, I saw your Live, Laugh, Love post where you posted a picture with your friends and you said,
this is wealth.
And I thought, he's not wrong.
He's not wrong.
but he's also not Sampart.
What is going on?
This is wealth.
What new era have you entered?
I've entered a very special era.
I'd let me explain.
Listen, it's weird.
Ever since having a kid,
the things that I thought I cared about,
I don't care about as much.
And so I realize I'm kind of like going all into this like emotional side of like
caring about others,
whatever,
all that stupid shit.
Yeah.
But listen.
So.
We can't even say it.
It's like her to say the sentence,
but we believe it.
Yeah. So before, so I basically lived in San Francisco and I moved from San Francisco to Austin. My best friend at the time, Neville Madora, he lived there. And I had this conversation with him before I moved. I go, Neville, I'm thinking about moving to Austin. One of the big reasons I'm moving is because of you. I want to be with you. I want to be near you. Would you be willing to? I want to be in you. I want to be in you. You can say. You can say. I didn't know what you're going with that one.
Yeah. It goes a better way than the, then.
that one way. And so if I do this, would you like commit to like us like living a life together
like with our families and like and that sounds weird. But I did that. And it worked wonderfully.
So we had there was about four other couples where we had this conversation where we're like,
let's live life together. Like you can count on me. I'll count on you. Whatever. And when you think
about that, that's strange. But if you really dive deep, it's actually not that weird because that's what
you did with your girlfriend probably. Like you're like, hey, so should we put a label on this?
you know what I mean?
And you do a girlfriend a boyfriend and then you make a huge ordeal to where you get engaged.
You get down on one knee.
And there's like a there's like a big like epic thing where like you were boyfriend and girlfriend.
Now you are officially a fiance.
And then you get married where you basically, you know, talk about.
Yeah.
You take a vow in front of people who have flown from around the world to witness this vow.
And that's normal.
But we don't really do that with friends.
And so I've recently moved in order to be closer to family.
And so now I'm trying to develop friends in a new town.
And I'm starting to go to them.
And I'm having this formal conversation.
And it really weirds people out right away, by the way, obviously.
But after a few minutes, the men in particular, they're like, oh, I kind of get this.
And it kind of feels nice.
It kind of feels nice to like talk about how we're going to do life together, how we can counter each other.
Or like to set, you know, to define the relationship.
What is it that you're saying? Let's, let's make this real.
So what are you actually saying?
So here's what I'm saying.
what I'm saying is what this guy in Japan is experiencing is this lonely thing.
And you're talking about people living by themselves, 38% of the time.
You're talking about people dying and for weeks not being found.
What I'm saying is I think a lot of people experience loneliness.
And I think one key way to get over, particularly men, men in particular, once they approach
their 50s and 60s, you basically never make a new friend again.
Just like you never go to the doctor, you don't go to the dentist, and you don't make new friends.
But I think there are ways around this, and it's around having these formal conversations.
And in particular, one extreme example is to move places just for the sole reason of this friend being there.
Do you know what I mean?
I know exactly what you mean.
But I guess what I'm saying is what is the conversation you're having with people, especially new people.
So I get the Neville one because he was already a really close friend from San – he was in San Francisco, right?
That's where you guys is originally became friends.
No, he would spend his summers in San Francisco.
and we would like hang out and then he would go back to Austin
because Austin was on very
so you guys were already really close and you're like hey
I want to move there and I really like I'm kind of moving there for you
or I want to move right really close to you and like let's do life together
and I'm a big fan of this.
I've said this before.
One of the most impactful things that's come out of this podcast
was a guy named Mike Brown came on the pod and he said
I was asking about going into business with his brothers
and he goes to me that's the point of life.
You find the people you love and you do life with them.
And that became like a very simple
operating philosophy for me.
So I'm a definite believer in that.
What are you doing now with new people?
Because I'm curious how that conversation goes
when it's not somebody you've already been friends with
for five or ten years.
I've only done it once so far.
And I just kind of like...
I hope they're listening.
Dude, it's weird.
Like, it's definitely like,
it's definitely weird.
But I'd be like, hey, so,
you know, I'm looking to, like,
have, like, close friends who I can rely on.
