The Iced Coffee Hour - How To Make $100 Per Day In The Stock Market ft. Jeremy Financial Education
Episode Date: March 31, 2021Elevate your writing with 20% off Grammarly Premium by signing up at https://grammarly.com/icedcoffee Go to http://fubotv.com/icedcoffee to start your FREE trial and get 15% off your first mont...h. Jeremy's Channel: https://www.youtube.com/c/financialeducation Add us on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jlsselby https://www.instagram.com/gpstephan GET YOUR FREE STOCK WORTH UP TO $50 ON PUBLIC & SEE MY STOCK TRADES: http://www.public.com/graham Join the 2x weekly mentorship group: https://tinyurl.com/yaexko4o The Equipment used: https://tinyurl.com/y78py5g2 Audio Equipment Used In Podcast: Rode NT1, Rodecaster Pro The YouTube Creator Academy: Learn EXACTLY how to get your first 1000 subscribers on YouTube, rank videos on the front page of searches, grow your following, and turn that into another income source: https://bit.ly/2STxofv $100 OFF WITH CODE 100OFF For Podcast Inquiries, please contact GrahamStephanPodcast@gmail.com *Some of the links and other products that appear on this video are from companies in which Graham Stephan will earn an affiliate commission or referral bonus. Graham Stephan is part of an affiliate network and receives compensation for sending traffic to partner sites. The content in this video is accurate as of the posting date. Some of the offers mentioned may no longer be available. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Well, holy smoke is this ain't no jokas.
Welcome in to the 45th episode ever of Millennium.
I mean, excuse me, the iced coffee hour with Graham and Jack.
They have made $50,313 in the history of this channel.
Congrats, gentlemen.
And thank you for having me.
Thank you so much.
That was really good.
That was really good.
You know Mateo right now is right after that being like calculating, calculating all the numbers.
I'm curious to see what it's going to be.
This stuff is a 50 grand is a $50,000.
That's pretty amazing.
That's incredible.
That's a full on salary.
Yes.
That's crazy.
How long are you guys?
About a year, right?
You've been doing this show?
A year in a couple months.
No.
It hasn't been a year yet.
No, a year in a couple months.
Oh, okay.
Okay.
It sounded like a year and a couple months.
Yeah.
And this is my third time on the channel.
So thanks for having me for a three key guys.
You've been on the channel more times than anyone else.
That's true.
We've had a few people twice, but never for a third time.
Okay.
I appreciate it, guys.
You were just so good the first two times.
We had to have you back.
We want to know what stocks to buy.
Oh, man.
What's going on with the stock market?
What's happening with the stock market collapse of 2021?
What's going on with Bitcoin?
What are you buying right now?
What are you selling?
Where's the market going to be headed?
How do we make money right now this episode?
Oh, my gosh.
That's a lot.
We've got a lot to get into.
Holy smoke is.
You guys got to flip my flapjack.
How much was that shirt?
This shirt.
So, okay, guys, I'll be honest.
I wore this to troll Graham.
It's a $350 t-shirt from Versace, straight from Italy.
So got it at Neiman Marcus, and I saw it in my closet and I said,
what am I going to wear to get Graham's blood boiling?
Because you guys know I like to troll you every time.
Last time I came with Starbucks.
Yeah, that's true.
The other time I had Starbucks delivered.
I think Blake was there with Uber, and then we had a tip and everything.
And then this time I was like, well, I'm not bringing Starbucks.
I'll just wear a Versace shirt.
Yeah, that was the first thing I saw when you were walking up.
I'm like, why?
Yeah.
What's the point that why did you buy that shirt?
Oh, man, I don't know.
I think just for this podcast, honestly.
No, you didn't.
What went through your mind?
Did you have money that you had to get rid of that day?
Yes.
Like it was a challenge.
Like you have to spend the money.
I think so.
I just wanted to see, does a $350 t-shirt feel better than a $5 t-shirt?
And what I can confidently tell you, gentlemen, no, it doesn't.
It feels the same exact.
Could someone tell you that was Fruit of the Loom and you would be totally fine with it?
Yeah, I feel like it feels like any other t-shirt, I'll be honest.
maybe slightly more premium.
But yeah, it honestly, like, I don't feel any different with it on.
I'll be honest.
Do you feel nervous eating like a messy food in that?
Like spaghetti?
Would you be really, like, sweating?
I spilled Dutch bros on this before I got here.
Right across, but lucky enough, it's black so it doesn't show up.
Dutch bros just like out of the lid kind of leaked a little bit.
I was taking a drink and just went, oh my gosh.
Did anyone ever tell you that you should return the shirt?
No one ever.
For store credit?
No one.
No one ever.
I don't know what Neiman's policy is on that.
I'll have to check on that.
Isn't Nordstroms?
Don't they have a lifetime return policy?
Yeah.
I think you could return stuff to Nordstroms without a receipt,
without any proof of purchase.
You just bring it back.
And they hope that you tell that.
It's like the honor system, I believe, with Neiman.
I appreciate that shout out for J.WN stock.
You guys make any money on Nordstrom?
I did.
I bought Nordstrom at what?
I think it was like $10 a share, $11 a share.
I didn't put enough in because I figured.
like, oh, it's Nordstrom.
Like, when's the last time I shopped in Nordstrom's?
A long time.
So I think I put in like seven grand or something.
Sure enough, it's like tripled.
Yes.
And I'm looking at that.
I think recently,
I think recently,
I thought it was like 30.
It was 30.
And then it just made a huge, like upward move.
I think it's like 45 now.
Are you still buying Nordstrom?
I'm not buying Nordstrom.
I still hold some shares.
And unfortunately, I sold some shares in the 30s.
And now I'm regretting it.
I'm like, why didn't I hold it?
Like everything.
I think I still got about,
A little under 100K probably in Nordstrom.
Wow.
But yeah, it's been a beast, man.
Like, and it was just $10 to $12 back in.
That was...
A few months ago.
Yeah, it was like in the fall time.
July, yeah, sure.
Yeah, like September, I think you could have picked up shares for 10, 12, and now it's like
45, yeah.
What's going on with the market right now?
Why is everything so expensive?
Yeah.
Everything.
Oh, my gosh.
You know, I saw your video about the everything bubble.
And, yeah, it does make me think.
I mean, there's just a, there's a lot of sloshing of money out there.
There's people looking.
to put money in different places.
There's a lot of people that made a lot of money in the market in real estate, almost everything.
And I think just that money kind of makes people want to make more money and invest more money in the market.
And I feel like we just had this massive, like, flooding of money out there.
And it's made a lot of stocks get really overvalued, you know.
There's definitely, people are willing to pay almost any price for stocks right now.
I mean, it's substantial, especially high growth.
That's the type of stocks right now that everybody wants to, you know,
I just spend $25,000 in Pokemon cards.
Okay, so I'm a prime example of people have too much money right now.
I just feel like there's something going on right now in the market
where people feel like they have to invest money out there
and cash is worthless right now and cash is being devalued.
And so let's buy stocks.
And there's a lot of people participating in the market.
I'm talking in the stock market specifically that these people wouldn't usually participate
in the stock market.
Like you really look at it and I'm watching.
people get in the market.
And I'm talking with big money, too.
I'm not just talking about, like, Joe, who's got like a thousand bucks and trying
to invest his first thousand on a week.
They don't talk about Joe that way.
Hey, sorry, Joe.
Sorry, Joe.
That wasn't directed toward it.
It was another Joe.
There's going to be a Joe out there who's watching this.
He's like, I can't believe Jeremy called me out like that.
He's like, yeah.
But anyways, no, I'm talking about like, like, people that have, like, you know,
seven figures or even more than that and are investing, like, madmen in the market.
It's like, you know, no names come to mind, but I'm thinking about some of these people.
I'm like, you know, some of these people didn't usually participate in the market.
And now they really want to flood some money.
And so it's an interesting market we're in right now.
And, you know, I'm just somebody that's participating in it trying to find deals.
My main thing, you know, when it comes to me, I'm looking for the best deals.
Regardless if the market's a bubble market, a bad market, an overvalued market,
undervalue market, I'm looking for the best deals.
And there's some of those out there.
but they're few and far between right now.
How do you find a deal?
Where do you look?
Walk us through the process.
Teach Jack.
Jack needs help at this.
So I'll be honest.
Like 75% or more than 75% of my stock picks now come from the private Discord chat in my private group.
Like I'm getting, I'm in a privileged position now where I just get fed stocks and people like,
what's your opinion on this stock?
What's your opinion on this stock?
And so sometimes it's annoying because it's like it's too many dang stocks to always think about.
but sometimes I'm like oh my gosh like they got a really good stock like a lot of these stocks now are
coming from people because like in my private group like these people are trained to look at everything
I look for in stocks so now I have thousands of people scouring like you know the the the markets
looking for that next gem that next Nordstrom that next revolve that next upwork that next Tesla
the next planet or whatever stock you know and so that's where it's kind of like an unfair advantage
I have now, I feel like, because of that.
But before, I would just, I would just, like, look up lists of, like, S&P 500 and do things
like that or just, like, you know, going seeking Alpha, see what they're talking about.
Sometimes I would just, like, watch CNBC and look for tickers, like, coming across the bar and, like,
oh, there goes one.
I've never looked in that stock before.
And just try to, like, be in the market, like, really, like, in the community of stock
market investing.
And so that's where I picked up a lot of names.
but nowadays, like, I'll be honest, like most of them are coming from somebody in the Discord
chat that, you know, puts me on to something.
And then I'm like, oh, you know, this is a really good one.
And the next thing you know, I buy it.
And what's your first step?
When you get a ticker, let's say, from a student in your group, what's your first step?
Like the fundamentals of the company, like really looking into what does this company even do?
And usually within 10 to 20 minutes, I can tell if this is, like, worth me going further.
Sometimes there's some companies and I'm just like, well, you know, that's just what.
way over my head. Like somebody could send me some bio pharmaceutical company and I'm just like,
that's, you know, come on. That's just too much. You know, like, I have no, I have no strength in that
area, for instance. I don't know that sector well or some healthcare name. Like, I don't know that,
you know, what company's going to grow and what. It's just, that's too much for me. So I'm looking for
the fundamentals of that business first and then we can go from there. And then we'll go into the
financials and things like that. But it's always about the business first. What do they do?
oh okay now let me look in depth in the business now i have a rough idea of what they do so do you
do you look up every ticker every ticker in terms of what in terms of what's recommended or is it just
like oh that that that seems kind of cool what's that one that sounds like an awesome ticker symbol
uh sometimes i mean usually like you know let's say somebody brings me a stock and they're like
oh yeah i'm buying blah blah blah stocks usually they'll give me a little bit of the case then i'll
look into that ticker and see what the company does
like the profile like Yahoo Finance, although it's falling off in recent years,
it's still good for like, if somebody gives you a ticker and you type it in,
like you can go to the profile section and get like in one paragraph,
like a little bit of an understanding of that company,
like what they do, how they make their money,
and then you can kind of go from there.
Yahoo Finance is your preferred method of research?
For that initial profile part of,
so let's say you shared a ticker with me.
Let's say I had never looked into Tesla stock, right?
And you're like,
I'm looking at this electric vehicle company, TSLA.
I would go to Yahoo Finance.
I would type in TSLA.
I'd go to the profile section and I would see like what do they do?
Like, because that's going to give me an idea of what this company actually does.
And then we can go from there and figure out is this worth me taking further.
Then I might go to the investor relations page for a company and start doing some research there.
And, you know, we can go from there.
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back to the podcast. It's too bad you're not able to set up a screener that could go through the
Discord or go through the group and then pick out how many times a certain ticker symbol or company
has been mentioned and then see based on that if there's any correlation to its price.
Ooh, that's a good idea. We could do that. People have been doing that on Reddit's Wall Street
bets. Yeah. They've been coming up with these incredible things that scour the entire page,
analyze every day how many times a certain stock is mentioned and then trade based on that.
Yeah, I have a guy that could literally probably do that in Discord.
Like he's like a genius as far as like figuring out like different bots to set up and things like that.
I could have that's a smart idea.
I might have to do that to be honest.
You know, but it's not like I can just intuitively feel like what stocks like a lot of retail people are in because if I get suggested this stock over and over again, this is like a stock that a lot of people are in like a Palantir is one of those stocks.
P.L.T.R. I think is a ticker symbol. That's one of those stocks that like I can just feel.
it like I don't even need it to sift through Discord like I get so many suggestions about oh look into Palantir more like what's your what's your bull case on Palantir things like that what do you think of Palantir I'm still doing research on it yeah that's one of those that's a hard one to wrap your head around in terms of really understanding on a high level really understand on a high level like what's their realistic opportunity in the market and because a lot of people like you know especially if you're new to the market you just want to put money in a stock and so you
you could almost be fed like any bull case and you're really excited and you're like oh i got to buy
that stock they're going to grow but it comes down to valuation also that's another you know part of the
stock market and picking good stocks like you got to look at the valuation so when i'm trying to figure
out i'm palenteer right now is is palantir the type of stock that is you know a good deal overall
based upon what their true opportunity is not what you know anybody else thinks their opportunity
what I've researched with the company, what I understand with the company.
So, yeah, it's still a process.
Sometimes it takes weeks.
Sometimes it takes days to look into a company.
Sometimes it takes, I mean, sometimes it takes months or years, you know, for me to really get to that point.
Sometimes I never get there.
So, you know, there's been times like that in the past where like an AMD stock, for instance.
Yeah.
