My First Million - The TikTok strategy that’s printing MILLIONS right now… (ft. Rob The Bank)
Episode Date: February 24, 2025Episode 679: Shaan Puri ( https://x.com/ShaanVP ) sits down with Robert Oliver ( https://x.com/thegeniusceo ) to break down his $100M TikTok strategy. — Show Notes: (0:00) TikTok Gold Rush ... (13:00) The Playbook (23:00) Brands crushing it (36:00) Trends: Lookmaxing, pet luxuries, niche communities (51:30) Mistakes to avoid (1:03:00) Character design — Links: • Rob The Bank on YouTube - https://www.youtube.com/@robthebankmotion • Rob The Bank on TikTok - https://www.tiktok.com/@thegeniusceo • KaloData - https://www.kalodata.com/ — Check Out Shaan's Stuff: • Shaan's weekly email - https://www.shaanpuri.com • Visit https://www.somewhere.com/mfm to hire worldwide talent like Shaan and get $500 off for being an MFM listener. Hire developers, assistants, marketing pros, sales teams and more for 80% less than US equivalents. • Mercury - Need a bank for your company? Go check out Mercury (mercury.com). Shaan uses it for all of his companies! Mercury is a financial technology company, not an FDIC-insured bank. Banking services provided by Choice Financial Group, Column, N.A., and Evolve Bank & Trust, Members FDIC — Check Out Sam's Stuff: • Hampton - https://www.joinhampton.com/ • Ideation Bootcamp - https://www.ideationbootcamp.co/ • Copy That - https://copythat.com • Hampton Wealth Survey - https://joinhampton.com/wealth • Sam’s List - http://samslist.co/ My First Million is a HubSpot Original Podcast // Brought to you by The HubSpot Podcast Network // Production by Arie Desormeaux // Editing by Ezra Bakker Trupiano
Transcript
Discussion (0)
The point of this conversation is this is a gold rush, and who knows how often these come around.
How much revenue will your brands do using this TikTok model this year?
100 plus.
So five brands, you're going to do over 100 million this year, and this is the playbook you're running across all of them.
Yeah.
So what's an example of one of these videos?
I think this video had made this kid close to $50,000.
The single video.
What you said in this video will make people millions of dollars.
All they did was just try to act on it.
Millions are being printed on TikTok shop.
Like, what are the mistakes?
needs people make.
My advice is be an observer, not a consumer.
That's the best thing you can do.
Let's brainstorm live.
A hundred million dollar TikTok brand.
I'm going to show you something that the world was never going to see,
but I'm going to show how serious I take this.
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.
Has anyone ever wore a cut off like this before?
The first one to bring the gun show to MFF?
So I was just thinking, like, I've watched a lot of these and I've seen a lot of guests.
And I was like, it's like I'm different in a lot of ways.
So I might as well visually capture that, you know, make a statement.
You were early to the Amazon trend.
And you took $5,000.
You turned it into a $30 million company.
You sold.
And what you told me was basically that this now is the first and biggest thing you've seen since that Amazon opportunity.
Is that right?
It is.
It is.
And I've looked for these.
I didn't appreciate it in the Amazon.
era, but I look for these moments in time where you don't need a ton of startup capital,
you don't need to raise money, and you can basically just find something that works. A system,
a platform, latch onto that and create something of substantial enterprise value. And TikTok represents
that. So what I want to do is I want to go through the big idea. So why people should be
caring about TikTok right now, what you see as the big opportunity? And then specifically,
what are some examples of people that are crushing it? How are they crushing? What's the playbook?
and then where are the opportunities that you see that are still open that anyone could go do?
So that's my game plan.
Absolutely.
So top of the funnel here.
Fundamentally, people don't appreciate what's actually happening with TikTok.
Like shop is a component of that.
That's the center of their model.
But you think about even restaurants.
You think about Google.
You think about Facebook, meta ads.
Like all of the, there's a paradigm shift.
So a good example, my now ex-wife and I went to Tokyo like a year and a half ago.
and if we went five years ago,
she would have gone to Google
to search for restaurants.
She would have yelped.
Now she goes on TikTok
and wants to visually see
what is going on, right?
Shopping is turning more live.
All of these things are fundamentally changing.
Even the creators of this last generation,
the influencers,
they're coming up off short form content.
We all know how important, you know,
clipping and all that stuff is.
By the way, I read that 30% of Jan Zee
gets primary news source is TikTok.
Yep.
And then same thing. Primary search engine. So in my company, we did a little poll there there. We were trying to work on our Google like search result.
Yep. And I was asking our employees, I was like, so when you Google for this, what do you do? They go, I don't really Google for that. I just go to TikTok and type in the name. And then whatever comes up on TikTok is what I use. Yep. That blew my mind because I wasn't using TikTok as a search engine.
Yep. And that's the paradigm shift. And that's, that's the opportunity because it's so early. And it's, I don't like the word like gamifiable. But when you just think through,
these new models and like how information is being shared. That's where the brands of the future
are being created. That's where the artists of the future are being created. That's where like fashion
design. It's all happening through this new means of distribution. Right. By the way, this happens
in everything. So I don't know if you ever heard the story of why Obama was so successful when he did
his first presidential run. Do you know this story? Just tapping into the social media and all that.
It was kind of social media, but he got this big grassroots movement going from two reasons.
One, he was one of the first presidents to build a huge email list.
At the time, the people who were running, they were doing, you know, fundraisers,
they were doing TV, they were doing, you know, traditional interviews, but they weren't
building an email list.
And he built a giant email machine before anybody else.
And then he started using social media on top.
And he basically hired people.
Trump did the same thing.
When Trump won in 2016, even this year when he won, he raised way less money than his opponent,
right?
The first time, way less than Hillary.
This time, way less than Kamala slash Biden.
And in both cases, it was because he was using a different marketing strategy.
His was all Facebook and online.
And the others were doing all like traditional TV buys, commercial, stuff like that.
And so when you see this, like you said, paradigm shift, it's like the new marketing
opportunity, if you can pounce on that, that's where you can get rich.
Can you quickly just say like what you saw in Amazon and when that was back in 20, what was
it 14 or so?
Yeah.
And I'll go from that to now.
Like the numbers were seeing the difference in terms of like Roaz, right?
Right. And it's challenging for people because it's happening so fast.
Like I think a lot of people still think that, you know, digital marketing is the new paradigm.
And like, actually, it's like all the way over here now.
And so Amazon's a great example.
I remember seeing brands, like billboards were of huge strategy back then.
I'm like, I started by working with brands.
That's how I got my start.
It's like a consultant helping them sell on Amazon.
And I'm going, guys, you're spending $50,000 on a billboard campaign.
And when you give me five grand to spend on a,
Amazon, you're having trouble tracking that. But right here, we're making $5 for every dollar
spent. And this is me as a 22-year-old kid. They're like, no, this is the way it is.
Or we're going to double, bodybuilding.com needs these. Or, you know, GNC needs these. And by the time
I finally, it probably took me like a year. I'm going, these guys are slow.
At first you think you're dumb. Eventually you realize they're dumb. You're like, yo, I keep putting
a dollar into this magic money machine and $5 are coming out, which is a five-x. This is cool.
Roaz. For people don't know, Roaz's is return on ad spend. So it's for every dollar I spend on
marketing, how many dollars do I get back out in revenue?
Yep.
TV, billboards, you don't really know, right?
The famous advertising saying is half of our advertising doesn't work.
Problem is we just don't know which half.
And like, and actually for a while, CMOs didn't mind that because if you can't track it,
you can't be held accountable.
But then Facebook and all these guys came and all of a sudden, every dollar you put in,
you get a like verified amount of how much revenue you're getting out of it.
Now you're held accountable.
But that also presents an opportunity.
Yep.
Just for a kid like you, you're like, all right, if this works,
It's inarguable.
This is working and I'm getting 5x return on my money.
And so now what we're seeing, what happens over time is that compresses, right?
Enough guys like me do podcasts like this.
Facebook ads are great.
Goddamn podcasting.
It shrinks the margin.
And so like you look at like an Amazon now, which has been my, you know, I've been doing ads on
there for 10 years now.
And like a like a one to one and a half row ads is like good in a hot category,
which is not profitable.
But you're, you know, that's where you're like, okay, repeat customers,
building the brand.
And so you have that modeled as like that was the last couple years.
And then TikTok comes along.
And that organic algorithm is so damn good.
And then if you, this is where now it almost goes back to the billboard era of like actually
tracking becomes a little more difficult.
But we're seeing just money spent on this system, which we can get into a little bit later.
But this system is like 7, 8x minimum return versus a 1x Roaz.
And upwards of like, when I first did this with, you know, Jimmy,
18 months ago, it was like 30x.
And then the question was how can we spend more?
I mean, it's like PEDs for marketing, right?
It's like if you're going to get, I can use this channel that not everybody understands,
this playbook that not everybody understands and gets 7X or I go to Facebook and Amazon.
I get a 1x, 1.5X.
I mean, that's like cheat codes in the game of business.
Can you give people a sense?
How much revenue will your brands do using this TikTok model this year?
So directly attributable to like TikTok shop, we modeled probably.
probably like 40-ish million.
And overall, the halo effect of all that?
100 plus.
So your brands, which is what, you have three, four, roughly,
brands, or how many, how many you're running right now?
Five that I either own, you know, a majority of or a meaningful, yeah.
So five brands, you're going to do over 100 million this year,
and this is the playbook you're running across all of them.
Yep.
Yep.
And by the way, how old are these brands?
One or two years old.
It's actually, it's unreal.
