The Diary Of A CEO with Steven Bartlett - Casey Neistat (The Untold Story): "I was a homeless dad at 15 & had $200k debt!"...The Crazy Story Of How I Became The World's No.1 Video Creator!
Episode Date: December 11, 2023If you enjoy hearing about the challenges of being a creator, I recommend you check out my conversation with the creator of ‘Call Her Daddy, Alex Cooper, which you can find here: https://www.youtub...e.com/watch?v=knPqBc2qJ8E There’s carving your own lane and then having over 3 billion people view the lane you have carved, all from the starting point of being a 17 year old teen father living in a trailer park. Casey Neistat is an America YouTuber, vlogger, filmmaker, and co-founder of the mobile application ‘Beme’, which he sold to CNN in 2016. He is one of the most famous people on YouTube, and his channel has over 12 million subscribers and 3 billion views. In this conversation Casey and Steven discuss topics, such as: How life has thrown unpredicted things at him Having a child as a teenager Leaving home forever on a school night Working 80 hours a week and doing anything to support his son The importance of patience Why he felt like a scumbag Feeling as if he was never heard Why he started making videos The reasons behind his filmmaking style The magic of Mr Beast Why Mr Beast is the most important person in the history of entertainment How great work matter The strangeness of fame Why you need to do something you hate to figure out what you like Being the definition of success but being in debt Becoming a millionaire but disappointing the people who got him there His moment of real darkness The challenge of his daily vlog How his daily vlog was taking away from his life Linking happiness and fulfilment with winning The only thing that gives him fulfilment The importance of knowing that nobody gives a care about you Follow Casey: Instagram: https://bit.ly/47NRUB8 Twitter: https://bit.ly/3RcoHZD YouTube: https://bit.ly/41altdX Follow me: https://beacons.ai/diaryofaceo
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Quick one. Just wanted to say a big thank you to three people very quickly. First people I want
to say thank you to is all of you that listen to the show. Never in my wildest dreams is all I can
say. Never in my wildest dreams did I think I'd start a podcast in my kitchen and that it would
expand all over the world as it has done. And we've now opened our first studio in America,
thanks to my very helpful team led by Jack on the production side of things. So thank you to Jack
and the team for building out the new American studio. And thirdly to to Amazon Music, who when they heard that we were expanding to the United
States, and I'd be recording a lot more over in the States, they put a massive billboard
in Times Square for the show. So thank you so much, Amazon Music. Thank you to our team. And
thank you to all of you that listened to this show. Let's continue. It got scary. We had to
move into a higher security building. And I didn't know what to do. That's when it got scary. We had to move into a higher security building, and I didn't know what to do.
That's when it got dark.
Casey Neistat.
The godfather of YouTube.
The king of vlogging.
One of the most prolific creators in history.
Throughout your story, there's this objectively delusional persistence towards a goal.
The word I've been using is patience,
because patience is so unattractive.
And I think you need to remove this idea of success being this romantic, beautiful thing.
It's not.
When I started my daily vlog, making a video a day, 800 days in a row,
it took eight years to go from zero to a couple hundred thousand subscribers,
failing year in and year out.
Now $200,000 in debt.
It's awful.
You're a loser.
But patience will smash into opportunity.
And then it went to 10 million subscribers in like 18 months. So in life, you can get whatever
you want. But are you willing to do that for 20 years? If you're not, don't bother, man.
You sold the company, you've built the channels, you've made a huge name for yourself. At that
point, that's when it got hard. Because the only goal that anyone should have in life is one of happiness and fulfillment.
And like this idea
that you have to win to be happy
could not be further from the truth.
I had by every definition
achieved success,
but I wasn't running the marathon
because I wanted to get
across the finish line.
I was running it
because I loved running
and the fame was insane.
Like we had to move to LA
and I didn't know what to do
until now.
Is this a new Casey? What can we expect?
Casey is a legend. He's a legend to so many people. He's one of the originals as it relates
to creativity, content, video, and YouTube. And although most of us know Casey, what most of us don't know is the underdog story, the true, deep, uncovered motivations that drove him to become arguably one of the world's most famous, most acclaimed, most celebrated online creators ever.
And it's a story that you'll relate to. It's a story of a completely normal dude that was down and out,
that had a very big, indistinguishable passion.
And the more interesting, maybe for me as someone that's watched Casey's journey for afar,
is what he's doing now.
For the first time ever, he talks about what his life is right now.
Now that he's not uploading videos every day.
Now that he's a little bit further out of the spotlight. And Casey gives us this blueprint for
how we can take that thing that we enjoy doing, that thing we consider a passion or a hobby,
and drag it up the mountain and make it an incredibly lucrative job? How do we turn our passion into a career? And how do we become
number one at the thing we do when everything, everything seems to be against us? That is the
story of Casey Neistat. And that's the story you're going to enjoy today. Casey, what do I need to know about your earliest years to understand the man that sits before me
today? I almost think of people's lives like a set of dominoes that have fallen. What are those
first dominoes that fell to create the man that sits here today? Oh man, how much time you got?
Plenty. So my whole childhood was just completely unsupervised like there was no did you do your homework tonight there was no
like dinner at six it was like be home before dark you're going to be in trouble trouble never
being defined and like dark never being defined and it was just kind of like a very loose, kind of fucked up, wandering childhood of
exploration. I was telling this story recently, but there were railroad tracks behind our house.
And one of the things we used to do for fun, we were little kids, is we'd collect pennies and
change and we'd lay them on the railroad tracks and the train would go over them and flatten them.
Very cool. But the train would vibrate the tracks as it approached and the coins would fall off of it. So the only way to address
that is you'd put the coins on the train tracks when the train was really close. So I don't know,
I was in grammar school, which is sixth grade. Like how old are you then? I was like 10 years
old. So little kid And like, you know,
train tracks, huge freight train coming and me putting nickels on the train tracks to try to
get a flattened coin. That's kind of what my childhood was like. As you look back, what is
the power and the gift that that unsupervision gives you? Because I resonate with that so much.
I think the reason I became an entrepreneur was because I've always said this, when I was 10 years old,
my parents weren't there when I went to bed
and they weren't there when I woke up.
And being the youngest of four,
it was like they'd assumed I'd also been parented already.
So they just, they like gave up or something.
They just got busy.
So in that void of independence,
I conducted a lot of experiments.
And I almost hear that in what you're saying as well,
that unsupervision allowed for exploration,
that allowed for something.
Yeah, I think it's like necessity is the mother of invention.
And I think, you know, if you're 10
and your parents all of a sudden are absent,
you're just forced to figure shit out.
It's funny because like all I want to do as a parent now
is protect my children from the hardships I had when I was little.
But it is those hardships I had that made me who I am.
And it is like this impossible dichotomy to address.
It's impossible as a parent.
Like I constantly think I'm fucking up my kids.
Like we send them to a private school because we can.
Like if you can afford it, which we can, we're fortunate.
Like why would I not send my kids to the best school?
But in the back of my brain, I think what's best for them
is to be in some New York City public school figuring it out.
Like I think that's what's best, but I don't do that.
Because I had a terrible time at public school.
I hated it.
So I want to protect them from that.
So I send them to a really fancy school that's lovely and warm and cozy.
And like, am I helping them?
I don't know.
But no, I think that exactly what you were saying, like, I had no choice but to figure
it out when I was little.
Like, I worked from, like, when I was super young, I figured out how to make a dollar.
Like, I was a paper boy when I was really, really young delivering newspapers.
And I'd make like 30 bucks a week.
And then, you know, when I got to eighth grade
and I started smoking pot
and I realized like the math behind weed sales,
I was like, okay, there's like a,
there's a 400%, a 4X return
if you buy quarter ounces and break them down
and you sell them as dime bags.
But if you buy a quarter pound and you sell them as eighth bags. But if you buy a quarter pound and you
sell them as eighths, you're looking at a 1600% return. I was like, okay, so how do I come up with
250 bucks to buy the QP and then let me break that down. And then like, I haven't hit puberty
yet. I'm a little kid. Like these guys are going to beat the shit out of me if I mess with the
wrong people. So I need to befriend the guys that can protect me
and like figure out that business.
All of that was because I had,
like I didn't have a choice.
Why were you unsupervised?
Where were your parents?
And this is what I mean when I say
my parents were accidentally great.
And I do think they tried their best.
You know, like my dad worked a zillion hours a week.
He had no choice um i think
we lived like a very middle class livelihood you know like my parents had like nice cars they had
volvos but they always bought like five-year-old volvos never new cars and like we lived in a house
that was like comfortable but like you know there's never any food in our house it was like
it was fine we always made it like, we'd go on vacation,
but it was always, like, in the back of the station wagon,
and we'd go to, like, a town two hours away
and stay in a shitty motel for two or three nights.
But my dad worked all the time.
And I only understood later that it was very, like, hand-to-mouth.
You know, he's paycheck-to-paycheck kind of guy.
And my mother, you know, I don't, I still don't understand my mom.
I think she was one of eight kids. My mother is you know, I don't, I still don't understand my mom. I think she was
one of eight kids. My mother is the tail end of an aristocracy. So it's like, I always describe
her side of the family as like all the privilege and entitlement of an aristocrat with none of the
money. So I, you know, I don't, my mother was just always kind of an enigma and always kind of absent.
And I think that they were just, they tried the best they could and we were just kind of left wandering as kids.
They divorced at some point?
Yeah, that's when things got really hard.
In what way?
I think that childhood always felt like you were sort of hanging on by a thread.
I was like one of four.
My older brother, Van, was the firstborn.
And he's such a, Van is such an incredible guy
and he's so magnetic.
And then there's my sister who's the only girl.
And then there's my little baby brother, Dean,
who was the baby.
And then I was just kind of this like accident
that happened 13 months after my sister
and two years before my brother.
Like it was just, so it was like I was always the loudest
and the squeakiest to get the most attention and uh you know that was I kind of think that like
characterized what my the challenges was were for me as a kid growing up and then it just got you
know the the the tumult of living in that house
just kind of precipitated until my parents split up,
which happened under very, like, auspicious, shitty, fucked up circumstances
and kids being blamed when the kids shouldn't have been blamed.
And I say all that without faulting my parents.
Again, I think they were trying their best.
But looking back at it, it's like, what the fuck, guys?
I heard you say previously that you had to tell your father that your mother had been,
had cheated on him. Yeah. I remember that vividly. I can picture the table we were sitting at. I can remember his posture. I can remember his response to it. But yeah, you know, my mother, you know,
she's a, she's a, you know, she's a good woman. She has faults like all of us humans have faults.
But I think she let those manifest in a way that were really dark at that time in her life.
And it was apparent to me as a 14-year-old exactly what was going on.
Exactly what was going on.
It was so fucking crystal clear.
As a 14-year-old?
Yeah, like abundantly clear.
And I never really understood my own
father's perspective on that. But I understand that his perspective now it's like, you know,
he's working a million hours a week to keep his head above water. And also like, you don't want
to see that. You don't like the truth sucks. So just like put your head in the sand and ignore it
is a very natural response to it. But I was like fighting with my mother at the
time about, you know, all kinds of shit that a teenager fights with their parents about getting
in trouble at school and all of that. So I was mad at her. And I think I, you know, part of me
addressing that was just sort of confronting my dad. What are you going to do about this woman?
At 14 years old, you knew your mother was cheating on your father.
