Right About Now with Ryan Alford - D.O.G.E, The American Dream, Google's billion trillion dollar fine

Episode Date: November 15, 2024

In today’s Weekly Business News, hosts Ryan Alford, Chris Hansen and Brianna Hall dive into a range of timely topics. They discuss the recent surge in Bitcoin prices following a political event, Elo...n Musk’s new government position, and a mishap involving Mattel’s toy packaging. The conversation also covers a hefty fine imposed on Google by Russia, sparking discussions about its potential implications and the broader issue of censorship. Blending humor with insightful commentary, the episode delivers an engaging mix of serious and light-hearted perspectives on current business news.Don’t miss the new segment, where Ryan takes to the streets to interview random people, asking them, “What is the American Dream and is it still attainable today?”TAKEAWAYSRecent surge in Bitcoin prices following a political event.Elon Musk's appointment to a government position and its implications.Mishap involving Mattel's toy packaging leading to an inappropriate web address.Discussion on the significant fine imposed on Google by the Russian government.Skepticism about the enforceability of the fine and its implications for multinational corporations.The absurdity of the fine in relation to Google's market value.Google's response to the fine and its impact on their operations in Russia.Censorship by private companies and its broader societal implications.Evolving concept of the American Dream in the context of modern career paths.The disparity between traditional career success and new opportunities in the digital age.  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. 

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Starting point is 00:00:00 This is Right About Now with Ryan Alford, a Radcast Network production. We are the number one business show on the planet with over one million downloads a month. Taking the BS out of business for over six years and over 400 episodes. You ready to start snapping necks and cashing checks? Well, it starts right about now. What's up guys? Welcome to Right About Now. It's our weekly business news of the week here on November 15th, 2024.
Starting point is 00:00:32 Wherever you are, however you are, thank you for listening. We appreciate you and I appreciate Mr. Chris Hanson. What's up, Chris? What's up, Brian? How are you? I am good here in a little chilly South Carolina, but I'm good. A little cooler today moving in, but Brianna, how are you? I am good here in little chilly South Carolina, but I'm good. A little cooler today moving in, but Brianna, how are you? I'm good. It was colder than expected this morning. I really wasn't expecting it when I walked out of my house with my jeans got a little
Starting point is 00:00:57 holes in my knees today. Yeah, I know. Does it get this cold in California? Definitely does not. Not until like January, then it gets, then it gets cold. All right. So it's a little early, but we've been spoiled. It's been beautiful here. So I've been enjoying it. We have like 80 degrees. That's the funny thing in South Carolina, the 80 to 50 really in a hurry. So nothing like talking about the weather. Everybody loves the weather. I heard that we have all four seasons in one day here Yeah, that's about right. That sounds right. Chris, how sunny Miami? It's been beautiful, man. This is the best time of year.
Starting point is 00:01:31 It's sunny, breezy. I love it. Does it hover right around 80? But the low humidity, lower. The humidity can vary. It was a little wet the other night. Still tropical, right? What's happening in Miami this time of year?
