The Iced Coffee Hour - “They’re Liars!” Mizkif Breaks Silence on $36,000,000 Loss, Allegations, & Controversy

Episode Date: October 20, 2025

NetSuite: Download the CFO’s Guide to AI for FREE at https://netsuite.com/iced Shopify: Sign up for a $1 per month trial period at https://shopify.com/ich ZocDoc: Go to https://www.zocdoc.com/ICED... and download the Zocdoc App for FREE Gusto: Try Gusto for FREE for 3 months at https://gusto.com/ICED Add us on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jlsselby https://www.instagram.com/gpstephan Follow Mizkif Here: YouTube: @Mizkif Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/realmizkif/?hl=en Apply for The Index Membership: https://entertheindex.com/ Official Clips Channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCeBQ24VfikOriqSdKtomh0w For sponsorships or business inquiries reach out to: tmatsradio@gmail.com For Podcast Inquiries, please DM @icedcoffeehour on Instagram! Timestamps: 00:00:00 - Intro 00:03:35 - When you realized you could make real money 00:07:26 - How much top streamers earn 00:13:49 - How much gambling companies pay 00:19:27 - Sponsor - NetSuite 00:20:40 - Most financially savvy streamer 00:25:55 - How he invests his money 00:34:41 - Why not buy cars from Copart 00:34:50 - Sponsor - Shopify 00:36:16 - West Coast Customs collab 00:41:36 - How much he’ll spend on a Lambo 00:43:30 - Is streaming harder than a 9–5 00:46:18 - Top 3 things that grew his stream 00:49:03 - When he started making real money 00:50:41 - Three streamers worth investing in 00:52:21 - Viewbotting in streaming 00:58:32 - OTK and revenue 01:02:30 - Are streams fake? 01:03:37 - Sponsor - Zocdoc 01:04:59 - Sponsor - Gusto 01:06:23 - Most overrated streamer 01:16:42 - Getting swatted live 01:23:56 - Turning down a Stake deal 01:25:50 - When income exploded 01:30:21 - Streaming vs investing income 01:31:56 - Craziest things he’s bought 01:33:31 - Most expensive date ever 01:40:40 - When money stopped improving life 01:42:46 - Biggest personal insecurity 01:54:41 - Streamer tier list *Some of the links and other products that appear on this video are from companies 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

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Is streaming harder than a 9 to 5? Yeah, my job's harder than your job. I'm always thinking about my stream, my content, how to grow, what I can do better. You're an entrepreneur. You don't stop working. That's what it takes to be a top streamer. Streaming has to become your life. What am I really going to do that's going to make these people want to watch me?
Starting point is 00:00:20 Especially as you get older, because your chat gets older, too. How are you investing your own money to try to, like, grow your channel and your brand? What a 30-year-olds want? They want to learn about money. They want to grow their empire themselves. I don't want to watch you sit there and hang out with girls all day. So the whole environment of streaming is way harder to grow now. It's impossible to get into streaming.
Starting point is 00:00:40 Twitch is a dying platform. It's dying because of its ads and it's dying quick. What would you say is your biggest insecurity? It was bad. When I say they were like the whole website was about ruining my life. It's the biggest drama that's ever happened on Twitch. I have a really crazy story. So I, when I was 16, I was day trading.
Starting point is 00:01:03 Like every day, all day. And I started with $2,500. And this is right about the time where Wolf of Wall Street came out. And everyone was going crazy for penny stocks, right? I got involved with this group, and they were on Skype. And they were called the Wolf of Weed Street. And the big thing was, it was a guy had a wolf instead of, it was Leonardo DiCaprio, it was a picture of a wolf.
Starting point is 00:01:26 And his thing was, you follow my lead, I'll make you rich. And then he started growing groups of people in that group who were like, these are your leaders. And you literally were just following them. I followed him for months. I would join his groups. I was listening to him talk in Skype calls and in meetings. And he would tell you what he's buying next.
Starting point is 00:01:47 And every single penny stock he invested in skyrocketed. Like, I did not lose money one time. And he just got bigger and bigger on Twitter. He started showing his penthouse suite, all this crazy stuff. He blew the fuck up. I went from $2,500. over 150 grand as a 16 year old kid. 16.
Starting point is 00:02:09 And this is, uh, what, 14. 30. I forgot how many years now. Yeah. And it was so big. And I felt like a. So my friends were talking to me and I'm like, dude, I'm rich. I made 12 grand in some days, like as a 16 year old kid.
Starting point is 00:02:23 And there's one investment. He said, he said, guys, we are doing Tesla puts. Put your money in Tesla puts. And I'm like, dude, if I just put 50 grand in these Tesla puts and it's, Guy Rockets, I'm a millionaire at 16 years old. I was freaking out. So I put $50,000 in and I lost every single penny. And then he just completely goes to the community and he just left the internet.
Starting point is 00:02:48 But what was crazy is what we were investing in, which was penny stocks, but for weed companies. And they were complete. It was like, this is a random pharmaceutical in Nebraska that's going to start changing the game. Because his name was Wolf of Weed Street. So we only invested in weed companies. So you still made $75 grand. Yeah. Well, I'm 16 now and I'm alone with a bunch of money thinking I have an ego and I know what I'm talking about, right?
Starting point is 00:03:13 So I had $75,000. So I then bet again on weed stocks thinking I know it was doing because there were some other guys that were like, I'm going to take leadership and you should listen to me. And I listened to them and it continued to drop. And it continued the drop. And I literally didn't have one win because we kept investing in penny stocks to the point where I was down. I think I came out with like 15 grand. So at what point in your life did you have a hope that you were capable of making a lot of money? It was probably, I always was a workaholic.
Starting point is 00:03:43 I love business. I went one time I was in, this is I was like five years old. I went to Toys R Us and I walked up to the lady and I demanded the job. I'm like, give me a job. I want to work now. And she's like, okay, here's a notepad. And I want you to write down your information. Couldn't write.
Starting point is 00:04:02 I'm like dad, this is all you. And I walked out of there with my head held high. I was like, I'm going to be a toy, you know, connoisseur. I'm going to test toys for Toys R Us. And that did not work out. I called them 20 years later. They were bankrupt, but. Sounds like the movie big, man.
Starting point is 00:04:19 Yeah. Sounds like they needed you. You see the movie big? No, I don't watch movies. Okay. It's a Tom Hanks movie. That's what he did. He's a kid and he grows up really quick from a wish that he made and he was a toy tester.
Starting point is 00:04:32 Oh, that's sick. Yeah, I wanted to do that. I remember I wanted to, uh, I always wanted to work. I love working because I get very bored. And I like money. So I always wanted to be very rich.
Starting point is 00:04:44 So I always was trying to find ways to make money. Um, and whether selling, whether it was, uh, weed stocks, you know, because when you're a kid,
Starting point is 00:04:56 you're always trying to find a way to make money the fastest way possible, right? You're willing to take those massive risks because really, who cares? If you take a massive risk as a kid, whatever, right? That $2,500 that I risked, whatever. I wouldn't even remember it the next day. But I've always loved investing, and I always loved trying to make money.
Starting point is 00:05:15 And I was always looking at like, wow, if I just invest a few thousand dollars a year from 16 to 30, I'll be a millionaire one day. Right? That was my logic. But then when money really started to come in was obviously during streaming. Before that, I was just a kid at college. There's this stereotype, though, that like streamers and YouTubers are really bad with money. I'm just curious, what's the most reckless that you've seen someone spend money? As a streamer, I'd probably say reckless.
Starting point is 00:05:47 Streamers are not really reckless with money. I mean, I would say probably my Lamborghini that I just bought was pretty reckless because ad revenues down dramatically. Sponsors are down dramatically on Twitch. And my sub counts way lower than it used to be. So me buying that Lamborghini that you told me. to buy was definitely a risky move and I hope it pays off but we'll see what happens. The thing is streamers are not really risk or they're not really, they don't buy things
Starting point is 00:06:13 that are ridiculous with their money. I don't really know any streamer that truly buys ridiculous things. What streamers do is you got to put them in the mindset of like a 17 year old because most of them are financially completely illiterate, right? They don't even know how to invest. They don't even know that you could put your stuff into a, you know, high yield. savings account. They don't know any of that stuff. I have so many friends that are streamers that have made millions of dollars that just straight up it sits in their bank account and they don't
Starting point is 00:06:44 touch it because they don't understand stocks. They don't understand investments. They don't get it. I have friends that have bought cash, full cash bought houses. Like, what are you doing? You buy your house in full cash because they don't understand business. They don't have an advisor. And they're not really bad with money because the things that a lot of streamers buy, it's just games, right? They'll be like, oh, I bought this game this week and their cost to stream is cheap. Higher an editor, maybe you have a manager, and you're paying for electricity in a game. So there's not a lot of expenses for a lot of streamers. So they're not really bad with money.
Starting point is 00:07:21 It's more so they're just financially illiterate and they don't use them. How much do you think they're making, like the top streamers? would probably say if you're talking top streamers, you got guys like Kai Sinat, it really depends on how much they stream, but he probably makes if I had to guess over $50 million a year. If I had to guess. That's insane.
Starting point is 00:07:43 He's doing a current, well, let's do with the map. He's doing a current sub-a-thon right now, right? And his goals to hit a million subscribers. Now, people go, oh my God, that's where all the money is. That's not where all the money is at all. He's making way more money with the ads, because
Starting point is 00:07:59 guys like Kai Sinat, run 22 minutes of ads an hour on Twitch. 22 minutes of ads an hour? Yes. It should not even be legal to do that. But these guys, the new generation of streamers, they run 22 minutes of ads an hour. Hold on a second.
Starting point is 00:08:15 We have four minutes of ads in like two hours. And people do not like, okay, well, actually, in fairness, we have four minutes of sponsorships in two to three hours. And then we have automatically placed YouTube ads, which is maybe an extra few minutes an hour. Right. That's not bad at all, right? No.
Starting point is 00:08:29 Listen, they used to complain about us running three minutes of ads an hour. Yeah. That was a big complaint. It was like, why are their ads on Twitch now? Well, they got to make money. But these streamers, these new gen streamers, run 22 minutes. And maybe it's because we're older. So we grew up with a, you know, generations and stuff.
Starting point is 00:08:47 Yeah. We didn't have commercials like this nowadays. Nowadays, these streamers or these, these viewers are conditioned to watch a lot of ads. Kair runs 22 minutes of ads an hour. a lot of times on his stream. That means that every like eight minutes, you're watching three minutes of ads. And they do that because they want you to subscribe
Starting point is 00:09:06 or they want you to watch the ads. Kai is making, if he gets a million subscribers this month, $3.5 per sub. That's $3.5 million, okay? I promise you that with the ad revenue, it's probably double that. Because he's live 24 hours a day with 100,000 plus viewers
Starting point is 00:09:26 running 22 minutes of ads an hour, Kai is probably making $10 million plus dollars this month. And that's not including other brand deals that I don't even know about, Nike, et cetera. I would say Kai, if he's able to hit one million subs, is probably making $10 million this month. How difficult is that to run an operation like that and stream that much? It's very taxing mentally. I condone him for his success.
Starting point is 00:09:52 I mean, he's doing this. It's the third one he's done. Dude is extremely successful. the thing that Kai has that really sets him apart is not who he is because he's a great entertainer. It's his team. He has one of the best teams I've ever seen in my life. They are so good with the tech. They are so good at just keeping his momentum going.
Starting point is 00:10:12 And I don't even know, I don't even know his team name. I forgot what they are. They're great at what they do. They're making him into a superstar. Yeah. But that costs a lot of money. So I promise you that $10 million is something way less because Kai is probably spending millions on this whole sub-a-thon between flying people in,
Starting point is 00:10:28 between paying for just a bunch of stuff, and also the people who are running the stream for 24 hours a day, he's probably spending a few million dollars just on that. So you're saying streamers aren't actually as bad with money as people may think, because I see a lot of streamers that are buying like Richard Mills and they're buying crazy watches, crazy cars, they're living in mansions.
Starting point is 00:10:46 You're saying that still that's not very, you know, poor financial decisions of them? No, because the thing is, a lot of streamers make millions of dollars a year. and these streamers, you know, they spend money whenever they want to. Buying a couple watches here and there, it also depends on what they do. If you're talking gambling streamers, they make tens of millions of dollars a year. That watches pennies.
