Right About Now - Legendary Business Advice - Weekly News Update 2.19.21: Old Spice Digital Studio Barbershop; McDonald's Chicken Sandwich Merchandise; Kit Kat Viral Ad; Reddit and Robinhood Hearing
Episode Date: February 19, 2021Welcome to this week's marketing news from The Radcast! We have some great topics for you today. Host Ryan Alford and producer Reiley Clark break down this week's hottest marketing headlines.Take a lo...ok at the headlines we cover below:Old Spice digital content studio and barbershop, opening March 1.McDonald's Crispy Chicken Sandwich is hitting the fast-food giant's store, as so is new merchandise.Kit Kat's viral "Take a Break" Ad.The Reddit and Robinhood hearing, was there market manipulation?If you enjoyed this episode of The Radcast, leave us a review on Apple Podcasts. Subscribe and share the word if you love what we discuss, so we can keep giving you the strategies to achieve radical marketing results! You can follow us on Instagram @the.rad.cast | @radical_results | @ryanalford | If you enjoyed this episode and want to learn more, join Ryan’s newsletter https://ryanalford.com/newsletter/ to get Ferrari level advice daily for FREE. Learn how to build a 7 figure business from your personal brand by signing up for a FREE introduction to personal branding https://ryanalford.com/personalbranding. Learn more by visiting our website at www.ryanisright.comSubscribe to our YouTube channel www.youtube.com/@RightAboutNowwithRyanAlford. See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Transcript
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You're listening to the latest Radcast News Update.
Here's Ryan and Riley.
Hey guys, what's up?
Welcome to the latest edition of the Radcast.
It's the Friday News edition.
It is February 19th, 2021, and I am joined by my lovely co-host and running mate here on the Radcast.
Yes.
Our producer, our extraordinary, Riley Clark.
Hello.
How are you today?
I'm great.
Good.
Hey, it's Friday.
I know.
You know?
It was a long week in the good way.
I feel like that sounded bad, but you know what I mean?
It's been a long week.
It was one of those weeks where you, like, Wednesday felt like a Monday, and it was just one of those weeks.
My weeks are rolling by.
I was thinking about this actually driving into work this morning.
I was like, I was like, I feel like it was two wins, like Thursdays, Fridays ago.
It's like, I feel like these weeks are like just boiling by.
It's like almost March already.
And I'm like, it's like, what happened?
I'm like, man, I'm going to be like 50 before I know it.
I'm kind of terrifying.
I know.
So I was like, and it's like, you know, we've had a couple episodes on the Super Bowl.
And it just shows you how fast like the news cycle is and everything else.
It's like, doesn't the Super Bowl for like a month ago?
Like, and it was less than two weeks ago.
Sunday will be two weeks.
I know, I know.
And it's like, oh, it's old news.
It feels like centuries ago already.
And I'm like, oh my gosh, no, we just did a part two about it yesterday because that's still relevant.
It's still relevant to talk about.
Oatley and it's okay to still talk about the super
Yes and the ads and the effects of them and what it meant and how it happened and it's all good
to be talking about so yeah but I do feel like I could brag a little bit because yeah I was
watching the Oatley ad yeah and you know started to poo poo it and then I knew it was
marketing brilliance and sure enough validated by Tyler yes at neuroinsight that it did have the
impact on the brain that I thought it did which is you thought it was you thought it was negative but
your subconscious was burying the Oatley brand into your brain like they intended it to do.
Uh-huh.
Oh, yeah.
No, I thought it was brilliant.
I mean, I know we talked about it the last, you know, if you caught the episode last week with Tyler,
then you'll hear all about how they even analyzed this whole process.
And then if you caught the episode that came out yesterday, it was a bonus episode.
But basically, Tyler gave us all the details on how the ads actually performed in the Super Bowl.
So it was super cool episode as far as, you know,
He gave us Pringles, Stella, Oatley, Rocket Mortgage.
And it was those four.
And he just really dissected, you know, where the brain felt any anxiety, basically, the bridge scene in Rocket Mortgage, you know, how that affects the brain, all that kind of stuff.
Anyway, super fascinating.
And definitely we always promote the video content.
If there's ever one that you might want to watch the video on, just to see the brainwave patterns for each one of those commercials, it's really fascinating.
So look that up on our YouTube channel.
You can find that anywhere.
You know, search Radcast on YouTube.
We'll get to all the episodes or on our website.
It's on Instagram.
Yeah, IGTV.
Yeah, IGTV.