Starting point is 00:01:52 Our basil coming up in December. That's kind of what everyone's preparing and talking about. I'm getting a lot of buddies reaching out that are coming down one to connect. I just have one thing to say and that is that I will be wearing this cozy warm soft Sweater. Oh, yeah for the rest of winter as it is too cold for me here Yes, hey, it does get cold. Hey, oh you're a spark to we're both sparks, you know And yes, and you know, you're a spark too. We're both sparks. You know? Yep. And, uh,
Starting point is 00:02:26 Yes. And you know, you know how you stay warm though? You gotta go to brandabills.com. They've got all the merch you want. And look, hey, it's all about bills, about hats, but their hoodies and their t-shirts will surprise you. This is, I will, I don't just say this, you know, they're a sponsor, you know, probably know that by now, if you've been listening to the show, but these are the most comfortable hoodies I've ever worn. If that perfect metal of softness and they aren't like you can oversize it and make it fit how you want, but I love how they fit like not too bad. It doesn't, like I'm a big dude, anything
Starting point is 00:03:06 about too baggy. And I look like, you know, walking, you know, Barney the clown on like just round and proud. But it fits tighter on me at the size that I wear, which I like. It's fitted a little more fitted, but still being a hoodie. So anyway, great merch. I heard Chris that you actually got a package delivered. Oh yeah. We finally made it happen. And it's honestly, it's perfect timing because it's hoodie weather at night, walking the dog. And I consider myself a hoodie connoisseur and I will say these have that good weight to them. Like they feel expensive, premium, you know, you can tell it's quality and I love when on the inside of the hoodie, it feels completely like, you know, like fleece, soft, buttery. They are buttery. It's like post workout, hit the
Starting point is 00:03:56 shower, throw that on, go take a nice walk with the dog. I am frickin chillin man. It is it's cozy. It's nice. I too do not like baggy cause I look stupid cause I have little legs. Have you been skipping leg day? Hell no. I've been hitting leg day. You missed leg day, bro. Like what Ryan's saying, I just don't look as like
Starting point is 00:04:17 roly poly. I just look more of like a tree top. You know, if I wear a real baggy hoody hoodie. So, and obviously I'm rocking the Brandon Bills hat right now. Another business mind, vacay with Ryan. Literally, every hat I have in my house is Brandon Bills because they're awesome.
Starting point is 00:04:34 Yes, that's what you see here on set. When we're here, I'll hold one up. That's got a Write About Now logo. Send us a DM, we'll send you some merch. And again, go check them out, brandabills.com. Click that button in the right corner. It says custom. Give your brand a boost. They will, they will customize it. That's the thing. They don't just throw your logo on it. They'll do something funky, fun, interesting patches,
Starting point is 00:04:59 leather patches. Their design team is more than just a, you know, logo, throw it on their team. They actually design and they'll do some things and push the envelope. And they'll mock it up for you. I had them mock up a couple of months ago, Ryan was saying no beta men. So we had a mock up done of the no beta men shirts. So yeah, they're a fantastic team over there. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:05:22 No beta men and friends don't let friends order merch from anyone, but brandabills.com official sponsor of right about now. Yeah. Tell if you need to be watching, if you're not watching. So if you're listening, we appreciate you. You need to go check out the YouTube channel and, or on Spotify, you watch the video because you need to see, and I want Chris to explain his glasses, which make him look really cool. But I think there's a specific use for those in there. The blue light blockers. Yes. Yeah, it's a very important
Starting point is 00:05:56 topic. You guys should get educated. We have a show called Vibe Science. We just had a great guest on that told us all about it. Andreas Christo. The UV light can play a lot in your circadian rhythm and that's, I, me, myself learned a lot of lessons from it. So don't go check out that. Have you noticed a difference? Cause I've seen you in pictures and like on social and when I catch it with you,
Starting point is 00:06:17 I see you having one more on video. So have you noticed any difference? I do feel like yesterday I was pretty consistent. And this is again, I'm experimenting. This is my first time doing this really. I did feel a little bit more calm into the evening, you know, kind of that, like my body was adjusting to the natural rhythm, right?
Starting point is 00:06:38 Of the sun and the moon. Yep. So I do feel like I was feeling a lot more relaxed and ready for bed earlier than I usually would. Hmm. I did notice on TikTok, your breakdancing rhythm had gotten a lot better. So is that, is that the kind of rhythm it improves? Yeah, baby.
Starting point is 00:06:55 Whatever rhythm you want, it will improve it. So Katie, breakdancing rhythm. Put it this way. We know blue light is bad. We set our phones too much. Can't hurt to rock a pair. Yeah. No, I will say this. I'm going to age myself.
Starting point is 00:07:08 You guys probably don't remember this. No, man. I'm the old man in the group, but they had this infomercial back in the day, either late eighties, early nineties, blue blockers. And they were these big, huge square, like bifocaled. And this was, this was early, man. This is late.