Yeah. And you your father. Yeah.
And you told him.
Yeah.
How does one know that?
I mean, it was super apparent.
I mean, there's a handful of very specific situations
that just made it abundantly clear.
You know, I think that's why, like, you know, at the time, obviously, he fought my mom through and through. But looking back at it,. And, you know, I think that's why, like, you know,
at the time, obviously, it fought my mom through and through.
But looking back at it, it was, you know,
it was probably something closer to, like, a cry for help
or a cry for attention or just a way of her, you know,
her letting the struggle she was facing
and the totality of her life manifest.
Like, this is the only way I can express it
is by doing this kind of fucked up, awful thing.
As you step out of that chapter of your childhood, what are the fingerprints,
the character fingerprints that are left on you that still are with you today? What did that
chapter of your life, those first sort of 15 years? Oh, I don't think anything has changed.
Like, I don't think it's even fingerprints. It was so like acute the way that I had,
that I saw my future when I was that young.
I knew exactly my plan.
Really?
And exactly my plan.
And look, the specifics of how that plan was going to come together were ambiguous at best.
But I knew exactly my plan.
New York City was always the plan.
I remember it was like page 41 in my social studies book was a two-page
spread of the New York City skyline. And I wouldn't let myself look at that page because
I would have such an emotional response to it. Like Tom Hanks in the movie Big, I would play
that movie on repeat because I was like, that's me. Like, that's me. I'm going to move to New York
City and get to be the kid that I wish I could be. Like, that's me. To this day, like I know every
word of that movie. That movie is like a Bible for me.
It is a roadmap for me.
But, you know, like I've made 500 YouTube videos
about this single idea,
but like the mission of my life,
and this was defined then when I was a little kid,
the sole mission of my life is to realize
all the promises I made to myself as a kid.
Like when you're a little kid and you're like,
someday I'm going to be an astronaut.
Like your mom yells at you and it's like, well, someday I'm going to have kids and I'm not going to yell
at them. Or like you're fucking hungry and you're all out of mac and cheese. And you're like,
someday I'm going to have a refrigerator that's always filled up with food. Like whatever it is,
you know, you have a boss that's an asshole. And it's like, someday I'm not going to have
any boss. And like all of those promises, like my promises could, you know, they could fill up a
phone book. And my sole mission was always like, no, I have to check every single one of these off.
The how was always gray, but the to do it was always vivid. And there was never even a doubt
that it was going to happen. Like there was never an if, ever. There's nothing even close to that.
But life throws at you at that age things
that you could never have predicted.
And those things don't seem to have deterred
your pursuit of that mission.
You have a child that's 16, 17 years old.
Yeah, that was it.
Yeah, so I moved out.
Moved out is such a funny way of characterizing.
I say moved out and I picture like a moving truck pull up.
I got in a fight with my mom at age 15
on a Monday night,
school night.
And she gave me this ultimatum.
This is when she and my father were like, you know, really,
they were splitting up and getting back together.
It was like a really gnarly time in the family.
But we got into this fight and I just remember thinking like,
I was so mad at her at the time.
I was like, you can't tell me what to do.
And she was like, you need to do this, this, and this,
or get out of this house.
And I was like, all right, I'm gonna go. And I just like left. can't tell me what to do. And she was like, you need to do this, this, and this, or get out of this house. And I was like, all right, I'm going to go.
And I just like left.
Where did you go?
I like that night I stayed at a friend's house down the street
because his parents were like weirdly religious,
but also kind of absent.
They were always like very warm to me.
So I was like, hey, can I sleep here?
And he's like, yeah, sure.
And I slept at another friend's house.
And then.
So you ran away from home.
Yeah.
So as they moved out, it wasn't like,
you know, put the couch over there.
It was like, I just took a backpack.
And it was as close to like a stick
with a red handkerchief on the back.
But I eventually moved in with these two girls.
They were great.
They were super fun.
And, you know, they were like,
let's say I was 15.
I think they were 17 or 18.
And then, yeah, I started, you know, one of them,
she and I kind of got close.
And then like immediately she was pregnant.
And a year later we had, yeah, we had a kid.
And that was challenging.
But even so, like I never, I remember one moment
where like she started freaking out in the car
because she was like, you know, eight months pregnant.
And she's like crying and just like, you know, dealing with it.
And I pulled over and I was like, what are you upset about?
And she was like, what are we going to do?
We don't have any money.
Like, you don't even have a job.
Like, what are we going to do?
And I was like, it's going to be, what do you mean?
What are we going to do?
It's going to be fine.
We're going to have a kid.
It's going to be great.
It's going to be fine.
Were you not scared?
Then, no. It just, everything made sense everything made sense i was like oh this is great there's a naivety to it's beautiful now i'm scared i always
say that like i had nothing to lose then i had nothing and nothing like i had no reputation
you know like my friends parents all thought I was a fucking degenerate.
They wouldn't let me hang out with my friends
because I was such a bad influence.
So it wasn't like I had a reputation.
Nobody knew me.
I had nothing.
I had no money.
I had no resources.
I knew no one.
And when you have nothing to lose,
you're just like a rat that's cornered.
And it was like, oh, I'm going to chew my way out of this one.
And now I'm so scared of everything I one um and now i'm like i'm so
scared and everything i do in life because i'm like it's so good right now i don't want to fuck
anything up take it really easy like i'm really happy right now like this is i want to protect
what i've got but no there was a naivety then that was just uh that was it's hard for me to empathize with how like bright-eyed, bushy-tailed, naive I was.
I remember when like my son, Owen,
when his mother, when she and I split up,
you know, she dumped me
because I was just such a pain in the ass
and God bless her for doing so.
But I remember I was like,
then I was like, okay, I've got a plan.
In five years, I'm gonna move to New York City
and I'm gonna figure this out and I'm gonna do this and I'm gonna a plan. In five years, I'm going to move to New York City and I'm going to figure this out and I'm going to do this and I'm going to do that.
What were you going to do in New York?
I don't know.
I had some cockamamie plan.
There's always a plan.
I don't know what the specifics are,
but I knew that like up until that point in my life,
I'd only ever worked in the back of restaurants,
washing dishes or like being like a prep cook
or just being like the low man in the totem pole
who takes out the trash and scrubs out the garbage cans
and does all the shit work mop.
It was the only job I'd ever done.
My father sold used restaurant supplies,
like if you need to do oven or walk-in fridge,
so he could always get me jobs in restaurants.
And I remember moving to New York City,
my only plan was like,
I'm just not going to work in a restaurant.
That's my plan.
I'm going to do anything that's not work. But I had this five-year plan to move to New York City, my only plan was like, I'm just not going to work in a restaurant. That's my plan. I'm going to do anything that's not work. But I had this five year plan to move to New York City. And like six months later, I quit my job and moved to New York.
When you look back at that sort of like 19 year old kid that quits his job and moves to New York.
So up until that point, what do you now know as a guy that's in their 40s about the brilliant
accidental decisions
you were making at the time?
Like what are the, you know,
like the accidental brilliance
that is probably objectively stupidity.
Like that's a stupid decision.
But in hindsight, you go, I was a genius.
You know, I never would say in hindsight,
I was a genius.
I was just, it was raw stupidity and fearlessness.
But it's like all those stupid fucking quotes
that everybody posts on Instagram that I hate
about like, you only live once, follow your dreams,
pursue this, like, fuck you, fuck every one of you.
I hate that shit.
I hate inspo porn, even though I'm very guilty
of fanning the flames of inspo porn.
But like, there's so much truth to all of that.
And the reason why I hate that shit is like,
if you have to be told that, it's too late.
If you're going to learn that from Instagram posts,
it means nothing to you.
It's just masturbation.
Like it's doing nothing for anyone.
People just put it up there to feel good about themselves.
But all of it is true.
And what I mean by that is like,
I could never do at age 42 what I could do at age 19,
which is just say, fuck it.
I've got a 10th grade education,
no high school diploma,
no work experience,
no life experience,
and a two-year-old.
What's the best thing I can do right now?
I know, let me move to the most expensive, challenging city in the world with no plan. If I hadn't done it then, I don't
know that you could ever do that. And I think that like, when I say those cheesy quotes are true,
it's like, you kind of have an obligation in life that if you feel something that is so powerful to
you, like follow through with that. And I'm not naive to that now. I wasn't
naive to it then, but I think now I can articulate it, which is like this idea of privilege.
I feel like born in the United States of America, if you like get to sit at a table and do this,
like now I wasn't a rich kid and like, yeah, I was like on welfare and got free diapers and
milk from the state. Otherwise I wouldn't be able to feed my child. And like, I worked 60 hours a week in a kitchen
making eight bucks an hour.
I think I got $7.25 an hour was my starting salary.
And like, that was like,
I'm like the luckiest person in the world
to get to do that.
Are you crazy?
Like, do you know what some kid in South Sudan
would do for that opportunity?
And I just walked into it. I'm like a healthy guy. I've got
two legs that work and like, like I have a brain, like I'm the lucky, I won the lotto on life.
So like, if you start life with this winning lotto ticket and it's like,
oh, a little hiccup. I accidentally had a baby when I was a fucking teenager. It's like,
no big deal. Like they'll just push through this. This is going to be great.
And it's like, I want to live in New York City.
It's like, let's go for it.
Let's do it.
The privilege there sounds like a privilege of mindset.
This objective privilege, I guess, from being-
Yeah, like I push back.
And when people say that, my response is like,
fuck you, privilege of mindset.
No, that's an objective privilege.
Name one time in the history of humanity,
like where the Sumerians invented the written word
5,000 years ago. Name one time when people had the history of humanity, like where the Sumerians invented the written word 5,000 years ago,
name one time
when people had
the kind of opportunity
that like people like us
born in the West have.
Like there's never existed before.
Never.
Ever.
Maybe it's a little bit easier
for our parents.
You know what I mean?
Like maybe like post-war USA
was like a little bit easier
than it is now.
Maybe now it's a little bit harder than it was for me 20 years ago.
But like, still, give me a fucking break.
Like this life is like, it's the hardships we face now are so menial
compared to what they were 100 years ago.
Objectively, 200 years ago.
You ever see that thing that went viral?
It was like the reasons why people died in London in the year 1892. And like the fourth
most popular cause of death was teeth. Like 60% of the population are dying because their teeth
are fucked up. Like we have a pretty easy. Why don't people? So there's going to be another
guy right now that's like washing pots in the back room at the seafood restaurant on the $7 an hour.
And he might be listening to this right now.
And he hears you say that, but why don't people take action beyond that point
and take the big bet when they have objectively potentially nothing to lose?
Oh, what's that line from, is it Caddyshack or Fletch?
When he's like, the world needs ditch diggers too.
That's a very cynical take on it.
But I think a very practical take is like,
not everybody wants it.
And I think that's okay.
I think that's a wonderful thing.
I never understood that.
I think like in life,
you can get whatever you want,
but you can't want whatever you want.
If you don't want it,
there's no creating that.
But you think sometimes people want to want it,
but they don't really want it.
Yeah, of course.
Of course.
And I think that's okay.
If you really fucking wanted it,
you wouldn't need this like inspirational podcast
to make you make that decision.
You'd already be fucking doing it.
That's not to be defeatist.
It just means that like the only goal
that anyone should have in life
is one of happiness and fulfillment.