And it, I don't want to say things stressed or scare me at this point, but it's one of those
things where it's like, all right, we got to see this through because the point of this conversation
is this is a gold rush and who knows how often these come around, right? And so I feel like I'm getting
to go back to my 22 year old self and saying, hey, like, this is going to be really big, you know,
focus right now, do the right things, execute, you know, and that's where we're at. Is that a conversation
you had with yourself back when you were 22 and the Amazon gold rush was happening? I took it really
seriously, but you don't know what you don't know, right? And just I didn't appreciate like, who knew
private equity was going to come in and value all these brands and who knew that Amazon was
going to grow to that extent. It was still kind of a discount site when I was first on there. That's why
brands didn't want to do it. You were in the supplements category. And you said the way the supplement
game worked was you had GNC or these like retail stores. If you wanted to be, if you wanted to win in
supplements, you had to win in retail. And then you're like, Amazon came around and changed the game
because now you have this online retailer and suddenly new supplement brands could win there where
you couldn't get on the shelf at GNC.
Exactly.
And you were saying,
now the same thing's happening to Amazon.
Exactly.
There's a new one's coming in
and sweeping the rug
in creating the opportunity
where maybe you weren't going to win on Amazon,
but now you can win in this new way.
Is that right?
That's exactly right.
It's these continual paradigm shifts.
Like Amazon, it was, you know,
there's this brand BPI Sports,
who was number one in GNC.
And then I just remember seeing that flip
where Amazon all of a sudden
was like 50% of their revenue.
And then they didn't focus on Amazon
and then there were brands passing them up, right?
And so the brands of the future
were born on that digital platform. And Amazon was, you know, there are Facebook ads.
There are other digital means, but we'll call it the e-commerce era. And now it's happening again
with like the short form discovery era. So it's much less about what does your website look like
or this and that. It's like, how are you optimizing for this means of information dissemination?
And, you know, I think when most people say gold rush, if you call 10 things a gold rush,
then what's really a gold rush? But I feel like you genuinely believe you're like, yo, this,
I'm not fucking around. I'm serious.
Right now there is a window where something can happen.
Could you like make your pitch not to me, but to like the next Rob who is 23, 24, 25,
oh, 30 years old.
It doesn't matter what age.
But like to be like, yo, take this.
You can even just direct a camera.
Like, what's your message to that person about this opportunity?
No, honestly, I'm going to hijack.
I'm going to hijack your friend here.
How many businesses a day do you think Ben looks at?
Just in general.
10 to 15, a day.
A day.
Yeah.
A day.
So he's constantly looking at opportunities.
And he sent me a text.
And he goes, oh, this TikTok thing really.
really does seem to be the best opportunity to go from like no net worth to like one to five million
with no skills, no background, no tech, whatever. And when he sent me that, because obviously I accept
my opinion is going to be biased. I do this every day. But when Ben sent me that, I was like, oh,
okay, yeah, no, this is for real. And then you look at our own, you know, like we're doing this,
our company growth, even though we have skills when we're doing this a while, but to go from zero to
you know, 100 plus million run rate is actually insane with no, you know,
is they're not raising, it's more profitable, like super profitable.
Yeah, you've bootstrapped these, right?
Like, you know, I'm a small investor on it, but you didn't take our money for the money.
You just, no, we love you.
You just want us to be on board.
All right, so let's stop teasing.
What are the brands, like tell me some stories.
Like, I don't live in this world you do.
Tell me some stories of some brands that are crushing it.
What are some examples that make this real?
One that I think we can start with is this company, Ruse Research.
And this guy had a little Amazon experience.
He's 27.
And this is like a nine figure play.
And I just couldn't be more excited for him.
And so I'm like, you know, hyping it up here.
But he reaches out to me two and a half years ago before TikTok's even taken off.
And he's like, hey, I'm thinking I'm starting the supplement brand on Amazon.
He picked the right category.
He's like longevity is getting bigger.
He gets on Amazon.
He's doing all right.
And then TikTok comes around and he pours all in on it.
And two years later, I believe this month, you know, he'll do, he'll do Northern.
of like $15 million between all online.
This month.
This month.
So what is the product?
What do they do?
It's something research.
NAD, Roos research.
And it's that like, you know, it's that every couple years a new supplement category
comes along where like this might have long term staying power.
Collagen was the last huge one, you know, $4 billion exit vital proteins to Nestle.
And he's betting on that.
And then he went all in, all bootstrapped, no raise money.
Not even like, he hasn't revamped the brand yet.
If you go look at it, you're like, oh, this looks so.
little like, you know, it doesn't look like a multi-hundred million dollar thing, but that's what he's
building. So I'd say that one. So he spotted the health trend early, early enough, not like the first
guy, but early enough, built a good product in that space. You said he went all in on TikTok,
or figured out TikTok. What did he actually do to make it work on TikTok? He tapped into this
creator model. So should we go in detail on the playbook? So if I, for all these ideas, they have
a playbook. What's the TikTok playbook? So it's important to preface it with this. Everyone is used to YouTube,
Instagram, like where your followers matter, right?
Like you have an Instagram following of a million people.
That's valuable.
TikTok shattered that.
And you have to look at everything through the lens of views.
You start a brand new TikTok account.
I do.
We walk out of here.
We start a new TikTok account together.
We start a video of dancing in the street.
That could get 10 million views, right?
And so that's the center of this whole model.
Swings at bat.
Screw your brand page.
Like, Ruse doesn't have a brand page.
Right.
They might run ads.
but the key part of the model is how many people can we get creating product-specific content for the brand?
Like an army, instead of one influencer becoming Kim Kardashian or The Rock or whatever,
instead of, I will become famous to get a lot of followers and then sell product.
What you're saying is the new model is an army of people need to create content,
and then it's just the content wins.
One of those pieces of content needs to pop in order for this to work.
Yep.
Is that it?
Yeah, exactly.
And the first big use case of this before product was Andrew.
tape. Like, that's how he, can we say that?
Can we say that name? That's how he broke
the internet, not even like intentionally, but he had
affiliates making Tate
content. And so he's not, taste not
on TikTok, but he has 500
hungry little minions who love him.
And he was paying them or they were just
inspired what was going on? Yeah, there was an affiliate commission
back to make more videos for him.
So like, like you could get people paying $50
a month by making this content. He created
basically like a content MLM almost.
Pretty much. Yeah. No, exactly.
So he, and what was his, I mean,
kind of genius of him to do that because no other, you know, we were content creators,
podcasters, whatever. But if we created content, we just put it on our channel. Yep.
And it was just us or like we would hire people to create clips for us. But on our one channel,
what he did was different. He's like, yo, here's a bunch of raw material. Send it. Run it.
You figure out how to go viral. And if you do, I'll pay you what, per view or what was he,
what was he doing? Per sign up, they got back to the community that would teach you how to do that.
Do what I mean? And the end result was most Googled man on the on the planet.
right and um and so now you see that everywhere streamers like aiden ross and those guys they they spend
six figures a month paying on a cpm metric paying people to chop up their streams and put it out
on new tics i do that right with my my stuff like someone from my team will chop this up and
you might see it right swings at bat and so now take that same idea when you say my team do you
literally mean like my employees or you're like i just like both we're trying to hit it from every way
and brands are too.
This is the fundamental thing.
How can you get as much good quality swings at bat as humanly possible?
And sometimes it's freelance people and then sometimes it's internally.
It's a little harder on shop so beautiful because the model itself incentivizes it without
us having to change hands.
You know, like internally I'm trying to figure out metrics like all that, right?
Whereas if you have talented creators, they just go.
And that was Tates too.
It worked, it fed itself.
The economics fed itself.
So shop feeds itself.
So just to explain, instead of just sending it to famous people, influencers, or random people,
what happened was certain people realize, oh, shit, I can make money doing this.
So instead of just doing it once, what if I made five videos a day?
What if I started picking brands that I thought would perform well?
And they started making $500 a month and $5,000 a month.
You have creators that make, how much is like the most successful creators make per month?
Just creators.
They don't own the brand.
They don't buy inventory.
They don't have to run the operations.
they're just making TikToks.
What do you think?
What do you think?
I've heard that like,
there's like 20-year-olds
that are able to make 100 grand a month.
Yeah, like, yeah.
Like a lot,
and way more than you'd think.
I was at an event for one of our,
you know,
the group that I own a little piece of
and we've had
27 people make over $100,000 in a month
as freelance creators.
And the important part is
these are not influencers.
Like Jacqueline,
I have a YouTube video with,
she was working as a server
eight months ago making
20 bucks an hour.
And she made like 180 grand last month.
And what they did did?
They go in the lab and they're basically like, all right,
I have to figure out what content can I create that will make this product,
you know, interesting, appealing to other people.
And then they get like, they're making like 30, 40, 50 videos a month.
Most of them don't do well, but a few of them start do well.
And they're studying and learning, oh, if I do this hook, that grabs people,
but it's not converting.
Okay, what can make it convert better?
And they're just specializing in the craft of short.
short form content. No, not too dissimilar than David Ogilvy in the past, figuring out how to
do print ads that are going to convert, all the great marketers in the past. It's just instead of
going to an ad agency, you're going to these creator armies where young people are specializing
in how to create short form content. Direct response marketing. This means. That's exactly what it is.
And there's varying degrees of it. There's like the innovators who can sit down. The algorithm is the
algorithm. You have to capture attention. You have to keep them watching. And then, you know,
something to convert. And then there's the second wave of that, whereas, you know, one of the
innovators hits what's works. And then there's literally 500 kids that are going to copy that same
idea. Right. I'll only make 20% of it. But then what does that do for the brand? Right. Then all of
sudden you have all these videos going nuclear. I bet you rude has. Show me a video. So what's an
example of one of one of these videos that this is a great one? I think this video, last I checked,
I think this video had made this kid close to $50,000. The creator. The single video. And he, he
paired, you know, a modern thing, Trump, like getting elected with conspiracy and all this,
whatever.
And just got into office one day ago and it's already going after one of the most predatory industries
in the world.
Watch this.
We have a public health system that does not.
So that was, first he's writing the news trend, Trump, instead of saying, hey, I have a product
I'd like to tell you about.
No, no, no.
Starts by talking about Trump.