Starting point is 00:07:24 It was early nineties. Go look it up. Blue blockers. They were a thing. They were the ugliest, big bifocal looking things, but they were, I think my dad had a pair. 1995, whatever it was back in the day. That is a vibe. Oh yeah. Again, in like 2008. Yeah. But I mean, I think maybe they were ahead of their time doing a similar thing, right? I don't know. They were. Who knows? Those infomercials, some of them, you know, some of those products actually turned out to help. And then they're not just end up in the, I tell you what, we were a yard sale family. We had yard sales like three times a year. You know, that's what happens when
Starting point is 00:08:03 you're poor. You have yard sales a lot. And so, but a lot of those infomercial stuff would be in our yard sales. I'm an average sucker, I think, for that stuff. And then I get passed on to me because I'm kind of a sucker for that. Oh man, look at that. Holds 8,000 batteries case, you know, like that looks so like organized, but you never put those things in those things. They just have been a drawer, the crappiest drawer ever.
Starting point is 00:08:31 Like everybody's got that drawer. Oh yeah. Everybody has. Don't act like you don't have that drawer. You got that drawer. Oh, I do. Mine's bad. So this was at night. I got a tray in my kitchen instead.
Starting point is 00:08:41 Oh man. Your keys and everything, but it's like a mountain of keys, mints, pocket knives. Yep. Yes. We've got a drawer and a tray so. Oh drawer and a tray. I like we have look we have four kids. There's six of us. We have like five of those drawers. Yeah. One in every room. I'm a pretty neat person, like on the surface, but I have at least 12 of those drawers going on. You know, like- You open up the doors and the chaos. Everything falls in, you know.
Starting point is 00:09:14 I think that's my mom taught me that or something. Cause when I go to my mom's house, it's spotless. But if you look around enough, you'll find a closet. It's like, don't open it too fast. You never know. Oh, what's happening in the news? Well, we are doing good here in the US. I've got a record breaking Bitcoin surge to 90,000 on Trump's win. It's actually interesting because Chris had told me and us and all the listeners to invest in Bitcoin and
Starting point is 00:09:46 pre-election, I noticed that it was trending right around $75,000. I think we talked about it last week. And I was like, oh, I should buy some or whatever. And I didn't. And then yesterday, I got the notification it was up to $89,000. I was like, dang it, could have made $10. It also sidelines me. Getting the game. Point 00001 of it. I know. Did Chris, what's it? What are we at now? We're still holding it like that 8990 years. It's gone back down.
Starting point is 00:10:16 It's ripping today. I mean, honestly, Dogecoin is the real big hitter right now. Yeah. I mean, Did you get in on it? Yeah, honestly, I just took a much larger position this morning. Oh, here we go. Yeah, I decided to jump in a little heavier myself, you know, because I've been in it for a while now. And I got the conversation with my family last night.
Starting point is 00:10:41 You don't need to be complicated, right? Get on Coinbase, set it for $20 a week into Bitcoin or whatever it is like you would an investment fund, take 10% of your income and do that. And just chill. And you know, check every month and you're going to be happy. Yeah. It's funny because last night when my mom goes, how do I get into that Coinbase account you set up for your father? I haven't looked at him for years, right? Four years ago, they're like,
Starting point is 00:11:04 how do I get out of this thing? So again, history repeats itself. Everyone's happy again. And then you're just talking about everyone wants to buy it. It's not too late, people. Set your tithes for Bitcoin. Yes. You know, say your prayers, send your tithe and set it and forget it and walk away and look back in a year with this administration that's pushing it and Elon Musk around and see what happens. Yeah. Speaking of Elon, we have Elon heading up the Department of Government Efficiency. Doge it is. Yep. How awesome. How awesome is that? That just happened to work out to
Starting point is 00:11:57 the acronym. What are the chances? Yeah, I don't know. I was actually wondering if that was on purpose or a coincidence. Oh, it was convenient that those because I think that's similar wording to what I think he was going to have Elon do no matter what. But you shit. Nothing. Nothing's accidental. Like Ryan is all I'm saying. They're like, dude, I'm just saying we can capitalize on this. Yeah. Marketing. What do you call it?
Starting point is 00:12:26 Borrowed interest. Borrowed interest. Yeah. Shared interest here. Cause high tide raises all ships, both directions. You know, they want good marketing of the new department of government efficiency. And then of course the Doge coin going up. I'd like to know privately what, how much Doge Trump owns.