Yeah, I remember when AMD was two, three bucks a share and I looked at that stock and I was like,
wow, man, AMD's really down.
But I just couldn't wrap my head around it.
And obviously AMD is.
like, I don't even know how high.
90 is it?
Probably.
You're 90 now?
Yeah.
I think it's a little under 100 or something.
Yeah.
And that was a stock I could have bought, but I just couldn't quite get there with my head
wrapped around it.
Invidia.
Oh my gosh.
I trained this one guy on like how to invest.
He was like another manager, a quick trip when I lived in Charlotte, North Carolina,
came over the apartment.
I trained him on everything completely for free.
Just out of goodness in my heart, we like spent a whole day.
And then he brought me a few stocks.
One of them was invidia.
This is when Nvidia was like $18, $20 a share.
I was like, I don't know about that one
because I just don't quite understand it.
InVity obviously grew into a giant
and I don't know what NVIDIA is today.
It might be $500 a share.
This is like, you know, five or six years ago.
It might be six years ago now, maybe seven years ago.
But still like, you know, from $18, $20 to $500 plus,
that's ridiculous, man.
Do you have any regrets?
The regrets usually...
What's the biggest one?
Oh, my gosh, there's so many.
I mean, all my regrets are always like stocks.
I actually did understand on a really high level,
but I didn't invest in.
them. So, you know, stocks like Amazon come to mind where Amazon's not some incredibly hard
business model to understand. Never bought it. And there's a few other companies that I look at.
And then the other regret I have in the stock market is like a situation where I sell a stock too
early. And then like the stock ended up being a beast. And I'm just like, wait, why did I,
why did I sell that stock again? Like, did I really need to get out of that stock that fast?
So those are usually my biggest regrets in the market overall.
I asked Dave Hansen this, and this was pretty interesting to hear.
Do you think that you would be better off overall if you had held on to every stock you've
ever bought instead of selling?
Ooh, that's really interesting.
Man, that's a tough question because some of my companies got bought out.
You know, like some of them got acquired by other companies, so it's not like I could
have really like, you know, held on in that stock.
For instance, like, I remember King Digital got bought out by Activision Blizzard,
which King Digital was basically they came up with like the Candy Crush game and some of those
and they're just like profit machines.
And so some of those companies get bought out so you can't really hold on on those.
But yeah, man, most of them turned out really well.
90, I would say 90, 95 percent probably kept going up even after I sold them.
Maybe 5 to 10 percent went down.
But also when it comes to selling, it's like where did you put the money?
because maybe you put it in another stock that's actually much better.
So for instance, you know, like I sold Apple,
what was that, a year and a half ago, two years ago,
and Apple's done amazing since then,
but I put that money into Tesla,
where I thought it was going to be better.
And obviously Tesla's massively outperformed Apple.
So Apple still did great,
and I could have just kept my money in Apple.
But at the time, I needed some more money to invest in Tesla.
So I put in Tesla and Tesla outperforms so.
But yeah, I mean, most of them have turned out pretty well over time.
What do you think of Kathy Wood and her new Tesla prediction?
What did she say?
It was some absurd number.
Yeah, yeah.
So they believe on a bare case, Tesla is going to be $1,500 a share in 2025.
And right now it's like $600, $650.
So that's our bare case.
Their medium case, like one they think, the realistic case, that one is at $3,000.
a share. Okay. And so a little less than a 5x from here by 2025. And then their bull case is actually
$4,000 a share. So, and they do have some cases that are above that. But that's, so they believe
basically $1,500 to $4,000 in 2025 Tesla stock will be. How is that possible? So they have them
doing some unbelievable revenue numbers. They believe that Tesla is going to be selling worst case
scenario, five million cars a year in 2025. Best case scenario, 10 million cars in 2025.
Now, as a Tesla bowl, that's really hard for me even to wrap my head around that.
Because keep in mind, Tesla last year sold about a half million cars. So to go to $5 million to
$10 million, like we're already in 2021 to do that by 2025. She's more bullish than I am.
And Ark Invest is more bullish than I am. How many cars do like Honda sell?
Toyota. Honda, I don't know off top
my head. I know Toyota, I think, is number one
and they usually do, if I recall,
I think it's around 10 million a year.
Around 10 million a year.
So she thinks that Tesla's
going to be selling as much as Toyota.
Yeah, but the big thing is by 2025.
See, like, I've always imagined like 2030.
Okay, we can talk about 2030.
Maybe they're the biggest.
Maybe they're doing 10 million, 20 million cars.
But 2025, like, you know, years go fast, man.
Like, you're already in 2021, 2021, 2025 to get to from 500K to 5 million to 10 million,
I mean, you're going to need to, you know, ramp up production in a massive way.
You're going to need crazy massive adoption around the world, basically,
to hit those type of numbers and that quick amount of time.
So, yeah, I mean, she's more bullish than I am.
I'm really bullish on Tesla, but my numbers are further out than her numbers are.
So in Ark Invest in general, let's be clear, it's not just Kathy Wood that comes up with these numbers.
they do models,
Tasha Keeney over there.
And so I don't want to say, like,
it's just like Kathy would be.
And like, this is what I believe.
It's like Ark Invest,
like the whole, you know,
ETF.
So what's to stop them from just making stuff up?
I mean,
because she could say,
like,
my bull case is $10,000 a share.
The price of Tesla starts going up,
like, you know, 10%.
Oh, what did I do?
Okay, so hit it once.
There you up.
Whoa, that is cool.
I had no idea.
So I bought this on Amazon.
It was like 40 bucks.
and I could not figure out how to turn it on.
But I set it down on the table and it turned on.
I was like, okay, maybe there's like a wire loose or something like that.
And then I adjusted it and it kept getting brighter and I thought like,
ah, crap, like it's broken.
It's like it won't stay at the same level.
It took probably like 10 minutes to figure out that anywhere you touch on that,
I don't know what it is, but it turns up or down the brightness.
That was cool, man.
Press it again.
Look.
Whoa.
For 40 bucks.
Yeah.
Oh, that's magical.
Yeah, I've never seen that before.
Wow.
Ah!
I'm just kidding.
That's cool, man.
Oh, my goodness.
Okay, Kathy Wood.
Is she crazy?
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Yes.
Oh, gosh.
Okay, so, yeah, I mean,
you know we should always view things from a context of it you know she's obviously been buying
Tesla heavy and Tesla's the name that made Kathy Wood in Ark Invest obviously right over all the
other names by far and away like if you know Ark Invest you know Kathy Wood it's because of Tesla and
her predictions and things like that right they've been buying the stock it is really important
for Ark Invest for Tesla stock to go up let me be very clear about that over the coming years the
reason being is if Tesla stock doesn't go up, people's, you know, not everybody, like some people
are going to ride or die with her in the ETF, but there's been a lot of people that have jumped on
that van wagon, who is because Kathy Wood and Ark invests, they're the hot thing on the block on Wall
Street right now. And so if Tesla starts going down, performing badly, there's going to be a lot
of people that pull their money out of that ETF. And then you kind of get in the situation, you got
less and less money going in. You know, Arc might have to sell more Tesla stock. It makes the stock go
down even more. It creates more disbelief in it in the short term. And so there's, I could understand
that argument about, you know, them wanting to keep Tesla stock inflated or go up a lot because,
let's be honest, the more Tesla goes up. Not just does it help ARCS returns. It helps ARCS brand.
It helps, you know, Kathy Woods brand and things like that for that ETF. And it'll keep money flowing in
so they can continue to buy Tesla stock and other stocks out there. So, you know, I don't want to
to say that's why they're doing it or something like that or why they have a big price target because
they've always had big price targets it's just like you should at least like understand that it is a
possibility so i have a feeling when people make bold claims like that if it doesn't pan out their
reputation isn't as damaged as one would think because a lot of people kind of just forget that they
ever made that claim in the first place yeah i would say so you know some people will definitely
you know hold it against them for a long time but yeah there's some truth to that for
instance, like the short seller, and I don't want to call it the short seller community, but like
the people that are always like, the market's going to crash 50%. You know, I remember you
reference Harry Dent recently in the video. Oh, gosh. He said too, the market was going to crash like
90 something percent in one of Kevin's videos. Yeah. I mean, so you have those individuals that
year after year after year, it's like this is the end, this is the end, this is the end. And then,
you know, people just forget about it. And then when the market gets rough, they, you know, are like
applaud it and it's like oh they're so smart but um yeah so there there's some truth to that i've definitely
seen it with those people that are just like always negative and it's like buy gold and things like
that so yeah i could see that so you'll buy stocks that are overvalued well i buy stocks that are overvalued
not usually if i'm looking out if i'm running valuations three years out five years out
and it still looks like a rip off i won't buy it it just flat out like it doesn't matter how much i love
the company.
If it looks like a rip off even on three year out and five year out numbers, like I'm good,
even if I love the company.
So I don't mind sometimes paying a premium for a stock, but it has to make sense over the
next few years.
Like I have to be able to like formulate the numbers and be like, oh, I see how they can
fulfill this valuation over time.
You look fit, man.
Oh, thanks, man.
I'm trying to make progress.
I'm trying to get six pack by summer.
That's my goal.
You could be, you know Jared of Subway?
You could be the Jared of.
tattooed chef.
Yeah.
And be like,
this is all because of tattooed chef.
I got to say the cauliflower.
Like,
I was really looking into it.
I was like,
you know,
and that's their main ingredient
in those products.
I was like,
dang, man,
that's actually a really healthy thing.
And also,
like when you spend $350 on Versace shirts,
you got to make sure they look decent.
You can't be,
you know, having rolls or whatever, man.
What's your workout routine?
What's your workout routine?
What are you doing?
Yeah,
I mean, sometimes I'll do sprints.
When I'm in Arizona,
I'll actually play a lot of basketball.
There's a,
in our community.
There's a nice, like, basketball and hoop and no one ever plays down there.
So I'll, like, record some videos.
And then I just go down there, like three, four o'clock, shoot some hoop, run around,
maybe do some sprints after that, something like that.
And so, yeah, that's kind of, I do a little more intense workouts and probably a lot of people.
I do have, like, a boxing bag at the Henderson house.
I haven't been hitting it lately, though.
I've been really lazy as far as that goes.
But, yeah, so, you know, some of that type of stuff.
Graham and I have been working out recently.
Yeah.
Oh, man.
The gym opened up.
Oh, it did.
Just opened up, yep.
So when you come in, are you going to work out with us?
I might.
That would be so much fun.
We do it like it's a daily thing.
Really?
Yeah.
Do you guys really good?
What do you guys do in there?
Waits.
We get jacked.
Yeah.
We get really big.
Yeah.
It's only been a few days.
So we're still getting into the swing of things.
That first day was so rough.
So I probably took like five months off from going to the gym entirely.
and got back and did my normal workout routine.
Maybe like, you know, 70% of what I would usually do,
I felt a little weak, but it wasn't bad.
That next day, I could not move my, like, basically my entire body was just,
it hurt so much.
And I went to bed, and I'd never had this before.
But I woke up, my arm was just, I couldn't move my arm.
And it was so painful that I thought, like, I might have to take an Advil for this.
Oh, my gosh.
I couldn't sleep.
I thought there was something wrong.
And, like, I couldn't move my arm beyond like that.
Because it hurts so badly.
Did you, uh, where, did you ever, your muscles ever, like, involuntarily just start, like, vibrating?
Like, do, do, do, do, do.
During the workout, yes.
Okay.
Like, you get the, like, you're doing the chest press and your arms are going like,
Oh, yeah.
That's not really what I mean.
But, yeah, there's a, there's a separate one where it's like, your leg would just like, do, do, do, do.
Oh, no, no, no, I'm not spasming.
Oh, really, okay.
Yeah.
That happens to me sometimes.
if I do a really serious work.
Really?
Yeah,
and it's like,
they say that's your muscle growing.
I don't know.
That's your muscle growing.
It might just be BS.
I'll be honest.
But, yeah,
no,
it's crazy,
man.
When you work out like that,
it's just a ton of little
tiny tears in your muscle
and then you've got to build it back stronger
tattooed chef.
Yeah,
it's weird how that works.
It is,
it's you're breaking down the muscle
and then it has to grow back
even thicker to compensate for that.
Yeah.
So it's like imagine
adding scar tissue
on top of your muscle
every single time.
You break it.
it gets thicker.
You break it, it gets thicker.
Doesn't sound healthy.
No, it doesn't.
Like, when you put it like that.
Yeah, like that's really, like when you see a bodybuilder like that,
they've just torn every muscle in their body multiple times.
And it's had to compensate for that.
Yeah.
It's really what it comes to.
It's weird.
I can't work out the way I used to.
I will say that.
And it's not because I don't want to.
It's just like, like, I get hurt or something, man.
I'm just a weakling now.
Like my back, like I got a herniated disc in my back last year.
I did a serious workout not that long ago.
and then my foot, I think I got like planar fasciitis, which is kind of like a situation in your heel.
And I'm just like, dang, man, I'm just, I'm only 31, but I'm like, dang.
Like, I have so much respect for, like, professional athletes that can keep performing at a top level at their sports.
Like, like, I watch LeBron.
He's like, I don't know, 38 years or I don't know, 37, 38.
He's still dunking on people's heads.
I'm like, my goodness.
Tom Brady just won a Super Bowl.
It's like 45.
Like, I have so much respect for those guys.
I'm like, how do they do it?
I'm watching myself at 31, and I'm like,
I didn't put anything close on my body like those guys have.