And then he has this curiosity.
What would you call it?
It's that information gap, right?
Where all of a sudden he went after one of the biggest.
industries in the world. What did he do?
What's that industry? What did he do? And then you hear it in the background.
It's that mysterious. It's a trending sound. You know,
change starting today. But you know what's crazy. His buddy Donno White was coming after
by the way, even how raw this is. He's taking a video of like an Android phone.
Yeah. So you don't think this is an advertisement.
No, exactly. And everything nowadays is shifting to that just raw, organic. Like, you don't want to feel
like an influencer's selling you. And that's not.
not what he is. You know, like, this is like, this is a random dude making, telling you a story.
Yeah. Okay. What's he?
I just give out a little bit here. You know, it's the Trump bit. And then got Dana White, more social
proof. This is what it all gets interesting because around the same time, they were trying to
silence this doctor. Is this the scientist now? Yeah, yeah, Berg, it's another famous scientist.
So they're building, he's building this case for, for something. Still hasn't told you about the product,
right?
fungus problem that lives up and through here. And oil of oregano is the absolute best remedy for that.
It's anti-microbial, anti-fungal, anti-candida, anti-viral, anti-parasides, and anti-mol.
So really, you get the idea, right? And then he still hasn't sold you. He's building this idea of oil oregano.
And then at the end, I believe he sells you. But I've been taking two of these pearls and he sells you.
like I'm coming down with something and it knocks that shit right out.
The only bad thing about this product is how fast they sell out, especially around
this season.
So if you're sick of being sick and you want to try these out for yourself and you see that
orange cart right there, that means they are still in stock and the flash sale is still live.
Masterful TikTok shop.
That's a masterful TikTok shop video.
And if you know marketing, you see it and you go, yeah.
But you forget like the average person sees that and they're like, you know, they're going
to the coffee table at work the next day and talking about, man, you know, like mold and
fungus is everywhere.
But I hear you take this oil of oregano.
Dude, I got cousins that will send me this.
Yeah.
And they'll be like, yeah, you got to start taking this.
Yeah, the government's out to get you.
Yeah, whatever.
They have these like that conspiracy combined with, you know, in ancient times, this used
to be the way we do things.
Uh-huh.
And then, you know, his last like scarcity call to action where he's like, the only downside
is they sell out so fast.
So if you see the button is orange, that means they still have it.
Just get it while I'm still there.
And it's on say it's on flashdale right now, you know?
It's like, did you see, you know, the, you know, the, you know, the, you know,
the brand you're invested in.
Did you have anyone send you content from that at any point?
Like just not only did I have people send me content from that brand,
which we were,
the founder of it doesn't want us talking about it.
All right.
But then also you send me video of other people creating videos being like,
I'm tired of hearing about this,
which is like the ultimate sign of respect.
It means it dominated TikTok so much,
which is like the video was like,
if I see one more video telling me about this,
I'm not going to buy your thing.
But like even that video had seven million views.
of the person complaining about seeing this so much,
which means mission accomplished.
We got 600 million views in a month.
Like, that is an insane, insane number.
And that was before shop.
How much did you spend that month to get 600 million views?
It was a little over 100 grand.
That was before shop, too.
So shop now is changing the unit economics.
I'd say, like, not in the favor of the brands,
but the end of the day, it adds a level of scale.
But now with commissions and stuff,
that was when we were, like, sending it to Amazon and just,
we're not even tracking it.
We're just like, if we can get 600 million views, we're going to be all right.
You know, for 100 grand.
Well, it creates this amazing flybill, right?
Because you hear about a brand a bunch on TikTok.
You go then Google it and click the link or you go to Amazon and you search on Amazon.
It tells Google, it tells Amazon, people are searching for this brand name.
It ups your rank there.
So now you get organic ranking off of this social in addition to the direct conversions on social.
Yep, no, exactly.
Where do you go to find these brands that are crushing it?
This tool, and this is the other crazy thing.
Calo data is directly plugged in to TikTok's API.
Calo data.
Calo data.
Calo data, D-A-T-A.
Like, so they, if you go to the homepage here,
you're seeing top products, top videos.
So you can go look at like.
You could study.
You can study.
That's that kid's video.
I know him.
He's in our group.
But that was like one of the top videos from last week.
It made them.
So if you go right now to like the top products, what do you see?
And they just, it's like rankings weekly or how do they do this?
Yeah.
So like beauty.
beauty and personal care.
You can filter it however you want.
So this is last...
Are you in this list?
This is last 30 days.
We are in this list.
We're top five and we're not three, four, five.
And then I think if you expand it,
like we have a couple products in the top ten.
Can you talk about what your products are?
Which products can you talk about?
Yeah, yeah.
A really good example has been...
Are we gatekeeping here or are you...
No, no, I don't.
I mean, I'd yap about stuff on Instagram.
all the time. So evil goods has been a really good case study of beef tallow in the, you know,
skincare section. How'd you decide to do beef tallow? That was an investment. And so one of our
students or whatever, like, saw that category as similar to longevity. Like, okay, holistic
wellness is obviously becoming huge. People don't like toxic skin care. This seems to have some good
supporting. Like it has this like grassroots Twitter movement. Let's bet on that. And so, you know,
that's what we did. And pretty much whenever you see the ability to market to fear,
like that big pharma or whatever it might be or insecurities from an individual.
Yeah.
That will do well on this platform. Just period. Because people feel like they're learning something.
And so it checked all those boxes. He came out with a crazy aggressive name. Evil goods is like,
you know, we'll see, because that could disrupt the ability to go to retail and stuff like that.
But at the same time. Liquid death.
Yeah. So could be a liquid.
death. Exactly. Exactly. So hopefully
you plan to flag on that, but this thing has gone
just nuclear.
What's your Cologne brand?
Top shelf. And so this ties
back to my thesis
that massive industries
are overturned, like in these eras.
I want top shelf,
it's like a passion project of mine,
but I want to build a creed for Genzi.
You know, creed like fragrance.
And it presents
the opportunity to do that. So the way that
Cologne, like I don't know much about Cologne,
but it seems like it's kind of luxury sold through retail traditionally.
Super high margin, like crazy margins.
It's basically water and a little bit of essential oil or whatever.
And so how do you sell that?
How did you make a popular clone brand?
And could you say, like, revenue-wise, what that's going to do this year?
We've been doing close to a million bucks a month.
So it's been, but it's a unique challenge for me that I like.
This ties back to, I mean, seriously, everyone in this world, if you're venturing into it,
pick something you like and see some area of disruption and make stuff for yourself.
Like that, that's really what I see it.
And as I've gravitated more towards, you know, we talked about offline, but I like high fashion.
I like design.
And so this seems like the perfect segue for me to go from consumable to something that can play
in that world, right?
Fashion culture.
Yeah, exactly.
Exactly.
And so like, like, Creed is relevant at, like, these big fragrance houses are relevant in,
in Paris and stuff like that.
And so for me, it's been a...
I know it's luxury because I have never heard of what you're saying.
Must be good.
Have you seen Creed or no?
No. You probably see a Creed Aventus.
It's like a, you know, popular fragrance that sells for $250 a bottle.
And so when I'm seeing that, I'm going, I can...
There's a lot of margin for air.
Let's walk through it.
So you're like, all right, I want to go into Cologne.
You get made how?
Where'd you go to make it?
So I had to hire a...
He's like, he calls himself a professional nose, you know?
And it's been like designing fragrances for God knows.
how long. And so I'm learning...
You just Google this guy, or how'd you find him?
Relationship through our other business partner. He had done
skincare before, and this guy was like a
known guy in the industry. Charges an arm and a leg,
made one good product. Don't think I
like it, right? So I'm like, how can we build
this out internally? And I've
learned more about the industry.
Like, you know, what... Smells actually
fascinating. Like, how it makes people feel.
What's fascinating about it? Just all the different,
you know, mechanisms and mixes and like, like,
you go to Abercrombie, you know,
exactly what it smells. Like it's like it can be a signature of branding. It can be a signature of a
of a person, you know, like, probably like the least used sense in marketing.
So a thousand percent, but you think about like a fresh pair of Nike's. Like that, that's
intentional. Right. New car smell. New car smell. And, and, uh, so it's just been a fun avenue to learn
more. And I'm far from an expert in it, just to be honest. Like we have the one product we're
moving well with and then we're trying to build out. Well, wait, so tell me. So you say you went to
the nose. Nose makes something for you. That's what you use or you say you didn't like it? So he, he actually
made us eight different samples. We chose the one he wanted to use. We blow it up. We did
700 grand our first month. It just gets murdered with bad reviews. People hate it. Like,
hate it. And so now all of a sudden I got awesome. You liked it or no? No.
You yourself were like one star. Yeah. And I'm kind of, I didn't hate it. I didn't hate it.
I didn't hate it, but I wasn't like, oh, I would, I would wear this. And at the time,
with Genius, I was really big on making products for yourself.
and like being all in on that.
And then we have all these things going nuclear and so I'm like money.
Right.
Where's some money?
$90 bottle.
I'm trying to make something for myself.
But this time it's money instead of a product.
And honestly,
I blew up in my face a little bit.
And so we revamped on the second one and had a, you know, it's a winner.
And like it was very methodical.
And so that's the one doing like a million bucks a month.
But before we made a billion a month, they must have made a dollar a month.
So how did it, what did you do initially to get that to work?
So you go to the creators.
That was the nice part.
The first fragrance.
we got the playbook, like the angles that worked.
So good marketing, bad product.
Yeah, exactly.
So what was the angles that work?
Give us an example for that.
That's another one.
It's huge in this, this Gen Z era.
I don't like saying Gen Z actually.
It's TikTok person and mail, there's a billion users on there, right?
So it's a disservice to the app to say it's just Gen Z, although that's where a lot of
these ideas percolate from.
But like the self-improvement and dating and all these little.
boxes that this generation is trying to check are hyper relevant to smell. Like, that's a thing in
their world. Like, how do you smell around the girl you're trying to talk to? Very easy fear.