And I want to let you know that, like,
you are that to me right now.
where I hope I can rely on you for important things.
And I'm going to let you know that you can rely on me for stuff.
And like, whatever I have, you can use whatever I have.
I got your back no matter what.
And I know this sounds weird and everything, but I'm looking to do life with someone.
And it seems like you and your wife might be that person for me and my wife.
And I make jokes about it.
And I realize how silly this sounds.
But it was actually really great.
It made me feel really good.
This is like how swinging starts.
So actually, I have a sort of related story.
One time I was doing an angel investment, a deal.
By the way, we need a word for this.
You were saying in Japan, they have a word for it.
We need a Japanese word for it.
We need a Japanese word for this.
Because when you don't have words to label these things, we need to define this word.
It's got to be explicitly heterosexual, explicitly not involving swinging.
It's got to be like some type of reciprocity or like, I'm willing to give more than 50% to this relationship.
Do you know what I mean?
Like this idea of like a good relationship,
you'd be willing to overgive.
So I just went into to Google Transline.
I wrote male friends that don't have sex.
And it says,
Sikusu no Otoko Tomodachi.
So I think that's the current phrase for it,
Tomodachi for short.
All right.
What were we saying about angel investing?
So I was trying to do an angel investment.
This was maybe, I don't know,
12 years ago or something.
And I had no money.
And I wanted to invest in this company.
And I'd finally realize like,
oh, I have friends who have money.
And I could probably go to them.
and I could probably pitch them a deal.
And if they do the deal,
they'll probably give me a little piece of the upside if it works out.
And so I go to a friend,
I go to my buddy,
Suli,
and I say,
hey,
I want to invest in this company.
He's like,
all right,
great,
let's do it.
I mean,
he's like,
cool.
So for the economics of this,
like,
how do you want to do this?
And I was like,
I don't really know.
What's the norm?
He's like,
well,
the norm is probably this where you would get,
you know,
like 10,
15% of my carry.
But,
you know,
we could do whatever you want.
and I was like, well, you know, I just want to make sure you're, you know, it's fair.
I was kind of thinking of transaction.
I was like, I just want to make sure this is fair.
Like, I don't want to, I don't want this to be, you know, one sided or the other.
And he goes, let's make it one sided in your favor.
And he goes, I don't care what happens on this deal.
What I care about is us doing deals together for the next 20 years.
And first of all, it was not just hollow words because he was giving more action on the deal to me that he did not need to.
I wasn't asking for it.
He just, you know, did that on, on his own.
The second was the way he signaled that like, hey, I'm looking for 20 years of doing stuff together was kind of intentional and new in a way that I hadn't really heard.
And then I started doing that with other people.
So when I met up with Ben and I was like, hey, you want to do this project together?
He's like, yeah, we did a project together.
It went great.
Want to do another project together.
We did another project together.
It went great.
And I was like, hey, let's start a business together.
But what I told him was I was like, I think you're awesome and I think we work really well together.
I want to, like, I want to be in business with you for 20 years.
So let's basically only make decisions that will increase the likelihood of us doing this together for 20 years.
And that really changed the game.
So that one little way of being intentional that this, I want this relationship to go beyond this transaction, this moment in time and saying like, I think you're awesome.
And I want to be doing stuff with you for a long time.
That has really helped me or changed the way that I viewed things, but also the way that other people receive it.
Because then they know they know that I'm putting my foot.
forward and saying, yes, I think you're awesome and I could see us doing plenty of things together.
Let's do this for the long haul, which I think settles everybody down and gets everybody out of a
sort of selfish or short-term mindset.
Just a bunch of guys being dudes, you know?
That's what it comes out to.
It's just a much of us guys.
We want to be dudes.
Tomodachi, baby.
Tomodachi, okay?
Let's just be bros.
You want to be bros?
I'm celebrating that.
Okay, so here's some, I guess, like, related.
things to this. So back to this guy, by the way, this
Shogi Morimoto. So this guy, 39 years old, look at his Twitter.
His Twitter has 420,000 followers. He's gotten like very
famous off of this. He said that before COVID, he was making $300 a day.
So he's doing this $68 a session, whatever.
And he was just going to coffee shops and playing video games and doing,
you know, random stuff with each other.