And like this idea that you have to win to be happy
could not be further from the truth.
Like, why do we hear about rock stars and famous actors
and these people that we see as sort of like
the absolute apex of success in the industry?
Why are they all fucking killing themselves
and dying of alcoholism?
And like all that darkness happening at the highest level.
It's like, cause that doesn't equal happiness.
Like what is happiness for you?
And an example I like to point to
is like my best friend in the whole world.
We grew up together.
Like I ran away from home.
I stayed with him for a little while.
Like we've been together since we were kids.
You know, like when I moved to New York,
he stayed in the hometown.
And like when I quit my job washing dishes,
I gave him that job.
He literally took over that job.
And now, you know, here we are 25 years later,
he still lives in that town. You know, he still has a job very similar to what he had 25 years
ago. He's got three amazing kids. He lives like a very, what I would say is like very classic,
archetypal, middle-class American life. And like, I look at him and I'm like, that is the embodiment
of like happiness and fulfillment.
He has this amazing relationship with his amazing wife. He has these three brilliant little kids
that he gets to, you know, make sure they get to school every single day. He's got like a cute dog
that he goes on runs with. He has this amazing life. And no part of that life was being like,
fuck this. I want to like live on the moon someday. I need to run away from all this.
Like his, his focus in life was something completely different. And I think that I didn't understand. I struggled to appreciate that when I was younger, but now I see like so much to that.
And that's why I think like adjusting the pie in the sky is just one of happiness and fulfillment
and defining those. It is up to you.
Brony Ware, I was talking about her the other day. She's that, I think it's called palliative care nurse in Australia who interviewed people with One Day Left to Live. And she asked them
what their biggest regret in their life was. Number one regret of the dying was not living
a life true to myself. And for those people, those that do have this aspiration to start that business or, I don't
know, become a ballet dancer in Europe or whatever, that are held back by potentially some form of
fear, you know, is there anything that one can offer them to get them just to take that first
initial step, which seems to be the hardest, like getting off the couch or getting out of
quitting the job that you might offer to your children if they came to you.
Yeah, I mean, I just think that failure is,
I think failure is like the greatest gift.
I think failure is like, it hurts so bad.
But failure is like, is a part of life.
And if you're not willing to accept that,
like failure is part of it.
You've got to keep failing.
Anvil, the story of Anvil. You know this? I made
a whole video about this. I made a YouTube video about this. And then the leads, there's a movie
called Anvil. I think it's called the story of Anvil or something like that. Anvil was this like
big hair rock band in the 80s. And they opened for like Def Leppard, you know, like 50,000 people kind of thing. But
they never headlined. They never broke through. They were always the opening act. They were always
like the bridesmaid, never the bride. And the movie opens showing these huge concerts in the
80s and Anvil just rocking out. And then it cuts and it shows the lead singer. And he lives in
Canada and he drives a little van and he delivers food to old
people making minimum wage, like barely able to keep his head above water. And he performs still
in his leather outfits as like this middle-aged 50-year-old guy to like six people. And they'll
be just drinking beer and he's there giving it his all. And the movie is about how relentless
this guy, like he's just not well. He borrows money from his sister to record an album. Nobody
buys it, can't pay her back. She's got kids and shit. It is the most devastating story
you've ever seen because he's unwilling to give up that dream. He just wouldn't let it go. This
is his whole life. And then this documentary comes out and it's fucking fantastic. And because of the
documentary, Anvil blows up. And all of a sudden, he is that superstar.
Like on tour,
selling out arenas in Japan and shit.
Like he did it.
Had he given up at any point in time,
the documentary wouldn't have been interesting.
It would have just been another person
who threw in the towel.
But they made this,
like a filmmaker saw this story
and was like,
that's crazy.
I need to tell that story.
And it yielded that success.
Had he not been willing to take on 40 years of failure, 30 years of failure,
he would have never found success. And I think that's the most extreme version of that. The
reason why I was interrupting myself is because I made that YouTube video about, that's basically
the story I just told you. And like the director reached out and was like, whatever the guy's name,
the lead singer of Anvil,
he's like, dude, he loved your YouTube video.
And I was like, yes, I was like starstruck.
You know what I mean?
But I think failure is overrated.
I think failure, people are so scared of failure.
And I think the fear of failure
is that it's a fear of what other people
are going to think about you.
Persistence.
That's what I heard through that story as well.
Just this almost objectively delusional persistence towards a goal.
And I don't know if those words are correct,
because in that situation,
I question whether Anvil's success was ever really making it
or the journey itself was the success.
But in your story, I see the same level of persistence
that a bystander would go,
that guy's crazy. Because there was various stats I saw about how long it took you to get to various
success milestones. Even when you started daily vlogging, I think it took you five years
to get to like 400,000 subscribers. Throughout your story, there's this persistence where I go,
this guy would have carried on doing this
because he wasn't doing this for any particular milestone.
What role does persistence play?
It's funny, persistence is such a,
it's a more accurate word,
but the word I've been using lately is patience
because I think it's so much less sexy.
I think persistence is like,
like under the picture of like a little kitten
hanging off the branch, it's like persistence.
You know what I mean?
We'll never say patience.
Patience is so unattractive.
And when people say to me like,
what's the one piece of advice you give
to an aspiring creator?
And you know, patience.
Like patience above every,
because like if you're not willing to give up,
if we're willing to stick with it for,
you will find success or you'll die trying,
which case fuck it, like whatever. You whatever. You're not going to be that person in the palliative care
saying, I wish I hadn't given up because you didn't give up. You just kept going. You're
going to be that person who's like, I've got one day left. I can still pull this shit off.
But patience is a really unsexy way of saying it. And I think you need to remove the sexiness.
You need to remove the sensationalism that inspiration has been perverted with.
Is this idea of like, it's this romantic, beautiful thing.
It's not.
It's fucking awful.
Like failing year in and year out and having everybody roll their eyes at you.
And I'm like, you know, whether you're a musician who's performing at the mall and having everybody roll their eyes at you. And I'm like, you know,
whether you're a musician who's performing at the mall
and no one's paying attention to you
or you're that YouTuber who uploads
and you get zero views,
like it's fucking awful.
It's embarrassing.
You're a loser.
Like I talked to Mr. Beast, Jimmy,
and it's like his war stories
from when he started YouTube
and he was using his like mom's busted compact
computer with a built-in webcam, making these videos that no one watched. They're all deleted
scrub from the internet now. They're terrible. And just like him going to school the next day,
and it's like two of his friends from school saw him and both acknowledged how terrible they were.
Like that kind of like being told you're, that's failure.
Being told you suck over and over and over and over.
And then seeing how much you suck be quantified by a lack of views
or no one showing up to your concert or no one laughing at your jokes
because you're a stand-up comedian or no one showing up to your restaurant
because you're a chef.
Like that sucks.
Starting an online store, no one buys your fucking t-shirts.
That sucks.
Failure sucks.
So, like, combine that with patience.
Like, that suck.
Are you willing to do that for 20 years?
If you're not, don't fucking bother, man.
Don't bother.
And that's why I like the plainness of the word patience
is because that is what it is.
There's nothing, persistence.
Persistence is like, oh, you're at mile 22, persist, man.
You'll get across the finish line in four short miles.
That's beautiful and fun and hardcore.
That patience that you and Mr. Beast have both shown
and many others, where does it come from?
Because objectively, any sane person,
if everyone's telling them they're a loser
and they suck and their parents are saying,
you better go get a real job.
Anyone who's acting in line
with their apparent incentives in that moment would quit.
I think very simply it comes for me.
And I think probably for Jimmy too,
we've talked about it.
He and I have talked about it,
but there was no plan B.
There was no other option. You know, like I, I had no backup plan. There was nothing else I could do.
It wasn't like I had a college education and there was like a job in an ad agency waiting for me
where I could just say, fucking go make 80K a year and get a nicer apartment and relax and have a
nice go of it. It was like, if this doesn't work, I'm back in the kitchen making $7.25 an hour.
Like, you know, getting money from the state
so I can pay for like groceries on a fucking WIC.
I was on WIC, women, infants, and children.
It was a card.
You'd swipe it and you would pay for your diapers and milk.
And that's it.
If you tried to buy like a Nintendo with it,
it wouldn't work like that.
I remember that.
That was the fallback.
That was the alternative. Every single turn, that wouldn't work. I remember that. That was the fallback. That was the alternative.
Every single turn, that was the alternative. I moved to New York City and I was here for three
months. I had a three-month sublet that my brother's ex-girlfriend paid for. She was like,
I'll loan you the money. And I was like, cool. It was her parents' credit card that paid for it.
And it was like 1,800 bucks, 600 bucks a month, 400 bucks a month
for three months. I shared it. In any event, that lease was up. I had nowhere to live in New York.
And I was like, fuck, what do I do now? And I moved in with some, this guy was like, hey man,
I need extra money. If you want to sleep on my couch, my dad pays my rent so you could sleep
on my couch and just give me like 300 bucks a month. And that way the money goes to me and i was like deal and i slept on his
couch for exactly 11 nights from september 1st to september 11th 2001 and then the morning of
september 11th the entire apartment blew up with me in it and him in it and i remember like later
that day like getting on the phone with my dad and like the towers are still on fire.
And my dad being like, I think it's time for you to come home now, come back.
And I was like, what are you talking about?
Like, what are you talking?
What do you mean?
Why would I come back?
And he was like, terrorists blew up your apartment.
You have no job.
You have no prospects.
You have no money. And now you have nowhere to sleep.
I'm like, I'll figure that out.
I'll be fine. Later, dad. Like that's that, that's patience. That's delusional patience.
But you asked why, like what fuels that patience? The plan B was literally moving back to Southeastern
Connecticut and getting a job in a restaurant. I read a study once about this whole idea of
plan A thinking, and they take a group of people and they tell them to do a puzzle. And in exchange for doing
the puzzle correctly, they'll get a snack. So they take two groups and they say, okay, do this puzzle.
If you do it correctly, you'll get a snack. Then they take another group and they say, do the same
puzzle. If you do it correctly, you'll get a snack. But then they say to the group, you can also get
the same snack just down the hall in
the vending machine. And in the second group where they're given a plan B to get the snack,
motivation levels drop, they spend less time trying to do the puzzle and their performance
towards doing the puzzle plummets as well. Just by being aware that they can get the same reward
down the hall, performance drops. And if there was ever a case for this psychology,
and they've done this multiple times in multiple studies,
but it is pretty solid evidence
that even the presence of a plan B
can reduce motivation towards your plan A.
Completely, completely.
I mean, I wish I knew that study
because that's such a beautiful,
beautiful illustration of what it is.
And also what it means to have a knife at your
back. I remember the thing I used to say back then, when I first started to find success,
I would always be like, my life is like I'm running from a pack of starving wolves. If I
slow down at all, I will be eaten alive. I have one choice and it's to keep going as fast as I can
or I'll be torn to pieces.
And that's what it felt like.
And I love that.
Like that sounds so like negative and dark,
but like I love that.
It was such like a motivation.
And I pitied the friends.
Like I remember I first moved to New York City
my first summer here.