Yeah, what's the name of your thing? It's like, her loss? Her loss. Where did that come from?
That's genius. It's actually, I went through this whole, like, Drake era on my personal brand,
and he has an album called Her Lost. It's like, don't reinvent the wheel. It succeeded.
What would be, like, a killer hook to sell that cologne on that? They do actual
skits. Actually, one that worked really well was we had female creators do it and they started calling it like pussy magnet juice.
If you got to leave that. My boyfriend came home in this or whatever, you know, and really high converting stuff.
There's a story. So I just did a podcast with the guy Craig Clemens. Do you know Craig?
So he... Monster. He told the story of like OG marketing. That's super relevant for this. So I'm going to retell it because his episode's going to come out too.
But he talks about like one of the greatest headlines he's ever.
red in marketing. He goes, I got four for you. And the first one he told was he talked about this
headline. He goes, here's the story. This guy's a famous marketer. He's known as one of the best marketers
on earth. And this Hollywood actor hits him up and he says, my wife wants to launch your own perfume brand.
Will you come and help us with the marketing of it? So he goes, he meets the wife. Wife says,
I want to do this. He goes, say no more. I'll make this happen. And he goes and he starts studying
fragrances and he goes to a mall. And you know the guys at the mall who are like, you know,
they had like a make-your-own fragrance thing
or like, you know, you have all these oils
you can mix your own.
And he just asked the guy, he goes,
what's the number one fragrance that women love?
And he goes, oh, sir, easy.
China Musk.
And he goes, China Musk.
And he goes, yes, China Musk.
Smells, that smells good.
So he takes it.
And this is like, you know,
he's only a couple weeks in,
but he doesn't go back to the Hollywood wife.
He sits on it.
He's like, I need to make her wait for her to value this.
I need to make it feel more important.
So after three months, he comes back,
dirty goes, I'd like to meet you. I have something for you. She goes, okay, what did you got? He goes,
I've traveled the world. I've tested, you know, thousands of things. I've studied. I've talked to
everybody. And I found it. I found the greatest fragments for you. She smells the China Musk.
She's like, this is perfect. In the meantime, he goes to a jeweler. And he goes, I need you to make me
the fanciest bottle you can come up with for this thing. It's like this, like whatever,
diamond shape, or whatever. And so he comes up with this beautiful bottle. He's got China Musk.
And then he tells her, we're going to do a launch. And she goes, yeah, we could do it at this.
like small place and he goes, no, no, no, we need to do it somewhere bigger.
How about the Crown Plaza Hotel? And she's like, that's huge. Like we would need a few thousand
people to show up. He goes, that's my job. So she begs the bet. She books the hotel. And she's like,
you better not embarrass me. So he goes home. He's like, I got to figure out a way to get thousands
of people to come to this grand launch. And he goes home and he writes this headline that says,
wife of famous Hollywood star
swears under oath
that her new perfume
does not contain illegal
sexual stimulants
and he goes she is
the sub the sub is he's like
to prove its safety
and that it is not made of a
not not not what people are claiming
she is doing a live testing
where she will prove without a shadow of a doubt
that this that this fragrance works
and is safe at the Crown Plaza Hotel
on this date and like 10,000 people show up to this thing. It's like pack, he cut he hires like armed security guards to walk in with handcuffs to a
briefcase that contains the perfume. So people see them walking in. They're like, holy shit. What is this thing
that's being presented in this way? And there's this whole story and it ends up becoming this bestseller.
And he's like that headline, but he's like, you know, he broke down the elements. He's like,
wife of Hollywood star, curiosity gap, which which Hollywood star, um, swears under oath.
Right? That's kind of like the conspiracy, the seriousness, the drama, the stakes of the situation.
And then doesn't contain sexual stimulants. So like, how good is it? People think it's so good it should be illegal. And, you know, evil goods or the stuff you're talking about with like your cologne is like hits those same notes. Now that was back in the, I don't know, like the 70s or something like that. It was a long time ago. But same playbook. Just read on today in 2025.
And then Craig took it and put in Facebook ads and I'm taking it and put it on TikTok. Quick side note too for anyone. I know there's like a.
vast internet world of gurus and people that talk about stuff. And if a guru or like talking head
in the marketing space doesn't know Craig, they're not really like tapped in on the world.
Simple test. Yeah. Like it's actually like simple, very like anyone that like I don't know Craig personally.
I don't know if he knows me. But I know that operation is run like fucking skunk works.
Yeah. And like he is he has popularized a lot of things. Like actually that framework has been seen on a
Facebook ad from him, that his name's, you know, that he's, you don't, you don't know him.
Exactly.
He's a madman.
Uh-huh.
What else could you show me?
So give me a couple other stories that you think are pretty badass that we should know
about the stuff that's working on TikTok.
Underbrush gum is another example of really startup scrappy entrepreneur that's doing
millions a month now who makes this gum himself.
And they, they built their own factory.
And he's had a crazy rush over the last month.
But, like, like, brands will go like,
this and then down. You got to find the new angles, right? Like this, that Trump video I just showed
you will work for a month and then it'll go away. Underbrush just hit a huge one. This last month
playing into TikTok's going away, my small family business is going to get crushed. And it was the
founder doing like some ASMR video of like how he's making it. Right. While talking about that.
Yeah. Well, no, and then he just gave that out. And then the army picked it up and all put their own play
on it. Gotcha. So it was the same angle over and over again with different voices and some claiming
this their business, but that, that did millions for him over the last, like 30 days.
Can I put you on the spot?
Yeah.
Let's do a little magic trick.
So let's brainstorm live.
Yeah.
$100 million TikTok brand.
Yep.
So where do we start?
I'll be your wingman.
I'll be your brainstorming partner.
Let's go right into Gen Z and this younger generation that there's so much change.
Like, we've talked about looks maxing, right?
We're like, explain what that is.
So looks maxing.
It's interesting, to say the least.
But there's this subset of like young men that are hyper focused on looks almost to the point
of like it being super feminine.
But like they're optimizing it.
Yeah, exactly.
And it's like they're again, their hearts in a good place.
Most things can be boiled down to basic human desires of like they want to reproduce.
But how they're going about it is all of a sudden like, have you seen those funny videos
on morning routines now?
It's almost like Patrick Bateman-esque.
It's just like so elaborate you mean?
Yeah, yeah.
I can trim each.
But there's a market there.
There's not enough products there.
So it's kind of like a community.
It sounds silly, right?
When you say it,
sounds superficial.
But, you know,
how different is that than,
you know,
maybe the bodybuilding movement
in the early days?
It's like these guys who take it really seriously
and they're counting the reps and the sets
and they're figuring out,
you know,
what type of training is going to lead to like,
you know,
this muscle right back here,
the lower head of the tricep.
And it's to anyone else,
it sounds like overkill,
but they got into it.
They got passionate about it
And they wanted to like, what if we took this to the end degree?
Brian Johnson doing that with longevity right now.
Yeah, it sounds crazy.
It's easy to make fun of them.
But he's like, I'm going to take it to the full money.
Yep.
And there's people who like rallied behind that.
And they think that that's cool.
And you're saying look maxing is this early wave where people are doing that.
They're taking, guys taking their looks as seriously as women take their looks.
Yep.
Because we all know women have this huge, you know, like tutorials on eyelash extensions and every little, you know, nook and cranny.
Now you're saying guys are.
It's happening exactly for guys.
And there's no, it's an underserved market.
You've seen products like, there's a product called jar size.
Have you seen that?
Oh, your jaw size like your jaw line?
Yeah, exactly.
That's like one of the core foundations of looks maxing.
And so that product blew up.
Right.
It's like a jaw exercising thing, right?
You just, you just bite it each day.
Does it work?
Does it not?
I don't know.
But then the kids are viewing.
And so you're just studying culture, it seems like.
You're just watching.
And I want to point out one thing, which is I had a really,
really early friend in Silicon Valley teach me this. I never forgot it. He was the first product
manager at Twitter. And if you remember, Twitter at the time was really like made fun of when it came
out because it was, you would text a phone number. There's no app. You just text a phone number
whatever you wanted. And anybody who was subscribed to your phone number would get a message
that says like Sean's eating. It was just saying, I'm eating a ham sandwich. And so it got made fun
of. If you go look up old tech crunch articles, people make fun of it. It's this like frivolous,
stupid thing. But it turns out, you know, now it's like the beacon of free speech. Like,
that's what happens in the world, right? And so at the time, I go, why did you take the job at Twitter?
Did it seem like the next big thing? He goes, no, but he goes, I had figured out that any time
there's a phenomenon of behavior that you see as weird, you don't even understand why they're doing
it, but they are, undeniably, they are doing it. You should lean in as an investor or like an entrepreneur.
That's your signal to lean in, whereas most people use that same signal. And they,
They point, they laugh or they push away.
Yep.
And it gets harder, the older you get.
But staying tapped in on that and not being oblivious to like the change in the future.
Like, because that was my dad with Instagram.
Like what a stupid platform, people posting pictures.
And now everyone knows you have to have an Instagram.
And so that's happening again.
And I think it's great advice.
Like we were hanging out with Mr. Beast last week and he has this thing he says, which is,
you're crazy until you're successful, then you're a genius.
Yep.
And he goes, I've been doing the same thing the whole time.
I used to sit in my bedroom and make ridiculous videos.
At the time, I had no money.
So his ridiculous videos back then were me counting to 100,000.
And it's like a 19 hour video or something.
Or him taking a plastic knife and cutting through a plastic table with just like a knife.
And he's like, it was just a stunt.
Now it's like taking a bulldozer and cutting through the Eiffel Tower, right?
Like he just scaled it up.
But he's like, at that time, I was seen as stupid and crazy.
and why are you wasting all your time on this YouTube thing?
Go to school, get a degree, get a good job.