Dude, he's hard, Twitter's harder. These Japanese, I'll tell you what,
they got a different word for everything.
Okay. So his service is called rental people who do nothing.
So I started thinking, do we have this here?
Because loneliness is not a only Japan thing.
Obviously, it's everywhere.
And actually, there are some things like this.
So go to rentafriend.com.
I don't know if you've ever seen this.
No, you know what?
Sean, I'm proud to say I haven't actually been on this website yet.
Friends seeking friends.
Okay, so now type in, like just type in San Francisco and click search.
and then you're going to see just like a huge list of totally platonic friends who are down to hang out and just have a day together.
It's pretty wild that there's this whole, I didn't even know this existed.
It's Craigslist for Friends. It's pretty cool, right?
And it actually has a lot of traffic.
You know, this is a little suss.
There's a lot of pretty women with full body shots on here.
Yeah, this might be like I found a laundromat and I'm like, this place is doing a huge amount of business.
And it's like, well, it's not just a laundromat, right?
Like, they're laundering other things besides clothes here.
So I don't know exactly the social norms here, but I'm going to take it at face value, that this is rent a friend.
That is truly for friendship.
And I've read some articles of people doing this.
And what they said was they were like, you know, it was actually in some ways kind of nice to have just someone on demand that I could go do this thing with, maybe a plus one for an event or to go to a concert together or whatever it is.
didn't want to go by myself, but I still wanted to go.
They were like, but the other side of it was, it had this weird dynamic.
It was like, wait, by the way, does rent a friend mean I pay them money?
Yeah, you pay the money to hang out.
Sean, this is like where you get a hooker.
This is like, there's Valerie odd here is like in a bikini.
And she's 20 and like really good looking.
It might be.
But I read this article on like whatever, Vox or whatever.
Somebody went and they did this.
So they rented a friend on this site.
And so they what they said was they were like, yeah, it was, you know,
I paid for this person to come hang out with me.
They're like, you know, one of the things.
and they talked to them about the other jobs that they've done.
They're like, yeah, it's a lot sometimes for older people or it's for, you know,
somebody who's, you know, just sort of been very busy with work, hasn't really developed
their social life.
And one of the things that they talked about was like, it made me a more rude person
because they're like, oh, if I'm paying you, then this is all on my terms.
I'm going to, we're going to do what I want.
And they're like, there are some downsides to, like, there's upsides of, wow,
this companionship on demand.
And on the other side, there was some downsides, which was like, the power dynamic was
off.
I was too aware, at least the journalist was like, I was too aware of the differentiation
name. So that's one business. There's another one that you've probably heard of called Papa.
Do you know Papa? No, it's Papa. This is for your grandparents. So it's basically a lot of people
have grandparents who are alone, they're both lonely, but also kind of need help, like maybe
little errands that they can run or somebody to help them when they're going to the store just
in case anything happens or to make a little easier to move around.
And this was a Silicon Valley startup that was basically like you pay for,
you pay for basically like a task grab it specifically to help the older people.
And it's something less than kind of like a live in care,
but it's more than me once a month calling my grandparents.
And so this company was,
I remember when this came out,
it was sort of this crazy idea.
And it was backed by some investors.
I remember Alexis Hanna and the guy who created Reddit, he backed it.
He said something like,
there's 11,000, you know, boomers that are retiring like every day or something crazy
like that. Some huge number. And he's like, you know, our aging population is growing very fast
and we're going to need services that are going to help them. And this company is valued
over a billion dollars. Holy shit. I'm looking at their funding. They've raised hundreds of millions,
$250 million. At least $250 million. Yeah. SoftBank put a bunch of money into it. And they were valued
at $1.4 billion. And it's literally a sort of like on-demand companionship for,
older people. Dude, have you ever met a sugar baby?
Have I ever met a sugar baby?
I think I have, but I don't know if it was like official or if it was just like a
like, you know, there's like the website where it's like this is an official arrangement
and then there's like, you know, just the, it's just happening in the wild. So I think I just
met someone who is happening in the wild. So there's sugar daddy.com where you like go
and you meet someone and it gets a lot of traffic. And I would,
We've got to go incognito for this one.
Let me just make sure I don't get targeted for ads for the rest of my life.