Starting point is 00:12:49 Yeah. I'd like to know too. I don't think we'd ever, uh, learn that, but, uh, Betty and some. The team, uh, did bring it to my attention that Elon, uh, he made a post on X says the department of government efficiency, the merch will be fire. Oh, yeah. You know what? You know how the Doge Department could get started? Invest in Doge and use the earnings to pay down the national debt. Yeah. Brilliant. The, the means gamble with government money.
Starting point is 00:13:32 The memes are amazing on X right now. If you are not seeing them in related relation to Elon and the election, they're hilarious. It just goes to show you like, I mean, with like, he didn't take himself too seriously. Like he posts himself with the gold chain, like doge on it. Like he's, I think at some point, cause I'm not sure he was always that way. Like 10 years ago, I'm not, I don't know. I'm not saying he wasn't brilliant and different and all those things, but I feel like he loosened up and just said, I'm going to embrace all this shit and, you know, and own my different.
Starting point is 00:14:08 And yeah, it's worked out for him. He is like showing us kind of a lovable side of Elon. Yeah. Which I'm enjoying. Yes. He's a dork and I like it. He is. So I want to see what the Department of Government efficiency he's doing it with Rams of a I can never say his name.
Starting point is 00:14:26 Vivek Vivek. Vivek. Rams Rams. I was something someone said that's better than me. Rama Swami. I love the guy. I just wish I could say his name better. Rama Swami.
Starting point is 00:14:37 Yes. Yeah, he's cool. I like him. Every time I see him talk. I'm like, that did smart. Yeah, it looks like, so they'll be regulating federal spending. In a statement released Tuesday, Trump referred to the new agency as DOGE, Department of Government Efficiency. And it says, it's not clear whether this entity will exist within the federal government or
Starting point is 00:15:02 outside. So we're going to have to see what the two of them come up with. Yeah. I, uh, I'm, uh, I'm here for it, you know, like, let's try something different. Like we've been doing the same shit in politics and in government for, you know, a hundred years, like let's, let's try some different things and see if, you know, some true entrepreneurs can figure it out or if, Hey, they might all call. He might all cry and go home. Yeah. Yeah. It's going to be really interesting. Uh, Roma Swami here said, we will not go gently
Starting point is 00:15:38 in a post on X. Um, and then Elon Musk said, this is going to send shock waves through the system and everyone involved in government waste, this is going to send shock waves through the system and everyone involved in government waste, which is a lot of people. Yeah. Yeah. Well, anyone that's been to a DMV knows that. Oh God.
Starting point is 00:15:56 Not in South Carolina, they're so fast here. Hey, it gotten better. Oh yeah. True, you should go to one in California. Used to be, I don't know what happened. It's like five years, six years ago, maybe. I mean, it used to be probably what you experienced and they entered, put in the number system
Starting point is 00:16:15 and take a number and all that. I don't know, somebody got that shit in order. They should get it raised. They really did because, well, I went into the DMV when I went to transfer my license from California to here and I walked in and she was like, what do you hear for? Like the lady at the front, what do you hear for? Before you even get to pick a number.
Starting point is 00:16:30 And I told her and she's like, okay, do you have this, this, this and this? And I was like, nope. She's like, okay, go. Like you can't even get a number. You're not even getting it. No suit for you. I mean, they're the number Nazis, you know, like, no, no, no, no, no license for you. Like it's like they don't mess around.
Starting point is 00:16:47 They know what you need. They're like, we're not, don't get in these lines. Cause it used to be a model of inefficiency. I'd, I would be behind 10 people and they get to the thing and AIDO didn't have what they were supposed to. And they got that shit in order. I couldn't credit. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:17:00 I'm thinking, you know, the government got right in South Carolina, the roads, let's not go there, but the DMV. The roads aren't that bad. Are you kidding? No, they're not that bad. Come on. They're really not. All right, you don't drive a sports car.