We do upload the episodes to IGTV, which some of you all know about, you know,
some of our viewers are there too.
So that's been, that's been cool.
It's been good.
But yeah, it was fascinating and knowing how the brain works.
And it was also great because, you know, all the ad types,
and I guess we are our ad types as well, you know,
They think the ad meter and all these things show like, oh, how great our ads did.
But not so fast, my friend.
It doesn't mean that it's resonating in the brain the way that needs to or that you're getting that resonance that you want when the brand is on screen and all those things.
So really fascinating for us ad geeks.
But I think it's also, if you're out there and you're even marginally in the advertising space, it's fascinating to kind of learn.
And, you know, Tyler was really engaging.
and just super smart dude.
So looking forward to future episodes.
I can see Tyler and I getting into a lot of fun stuff down the road.
Absolutely.
But how is the rest of your week, like business-wise?
Like anything you want to talk about radical-wise?
It's been a really great week for radical business.
A few deals have come in.
We've gotten super busy.
You know, I mean, business has been good overall,
but it's been really good this week.
And we've got a new gym concept that we're going to be working with.
More details to come.
We've got a really cool manufacture of custom iron type things.
Name to be later coming on board.
There's just a lot of.
And then we got like, I don't know, 10 website inputs this week for a lot of people like, you know, I'm like stumbling on my, what do we call these things?
Forms, fills on our website.
So the website's been really active this week.
And, you know, but as always, the Radcast is brought to you by Radical, our ad agency.
Yes.
Yes.
Yes.
Shameless plug there.
Obviously.
So, yes.
If you are ever looking for marketing, you know where to find it.
Oh, for sure.
For sure.
No, but the Radcasts-wise, I mean, we've been having really good episodes.
Obviously, we talked about Tyler's episode.
And next week's episode, we kind of talked about it a little bit as well.
But our genre, he's coming on.
And he's going to be talking about Hello Wolfie and the effect.
of emojis and emoji data and these companies he's founded he's a little bit of a serial entrepreneur
and it's just really cool to hear his perspective on i mean if you think about it it makes total sense
particularly the emoji story it's like humans have always processed you know even since like you know
hydroglifics or whatever um you know what i'm talking about i think i even i think i probably said that
wrong but no you said it right okay okay hydroglyphics yeah okay um i think hyperglifics
Hydro-Glyphics.
Hiro.
Are they water graphics?
Anyway, they're the glyphics.
I do think they're hydrophics.
I think they are.
I don't know.
I'm having a brain like melt now.
No, honestly, we do.
It's Friday.
It's okay.
Anyway, all this to say.
But we've always processed through images.
And so emojis are doing the exact same thing.
I mean, content does better when you see an emoji beside it on Instagram, on social,
on TikTok because you're reading and then you see an emoji and you see the connection
and it processes.
So it's just really cool to hear that from.
him. It was. And, you know, he's playing in the small to medium business space for social media.
I think he's doing a great thing with giving and leveraging them, leveraging data and tools
that businesses that size don't have at a really affordable rate. He's got a really cool,
like, share investing. There's a name for this terminology. I think we're stumbling on all our
names today. But nonetheless, where you can buy into the company, really cool. So it was a very
fun episode. I really enjoyed Arjun and just fun guy to be around and, you know, it's kind of one of the,
sometimes you have these episodes where, you know, it's an interview and you're talking about what
they're talking about, but I felt like it was more of a conversation, you know, especially about BDB
marketing, the realities of the space, the technologies and then the emoji stuff was just fascinating.
Absolutely. Yeah. Yeah. It was fun. Yeah. What, uh, pop culture, anything going on as far as like,
yes. I mean, so I'm not, I think I've said this on previous things. I'm,
I find I'm an independent as far as Republican, Democrat.
I don't get into politics much.
But growing up, you know, in AM radio and all that, I remember my parents listening to it,
but Rush Limbaugh passed away this week, which was really sad.
I mean, he's a pioneer of radio, which is in our industry, it's media.
Our industry is built on media and advertising all these things, and he's a pioneer in it,
no matter what you think.
So sad to learn his passing from lung cancer.
I mean, just
and a historic figure.
Absolutely, yeah.
I was watching on my lunch break,
you know, again,
not a fan either way,
but Donald Trump,
who hasn't been heard of
since, you know,
the president election,
like as far as he hasn't been
on any interviews,
he called in,
because, you know,
Rush is passing or whatever
and only to talk about that.