And now I'm this, you know, I used to be weird.
Now they call me passionate.
I used to be, you know, I used to be kind of like, you know, crazy.
Now I'm obsessed.
And he's like, he's like, I didn't change the whole time.
And so kind of what you're saying is you see the culture doing something that seems novel, seems new.
Instinct as somebody who's a little bit older is.
That's stupid.
That's stupid.
And now you're like, get curious instead.
my advice is be an observer not a consumer on all these platforms and so observe what's actually happening like hold your opinion to yourself just be super matter of fact and observe because if looks maxing views are going up month over month that just is i don't really care what your opinion on it is like that just is that's that's that's that's fact right and work backwards from that but so so looks maxing i mean with that all of a sudden it's literally this is how broad it becomes just like when pet supplements
became a thing on Amazon, it's a category that becomes potential billions overnight with nothing
in it. And so who makes men's skin care products well? Like two or three brands that aren't even
focused on it. And so, I mean, right there, you can build anything. So you would be like,
look maxing trend, go and then you would brainstorm maybe like skincare. Mastic gum, like
jawline stuff. Yeah. I like to look at exploding topics and I like to still look at Amazon data.
like there's different tools you can use
and you'll see searches for those things.
And do you get afraid, oh, somebody's already doing this or whatever.
No, it's like more validation of the idea.
And then you're going to try to out, you know, out horsepower them on the marketing.
And then you come up with the hooks.
So like what would be like an example of a hook?
Let's say let's just go looks maxing.
Now what's an example of the product?
It would be like a gum or like a jaw thing or you think skincare.
Which one would you go into?
Let's just say a gum.
Because what?
Consumable, novel.
Repeat buys.
It's probably relatively straightforward to do.
Okay.
And now you have a gum.
Great.
We got our product.
You want to name it as part of our improv here?
Ooh.
Chatsy-P-T.
Yeah.
What would you prompt?
Because you use AI for a lot of stuff.
A ton.
I actually do.
And that's...
Yeah, let's do it.
Let's go on and chat Q-T.
Yeah.
It's actually gotten so, so good.
Do you think the jaw angle is the trick with the gum?
Or would it be breath or what do you think would be?
It would be jaw.
You'd call them feminine in some capacity
for not having a strong.
I like how your brain went there.
Like I have this phrase that I say,
which is the only positioning is counter positioning.
Like a lot of people just want to say their position.
Oh, we're healthy.
We're good for you.
We don't.
And it's like everybody is saying those same things.
So you've got to be counter.
You've got to have something.
Is the enemy or you got to call,
you know, diagnose a problem and then sell the solution.
So the only positioning is counter positioning.
So what you're saying is if you're not working on your jaw,
you probably have a feminine jaw.
Exactly.
And if you can live with that.
If you can sleep at night with that,
That's on you.
Okay.
Yeah.
Okay.
So I start by asking chat GBT, like, do you understand looks maxing?
Yes, it's about small natural tweaks.
The goal is to maximize aesthetic appeal, emphasis on facial hermetry, symmetry, and overall attractiveness.
I'm creating a product for a jawline enhancement gum.
Some every day.
I like dual meanings and stuff too.
I love when names have like.
you know, like I like double entendres.
I like, I like stuff like that.
So that's where I would probably go with this.
I would say that would consume every day.
I'm looking for a clever, powerful name that has, you know, dual meaning.
Chisel.
So chisel's a nice, I feel like that's a nice name.
Is that what it gave you?
Yeah, chisels the first one.
Masticate is chewing, but also sounds intense.
And Chad Chew, these are all great names, you know?
I like chisel, though.
Chisle's good.
Yeah, chisel is my favorite.
So far.
So we got chiseled gum.
Yep.
And now you got to come up with how we're going to market this.
So you're going to go to your creator army.
You tell them what you want to do.
You just let them go.
No, I let them go.
And this has been part of respecting the future,
but understanding that I'm not the person in that anymore.
Letting go.
Yeah, exactly.
So let's pretend we're those creators.
We're not.
So we're like,
we're going to be white belts at this,
whereas there's black belts.
But like,
I see videos trending on TikTok all the time about transformation.
So it's like weight loss, whatever.
And so you could almost,
make it where you're not talking about a gum, obviously. It's like, you know, somebody being like my,
you know, they use the trending music that people are using. Yeah, they would take a fiddish influencer and they
put them up there and they would like highlight the different things on the facial symmetry and this and
that. And then like look at his jaw line. Right. And why this, what you're saying, why this person is
attracted. The human mind is attracted to symmetry, the golden ratio, stuff like that. You would use,
you'd use like, oh, I'm kind of teaching you a science about why, or you could even do like,
why guys don't think this guy's attractive, but girls do.
Yep.
And you're like, oh, okay, what's the difference there?
Or you could do a transformation and be like, I did five things.
I took creatine.
I did this.
Yep.
The third thing is I started chewing this gum daily.
Honestly, I didn't believe it, but look at this.
Boom, boom.
And then you're like, it's available on Amazon.
Back to my story about like, you know, my transformation.
It would be a video like that.
Yep.
That was one of the first ones that blew up on evil goods was literally that.
This girl had like hormonal acne.
and it was the three things that helped with that.
And she showed it before a picture and after.
And that was part of it.
And it just went nuclear.
All right.
So we got our hooks there.
We got our brand chisel.
So what was the other one you said you're like,
basically we can fund a startup right now.
We can find an operator.
It's a request for operator.
Yes, luxury pet is screaming at me.
Like Louis Vuitton is doing full pop-ups of $500 dog bulls.
And it just shows, again,
And it's like luxury is such an interesting world, right?
Because it's just like signaling and status and what are people willing to pay.
There's no luxury pet brands yet.
Dude, you hit it again where my initial reaction is, oh my God, that's so stupid.
What a waste.
I can't believe people are doing this.
But you're saying people are doing this, period.
Louis Vuitton.
That's the important part.
Louis Vuitton validated it.
This is stupid.
It's the second part of the sentence.
People are doing this.
That's a fact, Jack.
You can't deny that.
Well, I've just seen.
So I had this idea probably like 18,
months ago when I was just hearing what people spend on their pets.
Like it's actually insane from a, like even the pet supplements, you know, it's like they're
paying more for pet supplements than human supplements.
And so I'm like, okay, there's something here.
I wonder if you could ever do anything luxury.
And then Louis Vuitton rolls out literally like, you know, it's like lovers, like pet lovers.
And they're doing $500 dog bulls and, you know, $300, you know, high-end leather callers.
I'm just like, oh, validated.
Right.
And how many do you have to sell in that area, too, to have a successful business, you know?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Well, it was.
Would you, so my initial hesitation would have been, can you build luxury on TikTok?
Like, isn't TikTok kind of a little like, you know, it's more like a Walmart than it is like a luxury?
But maybe I'm wrong.
Maybe it's just there's a billion people on it.
And so you can't generalize like that.
That's why I love.
That's why I said, let's not do a disservice to the app and the platform they build.
That's what I do on Amazon with Genius.
Genius is a very high-end supplement brand.
Like we were selling, you know, I mean, we had, we had a $130 product that was by all intents of purposes like luxury.
And like, oh, that would never work on Amazon.
It's a discount site.
And TikTok has a lot of those components in it now too.
But again, you tie back to a billion people and you tie back to, I mean, my cologne's $90.
So it's that, that's not, that's not cheap, right?
It's not a $30 cologne.
$30 clones outsell us, but I only need to sell one of those for every three.
And it's done well.
So I think it's there.
And how would you, if you did this luxury thing, like, what would you do to make it to build
the brand?
Because I think you study high fashion.
You study like kind of the cool stuff in culture.
What would you do if you were translating that to the TikTok world?
What would you do for luxury pet brand?
Do you know Renee Gerard, like Peter Thiel's?
Yeah, like memetic theory.
I love that.
Explain the simple explanation of that.
I mean, people don't know what they want, so they want what others want.
And so from our perspective, as brand owners, influencing influencers, and finding those names,
I think the most straightforward way to run this one is find one of these streamers or, you know,
if I could get a clip of Drake using my clone and then give it to the creator army,
we would do millions of dollars.
And I think you can do that in pet where I don't know if Kim Kardashian has a freaking poodle or whatever.
Sure she does.
But not even that, you don't even need that big of name.
just someone in that space and then you feed it to the army and I think that's the most straightforward
thing and I think it would go overnight. Yeah, I almost wonder if you could even just use the outrage.
So like, yeah, of the cost of it. Of the cost of it. I was thinking that too. I can't believe people are doing
this. This is the craziest thing I've seen. Celebrities are doing this. It makes me sick, whatever.
And some people in the, like, it'll get to so many people and most of the comments will be
negative about the idea, but it's just going to get so much reach that some people are going to either
just it'll plant the seed that this exists.
That I'm not doing it, that other people are doing it.
That, hey, maybe I would do do that.
I do love my pet.
Or even like, you could even play into Louis Vuitton doing it.
Like with the, you know, there's, I think there's a lot of different ways to approach it.
And I just like those areas where there's, there's that much margin to play.
There's just more.
And again, it ties back to like human nature.
We exist in a culture, in a world where we've created so much abundance.
Like, bottom line.
Like, we could afford things like universal basic income.
and we're automating the hell out of everything.
And anything and everything is,
is freaking possible.
And so with that mind,
there's really no shortage.
Like,
you see some of the services that exist for billionaires.
Like,
it is just the most absurd hyper,
but it exists.
And the people providing those do well.
Isn't that like a Hermosie thing?
He says,
sell to,
I want to sell to people with more money or whatever.
Yeah.
Something like that.
One of his genius insight.
Sell to the people with money.
But there is a,
there is like an actual like business framework here,
which is if you take what the rich have,
but you find a way to democratize it,
you can build a huge business.
So Uber is a classic example of this.