I don't know how, but I like fell in with this like click of,
because I thought the girls were pretty, but like these kids and I'd go out with them and I just remember
like the way they would pick up the tab
and they're my age we're all like 19
20 years old and they're picking up like you know
hundreds of dollar bar tabs and like
always had taxis and like a taxi
to me was like you know it's like a private
jet they were like I had
all this money and I would always kind of look at them with this kind of like jealousy and like it was less of a jealousy and more just
fantasized like imagine if i was the same age i am now but i had a credit card with an unlimited
amount of money like i went to her apartment she lives in like the 26th floor she has a two-bedroom
apartment and she lives alone i'm sharing a 200-foot studio with strangers I met on Craigslist.
We have to wait in line to use the bathroom in the morning.
And I fantasized about what that would be like.
And then seeing as they got older and as I got older,
them sort of, this sort of wandering and not sure where they want to go in life
and all of that, whereas for me, it was such a, you know,
there was such a defined path
because I didn't have any of those luxuries
or any of those benefits
that I now look at back at that
as like being virtuous.
So how do you do that for your kids?
Well, that's the million dollar question
because it's like,
I never want my kids to feel the,
that bullshit that I had to feel,
like the shame of like
always hiding in the bathroom
when the bill came.
Like I would always, you know,
like I always do something.
I wasn't just like a total take,
but like I had just, you know,
like I always kind of felt like a scumbag
because I was never able to contribute
the way that other people were.
And like, that's a really shameful thing.
And like, I can remember so many times,
like when I would meet a young lady and she'd
be like, let me go back to your place. And the excuses that I would come up with, because I like
lived in an SRO for a while. I lived in a halfway house that I bribed my way into.
A halfway house for anyone that doesn't know in Europe is a...
It's where you get out of jail and you're not allowed to live normally yet in the public.
So they put you into a building where they can monitor you.
How did you get in there?
I bribed the guy at the door.
There was like a guy behind glass with like a little slot.
And you'd have to check in and check out.
And I went there and I was like, hey, do you have any open rooms?
And he was like, no, get out of here.
And I came back with a carton of cigarettes with a $100 bill in it.
And I was like, I need a room. And he was like, all right,
it's like 531 is yours, right? Your name there. And he was like, it's $450 a month cash or whatever
it was. Interestingly, when you tell that story of being in a halfway house and having no money
and all these things, objectively, someone looks at that situation and goes, oh man,
I feel so sorry for you. Like, I was so psyched. But this speaks to how a mindset and a perspective
can turn hell into heaven or heaven into hell.
Yeah, I mean, the reason why I learned about that
is it was my, I had a friend, her cousin lived there.
And he was like, here's how I got it.
I bribed the door guy.
And he's like, it's cool.
It's like, don't talk to anybody in the building.
And he's like, you know,
some of the people in here are undocumented immigrants. And a lot of
them are like, they just got out of jail. I was like, okay, that's cool. And he's like,
some of them are homeless people that were given these rooms. I'm like, okay, I can handle all
that. They like told me the whole thing of how to get in there and there's no bathroom and no kitchen.
How did this change, Casey? I know video had come into your life around
video came into my life before i moved to new york city that was the catalyst is um my baby mama
dumped me i came into new york to hang around my brother van who i like worshipped and he had just
bought he's doing like temp work right he lived in Brooklyn. He had bought the first iMac, like the one that was
shaped like a big
blue TV. And
it came with footage of a dog
in a
plastic kiddie pool
for children to play in. The dog
was getting a bath. So you could play, edit
with the footage that came with it.
And he and I would just kind of edit that
footage over and over
so we didn't have a camera.
So I bought a camera and he had a computer
and I came in and we'd like film stuff
and then edit videos of it.
And I was like, I can figure this out.
And I like maxed out a credit card
and started making terrible videos.
And then I was like, that's it.
I'll become a filmmaker.
And then I moved to New York.
Like it was one of the three things I brought to New York
when I moved here was this huge iMac
and like a backpack full of clothes and then like my BMX bike, which was stolen the next day. And you're like 19. Yeah.
What was it? Do you ever think about the psychological reasons why you were
so drawn to video and storytelling generally? I don't know. I have an answer to that,
but I don't know if this is the, why I was drawn to it, or maybe I've just said this so many times, it's become my default response.
But I definitely felt like I never had a voice.
I think it's because I was like that third out of four kids
or like I never did well in school.
I was always in trouble.
So teachers never listened to me.
I was always in trouble and getting in fights and stuff.
So my friend's parents never liked me.
And I just felt like I was never heard
and then I started to make videos I was able to kind of articulate my thoughts or an idea in the
form of a video and people would respond to that so I think that was part of it but I don't know
I think I also just liked it like there's something about it that felt so fun and there
was something in the end that you would have that was like this finished done thing.
Did you like movies?
Yeah, but I was never like a cinephile as a kid.
You know, like I had my favorites.
You know, like I loved the movie Big.
And I do remember in seventh grade,
we got to do this program
where you could like choose a profession
and then you got to go do that job.
And like there's a Pfizer
pharmaceutical had like its headquarters in nearby towns like a lot of the kids went there to be
chemists or scientists they have to go spend like two hours at Pfizer there's a submarine military
base a lot of kids got to go onto the base and see what it's like to be in the navy and mine was I
want to work at a video rental store because I want to get paid
just sit and watch movies all day. And they're like, all right, I guess we could organize that
for you. And I remember going there and it was like this kid and he was like, yeah, I worked a
day shift. Nobody ever comes by. And I was like, what are we doing? He's like, we have to put away
those movies. It took like three minutes. And I was like, now what are we doing? He's like,
just wait for customers. So we just sat there and watched TV for like eight hours. I was like, now what are we doing? He's like, just wait for customers. So we just sat there and watched TV for like eight hours. I was like, this is a job I could get into.
But I don't think it was like the, you know,
like the Quentin Tarantino
where he worked in a video store and studied film.
I never had that.
Do you think that's part of the reason
you were successful at it though?
Because your style has always been
so clearly original in so many ways.
That's how it feels.
It feels like you are, in fact,
someone that didn't go to movie school.
And that's why people resonate with it.
Yeah, I always say that my filmmaking style
is because I was never taught the right way to do it.
So I was forced to find my own way to do it.
And I think that kind of thinking is,
at the same time as sort of like
consumer grade video creation
became this ubiquitous thing with computers and editing software and cameras
for the first time ever in the history of humanity.
You could, like the early 2000s, you could buy like a DV, digital video camera,
and you could buy a computer and plug it in.
You could edit your own videos.
So my aspiration to make videos and this machine that let you do it, those happened at the exact same
time. And because of that, I was forced to create my own style. Like my hard drive was 10 gigabytes.
I could edit like, it was like 12 or 16 minutes of video before the hard drive was full. So no,
I made really short videos and that's why. It was like, I didn't have a choice. I had to be a short
video. But I do think, yeah, like the lack of formal education in that capacity
forced me to be a different kind of filmmaker
or approach it differently anyway.
Do you look back,
I'm so compelled by originality as like a subject
and the power of originality,
because when a couple of people in society
or the world or business or
creativity or movies take the risk of being original the issue is they draw in a and that
originality is resonant they draw in a big audience who then look up to them and almost
confuse their admiration for that person with their aspirations for themselves and go i will
create like casey and that is the way to be successful.
It's a very logical deduction, but it's clearly flawed because there can be no other Casey.
It's tremendously flawed.
It's what I fucking hate about YouTube.
I call this like the Mr. Beastification of YouTube.
And I have to be very careful here.
Jimmy's a genius.
What Mr. Beast has done on YouTube is brilliant
and it's because of his brilliance.
So this is not to take away from him at all.
I think he is incredible what he's done
and he has no control over the fact
that millions of people are trying to copy him.
But the fact that millions of people
are trying to emulate what he's doing,
that is the Mr. Beastification of the platform that I hate. Because Jimmy's always been very honest.
His goal has never been like, ask me my goal. And now in the most sort of intellectual of terms,
I'll look back at it and I'll be like, video for me has always been a way of a refined self-expression
for me to take my thoughts and force them into this sort of articulate six,
eight minute compartmentalized little video and share it with the world. Like that's been my
motivation. Jimmy's from day one has just been fine success. He was a kid who had no money and
no resource. He had no friends. He had nothing. And he's like, this is a tool I can use to take
me to the highest planes of business and all of that. Jimmy is just as passionate about his
chocolate company, Feastables,
as he is about his video creation company, Mr. Beast Enterprise.
He's just as passionate about his philanthropy being successful
and helping as many people as possible,
as he is about making a video about what it means to live in a million-dollar house.
His passion is about that winning.
So for him, it's beautiful.
But in the most reductive sense,
when people look at that, they're like,
hey, that's what it means to be a YouTuber.
All that matters is views.
And I put next to no value on that.
None.
Again, this isn't to take away from Jimmy
because what he's done is incredible.
But when people aspire just to get that view count up,
to me, it's a race to the bottom.
I fucking hate it.
I hate it.
And I do think it's because of people not knowing what to do.
So they look to see, well, who's successful?
That's how I'm successful.
Let me be that.
And it will never work.
It will never work.
It requires sort of an introspection of like, no, why do I want to do this?
What is true to me?
And then you go and do that. And maybe you'll find success and maybe you won't,
but at least it'll be true. Why does truth end up mattering more in that case than
views? So if there's one path here and I can get a million subscribers by just doing a Jimmy or Casey
knockoff channel, or there's this other path, which I go, oh, there's no blueprint here. And
it's never been done before. And I don't think anyone's going to like this stuff. And it's probably not going to pay my bills. What's the
case for pursuing the latter, the true path? I think that truth lasts. Truth matters. Like
there's a direct, there's no correlation rather between the movies that have won best picture,
the Academy Award for best picture over the last 80 years,
and the highest grossing movies.
Those two things have been the same like three times, four times.
One of them I think was Gone with the Wind,
meaning that the movies that the world determines
are the most quality, most important, greatest films,
the greatest contribution to culture and humanity
are almost never the same movies that make the most money.
Transformers 9 was a really cool movie.
I don't fucking remember what happened.
I think there was a dinosaur in it.
But like you see a movie that affects you.
You see a movie that matters to you.
You see Little Dieter Needs to Fly,
this documentary by Werner Herzog. You see
the Anvil story and you're thinking about it. I haven't seen that Anvil story in five years. I
think about that movie every day. That lasts. So that matters. And me as a 42-year-old grown adult,
like I know in life that's what matters. There's always going to be junk food. There'll always be an appetite for it. There'll always be an appetite
for fucking reality TV
and bullshit and
whatever pop stars are popular this
week and will disappear next week.
But the musicians that change you,
the ones that write that song
that makes you cry,
you'll never forget that.
So for me,
if you want to be an artist or like if you want to be an artist
or you say you want to be an artist,
how could there be any other goal but that?
And just to bring this full circle,
I think the magic of Mr. Beast, of Jimmy in particular,
I don't think he's ever wanted to be an artist.
And that honestly is why I have so much respect for him.
He's an empire builder
and that's what he's wanted to do.
And he's done that through video creation.
But again, neither here nor there, not to digress.
For me, it's like great work matters
and it does, it changes people, changes me.
Look at the work that like Spike Jonze did,
not his Oscar award-winning movies,
but like I look at his little weirdo music videos
that I used to watch when I was a kid and I watched watched those music videos over and over. What's Up Fat Lip, the music video that
he made with Fat Lip, who was kind of a popular hip hop artist who didn't have any money. And he
was like, I got this new song, Spike, but I don't have any money to make the video. So they went out
and they put Fat Lip in a clown costume and they filmed it on a VHS camera. It's like one of my favorite music videos ever.