But again, just shows the power
and the, you know,
just the prestige
and just known that Rush Limbaugh was.
and the impact that he had on the medium.
You know, he was just, you know, he was kind of to the right almost what I think of in the far other sense of like, you know, Howard Stern.
Howard Stern was not a political figure, but just what they both did individually, like one for politics, one for pop culture or salacious news, whatever you want to call it.
But just the impact on radio and then satellite radio, you know, both getting huge contracts, making multi-million dollars.
I think Rush was somewhere in like the $50 million a year.
You don't realize it to be on radio still, you know, like his annual salary.
And so it's crazy.
So we have a future.
Yes, podcasting.
But he still had 15 million listeners like a day or a week or something.
And so, again, still just a huge impact.
to the medium and the impact that he's had.
His wife did a really lovely kind of sign off for him
like the day he died.
I think it was Wednesday.
And I don't know.
So that kind of just resonated with me
because I remember riding in the car as a kid
and like my mom or dad like having him on.
And that voice kind of stuck in my head.
And it was less about the politics
or even what he was talking about.
But kind of just brought back memories for me
and the impact of like AM radio back in the day and how fast things have changed.
Yeah.
Now here we are in audio medium ourselves.
I know.
You know, there's parallels.
But sad day.
Yeah.
You know, so that kind of hit me this week.
Yeah.
Well, I mean, it's interesting.
When you think about like millions and billions, I'll transition a little bit.
It's interesting when you think about just the concept of billions versus millions.
And Jeff Bezos is now, again, the richest man in the world.
He passed Elon Musk.
I think it was over the last day.
They're like teeter tottery back and forth.
I know.
I know.
It's like now it's a competition.
It's like, you know, what's Tesla going to do next?
It's going to put Elon Musk back at number one.
But it's just, it's funny to see that he, you know, passed him again.
But in other kind of pulp culture-ish kind of news, I've been reading about this, but there are these people on Instagram, like Instagram thieves.
And they like have figured out like how to break into celebrities.
these really nice houses and things like that based on Instagram geotags,
based on things that they see in the pictures of these celebrities' apartments,
and they're able to identify where their apartments at in the space,
on the geotag, all this stuff,
certain things about the apartment they can hack into.
I just think that's bizarre that now people are using that to then break in and steal stuff.
I mean...
It doesn't surprise me.
I mean, nothing surprises me anymore, but, like, you know,
you share all this personal data and information and your house,
house and then and then they tie it back to the time of day when you're most like how often are you posting stories at restaurants or where you go out you know and they can probably figure out like the days and the times you're likely to be gone they know that you have some priceless base city oh it's totally unnerving yeah but it's like but it's a reminder of the realities of what's going on you know like yeah there's always going to be someone
using the information that's being put out there in nefarious ways.
You know, you want everybody, you know, when you're not, when you're not criminally minded,
which I don't think either one of us are, like you don't think about it in that way,
but criminals, all they do is process this through a lens of how I can manipulate,
manipulate or take advantage of it or steal or whatever.
And so it's not surprising, but it is sad.
Yeah.
We did this last week, and I want to ask you again,
And if, because, you know, for us in Greenville, the weather, it's, it's a little dreary, a little rainy, and it's just going to continue to be like this over the weekend.
And obviously, the rest of the United States is experiencing weird-ass cold front in Texas.
Texas is crazy to me.
But if you, wine pairing, we did this last week, and I liked, I liked that we did this.
So let's continue this a little bit.
So let's set the mood a little bit.
It's cold and it's raining outside.
and it's just you're not leaving your,
you're not leaving your house.
What, what wine, what wine are you going to drink
to warm yourself up with a fire,
potentially, your dog potentially?
I don't even know that you have a dog.
No dogs.
No dog.
We have four boys.
You don't need a dog.
We don't need a dog.
Well, it's just one more thing to have to keep up with.
It's less about that our children are animals.
No, no, no, I didn't mean it that way.
I don't need it that way.
They might be.
But at times.
But, you know, my first thought is like a nice bourbon, you know, but being a wine drinker, and I do drink bourbon, but some of the listeners out there, we'll do a bourbon tasting one time, you know, like on air.
I'll give some bourbon tips as well.
But we'll stick to the wine.
It has to be red.
So, like, I'm sorry, I'm a rosette.
I don't drink a ton of white, but I do like rosé.
We'll do rosé at some point.
But, like, it's got to be red when it's cold out.