It's crazy, man.
Even Tiger Woods still going.
Oh, he got an accident.
Fortunately.
Yeah.
When?
Recently.
At the last week.
It was a bad one, man.
I mean, it's to be seen.
I mean, he survived, but he, it's strange.
So what happened to he was going downhill in Newport Beach, I believe,
and just he lost control of his car.
and went through the center median and then went off the side of the cliff and the car like tumbled around.
So they got him out of the car.
He's survived, but it's unclear if he's going to be able to play golf again.
That's terrible.
Yeah.
And so people are wondering like, how do you lose control of the car?
Yeah, some people are thinking he fell asleep.
They're like that.
It's the way that accident, I guess, looked, looks like a common, like where you fall asleep driving.
And all of a sudden you wake up midway through and you're already too late.
Right.
and it didn't seem like it was speeding down this hill.
Like he lost control of the car because that's so...
Yeah.
I don't know.
So we'll see.
Hopefully everything is what?
Yeah.
Hopefully he's all right.
Do you think that the way that you research stocks and financial statements and stuff like that
translates to other portions of your life,
like analyzing the nutritional facts of like a food or something like that?
Maybe.
I don't know.
I was probably into nutrition.
way before stocks, but I don't know, maybe, I will say like, you know, stocks, you know, all the research
I do in the companies because I have been involved in, like, investing. I think it makes me better
at like business overall because I just understand like, you know, like you just, you learn so much
from these companies. Like I'm doing super in-depth research. I'm like, oh, that's how they're making
this money. Oh, that's how they're getting this gross margin. You listen to conference calls and you
pick up on so many different things, you know, just business related that I think it really like
helps me out big time when it comes to like if i'm going to make moves out there and things like
that so what are you having it jack what what was that a weird question no oh okay it's a fine question
i was thinking about what to say afterwards and oh we i was hoping you would just keep talking and
then by then one of us everyone wants to know this jeremy yeah okay what's your option strategy
like right now like are you doing anything yeah i got one option open right now one
one call option. So what I like to do is I like to play options that are basically two years or more
in advance usually. So what I like to do is September, October, between September and November of
each year, options come out that are like a little over two years in advance, like two years and
like three months. Okay. And so what I like to do is I like to say, is there any stock I have
a lot of conviction in over the next two years and whatever and that are really, really believe in
that is going to go up a lot.
And then I look at the option prices
and sometimes I buy them.
So the only option plate I have open right now
is Dropbox.
And it is up over 100%.
We've done very, very well on that one.
Yeah, it's been tremendous.
You bought one call?
No, I got, I bought $21,000 worth of calls.
And I think there were, I don't know,
between 45 and 55 right now.
And so we're doing really well on that one.
But that was one of those that I'm like,
there's just no way I can't, you know,
when I bought those,
there was just no way I couldn't see drop.
box like being a beast over the next two plus years and so i was like i'll throw a 21 000 worth in
in the call options and you know i don't do a lot of option moves because it does put you with that like
time situation i don't like that where it has to go to a certain price by certain date or you're
going to lose a bunch of money and so you know that i'm not a fan of but my gosh there's a lot of
money to be made but um i mean the problem is man a lot of people lose money when options i'll be
honest, there's certain individuals. I have one that's going to be a new coach for us.
Like they consistently make profits. But they're not doing the type of risky strategies.
Like even my strategy, even though it's two years out, is still considered risky because those
can expire worthless. You can do a lot of different strategies like selling covered calls and things
like that that I don't feel like getting into right now because I don't feel like explaining it
because it's, I'm like, my brain's not there. I need a whiteboard to actually explain options in
detail but there's some strategies like that that you can really make consistently pretty good money in
and there's there's other ones as well that you know of jack because you're the options master
and then you learn from you're the expert at one percent portrayed yeah hey man you're one
percent sometimes yeah there's different there's just different strategies out there man but uh you
know that's um yeah i don't do a lot of those moves i most of time i'm just like let me just
buy the dang stock and sometimes i'll look into a far out like calls and then i'm like
okay, I have to pay this.
I need to go to let me just buy the stock.
Forget trying to mess around with that.
What do you think of the whole GameStop fiasco?
Oh, my gosh, where do you start with that?
I mean, I don't have a strong opinion on it.
I mean, I know a lot of people are super opinionated on it.
Actually, I'm surprisingly not opinionated on it.
You know, I don't know.
I don't have that.
It's funny because I'm the stock market guy,
but I don't have a strong opinion on that.
It's like it is what it is.
I don't know.
Like, you know, it's not a stock.
I'm interested.
in it's not a bad stock but it's not a stock that i'm like i got to buy that stock um i think it's
good in the respect that it gets a lot of people into the market a lot of people are like oh let me
start buying stocks and and at least like you know sometimes you have to get people into the market
through different means right not everybody is going to be like me and like super like go get her
like oh i can't wait to start looking into companies i want to be the next warren buffett like
not everybody wants to do that some people you have to drag them into the stock market through
different avenues right
And so I think a situation like that gets a lot of people excited.
And so from that perspective, I'm happy.
You know, the whole rest of it, it's like, you know, it is what it is.
I don't really have a strong opinion on it, to be honest.
Does it still worry you that it's still trading above $200 a share?
It's a $15 billion valuation right now for GameStop.
Yeah, yeah.
I wouldn't say it worries me.
I mean, whether it goes up a bunch or down a bunch.
are down a bunch, you know, I think people that have really been buying that are prepared to lose
their money for the most part or see the value go down or something like that. And I think they
understand that risk. I think the same way, you know, somebody, you know, we live in Vegas,
right? So I mean, somebody goes down the sports book, like they could win a bunch of money,
but they also understand, oh, man, this might go, this might go bad and I might lose everything.
GameStop, I don't think that's the type of stock you lose everything in, though. Let me be very clear.
it's just whether GameStop goes up over the coming years or whether it goes down, let's say, 50% over the next few years.
I think that's the real question with GameStop.
I don't look at that business model and say that's going to zero.
It also is hard for me to see that going to $1,000.
I mean, I've seen people saying GameStop's going to $1,000, $1,000.
I've seen $1,000, $10,000.
Yeah,000 was in 100.
Yeah, yeah.
There's been people on Reddit being like $40,000.
It's going to hit $40,000.
We just got a whole lot.
Yeah.
All one's paying $40,000 for this.
Yeah, yeah, you know, people just will talk crazy.
People go bankrupt before that stock was overshorted.
And they have to buy it at whatever price.
They would.
They don't have to buy it.
Yeah, because they were locked into contracts.
No, they would just...
Listen, we're done.
We're bankrupt.
Listen, we quit.
realistically, that's what's going to happen.
They can't just invent money out of nowhere to pay for something that they can't afford it.
They would go bankrupt.
They would just go bankrupt.
Right, exactly.
Yeah.
And then nobody gets their 40 grand.
Yeah.
They're just going to say, I'm sorry,
I'm not playing this game anymore.
I don't like this game.
I knew someone.
Eric Cartman of that,
be like, all right, screw you guys, I'm going home.
Yeah.
I know I knew someone who was so convinced in GameStop
that they had everything that they owned,
except they're fully paid off house.
But every last penny,
aside from that into GameStop,
it was nearly a million dollars
in $800 call options that expired yesterday.
Oh, what, what are they?
Wow.
So they put in, they had like, I think it was like 80 grand or something like that.
And it went up to like $900,000.
And they held over the weekend two weeks ago into Monday of this week with like a million dollars in $800 calls.
So they would be able to buy GameStop at $800 per share yesterday.
And obviously it didn't hit it.
So what happens to just the money's going?
I don't know if he exit his position, but I know for a fact, if he did exit his position,
I'm sure he at least lost like 50, 60, 70% of a million.
Are these the people you're hanging out with?
I was telling him that was a terrible idea.
I was telling him that's a no-go.
Who is this guy?
His name's Crispy Stocks.
He's in the mentorship group.
Are you serious?
I told him not to do it.
Yeah.
I said, dude, you turned like 80 grand into nearly a million.
Get out.
And Jayba was telling him too.
He was like, dude, you should get out of that.
Like, you've already made so much money.
He's like, oh, I'm convinced.
It's going to $10,000 a share.
Jeez.
Why did not hear about this?
Because it was on a Tuesday.
You weren't there.
That sounds like an interesting video idea.
Wow.
I'll be honest.
No,
we could actually have like a segment with him on or something.
He has a YouTube channel and he's like,
he was so convinced in it.
He said he was fully prepared to go work at Wendy's.
Like if it expired worthless,
be totally fine going working at Wendy's restarting.
That's his greed.
That's greed though.
When you turn 80 into how much was it worth at the peak?
It was like a million.
That's just greed.
He said he was going to be worth.
10 million was his projection.
what can you do?
Yeah. Hey man. We live in Vegas.
I'm sure if somebody on the strip tonight's going to turn some silly small amount of money into some stupid amount.
And then they're going to get calm to that night and then they're going to stay another night and they're going to lose it all.
You know what I mean?
It's just, you know, gamblers want to gamble.
That's the hardest part.
I keep looking at like a hand of blackjack and I'm like, well, if I put 25 on this hand and I just keep pushing and I keep doing this for like 10 hands in a row, that's it.
I'm set.
I can't believe the last,
not to change the subject,
but I've been,
the last two times I went to the encore,
I didn't lose money.
That's a miracle.
And one of the times was with you,
I don't go that often,
but when I have,
it's actually,
it's probably twice in the last six months.
And that's a miracle,
because you know,
when I go.
Every single time you manage to lose money.
Yeah.
Not even doing anything risky.
It's not like you're making stupid bets and like,
oh,
I lost.
You're betting the same as everybody else,
but somehow you always lose.
Oh,
gosh, I know.
It's like I go there wanting to lose,
oh, man.
But yeah, somehow the last two times I didn't.
But anyways, to get back to that whole game stop situation, man,
it's a messy situation.
There's no doubt.
We'll see what happens with it over time, you know.
Yeah, you know, man, I don't know.
It's, I don't know what else to say about it, honestly.
You know, it's just.
Does it worry?
See, I'm worried that that's the state of the market right now.
Like, that's not a sign that we're in a healthy mark.
I mean, I'm sure every stock is going to have a little pumps.
But for that to happen on such a wide scale worries me that like,
there's no way that's healthy.
There's no way that we're in an economy right now that should support something like that.
Yeah.
Yeah, it's just what's going on at the moment, man.
Yeah, it is a little worrisome.
Like you're talking about people so flush with cash.
I think I'm the perfect example of buying the car.
Like I would rather buy the car than keep money in a bank account.
Yeah.
I think the car is safer than cash.
and I'm not like a conspiracy theorist about anything.
Like, I'm not like, it's too extreme on that.
Yeah.
So I'm thinking like if I'm doing that,
how many other people are doing the same?
It's true.
How many other people are that flush with cash right now
to throw everything they have into the market?
Yeah, no, it's a really good point.
I mean, there's a lot of people making money
from the GameStop situation in different ways.
I do have a friend.
He, if I recall, he sold some $800 strikes at expire
in April and he got like $31 premium.
So he, and I think he did four contracts.
So he's going to clear like $12,000.
And as long as GameStop doesn't go to, you know,
$800 plus by April.
I don't remember.
Well, even if it does, he's selling them for $800 a share, which is like.
Yeah, yeah.
So, I mean, he's looking good.
I mean, he could get into trouble if maybe, you know,
I don't know, the stock really goes crazy.
But, yeah, I mean, he's going to, yeah, he's going to make like $12,000 in a fairly
low risk situation, right?
I would say there's probably a one percent or maybe even,
less than a 1% chance of that happening.
To make $12,000, like,
hmm, that's pretty attractive.
That's wild.
Yeah.
People are willing to pay almost any price for those options on GameStop,
just because of the whole, you might go to $1,000 soon or something like that.
What do you think about the stock Fisker?
Fisker I haven't looked into in-depth yet.
You should.
I've looked into Lucid, but not Fisker yet.
Why not?
I just haven't had a chance to it.
Yeah, I mean, it's just like a massive backlog of stocks I always have to look into.
Look into Fisker.
Fisker, what do you see there?
I just, listen, I'm not a stock guy.
I liked Fisker back when they first came out with the Fisker Karma.
This is like 2011, 2012.
And I thought, I thought they were going to win against Tesla.
I thought they had a cooler car.
This is before the self-driving, whatnot.
They had a cooler looking car.
The problem with the car was that they caught on fire.
Oh, geez.
And then they had some financial issues.
They weren't able to fix the cars.
went bankrupt, then another company bought them.
Okay.
Kept them.
But then they're now remaking these cars.
Wow.
So I don't know.
I think there's potential there.
They got a really cool car.
They're coming out with a few other options.
Is it a hot stock?
Like on fire hot stock?
No.
No, it hasn't been underappreciate.
It's been trading between $12 and like 23, 24 for, gosh, how many months now?
I think just being a part of the EV sector, like that stock could blow it.
up.
I know.
You think the stock could blow up like on fire?
Like Neo.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Honestly.
Interesting.
Yeah.
I looked in the lucid so far and that's about it.
Oh, obviously Neo and some of those companies.
But yeah, I haven't looked in Fisker.
So yeah, I might have to take a peek there and see if there's something there.
Obviously, that's been a space that's been so hot.
Like, yeah.
It's just everybody wants the next Tesla, the next Tesla, the next Tesla.
People are really desperate for it, man.
But, yeah, there's been some stocks that have gotten hammered in that space.