Starting point is 00:11:07 They throw that. But if you're talking an average streamer who's a big timer, let's say 10 to 15K viewers, they're probably making a few million dollars a year. It's weight less than what it used to be on Twitch. During COVID and other places, ad revenue was way higher. People subscribed a lot more because there was more community. driven. And nowadays, what Twitch is having is a huge problem is their ads are down so much. They're down like 50, 60% in how much you get. And what's happening now that's a real problem on Twitch is they tell you, hey, because I used to run three minutes of ads an hour during COVID. That's nothing nowadays. I wish I ran more. But back then, David Bitch about 30 minutes of ads. They were literally like, go fuck yourself. You're running ads, period. And nowadays, you've got this, the, these streamers the new age,
Starting point is 00:11:56 they're running 15 minutes of ads plus. The whole point of Twitch was to get away from the mainstream media of ads. It was, I don't want to see 18 minutes, 15 minutes of ads an hour watching Fox News. I'm gonna go watch a streamer
Starting point is 00:12:11 who can react to this stuff and also I maybe runs 3 to 5 minutes. Twitch is not only down dramatically in ad revenue and they admit it to us behind the scenes. They tell us every time, yeah, we don't make nearly as much as we used to do an ad. ads. And I'm like, okay, well, what is the solution? How are you going to make sure that
Starting point is 00:12:28 streamers can continue their operation? Your website is declining in viewership every month. Twitch is down 25% this year alone. And that's not even including all the embeds and bots that go on on the website. It's on 25%. Where are people going? Is it kick? I don't think they're going to kick. I think what's happening is people are just leaving the website because the ads have gotten so bad that there's no reason to watch Twitch anymore. And then, And the problem is you can be one of those streamers that, hey, I'm just going to lower it to three minutes because you can do that. I'm going to be a good guy. I'm going to make less money.
Starting point is 00:13:02 I'm going to lower mine to three minutes. That doesn't matter. And that's the problem. It's because since everyone else is running 10 to 15 minutes of ads nowadays, because Twitch tells you to. If you go to my ad page, it says recommended ad time 10 to 12 minutes. Are you kidding me? That's daytime television. And you're telling me to run 10 to 12 minutes.
Starting point is 00:13:21 That's your solution to us making less money. So these viewers, they're leaving Twitch because the ads are so bad. They're not going to stay around to watch other streamers as well because Twitch is an ecosystem. That's how it grew is streamers were growing. High tides raise all ships. But if you run three minutes of ads an hour, okay, when you're offline and they're going to go watch other people, they're all watching 10 minutes of ads an hour. They're leaving. They're not going to just stay there for you.
Starting point is 00:13:49 Sorry. Investing, trading. That isn't a personality. You don't need the voice. You don't need the jargon. You don't need the podcast. You already know how to trade. You've done it your whole life.
Starting point is 00:14:02 And TD Easy Trade taps into that instinct so you can build something real. No minimums, no monthly fees, 24-hour support, no investor personality required. Because you are made to trade. And TD Easy Trade is made to help. Download it now. So when people are making that much money, though, and they tack on a gambling stream on top of that. How much do these gambling companies pay?
Starting point is 00:14:27 What's the craziest deal that you've seen? I got offered $36 million for a year, at my peak. That is insane. I have XQC, and this is public, he got $100 million for two years to stream on kick and to do gambling. And now when they pay that amount, is there a requirement that says, okay, we're going to pay you this, but we recommend that you gamble 80% of that? Yeah, they tell you to gamble. They tell you that you need to do a specific amount of hours. And for XQC, it was more of like a big deal that he went there because this is the beginning of kick.
Starting point is 00:15:02 Yeah. But yeah, XQC is by far the biggest deal that ever happened and will happen. He got $100 million plus dollars to stream over there and do some gambling and do two years of service there. But I'm assuming that, so they fund his account, I'm guessing. So it's $50 million per year. It's about $4 million a month. how much of that four million that they give him per month are they expecting him to gamble?
Starting point is 00:15:23 Well, like how much can he whittle it down to? Can he whittle it down to like slots? Yeah. Yes, he could 100%. But he doesn't because he also is a huge gambler. That's the thing that these companies want. They want you to push it, but they also want you to be addicted to it.
Starting point is 00:15:38 And XTC is very addicted to gambling. So he was doing it off stream. He was doing it on stream. And he was just gambling sometimes millions of dollars a day. I think his total account was like a billion dollars. Now, I believe XCC's money that he would gamble was actually his money, but some streamers don't do that. Some streamers gamble with fake money. And that's where a lot of people have problems is like, well, you're not gambling with your own money. And that is disingenuous
Starting point is 00:16:05 because you're acting excited a lot of times. It's not really your money. Can they not keep the profits if they're not gambling with their own money? That's usually what happens is the company who say, look, you can keep the profits. So that way they do seem excited. But a lot of times, what they will also do is, hey, you will give you, let's say, $50,000 for three hours, and you just play with this 20K and then just leave it in your account. So I saw a clip of a streamer that made $40 million on a spin on a slot machine. Yes. Do you think that that's just fake money?
Starting point is 00:16:37 No. That's real money. I know that exact clip you're talking about. That's real. And he made $40 million. He made $40 million. And then he probably whittled it away. Yes.
Starting point is 00:16:47 I know who you're talking about. he is a huge gambler. Yes, he probably won't have the way. But, I mean, he's also getting paid from stake monthly millions of dollars, I'm sure to promote it. So he's not willing to lay whittling anything. He's making millions and millions a month streaming on kick. So what was it like getting a $36 million offer like that? I mean, that's like multiple generations, life-changing money. If you could go back in time, would you have taken the $36 million? It's really hard to say. I actually don't think I would. And the reason why is back then I had a tremendous. amount of young viewers.
Starting point is 00:17:20 I was very popular with like the Minecrafters back then, but then I ate this like autistic toy on stream. I like chewed on it and they all hated me afterwards and I'm like, all right, if you're going to hate me for that, you're going to hate me for everything. But they, but before that is when I got this deal.
Starting point is 00:17:34 And it was a lot. It wasn't just like a small, like, keep in mind, $36 million, yes. It was basically, hey, ruin your career for $36 million. And I can do that on my own. I don't need $36 million. You'd rather just chew a toy. Yeah, I'd rather just chew a toy and they all fuck off.
Starting point is 00:17:47 I got that offer was basically, hey, we want you to make 100 hours of gambling a month. It was not some like, do this once in a while and tweet. It was like, no, we want basically your social media. Let's sell it for $36 million for two years. So it was much more than that. Would I be happy with that? I don't really think I would. You know, I didn't, don't remember I'm $36 million is a ton of money,
Starting point is 00:18:11 but the amount that they wanted and the deal itself was just a lot. It was a tremendous amount of work. I'm just saying, I think from your perspective, I wonder, because I mean, effectively, you lost $36 million. I'm curious, if you could go back in time, why not just go take the $36 million, aka $3 million per month, go and just do penny slot the entire time and not get excited when you win it and tell your audience. By the way, guys, I think this is completely stupid.
Starting point is 00:18:34 Tune in next year. Tune in next year. You could. Like, that would have been phenomenal content. You could have talked about anything, played, you know, gambling on half the screen and then like YouTube videos on the other half and you're just like spinning the entire time. Yeah. And they're talking about this.
Starting point is 00:18:46 And then there's a discomalible. disclaimer or something. By the way, this is sponsored and also like I could care less about this. I'm trying to take 30. Yeah. Like that would have been legendary to walk away from that. Don't do it funny. Especially if you talk about how bad gambling is and how addictive it could be and like how you shouldn't be doing it. Yeah. And does that work though is the thing when you say it's it's bad? You can win 10 cents to be like oh look I just won 10 cents. But you know, plus I guarantee you because these companies, you know, they would have stopped it a month in. They would have stopped at a month. And they would be like, if you're really just doing penny slots here like go for yourself. They'll find a violation in the contract. Or they won't do contracts at all. I mean, a lot of these companies just do like, hey, here's the crypto, right? So I necessarily don't know if that would have made a, I definitely couldn't have done that.
Starting point is 00:19:27 I definitely would have to gamble real money. I'd also be bored out of my mind. But back then would I have done it? Probably not if I can go back. Would I do something smaller? Probably. Because I think for myself back then, I was very against it.
Starting point is 00:19:41 Also, nowadays, my viewers are a lot older. So they don't care as much. Like, oh, well, I'm like 30. now is I don't give a when before it's like a lot of them were like I'm 16 years old and a lot of those viewers just went over to Aidan Ross is what I guess or speed I don't know now really quick I just want to say that I always ask myself what does the future hold for business and the thing is if you ask nine different experts you're going to get 10 different answers from a bull market a bear market things are going up to going down be very helpful to have a crystal ball but until that happens
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Starting point is 00:20:50 opportunity, right now you could download the CFO's Guide to AI and Machine Learning at netsuite.com slash iced. Again, that guide is free for you at netsuite.com slash iced with a link also down below, net suite.com slash iced. Thank you again to NetSuite for sponsoring this episode, and now let's get back to the podcast. So on the topic of the people that are really bad with finances, which apparently not very many, but then let's talk about who I think is the person that is best with their finances, which is Asman Gold. I mean, realistically, I suspect he's making a million dollars a month. That's what I think. And he's still eating dollar steaks. Yes. So he's probably saving 99.9% of his income, basically. But for what? I agree. I mean, I think he's shortening his
Starting point is 00:21:35 lifespan by eating those dollar stakes and maybe not brushing his teeth. I don't know. But I think that that's a little bit dangerous because he could be improving his life, improving like getting more sunlight. I think that's what makes it appealing though. Sure, it might make it appealing, but at the same point, like, I think, didn't you have a video where he like showered and it got like millions of views? I think people want to see him, you know, be healthier and like. But you say that right, but let's be honest, if you watch a fat man lose weight, it's exciting until he loses the weight. Right? Like, you got to understand. that if Asmigal becomes this prim prime person and starts living in a lavish house or a nicer
Starting point is 00:22:11 house or he changes his style, people are going to be very proud of the progression. But once they hit that goal, it's like, okay, but this is not who he was. So he keeps that narrative of this is, I'm this gross guy. And it's smart. It's his business. It's, it makes him unique. Is it a narrative? No, he's really like that. I mean, he is genuinely a person that lives in his house and he will, in my opinion, in that house. He loves that house. He loves the way he lives. I don't see him changing. I think he can change a little bit. He might eat like a piece of broccoli every two weeks,
Starting point is 00:22:41 but I just don't see. What does he do with the money? I personally believe he probably leaves it under his mattress. You don't think he's investing? No. Like doing something smart with it? No. Have you talked to him about it?
Starting point is 00:22:52 Yes. I promise who he's not. Or I just don't think he cares. I think between Kik, his normal money he makes and everything else, that dude genuinely does not care about money. He cares much more about the growth of his channel. and the success of his stream than he ever will money. He didn't care about money when I first met him.
Starting point is 00:23:10 He never cared because for him he knows this is the life I live and it's $3,000 a month. And he doesn't want more. Now, I think it's wrong. I think it's admirable. I don't think so. You don't think he's not admirable. We've had talks with him. He needs to spend more money.
Starting point is 00:23:27 He's lived this life for a while and I think it works in your 20s, right? That lifestyle, the generosity is sitting around, you know, you're jerking off and just hanging out with your friends, but the lifestyle he has now, he's a 35-year-old, 36-year-old dude. It catches up to you at that age. And I think he knows that. So I believe he's taking steps to get better, but I also know the dude probably just is going to continue doing it the way he does. He's not a guy of change ever.
Starting point is 00:23:53 Does he get a lot of interest from women? I'm sure there's a lot of women that are some blonde chick that probably wants to cheat on her Republican wife that would probably fiasmin in a heartbeat, you know? I'm sure that's the thing. I know Asma, I know he likes Asian women with big boobs. So that's who he's going after. So if you're an Asian girl with big boobs and you want a nice man to feed you roaches
Starting point is 00:24:16 and coughing with spiders in it, he's all yours. He'll make you a $2 steak and you can have it as well because he's not taking out the dinner. I promise you that. He'll bring you to like 7-11. So he has a natural apprehension to spending money. It's not the fact that he doesn't care at all
Starting point is 00:24:28 and he just wants to hang out in his house, but it's that he's like genuinely apprehensive of spending money. I think it's just he just doesn't. I'm telling you, man, I've never heard the guy care about money. Whenever there's a deal or opportunity, he would just, like, dude, you got to realize, like, this guy, no, he would have $100,000 sponsors and he'd be like, I don't want to do it. Like, it's three hours. Why? I don't want to do it, because I just want to go to bed.