Oh, yeah.
need, it's just the warm, you need like, you know, I still like mine maybe, you know, just a little
bit below root temperature. Some people like it, like, almost chilled their reds, but like at this
time of year, you kind of want it right around room temperature. Yeah. But I am going to go, I couldn't
go too far without, like, some of my favorites and, you know, Austin Hope being, you know, one of my
buddies and one of the fastest growing wineries in America atopasa Robles. He actually has a,
They probably have 10 or 12 labels, you know, brands under their stuff.
They're like Troublemaker Wine, which you've probably seen Liberty School, which you've seen, all good wines.
But they're Trayana Cabernet, which is actually one they've made for a while.
The Austin Hope label Cabernet, which is good, a little pricier.
But Triana Cabernet is a little bit more approachable and cost.
It's a Cabernet.
and everything that Austin does,
he has really studied tannins,
which is just to keep it simple,
we're not going to do wine at full wine episode here.
When you're drinking wine,
kind of that kick in the back
after you're drinking a glass of red,
that little bit of mf at the back,
that's either smooth
or sometimes might feel a little green
or a little bit,
that's the tannins in the wine.
And he is kind of mastered smooth tannins.
He's been his career,
rear, like how to get the best flavor.
Because what's happened, what typically happens with Cabernet and the big red wines is
they have to have that tannic structure to age.
And it also plays into the flavor profile.
So sometimes you'll have these delicious wines.
Yeah.
But those tannins just kind of stick to the back of your mouth and, like, kind of kick your
ass a little bit.
Yeah.
He's mastered making big, robust wines that have very approachable tannins.
And Triana is very much in that realm.
So you're sitting on the couch.
You're reading your book.
You've got a fire next to you because your power's out, you know, which is possible.
Treyana Cabernet, 1999-ish.
Mike can find it a little less, might be a little bit more.
Very approachable.
$20 bottle of Cabernet.
It tastes like a $60 bottle.
Let me tell you right now.
You can't find many $50 bottles.
It tastes as good as Treana Cabernet.
That's T-R-E-A-N-N-A.
T-N-N-A.
T-A-C-R-E-E-Cabernet is your cold-weather wine tip of the week.
Can you find that pretty much any grocery store?
It can be.
found.
Or wine and liquor store.
Wine or liquor store, you'll find it.
It's very much available.
Oh, cool, cool.
It may not be in every public, Sir Harris Teeter.
Yeah.
But I've definitely seen it in many grocery stores and definitely a lot of wine stores.
So if you see it on a wine list when you're out, so maybe you've heard this tip,
but you're to one, you see it on a wine list, get it.
It'll be more affordable than most of the other wines and they're better than most of
them that you're going to see like $80 ball.
And we're like, uh, get the tray on after like 45 on the wine list.
Thank me later.
I love that. Awesome. Awesome. Awesome. Cool. Well, here's Riley with the news.
Here is the Radcast News. Okay, so to start out this week, Old Spice is creating a digital content studio kind of barbershop vibe deal. And I think this is really cool. This is a Procter and Gamble and agency involvement. And it's starting March 1st in Columbus, Ohio. They have transformed this barbershop into very specialty. Old.
Spice products, branding, merchandise, super cool little space.
But did you read about this a little bit?
Yep.
Love this.
It tugged on my heartstrings because, you know, we've, I've kind of built an agency.
Look, we are an ad agency, so in many ways.
But we've built almost like a lab structure with what we've done with like GVL
hustle, our GVL brand locally.
Building an e-commerce kind of lab, we've built, we do merchandise, we build an e-commerce,
store.
And yet, but it wasn't really to make profit.
It was to learn.
Right.
And you look, Old Spice is a brand, is a, you know, bathroom, you know, hair, cosmetic, all those
things.
So the barbershop, and it's definitely taken the turn if you've watched their advertising
in the last 10 years, the turn towards, you know, that manly approach, which plays in
perfectly, you know, with the notion of old school barbershop and kind of a man's man's
man you know whatever so the thought of building kind of a lab to showcase products to do things
and content which is i love like you could build they can bring to life the content the environment
of what that is it was a brilliant play i love this it's it goes with everything that's right with
how you build and develop content in an organic way yep so hats off the old spice i love this
yeah i love it too i think it's super cool and you see this more i mean brands are trying to create
ways just for organic social media content because it's huge it's this power social media campaigns
people posting tagging you whatever oh i'm at the you know columbus old spice barbershop old spice like
it's just the thing it's the thing to do we saw this in sweden with the mcdardons barbershop they did
the golden m haircut it's something similar to that effect and it's just it's going to be big and
you know i'm looking forward to the follow up about it the thing i like about it the most is it's got
legs that plays in with their brand like sometimes you know like we've talked about a few of these
experiential things where it's you know the dunkin donuts thing like in Vegas fun cool extension but you
know like long term like this isn't like it's a one-off right this to me is this is becomes an
all the time content play it's somewhere that people stop it's not going to go away it's always
kind of related to their brand it has longevity yes and so I
I like this a ton more than just the one-offs that are kind of gimmicky.