I don't know how.
how much you guys, you know, keep up with it.
But like, war course, oh my gosh, that stock fell, I think, 60, 70% like in a snap of fingers
because they didn't get some contract with USPS that they were supposed to.
Like, my gosh, that's devastating.
Lordstown Motors, I think that one's down.
I want to say 50, 60%.
Yeah.
That's a weird situation there.
And so some of those stocks have just gotten absolutely obliterated.
Never mind.
Like, here's the thing.
If the NASDA goes down a bunch more, like, you know,
I'm not even talking like.
a ton. I'm talking like 10%. That's going to mean Tesla's down 20 to 30%. That's going to mean some of
those other stocks are down even more than that. So I don't think that's the thing people understand
about the market. And, you know, obviously if everything goes great, NASDAQ keeps going up,
NASDAQ keeps pumping. Tesla's doing great, right? And a lot of the higher risk plays are going to do great.
But all it takes is NASDA, like if the NASDAQ falls 10% next week, which probably isn't going to
happen, but let's just say it hypothetically did, Tesla's down 20, 30 plus percent.
in that amount of time easily because Tesla just goes down a lot more and the market goes down,
usually 2x to 3x.
On the flip side, if the market does great, Tesla goes up 2x to 3x more.
And then all those other higher risk plays than a Tesla get hit even harder.
And so some of those can go down 30, 40%, with only a 10% pullback in the NASDAQ.
And that's, I think, sometimes what people don't understand.
That's why it's really dangerous to go on margin with those sorts of stocks.
And I don't think that's what people understand sometimes.
They just think about the upside.
They're like, ooh, I'm going to margin out extra money into these.
And really what they're not realizing is, man, it's true.
You know, it can go south fast.
And when it goes south fast, man, next thing you know, you have margin calls and it gets messy quick.
Do you think we're running out of growth?
Like what more can contribute to this?
Because I feel like we just did the stimulus package.
We've already somewhat priced in a full recovery.
We're getting people vaccinated.
What else is there to boost this further?
Yeah, now it's going to come down to corporate earnings.
I feel like from here, now as the economy opens back up, all eyes are going to go on to
earnings and for the next probably two to six quarters, I would say.
And now it's like, now we're going to be into a stage where it's like, prove me stock market,
like prove to me what you're going to do, like prove to me companies, like what your EPS is
and things like that.
Prove to me that you can justify these valuations.
If corporate earnings are extremely strong throughout 2021, there's no doubt.
we could have more potential upside, but that's what it's really going to come down to.
The earnings have to be strong.
They have to justify these valuations.
And then people will continue to buy the stocks, right?
If earnings are bad and it's like, oh, this wasn't everything we're cracked up to be.
And then it's like, oh, okay, that's not looking good.
So, yeah, we'll see.
Do you use margin in your account?
A little bit, yeah, because I got 1.55% now.
I negotiated with Fidelity.
Thanks to Kevin.
Shout out Kevin.
If you see this video,
which you probably won't
because you record videos all day.
But if you do.
Kevin watches everything.
Yeah,
I know.
You would be surprised.
He's one of the first people
to comment on almost
every video in the main channel.
Kevin,
if you're watching this, comment,
I'm watching this.
No,
no, no.
I'm watching this.
One, two, three.
There we go.
I'm watching this one,
two, three.
So he's got to be precise about it.
Oh, I like that.
I like that.
But yeah.
It's the ultimate test.
Yeah, anyways.
Shout out to Kevin
for giving me
that lower.
margin rate. So yeah, I will. But the thing I like to do is I like to always make sure I'm not
overextending myself or anything like that, you know, because like I said, it can get, it can get
dangerous fast. And the other thing I like to do is I like to focus on companies, buying
companies that I feel like are undervalued, that there's very limited to, if I'm going to buy a
margin, it has to be with stocks that have very limited downside for me. You know, like, sir, for instance,
some stocks that I bought some on margin of recently would have been Walgreens, put some money,
margin money in that when it was like 40-ish air roughly.
And I looked at that one and I'm like, okay, like,
what's the chance is that one falls 30%.
Even 20%?
I feel like extremely minimal.
And obviously it's done pretty well.
Coursair gaming, I've been doing a little margin money in that one recently because
that one's down to a 4p of like 20.
So I feel like there's a little potential short-term weakness there around potentially
situation where there's a lockup coming, this upcoming week.
So maybe there's a little more sell-off.
for the next few weeks or something like that,
but then I feel like from there's upside.
Margined a little bit in tattooed chef
where I feel like there's limited downside there
because it's like a $1.7 billion mark cap
with 200 mil cash and crazy growth.
So, yeah, I really have to feel protected
if I'm going to do anything on margin.
And I have to have the money to back it.
I went 100% margin in my Robin Hood account,
just in my Robin Hood account.
Okay.
Right, like in during the dip, not at the bottom, but as it was going down.
Wow.
I tried to time it.
Good for you though.
You probably did well.
No, I didn't do well because because this was as it was paper hands.
Yeah, no, no, no.
As he loses 2%.
So things didn't go as bad as they could have gone.
So as it was going down, I bought like, I want to say like 120 shares of Apple.
Like as it was going down.
And I bought some more Palantir, some other just like random stocks, some Neo and stuff like that.
But it's still.
continue to go down, but once I bought them, I hedged my position with some covered calls.
Okay.
So, although it did continue to go down, my options had value.
They, they went up in value, and my options actually shielded me from all of the downside
that I would have felt.
Are you talking about the March 2020 crash or this most recent?
This most recent one.
Oh, okay.
I was little confused.
Okay.
Cool.
No, no, no.
Yeah.
I was, I was thinking you were talking about that one.
I'm like, well done, man.
Like, no, no.
I went down a lot, but it did.
It could have hurt a lot worse had I not.
I was so scared to buy stocks in March 2020.
We talked about regrets earlier.
Yeah, I was really, I didn't buy anything.
I started buying in April.
So I didn't get the exact bottom, unfortunately, in a lot of stocks because I was like, you know,
I was really confused on like, like, you know, when have we ever shut off money velocity?
And like, how does all this play out?
But man, like, I remember, I remember seeing win at $35 a share one day.
I remember seeing Uber, Ubidi-Duba stock.
and I think it was $14 a share.
And yeah, just some of those pricing.
And I had cash, but I was really scared.
So I started buying again in April when we had, you know,
we had kind of started going up again.
And I was watching what was happening.
And then they were talking about stimulus.
And I was like, okay, let me start entering.
But man, some of those prices, I think it was March 23rd was the very lows.
Oh my gosh, man.
Congrats to anybody that bought March 23rd, 2020.
You did well for yourself.
That was a scary time, man.
Yeah.
I bought, the issue that with me is I started buying too early.
So I started buying the beginning of March.
Okay.
So this is just like after the 15% dip,
bought in a little bit thinking, I'm a genius.
I'm a genius.
Look at all this fools over there buying in.
And I kept dropping.
And I'm like, okay, let me just take a step back.
I don't want to just like invest every.
And then about April is when I started going in.
But I missed that.
that bottom kind of coming up.
Yeah. Yeah, that was definitely, you know, the scariest time I've ever been in the stock market.
Because, I mean, it came out of nowhere once in a hundred year health event.
And then it was just like, you know, that's just something you, you know, you can't prep for it.
It's just you have to go through it to really experience it and things like that.
I think one of the biggest things is like I've always learned is like just to keep the faith.
Yep.
You know, and then one of those situations that is going to work out, you know, you don't know how it's going to work out,
but it's going to work out.
And, yeah, Jay Powell, man, can't stop that, man.
He's unstoppable.
Do you think they're basically, they've gotten the market to a point where they're not going
to let it fail?
They're not going to let it drop more than like 30, 40 percent.
That's kind of almost a way I feel sometimes.
I mean, yeah, I feel like they're really, really scared to really like let the market
go down in any significant way.
And yeah, yeah, I do kind of almost feel like that, to be honest.
I do.
It's, you know, and it kind of almost makes you feel,
it almost makes you want to feel fearless in the market.
It almost makes you want to say,
let me throw everything,
let me go all in on margin,
you know,
let's go all in on calls because you almost feel like
it can't go that bad because they're going to save the day.
Like they'll just pump some money out there and things like that.
But the interesting thing about this last time was
they had the excuse to pump money out there
because it was a once-in-a-hundred-year health event.
And because the government,
forced the economy to close in states and, you know, federal government and everything like that.
So when you, when you come from that context, it's like, okay, you can do everything.
But, you know, I mean, it still does, you kind of think like what happens if we had a traditional recession
where it's not because of a once and a hundred year event?
Can they still get away with the money flood out there?
If there's unemployment, I do think so.
Okay.
Yeah.
Because then they would be worried about the entire economy collapsing, lending, drying up, people are losing their job.
or losing their homes.
They can't, they can't have that.
Yeah.
No, that's a good point.
Yeah, that's a really good point.
And then the other thing is with this whole, you know, most recent situation,
I think now they're going to have a lot more discussions,
not just, you know, soon, but over the coming years about like, you know,
should we start sending $1,000 to everybody that makes under $100K every month?
I think those are going to be discussions that are probably going to be the most heard in
America history, which is going to be interesting.
So if you don't make $100K a month, then you get it.
Sorry. I was speaking with Graham Stephan.
Yeah, for everyone making under 100,000 a month.
Gosh.
I'm sorry about that.
I apologize.
100K a year, okay?
Yeah, so it faces out at 200,000 a month.
Oh, and for families, it's for families earning up to $400,000 a month.
There are people that make under 100K a month, are you telling me?
That's normal?
Oh, gosh. Yeah, no, anyways.
That should be interesting.
We'll see what happened.
So what do you think about EBI?
Man, for everyone earning under $100,000 a month struggling.
I mean, you know, obviously it would probably benefit the economy well.
You know, I am not a professional economist, and I'll never pretend to be one, and I'm also not a government official.
And so I don't know what they would do to budgets.
I don't know if they would create a messy situation.
I know obviously there's, you know,
There's a lot of folks that feel that if we just give money for free,
that it's taking things too far, right?
You know, some folks out there are okay with, you know, food stamps or...
Unemployment.
Yeah, yeah, unemployment.
Or let's say even a situation where you get free health care,
you get your health care taken.
And I've been on that system before.
Like, you know, there was, you know, when I didn't have much money, like I had to be,
man there was this weird like rash that happened on my body and had to go to the hospital for a few days
and this is when I was working at Walgreens making like 825 an hour so I didn't have uh you know health insurance
and I didn't have any money obviously so you know that was like 20 I was either $19,000 or $23,000 in bills right
and I didn't have to worry about it like the state just paid that state of Arizona because I made under
a certain amount of money and so you know if I had to actually pay that debt at that time that would
have been devastating that would have been super bad you like that just wasn't in the financial position
So, you know, people are okay with that.
They say, okay, you can eat, you can have health care.
But where a lot of folks have issues is if you're just giving straight up money to folks that they can spend it on whatever.
And, you know, I can understand those concerns.
And I can understand the concerns coming from the other side that say, hey, man, I need money.
So, I mean, I understand both sides.
It's going to be a messy situation to ever get it past, I feel like.
because of that reason, it's like, are you changing, you know, a lot of folks that feel like,
are you changing the fabric of the United States in what we mean and what we represent if you just
start giving people money for free, as some folks would say?
And so, yeah, I mean, I don't know.
I have no opinion on it, really.
I'm like, you know, I would love to see studies that are done.
I think this whole situation is going to be interesting.
like if the economy does tremendous and not just in terms of like the short term but i'm talking over
the next several years i think there's going to be a lot of push for this potentially being a thing
out there i think if the economy doesn't really benefit that much and it just feels like assets
i think people are going to say that was not a good idea you know or things like that so yeah i'm
watching it we'll see how it plays out yeah what do you guys think if you want to share
your opinion. Yeah, go ahead. Jump in the fire. Yeah, give me, I was just collecting my thoughts here.
You first. I think that, well, okay, I don't want to say I think that because I don't really know what I think, but what makes sense to me is that there is like a basic standard of living. Right? Where obviously like you can afford the, the things that you are required to live. Okay. Right. I don't want to be like political or anything. That's really not my thing. Yeah. I would listen. What, what,
I feel there's so much government waste.
There's so much money that's wasted.
I have a feeling we could probably afford it as is.
If we just cut all the crap.
I think there's so much just administration and so many just big salaries required
just to just to distribute every little thing and like check every.
I think there's just a lot of waste.
I think if we could find a way to expedite it,
we could probably actually still do that,
but save a lot of money in the process and cut other things that maybe aren't as efficient
and just straight up to sit every one a thousand bucks.
But cut out a lot of the other things that just are no longer needed because of that.
I agree.
I actually was looking into it.
And the city of Santa Monica makes over,
or sorry,
makes nearly $1 billion in revenue every year.
And if you go to the city of Santa Monica,
it is not very nice.
Like,
it's not very clean.
It's nicer than Venice.
Well,
sure.
But there is like a little bit of poverty and stuff like that.
And it's not like the nicest area, but considering how much money that they're making, you would expect that they would be able to handle some of those things.
Yeah.
You know what I mean?
And increase the standard of living for the residents.
But they, they don't.
Jack is angry that he gets parking tickets.
I get so many.
From Santa Monica.
So many of them.
Wow.
And you know what?
That's how they make so much money.
$73.
$73.
I looked it up.
And from like the parking enforcement, I think it was like some ridiculous like 15.
million dollars every year.