But I saw that and I was like, I can be a filmmaker.
Now, if he had made a video just trying to get the most views or whatever it was,
instead of just him and his friend Fatlip trying to make something great,
it might not have done that for me.
And that changed my world.
So like, if you're going to share your fucking inspirational quotes on Instagram,
then step up. Like make the thing that could change the world. So like, if you're going to share your fucking inspirational quotes on Instagram and step up, like make the thing that could change the world, make the thing that could affect someone.
Don't just give me Mickey Mouse bullshit. That's going to get views.
I look at both you and Jimmy as pioneers, but for very different reasons and seemingly with
very different motivations. You strike me as someone that was really inspired by the art form and the
storytelling side of like the creative production process. And Jimmy took this, it seems like he
took this other approach where it was much more about what the data was telling him to make.
Yeah.
Both of them created originality though.
Completely.
You know?
Completely. I think Jimmy is in the history of, I think Jimmy is the most important YouTuber
in the history of YouTube.
And I think that arguably,
I think he's one of the most important people
in the history of entertainment, full stop.
I don't know that anyone has built an empire
that reaches as many people as what he's doing.
I think there will be case studies taught about him at Harvard.
I think he is a true pioneer studies taught about him at Harvard. I think what he is a true pioneer
in every sense of the word.
Do you care about the views?
No, but that's easy to say.
I'm like, you know,
I don't worry about paying rent anymore.
And I kind of usually don't check the prices
at restaurants before I order dinner.
So it's easy for me to say.
Obviously, there was a time when that really mattered to me and was super, super important
to me. But I've grown up and I have a level of financial security, which is super real.
So it's less about that and more about doing good work.
If one of your kids came to you and they said, dad, I want to be a YouTuber.
And what would be your response
to just that first surface level question?
I mean, it's happened.
Little Francine is like, she's so good too.
But Candice always gets, not mad,
but she's always like, take it easy, Casey,
because I have a tendency to over-intellectualize it.
But I'm like, Franny, you can make whatever you want, but you're not allowed to share it.
And she's like, why? I want to get subscribers and views. And I'm like, well, if you make it,
like, I just want to make sure you're making it for you because you want to make something,
not because you're looking for that, I don't know words I use with her, but like that validation.
I don't know if she would know that word. But that's when Candace is like, take it easy, Casey.
She's eight.
And I'm like, okay, all right, just do your thing, kiddo.
But yeah, I think like the concern.
What is the concern?
Is why.
Like if she wants to do it because she wants to be an artist,
fuck yes, I will drop everything to help you on this mission.
If you want to do it because your little girlfriend at school did it
and she got 35 likes and you want to get more likes than her,
then like pump the brakes, kid.
Like that's, you know, like that's…
What if she says I want to be bigger than Mr. Beast?
The same thing.
Then, you know, it's like why?
Like why?
Why do you want to do that?
You know? then you know it's like why like why why do you want to do that you know and also like
I have fame is a very weird very strange thing um and I think that what the most strange thing
about fame is it's not what you think like there are people who have achieved and felt some degree
of fame and there are people who haven't.
And if you're in the haven't camp,
there's no way to understand the have camp.
There's no way.
There's no way.
And having been over here,
to see someone aspire for that is like no way.
What's the warning?
The warning is just like, if fame is a byproduct of what you're doing,
then it is what it is.
But if fame is the end game,
then you're just like one of those fucking reality stars with the fucked up faces because you've had so much plastic surgery.
And like, what are you doing?
What are you offering the world?
Like, why are you doing? What are you offering the world? Like, why are you here?
Like, you're benefiting the world in no way whatsoever.
You're elevating the world zero.
This is pure like narcissism.
This is just, just, just for some weird ego journey
that you're on.
Again, this is one of those moments where my wife would be like,
back off, Casey. She's
eight. Let her finish her mac and cheese. I wouldn't say it's a kid, but like, yeah,
if she says I want to be bigger than Mr. Beast, like, then yeah, I get nervous.
What if she says, okay, I want to do, I want to make YouTube videos because I love creating
videos, but I would like some advice to add on how to be a successful YouTuber.
Yeah, you should see her. She has a whole channel that is stop frame animations
of her stuffed animals.
She's not allowed to have her voice in it
or her hands in it.
You're not allowed to identify
that it's in our apartment.
But she makes those
and they're fucking great
and they're funny
and they're really good.
So that like, yeah,
we support her so much.
We buy her the equipment.
We help her make it.
We're part of the audience.
We have like a family iMessage thread
that we distribute the videos on. She even has her own Instagram handle that has zero followers.
Candice and I don't follow it. We pass the phone around to watch her Instagrams because we don't
want her to even associate one like with why she's doing it. Even if that like is from us. My sister texted and was like,
hey, you sent me a screen capture
of Francine's TikTok or whatever.
Can you send me her account?
We're like, no.
This is clearly coming from your experiences, right?
Yeah, protect them as long as you can, man.
Keep the kids so far away from that.
Keep them far away from views and likes.
Yeah, from seeking validation.
Did you ever fall prey to that?
Did I ever fall prey to that?
Yeah, but I'm different because I was old.
Like I was literally your age
that you are right now sitting across from me
before I had an Instagram account.
Think about how much more you know than an eight-year-old.
Like for an eight-year-old,
that's the world that she's growing up in. It's a really scary
place. Like social media, we're seeing
how much it fucks kids up. We're seeing the
mental health crisis. We're seeing how it's
manifesting. We're seeing eating disorders
because of Instagram. We're seeing like all
these social issues because
of social media.
And I think wanting to protect your kids from that
is sort of a universal thing,
not just someone who has lived in that space.
You know, I think I've had a unique experience with it
because I was, I had achieved some level of success
outside of social media
in the world of regular old media.
And then it was on social media that I found real
success. But I was able to do that with that kind of hindsight and with that kind of clarity of being
an adult, being pursuing this career for 15 years before. On social media, you found real success.
Yeah. Was that due to your daily vlog predominantly predominantly, was that the real catalyst moment in terms of growth?
Yeah, 100%.
You know, like I, Van and I, my brother Van and I
had a television show on HBO that we sold to HBO in 2008.
And that television show was exactly my daily vlog.
Full stop.
Only eight episodes or something, wasn't it?
Eight episodes, 22 minutes, 22 to 24 minute episodes.
But if you watch that daily show,
it looks like an early version of my vlog.
It's identical.
It's the same exact shit.
But that was before YouTube was really a thing.
YouTube was invented in 2000 or launched in 2006.
And it was really just a place for watching
like basketball highlight reels
and like Charlie bit my finger.
So, you know, we put that show on HBO.
Very highly reviewed, but nobody watched it.
It was on at midnight on Friday nights.
It wasn't a breakout success.
And then Van moved to California, so I was kind of on my own.
And I was like, I just want to do that.
So I tried to sell it to MTV, and they didn't get it.
They're like, we know this is great.
I showed it to someone there and they brought me in
and I met with the heads of MTV,
like met with some really powerful people.
And they're like, this is not like anything we've ever seen.
This is fantastic.
But we're not sure this works on TV.
I was like, okay, cool.
And then, yeah, and then I put it on YouTube.
And how did that go?
Well, you know, you talked about the numbers before.
Like, so before my daily vlog,
I was considered like a successful YouTuber,
like a celebrated YouTuber.
I think it was 280,000 subscribers.
And it had taken me almost a decade to get there.
I started my YouTube channel in 2007 maybe.
And by 2014, 2015, I had 280,000 subscribers.
I had a couple movies that went truly viral that had like 5, 10 million views.
All of my movies did more than like 50, 60,000 views, which is amazing. And people liked my
videos. Like the New York Times saw my YouTube videos and like make videos for us. I was doing
that back then. So by all definition, very successful on YouTube. But then I started my daily vlog.
And it took, whatever that was, eight years to go from zero to a couple hundred thousand subscribers.
And my daily vlog went from a couple hundred thousand subscribers to 10 million subscribers in like 18 months.
It was a kind of like explosion that I had never felt in any other capacity in my career, my life.
What's the lesson that you take away from that
about consistency or compounding or, you know?
Yeah, that's that thing, patience.
I wasn't really doing anything different.
I mean, certainly I was working much harder to create a video every day.
It was hard work.
But really, it was just like I had this square peg and I tried to knock it through thousands of round holes for 15 years.
And like sometimes I was able to jam it through and sometimes it would kind of fall through and I wasn't able to duplicate it.
And then all of a sudden, like the moons aligned, like the fucking planets aligned, Pluto was lined up, the sun sun shined through like right as the locks arc
the light came through
the city illuminated
and like 2015
YouTube was just becoming something more
it's the first generation that grew up on YouTube
like it'd been around for you know nine years
and people had a relationship with this platform
and no one was doing anything
of any significant production
quality. And I had 15 years of experience in making short videos. I brought all of that to YouTube
and then just the episodic aspect of it. So it was like, you know, make one video of me running
around New York City, hanging around my wife, having lunch, doing something else. And then the
video is over and it's like, oh, who's this funny looking guy in New York, whatever.
Do that seven days in a row and you're like,
oh, this is kind of fun.
I get to hang out with this guy.
Do it 300 days in a row and it's like,
I've become part of your life.
And that just snowballs.
Like it snowballs in every way.
It snowballs algorithmically
and that's what the quantitative explosion was.
It snowballs financially because you get paid whatever,
call it a tenth of a cent per view
and that doesn't mean much if you're getting 10 views.
But if you're getting 100 million views,
the money starts to become substantive.
Brands, the kinds of companies you always wanted to work with,
maybe one out of every 100 creative directors at an agency
has seen your videos,
but all of a sudden you go from getting
a hundred thousand a month to a hundred million a month.
And now every creative director has seen your videos.
They're like, we want to work with that guy.
And it just, it just was, you know,
just, it happened so quick and was so explosive
and so exciting and so fun.
It sounds like that was your anvil moment in some respects,
like the, you'd put in 15 years
of work and then your craft and patience had met opportunity in a way. And people might look at
those moments and go, Oh, that was, you know, that's luck because you know, you just, but what
is the rebuttal to that? What's the life? They're right. It was luck. But like luck is, what is it?
Luck is where preparation meets opportunity. I had just been preparing myself
for that moment for 15 years, you know, and then the opportunity opened up and I was right there.
And the truth is like most of us see opportunity just flies by us all day, every day when I'm
ready for it. I was seeking it for that long. And, you know, there's some other circumstances
too. My friend Max pointed this out to me when he and I were having a meeting last week, which was like, when I launched that YouTube channel, the daily vlog rather, when I launched
that in 2015, I had had a show on HBO that they bought for $2 million. I had had movies that I
produced, two of them in the Cannes Film Festival. I won the Cassavetes Award at the Independent Spirit Awards, which was like
the Academy Awards for indie films. I worked for the New York Times. I made movies for Nike.
I had worked for myself at that point in time for 12 years in my own studio. I had by every
definition achieved success. But the exact time I launched that YouTube channel, I was $200,000 in debt,
meaning I was more broke then than when I was on welfare getting checks for my kid,
because I was so deep in debt. Because the year preceding that, I was invited to MIT
as a fellow. And as a high school dropout, it was like no greater honor than to get to go to one
of the most prestigious academic institutions on the planet and be invited there. And I remember
going there being like, whatever I do on the other side of this is going to be different from what
I'm doing now. And what I was doing then was making TV commercials and doing fun stuff like
that. I had a good career. Around that time, you read this book.