Rich people had private drivers where, you know,
when they're done with the meeting,
they send a text,
done, driver pulls up,
they get in,
they get out,
they don't have to go worry about parking and gas.
There's a guy who does that.
Uber democratized that private driver experience.
And literally that was their homepage,
was a private driver for everyone.
And so like that became,
that was the start of Uber,
black cars.
You know,
even Airbnb's.
What is the Airbnb?
It's having a vacation home.
Yep.
It's being able to go and stay in a home in, you know, Tahoe or in all these different places.
Airbnb became a thing that rich people have, vacation homes in different cities, but now everybody gets access to that in a different way.
Markey Jets was private, private flight.
Yeah.
So instead of buying a private jet, you know, $50 million, $100 million, you would instead buy a fractional share and get to ride certain hours.
And there was a huge market of people that wanted to do that.
Even JSX now probably to some extent.
You, JSX is exactly like that.
So, you know, that's a bit...
If you can find a way to drop the cost,
and even dual lingo,
like, we have rich people who will hire a Mandarin tutor for their kid,
but then if you have an app that can teach your kid,
you know, a foreign language,
in a way, it's doing the same thing.
And so I think that's...
That is just generally a business model.
What are the mistakes people make?
So, like, if somebody was to go into this,
what are the common pitfalls someone could fall into
that you could just, like, save the...
super top of the funnel here, how they treat those affiliates. It's very culture-based.
I've seen brands. There's so much money being made right now. Brand owners need to be super
generous because, you know, a market's a market. And right now people are paying, you talked about
the goalie challenge. Yeah, explain this because that was in an old episode. So explain what they were
doing. This brand comes in and in an effort to get as many creators as possible put together all these
prizes with like the number one, if you did a million dollars in sales for them in a month,
I believe they'd give you a condo and brickle or the cash equivalent, which was like 600 grand
or something like that.
Like Lamborghini was the next one.
It was like this like rewards tier list.
Rolexes left and right.
And you're selling golly gummies.
Like they just make these like apple cider vinegar gummies basically, which also was a health,
kind of like a holistic health wellness things.
Apple cider vinegar has benefits in your gut and whatever.
Maybe.
Maybe.
Yeah.
Well, that at the time was the narrator said so.
Yeah.
This 22 year old who's trying to win a condo.
told me that that's how the world works.
Oh, man.
Do you believe any advertising at this point?
No.
Once you've seen how the sausage is made.
There's a reason I hate supplements, too.
I'm not launching new supplements.
I mean, there's some good stuff out there,
but overall, when you really peel back all the,
like, a decent amount of health advice online nowadays
is coming from 18-year-olds making conspiracy videos.
That's pretty wild.
It's reality.
So a brand like gold,
always comes in though and they set the stage for how creators are being treated.
And obviously they have a lot of money and they're trying to mess the game up for everyone else.
They can afford that and maybe lose some money.
But then if you're this startup brand owner and you're coming in and you're,
no man, I don't want to give you 25% commission.
I'm going to give you 20.
And that can be super off-putting.
And so in this current era, I would say, and even the culture from like the group we own part of,
it's like abundance.
It's like put it out there.
It's going to come back.
and I think as an owner of a brand,
like bringing that,
not, you know,
accepting that we are a different generation
and not infringing on them.
I think that's the best thing you can do.
Right.
All right.
Give me your,
like,
just summarize.
If I tuned out
and I just need to hear one thing
to summarize what your thoughts are
on this kind of TikTok opportunity,
give me those summary
and I want to ask you about some other stuff.
Millions are being printed on TikTok shop.
Like,
like,
what are you doing?
Like,
just starting brands and
trying to get as many.
I'm trying to perfect short form content
and short form content distribution.
Period.
From a brand.
Why do you believe so much in short form content?
Because it's changing the world in front of our eyes.
Like it's from personalities we know
to songs we know.
Like it's so like music even.
We're hearing songs that are blowing up from this world.
And that's just,
it's the future.
Do we have this friend Connor Price?
Have you seen what he does on TikTok?
Wait, who's he again?
He's a rapper, white guy rapper.
Yes, yes, yes, yes, yes.
He used to work in Ramon's warehouse, like moving boxes.
No shit.
And he was like, and then during COVID, warehouse shuts down.
He goes home.
His wife's like, you should put your music out there.
Let's do something.
We're just sitting at home.
And he was really shy about it.
And she's like, you got to start making content.
He puts out a YouTube video and it gets like, you know, 11 views like most YouTube videos do.
And then she had this genius.
She's like, she's the real master.
mind behind it because she was like, let's make a TikTok.
And he was like, he had the same reaction.
TikTok, that's stupid.
That's not serious.
Like, I'm an artist.
I'm a musician.
I'm not just one of these kids dancing.
And what he did was he started making these videos.
We'll put one on the screen here so people can watch it.
But he created a little skit.
So his, instead of just saying, what I would have done like a boomer is I would have
been like, hey guys, I got a new song here.
Or I would just make a video of like playing the song.
Yeah.
And guess what happens when you, when you're scrolling through TikTok, you're swiping
every three seconds and a song starts to play that you've never heard before. You just keep swiping.
Like, he doesn't grab you right away. So instead he started doing these funny skits where he would,
he was three characters, almost like an Eddie Murphy movie. He would open the door like every
skit starts at him opening the door. And there's, uh, that's the rapper coming into the studio.
He's got the guy with the headphones on. That's him, him as the producer. And they have the weird
brother. And the weird brother is kind of the key to make the whole thing work. So he would walk in and
he'd be like, yo, you ready for a session? Whoa, what's he doing? And just,
immediately you want to know, well, what's he doing? Why is he surprised? And the weird brother is doing,
like, he has one where he's taking a carrot and he's drilling holes in a carrot. And you're like,
and it's like the sound of a drill. It's the carrot. It's visually weird. And they're both like,
he's being weird again. And then he's like, let's get down to work. You want to play that song?
And then you hear this flute playing. And they both look at the brother and he's playing the
carrot flute, but it's the beat of the song.
Like, he overlaid it that way as if that was the beat.
And the producer's like, go with it, go with it.
And then he starts rapping.
And then the song hits and the song is almost the punchline of the skit.
Yep.
And dude, he became like independently no record label, billion streams on Spotify,
doing no marketing on Spotify, only on TikTok.
Off that.
If I want to summarize all of this, it almost seems dark for a second.
but like one of my favorite, you know, quotes is, you know, if you tell a lie enough times,
it becomes truth.
And that was obviously war propaganda back in the day.
But you take that idea and then you just think purely in terms of views and more specifically
cost of acquisition of views.
So you have like a, you know, if you're a tobacco company whenever and you're getting
doctors to promote it, like you have the money to get the views and control the narrative.
Right.
And the more you can do that, like it's usually.
usually a pay-to-play game except in these windows. When all of a sudden an Andrew Tate burst on
the scene, it doesn't matter what he's saying is real or not. He's getting seen a billion times a
month. And so all of a sudden, there's some narrative there being formed that he has serious
impact on. And these gold rush windows are when there's the ability for normal people without
you know, multinational level marketing budgets to form a mainstream narrative or get a billion
views on a Spotify and, you know, become something because of these windows.
We couldn't have done that.
He couldn't have done that without TikTok.
Like he just, the old Instagram, you wouldn't have gone viral on.
There's no means of connecting.
Yes, this amazing circle.
Like 12 years ago, Instagram comes out.
And imagine if you were like, what are you doing all day today?
It's like, oh, I'm filming myself.
I'm making, I'm cooking at home and taking pictures of it or making videos of it.
Yeah, you're a weirdo.
Dude, get a job.
What are you doing?
So you go from.
weirdo wasting his time, but you were early on the platform to now, let's say you wanted to go
become a food creator. It's like, dude, it's too saturated, man. It's impossible to win. But now
everybody's accepted that influencers are a thing and that they have, they can move product.
They can become rich. They can become famous doing this. And what you're saying is kind of like
on TikTok, it's the same model. But instead of you becoming a famous creator, it's your product can
become famous by putting it to the hands of talented people who are going to make all kinds of
videos taking literally like a thousand shots on goal a month. And if they get the right story or the
right premise and they keep innovating on that, your product gets famous that way.
Whereas, dude, you weren't going to be able to walk into Walmart or Target and get on the shelf.
Yep. You're not even going to be able to really go onto Amazon and just rank number one
in these categories because they're so competitive. Not anymore, right? You're not going to
become an influential create on Instagram. It's harder. This is where the green field is.
My dad called me an idiot when I was pouring into Amazon.
Like actually, like, you know, like question my sanity as like a human, right?
Like it was like a crazy experience.
Now in hindsight, it's like, God, thank God.
$30 million later.
Yeah, thank God.
I didn't listen to my parents, you know.
And it's just, it's just, that's why I admire guys.
Elon's a good example.
I think when you look through things, look at things from like a very ground up perspective
and don't take the common.
There's so much arbitrage everywhere because humans are narrative machines and we live off
that.
like common knowledge becomes whatever.
And yet technology is reshaping everything.
That's why I just want to keep leaning into that and being.
I think more people that aren't afraid to just send it with like that in mind in some capacity,
the more it gives others the confidence to stand up on their own right and do their own thing.
Right.
I like that you said send it.
You have this phrase I like.
So we talk about looks maxing.
You have said this phrase before, life maxing.
Yeah.
And I kind of like the philosophy.
but I don't really fully know it because we've only hung out in group settings, a bunch of times.
What is the life-maxing philosophy?
Is this something that you think more people should be kind of taken as a mantra?
Yeah, I think so.
I think there's a lot of existential dread in today's world.
And there's also a lot of us trying to astrive.
Even amongst successful people, you mean?
Especially amongst successful people.
Especially among successful people.
And it manifests in all sorts of weird ways.
Look at Ryan Johnson.
I'm kidding.
Love you, Brian.
No, he's awesome.
He really is.
He really is.
And I think he's a good example of someone that's all in on life maxing.