I was talking to my wife about this the other day because she somehow knew someone who was a sugar baby or or and I think there's like reality TV shows about it too.
Yeah.
Yeah.
You definitely have seen because you guys have like the same TV taste.
But I actually think that this is like a fairly fair trade.
As long as it's consensual, obviously.
But I'm shockingly on board with having a sugar.
baby. Like, if you're, if you're an old guy and you just want to, and like a lot of these guys,
they literally just want a companion. They just want someone to be there for them and things like
that. And it's not always like, you know, as weird as it sounds. It's no different than wanting
to rent this Japanese guy to come hang out with you. Yeah. And, you know, I don't really have
any judgments on this. Like, I don't, I've never experienced this. I don't really know the lifestyle.
I try not to be, you know, too judgmental things I don't really understand. What I'm
fascinated by is just this phenomenon. And again, like, I don't, uh, I don't know. I
remember when I first moved to Silicon Valley, I met the guy who was the first PM at Twitter.
And I asked him, I was like, man, that's amazing.
You picked Twitter really early on.
There's only 14 people there or something like that at the time.
How did you know?
Was it obvious that Twitter was going to be a big deal?
He goes, no, everybody thought Twitter was weird, stupid, useless, just like a strange thing to do.
And he goes, I remember when I joined, somebody asked me, why do you join?
He goes, because you can't deny the phenomenon.
Meaning, when you observe people doing a behavior that kind of makes no sense or seems odd, seems strange, seems weird to you, the natural inclination is to push that away and be like, oh, that's stupid, that's weird.
And you sort of resist it.
And he goes, as an investor or somebody, you know, where we worked in the technology space, you want to lean into the phenomenon.
You want to understand, wow, why is it that people are watching other people play video games, Twitch, right?
Why is it that people are just texting out to a random group of strangers what they're having for lunch, Twitter?
Why is it that people are getting into strangers' cars instead of taxis, Uber?
Why are people sleeping on other people's couches instead of hotels, Airbnb?
All of the biggest winners tended to be these weird behaviors, things that's either broke a social norm or sounded a little sketch.
And once you sort of wrap that into a more safe and acceptable behavior,
unlocked a pretty big market.
And so I've always tried to have,
I've tried to learn to have a more open mind about this stuff.
And so would I be surprised if the way that getting into people's,
you know, sleeping on couches or getting into strangers' cars,
like would I be surprised if companionship as a service,
like totally non-sexual companionship as a service was a big deal?
I would absolutely not be surprised because I think that probably by default,
most people are lonelier than they want.
Yeah.
And I actually think that this is not a new phenomenon.
I think that it's a phenomenon.
It's a thing that's always existed.
Now, let me get biblical on your ass.
I was raised Catholic, so I went to Catholic school my whole life.
So I had to read the Bible all the time.
Did you ever read the story about Jesus?
And I was like carrying the cross up like the hill or something to like, you know, to be executed?
No, I didn't read that one.
Well, yeah, I don't know.
It's like part of culture a little bit.
But like there's a at one point, there's like a line where like these professional women
or these women who are professional,
I think they call them whalers,
but basically these women who are hired
to come cry at a funeral
to grieve to make you feel
like you're not the only
one there to grieve for this person.
And he like dismisses them
and he's like, you know, don't
get this out of here.
His direct quote was like,
get that nonsense out of this out of here.
Something like that. No, but I actually think that is
a thing at funeral home, by the way,
at funeral homes where like you have like
a griever who will come and make and fill the room.
You know what I'm saying?
But these types of things have been around forever.
And so I don't actually think it's particularly a new phenomenon.
I think we've always felt this way.
Now there's just interesting platforms to help solve the problem.
Right, right.
It's like those, there's like these marketplaces now online to rent a crowd.
It's like, oh, you need a crowd.
People who either love you or protesting you, push this button.
I'll get you 30 people in a crowd today.
Right.
and, you know, politicians use this
and brands use this.
It's a easy, technology made it easier to coordinate.
By the way, there's a great tweet.
Have you seen it where he's like, hey,
I'm willing to show up looking like a mob boss
at anyone's funeral, just so your friends and family feel like,
man, you really have some shit going on, but they didn't know about.