Yeah.
What was so inspiring or perspective shifting
about that book, Hatching Twitter?
It wasn't around that time.
So I went to MIT as a fellow.
I worked out of the MIT Media Lab.
And my lab group was called the Social Computing Group.
And it was, you know, eight or
10 technologists, one artist was a painter and then me. And I never, to this day, I don't know
what I was doing there. I'm incredibly close to the professor. I talked to him all the time. He's
since left there and he is a mentor of mine, somebody I speak to regularly. I still don't
know what I was doing there. So mostly I just observed.
I was given no assignment.
I just observed.
And I didn't have any friends.
I was living in Boston.
My pregnant wife was alone in New York City hating me
because I abandoned her.
And I read this book.
And all I knew is that when I was there,
I wanted to figure out what to do next.
And the magic of hatching Twitter,
by the way, Nick Bilton has since become a good friend,
but the magic of this amazing book
is it reveals the madness that was a technology startup.
Like the chaos.
Like, you know, these guys are all very smart.
All the guys that started Twitter.
But like, I don't think they're smarter than me. Like, I think that
like, there's like, you have like regular people and like smart people. And then like these geniuses
that you just can't relate to. And I think that like, I live somewhere between like regular and
close to smart, but not fully smart. And I think these guys were like, they're just smart,
persistent people that wanted to do something. I was like, I can do what they did.
I can do that.
And when I left MIT, I was like,
I'm going to start a technology company.
And I didn't know what that meant,
but it just sounded like a great idea.
But the whole time I was at MIT,
I wasn't making any money.
So I was living off my credit cards and off my debt.
My business had a revolving line of credit
at Chase Bank that was maxed out.
And then I started this company, which was basically just meeting with people,
telling them I wanted to start a company. And yeah. And so six months later, I was $200,000
in debt. I couldn't afford my half of rent that I owed to my wife, who was pregnant.
And that's when I started a daily vlog and started a technology company.
And it made sense.
But the reason why I give that long preface about like I found all this success
is it was like, I found all that success.
I knew there was snack down the hall
if I didn't want to do the puzzle.
And I was like, fuck that.
Let me burn it to the ground.
Like, let me go $200,000 in debt
and do something that I have no idea.
I've never written a line of code in my life.
Let me start a technology company.
Let me start a software development company.
I've still never written a line of code in my life,
but let me do that.
That's a good pursuit for me.
And that's what I did.
I don't know, I'm not sure what I was thinking.
What were you thinking?
I don't know.
It felt like a great idea.
It also like...
How old were you at this point?
you were what?
35?
yeah and I also like
those guys were such superstars to me
like Mark Zuckerberg
like that
in the social network
the movie The Social Network
that scene
that juxtaposes him
just sitting in his dorm room
writing code
with all the cool kids
getting on that bus
going to the party
with all the hot girls
and he's just
I was like
I want to be that guy
and also like I didn't think of anything more explosive.
It was like, I was still, you know,
I had financial success, but like the 2 million bucks
from the HBO thing didn't make me a millionaire.
It's like cut it in half from taxes.
You're at a million, pay back our investor.
You're 400,000 left over.
There's two of us.
Give half that to Van, it's $200,000.
And then three years goes by and it's like,
you're making like middle-class income for three years. You know, we're not rich. And I was like, I want to be rich.
Like I want to be a billionaire. Let me start a tech company. That's how I'll get there.
Unqualified. I mean, when I look through your story, I see someone who was seemingly unqualified
to pursue the things that he pursued over and over again. You weren't qualified to get into
movies. There was no formal education by and over again. You weren't qualified to get into movies.
There was no formal education by any objective standards.
You weren't qualified to be starting a tech company.
What was I thinking?
What is unqualified?
Because I think most people would say,
well, I'm not a tech entrepreneur.
They would like self-label
and then disqualify themselves from doing that.
And I think in most people's lives,
they're actually spending more time
disqualifying themselves psychologically. But you seem to be taking the opposite approach,
which is you seem to be qualifying yourself for things that you're objectively unqualified to be
pursuing. I had this conversation with Candice, my wife, last night, because it was like,
what do we do with these little girls, our daughters, to show them they can do anything?
And if they were boys, I knew what to do. If they're
boys, force them to work with their hands. It's one of my regrets with my son. My son is 25 now
and he's a superstar. He's fantastic. But he loved academia and I indulged him in that.
And I wish I had been more forceful in encouraging him to learn to work with his hands.
Why? Because I think you learn something about life by learning how to build and do things.
There's this great South Park special that's on TV right now. And like the handymen who like fix
your broken toilet become the billionaires and all the intellects are standing
outside of home depot like holding up signs that are like i'm a i'm a biologist please hire me like
we'll trade for because it's like and they're sitting around they're like i wish i just learned
to work with my hands why didn't anybody tell me and i think what they're saying with that or what
i feel what i was able to deduce from that is it's just like, there are universal aspects of life
and humanity and the world
that you learn from working with your hands.
And like this rule of mine,
which is that if you don't know
what you want to do in life,
do something you hate.
And through that process,
you'll figure out what it is that you love.
Like I learned that I wanted to be a filmmaker
by scrubbing out chowder pots
in that fucking seafood restaurant in Connecticut.
40, 50 hours a week, just hating it.
90 degrees back there in the summer.
Stinks.
Scrubbing that pot.
Hated it.
It's a lot of time thinking about
what do I wish I was doing?
So for like kids, it's like,
yeah, no, no, no, you don't get to go to college.
Instead, I'm sending you to this school
where you're going to learn how to rebuild diesel engines.
Enjoy it.
I don't know that I can do that
to my little blonde haired, blue eyed daughters.
So you asked me about what it means to be unqualified.
I don't know.
But I think like, you know,
when my bicycle was broken at home
and I was a little kid,
like I didn't have the tool to fix it I first had to build the tool that I could then fix my bike with
like it wasn't qualified but I had to find that qualification and everything that I did it was
the same kind of thing so why wouldn't I think that I'm qualified to do anything it's part of
that as I hear you say that and thinking about this idea of doing stuff with your hands it's
part of that because like the what it teaches, and I was thinking about your bike example
there, is that when something is broken or when there is a challenge, you're learning,
you learn at that very young age that Casey can solve that problem himself. And that lesson of,
I can close the gap between what I want and where I am is like an overarching superpower for the
rest of your life where it's, you know, the gap, the gap between where you are and where you want to be.
The gap between Casey being a guy that's, you know, making videos to the tech entrepreneur.
You learned very early on in your life that Casey can close the gap. And a lot of people never learn
that. They think, oh, I'm unqualified to close the gap, or I don't have the skills to close the gap,
or the money, or I'm scrubbing pots in a back room.
I can't close the gap.
But that's evidence.
And evidence comes from, you know,
closing the gap a couple of times with a bike.
I had a friend DM me this week
and it was something like, I don't know what it was,
but it was this thing that was like,
how to figure out who high agency individuals are,
something like that.
And like, there's like five bullet points.
And number five was like the golden question.
Who would you call?
From George Mack's friend of mine, former.
Is that what it was?
It was like, who would you call if you're stuck in a Thai prison
to break you out?
Yeah.
So that's George Mack, who's a former employee
in one of my former companies.
He's a superstar.
He's an incredible guy.
He does tweet threads and he did one like last week,
which is how to spot a high agency individual.
And I think about that a lot
because someone very close to me
couldn't find his partner.
He couldn't find his wife.
And in a moment of panic,
he thought she had been kidnapped.
And he's thousands of miles away from me
and he didn't know what to do.
And he called me in that moment.
He was like, what do I do?
And I was like, give me all of the information.
And he gave me all the information.
And I was like, I need more.
And I'm like asking him all these questions.
I'm writing it all down.
And then I'm like, what are you doing right now?
And he's like, I'm going to the police station.
I was like, do not go to the police station.
Here's what they're going to do.
And I was like, this is why you don't do that. Here are
the things you can do to be effective. Call the bank, find out what her last transaction was,
figure out what her password is on her iCloud account. And like going through all these facts,
like do all that and call me back. And then I hung up with him and I'm like, how do I solve
this problem? And it wasn't, there was never a moment of, is there someone that can solve this problem that's not me?
It was that thing that's like says,
either in Lockheed Martin or at NASA,
where it says in like hundred foot letters,
it won't fail because of me.
Like, that's what that moment was.
It was like, no, I'm the only person
who can solve this right now.
And like, sure enough, the next phone call,
I called him, it was very Jason Bourne, but I called him like 11 minutes later. And I was like, she's at the tennis club. She's
asleep on the couch. And like, it was much credit to my younger brother, Dean, who is an actual
jet pilot in the Air Force for helping me figure that out. But like, it was interesting. Like,
there was something about the fact that he called me. There was something about the fact that I
could hear in his voice, a total uncertainty. And his instinct was, there has to be a higher
authority that can solve this problem. And how antithetical that was to my own thinking, which
was there's no higher authority. There's no one that can solve this better than I can solve this
right now. And I think I applied that to most
of what I've done throughout my whole life
I remember
when I was really broke way back
in the day I had a
1986 I think Volvo
240 whatever the one that had
the dual halogen headlight was great year
and
somebody crashed into the front of the car
and the estimate to fix it was like $2,200.
And the insurance company just gave me that money. And I was like, fuck this. I was like,
I can fix this car myself. I remember my baby mama being like, what do you know about fixing
cars? I'm like, how hard could it possibly be? And in that moment, I took the whole front of
the car apart. I did not do a good job.
I did a good enough job.
And I pocketed like all of it,
like 150 bucks to replace those halogen headlights,
like screw it all back together.
I mean, before we started this podcast,
you're like, Casey, what are you doing with your time?
I'm like, just building out my studio.
I wanted to build my girls a tree fort in there.
There was never of like,
what carpenter do I hire to build a tree fort?
It was like, no, no, I'm going to do this. How hard can it be? How hard can, yeah, how hard can any of it be? Like,
give me a big enough pile of balsa wood and enough time, I will build you a spaceship.
As a mantra for life, how hard can it be? There's an air of naivety, which is-
Once you realize how hard it can be, it's like, I will never do a software development company again.
If I knew now,
if I knew then what I know now about building that company,
no fucking way.
No chance.
There's no chance.
It sold for, what, $36 million though?
Something like that.
Which is a success.
Yeah, it's a success.
A million failures though for that one success.
And the failures keep me up way more than the success puts me to sleep.
What are those failures?
Some of the really key failures were the naivety that an exit is the holy grail.
For me, we were all out of money.
My partner, Matt, and I cut our salaries
for the last year and I think
the last couple paychecks I was paying out of my pocket.
So when we sold the company
and everybody got to have a job and everybody got paid out
one of the aspects
of the sale was that
every employee that had equity would get a full
cash payout immediately upon
the sale.
I thought everybody would be psyched,
but when he told everybody, they weren't. Because for them, it was like, no, no, we signed up to
build this company with you. This is fun. This is a startup. This is why we didn't take twice
the salary from Facebook. We wanted to do something novel with you. And now we just
get to go work for a big company. In that moment of feeling like I was letting down
all of these people that helped me get there,
it was like, yeah, I got to get this fat check.