Starting point is 00:24:53 You're not going to stay live for three hours to do a $100,000 sponsor? Nope, doesn't want to do it. So he just wouldn't do the sponsor for three hours. It's like any game. He's had offers for like half a million dollars for the dumbest. Like just stream our game and put a YouTube video up. He's like, nah, don't want him. And he doesn't do it because he just does not care about money.
Starting point is 00:25:12 I think he cares much more about his power he has and his political views and his growth of his channel. And I think he knows that if he money is kind of in his way for that because that can make him not care about it as much. You know, if he puts, if he cares about money, what will happen is that takes away from his profile who he is. And I do think he's going to care about it a little. He has to. He can't just keep doing this. lifestyle forever, he'll die. And he knows that. Like, he can't be this degenerate 16-year-old boy that he still acts like sometimes, but, uh, I don't think he's going to change. I don't think
Starting point is 00:25:46 he's going to look like you one day with a nice haircut and, you know, a polo shirt or something. You haven't seen Jack's living room, though. My living room is fine, Graham. That's, that's how, what Asim says. I mean, he cleaned his house once. And he got canceled once and cleaned his room. but I but I promise you it's probably the same What do you think it would take for him to clean up
Starting point is 00:26:08 his house? Get canceled again It's probably as like method I don't know For me I hang out with two Asian daughters that I have in Japan and I just make a bunch of TikToks
Starting point is 00:26:21 for him I think it's just cleaning his room because I'm like oh he's changing good for him and just goes back to normal So what about for you though How are you investing your own money To try to like
Starting point is 00:26:30 Grow your channel Your brand The thing is the difference between me and Asman, right, is Asman Gold is a React streamer. You go to his stream for him reacting to the news and reacting to videos. His cost of expenses is very low. It's nothing. It's electricity, right? But my cost is a lot higher because people go to my stream. They don't go to my stream for me to react. They don't go to my stream for me just watch videos and sit there. They go because I have collaborations. They go because I'm trying to do cool stuff. And that's
Starting point is 00:26:59 what I like to do. I don't like reacting anymore. I did it for six years. It's board of it. So what I'm trying to do is I'm trying to go more of a route of finance. And this is actually when I called you. I was like, I want, because I'm 30 now, I don't want to pretend to be 21 anymore. I'm not trying to pretend to cater to this like younger audience, the phase kids, all that stuff. Because I just find it kind of cringe. Like, I'm 30. I'm not a 21 year old. They, they can do it because they're young. But for me, I'm 30. I'm almost 31. I want to do something where I can age into, not where I'm trying to grasp on to what I had. And I think a way to do that is finance. I think that's a finance, business stuff. I opened up a gym a year and a half ago.
Starting point is 00:27:42 It was called Iron Forged Gym. No one thought we can do it, but it was super successful. It popped off on Twitch and YouTube. Everyone loved it. And now we have a thousand members, despite there being eight gyms around us. We have a thousand members. We do MMA fights. How profitable is that? not a lot. Gyms are a waste of money. Please do not buy a gym. Because the problem is you have to have so many members because you have to buy all the equipment.
Starting point is 00:28:05 Yeah. Cost is ridiculous. It's like $800,000 in equipment. It's a good write-off. It's a good write-off, but it's extremely expensive. So, okay, 800,000 equipment, then a lease you have to sign and then a build-out. So you're in at what? One-two?
Starting point is 00:28:19 One-three? Yeah. Like everything all in? Yeah. And then our lease is five years, I believe. It's not, was it worth to do for content and stream? Yes, was it worth to do because we got a thousand members and we're slightly profitable? Yes, because we're growing still.
Starting point is 00:28:35 Okay. We were at 800 members or 700 members a few months ago. Now we're at 1,000. And it's not because of me anymore. Now it's just word of mouth, which is the best part. But it was fun and content. I loved it. The chat was learning business.
Starting point is 00:28:48 I was learning about business as well. I'm not, you know, I'm not going to pretend I know everything. And we really made a brick and mortar on Twitch. which was the first time ever. Someone truly brought and made a brick and mortar, and it's successful. How much is insurance? No idea.
Starting point is 00:29:01 You don't know how much. Someone drops a weight on their foot and they say, you know, it's your fault. I'm going to sue you because this is California. I'm a big believer in hiring people smarter than you. Okay. So this guy that owns another gym right next to us around that area,
Starting point is 00:29:17 I was like, hey, why don't you come in with us? You're good on stream, and you run the gym. So he does all that. But the gym was a success. Good. And it's going well.
Starting point is 00:29:26 Everything's fine. We are slightly profitable. We're using that money to continue to grow the gym a little bit because I don't really care for the profit of a few grand. So the gym is great. And I saw that. I'm like, wait a minute, this is awesome. Chat learned something.
Starting point is 00:29:42 They learned business. I learned something because that's what I hate about streaming. Is you're basically trying to pretend you're a young teenager or you're like in the middle, like late mid 20s or like late or like early 20s right you're trying to pretend you're something that is farther away every year you're trying to pretend that you're this you know young person that is friends all around when like i've known these guys for nine years most of them aren't friends right it's it's a game so i was like i just want to when i had 30 i just want to do stuff that progresses me and the business was awesome chat loved it i loved it so like well what else that could i do and i was
Starting point is 00:30:21 going to do a, I was going to buy a house and fix it up in LA and I called you and you told me that's a terrible, terrible idea. It's an awful idea. It's a awful idea. Yeah, when you look at the amount that you would be paying an interest, the amount of property taxes, the restrictions, I'm going through right now, believe it or not, I didn't listen to my own advice and I built out an ADU in Los Angeles and I looked at the numbers and the numbers were fantastic. Like I'm talking I'm going to make a more than 12% cash on cash return on my money with very little work on my end. Going through the city of Los Angeles has been the biggest nightmare of my entire life. If I could just go back in time and just tell myself, don't do that. It's just it's the mental
Starting point is 00:31:08 headache. It's not the cash is great. It's just a mental headache of going through the city of Los Angeles has been awful. It has been the worst experience in my life. And they say, we're in housing shortage we want you to build there are all these incentives right now to build a property in LA I think oh it's great I'm gonna take advantage of this because my return is gonna be so big for this one specific project on a property I already own mm-hmm perfect impossible the city inspectors don't want to work it's like get just getting a phone call back could sometimes take a week everything goes to voicemail it's awful it's a whole antiquated system you dodged a bullet on that
Starting point is 00:31:46 one yeah well you help me because I was gonna do it and take a loan out but that I called you and you told me not to do it. And instead, what you told me, which I greatly appreciate, you said, you know what you should do for content? Because I'm like, look, I want to get in the business. I'm not sure what to do. What do you think would do well on stream? And you're like, why don't you fix a car?
Starting point is 00:32:03 Because that's what's blowing up on YouTube right now. And I didn't really know about it. I'm like, yeah, that sounds great. I can learn maybe a car thing. But I looked at the videos. Like, holy, this is huge. I didn't realize repairing cars is such a big deal. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:32:16 And how well it's doing. All these channels are getting millions of views. Matt Armstrong is leading the charge. Yeah. So I bought a car on a better bid.com. I bought a car and it was a f*** up Lambo for $145,000 after all the, everything was said and done. So I saw that.
Starting point is 00:32:36 So my logic when I told you that was that I got really inspired by Tavarish, who bought the P1. Hoovies garage, who buys like clunkers and then fixes them up a little bit. And then our friend, Biaheza, he bought a Lamber. He bought a Lamborghini and an I ate. And he fixed it up himself part-time and his video was incredible. And I saw that. I'm like, oh, my gosh, that's a G.
Starting point is 00:32:57 Like, I would be doing that if I had more time and I had the editing skills that they have. And so that's why I recommended it to you on that car, man. I think you overpaid for it. I mean, I did. That's the issue. That car, I would say, in my opinion, should have been worth just looking at it. Just seeing it on the f*** thing. 1.15, I think, would have been a safe bet because then there's enough margin there where
Starting point is 00:33:26 when you overspend on it, you're going to be like coming out ahead or break even. You're right. But that price, because you could get like a fully, like a nice one for 210 to 220. With a higher mileage, but like you're going to spend too much money on that car. Here is my problem, though, is I really wanted a Lamborghini Hurricanes to fix up because I think it's good SEO, but what I also think is good about it is I just, I do love Lamborghinis. Like, I always wanted one. The problem is getting one on a better bid and having it to be content, because that's opportunity
Starting point is 00:33:57 cost, because I have no content. So for me, it's very tough to figure out what to do next. And I'm like, okay, I know this is going to be a little bit pricey. When I was bidding on it, I'm like, this is going a little bit higher than I want. I was hoping for like 120 in total, 115, 125. It went up to 1.45, and I was really hoping it wouldn't. But opportunity cost. If I wait for another car, now I have to stall for a month of content, and that's
Starting point is 00:34:23 stress that I don't need. And that's money that I'm not making because I'm not streaming. So I was like, why not just buy the car? So I did bid on it. I did win it. And it blew the fuck up all over everywhere, which made me really happy. And I didn't realize how many car enthusiasts are because I started posting TikToks and it started blowing up.
Starting point is 00:34:39 I started posting just like an hour-long video of us fixing up the car and it sort of blowing up. But what was great is West Coast Customs messaged me. like, look, our guy, the CEO's son is a huge World of Warcraft fan. And he watched Love's Only Thanks. He likes Only Fangs. And I'm like, you know, he's like, you should make your car here. I'm like, that's perfect.
Starting point is 00:35:01 That's best content scenarios. The biggest car place in the world is making my car with me. And it's been awesome. Like, I'm going to make a whole series out of it for months. So it was worth. But I do agree with you. Did I overpay? Absolutely.
Starting point is 00:35:13 Why not go in copart? No, that's what I did. is a copart. I thought you said better bids. Oh, I'm stupid. Co-part. Okay. I'm a co-part.
Starting point is 00:35:20 Okay, you did. Yeah. Okay. And when Jack and I started the ice coffee hour, now almost six years ago, we had to figure out everything ourselves, from the best cameras to use, the best editing equipment, how to get guests. Every day had a brand new challenge. That's why, if you're starting or growing your own business, you know how valuable today's sponsor is, and that would be Shopify.
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Starting point is 00:36:44 Thank you again to Shopify for sponsor. I'm sponsoring this episode. Dude, the West Coast Customs thing is big. Like, you have, like, even for me, West Coast Customs was my entire teenage years, was watching Pimp my ride. I know. And it was all West Coast Customs. And I would look at those cars and dream of like, oh, man, one day if I have a car that's West Coast Customs, that would be the thing. Well, you know, is, on the first day I went there, it was fun as the people there are great. They're so charismatic because they're used to being in front of cameras. Yeah. Chief Chief was there. I was just like, what's up, bro? So I hung out with Chief Keith for like a second. I told him I'd make his Lamborghini for him. He probably forgot me in two seconds because he was whatever. He wasn't paying attention. But there's always celebrities coming in. So there's chances I would see them as I'd make the car.
Starting point is 00:37:29 It's a whole new thing. And my chat, I didn't know how much they would love it. They love it. They're so attentive. They're typing like crazy. Hey, like get this part. Do this, do that. They love the whole process.
Starting point is 00:37:41 And I'm like, wow, this is great. You're learning something. I'm learning something. and we're building something together that is not stressful for me for streaming because the thing that sucks about streaming sometimes and being the content creator of more IRL, you have to find out what the fuck are you doing that day?
Starting point is 00:37:56 What am I really going to do that's going to make these people want to watch me? And that's so hard to do, especially as you get older, because your chat gets older too. And they're like, I don't want to watch you sit there and hang out with girls all day,
Starting point is 00:38:09 because that's what I do. Or I don't want to watch you sit there and play, you know, a dumb-ass game. What do 30-year-olds want? They want to learn about money. They want to grow their empire themselves. And they want to start a family. They don't want their politics.