Because everyone, my thing is we have this.
He took it literally.
He did.
Lifespan maxing.
Lifespan maxing.
But we have this blank, you know, scorecard.
Right.
And we have this finite time here on the earth.
And I think the more.
you can fill it up with things that you thoroughly enjoy and then kind of like maxing out those
stats, so to speak, we're capable of so much. And instead, we fall into this like, oh, I'm only
going to chase money or oh, I'm only going to do this, where living a well-rounded life,
what's the difference between just being well-rounded and life maxing? Are they the same thing
with just a cool name or is there a difference? I don't see many people, it ties back to that full
sending it thing. I don't see many people that are really like, yo, I'm, I'm,
living for this. What was your shower thoughts this morning? My shower thought was I realized that the
optimal way in terms of how the optimal mindset for me is to be ignorant of the past, realistic about the
present and delusional about the future. Too many people are living in their past or they vacationed
there all the time. They just keep going to visit and they tell themselves it's for all kinds of
reasons. Maybe it's therapies, tell them to go think about their childhood. Maybe it's their saying,
I'm going to go learn lessons. Reality is, the more you live in your past, the less happy you are.
Yeah. You want to be delusional about the future. Why not? Why be realistic about the future?
Because you can be only when you're a little bit delusional about the future, do you actually,
like, kind of blow your own mind? You get to do more than what you thought was reasonable.
But then you've got to be realistic about the president. If you're just delusional about the president,
you're like, no, I am the best dad, but you're not. Then you go nowhere, right?
Oh, I'm already uber-duber successful.
Like, bro, your bank accounts, you know, three digits right now.
It's like, you've got to be realistic, but just say like, all right, that's where I am,
but it's not where I'm always going to be.
Forget the past.
It don't matter if I failed 10 times.
Like, the most successful people, when you talk to them, they're like, yeah,
10 years, you grind it.
If you ask them, be like, what was that like?
What were you doing?
It's almost hard for them to even remember.
Yeah.
And it's not because it was so long ago.
It's because there's actually like a useful part of your brain that just blocks it out.
It's like my wife, she did like natural delivery of birth like three times.
And if I ask her about it, it's like her body has like a mechanism that's like,
you never forgot that.
I never forgot.
I'm traumatized.
I'm like, how could you do this to me?
She's like, what are you talking about?
I'm with you.
I'm fainting, right?
And she's like, forgot about it.
She's like, only remembers the good.
And it's like, wow.
Your brain gave you a survival mechanism that was actually really good for you,
that you don't remember how bad it was, how hard it was.
And I think ignorant of the past, realistic about the present, delusional about the future.
I think that's a good motto to live by.
So I take that.
There's two things.
I'm obsessed with this idea of character design.
And that's what I'm living real time.
I think we have the ability when you zoom out long enough to create literally whatever type of thing you want to be.
Like you can truly design that.
And so you have that.
And then you have another idea I'm obsessed with, which is Bezos's 80 year regret minimization framework where he wants to like that view of his deathbed.
He wants as few regrets as possible.
And so when you work through those two avenues,
you can quite literally do anything.
So explain the character design.
Because I've heard the regret minimization,
which is basically like,
if I'm dying,
I want to have the least regrets possible.
So therefore today,
which,
if I have a fork in the road,
you know,
do the one that will lead to the least regrets
when I'm 80,
when I'm 90,
when I'm 100 years old.
That ties back to your piece.
Be relatively delusional about the future
while being very aware of where you're out today
while pretty much disregarding
everything. And so when I look at like this, you know, like I, this is music I've been working
on, right? And I remember going to a show in Puerto Rico, John Summit, and I was like,
you know, in the booth right next to the DJ thing and just watching him command that crowd
and the energy and like the impact. And I was like, you know, if I'm 80 years old and I didn't
at least try to send it in this space, I'll regret it. And then I start thinking through the
character lens of what does an artist look like? And what does it? And what is a
this, like things I have in me. So I'm not like completely disconnected from reality, but now
taking all of the, hey, this is a business. Hey, now the product's music. Hey, this is streaming.
Hey, you know, marketing. And, and that's, that's where I'm out with it. One of the things that
you're reminding me of when you're talking about, let's say the music production or getting people
to remember is you were talking about whether it's marketing or music or if you have something
good to say, you almost owe it to yourself. It's like, do you believe in the thing you made,
the thing you have to say
because people are very bashful about marketing.
They're bashful about putting it out there.
I know this.
I would write things.
I wouldn't even send it to my own friends and family.
I wouldn't post on social media.
I wouldn't promote my product.
I just kind of wanted it to just be organic.
And when I look back at that,
I'm like, damn, I did myself a disservice.
Like, did I think the thing I did was good or not.
If I think it was good, then I owe it to that to do marketing.
To send it.
To send it.
And, you know, when you,
when you talk about storytelling, music,
you got to study the art of how do you get your stuff out there?
It's a phenomenal skill.
It's like a crazy, crazy.
Like that's the vehicle.
You put the package in the trunk,
but you need the vehicle that's going to actually get it out there to the masses.
It's crazy.
Dude, we're going to watch this video.
This YouTube video right now,
you just said it yourself,
what you said in this video will make people millions of dollars.
All they did was just try to act on it.
Give it two years, try to act on it.
You will become a millionaire.
if you just follow what you just said.
And if I go look at the YouTube video stats,
the retention chart is going to look like
at just a downhill slope.
Most people are going to click off within 30 seconds.
And then by the end of this,
there's only going to be, you know,
25% of people are still watching this at the end.
I mean, 75% of people clicked on this
because they wanted something out of their life
and then they're not going to even stick with it enough
to watch the video.
Yep.
But that's just the laws of nature.
And don't be that in mind.
But with that in mind,
I think this last chunk of the video
where we're talking about these stories
and the ability, like the model is becoming less important, the more I understand people.
And tapping into whatever that innate thing in all of us is is way more important.
And I want to bring that out of more people because I've been through like a
kind of stuff in a short period of time.
And I think the more I can bring that forward, the more general impact they'll be.
There's one of my other favorite internet clips, you know, for the Elon Musk's and like, Brett
Hancock, do you have him on or not?
Adcock, yeah.
Adcock, sorry.
There's those minds.
that are just like obviously incredible in their own space.
But then there's that Elon interview and it's like,
Elon, you inspire everyone in this room.
Who inspires you?
It's like Kanye West, of course.
You know, it's just like, is what he said?
Yeah, it's hilarious.
And it's, it's, it's, that's the opposite side of that.
Like, yeah, okay, Kanye's nuts in every way.
But just that ability and desire to create and stand up for new things and,
and like have that confidence in yourself,
regardless of what people say, is nothing short of not only incredible, but necessary for people.
I love the sended attitude.
I mean, I want to make merch with the send it thing.
And also, I think you made me realize there's probably the way I used to think about it,
which is well-rounded.
You know, Mike Posner came on the podcast, the famous musician.
He wrote, like, took a pill in a visa and all those songs.
First song went viral.
And he tells the story, he's like, first song went viral.
I'm like, of course, that's what I do.
You know, like, I guess that's what I do.
I put out a song, I go triple platinum.
And then the second song with double platinum, then single platinum, then no platinum.
And then he was on the shelf.
The record label was like, it's not even worth paying to produce your music because we don't think it'll sell.
But also, you can't go do something else.
You're under contract.
So he was like, dude, I'm shit out of luck.
He like, went back to school and started learning how to sing better.
He's like, do I always work on my craft.
And then he came back and now he's had, he's like had this resurgist.
But he talked about, he goes, I had to look at my life and realize, yes, I was,
uber-duber successful in my career,
but I was a desert wasteland in relationships and health and whatever.
He's like, that I realized was just not success for me.
And so I was inspired by that.
And I started thinking, yeah, you do want it to be well-rounded.
You want to be the dad, the husband.
You also want to be having fun.
You also want to be, you know, being creative and making cool shit, being successful, making money.
But the well-rounded thing is more like a check-the-box.
It's like, am I doing, you know, a sufficient amount of X, Y, and C.
Right.
Whereas life maxing is saying, what would it look like if I really sent it in terms of my fitness?
Like, yeah, I'm going to work out anyways, but like I know you do Muay Thai, right?
You're like, I'm going to work out for an hour anyways.
What could I do that makes me like, what would be full send on this workout?
Dramatically better.
And that's the great example.
It's like two years ago, I couldn't fight it all.
And I feel pretty comfortable, like, in there with a lot of people.
Right.
That aren't named John Jones, you know.
But just taking things seriously and really put that notch on your bell.
It's like now music or even like learning Spanish is one that I'm like going to do.
And I'm going to take it very seriously.
And it's not going to be I'm half learning Spanish.
I'm going to be fluent in, you know.
Do you do these one at a time or how do you how do you like?
That's what I'm discovering.
How do you not stretch yourself?
That's what I'm discovering.
It's like how much.
And I like that healthy balance of pushing yourself to we're capable of so much more than we
give ourselves credit for.
I've already, I've already seen that.
But there is some line.
And so I don't have a good answer for that.
But that's, I'm trying to also be an open book and show it all real time.
I want you to look back at my fighting clips from two years ago, and I want, you know,
the meat, like all of it.
I want to be an open story that is ongoing and constantly iterating.
So this year, I, um, Jesse Hetzler came on the podcast and gave this idea of a Misogi.
He's like, oh, this is Japanese tradition and the way, kind of the American translation or the way he
translated the Japanese idea is, um, one grand challenge a year, but specifically like,
do something so grand that it changes you.
Yeah. Then it changes you. So then it's like, so he, for him, it was like, he ran this
hundred mile race. And every year he picks a different one. One year was write a book.
Another year, so he's done this for like 15 years or so. And I was like, damn, I never really
do something like that. Right. Like I have like New Year's resolutions, things I want to improve
about myself. But I never really like put out the Masogi, the grand challenge for the year.