I made me a millionaire.
I was like, I got to be a millionaire,
but I feel like I disappointed the people who got me there.
The people who held me up so I could reach the top,
I let all of them down.
And maybe that's unfair, but that's how it felt.
That's how it still feels.
Feels weird.
I have zero employees right now.
I don't have an assistant.
Your producer had to call a friend of ours last night
to be like, I haven't heard from Casey in three weeks.
Is he going to show up tomorrow?
Because I don't check my email.
I don't have an assistant.
I don't have a schedule.
I have no one. I mop my own floors. And I think a lot of that is like the
post-traumatic stress of having 35 employees at my tech company and feeling like I let a lot of
them down and never wanted to feel that way again. So I was just like, fuck it. I'll just mop my own
floors. I might miss an appointment. But there's a million failures that fall underneath
that umbrella of being a manager, being a terrible manager that I think about way more
than the moments of elation that were, you know, selling that company.
What was that moment like? If I zoom in on your psychology throughout that period,
you go on this incredible journey to build this business, twist turns. And I mean, that's the story of most tech startups. Most of them fail. Most of them
run out of cash. And then you get this exit. Objectively, people look at that and go,
oh, congratulations. Amazing. You smashed it. You're rich. You've got money now.
What's going on in your psychology? The day you get the call, you call your investors.
One of your investors, I think, is a good friend of mine and an investor in one of my companies Gary Vaynerchuk um and then it's done
how are you feeling if I was a fly inside your head
I mean good it was like super thrilling to get across that finish line a month after then
so a month after that you know like to get specific like the company cnn turner bought our company
and you know matt my business partner and i signed a three-year deal with them to stay on and work
with them for three years and just to tell the finish line they fired us 11 months later 11
months later so for the a month into that it was about how do we build this business into a success underneath this bigger company?
And it was exciting,
but I also think there was a huge amount of naivety
on my part about what the realities of that look like.
What I interpreted as ambiguity from CNN
about what to do wasn't at all ambiguity.
It was them looking to me to lead.
And my lack of awareness of that
is something I look back at now
and just sort of shake my head.
Like, this is what I mean by like a thousand failures.
Like, I can tell you,
and I don't think this is an unfair characterization
that like, I think they bought my company
because they're like, this kid is a star
and we want his reach alone
is worth this amount of money. And as a bonus, we're getting all of this technical know-how and
skill and we're getting the brilliance of his partner. And like, this is a great deal for us,
but we want that influence. And then he'll use all of these brilliant people that he has around him
to help promote that influence. Like that's what they wanted. I can say that. They also wanted to exploit my reach doing
stupid Mickey Mouse shit. They had some million dollar deal for me to do commercials for a watch
company. And I was like, guys, this isn't why. I want to work with you. And I said no to that.
And there's a huge... I can point to all these things, like them being a big corporation and
us being a nimble startup and them wrecking that culture. But the reality is the
reason why we didn't succeed under CNN was because of me and only because of me. It was my failure
to recognize the opportunity and build within that. And I attribute that to ego. I attribute
that to naivety. Someone like you doesn't belong at CNN though. Sure. Easy to say now, but like,
fuck you, man.
I can build a spaceship.
I can do whatever I want.
I'll fix that Volvo.
I can build a fucking company for CNN.
You know how incentivized I was?
Like if I built that company to be a success,
like the incentives that they gave me were out of this world.
The people I was working with at CNN were incredible.
They're brilliant people.
But the only reason it didn't succeed was because of me.
And I don't know, you asked how I felt a month later.
When I look back at it, it's like a month later
is when I was probably at like peak hubris.
Like I know it all.
Look what I did.
I know everything.
What about 11 months later?
11 months later, it was just exhaustion.
I wanted to get out.
Just let me, let me.
Like when they said we're shutting down the company,
I remember it was like super weird.
Like I was in South Africa with my family
and they're like, we're going to let you know
for the end of the year.
And like December 31st, I like called my kind of boss at CNN.
I'm like, what's going on with the company?
Are you guys shutting us down or are we going to keep going?
They're like, we're going to talk when you get back.
And we got back and they're like, we're going to meet here.
And I'm like, why don't we just meet at our offices or your offices they wanted to meet in
like a neutral location and there's like a head of hr or something in the meeting and they're like
we want to let you both know we've decided to shut down the company and release you from your
or whatever they said and i was kind of like okay cool like like it was not a big thing. It was kind of what I expected.
But it was like a sigh of relief, weirdly.
What did your plan become for your life?
After that?
Yeah.
You know, you're this guy that's checking off your bucket list,
the bucket list you had as a child.
You've sold the company, you've built the channels, you've made a huge name for yourself in movie making.
At that point, 11 months later, after leaving the HR
meeting at the neutral location, what's the future? That's when it got hard.
Dark. That was like a moment of real darkness in my life because, not because of those external
factors, but just internally. The fame then was something that I just did not understand.
The only way to quantify it was I had done like 3 billion views in two years, something like that.
And the content was all me. It was the real version of me. I wasn't playing a character.
I wasn't acting. I didn't have on a Superman costume. I wasn't like, I'd always say like,
I love Tyler Durden, Brad Pitt's character in Fight Club. Superman costume I wasn't like, I'd always say like I love Tyler Durden
Brad Pitt's character in Fight Club
but if I met Brad Pitt, he's not that
person, you meet me
I am the person you think you know
and the fame
was fucking insane
we had to move into a higher security building
in New York City, it got scary
that kind of fame
and when I was winning, putting a video out higher security building in New York City, it got scary, that kind of fame.
And when I was winning,
like putting a video out every day and I had this company,
I was cool as shit to talk about.
It was like, you're like coasting on that.
But I felt like I wasn't winning.
I didn't want to do my daily show anymore.
I was exhausted from it.
CNN had just kind of fired me
so I wasn't building anything with them.
I wasn't sure what to do, but I still couldn't step outside
without being like Justin Bieber kind of swarmed.
And I didn't know what to do.
And I kind of started this other company called 368
with my partner at the time, Paul.
That was a cool project.
I started up a new daily show with my other friend, Dan.
That was kind of exciting.
But basically, it just felt like a bunch of sort of slow starts.
Why did you say dark?
It's a very interesting word.
Because it was the first time, like,
it was that thing that I referred to before,
which is like,
you attribute happiness and fulfillment with winning.
And I had won.
Like, this was the first time in my life
where I achieved like a level of financial security
that you know like if I played my card rights could have meant financial security for the rest
of my life like for a guy who couldn't afford diapers that's a fucking journey that is a big
box on the list to check off um you know like for a guy who like made would drive around in my car
giving people vhs copies of my videos.
I had 3 billion views in two years.
That's a big box to check off.
I'd done those things.
And instead of feeling like I was like,
I had done it, I'd earned it.
Instead of feeling like I was standing
on top of the mountain,
I just kind of was like,
well, what now?
This isn't it.
It wasn't like I wasn't running the marathon because
I wanted to get across the finish line. Like, I don't know where, I've run 24 marathons. I don't
know where any of my medals are. I was running it because I love the running. Like, I loved it. And
it kind of felt like that was over and I didn't know what to do. And it kind of, yeah, it got
weird. Got dark for a little bit. And that's when we decided to like leave New York and move to LA.
If I was a flaw in the wall then in that moment in your life
where it's dark and weird,
what do I see in the walls of your home?
Well, first of all, the house was really nice
because, you know, I just bought my company.
So it was a really nice house.
Candice bought the fancy wallpaper.
But no, it was mostly like I had a little baby at the time and then like a
three-year-old. So I was kind of at home, chilling, hiding. I didn't want to go to my studio. There
should be too many people outside. And yeah, just unsure, uncertain. Like I think so much of our
decision to move, we moved to LA for like three years. It was a disaster. We moved back to New York, but so much of my enthusiasm to leave New York was just
like, I need to get away from all of this. And I pictured like LA, like I was moving to the moon,
like nobody would know me there. And I could just go to the beach every day and chill out.
Couldn't have been further from the truth, but that's, so there was like, we decided to move to
LA and we didn't move for another seven months or whatever. And those seven months were just kind of me
hiding and waiting.
And Candice, you've kind of indirectly made her famous as well
because of that whole, you know,
everything that happened in that chapter of your life,
which means that both of you can't just like leave,
live a normal life,
can't just walk down the street together.
How is she feeling in that moment?
And does that add strain to the relationship?
Yeah.
I mean, it was always,
that's a whole nother podcast,
but like, you know,
my daily show was effectively,
I was just pulling stories from my life,
my own real life experiences.
Let me figure out how to turn that into a narrative.
I'm coming on your podcast.
Let me film my journey here
and then talk about what this is about
and then my journey home. And let me make that today's video. And so it was just
this vacuum and whatever was closest would get sucked in. So she's my wife. She's my partner
to my best friend. So she would get sucked into the content all the time.
Mostly she's willing and supportive, but not all the time. But I still had to make my videos.
So it had this, you know, this burden on her, this stress on her.
Some of it was positive.
You know, she's building her own company then.
And it brought enough exposure to her that people were like, oh, I love what she's doing.
And it yielded a kind of, it shined a light on her brilliance as a designer and a jewelry designer and an entrepreneur herself.
And she embraced all that.
But ultimately, yeah, it was a big stress on our relationship.
If this next 10 years of your life is a movie,
what is the narrative of this movie?
I don't know.
You ever seen Kiyonosukatsi?
No.
It's this amazing movie.
There's no story at all.
It's just beautiful establishing shots of cities with weird music
and nothing happens.
That's what I feel like my life is right now.
It's just like it's so beautiful and wonderful.
I'm doing fuck all right now.
I'm doing nothing.
And I feel guilty because I still like I get paid jobs
and I take those paid jobs.
I do them as best I can. I think
I do a good job with them. But I feel a little
bit like
I'm selling
out or something because I still need to make a living
and I still can. But I'm mostly
just riding the momentum that I created
years ago. And then just
like, I race home from
work every day at like 4.30 in the afternoon
so I can be home when my kids get home. And I just like sit around I race home from work every day, like 4.30 in the afternoon. So I can be home,
my kids get home and I just like sit around, like you can ask me out to dinner. You can invite me
to go to the Met Gala. I'm like, I can't man. I just go home, play with my kids every day. It's
my favorite thing. Like kids go to bed at 7.38, whatever, go to the gym for like an hour, come
home, like bother Candace for an hour, watch TV, go to bed.
That's my life.
And then during the day, go hang out in my studio.
It's just this clubhouse, fun shit in it.
Build stuff, make things out of wood,
go home, tell Candice I worked a lot today,
play with the kids.
I just do that over and over and over.
And then it's like Christmas and we go visit our family or it's like summertime
when we go to the beach.
I'm just coasting through life right now
and it's fantastic.
Is this a new Casey?
Because the other Casey seemed really like
as if they were striving towards
some bucket list thing
that they'd written when they were a kid.
This Casey seems to be...
Yeah, I mean, look, I'm at peace right now,
but this is not a sustainable...
I'm at peace right now, but I'm hyper cognizant that this is not sustainable why I mean because I'll just be
broke in like three years but um moreover like the only thing that brings me a sense of true like
fulfillment in what is a big part of my life is when I make something that I think is good
creatively. So like, I think I'm a good dad. That's that part of my life. And I think I'm
a good husband. That's that part of the life. And I'm super fitness focused. And I care a lot about
my physical existence. That's a part of my life. But then there's the majority of the pie chart
is like my professional life.