Dude, I bet you the rent-a-friend CEO or like company,
they're listening to this podcast and they're like,
oh, that's so cute.
Sean thought that we were just so you could meet friends.
and not for prostitutes.
Friends is in air quotes.
Aw.
By the way, if it's not friends,
that's just me being me.
Naive old me.
Just sucker for whatever you tell me, okay?
I believe in humanity.
There's hundreds of thousands of people right now
collectively saying,
aw.
Could I tell you about another thing
that I saw that I think you might have seen
as well because it happened at a UFC event a few weeks ago.
I've been meaning to talk to you about this.
Yeah, what?
Did you see at the recent, I think it was at the sphere event?
Did you see a very interesting advertisement on one of the, on the post during the UFC?
Are you familiar with what I'm talking about?
I saw what you were talking about, but I don't know enough to like riff on it.
I mean, explain it and then maybe I'll remember.
I'm watching the UFC pay-per-view, and it's their first event at the sphere in Las Vegas.
and I heard you bought tickets for it.
Yeah, that's another story.
How I actually ended up paying $15,000 to not go to the sphere event, which is a big L for me.
Wait, you paid $15 grand for tickets?
So speaking of friends, I was like, hey, let me buy tickets for the sphere event.
I heard Dana White talking about it.
And I was like, oh, wow.
He says this is a one and done.
It's going to be something like you've never seen before, blah, blah, blah.
So months ago, I just go online and I buy six tickets to the sphere.
I think it was like after the ticket master fee was like $25, $27,000 or something like that.
Oh my God.
All right.
And then I emailed a bunch of people who I haven't hung out with either ever or recently.
And I was like, hey, do you want to come to this event?
And they were like, yeah, this is awesome.
And so some of them said, yeah, some of them said, oh, I'll try.
Let me see if I can make it work because there's still months out.
And then a bunch of things happened.
Two of the people couldn't make it for like medical reasons.
The card for the sphere got way worse than it was supposed to be.
It got way worse.
I myself had just gotten sick like the two weeks prior to it.
And so I'd like had just come off of like not being helpful at home to like, oh,
wait, now I'm going to go on a trip to Las Vegas after this.
Not really the best game plan for me.
And the ticket prices dropped like crazy.
So we ended up selling the tickets for like, you know, a third or something of whatever
I paid for them.
So yeah, not a good win for me.
But a great story that I got to tell here.
So that was that.
So then I'm watching it on TV.
And I see on the post behind all the fighters that says, invest like a politician.
Invest like a politician.
What is that?
That is kind of an amazing hook.
And I realized, oh, this is that app that I've been following for a little while.
This guy, Chris, he's behind this app called Autopilot.
And he came and he went on Twitter and he explained this thing that they were doing, this stunt that they did around the UFC.
So they sponsored the invest like a politician,
but they did a lot more than that.
I just think it was a badass marketing stunt that I wanted to show.
Yeah, he did like the Tesla, the cyber truck.
So check out this thread.
So look at the photos in this.
And if you're listening on audio, go to YouTube and watch this thing
because you've got to see the clips of this.
All right.
So what they did was they hired.
So I guess the premise of autopilot, I should say,
is it's a investing app.
But it's kind of like you basically pick who you want to.
to follow their portfolio and you will invest.
Let's say I wanted to just mimic Warren Buffett's portfolio.
I want to mimic some famous trader's portfolio.
I could do that.
One of the traders that they follow is Nancy Pelosi,
who everybody kind of knows is a legendary trader in her own right.
And so what they did was for the sphere event,
they found a fake Pelosi impersonator.
Do you see her there?
They find her on TikTok and they hire her and they put her through hair and makeup.
up and then she she goes to,
they fly her to Vegas and she goes to the event.
And before the event,
she starts interacting with all these influencers.
So they go get Mike from,
you know,
the impulsive podcast.
And she's hanging out.
She's playing blackjack with Mike.
And then she meets up with the knelt boys.
And the elk boys are like,
holy shit,
it's Pelosi and they're playing blackjack with her.
And then she gets,
then she's in the crowd when Sugar Sean O'Malley walks out.
And she's in this hot pink pants suit,
power pants suit like Pelosi.