And so I made one. I was like, all right, I want to. And I like that it's one. Because I was like,
oh, I want to do this and this and this. All that was going to do was guarantee none of them happened.
Yeah. So all right, what's the one for.
this year. And I was like, I would love to be, I was like, I want to have more fun in my life.
I have fun playing basketball. I have fun doing the podcast. I have fun, you know, in business,
my kids. Where can I, where can I dial up fun? And I was like, I want to be able to jam out
with music. Because music is like its own little like magic potion. Music makes you feel good in
13 seconds. I can play a song and change your mood in 13 seconds. There's not much I can say to you that's
going to do that, like to change your mood for the better. And so I was like, all right, I want to be
able to jam out on a piano. But then I was like, all right, what's the life maxing version of this?
So I was like, all right, not only am I going to learn to, not only just going to learn piano.
Like, I'm going to get good. I'm going to be able to jam out to any song I want on the piano.
That's going to be my mission. Two, what if I could also teach my daughter? She's five.
I was like, what if she could do it with me? Now I'm getting dad points while I'm getting piano
points at the same time. Finding those synergies to weave it all together. So I was like, oh,
it's integration. I'm not choosing family or my piano hobby. It's both. So she comes with me to every
single lesson. She begs me to do piano now every night. I'm like, okay, that's cool.
Then I was like, all right, what would be like the max out, the full send version of this?
If I really was to send it, what would I do? And at first I was like, what would I make a song?
Would I perform at a theater? And I felt like, that's kind of playing somebody else's game.
So I think a key part is like, pick what's real for you. Don't just like take somebody else's
scorecard and be like, that's now how I'm going to judge myself. So I had this idea from my cousin of
go play a recital at an old folks home.
I was like, oh, that would be just like more fun.
Like that would just be more fun for me, more meaningful to me
versus like post it online and get a bunch of views
or perform it in front of other people.
It's like, dude, go to this place where I've been to a bunch of like senior centers.
Not a lot is happening there.
Like I could go be there Kanye because there's nobody else there.
Yeah, absolutely.
And for me, that would be meaningful.
Like I made other people's day brighter if I did that.
So I was like, to me, that was a real learning lesson of like
how to choose these side.
quests, how to choose these misogies, these one year challenges in a way that I'm going to use
now going forward. Absolutely. I think you hit the nail on the head with being hyper individualized.
Like my life maxing scorecard is not yours and it shouldn't be. We're all drawn to different things
and I think keeping it individual is important while keeping that. My main framework is like don't
let anyone else dictate it for you or don't let anyone tell you what you can't be or can't do.
Right. What's yours? What do you, what is that? What is that?
that scorecard look like for you? So I'm like moitai starting to take like a back burner thing.
I'm putting, you know, being a dad at the top of that, which has been, so that, that's like,
reshuffling everything. Because I'm learning what it means to be present as an individual. And that means,
like, you know, way less phone, which inherently means, like, it starts to crumble some of the other
pieces. But the beautiful part of this is when you put your priorities in, in place, things start to
handle themselves. Like, then all of a sudden, you start thinking smarter just naturally. Like, okay, like,
that still has to get done.
So I have to trust, you know, my team for that and this and that.
So that's at the top of it.
The music is the second piece and then still the other, you know, it's like I'm taking content
as one of these things now, like just from a storytelling.
Some of the stuff I'm I do on YouTube, I think is going to, is going to.
Well, let's talk about content real quick.
Yeah.
When I first met you through a mutual friend, you showed up and you had this like, again,
you always have a different, like, crazy outfit on.
And somebody was like, oh, you got to check out his Instagram.
And I go.
And I was like, bro, like, I was having a great conversation with you.
And then I went to your Instagram.
That's not this guy.
I was like, I would never talk to this guy.
Your brand name was like, the genius CEO.
Every video was like Dan Bilzerian meets like, Instagram, meets like drop shipper.
It was like, oh, man, this guy's selling courses.
And every video was like over the top.
He's talking about how you can make millions instantly.
it was a get rich quick vibes
but I met you
I was like dude you
yeah and you and you were like
I'm like you're like it's an experiment
like I'm being intentioned
I'm intentionally turning that knob up that way
because I want to see what happens
and you're into that at the time
I think now you're making a shift
but like can you just describe
what you did there?
Because I almost once I met you
and I was like oh that's he created a character
so my I was like that's actually respectable in a way
I'm huge like one of my core things
is obviously intense ownership of like oneself
And one of my problems, after I sold that business with Genius, I had my first daughter, I was really frustrated with the world.
Like, I just was. And it started to become like a cope and like a, you know, other people have weird ways of ducking ownership and responsibility and like disconnecting from their own unhappiness.
And I remember just thinking like, I don't like where the world's headed.
And so I could sit there and keep crying about it or I could try to have some influence or some dent on it.
and that's what kind of drew me to intentional social media.
I tried to do like this cool health content.
Like I was doing not full Brian Johnson,
but like Dave Asprey level stuff like seven,
eight years ago,
like hyperbaric chamber,
red light and like literally nobody cared.
Nobody cared.
And now in hindsight it was-
The nice guy was finishing last.
Yeah.
And in hindsight it was I didn't know how to make the content yet, right?
But I saw this like clear formula of,
oh my God,
if I post a car,
I am actually rich.
I stole a business.
And if you post a car or watch or whatever, people respond.
And so as that started to work, I started doubling down on those things.
And it wasn't until like, you kind of got to play the game to change the game a little bit.
It was my opinion.
And that's when you met me, kind of in that wave where like pseudo-relevant, even if maybe not in the right lens.
but until you have learned those skills and learn to kind of, you know, develop a platform,
then literally nobody cares. Like, nice guy does finish last. And so I guess that's just been
my personal evolution. Like, it's been fun. Because I got, I'll be the first to say, I got way
too far in that stuff. Like, I got lost in it. Like, that actually does happen. Ben, your partner
flagged that for me like seven or eight months ago in a really casual Ben way. But like,
Ben's non-confrontational. What did he say to you? It was just something along the lines of like,
well, if you do that stuff enough, don't you start to kind of,
believe it or become it. And that stuck with me. And I don't think he knows that stuck with me.
I don't even know if he remembers he said that. But there were a lot of little things like that
that prompted me to go. It's like an actor. You stay in character because you're doing it for the
role. But then at some point, it's method acting. Yeah, you lose yourself and you'll get lost in the
soft. And actually, that happened to me. And unfortunately, like a lot of the things I was leaning into
do make you like cool or whatever. So now there's this, this audience that looks up to you in a very
specific light. So you have two choices. You keep down the same path or you say, whoops, you know,
like this is what I actually am.
And so I feel like I've separated a lot of the negative parts.
I love fashion.
I love design.
Like I genuinely do.
I think it's individualism.
I think there's like, you know.
Can we do the fashion?
Okay, so here's me.
I have Nike shoes.
It should have been this new balance to go full dad mode.
I'm wearing sweatpants and a plain black shirt.
Those Kobe's though?
No, these are not Kobe's.
These are $90.
I just like this color of green.
So let's go head to toe.
Teach me what you got on here.
Full San Francisco.
go. And I love it.
I got matching socks today. That's only because I knew I had to step my game up for you.
Normally it would be mismatched socks. It'd be more sweat jeans. These are Lulu's at least.
And then like, this might be my daughters, but I was like, oh, hold on. He's going to have
hella accessories. Let me come strong with the rest. I got less accessories and usually. So I start
with the wrist. How much do you think this is? You start with the wrist. Is that like part
of the fashion? No, no. I just, I don't want to talk about Louvitton. So, okay.
That looks, it looks fancy to me. All right, my honest guess would have been that that's a $20,000
This is a vintage Oakley from like the 90s and it was like $3,500.
Okay.
So I don't believe that like expense and costs, I have some expensive stuff, but I think
like it's way cooler to put together like unique kind of stuff.
This shirt is this gentleman, the brand's ERL, I can't pronounce his name, but he's like
the head photographer for Vogue and like he did all of Kendrick Lamar's stuff.
And again, not super expensive, but like very on the come up.
The jeans were from Kanye's, like this is probably, like he's not cheap, but probably 300 bucks or something, but not mind blowing.
Kanye's free Larry Hoover tour with Drake.
These were probably like 150 bucks, like $10.00 not expensive.
Louis Vuitton boots, which were expensive, they were $2,500.
I love what, Ferrell is one of my business idols.
I think there's a huge gap between like artistry, culture, and actual business.
has that quote.
It's creativity without business is victimization and business without creativity is just dumb.
And I think he stepping into the head of Louis Vuitton, like a brand I would typically never wear
or care about is the perfect example of those two things merging,
creativity with meaningful enterprise.
Bernard Arnaud's top three richest people because of that.
All right.
I got a little bit, I got a little bit cool.
I don't think I could pull it off.
I think you pull it off.
But maybe, I don't know,
you got to give me like the dad,
baby steps version of these.
I'm going to start just,
I'm going to start at the wrist.
Take a simple and then we'll go from there.
Actually, I should just show up for,
he should have done a thing where it's like,
I don't know if you've seen Rick Glassman.
He does these interviews where he does a podcast,
but he'll go and then it'll cut and they'll switch outfits.
It's so funny when they do shit like that.
But we'll just pretend I did that.
That's awesome.
Rob, thanks for coming on, man.
Everybody should find you.
Rob the Bank, which is one of the greatest
handles of all time. Thank you for that.
Well, you were already saying it.
I didn't come up with it, but I was like, dude,
that should be your handle.
That should be your brand.
What is this?
The Genius CEO?
No, no, no, no.
You should be robbed the bank.
And just wait, full disclaimer before we, you know,
my last company was the Genius brand.
So I didn't just, you know, it just looked that.
It looked that.
But no, thank you for having me, seriously.
Like, this means the world.
I really appreciate it.
Awesome.
Thanks for doing it.
My all in it like no days off.
On the road, let's travel, never looking back.