And if I'm not making something,
even if I make something
that's good
and I don't share it or post it,
that checks that.
That does that.
I made something great.
What did I do?
Like I made my mother-in-law
for her 70th birthday.
And she was like,
will you make me
one of those slideshows?
And I know she was picturing like, you know, you drop all the photos into like Windows
slideshow maker and push a button. I made like this great video. We like played it at her 70th
birthday to all of her old lady friends. Nobody saw that. Like that did it for me. And I don't
feel like I'm like cashing that check right now. I don't feel like if I'm looking at that as like a
staying healthy, it's like
instead of going to the gym, I'm like eating junk food. Instead of going for a jog, I'm like sitting
on the couch. Like when I get to the office, instead of like putting my head down and just
making something great, which I can do, I just kind of putz around and like reorganize my tools
every day. Do you know I said earlier, before we started recording,
about this word boredom?
I use the word boredom,
not because I'm implying that nothing is happening,
but so many of the creatives I've spoken to
tell me that you need to have chapters
and seasons in your life of like,
basically where you're just chilling
because those,
they kind of cultivate an energy towards the new thing.
Maybe it gives you enough time and space
to stand back from the picture to see the whole painting
or to, I don't know, get some inspiration
from something your kid says to you one day.
Yeah, yes.
Look, absolutely.
Like there's a pendulum and my pendulum swung so far
when I'm making a video a day, 800 days in a row
while running a company with 38 employees,
while having a wife and a brand new baby at home.
Like, you know, I didn't sleep for three years.
Like I was running at full speed.
Millions of people with their eyes on me every day.
And like, you could definitely justify as a pendulum
slowing in the other direction.
Now, like, I just need this time to decompress.
But I don't accept that.
Because to accept that is to sort of justify my current laziness
in general, sort of laissez-faire attitude towards life.
Like I recognize how indulgent it is right now.
And I'm not doing this because I need it.
I'm doing this because I can.
If I was broke right now,
I'd be fucking busting my ass every day.
If my kids were hungry right now,
I'd be busting my ass.
I'm doing this because I can.
I'm not solving the puzzle
because right down the hallway are all the snacks I could ever want. And I'm doing this because I can. I'm not solving the puzzle because right down the hallway are all
the snacks I could ever want. And I'm very aware of that. So I hear you. I do not accept that
justification. This is just pure indulgence. And that's all it is. It's great. Can we go have some
snacks and build a shelf this afternoon? It's very of you i don't think anyone's ever said that to me because people do justify justify their indulgence it's very
interesting what can we expect from you can we expect anything do you know the answer to that
because so many people are like ultra fans of you i think there's a anticipation of what's casey
what's the next big thing casey's gonna do you You know, I don't, the short answer, like, but I've been saying this
for a while and I haven't done it. It's like this version of my life right now that I do love.
And I really just, I have all these movies written. When I say movies, I mean, YouTube videos
written. They're like really meaningful and awesome. And some are deep and some are shallow and some are one day shoots
and some are three weeks of writing.
I just want to make those.
I just want to go to my office every day alone
and make these videos and put them out on YouTube.
And like I deleted the YouTube studio app from my phone.
I don't look at comments or views anymore.
I don't check AdSense.
I don't do that.
I just click upload and then go back to work.
That's what I want to do right now. And when I'm beating myself up about my laziness,
it's because there's nothing stopping me from doing that. I keep kicking the can.
But that's what I want to do right now. That's it. I just want to put my head down and make
the things that I think are great. I give a shit if anybody watches them.
You talked about privilege earlier and acting on your privilege.
Yeah, to do that is the ultimate privilege.
Like there's nothing more.
There's nothing more.
That's like the most privileged existence.
So why aren't you acting on your privilege?
You've got the lottery ticket.
You know, I think of like just to go back and be as honest as I,
is because I don't, I don't, I don't have to.
And I'm embarrassed to say that,
but that's the truth.
Jack over there, Jack Sylvester,
he's a producer's podcast
and directed it with me
since the very beginning.
And you're the reason why he got into video.
He told me many years ago,
I think he told me two years ago
when we first started this,
he says, he said, Casey is his dream guest.
Jack, I'm glad I didn't cancel today.
I thought about it.
It's like, you know,
instead of doing that podcast,
sure it'd be cool just to sit in my office
and do nothing again.
I'm glad I'm here.
But my question really is about 19-year-old Casey
when he first arrived into New York City.
What is the advice that Casey needed to hear
at that point that he just didn't get?
And I'm speaking to all the Jacks out there that are 19.
Fuck, that's tough.
A quick digression.
Like hearing that and then knowing
that I'm like my notes app,
I have 25 great movies that I wrote that I really care about,
it makes me feel like Spike Jonze has this great idea
for a music video to make with Fat Lip.
And if he just decided to go make shelves and have lunch
and not make that video, it might not have made me get off my –
like, that's a fucking motivator.
Like, that makes me want to create stuff. But what's the one piece of advice?
I think that, like, nobody cares about you is something that was never made clear to me.
And I mean that in the most positive, optimistic, inspiring, motivating way. Like, I think that,
especially if you see yourself as a creative or you want
to exist on YouTube or as a filmmaker or musician or as an artist or a painter, any of those things,
like you think that everybody's paying attention. And because of that, it kind of controls how you
think. And even when I was young and fearless and nothing to lose, I was still so cognizant of like,
how are people going to react to this? And what's the best way to do like i was so aware and the reality is nobody
gives a shit everybody is so focused on themselves in this world nobody has time for you and the
sooner you accept that as a creative person the sooner you're free like you're totally free i do
exactly what feels right to you and if you can get yourself on that trajectory, then it goes back
to what we were talking about before, about being novel, about being an original, about not being
a photocopy of somebody who did something. If you're that photocopy, you will never be the
original. But the moment you accept the fact that nobody cares, do your thing, nobody cares.
And then you start to go down that path. You will just get better and better and better.
Then you sprinkle on that patience I was talking about.
You just keep going.
You keep going.
And eventually like that persistence
will just smash into like opportunity.
What is it?
Preparation will smash into opportunity.
Persistence will smash into opportunity.
And like your moment of explosion,
your detonation will happen.
That was verbose, but you asked a big question. Thank you so much, Casey. We have a closing tradition on this podcast where the last
guest leaves a question for the next guest, not knowing who they're going to be leaving it for.
But I did have a question because you are, I mean, many people consider you to be the very king
of vlogging. And we've started a weekly vlog where, which is going really well.
We've uploaded, I don't know, eight or so videos.
And we've got an engaged audience.
Because you are the king of vlogging in my eyes.
The question I want to ask you selfishly is,
what do you make of that whole medium?
It's been on a journey.
There was a lot of daily vloggers back in the day.
I used to watch the Shaytards
and I used to watch you
and then, you know, doing these daily vlogs.
And as you said, I felt like I was your friend
living your life with you.
The algorithms change, things change.
It doesn't seem to be the case
that there's daily vloggers anymore.
Even like vlogging on the platform
seems to have kind of fallen down a little bit.
What do you think of?
I mean, at the time, like when I was doing my daily vlog,
I really thought that it was like the ultimate,
like maturation, if that's a word,
like of reality television.
Because you've got Kim Kardashian
and then you have her TV show.
And in between those two things are all these producers and directors and writers
and all of this fabrication.
So what happens if you remove the middle part
and it's just sharing your world?
Like that was the most sort of optimistic,
whimsical trajectory that I saw the genre taking.
And I think it just never happened.
It never manifested that way.
Instead, it was a pursuit of sensationalism and views.
I think it was corrupted by the view count.
I don't fault anyone.
I was susceptible to that too.
It was corrupted by the view count.
So it could have been something virtuous
turned into something, I think, much less interesting.
And that crashed and burned.
And now in the ashes of that,
I think we're seeing really, really interesting things.
I think we're seeing niche succeed,
which is so fucking wonderful to see.
You had to be a YouTuber to succeed back in the day.
Like one of those, you had to fit in.
So you had to be one of those.
And now it's like, we have these micro creators
that are finding their audiences.
A friend of mine, all he's into is fish tanks.
It's all he does is fish tanks.
His channel's huge.
He's so good.
These guys, Retro Dodo, they're friends of mine.
They came to New York to film with me.
Their whole channel is just retro video gaming devices.
They're wildly successful.
They've released books.
And that is so amazing.
You have eight episodes of your vlog out now.
I haven't seen any,
but I'm sure they're much more about this
than they are the intimacies of your life.
You're able to lean into that niche.
So I think this thing had all this potential and it crashed and burned. And now out of those
ashes, we're seeing these sort of beautiful little things sprout up. And I hope that that's
the trajectory it continues. And you're not tempted to vlog again on a daily basis?
If I could do it without having any notoriety or attention from it, I would do it.
That's the only reason you don't do it?
It's a big part of the reason so interesting my like the thing that i fantasize is about is like um quentin tarantino just disappears off the face of the earth for like
six years and then it's like hey guys i had a new movie coming out in six months and he is
the only thing anyone talks about is that movie.
And then he goes and disappears, crawls back into his cave.
And it's like, that is the ultimate.
I don't fucking know anything about that guy.
Is he married?
I don't know.
Does he have kids?
Like, where does he live?
I don't know.
What is he doing right now?
I have no idea.
What kind of car does he drive?
Don't know.
What are his hobbies?
No idea.
I know nothing about him.
But his work?
I know every word to every movie he has ever made.
I appreciate that man for one reason.
That is his artistic contribution to the world.
Like that is the ultimate.
So for me, with like daily vlogging,
it's like, I don't know how to separate
the like selling of me and my personality
with the art and that conflation starts to fuck with my head.
And then when people in the street come up to me and engage me, yeah, it's, it's that turning into
something in the real world that just freaks me out. How long have we been talking?
We've been done a while. The question left for you is what is one piece of feedback you want to give
to me oh gosh shit what is one piece of feedback you want to give to me yes me steven
but might be nervous to tell me when you set up a studio in new york city Don't do it 40 minutes out into fucking
Brooklyn. You figure
out how to build this studio in downtown
Manhattan so all of your guests
are five minutes away instead of
40 minutes away. You were really busy
today? No.
I'm not watching TV.
Our studio was in
Lower Manhattan until
this was the first time we've ever done it here
but that is great did you get come here on your skateboard I thought about it but it doesn't have
the range oh shit I appreciate that Casey thank you so much for the inspiration this is fantastic
I've talked about you for many many years and it's really about the principles of towards life but
also creation and the artistic side of your work that have inspired me so profoundly. And even hearing
the import, you speak so clearly on the importance of truth and authenticity in what you produce
has, has made me rethink a lot of things that I do. And I think in a really important way,
and you're someone that is further, further up the ladder that I think creators like myself
are climbing. So for you to shout down these messages mean that I don't have to go through the darkness
or the confusion or all of those things
that you've been through.
So I thank you for that.
And I'm very excited to see what you do
because you're a pioneer.
And people that are creating
for their own authentic reasons
always make the most interesting shit.
And so that's going to be a source of inspiration for me
if you do make those 25 videos in the notes of your phone.
So please do.
I appreciate that.
I will do it for you.
Thank you, Casey.
Thanks for having me.
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