And it gets freeze frame.
and everybody's like, holy shit, is Nancy Pelosi at the UFC?
And all these people are tweeting about this.
And then she doesn't look like her at all.
This model or actress is way better looking.
It's like hot Pelosi.
Yeah, she's like way hot.
It's actually kind of like Sarah Palin and Pelosi together.
It's kind of what they got.
Because Nancy Pelosi is like 80 years old or something.
Yeah, this woman is like legitimately a model.
But go ahead.
So then they got a truck, a cyber truck.
And they wrapped it.
And it says Pelosi 2024.
And it says, invest like a,
politician, autopilot. And they drove this around Las Vegas getting just honked at. And there's all
these like TikToks of people taking videos of this Pelosi 2024 thing. And if you look at their Google
trends, they go from like nobody's searching for them to like, you know, it spiked and hit 100%
interest on that day of the event. And basically they were like, yeah, we just took a risk.
We spent a bunch of money on this. And let's give it a go. And I just thought it was a amazingly
well-done marketing stunt.
Did he say how much he spent on it?
I didn't ask him that.
So I did talk to him. He goes, he said,
we pulled it together in three weeks.
We had the Pelosi idea.
We came up with a bunch of research.
They searched through TikTok for impersonators,
went through agents, found an actress.
They hustled their way into, you know,
getting kind of like collabing with the knelt boys and Mike during that event
because they knew where they liked to gamble.
So they kind of arranged for them to bump into each other.
And they're like, we got a bunch of downloads.
What he said was, he goes,
it was more expensive than if we had just run,
you know, Facebook ads.
But, you know, our view is that we're trying to like build the brand
and make a statement about what are we all about
and that we believe that over time this is going to pay off.
And if you've seen, they've done this actually,
a bunch of interesting marketing things.
So they did the Pelosi tracker on Twitter,
which has, I don't know, hundreds of thousands of followers.
They have an Instagram account called Politicians,
politician Trade Tracker,
which has 730,000 followers.
And they'll post, so like, you know, like the last post was they had called out weeks ago that Debbie Schultz, who is a politician, had made a $15,000 trade in her son's name of one random small mining stock, a silver mining stock.
And they had flagged it as like, hmm, here's a politician trade that you want to be aware of.
You know, they don't give financial advice, but they just tell you what the politicians are doing.
And sure enough, in a month, it's gone up 30 percent.
to this random small mining stock, Helicom mining company.
So, you know, called it.
And so they follow these politicians.
And that's what the whole account is.
And I think they tapped into some feeling of like outrage or wrongness that people have about what's going on.
Like why Nancy Pelosi outperforms hedge funds and Warren Buffett and her, you know, her trading track record.
They tapped into this feeling that like, this is wrong and they should not be allowed.
they're using it for their own growth,
which I think is great.
Dude, have you
AOC and what's Parker
or Palmer Lucky's brother-in-law?
Do you know who Palmer Lucky's brother-in-law is?
Matt Gates.
Yeah.
Him and AOC have like joint hands
for this,
for like the one thing that they've come together on
is the fact that they want
politicians to not be able to trade
or at least have all of their money
in like a political ETF or something like that.
And it reminds me of, have you seen that video go viral of AOC and Elon Musk flirting?
Yeah, it's so good.
We got to play that.
Oh, we should play that right now.
On YouTube, just play that clip.
It is whoever made this, you're an absolute genius.
I've tried to look up who made this.
This is like some anonymous account.
I watch that video, like I've seen it a bunch of times and I rewatch it all of the time.
It's so funny.
It's one of the funniest things.
And they need to do one with AOC.
And this guy, Matt, of them, like, fake flirting.
Because this is the one thing.
Because I think he's pretty far right.
She's pretty far left.
And they've come together on this one, like, idea that politicians should not be able to trade from individual accounts.
And I think it's pretty funny.
Yeah.
That's pretty wild.
Do you want to do one more thing?
What's this blue collar side hustle?
All right.
So I'm bringing back an old segment we used to have called the blue collar side hustle.
of the month. And this is, the goal here is these aren't the biggest businesses, but they're
straightforward businesses that anybody could do if you were just willing to work hard. And so the
blue collar side hustle is, I saw, I forget who it was, Chris Corner or somebody like that.