Yeah, I agree.
I agree.
And I do think it brings in the barbershop culture that I think it's coming back in a lot of ways.
Because I think sometimes, you know, I think this is just a good thing for guys.
I feel like guys, you know, need this.
I mean, maybe even girls need it too.
But I just, I think this is a really good thing for the brand of Old Spice and, you know,
looking forward to seeing where it goes.
Speaking of McDonald's, they are dropping a new chicken sandwich.
It's a crispy chicken sandwich.
but it's interesting because they are doing a chickendrop.com
and it's like this merchandise kind of deal as well.
But it's interesting.
I feel like they're playing on this idea of like having cool,
like a cool drip,
you know,
cool style,
whatever,
but also having like a really good crispy chicken sandwich,
which I'm now really curious to go try.
Well,
it is so interesting how the chicken sandwich has become like the mecca of trial.
You had,
you know,
of course,
you know,
being in South Carolina,
one of the originals, the Chick-fil-A sandwich,
kind of being the pillar of chicken sandwiches.
But then you had Popeyes who comes out with the chicken,
and they had a huge,
there were lines for months at the Popeyes for chicken sandwiches.
Like, it was supposedly as good as the Chick-fil-A.
It had, like, homemade pickles.
It is a damn good chicken sandwich, by the way.
And actually, you know who actually always makes a pretty damn good chicken
sandwich.
I had it for the first time.
Church's chicken, what we actually ate at.
I've never eaten it a church's chicken.
And I don't know why, because it was a damn good chicken sandwich.
I've never been to a church's chicken.
I'm telling you that chicken sandwich was delicious.
Back to McDonald's.
I don't know why.
Shameless plug for all the other.
But I think we should do on one of these future episodes.
We're going to do a chicken sandwich sampling, you know, one of each.
Okay.
We'll line them up.
I'll have Chick-fil-Aze.
I'll have Chick-Pillays and let you know.
We're going to do a live radcast rendition of the best chicken sandwich.
So look, I don't know what it is about chicken sandwiches,
but I have to think that McDonald's is playing off of that on some level,
how do we get in this chicken sandwich game?
And then, you know, to add their little bit of spice to it, so to speak,
they do, you know, updating their merchandise,
which has kind of an old school look.
Yeah.
Retro look, which is kind of in.
And so, you know, it's cool.
You know, I don't know how many people buy a merchandise from McDonald's.
I don't know, you know, like.
But if it looks cool, maybe people will.
You know, that's the thing.
People love McDonald's.
I mean, my kids love McDonald's.
You know, if there was a hamburger mask, I might buy it, you know.
Really?
You know, like Halloween.
No, I mean, that's true.
That's true.
It's basically what we're doing with Josh here, you know, LTO, Burger.
Basically made him burger boy.
Yeah, exactly.
No, it's cool.
But I kind of want to taste it, though.
It's kind of making me hungry.
I know.
I'm like, you know, it's ready for luncheon already.
I'm like, Sarman.
No, but the other news we have is,
Cat, which you've seen this campaign.
If you're on Twitter, you have seen this.
You have seen this because this is so simple because you already know the tagline.
When you see it, you know this is for Kit Kat because it has a calendar and then it's just
two Kit Katz and then it go back to your calendar.
It was so familiar.
I saw it.
I did not see it like in my feed or anything.
I admittedly saw this on like the news, you know, feed that we get like online going
on to an article.
But as soon as I saw the picture.
I got it completely.
I thought it was brilliant because you looked just like you would like on your calendar
on your smartphone or something like that, that whole bar look.
And then the Kid Cat fit in perfect.
You didn't even have to say a tagline.
Exactly.
I love the simplicity of this.
It's like simple design, high concept though.
And sometimes pictures tell a thousand words.
Exactly.
That's all you need.
And so, and you know what else was brilliant?
This was an entry by someone that was.
wasn't even on the roster of agencies for Kit Kat.
Someone entered it.
Sam, I forget his last name, but yeah.