Starting point is 00:17:12 Go drive my Audi. Yeah, yeah. They're not bad if I'm driving my husband's lifted Tundra, they're fine. Yeah, my road and driver's been in the shop and I can't wait to get it back it I'm done with the Audi and these roads Interesting news article here to share with you guys Mattel the toy Manufacturer they had to pull a bunch of their wicked dolls off the shelves after somebody
Starting point is 00:17:41 Missprinted the web address. That's on all the packaging So it was supposed to go to wickedmovie.com. Oh boy. And it went to a different web address that was showing it looks like adult entertainment videos. Cool. You had, this is like on, you know, ESPN, they have a segment. You had one job to do. Yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:18:05 Yeah, like the snapper, you know, like one job to do and you screwed it up. And so- It's hard to believe it's a mistake. I thought that's where my mind instantly went. You know, my conspiracy theory brain, but then if it was like Cinderella movie.com, okay. I could kind of see how this was a mistake.
Starting point is 00:18:23 But being wicked, do you think, Okay. They paid some money off. Like no one did a double check on that before they were like, we're like, all right, let's send it to the assembly line. Let me just say this. I used to like my first job, my, you know, how things change, but I worked on my first marketing job with Verizon and I proofread brochures. I literally was a junior AE, like 200 page fine print brochures and other things like that. And that went through tons of checks.
Starting point is 00:18:58 We got a lot more right than we did wrong about the volume. Our percentage was awesome. However, you would be surprised at how shit like that can and does happen. I'll just say, now we never, luckily, I probably wouldn't be sitting here today, printed any porn sites on any of those. But at the same time, there was a couple of ads that actually went out that we worked on that were print ads like newspaper. And it went through to the top of the mountain to the bottom, like the food chain of people looking at this and proofreaders. And you'd have a, you'd have a word with like 40 point font and it was misspelled and no one fucking
Starting point is 00:19:42 caught it. Like it was like once in a blue moon. And it's like, I don't know. I could believe the conspiracy totally, but at the same time having worked on high volume, like high profile stuff like this, you would be surprised. I think they probably just put wickedmovie.com or whatever. And everybody just assumed it was right. One person probably put it on there
Starting point is 00:20:03 and nobody ever double checked it or typed it was right. One person probably put it on there and nobody ever double checked it or typed it into Google. But yeah, don't put out adult entertainment sites on children toys. Not a good look. No, please don't. I thought this one was interesting. Russia has decided to find Google. An amount of money I don't even know how to say. It's a two followed by 36 zeros, the equivalent to around 20 billion, trillion, trillion. Man, that's quite a lot of money. Here's where my head went.
Starting point is 00:20:48 Is this enforceable? Will they ever see a penny of this? Like, I get that it has a lot of people and Google's a multi-continent, multinational, corporate, global brand and provide services in these countries and is liable on some level, I just don't think they're going to write that check. No, no. It's very interesting. You know, I think that especially like, you know, with this number, yeah, to your point, like, is that enforceable? That's not even a number that wouldn't even fit on a check.
Starting point is 00:21:25 I don't even know. And even Google, I don't think has that sitting somewhere. Like they have a lot more money than God, but you know, like they don't have that much, I don't think. Well, it says that this number is significantly larger than Google's market value of $2 trillion. That's well larger than the entire global economy. Your global economy is 110 trillion.
Starting point is 00:21:45 Yeah, exactly. So you know, this is 20 billion trillion trillion. The funny part is Google's response. Google referred to the fine and its recent earnings reports mentioning ongoing legal matters. So, you know, you and I, anybody, we have some ongoing legal matters. Those things can be very different. Both have the time and money to stretch this indefinitely. Yeah. Russ just got a lot of money. I mean, don't mistake some of this dumb shit going on over
Starting point is 00:22:17 there. There's a lot of money over there. But here's what they said. The company noted, we do not believe these ongoing legal matters will have a material adverse effect on earnings. Oh, that'd be like the equivalent of me getting like a $2 million fine from the government and being like, ah, that really didn't affect much. Maybe. All that tells me is they know that they're never going to write that check. Yeah. And it sounds like they ceased most of their operations in Russia and, you know, they're not going to probably go back to doing business there.