That's a successful business.
Yeah.
Like it's absurd.
I know.
So yeah, I think that there is, there is a lot of government waste, I think, undeniably.
There is a lot.
Yeah, Santa Monica was bad.
They, man, so they charge you for, like a rent control fee.
So if you have a multi-unit in Santa Monica, they charge you every year to basically be a part of a registry where they just monitor
what you're charging the tenant,
and they're monitoring the rent increases.
So what I found crazy is that in Santa Monica,
the maximum rent increase
is either 3% per year
or $44 per year,
whichever is greater.
Yeah, that's not much.
So if you're renting a place in Santa Monica
for like, let's say, $8,000 a month,
the maximum rent increase every year is $44.
Jeez.
$44 bucks.
And you have to pay for them to oversee
all of that.
So when I got my place,
they automatically bill you
for that rent control fee,
even though I was living there.
They billed me for it.
And then I have to go and prove
that I'm living there
for them to refund me.
So I actually did all this work
and I got like my 200 bucks back
because just out of principle.
I'm like, there's no way
they're collecting that fee from me.
Wow.
My gosh.
It's run very poorly.
Yeah.
Jeez.
Yeah.
Man, I know.
We thought about starting
life insurance business recently and you know i had like the lawyers looking into it and things like
that and you know when we got to first off if you want to do insurance you have to go like state by
state it's not like you just get like it's it's complicated and so i was like well what about
california like no no no not california like there's so many easier places to do business than
in california but anyways you know yeah it's it's uh you know i don't want to speak on it because
i've never lived there i've just i've heard stories from a lot of different
people that it's just it's a hard place to do business it's a hard place to do a lot of things so
yeah yeah the only thing for me with Vegas Vegas is very much like do whatever you want
i like that but it's the HOAs oh the HOA's oh geez i i didn't realize there are two
h08 and it's my fault for not understanding and we're an HOA within an HOA and i didn't realize
that yes i thought you said there was no HOA
I would have never said that.
Are you sure?
A hundred percent sure.
Even a few months ago?
Yes.
Who do you think pays for everything here?
It's just come including.
Okay, I'm sorry.
I'm sorry.
Yeah,
okay.
Jack is blinded because he's just like,
oh,
yeah,
I'm living in my own world.
Yeah,
yeah,
yeah,
I'm sorry.
Yeah,
laundry just cleans itself.
I don't know.
We don't have a laundry machine here.
He makes fun of me
because I can't do my laundry,
or I don't do my laundry,
but I cannot.
We don't have a laundry machine here.
Do you need me to buy you one?
I'll be happy to.
They're on back order.
Like, we already have some time.
We ordered one.
It was supposed to come,
it originally supposed to come November.
Then it was like the first week of January.
Then they moved it to March.
And now it's like April 16th, I think it's supposed to come here.
April 16th.
Who guys ordered this thing from?
That was way fair.
And I purposely got that one because it said it was in stock.
You guys have a fridge now, though, right?
No.
We have a mini fridge.
Okay.
The refrigerator was terrible.
So the refrigerator I ordered before the house actually.
closed. So this is like five months ago. And it was a special refrigerator to fit the spot.
This, this spot, to have it like be flush with the cabinetry, it was like a special size, only a few
companies make it. So I didn't have a lot of choice. But KitchenAid was one of them. So I ordered from
KitchenAid. And what I don't like is I ordered through one of their like Black Friday sales.
Okay. And when I did that, I locked in like a discount of a little bit. But it's so back ordered.
It's so delayed. Even though it said also, it was in.
in stock.
Oh,
supposed to be delivered by New Year's,
never did.
And then it's now April.
Yeah,
but if I,
oh,
and then I called and I said,
can you cancel me on this?
Uh,
and she says,
you know,
fine,
but then you lose the Black Friday deal.
Dude,
it's not worth it.
We just got to get a fridge here.
Yeah,
but then I got to order for,
there's only a few companies
that have that size.
So that,
you know,
the stress,
the time,
all of that.
It's not worth it
financially.
It's like that
Apple pencil situation.
Yeah, the Apple Pencil.
It's like the Volvo situation, too.
I wanted them to give me a discount and something just for the inconvenience, but they just, they're ruthless.
They don't care.
Did you, like, really, like, try to get into it with them, or did they?
I didn't, not, not, like, aggressively, but, you know, firmly, I stated my case.
And you know, nothing we could do.
It's, I think it's terrible.
Now you do an exposed video.
You know what?
I could do that, like I did with Samsung.
I got a, um,
a dishwasher for rental property,
it started peat, the front little panel,
yeah, it started peeling within days.
And then by the time they sent someone out,
sorry, it's past door 30-day thing,
even though I reported it days after,
they sent someone so far ahead in advance.
So when I posted on Instagram,
they finally were like, okay, we'll fix it.
But I got a lot of people complaining.
And thanks to all of you guys,
that when I posted on their Instagram,
I tagged them.
And then everyone went to their page.
It's like, make Graham's death right.
This is not good what you did to Graham.
Please help Graham.
And all the comments were like that.
I love it.
And it worked.
It worked.
So like, you know, I might have to do that with KitchenA.
I don't want to have to do that.
But we might have to go to KitchenAid and just take the mob.
And just let's hammer them until I get my refrigerator.
Get Grandma's refrigerator.
That's not fair for Graham's refrigerator.
We should do that.
Dude, yeah.
It's funny.
Yeah, it was a situation recently where we have some trouble.
with the pool we have in Arizona
with the finish of it.
And my dad was like,
yeah, you should put your lawyers on them
and come after them and things like that.
I'm like, first dad,
my lawyers don't like deal with that type of stuff.
And I'm like, second, like, if I really wanted to hurt them,
I would come out on social media about this.
Like, he's like, well, they'll fear lawyers.
I'm like, you know what they fear worse?
Is like the retaliation from like somebody
that has a lot of followers in like,
you know, ruining that brand or hurting it severely,
you know, by posting like you did on the Samsung thing.
And it's not even like, you know, super malicious.
It's just like, you, but all of a sudden they listen.
Because all of a sudden they're like, oh, he just put it out there and now 80,000 people, 100,000 people, whatever's going to see this.
Oh, crap.
We got to have to fix this quick, man.
Yeah.
It's cheaper for them just to fix it.
Yeah.
I was ready to make a video.
I told Jack.
Yeah, he was going to make a video on the Samsung dishwasher.
Wow.
A second channel.
But a 10-minute piece explaining the situation, what's happened, showing the dialogue back and forth.
It's so, like, proving, like, here are the dates that all of this happened.
Here's what's, here's what's gone.
Here are all the other people who were affected by this.
Because I had so many other people saying, oh, my God, the same thing happened to me.
This, like, literally, same thing they didn't want to fix it.
So I wanted to do this piece on them.
What would have been interesting.
I mean, it's very out of your norm for, you know, like content.
Right.
But, um, hmm, it'd have been interesting.
Imagine it ranks number one for Samsung on YouTube for like two years straight.
Oh, gosh.
Yeah.
Like you're typing Samsung anything.
it's like first thing it comes up like oh gosh right but no i mean that's a good thing about having a
following i mean there's a lot of good things about having a big following behind you but one of them is like
hey man you need somebody to listen like they're going to listen if you post something on social right
so i saw on your instagram story you got a new watch and you said that graham has been getting
you into watches and i see it's yeah it looks pretty nice yeah frank mueller so or some people say
frank mueller um yeah thanks i appreciate it man it's a it's a
it's a new one um yeah graham kind of got me into it uh many many months ago we went to the
rolex store um and you're like oh you should get a nice watch because i've never bought like nice
watches and like i i i i have Rolexes aren't my style like i don't like really like the classical
look and things like that and uh like puttex and like what uh you know the other automars or whatever
yeah and um so i'm not really into those styles i i love like um uh there's rich or milly uh that's a
brand I really like, but their watches are like way stupid, like price.
100 grand.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Like insane.
And so Frank, you know, Frank Mueller, they make some watches that are pretty
interesting, like, visually, like color schemes and things like that.
And, you know, made in Geneva.
And I really like that brand.
And so I've bought a couple watches from them now.
But, yeah, I'm not, like, I wouldn't call myself super into watches.
But I do like a watch like this.
Like, I've thought many times, like, would I buy an Apple?
watch. I'm like, I'm just, I'm not that type of person. My wife loves her Apple Watch. She doesn't
care about any, like, other kinds of watches and things like that. But I think there's just
something about wearing a traditional, like, watch that I just really like, like, you know,
so yeah, I'm getting into a little bit. It's a good looking watch. It fits you well.
I appreciate it. Thank you. I appreciate it, man. Yeah, I have to have a little color and flare.
It has to have, like, a little style to it for, for it to represent me, I feel like. So, yeah.
Should Jack get a watch? I've been trying to tell him for.
a long time.
I'll get the watch.
Every month he waits,
he keeps going up in price.
I got a place in Scottsdale,
Arizona, man.
You got to come out there
with us.
It'll take you over there
and we'll negotiate a little bit
with them.
Yeah.
We'll haggle a little bit
back and forth.
Get you a good deal, man.
$5,000 later.
We'll get you something.
$10,000.
What you want to spend?
What's a thousand?
$5,000.
That's a pretty big spare.
What Jack wants is,
I'm telling I'm a Submariner.
Get a good Rolex
Submariner.
Yeah.
Black Dial.
So you could wear
like a classical watch.
Like,
traditional.
Yeah, I like the way it looks.
Okay.
I think that's more of a sports.
I wouldn't say it.
Technically, it is a sports watch.
Yeah.
Okay.
So Mariner is a watch
that can go with anything.
That's one of the watches.
It's respectable.
Okay.
Wear it with a suit.
You could wear it.
I just don't understand because it was initially
created for divers.
But why is,
why is that now like the standard
for like every day wear?
The design.
The design.
It's a classic design.
Interesting.
And you posted something recently.
it was, I don't know if it was a video I saw
our Instagram story. Some Rolex sold for
some crazy amount of money.
The original Rolex Daytona, one of a half million dollars.
Wow.
It was just recently, yeah, at auction.
Oh my gosh. One and a half for a watch.
Wear a watch.
Whoa. Do you know who bought it?
No.
Interesting. Wow.
Was it an NFT?
Yeah, so it's sold as an NFT.
It's not even the real watch.
It's a picture of the, it's a screenshot of the watch.
Could you imagine if the NFT sold for more?
money than the actual watch.
I wouldn't be surprised.
I'm, how much did your watch cost?
This one, I got negotiated down to $6,400 before taxes.
So this one's much more affordable.
My other one's $10,000.
That's a good looking watch too, like I.
Thanks.
I appreciate it.
It's like lower end fronk, though.
Like my other ones, like Graham felt this one and he's like, oh, it's pretty light.
The other one, man, the other one's really like, you pick it up and you're like,
oh, this is a watch, man.
But yeah, I like this.
one. I like this style more than my other watch.
I'll be honest. The other one I bought. But now I'm
gonna chill on watches for a while. I want to become a watch
addict. My wife bought me this thing for
Christmas, like one of those store your watch
things, like where you can put like 10,
12 watches. Yeah, but my problem is
I'm like, well now I feel like I got to fill it up
and I'm like, I don't, I can't just... The spinny thing?
No, it's not spin. It's just like
a nice thing. You know, it has like the middle
furry piece. Yeah, yeah. And then
you just like a glass case on top of it
but then I'm like, oh man, I don't want to
have a million different watches. Because now
This is the only watch I wear pretty much almost every day.
So that's what I found.
Like if I buy something I really like,
like I just use that over and over.
And then the old thing I had just goes to waste and collects dust.
But, yeah,
that's happened every single time I got to watch.
So are you getting into like a bunch of alternative investments
because you just bought a Pokemon box for it.
Oh, yeah.
Let's see it.
Okay, okay.
Let's bust this.
So explain the story behind this.
Why'd you buy this?
So what happened here with the Pokemon, okay,
is somebody in the private group,
they said,
they showed a picture
and they were like,
I'm trying to sell.
And they're also in coaching.
They're like,
I'm trying to sell.
I want money,
but I'm trying to sell
one of my two Pokemon boxes.
I'm not sure which one,
but one,
I'm asking $30,000.
And the other one,
he's asking $40,000.
And the $40,000 one that had,
I think it was a blue wing Charzard.
So something about that,
you have a higher probability
of getting a shadow list,
blah, blah.
Wait, wait, wait, wait, wait,
so that was a shadow list box.
It could have been. Andre, I spoke to Andre about it. He's like, I don't think it is.
I don't know why Andre said that, but he's like, I don't think it is. Even though it was a blue winged Charzard. I don't know how Andre knew. Maybe, maybe he's wrong. I don't know.
Because I'm pretty sure you could tell which one is going to be shadowless and which one is not. Maybe. Yeah. And he's like, like, Andre sounded really confident about it. So I was like, okay, Andre sounded really confident about it. So I was like, okay, Graham doesn't care. Graham clearly.
doesn't care and then Andre was like uh you know he wasn't really like that into it so like he didn't
tell me like oh try to get it for this price or something so then i negotiated and i said you know what
about 20 25 000 and yeah he went with 25 000 that's what we ended up doing and then i'd
give him 500 bucks extra so he could like get a hotel room for the night because i wanted
delivered like a sap so yeah this is this is this is the uh the box here okay so i just hope
i don't unravel it somehow it's crazy to think for it's crazy to think
It's crazy to think this first edition would be worth like half a million bucks or now.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And these have been going for like 35 to like 45 to like 45.