Starting point is 00:38:25 They don't want to deal with this. Back to Asmingold, he's very smart. He's a very smart dude. And he knows and understands these trends. Asmengold first started off as a wow streamer. And he knew that wow is not going to be there forever. So what he did is he started to react to videos. and those React videos did really well.
Starting point is 00:38:46 Drama videos, gaming. He was really into gaming first, like Reacting the World Warcraft game videos. Then it was more gaming industry. He's slowly expanding. Okay, now he's got more people watching, gaming industry. Then from gaming industry,
Starting point is 00:39:00 he went to just the industries in general, right? He started getting more into technology and talking about that. And now he has the biggest web of them all, which is politics. And he's 35 years old, right? So that's smart to do because you're growing with your age. You need to do that because if you don't do that, then you're just holding on to something you once had.
Starting point is 00:39:22 And that's not smart, I think, for stream. I think it can come off especially a lot of times as like cringe where it's like, oh, well, you're just trying to be this younger person. You know, you want to grow up. And you also want a new directory of people that can watch you. There's a lot of people who now follow me from the car stuff. Like, I don't even know who the hell you are. The car community is massive. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:39:41 Our biggest episodes tend to be with... Doug DeMiro, Stradman, Thorish. Yeah, but that community, because cars are like, everyone likes cars from the most part, especially like if you are into money, chances are you like cars. And if you like cars, it's probably you also like watches to some degree. And so all of it overlaps, but that is just like really good, fun content. It's relatable and it's aspirational because when someone gets like a Lamborghini, I always thought when I was like a teenager
Starting point is 00:40:11 Oh, I could get to salvage like, you know, 2005 Lamborghini Gallardo for $50,000 And I'm going to drive a Gallardo for 50 grand It's like I could wrap my mind around how that's possible for me Yeah, and I think what's fun about the chat is them seeing that Don't do that it's a waste of money with me Because they're like, holy, fixing this car is so damn expensive And Ms is wasting a lot of money
Starting point is 00:40:34 You're right, I am, but you know, I can because I'm streaming it It's you can't really lose because I'm just going to stream more or stream a lot if I need to make more money for the car. Dude, and there's so much you could do with the car too, like straight piping the car, putting a wing on the car, wrapping the car,
Starting point is 00:40:51 different rims on the car. You could do so much to it. We just did a design stream. There was 20,000 people watch me just designed the car. And they were so attentive. They were watching it. They were making polls.
Starting point is 00:40:59 Yeah. They loved it. That is true. There's a massive community doing that on YouTube, but it hasn't really gotten to like the live viewer audience yet. So you could kind of pioneer that.
Starting point is 00:41:08 And the thing is just starting, I hate to say low enough, but with a hurricane, that there is so much room to go up from there. Like now, Tavarche set the bar so high on YouTube with a P1. And now he bought a Porsche 918. And that's like a $1.8 million, $2 million car. And then Hovie just bought a 300 SL Mercedes. And it's like the bar on YouTube is now like plus $2 million.
Starting point is 00:41:35 Yeah. My bar is going to probably go lower after Lambo. like what I want to get after this is like some early form of the Camaro. I think it'd be cool if you flip the car. I've been watching a lot of like the car for me. I got to sell it. Oh, there's a guy Doug something. He has a series right now that's like blowing him up, which is buying or flipping cars
Starting point is 00:41:55 until I can afford my dream car. And they're really, really good videos. I don't like that. Yeah, they're getting like a million views of pop. He went from like, I think he literally zero subscribers to like 100,000 after the second video in the series. It's crazy. How much are you going to spend on the Lambo?
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Starting point is 00:42:36 To fix it and to make it running, it's about $65,000. To do all the cool shit I want to do to it, which is get a kit, I want to get a wide body kit for it. And, you know, some air suspension and also new exhaust possibly in tuning it. You're looking at another $100,000. Okay. I would tell you not to do all. I tell you just get it running. Enjoy the car, then wrap it.
Starting point is 00:43:08 But it depends how much money is making from the stream. I'm just saying you're not going to get a positive R.O.I. On a wide body and tuning the... Not everything's about money, Graham. Tuning the car. I'm going to tell you, big waste of money.
Starting point is 00:43:18 I agree. The resale on that? I mean, listen, the resale's already kind of messed up, but you mess it up even more when you're like, you got a salvaged car. It was in a bad accident, and you tune it, and it's just... And it's going to make the car
Starting point is 00:43:33 slightly less reliable. But if I can do two streams tuning the car, I'll pay for the tuning. But you could do... two streams wrapping the car or you could like wrap it why? Because it's cooler that you have a wide body kit
Starting point is 00:43:47 when you get that you get from Tokyo that's like a it's going to be a one of one custom car. That's the whole point of West Coast customs you're doing something completely unique this car is going to be one of one. If I just get a wrap it's boring I want to make this thing look sick as hell. Yeah but can't you get a different body kit on it
Starting point is 00:44:03 like make it look like a different car like... See I'm not smart with cars so I don't know but Every guy who's telling me says my car is sick and I should keep it. And to me, yes, I'm spending way too much money. I'm not, I'm obviously know that there's going to be some finance comments saying you're stupid. But to me, it's good content and that is worth the money. Now, is it worth $100,000?
Starting point is 00:44:27 To me, I don't know. That's a good question. Depends on my videos do. Would you say, is streaming harder than a nine to five? Yes. I'm not kidding. you. Because that like a 100% resound yes. Well, here's the thing. It depends on the nine to five. You go to an average nine to five. What does that even mean nowadays? Right. I have friends back home in
Starting point is 00:44:52 New Jersey. Whether nine to five is they wake up, they're on their computer for maybe two to three hours a day, half the time they're doing something else watching YouTube videos or even streams. That's their work and they pretend that they do eight hours a day five days a week. I know what they do. Nothing. Yes, my job is harder than a lot of people's fake tech jobs that they have, where they're writing chat, CBT emails, or they're just answering a bunch of stuff for maybe an hour or two a day. Yes, my job is harder than that. What would you compare it to?
Starting point is 00:45:23 You're an entrepreneur. You don't stop working. I'm always thinking about my stream, my content, how to grow, what I can do better, if this is good content, because that's what it takes to be a top streamer. You need to be working 24-7. It's not a job. It's a lifestyle. Streaming has to become your life.
Starting point is 00:45:40 If it's not, you will never make it. You have to make sure that you're always caring, always trying to do more, always trying to do better. Because that's how difficult it is to do nowadays, right? It's impossible to get into streaming. I agree with you. I think it's not just being in front of the camera, but it's also strategy, title, thumbnail,
Starting point is 00:45:57 and you have to constantly think about it. And if you're not working harder than everyone else, you're going to fall off and no one's going to watch you. It's a lot of stress mentally. it's a lot of pressure mentally. The reward is there for sure, money-wise, right? But it's a lot of stress, pressure, dealing with stuff.
Starting point is 00:46:13 And what's difficult about it is not necessarily that you have to go live. It's you have to go live and put out a show. Now with all this pressure, with this stress that you have involved, you have to entertain for eight hours straight. You know, you have a bad day. You're not feeling good.
Starting point is 00:46:28 It doesn't matter. You have to go live and you have to put on a smile and entertain for eight hours where people are staring you down in a camera or you have to hang out with people and do that. Most normal jobs, you can kind of fake it
Starting point is 00:46:39 because it's a lot easier. You're not having to entertain. You might just have to put on a smile. But for streaming, you have to entertain to keep the viewers there. So I would say my job is definitely harder than most nine to fives. Today, I would say,
Starting point is 00:46:53 is my job harder than a garbage man or some of the action worst construction or a job like that? No. I think that they work way harder than us because it's physical labor. I think those jobs are much more difficult, but a lot of jobs that are your mundane
Starting point is 00:47:06 jobs nowadays that people work three hours and pretend they work 40 hours a week. Yeah, my job's harder than your job. So the whole environment of streaming is way harder to grow now, but you kind of, you had a really strong growth, I feel like, when you're first kind of, I guess, started on that, that growth journey. What would you say are the top three things that you did in order to explode on Twitch? Well, I personally, when I studied Twitch. So I didn't just come into Twitch saying, I'm a viewer. I didn't watch Twitch for fun. I watched Twitch for fun. I watched Twitch. to study what they do and how I could do it better. So I watched Twitch for about three years
Starting point is 00:47:40 constantly learning what people do. I watched the top streamers soda pop and Greek Godex, Recful. I watched what they do and I said, how can I make that mind? How can I grow myself? And what I did is like, I have an idea. I was driving to Florida with my dad.
Starting point is 00:47:55 I'm like, why don't I make documentaries on streamers? And what I'll do is I'll make it funny. I'll make it dumb, not as serious. And I'll send it to them because they need content. That's the one thing that streamers need is content all the time
Starting point is 00:48:09 and they love their egos being boosted. So I made the videos wholesome, sweet, and funny, right? And I'll take the react of them, put it on my channel, slowly grow my YouTube
Starting point is 00:48:19 and then hopefully become a streamer one day through that. So what I did is I made these videos. I made a video called Who is Tyler One? And I was with my friend named Glink at the time and he's like,
Starting point is 00:48:30 dude, you know what you should do? Take this video and tweet it to everybody because I just finished it after two weeks of working nonstop. So tweet it and let's see what happens. And Tyler did not react to it. Michaela, who's his girlfriend at the time, did not react to it.
Starting point is 00:48:48 Tyler's brother named E-Rob watched the video because he has no content and he drinks all day. So he watched the video on stream and he told his chat to go push it. They did because they were like, this video's funniest and it blew up from there. It went from getting 100 views in a day. to tens of thousands to now it has like five or six million. And I started doing that for a lot of the content creators at the time, and it blew everything up I had.
Starting point is 00:49:15 From there, I got invited to go on an RV trip with Ice Poseidon. I'm sure you guys are aware of who he is. I went on an RV trip with him, and then I basically started on Twitch with like 30 viewers. But I had all the connections. So I started just, you know, going in the chats and talking. But I always knew I was like more entertaining than most streamers. Most streamers are kind of introverted than scared.
Starting point is 00:49:34 I knew I was better collabbing. so I just used that in my connections to slowly grow over time. Yeah, like how fast did it take for you to turn it into a viable business? It happened in about five months I knew I was gonna make it. Like I went from the second I clicked Photoshop
Starting point is 00:49:49 and started making that video in Adobe Premiere to being able to say I could do this was about five months. But keep in mind, back then, there was no money on Twitch. The top streamers were maybe making $1,000 a day in ad revenue. It was not this business now
Starting point is 00:50:03 where people were making millions a month. So when would you say you started making real money? I started making real money in 2019. And when I started was their sponsor started to pop up more because they realized this industry is really good to get into. And I remember there was a sponsor for Daisy on the Xbox and I got $12,000 for two hours. It sucked. My viewership dropped dramatically. No one cared.
Starting point is 00:50:26 But I got $12,000. And I'm like, wait a minute. If this keeps happening and I keep growing, I'll be rich. I can make money from this. I can grow my business. So that's when I realized that this is real. Because what's interesting is before 2019, 2018 Twitch to 2012, it was all through donations. There was no subbing.
Starting point is 00:50:44 There was no ads. You just made money through donations. So a lot of the top streamers back then, like Recful or Soda Poppin, they would get donations from these oilers. We'd call them oil princes. And they would be like $20,000 sometimes, $30,000. Huge donations that would just come in from straight up oil princes. I had one. One of mine, his name was Hamad, and he said an oil prince from Saudi Arabia, and he would just give me tens of thousands of dollars.
Starting point is 00:51:12 What did he want? What did he want? He wanted me to be successful. He's like, I believe in you. And he called me one time on Skype in 2019, and he was in a Rolls-Royce in the middle of the desert. And he showed me his others, and he had like four of the cars just sitting right there. And then he went 100 miles an hour, and he got banned on Twitch. Where is he now?
Starting point is 00:51:32 He's in Dubai. Do you talk to him still? He comes to my chat. He says, what's up? He puts this remote called Try Hard, which was pretty popular back then. He puts that and just leaves. I'm like, what's up, bro? But yeah, I still talk to a lot of my old viewers.