They were talking about this woman in Dallas who has this business called Portch Pumpkins. Have you
seen this? The bass. The bass. Wow, you're really into this. Tell me more.
All right.
So the business idea here is every fall for, you know,
sort of Halloween and Thanksgiving,
people like to decorate their front porch with a bunch of pumpkins.
And what she does is she will do that as a service.
So she'll bring to your house a package.
I mean, you can go to her website.
And you can see she's,
it's popped up,
currently sold out.
But you can see like three or four packages.
There's like the luxury package,
which is $1,350.
So, you know, $1,300.
there's like kind of the medium one, $750,
and there's a smaller one for like $300.
And what she'll do is she'll come and she'll decorate your front porch,
the doorstep, all that with a bunch of really cool variety of,
you know, fall, you know, harvest-type pumpkins.
And this is all she does.
And the numbers that came out was that basically she's done 900 jobs that
range, you know, from this 300 bucks to, you know,
$1,500.
And the estimate was that she might have done a million dollars in revenue in a year.
off of those 900 jobs.
And how cool is this?
Just a mom in Dallas who is going to people's porches and just putting out pumpkins.
And wow, you can kind of hustle your way into a pretty cool business for a very small
window of time.
I think that's the other cool part about this is that it's only going to take place in a few
months out of the year.
And then she posted on Instagram and that kind of drives the flywheel.
And then people like us talk about this and it gets on the local news and then she's built
a kind of cool business here.
And we talked about this last year.
I think one of my blue-colored side-dusts last year was the guy who came and did Christmas
lights at my house and he did it for, you know, half the houses in our neighborhood.
And I realized like, wow, in kind of a six to 10-week period, you know, this guy probably
pulled in, you know, 60 to 100 grand of side income just by putting up lights, him and he had one
guy working with him.
And I think this is the extension of that.
It turns out that it wasn't just Christmas lights.
You could also do it with fall pumpkins.
And I'm sure you could do it with Halloween decorations as well if you wanted to expand
into that. So to me, this is an example of a blue-collar side hustle. Now, to be clear, I don't think
she made a million dollars. I think she might have generated a million dollars revenue. Apparently,
she's got like 15 delivery guys and like a bunch of other stuff. Yeah, but even if she made $200,000.
I would bet it's like, you know, 100 grand is my, my guess, or being conservative, I would sort of
assume that. But that's still pretty great for what's probably a, you work, you know, two months
out of the year or three months out of the year, straightforward business that you could do that
doesn't require, you know, any special skills. And it's pretty fun, you know, for somebody who's got,
you know, a little bit of design taste. I think this is great. My wife's not working right now.
You know, we had a kid and she's quit her job. And like, she's thinking of these things that she can do.
She's like, you know, I don't, I can't commit to a 40-hour work week or 52 weeks out the year.
But I, I would love to have a project, you know, something that I can do. And when I see projects like this,
I'm like, that's awesome. That could be perfect. Do you know what I mean?
and so she's like looking for projects,
but you know,
you can't like,
you can't commit to a nine to five,
or at least you can't commit to a nine to five for the entire year,
but you could for little sprints.
And so I love ideas like that can satisfy that need.
Yeah, yeah,
exactly.
My wife works only on Wednesdays.
So she works one day out of the week.
She works kind of like an eight hour day on that day.
And it's a super creative kind of job.
I can't go into all the details,
but it's very creative.
So it's fun.
It's with somebody she really like.
So a coworker comes over.
They work together for eight hours day.
She's no longer.
Then she doesn't have,
it doesn't spill over.
So like the next day and the next day after that,
she doesn't have to like follow through and all the deliverables from the meeting or
anything like that.
And we didn't plan for that.
But that's,
we kind of stumbled into what is basically the perfect amount of work for her.
Because we got three little kids.
And she wants to be a stay at home mom.
But also it's pretty easy to just go nuts, you know,
like to just be.
Because it's groundhog day.
When you have three little kids,
you are doing the same routine every single day.
And as much as you love your kids,
like it is nice to have a small break,
some project you can put your creative energy into,
a person that's not your family member
that you can get to talk to that day
and not have to deal with the kids for,
you know,
eight hours is a huge win for her.