I've been watching on eBay.
So that's just the base set unlimited?
Yeah.
That's just a base set from I think 99.
And so the gentleman that bought this, he bought it for, he negotiated it for, I think,
$2,000 in 2016.
team. And so yeah, I'm like, wow, that's, you know, he made a pretty sweet profit on that, like,
you know, over 10x his money in a matter of a few years. So it would be interesting if you could
invest like on an exchange in like the Pokemon market or in the Rolex market or the Ferrari market.
That, oh man, that's an interesting concept. That's probably the next billion dollar idea.
That's probably like how you can NFT them off, right? So like you create an NFT for partial shares of
ownership of a Ferrari or something.
I like that idea.
Yeah.
And if you push it down a little bit in the middle,
you can see the cards and whatnot.
Right.
But,
wow.
Yeah,
I was,
I wouldn't have bought that
if it was just some random person.
I'll be honest.
It was a trusted.
Yeah,
yeah,
it was like,
you know.
Smaller than I would think.
Same here.
Looks bigger online.
Yeah.
Like,
yeah,
absolutely.
Yeah,
it was two.
Magic just starts unwrapping it.
Oh my God.
Hey,
that would make for an epic episode,
man.
This is so cool.
So what's,
what's your plan with that?
Uh,
just hold it.
Yeah,
get a nice case for a nice clear case
and just hold it
for, yeah, long term.
I don't know.
You know, I could always resell it,
but I'm like, I don't really want to.
I think it's just a cool piece to have.
It's almost like art.
Yeah.
I almost look at it as like an art piece.
Like, you know, I'll put it out or, you know,
bring it out every once in a while and we can,
we can look at it.
I just, look at this booster box.
I just,
man, I just want to open it.
That's the thing to me.
I want to open it and find the char as art.
Oh, gosh.
It's in there.
It's probably.
probably in there. It's probably like a 90%
chances in there. Because there was a
box Logan open recently. Yeah, I had two.
Yeah. Wow. Yeah. And like two
chancies too? Or three chancies.
And then
yeah. The other thing I could do if I really wanted
to, I could actually sell pack by pack.
You'd be able to probably say, if you did
shoutouts with that, you'd probably be able to
sell them about $1,000 a piece.
Yeah, that makes sense. Yeah. But yeah,
in gentlemen I bought it from, he's like, yeah,
it's going to sell, you know, keep it
keep it boxed up. He's like, keep it sealed up because it's going to be worth way more money.
Why is he selling? So he just, when he needed some money, he wanted some money. So,
buy some stocks and stuff like that. Really? So yeah, I'm like, he wants to get in the six figure
club and he's not, he's not there yet. So he's like, you know, that 25,000 he could put in the
market and whatnot. So what about the other box? The one of the other box I didn't buy. That was
the one I was going after actually. And I offer him 35,000, but that had a tear in the plastic.
Now, he believes it should be worse still just as much, even with that tear.
But I didn't want to buy something that had a tear in it.
I wanted the, you know, you saw that.
That looked perfect.
And so I'm like, I really, even though the other one was a blue wing Charzard,
after Andre told me, he's like, yeah, it's not more unlikely shadowless.
I was like, ah, forget it.
Why?
So it had a tear in it.
How big was the tear?
Pretty big.
Really?
It was like a good chunk, like this much off of it.
So, yeah, he said he did.
that like shortly after he had bought the box like showing it off to somebody and um so i was like
oh no that i'm okay you know what i would have done you you buy it for a reasonable part let's say
27 he wouldn't have sold for 27 really yeah no i got him down 35 and that's like what we had agreed on
but then it was like um the tear and i was like no and then you know this one and i was like i could
spend less money and i felt like he kind of really wanted to keep that one because of the whole blue
wing charzart thing um i feel like he liked that one even more
than this one.
So, yeah.
I bought it for 35 and then sold off all the packs and kept a few for yourself.
But then it's shipping and dealing with that.
Yeah.
And then I wouldn't have been able to buy this one because he was only selling one.
Oh.
Yeah, he wants to keep one.
He wants to kind of like hedge his bet.
Like, well, Pokemon's hot right now.
Let me cash out of one of them and keep the other one long term.
He wouldn't have sold both them.
I might have tried to pursue it if he was selling both.
But he was not going to do that.
He was like, it's, whatever one you want to go.
go for. I'm keeping the other one.
Wow. You would have bought both if you give you the opportunity?
Maybe. Yeah, I would have considered it, but that wasn't even an option for him.
It's like it's one of the other essentially. So yeah, so anyways, I'll hold it long term.
We'll see what happens with it. And no matter what it is, it is like at the end of the day, like,
these are becoming more and more extinct. The first additions are almost non-existent now, right?
You know, whoever is holding those, it's very few and far between. Because a lot of people have
open up. Yeah. How many does Gary have?
has like, is nine.
Nine of them.
Nine.
And he probably has one of the bigger collections of anybody, I would imagine.
The biggest.
It is the biggest.
Oh, yeah.
It's confirmed.
Yeah.
And that's first editions.
First edition.
Nine.
Nine first edition.
They're probably worth about half a million apiece.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And so,
wow.
Yeah.
The few people that have some first editions aren't going to likely open them.
They're just going to hold them.
They're not going to flood the market with them.
There's probably limited amount.
And these, I feel like are becoming really extinct now, like, which aren't
first edition. So yeah, I looked at it and I was like, and, you know, he was pretty confident
that over time it's going to be worth 100K, but obviously, you know, it's just, it's dependent
upon what another person's willing to pay over time. So, but did you see this as an investment or
did you see it as just something to spend your money? Jeremy is so flush with cash right now that
he's just trying to like get rid of it. I saw Graham spend 300,000 on a GT and I was like,
okay, well, I could spend 25,000 on cars. That's even cool. I can't let him out. I'm not. I
flex me no i i did look at it as an investment but a cool thing yeah i will be honestly because it's
like how many opportunities do you get for that man and like i said i was looking at on the ebay and
for all those you're going 35 45 55 50 000 and i would have trust issues with those yeah right
i really would um so yeah i'm like you know i'm looking at it i'm like you know he did well i did
well everybody's happy so we'll see what do you think about nfts
Oh, I don't have an opinion on it, man.
Not non-fundgible tokens.
Yeah.
No.
I have no opinion on any NFTs.
That's really, I know it's like the hot subject right now, but it's just not one.
You know, every time they talk about it on a millennial money, I'm just quiet.
Yeah, we just see your face.
You do the Kevin there.
Looking at the camera directly.
I'm like, no.
But, yeah, I honestly have no opinion.
It's interesting.
It's something I'll keep an eye on.
And I don't really have.
anything to add their value.
Just come out with your own
NFT.
Yeah, that'd be,
Holy Smoke is the saying no jokas.
You gotta be flipping my flapjacks.
Have me, like, it's an artwork
where I'm like flipping a flapjack or something.
I would love to do an end.
I think it would be cool.
Every thumbnail I do,
turn that into a one-of-one
NFT.
Wow.
I think that would be kind of cool.
I think that's a great idea.
It's signed, I don't know if we could sign
NFTs is like,
have that be like the original.
It's going to be 1280 by 720 or, you know,
it's not going to be a,
super high quality thing, but just every thumbnails, it's on an FTA.
Your thumbnails are just so dang good, you know.
I'm trying.
I mean, you know, I was talking to Chris about this recently because, you know, he's going
to do that, that clips channel and whatnot.
And we were talking and I was like, you know, trying to explain to him like how much
of an art it is to title a video great.
And you are, you are the top level and everybody falls underneath you.
And I feel like I've gotten to a pretty good level, but you're on another level.
like and like people don't really realize like how much it's a skill yeah like you know i know you won't
gas yourself up but it's a skill like thumbnails titles it's a true skill and i'm sure you you have
experienced this jack being around gram every day for you know i don't know the last two years or
whatever it's a true skill um to really title something an interesting title that makes people say
i've got to watch this video i've got to check this out man and um yeah so your thumbnails man you
maybe have something there.
You should do your titles too.
Oh, man.
It's honestly,
it's lately become my least favorite part.
Really?
Yeah.
Why?
Because of how much pressure there is to do well on a title.
Like you could have the best video in the world,
but without the proper title and thumbnail,
it's all for nothing.
That's true.
That's a really good time.
So I hate having to be like what title is going to work,
what thumbnail is going to work.
How do we make this stand out?
There becomes a point where it's just,
it's so much riding on this.
That is, like any mistake in that, like, even I go with Jack and we'll, like, come back and like, should we do this green or do you like this bluish color instead on this, right?
Like every little detail has to be so precise.
And if it's not, the video's done.
Yeah.
And so then, and then there's like thousands of dollars on the line.
It's true.
Per title and thumbnail that can make a huge difference throughout the channel.
Yeah.
It's true.
And then it's like, the algorithm.
Oh, no.
Right.
I hit bad.
I hit bad again.
Yeah.
So, I mean, it could.
be, it could honestly be a $100,000 mistake to have like three titles and thumbnails
not perform. Yeah, 100%. So, you know, it's just like so I don't like the pressure of it.
The pressure. If there's no pressure and it's just having fun, by all means. And it's, it's good though
when it does hit. When it does hit, it's like, you did something right. Yeah. And sometimes, you know,
I'm sure there's times where you think something is great. And then you're like, oh, that then just didn't
hit. It's almost like a, I feel like it's almost like being a musician, right? You're a musician and you come out
with this song and you're like, oh man, this is a bangor, man. This is going to go huge and then it like just
doesn't hit and you're like, what went wrong there? Do you ever have that experience? Yeah, all the time.
And when it doesn't hit, I'm like, oh, that's why. Sometimes it'll post. You think it'll do well.
It doesn't. And then you look at it again and be like, yeah, no, I could see why it didn't do well.
Let's change it up. So do you envy Kevin at all from the.
the respect of like he puts out so much content that it almost doesn't matter i mean his titles and
thumbnails are still somewhat important but he puts out such a a gauntlet of of content all the time
he's almost removed that stress of like yeah i don't know some not really because i know i know
i couldn't do what kevin does so i don't look at that so much with envy like oh look at kevin doing
this i mentioned to jack it's like kevin could get away with these titles and thumbnels it gets
so many views, but I just, I know I can't make five videos a day.
Yeah.
I can't live stream as much as he does.
So it's like, I don't, I don't envy or I don't look at that with jealousy because I know
like he's on a different level than I am in terms of what he's doing.
It's completely separate from mine.
Mm-hmm.
So, no, that makes sense.
But yeah, it is nice from the perspective of not having that stress of, uh, every video's
got to hit.
I think Kevin could probably, all he needs to do, in my opinion, is just go live twice a day.
once market open, once market close.
And then one summary.
That's enough content.
That's more than enough content.
You can't even watch all of the content he's doing.
No.
You can't do it.
You literally, even at two at speed, you can't do it.
I think he has to, you know, keep it up.
I think if he starts feeding only, let's say, two videos hypothetically a day,
and you go from six videos to two videos, like, views are going to go down.
There's no doubt in my mind.
Views will go down.
And then you get into this.
whole bad cycle around the algorithm and then like starts feeding you less and then you kind of
get it you know i don't know i feel like that could be that's you know yeah i don't know man i don't see
that working uh i mean i've tried it with financial education three where i went content crazy
got view pushed views way up and then dropped off content and then try to go it up again and
it wouldn't be the same and so the great thing with him is he's continued to pour out more content
where he all of a sudden started doing two a day then three a day then four a day and now he's doing like
six videos a day.
But if you start going backwards, man,
it would be like you going to one video a week, you know?
Or shoot, no, that would be like you go in one video a month,
you know,
because he's putting out six a day.
Right.
It'd be like you're doing one a month.
Gosh.
Yeah, now that would just be,
you'd be devastating to your channel,
I would assume, you know,
because even if you got a million of people to watch that one video come out
with each month,
it's just there's no way of feeding other videos on the blog.
So, Jeremy,
Everyone wants to know.
How is your net worth divided up?
Oh, divided up.
Okay.
So,
uh,
it's complicated subject.
Because I mean,
sometimes,
you know,
it's interesting.
Like,
do you value YouTube channels?
I'd say no.
No,
let's just talk about hard cash.
Okay.
If we're not taking anything out,
do you,
do I value my business or?
No.
So this is just like straight up money you could pull out.
Okay.
So I am,
oh gosh,
heavy stocks,
60%
plus stocks, maybe 15, 20% real estate.
Rest cash.
Yeah, or maybe.
25% cash.
No.
Let me see.
So cash, I probably actually have more cash than I do real estate.
So, yeah, I'd probably say 20% cash, 10% real estate, 70% stocks.
and 0.0001%
Pokemon cards.
Now you know my network,
just kidding.
So yeah,
definitely stock heavy
still to this day
and I don't see that
probably ever changing.
What are you doing with that cash?
So most of it
I just keep unfortunately
in like checking accounts,
savers accounts,
things like that.
Some of it I have been putting
into a little bit into cryptos.
I forgot,
I'm a teeny bit into cryptos now.
Little USDC.
Are you did that?
Are you getting interest?
Yeah, like 9% or whatever.
Wow.
How much,
how much cash did you put in there?
Not much.
Only probably maybe 30,000 to start.
Because I'm a little unsure.
I'm like,
maybe 20,000,
20 or 30.
Okay.
I'm a little unsure because I'm like,
I'm still having trouble
wrapping my head around that.