Starting point is 00:51:43 Stay around. If you were to be able to invest in three streamers right now, who do you think has the most growth potential? You know, that's going to be a question. I don't even know if I can answer. Because the truth is, I think that with Twitch's massive decline in viewership, I wouldn't invest in anybody because Twitch is a dying platform. It's dying because of its ads and it's dying. quick. Twitch is down 25% this year. Twitch is continuing to fall since the peak in 2021.
Starting point is 00:52:12 I don't think I would invest in anybody. I would hold my money and wait until GTA 6 comes out in six or seven months and I would find streamers there. My belief is I think that Twitch is slowly going to keep dying. There's no good games. No one wants to watch it. But when GTA 6 comes out, I think Twitch is going to double in viewership in a day. And it's just going to hold that for a long time. GtA6 RP is going to be huge. When you see that, that's when I would invest in those streamers.
Starting point is 00:52:41 The small ones that are funny, interesting, bam, now the market's hot, right? Who can I invest in to grow? That's where I would go. Yeah, but for streamers, couldn't that include Kik or going on like TikTok Live? Yes, it could, but I don't trust Kik's numbers.
Starting point is 00:52:57 And TikTok Live is, you're there today, gone tomorrow. Twitch is something where if you are able to hold a community and you're consistent, you'll probably hold that community, at least decently. But the thing is right now is people aren't really growing.
Starting point is 00:53:11 The top streamers are not, who are so viral in every other aspect, TikTok, everything, they're only getting like 10 to 15K viewers on their normal streams. That's nothing. These guys are way bigger than I ever was. How many people are viewbodding?
Starting point is 00:53:26 A decent amount. So Twitch actually recently took down viewbots and the views on every platform or a lot of streamers dropped like 20 25%. Viewbots have definitely taken over the website over the past few years. It has been something that most streamers
Starting point is 00:53:42 have known about, but the thing is, and this is what people don't understand, is they think that it's always the streamer that does it. I know I get viewbotted. I'm not stupid. I know that there are people outside of me that view bought me. Hell, I have been viewbotted before with a sponsor,
Starting point is 00:53:58 right? So a sponsor will be there, and they you know, view bought you so you look like you get more views. Because who really going to care. Let's say you're sponsored by Sony, right? They have a marketing department. That marketing department hires another marketing department who then finds your agency, who then pays you, right? There's a huge line of chain. Okay, let's say this marketing team here boosts your numbers just a little bit, and they report back to Sony and they say, hey, look, the numbers were great. Sony doesn't give a fuck, they're Sony. So these agencies view bought a lot of streamers all the time to upsell them
Starting point is 00:54:33 like crazy. And that's what's happened a lot on Twitch. I don't believe a lot of these streamers know they're getting botted. I think the truth is a lot of the time with these streamers is the agency is the one doing it. It's also proven that viewers view bot streamers all the time. Tyler
Starting point is 00:54:48 One was view bodied for years by one viewer. His name was like Tyler, lull Tyler 1 laughing at you. And he found out he was botting him and he banned him and he got prom band on Twitch and then Tyler's number dramatically because for years this guy was just botting his dream. Why would he do that?
Starting point is 00:55:07 He likes him. So he just wants to make him look better. Yeah. How expensive is it to VueBot? It depends. So there's embedding. Embedding is very expensive because you're paying for an embed. And then normal botting is super cheap.
Starting point is 00:55:22 It's like, I mean, I don't know the prices. I'm not going to pretend I do know the prices. But I know it's not nearly as expensive to bought rather than to embed. Wouldn't it be obvious, though, if you're not just getting as many comments? or do they fake the comments too? So nowadays there are bots that apparently can fake comments and they can fake
Starting point is 00:55:40 subscribing to you. So it's pretty crazy nowadays. It's not some small thing. There are some times where like, you know, viewers viewbot, like there's, I remember one time in April last year, 2003, I don't even remember,
Starting point is 00:55:54 where I averaged 50,000 viewers in a month. Because just some guy was just viewbot in the fuck at me, Hassan, and Pokemon all day. I liked it. I didn't care. cool. I'm just going to sit here and play, you know, Mind Sweeper with 50,000 viewers. I was just doing whatever the fuck I wanted. Um, but it's, it's tough to say if it's obvious or not, some viewers, sometimes yes, it's something that you can't really control and there's nothing you can really do.
Starting point is 00:56:19 And with your agency, right, it's like, well, I know this is happening. I'm just not going to say anything. Like, I've been bought it by agencies before. I just don't say anything because I don't really care. Makes my numbers look better. And if it works for the, the guy up top, it works. for me. And it's interesting because people are like, well, companies must hate that. That's fraud. Right. That's fraud as a problem. Right. The front page of Twitch is embedded. So if you go to Twitch right now, the front page is a carousel and companies will pay a lot of money to be in the front of Twitch. So that way, you know, they, their streamer might get an extra 10,000 viewers. But it's not real. Everyone on the front page of Twitch is not watching that streamer. It's just they're on the front page.
Starting point is 00:57:03 not paying attention, right? So they, companies will pay for it. They know that embeds happen. A lot of times they just don't care because they're like, well, I'm trying to hit my KPI's to go to that agency and say we did a good job. That's wild.
Starting point is 00:57:19 I wonder if now some of the advertisers are becoming aware of this like fake viewing problem on Twitch and that's why the AdSense revenue payouts started going down and why creators are now putting a bunch more ads in, so fewer people, and then they start botting. Yeah. And it's kind of like,
Starting point is 00:57:34 I don't think that's it. I think the reason why Twitch is losing money is because there are, I just think in my opinion, I mean, I know some stuff for extra, but I believe that the return on investment for these advertisers is so low
Starting point is 00:57:51 and Twitch asks for so much money, it's not worth it. They're going to TikTok where the KPIs are better, where they're getting better return on their investment for tenth of the price. That's true. I think a lot of the viewers
Starting point is 00:58:02 are pretty AFK on Twitch anyways. And so, like, you're not, if you're paying for someone with, like, 10,000 viewers, you're probably only getting, like, 2,000, like 20% percent. Let me ask you this question. If I play a game, you're paying me three, playing a game on Twitch for three hours, right? Okay. That first hour, you may be, like, talking, doing your talking points, and people might be interested or not interested, but do you really think they're going to be interested in
Starting point is 00:58:25 the second hour or the third? Why are you still paying me? It's, it's a depreciation every single hour that, you're not. you're losing that retention, that the viewer might be AFK, that the viewership is continuing to go down, because whenever you do ads, your numbers go down, right? So it's like, well, what's the return? And the answer is it's so low after that first hour. So companies are realizing and what they're doing now is they're going based off of clicks, they're going off of other metrics, they're not just going off of viewership because they can't. And what's interesting is,
Starting point is 00:58:57 because I own mythic talent, I own an agency. The best people who are, are in the industry that make the most money for sponsors through clicks is V-tubers. By far their community is gun-ho and just clicks on everything they tell you to. They buy everything you say. They are loyalists and they have so much money because they're all just a bunch of engineers that, you know, like V-tubers. They have a lot of money. People that have the least are usually the younger kids now, the generations that are 15, 16 years old. They don't have all this money in the world, you know, so they don't even click a lot of the time.
Starting point is 00:59:32 because they're on mobile. That's what a lot of viewers are on mobile. So you started a gaming organization back in 2020 called OTP. I'm curious, was that profitable and what was the purpose behind doing? So OTCK, the point of it was to basically create an org where we all make content together and then we would one day sell the org, right? We wanted to sell OTP to a company where it's like, hey, you're in charge of this now and we basically take a step back at around this time of my age.
Starting point is 00:59:59 I was like I'm around when we're all 30, 35, whatever. We take a step back. There's new young blood in the OTC sphere and we just basically chill. Well, that failed miserably because the truth is, uh, orgs in general, just no one wanted to buy it. And it makes sense why you don't want to buy it, right? In 2018, it was such a hot word org group. A hundred thieves sold for $100 million or something like that.
Starting point is 01:00:27 They made a ton of money off that deal. but when we got in, we got in too late and all the companies started becoming smart and they're just like, okay, well, because it was me and Asman were the two biggest people, they're like, okay, but what happens if Ms. Kiff and Asman take a huge break and we're like, oh, well, that won't happen.
Starting point is 01:00:43 Well, Asman did for eight months. They know that. They're like, when Asman took a break, you guys lost a lot. What happens when one of your streamers gets canceled? What happens when there's a controversy? It hurts you over the whole business. So unless you guys are squeaky, clean telitubbies,
Starting point is 01:00:58 You're basically asking for this to be a failure and no one took the bite. We did not get, we got, the truth is it just didn't make sense for anyone to ever purchase. And it didn't make sense to really run and operate. So now it's very small. I don't do OTP anymore because I moved here. They're all in Texas. But the thing is we still have mythic talent, which is our agency. It's an umbrella.
Starting point is 01:01:21 So it's under it. And we do have StarForge systems, StarForge PCs. They're huge. They're everywhere. They actually are great people. and we started that business on Twitch. We actually got really lucky. What happened was we made StarForge PCs
Starting point is 01:01:38 and we're all like part of it, right? We're all owners, we're great, OTK. And when we made the PC company, we actually f***ed up real bad. There was a piece in the computer that we didn't know was cheap when we first made the computers. And this guy was a reviewer of computers
Starting point is 01:01:57 a reviewer of computers and he was on Twitch and he got clipped. Shout to this guy who clipped this and he said, and he was a big YouTuber who exposes computer companies. Like, I'm going to ruin StarForge. And these guys don't understand that if they just change this one wire from $10 to $20, they'd have a great PC, but they're being cheapest. So we saw that and we're like, okay, let's just change that part.
Starting point is 01:02:19 Boom. Everyone's like, wait, their PCs are amazing. So we literally got saved by that guy clipping us and us realizing that. Then, Linus Tech Tips reviewed our PC and we were scared because we're like,
Starting point is 01:02:31 holy fuck we're done. He loved it. He thought our PCs were amazing from day one. He's like, these are great PCs a little bit messy but nothing crazy.
Starting point is 01:02:39 And then Asman reacted to it which then blew it the fuck up. It went to like 7 million views. It's one of his biggest videos ever. And then from there, it's just been huge success. We sponsor streamers. We get a,
Starting point is 01:02:49 you know, for a little bit and then they get a lot because there's no real computer companies on Twitch anymore. So we don't have any competition. We just give people money and then we make a return on our investment. How much does the computer company make? It's in the tens of millions of dollars now, I'm sure. I don't look at it every single day, but I know it's a growing business that is continuing
Starting point is 01:03:08 to grow and they are super successful. I mean, the dude... So what do you get? Do you just get distributions or so every month? Oh, currently right now, we do not get any distributions. We are literally putting it all back in because we fully believe this company could be huge one day. Like, I think it could be worth $100 million dollar push. How much do you own it that? I own a decent chunk of it because it's an umbrella under OTK. I'm not going to say numbers, but we all own a decent amount of every company that we own. So what percentage of streams do you think are manufactured content versus actual real organic behavior? What do you mean manufactured?
Starting point is 01:03:43 Like sort of trying to get a clip and like exaggerate a behavior or like even faked content. Do you think there's a lot of faked content on Twitch? No. I mean, it depends on the person. There's a lot of people that are trying to farm clips a lot, a lot of the younger guys. That's because their audience likes it. They grow from it. Is it fake? It's improv.
Starting point is 01:04:03 That's all it is. It's not fake. They don't fake clips usually. It's more like this happened in this scenario and they're improvving it to get a clip. I do it all the time. Like you're just figuring things out. You're like, that's a funny moment. That's all it is.
Starting point is 01:04:15 Most clips are just funny actions or moments. The new viewers, the new streamers are very entertaining. They're good at what they do. And they understand that clips, push their channel very far. So they just do more improv all the time. They're not thinking necessarily what's the best stream. They're thinking what's the best thing I could do next to farm a clip to bring out that improv side of me. Who would you say is the most overrated streamer I know? Well, really quick, I just want to say, here's your reminder. Remember that doctor's appointment
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Starting point is 01:07:22 Again, gusto.com slash iced with the link down below in the description. Who would you say is the most overrated streamer right now? Probably me, honestly. Who's the most overrated streamer? I don't really know. I don't watch a lot of streams. I can tell you who I think is the best streamer right now.