Dude, after this pop,
I'd be like,
babe,
what do you know about pumpkins?
Open the trunk.
Like,
I love the homepage of everything.
It's a trunk full of like 65 pumpkins.
I love this shit, dude.
I think this is fantastic.
And I'm sure that there's some type of like artful, like aesthetic or, you know, like you got to have like some type of eye.
But, uh, and it would be silly of me to like, be like anyone can do this.
But it definitely seems learnable.
This seems very learnable.
Anyone can do this.
Not anyone will do this.
But, but I do think this is not like above, you know, most people's means to be able to do, to be able to pull this off.
You know, what I would do, let's say I wanted to do this.
How would you, how would you have purchased this?
I would not go into the pumpkin business right away.
What I would do is I would go door to door,
and I would have basically like three photographs of what the front can look like,
what packages you have.
And I would just go to door,
to door,
and I would say,
I'm going to knock on 100 doors.
I'm not going to 100 doors in my neighborhood.
And I'm basically going to say,
hey,
just want to let you know.
I do this for families in the area.
I can make your porch look really great.
Is this something you'd be interested in?
And then try to see,
does anybody,
Basically, if people are interested, that's your pre-order.
And then you basically go buy the inventory you need to go fulfill just that demand.
And then as soon as I get some, I would take photos of that.
I would ask them, can I, you know, would you mind if I use this for my website,
for my marketing, they would say yes.
And if they say yes, then I would now have better marketing material that I would go to the next door with.
And I would say, you know, we did this there.
And I would try to have something, if I could, maybe one branded pumpkin.
That's kind of like this was done by the, you know, the,
local pumpkin queen or whatever it is, right?
And like have my domain on one of them.
If I could try to get people to be able to go find me from there.
And then go and upcharge them when they fucking start to rot and you've got to get rid of
them.
Well, there is a pickup or like a cleanup fee, right, that you do at the end.
Same thing with the Christmas lights guy.
He's like, yeah, then you pay me to put them up and you pay me to put them, take them down.
And so you get both sides of it.
I also think that this is one where you could, if you ever go read like these PR
books that were like local PR news jacking.
So like local news is pretty much devoid of good stories.
And so you can see this if you've ever turned on like your local news channel.
There's restaurant, you know, got flagged for this thing.
They're looking for, you know, good local feel good stories.
And so as soon as you get a little bit going and then you could say, whatever, single mom who's making thousands of dollars decorating their, you know, their neighbor's porches.
And so as soon as I get just enough momentum, my goal would be to get to the,
local news and I would go to them and make my pitch for the story and I would try to get it
you know try to get my story on air for that local news and then what I would do is I would take
that that news story right you're stacking the marketing chips and then you could even run ads
on that local news story that article in your area dude I grew up um like with a big steep
driveway and then after there was a small street and then there was like a park and it was as if
I was like the park was like a canyon and one
after Halloween. It was a tradition at my house. And my parents, this was one of the more redneck
things that my father has ever done, which was we would take all 20 of our pumpkins and we would
let them roll down our hill. Straight the running of the bulls. Straight into the middle of the park.
And I, up until, like, I was like 25. I thought it was okay. Because if you have like a banana
peel or something, I'm like, you just like fucking toss it to the street. Like, it doesn't matter.
We used to put our pumpkins like in the street.
Like it doesn't matter, right?
That's not littering.
Turns out that is littering, by the way.
Like, you can't like, like, there's like,
we're all of like November or whatever,
there'd be like the 20 rotting pumpkins in the middle of this,
in the middle of this park.
And if you're going to go play flag football that month,
like look out for the rotting pumpkins at the bars through in the middle of that fucking park.
Yeah, you needed the opposite of the news story.
It's like local family terrorizes park with rotting pumpkins.
again.
Dude, I thought it was like acceptable.
It's like, oh, I'm just put it back to its home.
I'm just throwing this fucking banana peel and all our garbage right in the middle of a park.
Where do you want to go from here?
I think we wrap this one.
So we got the do nothing man, the loneliness epidemic.
We have the autopilot marketing stunt.
And then we got the blue color side hustle that anybody could do door to door.
All right.
Let's do it.
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 put my all in it like no days off
on the road let's travel never looking back