I'm just like,
how can somebody pay this 9%
interest rate and still make money?
That's just crazy to me, man.
Unless they're printing their own USDC,
so they're able to like manipulate it.
It sounds like no one can give a direct answer to that question.
I never understand.
Everyone's like, well, they lend it out on the blockchain and then they return it back to you and they make some money on it.
That's why I can't put a lot in it because I'm still a little sketch.
Yeah, same.
And like they say, if it's too good to be true, it's too good to be true for me.
It's too good to be true.
I mean, if they offered 3% and I actually feel more comfortable.
Yeah.
Because then I'm like, all right, I could wrap my mind around that.
Not nine.
Yeah.
So, you know.
Because who's to say they can't just print more USDC to pay you back?
Mm-hmm.
I don't understand.
Who are buying these loans at like, what, 30% then?
How are they able to give nine per-
Who are these people?
I don't know anybody that's receiving loans from that.
Yeah, it's like funds and whatnot for the most part.
It's like different crypto funds and things like that
that supposedly they're making so much money that it makes sense for them to basically
had that cash go in their account.
Andre could probably explain 10 times better.
We should try.
Yeah.
Yeah, I feel like we should really like push Andre on this in a moment.
millennial money one night. I think it would be interesting because, you know, he's really the, of us,
he's by far the most crypto guy. So I would love it if he could really like dive into that.
Andre, if you see this, which you probably won't, man, we're going to push you on that.
Andre, if you're watching this comment, I'm watching this. I'm watching this.
I'm watching this one, two, three, four, five.
Exclamation point. Astrosk. Yeah, I know nobody's, everyone's tried explaining it to me.
I don't understand it. Yeah, and I'm not good at explaining either. Like, I kind of get the concept,
but I'm still, I'm like, how do they make money on this?
This sounds like insane.
But anyway, so a little bit of money over there.
But yeah, I'm still stocks heavy, man.
I don't know if I ever see a day where I'm not stocks heavy, to be honest, you know,
because even in a market where I feel like we're a little richy value, no doubt, I still find deals.
Do you own any, like, funds or anything?
Nope.
Zero.
Zero funds.
Zero, zero funds.
Yep.
What about a business you're starting?
What?
Oh gosh.
We're going to start with that one.
Yeah, so we got a business we're starting.
I'm joking.
We got a business we're starting, but I can't talk a ton about it,
but it's been a lot to set up.
You know, obviously, you're one of the biggest, you know,
shareholders in the company, and then got a lot of other talented people in on that project.
Really looking forward to that.
It is app-related.
I don't want to get into the details of it because all that speak when, you know,
we can really speak about the details, which we're not at that level yet.
But yeah, I mean, that's really exciting, man.
It's exciting to put together a new company that's fresh.
But man, it's a lot.
It's a lot, you know, it definitely takes a lot of my time.
It, you know, dealing with, you know, the setting up of the company with lawyers because we're doing it like real.
Like this is like real proper like Delaware Corporation dealing with all the different stakeholders and, you know, the team behind it that's creating it and whatnot, man.
It's definitely taking a good amount of my time.
But it's going to be exciting when we launch it.
I think it's going to be fun to do something that's so far out there that, you know,
it's trying to try to do something really, really big.
And I think that's fun.
And so, yeah, we'll have more to share with you guys in the future.
What if there's a link down below in the description where we could have people sign up for an announcement?
Can we do that?
We can do that.
Maybe even pin comment, no promises.
But, yeah, certainly we could do something in the description where, you know,
at least folks can maybe get on the wait list to maybe, maybe they'll be beta folks
that can, you know, test it before we really get it into the market.
When's the launch date?
Launch date.
Oh, my gosh.
That's the hardest part.
I would say between the next 30 and 90 days, like I think worst case scenario 90 days,
I think best case scenario 30 days.
So somewhere in there we should launch.
I'm hoping within the next 30 days at least to have a decent product in our hands
that we can start testing and playing around with and seeing.
like the bugs and those sorts of things and maybe get to the early beta crew.
Maybe these folks, maybe watching this video can be in that earliest stage to get their hands on it
and try it out and see things like that.
So, but yeah, it's really tough.
I mean, it's not, you know, when you're creating something like this, it's not really like
you just say, well, it's done like it in 14 days from now.
It doesn't really work like that.
So, but yeah, I'm thinking 30 and 90 days.
So let's hope.
Let's hope.
I did make an announcement of it in one of my videos on Wednesday.
coming up. I'll maybe have you listen to that. I just said it's a financial app. Yeah.
That covers information that I'm not able to discuss on the channel. Oh, that's perfect.
So vague enough. Yeah, exactly. But yeah, it extends beyond what I could do in a video.
Oh, that's exciting. Yeah. That's great. All right. Yeah, I'm looking super forward to it, man. It's something like I've been wanting to build something that's a big maybe in the finance community that, you know,
a lot of people really enjoy get a ton of value out of that's a thing and it's a free product
that that's where i think is really interesting so yeah we'll see it's a lot of work man it's a lot
of work to really put it together and things like that so but uh yeah i'm happy and jack you'll be
the first to try it out okay i'm excited as long as you keep my Pokemon cards safe but yeah man
i'm pumped so cool probably talk about do you have any hot takes hot takes yeah uh
Any drama, any gossip?
Any drama and gossip?
What's going on with you and Kevin?
Oh, man.
Are you guys cool now?
Because he was, he called me up the other day.
He's talking, talking some crap.
Yeah, yeah.
She was mad.
I heard it.
Yeah.
I heard his yelling from the other room.
No way.
He's talking about your family and like, yeah.
No, you're lying.
No way.
No way.
I'm joking.
I'm joking.
Oh, gosh.
He took it seriously.
Like, there's no way we would have gone that far.
He shorted the stock.
Oh, gosh.
Yeah, you know, I don't like it if somebody talks bad about my stock.
So, yeah, I mean, you know, with the whole Kevin situation, you know, I kind of just got fed up recently with people like being like, oh, Kevin said this about your stock or, you know, whatever stock.
And it just kind of like frustrates me because I'm like, then I have to answer questions.
And like, I feel like, oh, I have to go out there and like prove my case again.
why Kevin's wrong or something like that to these individuals.
And so that gets a little frustrating.
And I have a tremendous amount of respect for Kevin as a YouTuber and just as like a person,
like tremendous amount of respect.
Where I don't have respect for Kevin is as a stock picker yet.
It doesn't mean I can't get there over time.
It's just like when you're in the stock market community,
you've got to like have stock after stock hit.
And, you know, like, you know, big winners that aren't just like the ones that, you know,
You're hearing from other people, essentially.
And so, you know, with Kevin, I'm like,
why do I even have to answer questions in regards to Kevin's opinion on tattooed
chef or Dropbox?
I heard something.
He said, oh, about Dropbox.
And so I'm like, that's what really led to this frustration.
And that's why it was like, let me, let me make this public.
Let me, let me make this case publicly and go that route.
And now we got, what is that a phone?
What is that?
I don't know.
Is that your phone?
That's mine.
Yeah.
That's your phone.
I bet it's my mom.
It's probably, you want to get up and see his calling?
Just tell me he's calling me.
Imagine it's Kevin?
Yeah.
Could you imagine?
But anyway, yeah, anyway.
So, yeah, so that was the situation there.
I think the beef's over now, to be honest.
I think it's played out.
You know, I've stayed in my bowl case.
He doesn't really have a bear case, but he's not, you know, super positive on it.
So beneath all of the fun and games, there was a little bit of, did feel like,
a little disrespectful that you had to respond to someone.
Exactly.
Maybe that hadn't quite proved themselves in your point of view in the stock community.
Yeah, because I looked at Kevin and I said, you know, like I said, I respect him a ton as a person.
I respect him as a ton as a YouTuber.
I'm like, like, as a beast.
But yeah, when you're coming to my arena, which is stock picking, stock market investing,
I say, okay, like, what have you proven?
Like, why should I have to, you know, like, go against you or something like that?
Like, you know, why should I have to answer questions on this person's behalf and prove.
like my stock against yours because like Kevin like I respect him also as a real estate investor like
I remember I bought his real estate course before it was even like formed and so you know when I'll
send you know but now he's like so into stocks right and he's really got into in the last year he's
posting a lot of stock market videos and things like that and then yeah it's just like I just got
frustrated with it and I'm like okay you know I'm gonna I'm gonna talk about these things so
but that that goes for anybody in the stock market community like sometimes you know folks
pop up here and there and you're like you know who's this person and
things like that. And it's just, you know, yeah, it's something you'd have to deal with in the
communities. So what do you say to an individual? No one is specific that may not own any tattooed
chef. I won't say anything to him, to be honest. So buy the product. It's out at your local target.
Okay. That's about it. But as far as the stock, I like the stock. If he likes the stock,
I like this. If he's in, I'm in. If he's still in, I'm still in.
Yeah, so anyways, we'll see how that one plays out.
That's a five, ten year play out that I think has massive, massive upside potential.
We shall see.
It would be interesting to look at Kevin's returns this last year and like analyze it per stock and see what it's what it's come out to be.
Yeah.
Yeah, I'm sure Kevin's doing really good.
And so there's no question about that.
It's just like you have to prove yourself over a period of time.
That's sad.
You know what I mean?
Like I've seen it before where, you know, like there would be somebody in the private group that gets like a five,
100% return.
Like blows me out of the water.
And it doesn't mean they're necessarily a better investor than me.
They destroyed me last year.
But like it's like what can you prove?
It's like YouTube, right?
Let's say YouTube's a game.
Like somebody could come out in the finance space and come out with some viral video,
gets like a million views.
Doesn't mean they're better than you.
Or it doesn't mean like,
oh, they're the king of YouTube now because they had that video that got 10 million views
or something like that.
So yeah, I mean, that's just the way it is in every single space.
And, yeah, stock market investing is competitive, man.
And I'm really competitive when it comes.
so that. And I take my craft pretty serious. And, uh, you know, anybody that kind of comes in and I'm
just like, you know, I'm not sure how serious they are. I get a little, uh, in my feelings about it.
So that's good. You're passionate about it. Oh, 100%. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Really. So, but yeah.
What's one thing in investing, uh, specifically stocks, let's say, that you think you could do better in?
Oh, when it comes to stocks. Um, I mean, I'm always trying to get better at everything. You know,
It's not like there's one glaring thing nowadays.
It's just like, you know, that holds saying like 1% better.
I don't even know if I can get 1% better.
But I can always like understand more business models.
I think that's the one thing.
Like understand business models.
Maybe understand them faster because sometimes it takes weeks or months for me to like really get
wrap my head around it.
So that's maybe one thing.
But yeah, I play, you know, growth stocks, value stocks.
I'm in dividend stocks.
I'm in turnaround plays.
So I'm kind of almost, you know, doing everything now as far as an investor.
But it's always about doing it even better.
What's the one thing you think you could be doing better, Graham, as a YouTuber?
As a YouTuber.
Yeah.
Probably taking more risk and off-topic content.
That's probably what I could do.
So like diversifying the content?
Right.
I like that.
That's probably what I could do.
The vlog channel.
And then what do you think Jeremy could improve your thumbnails?
Yeah.
I think your thumbnails are,
the main picture of you is blurry.
Really?
It's really bad.
High-res thumbnails.
That's what's crazy because I thought it was really good.
No.
And I don't like the hat.
Okay.
I don't like that.
Yeah,
you use the hat in every thumbnail.
So I would do a less exaggerated face,
actually funny enough.
Okay.
Less over the top.
High quality.
Wow.
Okay.
No,
that's great to know.
I'm just going to go on a photo shoot.
Some,
something that has a great camera.
Yeah, because it's funny, because I look at it.
I'm like, oh, that's really high quality.
But like I said, there's levels to things, man.
And I feel like it's not that high quality.
I think the videos themselves are fine because I listen to them.
So to me, it's memorable to see the goofy little pictures coming up.
So I don't really look at the video itself.
Yeah.
But the title thumbnail or something that are important to me.
Titles are okay.
It's the thumbnail that I feel like you could really improve on the thumbnail.
Wow, that's good to know.
Yeah.
I mean, you know, I created that thumbnail for millennial money and then you created one and I was just like, oh my gosh, that blew me out of the water.
I'm like, you're the thumbnail man for the money now.
You got to be abstract now.
Like, in terms of the thumbnail, like it's really got to be, it's got to make people question.
Like, what am I looking at?
Oh.
Sometimes it doesn't even need to make sense.
No.
Honestly, so long as it gets people's attention, for example, we'll make a video about a real estate crash, but we'll be happy to put the background as a galaxy.
or as like a huge like war zone.
Just because it gets people's attention.
Yeah.
It doesn't necessarily need to make sense with the content.
Yeah.
But you see it and the colors are so vibrant.
And you're like, whoa.
And it stops you for one second just enough for you to see,
oh, let me see the title.
Or just enough for you to think, should I watch this?
It gets your attention.
Yeah, that's interesting.
Yeah, there's one I made that makes no sense whatsoever.
But it did really well.
It's the stock market is about to drop again.
and the thumbnail was me in a middle of a stock chart
and the one side is up high,
the other side is down.
This is a random stock chart that we just happened to find.
I don't even know if it was like for the right decade,
but we did an arrow to one side
and then a circle on the other with a question mark.
Making people think, like,
no idea.
We're here and what's going on over there?
Made no sense.
There was nothing behind.
but it just looked cool.
So stuff like that.
Or in our thumbnail,
we're talking about a split.
So I like took the images
and like split them in half.