Starting point is 00:22:57 Yeah. I mean, was Google like, if you search for Russia, like, were they putting up like pitchforks or something like in the search results like Putin and like, you know, Satan, like having, you know, lunch together. Like what, what, what, what, what earned, what earned the, uh, the fine this high, I guess, just, I think they said that it was blocking. They were like blocking, uh, okay. We're censoring pro-Russian channels. Oh, Oh, wow. That that then what's the fine in the US for censoring the Rogan Trump? Episode. So honestly, Russia is being a good model of what we
Starting point is 00:23:34 should all be thinking about. Yeah. Yeah. Private companies are censoring vital information from the public. Yeah, that's right. Hmm. That's just Google. No big deal. Well, it is interesting. I mean, this is a number that most people can't even fathom. Americans searching for the American dream.
Starting point is 00:24:01 Yes. Do you like that segment? I did like that. You know what it is? It's a number big enough to get us talking about it. The American Dream. Yes. Do you like that segment segue? I did like that. You know, it is it's a number big enough to get us talking about it. If it was 20 million, we would know and would even pay attention. Yes. It's almost you have to be so ridiculous to create the conversation.
Starting point is 00:24:17 I mean, the American Dream has become different. We're doing a segment with our good partner, independent center, and we wanted to bring it to life here on the show and really thinking about what the American dream is today and how attainable it is. I mean, when you hear those things, Chris, like, what do you think? I guess I'm going to ask you to think about it from two sides, like you personally, and then maybe what your sentiment might be for how what other people think. I know I'm not asking you to guess, but maybe just your assumption of what people think the American dream is.
Starting point is 00:24:54 I think the assumption the American dream is what we, you know, what we grew up thinking, right? A house, kids, dog, you can pay for your kids' school, debt free, right? At least that is to me. Well, I have larger dreams than that. And I feel like I'm just not cut for that life, to be honest with you. I've tried to domesticate life. Yeah. I mean, everybody's dreams different, you know? Right. But I do think it's much harder to attain with the tools we were taught in the resources, right. And that's where I think
Starting point is 00:25:29 forward thinking I had a call this morning with a younger guy who's just launching kind of his own company and doing fitness training and stuff like that. He only talking about do I do a t shirt? I said, No, dude, you, you're the brand. Because if you're if you're pursuing brand. If you're, if you're pursuing that, and you're building yourself, you can do all that other stuff. Right? If people know who you are, and you say this all the time, you know, the power being known, where I'm
Starting point is 00:25:57 like, you know, supplement all the stuff, plus from an earning standpoint, I always think of residual, right? That's the residual income is going to get you the American dream faster than one off two off stuff. So you know, I think I still think the American dream is the American dream. I think it's, I don't even know if I want to say harder to attain. I just think the way of getting there has changed and we all need to pivot and learn new tools, explore new things the world I
Starting point is 00:26:24 mean, even in the marketing world, everything's evolving, changing. AI is coming into play in every industry. So it's, you need to just be actively pursuing and trying to learn and evolve with that. You know, nothing is stuck in time. So, totally just gotta change up your perception.
Starting point is 00:26:44 Yep. I have some thoughts, but I'm gonna wait to Brianna. What are your thoughts on here? Okay. So I think I have a unique perspective on this, right? Because I've been married for five kids. I have been married for five years. I have two kids. We just bought a house this year. And we, you know, have been saving up to be able to do that, you know, college educated couple. So we did everything, quote unquote, like, right, you know, and like how we have been raised. Go to school, get good grades, go to college, then you'll be able to get out of college, get a good job, buy a house, have 2.5 kids, get a dog, go on vacation once a year, save for retirement.
Starting point is 00:27:27 That is what I would argue has always been the American dream, that you can, whether you're an immigrant coming to America or you are born and raised here, that that is the pathway to success. Go to school, get educated, work hard, you'll have success. It is not attainable in that way anymore. It is only attainable if you are smart. To your point, you can pivot, you can open a business, you can become an entrepreneur. Because here's the deal.