Starting point is 01:07:42 I do think it's speed. I think speed is the best content creator right now in terms of just what he's been doing and his movement he's had. I think there's other ones too. Like there's this guy named Stable Ronaldo. I think he's a...
Starting point is 01:07:52 We filmed on him yesterday. Oh, really? Yeah. Genuinely funny, what he'd he do. Like, he to me is someone that I... He reminds you of myself when I was younger where I just didn't understand the world. He's like a non-jaded version of me.
Starting point is 01:08:05 And I think he's a really good streamer. I was surprised because I had watched his content and it's obviously like, I can't get into it. But talking to him, he's so strategic. And like, very smart, very calculated. He's a good dude. He's not smart. He's not dumb.
Starting point is 01:08:19 Like, he's very articulate. Yeah. He knows what he's doing. He knows how to play the game. He's good with clips. He's just a genuinely funny dude. And he's, I do think he has a lot of room to grow. Because I think when you go on Twitch, there's a lot of streamers that you're like, well, this is guys probably better as a clip.
Starting point is 01:08:36 I think Ron is a great streamer. I think his whole stream is just good. When I watch it, no, he's too young for me to care, right? I'm not going to watch a 21-year-old all day. But I also just watch Gossip Girls who are my. talking, but at the same time, I'm not watching Ron. But I think he's a great stream. I've seen his streams. I'm like, yeah, this guy gets it. Was there ever a moment in time where you genuinely considered quitting streaming? Oh, yeah, all the time. I wanted to quit streaming. I started having
Starting point is 01:09:00 ideas of quitting or retiring five years ago. And my dream was always when I'm 30, I'll quit. Because I said to myself, I know how mentally exhausting this job is, because it's very mentally exhausting. And I was like, at 30, I'll have enough money to quit. 30, I'll retire. well, I'm 30. And it's not necessarily that I'm, I'm not retired. I just, I've definitely taken a step back. I stream six days a week, eight hours a day. But, um, I don't see myself retiring anytime soon.
Starting point is 01:09:30 Retirement sounds boring. I just thought about it. I was like, it's a great idea for about two weeks and then you're bored. I'm curious, being a pretty big person on Twitch. I mean, you could say you have celebrity. I imagine there's a lot of really interesting opportunities that come alongside that. What would you say are like some of the crazy? craziest DMs you've gotten from people.
Starting point is 01:09:48 Is that I'm a celebrity? Because I'm like, that's just not true. I'm not a celebrity. No, I think that you have celebrity, right? Like, if you go and like, I mean, there were literally like five minutes ago, people were, like, freaking out as they were walking by. I don't know if that was because of this guy. Maybe that's because of us, you know.
Starting point is 01:10:01 Maybe like, oh my God, that's Jack Shelby. Yeah, I don't know. I mean, they were, yeah, but anyways, I think that I'm sure you get a lot of crazy opportunities and DMs and stuff like that. What would you say is the craziest opportunity like that? I mean, I don't really think that opportunities, but, yeah, Like, this thing is streamers are just so transformative with their content that we're just so well known, right? Because you guys make a video and then you have to like make clips yourself or try to organize how to be strategic.
Starting point is 01:10:28 Dude, with streamers, we just have clippers that just clip our shit because they're trying to grow their brand. You know, stake logos are on our. We can have, I can make five TikToks in a day just by being an idiot on Twitch. So for us, it's so easy every day to make content that we're just so known now. But yeah, like I get recognized all the time. But those people don't watch me and they're like, oh, wow, dude, I love this stream. Half the time they're like Mize Keefe or Mix Kiff because they just seen my clips. And yes, like I'm very well known.
Starting point is 01:10:56 I walk down the street people sometimes, most of the time. Okay. When I sell my business, I want the best tax and investment advice. I want to help my kids and I want to give back to the community. Ooh, then it's the vacation of a lifetime. I wonder if my head of office has a forever setting. An IG Private Wealth Advisor creates the clarity you need with plans that harmonize your business, your family, and your dreams. Get financial advice that puts you at the center.
Starting point is 01:11:26 Find your advisor at IGPrivatewealth.com. People recognize me, but it's never really, it's not usually in a way of like, I love your content. It's like, I saw you play Mario 64, four years ago on a clip. Or like, yeah, your sister's ass was showing and I saw your face. It's never like a genuine moment. It is sometimes, don't get me wrong, but most of the time it's just clipping. That's so interesting because I feel like whenever we get recognized, it's like they watch the podcast.
Starting point is 01:11:53 And so they see us once a week for like two hours a week. And so they know a lot of, like a lot about what's going on. It's very rarely like, hey, aren't you that one guy? Dude, it's so funny. Every time people come up to me, they're like, dude, did Jack get a girlfriend yet? They always ask about your dating life. Speaking of. So is Jack dating someone right now?
Starting point is 01:12:12 Speaking of, I'm curious, how is it dating? as a streamer. How is it dating as a streamer? It's terrible. Really? Oh, yeah. Why? Because you, you, it's, well, when you date someone else that's a streamer, like, you want to usually date that someone understands your business or like what you're going through, right? That's hell. Because what happens is Twitch is high school. That's all it is. It's a glorified high school. You have the people sitting at the lunch table with the nerds, the geeks. You have the people that are losers. Um, you know, You've got the sports guys, whoever, you have all these lunch tables in high school. That's all it is. It's just a high school. And if you date someone, what happens is, you know, friends pick sides usually in that high school. That's what happens. They leave you or they leave them.
Starting point is 01:13:02 So when you break up with someone, it usually put the whole feng shui of the website almost. And it can cause a lot of drama or indirect problems for you throughout your career. and it's definitely done that for me. It's definitely done it for a lot of other streamers. I will never date another streamer again in my life. Dating, I mean, there's a lot of women. So it depends on the streamer. I'm one that I bring on a lot of women,
Starting point is 01:13:26 and I also use women a lot on stream. So a lot of women do come to me being like, I'll you, just bring me on your stream. But I'm very against. Is straight up tell you that? Well, that's so obvious. So like in my DMs, trying to hang out with me, like, off stream to then like,
Starting point is 01:13:41 oh, come on stream. Or do I just. How do you know they're not just genuinely interested in you? Bro, I am not, no way. I am a f***ed. There's no way. You don't think there's any chance. They're like genuinely or like a am.
Starting point is 01:13:51 Bro, half the time these girls that are trying to go on my stream, they have like husbands and they're like, yeah, I want to fuck you basically. Just for the flirt with me and then be like calling my stream and then they make money. I've had a girls come on my stream. Sometimes they make like 10, 20K in a day just going on my stream. No. Because my viewers are Coomers to the max. They're just Twitch chatters.
Starting point is 01:14:07 They're like, ooh boobs and they go nuts. How do they make the money though? Is it like a funnels to an only fan? or something? Yeah, the only fans. They just bend over real quick, be like, you dropped your controller, and then I'm like,
Starting point is 01:14:16 you made more money than me today. That's really what happens. Do you get them to pay you to come on your stream? Biggest regret of my streaming career is I never made an only fans agency. I, uh, why don't you start one now?
Starting point is 01:14:27 Because I feel like there was a time for that. I'm a car guy. Now you're a car guy. I just don't want to do it. Like, it's like, I've done it for seven years. I brought on OnlyFans girls and did that.
Starting point is 01:14:39 I'm not trying to redo that again when I've just slowly gotten away from it. What do you think of Jack Doherty doing that? He's, oh, you asked me who's the worst streamer, Jack Daughtry. He gets 300 viewers and he's still the worst, most overrated streamer. He sucks. He's actually a, he's like a terrible person. What do I think of him?
Starting point is 01:14:56 I think any girl that's with him is very sad. I think he's a sad human being in general, and everyone feels that way. He's just a loser. Like, he's the worst streamer. Do you think that perhaps there could be some strategy behind what he's doing? And he has this persona because it is strategy. It makes it talkable. Yeah, no, there's definitely.
Starting point is 01:15:12 a strategy with what he is, but I also know from firsthand from people who hung out with him, he's just a dick. Like, it's not just this like, oh, I'm a strategist. It's like, oh, well, I'm this piece of, let's use this, because he's just a dickhead. So I will say in his defense, anyone that's willing to do what he did to, like, bothering people on the street, you're a dickhead. Like, you're just a bad person. So I will say, in his defense, five years ago, we had him on the podcast. And it was an early podcast, like eight o'clock in the morning. on like a weekday. And I was thinking, because I was not familiar with him,
Starting point is 01:15:47 and I saw his content, I'm like, there's no way this kid is going to be on time. Because I saw him pulling pranks and neighbors and, like, disturbing the piece and that. I thought he was going to come in late, was going to be just like. Disrespectful. My gosh, he shows up, like, five minutes early.
Starting point is 01:16:03 He's so kind, so nice. Now, granted, that podcast was five years ago. But, like, he really seemed sincere. like back then in person. It's easy to fake for two hours. I mean, we spoke off camera and everything. I mean, he might be sincere to some people, but he also could,
Starting point is 01:16:22 I genuinely believe that that kid was a nuisance since day one. I mean, he just, I've seen his videos from 10 years ago and he's still a prick. Like, he's just a dick kid that doesn't have to grow up. I, you could tell me all you want that he was good on your podcast. I'm sure he was because he probably saw opportunity,
Starting point is 01:16:37 but he was just that guy. You know, when you dangle, views in my face, I'm going to change because I can grow, especially when I'm small. What about, like, people like Vitaly or Johnny Somali, extremers like that that are now in jail? Do I, I mean, I truly believe that fame, I mean, you know how it is fame and attention can really your brain up. And I think those people are just mentally deranged. I mean, Vitaly doing what he does and did what he did.
Starting point is 01:17:08 And same with Johnny. It just blows my mind that it's a reality. I don't think they were like those terrible people before, but it definitely was brought out through streaming. You know what I think it is? It's like drinking, right? It changes, like, people say that drinking is just a personified version of who you really are and what you're thinking, right?
Starting point is 01:17:24 I would say it's very similar to streaming as you get an ego, as you get more famous, as you want to push that envelope. You just continue to get it as a worst person. You know what I think it is, is that to continue growing to that degree, you have to keep one-uping yourself. And there's just a point where you can't keep one-uping yourself without getting in trouble. It's also that these content creators feel that it's their only way to get into the space.
Starting point is 01:17:46 Like, who's really being that of a person? Because if you are, you're probably getting some pretty insane national news, right? It's hard to get into the space being a good person. You go live and try to be funny or chill out and relax and play Minecraft. You're not going to get anywhere. So you have to do what's crazy to make it work. So they just take the most toxic communities in the world, the 4chanters, the whatever you want to call them, the swatters, the doxers. and they just go with them trying to make a community.
Starting point is 01:18:13 And it never works. Like they get like 200 viewers, but they get all this hate. So speaking of being swatted and doxed, what are your experiences with that? I imagine, I've always had this theory. Well, it's not really a, I mean, most people would probably agree with it. That I think the relationship between, like, the diehard viewers and a streamer, streamer is way more parisocial than like a viewer of a YouTube channel. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:18:34 Because they're spending time with you for eight hours a day or whatever. I mean, you can not argue and say that, some of my viewers have seen me more than they've seen their parents in real life, statistically. If you've been watching for eight years, you've watched me constantly, you've seen my face more than probably you've seen your parents' face. What are some of the craziest experiences that you've had? I'm guessing you've had, you know, probably stalkers or, you know, people that docks you
Starting point is 01:19:00 or people that swat you, like with relationships with fans? I've had a lot. I mean, I started with Ice Poseidon where we just got swatted every day on an RV bus. We had M4s put on our head while we got out of a bus multiple times. I've been swatted dozens of times. Swatting has gotten a lot less over the years because the technology's gotten better to find the swatters. A lot of swatters have gone to jail. So people are afraid to do it and they should be because it's way more difficult.