Yeah.
It's like one part of the one side versus another.
Like yeah.
Just it doesn't need to make sense.
It's the other one is like the end of the stock market or something like that where I'm like half underwater.
That was so good.
I love that.
Thank you.
That was my favorite thumbnail.
That was the thumbnail that we did.
That was 10 of 10.
Thanks.
That title because that title made me say, oh, like, like what does that mean?
Yeah.
You know, you almost feel.
like you got to watch it.
Like Andre had a really good one recently with Ethereum.
Ethereum's about self-destruck.
I loved it.
I was like, oh, gosh, man.
Like, how can you not watch that?
What does that mean?
Self-destruck?
We've been coming out with different terms now that make no sense.
Like, the stock market just flipped.
Totally ambiguous.
It's just reversed.
The infinite money glitch.
I just used that on Financial Education 3.
Yeah.
And so what we do is we're looking up synonyms of certain words and then be like,
this sounds kind of cool.
That sounds neat.
The Graham was thinking about using the word tantrum in a title.
It didn't really make sense in the context.
Because when you think of...
I'm using that one.
The stock market just threw a tantrum.
Yeah, because it's like you think of a little kid throwing a tantrum,
but it would get your attention.
And that's all that really matters.
Oh, man, that's good stuff.
You know what?
I was thinking about this one night.
I was like, imagine, like, I wonder if there's ever going to be, like,
a next generation of finance YouTubers that are, like, way bigger than, like, us.
and like like could you picture that or could is it like maybe not YouTube but maybe another social
media I would say another social media probably TikTok okay where it's just like we're like blown away
like wow that many people watch those videos and stuff I think so at some point yeah there just like
Dave Ramsey right yeah it's like back in the time like back in the day he was like still the biggest
so well maybe not on YouTube maybe a different demographic yeah but yeah like he owned his own platform
I guess yeah yeah just gotta be I bit
10 years. I don't know. I'm sure at some point. It could be interesting. Yeah, because I mean,
our generation, we weren't really the ones that grew up on YouTube. Like, we started using
YouTube, but it will be interesting with like the kids that are on the come up right now that
maybe grew up with YouTube, like since they were kids. And then they get like financial
knowledge and then they share it. And maybe they understand like the YouTube stuff better than we do.
And yeah, we look back and it'd be interesting. You know what it's going to be. I have a feeling it's
going to be another platform. I don't think it's going to be YouTube. I think it's going to be some,
like a TikTok where they're all sophisticated. Maybe it's like you put on these VR like this headset,
like everything's all crap. Like we would try this and just not get it. Yeah. But they'll understand it.
So I have a feeling it's going to be something. It's going to be something like that. It's going to be something like.
No, I got picture that. Yeah. That should be interesting. And one day we're going to be too old.
We're going to be unrelated to like the new, the new demographic, the new audience.
They're going to see like, oh, look at the grandpa's. You're talking about the buy and hold.
now we're going to be trading some like futuristic call option hedged alpha beta theta
gang whatever it is there's going to be some new level of investing that we don't even know
exists so what's interesting is you know i always flirt around with this idea of leaving
youtube or like like leaving social media but if i want to stay on the great news is like
um as you get older you actually get a lot more respect you know in the stock market like the more
decades you get in and you do on a high level, like the more people are going to want to watch
you and stay tuned and stay around. Because at the end of the day, like, you know, what I learned
is like if you, if people make money from you, if they really like hearing your opinion,
they're going to stay around. I've just tested like, you know, I mean, I could, I put in probably
the most minimal work to videos, but people still watch it because they really just, they're,
they're not there to be entertained. They literally just want to hear my opinion on what next stock I'm
buying or what I'm doing in the market. Like, you're not there for some flash.
you know, show like, you know, respect to you and like Andre, like, you know, I could see people
watching your channel, Andre's channel who, you know, they are, you know, they want a show like you
guys put on a show, man. It's, it's amazing. And it's like, you know, my videos is not like that.
It's like, you're just there to hear the opinion, man. And that's it. And so with the stockmark
community, like, you know, the longer you're in it and proving yourself, like the more respect
you get. So that's the, no. I'm like a young, I'm still like a really young person in the stock
market like only being 12 or 13 years but being 31 like most people that have a lot of respect in the
stock market are 50s 60s at least 40s usually 40s 50s 40s warren buffett 90 you know what I mean it's
like so that's a cool thing as far as that goes but yeah man do you have any advice for graham on
his stock picking or investing strategies uh graham I mean I feel like he could be maybe more
aggressive you know Graham you you're you know you're you know you're you're you know you're you're
You're very place safe, I would say.
So maybe a little more aggressive.
But that's about it.
I mean, you do pretty good, you know.
I don't feel like you're trying to be like a professional stock picker.
I feel like you're just like, you look at something.
You're like, oh, it looks like a pretty good deal.
Let me buy some of that.
I don't think you're the type of person that's like listen to conference calls and stuff like that.
Yeah.
So, you know, and you mostly buy index funds.
I literally watch what Kevin does and buy his stocks.
I'm kidding.
So I sold out a tattooed chef.
Shorted Walgreens.
Shorted Planet 13.
No, I'm kidding.
That was too far, Graham.
That was too far.
Put it all in shift.
Oh, shift.
What is going on with that company?
I don't know.
Look into that one.
Okay.
Oh, dang.
Well, anyways, you're mostly indexed funds.
You dollar-calf.
I know.
Actually, I'm more now an individual start.
Just because those went up so much.
Okay.
I don't know, I'm like 30, 40% index funds and then 60 individual stocks.
Okay.
Started off 50-50, but those individual stock really took off.
Interesting.
Maybe it's like 35%.
Is there, here's an interesting ad break.
Is there, have you even thought about the chance of ever leaving YouTube and like a
timeframe or is it so far away that you like can't even imagine yourself leaving YouTube?
I think about it every now and then.
Okay.
And it's like, well, you know, if I stop, do you kind of go out on the top?
Or do you keep going?
So I think at some point, it's probably got a shift to something more sustainable.
It's just, it's the main channel.
It takes such a long time to plan out every video.
So at some point it might go more to like the second channel, the podcast, maybe a vlog.
Okay.
I don't know.
You know, by the time this posts, we're actually going to have the first episode of this to family post.
Oh, yeah, yeah.
We started this to family.
Yeah.
So that's a vlog.
Yeah.
So the goal is that we could post one to two episodes a week as a bonus.
Basically, like I'm telling Jack, I don't want to go out of my way.
I don't want to do anything special.
I don't want anything scripted, nothing crazy.
Just I feel like throughout the week, we'll have 10 minutes of content.
Behind the scenes stuff.
Just behind the scene stuff.
Yeah.
It doesn't have to even be work related.
Just random stuff.
10 minutes of content for an entire week that's entertaining to watch.
That's the goal.
I just post one.
a week.
Yeah, I like that.
Maybe twice if there's something exciting going on.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
No, I can see that.
That's pretty cool.
But I think, yeah, at some point,
something more sustainable because I really,
like, I can't be making three videos a week on the main channel indefinitely.
Yeah.
It's taken its toll.
Yeah.
And some days I love it.
And like, that's all I want to do.
In other days, it's like, I just, I got to get a video out because I don't want to
fall behind.
I don't want to not post a video.
So it's a fine balance between the two.
Yeah, it's performance on a high level, man.
I don't think that's the thing people get about it.
It's like, I remember when the Paul brothers were going crazy,
Jake and Logan,
like they were pulling in, you know,
three million,
at least a video for Jake.
And it was like five million,
six million for Logan.
And I remember watching them and I was just like,
man,
if they keep going on this,
they're going to be some of the biggest celebrities in the world.
And eventually,
you know,
the whole,
you know,
the whole, you know,
for a situation happened with Logan
and then Jake kind of stuff.
But it was just like,
it was clear,
like eventually,
like,
it was going to be too much.
Like,
especially that vlog,
I'm trying to make a vlog,
every day. I remember Casey
when Casey Nicestat, when Casey
Nicestat was going crazy on YouTube, and he
was pulling in, like, at that time,
he was the biggest before Jake and Logan
took the mantle.
And, uh, but he just always used to talk about,
like, how it was so taxing.
It was like every day, seven days a week,
constantly thinking about it, constantly.
And he's like, you know, almost caused him
get a divorce and stuff like that because
just too much. And, uh, yeah,
I mean, you know, you want to stay on top. It's,
it's fun. But man, it is, it is,
uh, yeah, it's taxing.
Yeah. I was, I,
I want to keep it going as long as I can, but I realize at some point it's got a skill back.
So it's probably not going to be just all of a sudden nothing.
It'll probably be, well, now it's twice a week or now it might be once a week or something
that's a little bit more relaxed.
Yeah, I could see that.
Yeah.
I mean, it'll be interesting with you to like let somebody else kind of like, let's say take the mantle from you like over time, you know,
whoever that person is like, you know, and kind of letting go of like, I feel like, I feel like,
you're kind of still the king of YouTube finance,
even though Kevin gets more views than by far everybody.
But he puts out so much content.
Like, I feel like still you're kind of that guy.
And it'll be interesting, like, if you want to let that go.
Or if that even means anything to you or anything like that.
Because you are recognized as that person.
And it's like somebody else takes it.
Does it hurt at all?
Sometimes you don't know until it happens.
Sometimes I feel like it's better on your own terms.
Yeah.
Because then it's like, then you made the choice.
and it's not done like you just you burn out or something happens like that.
So I mean, we'll see.
The plan, I mean, I at least see throughout the next like year or two.
Yeah.
Keep the same schedule or as long as they can.
You're going to wait until I retire and like have my head straight.
And then you'll be like, okay, I can do it now.
And then two weeks later, done.
But regardless, I think the podcast is something, absolutely keep that up.
The second channel, absolutely keep that up.
The vlog might actually get more interesting if I'm not.
Graham likes the podcast and the second channel.
because he like hands off all of this stuff.
And so all you have to do for the podcast is show up.
And obviously organize the guests and stuff like that.
Right. Which is pretty nice.
Yeah.
And like I was thinking I was like even if let's say I walked away from YouTube,
I would still want to do millennial money every week.
Because I'm like, that's just fun.
You know what I mean?
Like that's a good time.
Right.
Get on there.
Still be active on social media and like debate some stuff.
Yeah.
The hardest part is really coming up with a topic, planning, filming,
editing for the main channel.
Title Summit.
You can delegate a lot of that work.
I can't delegate planning.
I could delegate some ideas,
but Jack and I spitball ideas all the time.
And we'll come up with ten ideas,
but they'll suck.
And then we're back to the drawing board.
Filming, I don't mind it,
because I know I could get it done.
Planning is the topic,
getting in the zone
and planning out of video
that I think would do well.
Okay.
Yeah.
Oh, I can see that.
It's a lot of work, man.
Anything.
else, Jeremy? I got nothing. I got one quick question. What are your top three stocks right now?
Top three stocks I'm buying right now. Coursair gaming, tattooed chef, and third would be, oh man,
third one's really tough between GGTTF and Facebook for number three. Let's say you could only hold
three stocks for the next 10 years. What stocks? Oh man, that's a whole different debate there. Three
stocks for the next 10 years. Okay. Then I'm going with the planet. Um, I'm going to, I'm going to,
going with tattooed chef and i'm going with facebook no tesla uh tesla is very compelling man it's between
tess and facebook because it's like facebook's way safe for the tesla um you know it's just like they're
already a cash flow machine tess has to become a cashful machine um but yeah maybe maybe tesla i don't know
maybe i'd kick that out but planet's already taken risk and so it's like do i want a planet risk
with a tessler risk with um you know tattoo chef still is somewhat of a
risk, right?
Because, I mean, even though it's a food business, it's like hypergrowth.
The marketing.
Yeah.
Oh, gosh.
Unproven marketing.
It's tough, man.
Picking your favorite stocks, like, you know, to only own, you know, three stocks.
It's like picking which one of your kids is your favorite, man.
You can't do that.
Which one is your favorite if you have to pick one?
Well, it is.
They see this video in like 20 years like, remember what you said, Dad.
I'm the favorite.
Yeah.
Now I have the throne.
Yeah.
What stock do you think is really undervalued right now?
Well, I mean, I just said it.
Like, I feel like, I feel like Coursera, if we're talking just undervalued, Coursera.
Coursera gaming, CRSR.
That just speaks undervalued.
It's like 4P of 20 with, you know, massive growth for the next 5, 10 years.
So I feel like Tattoo Chef's a good value, but it's high growth with, you know,
you can say high valuation at the moment.
But yeah, Corsair is like, yeah, it's hard.
It's like it's almost impossible for me to look in,
be like, oh, I didn't make any money.
And on Coursair over the next five years,
Dropbox would be up there too.
But it's climbed a bit.
So, yeah.
Cool.
Thank you so much for coming on, Jeremy.
It was great seeing you.
As for usual.
Absolutely.
Thank you, guys.
Thanks for having me again, man.
I can't wait to do this again next time.
It's always a good time.
We talk about a lot of stuff, so I appreciate it.
These are always the longest episodes, too.
Yeah.
Well, I mean, we could just keep talking about stock after stock.
The market, it's like, you know, we could go for days.
but yeah,
appreciate it,
guys, thanks.
Cool.
So with that said,
you guys,
thank you so much
for watching.
I really appreciate it.
As always,
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Thank you guys so much.
And until next time.
Because one of these is broken.
I want to make sure we're using the right ones.
Okay.
Right.
Well,