Starting point is 00:27:59 In America today, you could make $7 million becoming a YouTube star as a six-year-old playing with toys faster than you could go through the path of becoming a doctor or a lawyer or any other kind of profession. And so that seven-year-old or six-year-old who made $7 million on YouTube is more successful potentially than somebody who spent 25 years honing their craft and becoming a cardiovascular surgeon. So how do you rectify the fact that the American dream is just different now? Yeah. I mean, it's different, but I think it's also a slippery slope that that's still a one in a million. Yes, it happens it happens, but like, let's use Ryan,
Starting point is 00:28:46 the kid that has all the toys and the YouTube and all that. That's multimillion, 20, 30 million now, maybe more. Yeah, there's a handful of those examples, but there's how many million children in there? So yes, you can, there's a lot of different ways to do it, but I think the glamour of that sometimes outweighs the reality of doing it is sort of the danger. I can understand how, but I think the equivalent would be like our parents watching someone
Starting point is 00:29:21 that was a gifted athlete, that was a more clearer path to like the wealth that you're talking about, you know, 30 years ago, like that's still a one in a million athlete that had that path. And now there's more channels. But I do think, I think it's a combination of what Chris said, we do have these tools now and anyone can unlock them and go watch YouTube videos or come watch some of our content, because we talk about it a lot, and learn how to make themselves more known. And if you're willing to do that, if you're willing, and it's not for everyone, not everyone's
Starting point is 00:29:54 going to take advantage of it because either self doubt, either worry of judgment, or I'm not good enough, like, or whatever it is, that's fine, but it's an equal opportunity. It's just as American as anything, the opportunity to become your own, and I hate the word personal brand, but your own microphone. Because you couldn't buy your own TV ads 20 years ago, you couldn't afford to do that. But we have this democratization of awareness generation that you have with social media, which allows you to then get more likely, I mean, to hit the jackpot socially, like you described, that's a lot more likely if you're playing the game. Yeah, definitely. And you learn the game.
Starting point is 00:30:45 So, and there's nothing holding anyone back from doing that. You mean, cameras are easy. You just gotta be creative, wanna do it, put stuff out there. And I'm not saying it doesn't take more creativity than that, but it's equal opportunity. I mean, what's keeping you from being more social, like giving yourself more at bats to that?
Starting point is 00:31:07 Mm-hmm. Yeah. Well, and like everything, I think becoming successful with the American dream, it's just like a repetition, right? If you do it over and over again, eventually you'll become good at it. But if you try something and then it doesn't work right away and you give up and you keep switching gears, then it's going to take you a lot longer to get there. My bigger issue with like, you know, what I was going to say like what the American
Starting point is 00:31:31 dream is. I don't want to paint with a too broad a brush here, but this is my perception and not not how I feel. But you know, there used to be the saying with the American dream and it was kind of like with the you know, what can to be the saying with the American dream, and it was kind of like with the, you know, what can you do for your gov with for your country? What can you do? What can you add? Like be additive and in finding the American dream, you know, you do a job that adds to the greater good and yourself. I feel like we've come to the what can the government do for me? help? How can the government help me reach the American dream? It feels like we've gotten a little bit like the younger generation, maybe. And again, I don't want to paint too broad of a brush.
Starting point is 00:32:14 This is just my perception at a really high level of, you know, well, the government's in my way of the American dream or the government's not helping me reach, well, the government was not put there to necessarily help you reach the American dream. It was a stay out of your way. And so, but to govern and keep things licensed and agreed to that, you know, for just a greater good. And so we don't really supposed to be reliant on the government to reach the American dream. The only thing that was promised, you know, is promised to everybody is right, life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. And you know, pursuit being the right word. Yes. Pursuit is something you do. That's not, not that's handed to you.
Starting point is 00:32:57 Yeah, it's not handed to you or expected, you know, and I think again, that's not everyone, but I think there's a fair amount of people though, and I think, again, that's not everyone, but I think there's a fair amount of people though, that are like, I don't, I haven't been given what I needed to reach that. Well, and I think that people have a different baseline, this is my perception in my opinion, but I think people have a different baseline.