Yeah, he entered it as an entry.
I think maybe someone had creative entries for ideas or something.
So I love that.
I hope he got paid well after the fact.
I'm sure he did with how much it's blown up.
I mean,
because I saw it on LinkedIn and Twitter.
Oh, for sure.
So for anyone out there,
hey, don't be afraid to give it away because it will come back eventually.
I've built my career on that.
Oh, yeah.
And other news.
So yesterday there was a hearing and we need to get the details on it, but it hasn't been fully released yet as to what happened with Robin Hood.
But the Reddit and Robin Hood hearing to see if there was, in fact, market manipulation.
Because a lot of the hedge funds, you probably know this a lot better in a deeper way than I'm going to explain it.
So maybe I should just let you take it away.
Well, I don't know how it's going to play out, but essentially, you know, for everyone,
we even had this, I think, on a couple news episodes where GameStop stock was essentially,
there was a group of thread on Reddit where people were talking about,
all right, let's go buy Reddit, let's show the man, because a lot of people had shorted
the stock were essentially saying it was worthless.
And the guys on Reddit were like, all right, we're going to fight the man.
So we're going to go have everyone buy it, which drove the price up.
Because, I mean, it just shows the power.
They had millions of people, like, or users that were following this article.
So even if they were buying, you know, $20, $30 worth, you're talking about $30, $40, $50 million in movement.
So that drove the stock price up.
And then it kind of got momentum and went to like $300, $400 when true value of that stock was in the single digits maybe.
Exactly.
And I think it's come back down now.
But Robin Hood's essentially set down your ability to buy or sell it for a period there
when it went up and that was just the biggest stink in the world.
I was going to say, but what is your opinion on that?
Because I think that goes, I know we talked about this a little bit, but it's continuing.
It's a continuing story and it's so relevant, but it goes so against any way, shape, or
foreign, the brand of what Robin Hood is supposed to be.
Oh, yeah, completely.
And as well, it goes against, it goes against the whole system of just free market, right?
Oh, it totally does.
And their claim in, you know, this will all play out, was that it was more about their liability,
not just because they say, again, not saying I believe any of this, but it was using what they're saying,
that they have to make sure there's not manipulation happening.
If they keep the market open, they keep allowing it, and there is something nefarious happening,
they could be, their risk or liability is potentially, it's, I think,
is more complex than I just described,
but I think on its surface it's related to that.
So they have to do their due diligence,
and in doing their due diligence,
they take it down,
and it looks very bad,
and they run a really bad.
Super Bowl commercial.
Oh,
that was so bad.
So I don't know.
I'd really like to know,
like,
you're probably never going to hear this,
but, you know,
what their valuation,
you know,
their private company now,
but they're actually going public this year.
But I'd like to know how many,
what their user base went,
what it was before all this and what it is now and the money in it.
I'd be interesting.
I'd be surprised if it went down.
The money?
No, Robin Hood users.
Oh.
Because, I mean, if they're going to like basically shut you off from being able to invest stock.
I mean, I would jump ship.
Yeah, there was a lot.
I'd go to a different act.
I still have it.
I don't even invest, but I just jump in.
I moved some stuff from it to another.
I still use it a little bit, but I moved about half of it into another app.
So, yeah.
And it just, it's like.
Like this is bad optics and just bad precedent.
You got to figure it out, but it just shows you, hey, the man isn't always in control.
Sometimes the people can rise up.
So I think you're going to see more of that, by the way.
Oh, for sure.
Across several industries.
There's been a couple, I think they've tried to pop off.
They haven't gotten as popular.
I think you've seen a lot of this with like crypto and stuff like that.
Oh, yeah.
I love me some crypto now.
Oh, yeah.
It kind of drives me crazy watching it go up and down.
but I just kind of, I've turned it off now.
I'm like, I don't even want to.
I'm going to check back in in a year.
I think, I think it's here for at least that long.
I don't know about five years, but you make some money in a year.
You never know.
I'm sure people didn't think digital money was going to be a thing.
Vimmo, you know, I'm sure people thought that was going to go way sooner or later,
but here we are, right and think of it.
Cool.
Well, it was a good week.
And as always, RIP Rush Limbaugh.
And so, but yeah, looking for,
forward to everything that's coming up and I hope everyone's enjoyed it. You know where to find
us at theraddcast.com at the dot rad.com on Instagram and we'll see you next time.
See ya. Have a great weekend. Yo guys, what's up, Ryan Alford here? Thanks so much for listening.
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