Starting point is 01:19:26 A lot of police now know about swatting. Back then it was not really known. So they're not as stupid. And a lot of times the streamers call the cops and say, hey, I'm this streamer. I live at Blank. just want to let you know there might be a dumb call one day about me and they usually will call you first
Starting point is 01:19:42 and then I'll hang up and then it's fine so it's definitely gotten away better but when it comes to stalkers I've had Lentie because it goes with having streamer relationships it goes with being close friends with other content creators
Starting point is 01:19:57 and their stalkers start going after you I've had stalkers come to when I'm going down the elevator in Austin, Texas waiting for me at the bottom stairs just talk to me and say that like they're here for XYZ or they're here for me. It's been a lot. What do they want?
Starting point is 01:20:15 Friendship, relationship. They think they're in love with us or that we're in love with them. They're schizophrenic usually. So they truly believe what they're thinking. I've had encounters with stalkers that are at hotels for months that are just waiting for us to come outside. I've had, we've had encounters where someone moved close to us for months that we didn't know about just so they can talk to us.
Starting point is 01:20:37 and then they went bankrupt and had to go back to their country because they just didn't have a job. They were just waiting for us to hopefully one day reach out to them. It's crazy stuff. And mine are bad, but there's some streamers that have way worse stalkers than I do, primarily girls, way more stalkers than we ever had. Hearing about Pokemon, like the length she goes to to make sure that they don't know where she is. Like I heard, maybe she said this, that she had to like remodel her kitchen
Starting point is 01:21:04 so that people couldn't reverse image search her backdrop to find where she lives. That's the thing. It's very easy nowadays to find your address. Like, I don't even try to pretend that people can't find me at all times because it's just so obvious. Like, I don't try to hide it.
Starting point is 01:21:21 I don't try to fight it. I just know that, like, yeah, you probably know where I live. I don't really care. But I'm also a guy, right? For girls, it's way different. For girls, it's like, that can be scary. That could be death.
Starting point is 01:21:33 Some of these streamers, viewers are insane. You know, they write to them, they call them, they'll harass their family for years. I don't really have that. I don't, I'm not interesting enough to do that too. I don't think people care. I'm curious. On the topics of streamers and their fans,
Starting point is 01:21:51 what about stream snipers? Who is Dr. Pepperman? I know he's given you Dr. Pepper quite a few times now. Yes. It's very, very, very popular. clips. I get recognized for that from kids. Like, dude, is Dr. Pepper guy. Like, what? I'll be honest. I don't know him. I have no idea who he is. He has never contacted me. I have never contacted him. No idea. I don't know him. I should look like. He's just some kid from,
Starting point is 01:22:20 I think, New York or somewhere that was he in Japan. I don't know. I have no idea. I've never said a single word to him because the thing is that is good content. Don't mess with it. Right. If it's a good thing, Don't mess with it. He comes in. He gives me a Dr. Pepper. He opens it. I drink it. It gets a lot of views.
Starting point is 01:22:39 Don't mess with it. I don't message him. He knows what he's doing. I know what I'm doing. I don't care what the rest is. Don't you want to know, like, how is he making money?
Starting point is 01:22:49 How do he get there? Because there's no sponsors, no brand deals, no ads, no nothing. He's like a, he's a mystery. Yes. And I would like to keep it that way.
Starting point is 01:22:58 Like, it's up to him if he wants to do something with it. But to me, it's not my job to expose that. I saw this one clip of someone who tried to chase him down, and then she started having, like, electrical issues with her stream. Like, she was trying to follow him and film him. And then, like, no one had ever done that before.
Starting point is 01:23:14 And then the first time someone did it, like, literally their footage started, like, it looked like it was being disrupted by some, like, EMF thing. It's like glitching out of a cutscene. Don't do it, right? Like, like, well, let's watch the cutscene. The cutscenes he walks away. You don't know where he goes. I saw that clip where she tried to follow him.
Starting point is 01:23:31 Why do that? Like you're ruining something good. He comes in. It's funny. It's interesting. He's the only good thing we have left. Right. So if you go and what she did was trying to follow him around and like, where is he going to go?
Starting point is 01:23:42 What car? It's like, come on. Let the guy make his bit and leave and keep the mysteriousness going. I will never message him and he'll never message me. And I don't think he's ever messaged any of us because I don't want to know what he's doing. If he comes in, I say what's up and I take the Dr. Pepper. Listening to creators who'd make Only fans drives me nuts. Why?
Starting point is 01:24:02 Because they don't work at all. At all. It's basically like posting an Instagram picture. But here's the thing. I'm sure people could look at you and be like, oh, but my job is so hard. And I don't make millions of you. I could do that. And they're probably wrong.
Starting point is 01:24:16 But only fans, girls. Maybe you're wrong with some of that too. I'm not. I've seen them do what they do. Though here's what they do. They have someone posting their stuff in the Philippines at $2 an hour, pretending to be them all day. So that way the dudes that are messaging them, them that are like, I want to fuck you. They're just going to some 38 year old dude in the Philippines.
Starting point is 01:24:37 Then they just go to a photo shoot maybe once a month and just do all their videos and pictures in a day, maybe two, and then they go home. They have nothing to do the rest of the month. So if you were a hot girl, would you do only fans? There is no question in the, I've been the biggest whore imaginable. I would not give a, of course I would. Actually, I wouldn't be a big whore at all because that doesn't make the money. It's better to be scandalous. I would be like, you know, Flashy show a little bit, but not too much. I would totally have an only fan. Yes.
Starting point is 01:25:06 No question about it. Yeah, I was blown away when I saw Sophia Rain on David Dobrick's blog. It was what, $83 million in a year and a half? Now, don't get me wrong. Some of these girls work really hard because they're constantly making videos, TikToks posting. They are doing a lot of stuff. I know some girls like this girl named Mort Pye, who's a friend of mine.
Starting point is 01:25:23 She's working at 12 hours a day on Twitch. Then she goes offline and does videos and TikToks and posts. They're also girls that straight up do nothing. thing. I'm curious, though, also, you did turn down this steak deal or the online gambling casino deal and lost $36 million. But I'm curious, I'm curious, what is the biggest stake deal that you've heard of? I told you, it was XQC. It's like $100 million. So it's that officially XQC $100 million over two years. Yeah, I mean, there's other streamers, I'm sure, that have made close to that, but XCC was just the most profound known one. How much do you think he's going to walk with at the end of two years? Because he's going to gamble a lot of it.
Starting point is 01:25:59 Probably 200 million. because you got to realize something. Like, yes, he had that money, but he got it in Ethereum. Ethereum's only skyrocketed over the past year. Wow. But what about, I thought he's gambling with the money. Sure, but he's not gambling $100 million.
Starting point is 01:26:16 So he's gambling, and I'm sure he's maybe, let's say, he's a little bit lower or break even or maybe he's above. I don't know, but he got it from Ethereum two years ago. So he's not bleeding millions a month when he's gambling? No, not at all. Because while he's streaming gambling on now, He has two-year contracts over. Now, if he streams gambling, he's getting paid.
Starting point is 01:26:34 So he's using that money to scramble with Ethereum. Do you think that he's the wealthiest streamer? Yeah, it's not even a question. XTC is the wealthiest. More than Aiden Ross? Yeah, for sure. I bet XTC's worth like $200 million. And I bet you eight, the thing is like, I don't know, right?
Starting point is 01:26:50 Like, Aiden Ross could be. To me, it's like they're both, ying and yang. They're both the richest streamers on Twitch or in the industry. Nothing like Speed or Kai. I don't think speed's worth, I'm sure speeds worth millions and millions of dollars, but I just don't think it's that much because he does short streams. He doesn't really promote anything. He put it a crypto scheme a while ago. I don't even money on that, but that was like five years ago. Kai is definitely worth a lot of money, but it's nothing compared to XQC and Aidan Ross. They're deep in the gambling that you can't beat it. So let's talk about you and your finances over time if you're open to talking about it.
Starting point is 01:27:26 Sure. When did you start making like crazy money at what? 2020. 2020. And what was revenue looking like? Where was the money coming from? It was all sponsors. Sponsors. And then back then a lot of it was advertising on Twitch.
Starting point is 01:27:39 You run ads. So I was making a lot from that. 20,000 to 30,000 subscribers a month on Twitch. That's 3.5 times 20, which is what, like 80,000 or something. So I was making a lot on Twitch. Sponsors were very heavy back then because they had nothing to spend money on besides us because COVID was happening. So where did they put all their money towards? Streamers.
Starting point is 01:27:58 I did almost a sponsor like every other day because they didn't have anything else to spend it on. There was no TikTok stuff. Nothing was happening and everyone was talking about Twitch all day. I mean, I would sometimes sit there with 40,000 viewers doing nothing because they're just like, yep, we're bored. We have nothing to do. So what was the most you ever made in a month?
Starting point is 01:28:17 The most I ever made in the month is probably like $900 to $800,000. Wow. Yeah. How? Sponsors. I mean, I could have made way more. I turned down a solid. Arabia deal, which I regret turning down, that was $500,000 to go. And then it was like $400,000 to
Starting point is 01:28:34 come back. It was like $900,000 or something. What do you mean to come back? Like, it basically, if you took the deal and then you went and then you did the whole thing, like you didn't just do a little bit of it. It was like a week or something. I had to go for like some Fortnite thing. Then you would get 900K. So it was like 500K up front. And why did you say no? Because Hassan Piker, that piece of shit was like, blah, blah, blah. Don't do it. And I'm like, damn it. And then I got a hate thread on Twitch. And back then I was a bitch. So I said, all right, I'm not doing it. And I regret it because I wish I did it.
Starting point is 01:29:01 What was the issue with it back then? Saudi Arabia is a bad place. Because women, you know, they can't drive and stuff. They were inviting one of my friends to come with me who was a girl. I was like, damn it, dude, like, I lost a lot of money. I know a lot of comedians actually just got invited to Saudi Arabia. Tim Dillon is going to Saudi Arabia. Really?
Starting point is 01:29:18 There's a massive comedian thing happening. Yeah, like a big performance over there. That's funny. Where I think the Saudi government is paying them. They just want to like up their... They have so much money and they want to like entertain with like Western entertainers. Yeah, they have infinite cash. Yeah, I mean, they, they're doing the, they own the live golf, right?
Starting point is 01:29:36 Yeah. The massive golf thing that's like competing with the PGA. Yeah, they just have a bunch of money. Wow. I don't know. I don't think they own PGA. I think they own live, right? Yeah.
Starting point is 01:29:45 But they're, yeah, they have infinite money. I regret that, but I made 900K in one month. That was the most I ever made, something like that, 800 or 900K. Uh, I could have definitely made more. back then. But I also thought back then, like, the money was going to be infinite forever on Twitch. I always thought, like, dude, money's money, whatever, because like, I'll have so much money and I'll have, it'll be forever. But that changed dramatically over the last few years. Advertisers have left Twitch. People don't subscribe as much. Numbers are down dramatically as Twitch goes on. So I make probably like, I used to make like $150,000 to $200,000 a month on Twitch. I'd say I make like anywhere between like 40 to $70k now or maybe probably even less.
Starting point is 01:30:23 And I still run double. I run double the ads. I used to. So that's your total earnings right now about $50,000 or $50,000 a month. Your total earnings right now are about $50,000 a month. Yeah, it's about like 50 to 60 K. I would say a month I make from just Twitch. And then there's sponsors where that's a lot of my, that's most of my money nowadays is through sponsors and YouTube revenue is just a little bit, but nothing crazy. Does that skew your perception of money when you go from making so much to having it drop like 80%? Oh, yeah. it's definitely changed me.
Starting point is 01:30:57 Back then, money just felt like paper. I just felt like, I want something. I'm going to get it. But nowadays, I definitely take a second to think, right? Like, I was like, hmm, I could walk to this podcast or I could take a Lyme scooter, but I'm probably going to walk, right? Because you want to save as much money as possible. So I do think about money now when I just didn't before, because it was endless.
Starting point is 01:31:19 What were you doing it with it back then? Investing it. That's all I did. Good. I invested all my money. I bought boxes for Nintendo boxes. They didn't go up in value, but they pretty much stayed the same.
Starting point is 01:31:32 I was big in collecting before everyone else was. Like 2019, I loved collecting boxes, Nintendo stuff. So I have a huge collection of Nintendo. But that's not why my investments. I have been investing in the SMP 500 for years. My big thing is if it drops 1%, I always put money into it. I was big in Nvidia four or five years ago.