Starting point is 00:33:20 Everybody assumes that they are owed housing and a car and food. And I don't think that that was necessarily the belief in maybe our parents' generation. It was like, well, if you want those things, you better work hard to get them. Otherwise, you're going to be on your own on the street. And now it's like, oh, well, somebody is going to provide that all for me. Yeah. And if those basic needs are met,
Starting point is 00:33:45 you have less incentive to work hard. Yes. I think you're right. I mean, I have certain family members and I mean, I hope my, I don't feel like my kids are this way, but they certainly could be at times where I've had certain family members that absolutely,
Starting point is 00:34:03 you know, I'll be getting a car. I'll be getting it. I'm like, okay. I certainly asked for one and my parents helped me out on the first one, but I don't know that I was guaranteed to be given it. If the moon's aligned and my grandmother's car's available, I might get lucky. Yeah. Well, and then how many people are hurting their children without realizing it because they're making the path too easy for them. This is a topic that has come up for me in parenting over and over again, is that if you take all of the adversity away from the next generation of children and of people and you take the adversity away and
Starting point is 00:34:46 They don't know how to handle rejection. They don't know how to handle hitting a wall They don't know how to problem solve because you know, the adversity's never been there They haven't had to navigate their way around it. Yeah And I think it's gonna be fascinating I'm actually gonna play a few of the street interviews that I did where we asked this question to people that just randomly on the street, you know, what, what is the American dream to you and is it still attainable today? So take a listen to those now.
Starting point is 00:35:15 All right, man. What we think about the American dream today, I think it's alive and well, more exciting than ever being American. The time to get stuff done is right now. He's got to be creative and thoughtful and make stuff happen. And remember, the more you can do for other people, the more you can get out of life. Love it. Love it.
Starting point is 00:35:31 And how attainable is it today? As attainable as you want to make it. I mean, there's always been challenges in this world. And Ryan, there continue to be challenges no matter what you think. Challenges are going to happen. There's a book I like to read called Run Oscar of Success. And it talks about how in life you get up every day and go as hard and as fast as you can and realize you're gonna get some barbara every once in a while calling you
Starting point is 00:35:51 just keep on going and get up and get and do it the next day. There's gonna be more guys like this guy. Yes, that's what I'm talking about. All right ladies so what do we think and what does the American dream mean to you today? To me it is equal opportunity for people not necessarily equal outcome depending on a lot of variables hard work where you come from how much you're willing to put into things but to me the American dream is everybody has opportunity here it's a free country lots of freedoms we can take advantage of the question is will you? Love it Yeah. I mean, I kind of bounce off that, but I think ownership, um, there's a lot, especially in green though, we have a lot of entrepreneurs,
Starting point is 00:36:30 I think having ownership in your business and your life, taking control of, you know, how much you're making and what you're able to do with that. Um, and just having the opportunity to do so. So yeah, check that. Those were fascinating interviews. We've been enjoying that. We really enjoyed this segment brought to you by independentcenter.org. Go check them out, sign up for their newsletter. You'll get all kinds of interesting.
Starting point is 00:36:55 I was actually looking at one of their latest polls. They asked millennials, you know, something specific to the American dream and it played in line to a lot of things that we were talking about But I did I was sort of encouraged by the percent that still felt like they could go after it I thought it was gonna be lower than that. So that's a really interesting. They send out that poll data Go to independent center org Check out the newsletter sign up. I just give your email and zip code They'll get it to you and they don't over email you. This is like every couple of weeks. If it's interesting stuff, it's not
Starting point is 00:37:29 about politics. It's about policies and what the American people think. Independentcenter.org brought to you this segment about the American dream. Very good, Chris. Any final words today? Everyone have a good week by your cryptocurrencies. There you go. Said it and forget it. Brianna, any final thoughts? Go doge. Go doge.
Starting point is 00:37:52 Doge for the win. We appreciate you. Find us at Ryanisright.com. Highlight clips, full episodes, links to all the social media. Hey, tell a friend that you listen to us and pass the love on. We appreciate you. We'll see you next time. Right about now. This has been Right About Now with Ryan Ulford, a Radcast Network production. Visit Ryanisright.com for full audio and video versions of the show,
Starting point is 00:38:20 or to inquire about sponsorship opportunities. Thanks for listening.

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