Starting point is 01:31:52 I, yeah, I've made a lot in my investments. Have you made more in investing than you have from streaming? I would say yes. If you, because the thing is what streaming is I make a lot more for sure, but I spend a lot. Sure. But my net is definitely way more through stocks. I've quadrupled my stocks in the past few years, I'd say. Last year I made like 70%.
Starting point is 01:32:15 I think I'd forget. Oh, all because of Nvidia probably, right? A lot of was in Vigua. I was in some Bitcoin ETF. for fund and then yeah my portfolio has been going up a lot dude you gotta give jack some tips
Starting point is 01:32:29 huh yeah give me some tips dude help him tell me what stocks to buy oh bro i mean listen i have a manager and then i have my own you know who actually tells me a lot of stock stuff is my chat so do you have a number in mind that you're trying to hit
Starting point is 01:32:41 uh my number's like I want to be able to make enough where i feel like the 5% if i just put it in like low investments i would be like living very lavishly It's like $15 million, I would say, is that number to, like, truly be able to say I would be totally okay. I don't think I'm going to make that through streaming. I'll probably just make that through my investments.
Starting point is 01:33:02 But, yeah, I would say like $15 million is what I'm looking for. I feel like you would be there already, investing as much as you are with Nvidia. I'm getting there. It's not there yet. It's probably a few more years away or like two or three years away if the market keeps going well. But who knows, right? It can also be dead tomorrow. Like it could be Trump could just say some stupid
Starting point is 01:33:23 It's a good buying opportunity It is, it is The hard part like I said is funds nowadays I just bought a Lamborghini If you heard about that Making that sort of money You said money just felt like paper What were some of the craziest expenses
Starting point is 01:33:35 You spent money on? Oh, I bought dumb shit I bought this World of Warcraft armor For like 10 grand for no reason I mean I just bought this Lamborghini That was apparently going to be like 180 grand I didn't really have a lot of dumb expenses That I'm like
Starting point is 01:33:50 I truly am stupid for this. I don't really think so because a lot of things just, like my boxes, they went up in value a little bit. Like, I didn't really lose anything on that. I would say my biggest waste of money was my pool. What a waste of money that was.
Starting point is 01:34:05 I bought a pool in Texas, an absolute waste of money. I never used it. It never got used. It was expensive. It was cracking. The company that built it didn't even have a license I found out at the end of it.
Starting point is 01:34:17 And they don't need one, which is crazy. And now there's just huge things. going on in Texas where a lot of pools that were built in like 2020, 2020 are having this like cancer is what it's called in the cracks of the pool where there's actually a class action lawsuit going out for this one company because it's at the mix up. So therefore everyone's pools are cracking. How much does you spend on the pool? Like 200K. 200,000 for a pool. It just depends how big the pool is. That's the high demand. It's an uplifted pool is a thing. And it's ugly. I hate my
Starting point is 01:34:48 pool. Yeah. But that's also a peak pool time. Like, materials were hard to come by, labor was hard to come by, and everyone wanted a pool because they were home. And they would finance the pools, too. Like, you could put zero percent down and finance the pool for the next, like, five years. Yeah, I waste my money. Did not make my pool, my value, my house go up at all. Waste. No one used it.
Starting point is 01:35:07 What's the most you've ever spent on a dinner? I don't know, bro. I'm a very, when it comes to food, I eat simple. Like, I'll eat, like, chicken every night. But I imagine, you know, you go on a date. Like, what's the most you spent on a date? I don't spend money on a date What do you do on a date?
Starting point is 01:35:22 Netflix That's it Like a first date I mean if I go on Like let's say we go out somewhere How much is maybe 50 bucks 60 But you can't bring them to rich ass places
Starting point is 01:35:35 And like that's when they start getting in their head That like oh he's just gonna treat me like a goo Like doll You gotta go low So I don't give I don't show them anyone Okay so how are you how do you meet a girl You're going on a date with? I usually just go out to bars
Starting point is 01:35:47 I don't ever use You pick them up at a bar? I know I've never had Tinder in my life. I actually had Tinder in college, that's it. Hinge? Nope. So you're saying you go out to a bar, and I imagine once you're out the bar, you're getting
Starting point is 01:35:57 recognized and stuff, right? Here's what happens. I go to a bar, I try to find someone, I start talking to her. She's somewhat interested. My goal is to use my blue eyes to hopefully hone in like a light that someone recognizes me so I look cooler. And then usually within like a five-to-10-minute radio or a timeline, someone recognize me and goes, you're a miskiff.
Starting point is 01:36:14 Bam, now there's a conversation. Wait a minute. Are you famous or something? Yeah, it's whatever. And that's how I get late. Do you go out to the bars alone or with friends? No, I'll go with friends. But I will leave the group immediately because I don't go to bars for fun. I go to get late. So you have the confidence then to be able to approach a girl just like that?
Starting point is 01:36:31 Yeah, of course. Okay, so let's say I'm a girl at a bar. Let's say you're approaching me. What do you say? I'm just like doing my own thing. You know, I'm drinking, whatever. Amazon presents Jeff versus Taco Truck Salsa, whether it's Verde, Roja, or the orange one. For Jeff, trying any salsa is like playing Russian roulette with a flame thrower. Luckily, Jeff saved with Amazon and stocked up on antacids, ginger tea, and milk. Habaniero? More like habanier, yes. Save the everyday with Amazon. You show them their Robin Hood account?
Starting point is 01:37:13 No, I go like this. Oops. Oh, you dropped, let me see that. What is that? See, that's what they do. And they grab it. It's a character. on it. You dropped your carrot card? I'm like, you have a carrot card? Yeah, the Robin Hood
Starting point is 01:37:32 I had now. It's really good. The gold one? Yeah. What do you get on that? 3%. You get 3% of your Robin Hood card? Yeah, it's a great card. Like, actually, it's a legitimately good credit card. Oh, that's awesome. Yeah, I'm just using like a Discover It card right now. I'm getting like a percent and a half. So I'll drop the card and usually that starts the conversation because I'm like, oh. Is that actually how you start a conversation? No, it's not how you start a conversation. I swear, or I'll be like drunk and just go up to them and like, like, Okay, like I met a girl the other week in Austin. We went to 6th Street, and I'm like drunk and being an idiot. And this girl had this chain that she wrapped around my neck and left it there.
Starting point is 01:38:11 She's like one of my friends. And she's like, oh, look, you're my bitch. So she's walking me around with the chain. I don't care about getting demasculated, obviously. So I'm walking around with this chain around me. And there's really hot girls sitting there eating macaroni. So I just go up to her. I'm like, yo, can you please help me get away from these people?
Starting point is 01:38:25 they're freaking me out. And I basically started talking to her and like, oh, where'd you get the macaroni, then blah, blah, blah, and then just went from there. That's hot. And did you get recognized when you were talking to her? Yes. The guy who made the macaroni recognize me. So it's pretty much off to the races at that point.
Starting point is 01:38:40 Yeah. And that's when you didn't even have to drop the card. But you have dropped a card before. Yeah, dozens of times. Dozens of times? What's your success rate? With girls? Pretty high.
Starting point is 01:38:51 I go up to girls. I usually have a pretty high chance of getting with them. Unless they have a boyfriend. which the chances decrease a little bit. Usually better, actually, for some reason. How? Because girls cheat. Do they really?
Starting point is 01:39:02 How often? How often do they? So I think girls cheat? Yeah. Give us a percentage. I think, is this statistically girls cheat more than men? No. I think so.
Starting point is 01:39:12 I think it's pretty even between men and women. Because guys don't have the opportunities that women have. Women have in less opportunities. Well, I mean, it appears as though that's not the case right here. That is true. For the most part, I'll fuck anything. Anything? Most girls have to, yeah, after like six shots.
Starting point is 01:39:27 Every shot is lower and lower. If it's a 10, okay, take a shot, I'll 5, 9. Another shot of 8. I keep going down. What if you take nine shots? Oh, you. Wait, I'm just a 1? Huh?
Starting point is 01:39:41 I'm just a 1? As a girl, you're a 1. Spencer, go grab some shots, man. Go grab 9 shots. As a girl, you're a 1, but as a guy, you're pretty up there. You're good. Thanks, man. I think you're pretty cute, too.
Starting point is 01:39:50 All right, this is a finance podcast. Should I leave? That's fine. I feel like I should just go. I mean, this is really fascinating. I'm not going to lie. What is your usual, do you have a pickup line or do you just approach them and talk to them? It's always situational. There's no pickup lines or cringe. You just go up to them and start talking about something that's going on or like a situation, right? Songs playing, you're talking about it.
Starting point is 01:40:11 You know, you just have to follow what's going on around you and be present and then that's how you talk to them. I mean, also, I'm not like some guru, God, demon guy. I play with World Warcraft. Like, I don't know anything. I just, you know what called you. I just troll. I have confidence when I go out, so I just troll a lot. They're great talker.
Starting point is 01:40:26 That's the thing. It's like you have so much practice talking on stream where you could talk straight for 20 minutes and come up with content, like on the fly. I'm curious, when you go out with these girls, let's say that you hit it off, you know, you take her back to your place, whatever. How often do they then hit you up later? Like, hey, do you want to hang out tonight? Or is it most of the time just like, that's it?
Starting point is 01:40:45 No, it's usually every time. And then what do you say? I can't with another girl. No, I'm kidding. They usually, my problem. that I have is like a lot of times I will, uh, that's when you should like almost separate,
Starting point is 01:40:59 but like I'll message them and then like it'll be kind of become a thing. And then they're like, oh, like, let's take it to the next step. And I'm always like, no, I want to just be alone. So you just don't want a girlfriend? No, absolutely not. Eventually? Eh, whatever. Do you think you're going to be single forever?
Starting point is 01:41:13 Hopefully. I don't know. Why do you want to be single forever? Because there's too many opportunities for women that I feel like monogamy is so difficult nowadays. What if you had like a polyamorous relationship? Which I could fuck other girls? Sure. Then hell yeah.
Starting point is 01:41:28 Find me a girl that's willing to do that that literally does not care. That's like, yeah, you can go fuck other girls. I don't want her to fuck other guys though. She's just got to stay put. So do you think that there's any like excitement though in having like a long term exclusive relationship or you get to know her super well and she gets to know you? Oh yeah.
Starting point is 01:41:44 Dude, it sounds like such a beautiful blessing to find someone to romanticize it, to get married to them. and have children, but what about when those kids are like eight years old and their and your wife got fat and you look uglier and your eyebags are six feet deep and you are sleeping on separate couches now and you're running around the house constantly trying to clean up. That's not fun. It's oddly specific.
Starting point is 01:42:07 It doesn't have to be that way though. It could. It could. It could, but it could not as well. Let's say 10 years out from now, you know, let's say even, you know, 20 years out from now when you're getting older, you know, maybe your knees, you're kind of a little decrepit at that point. What are you going to do if you want to, you know, settle down when your options have diminished because you're...
Starting point is 01:42:28 Why would my options diminish? Because you're older and accept it. Look at Leonardo DiCaprio. Dude, 24-year-olds on the reg on this boat. So you're comparing yourself to Leonardo DiCaprio. Anthony Keatis, too. People compare me to Leonardo deCaprio all the time. They say you look like a 50-year-old version of Leonardo deCaprio.
Starting point is 01:42:42 They say you look like a 50-year-old version. Yeah, not the young one. I look like the 50-year-old version. They say at a certain point, money doesn't really improve your life as much. Yeah. At what point would you say that that hit for you? $2 million. In net worth or in income?
Starting point is 01:42:56 In net worth. I think if you have $2 million and you invest it properly, I don't think that's going to change your lifestyle. So $2 million, why will it not improve your life after that moment? Well, I mean, at that point, you can have a nice car, nice house. You can have a good amount of money saved for, you know, in a high-yield savings account or something where you can either, A, live off of it at a, you know, normal life, basically, right? And you can kind of chill out.
Starting point is 01:43:23 You can probably go on a couple vacations. You can spend your money wisely but not too crazy. And you can live a pretty decent life. I think after that it starts becoming like what does it really matter? Like I believe that like being super rich is not what I ever care to do. I don't care to have 10 cars. I don't care to have three yachts and seven houses around the world. That sounds like a lot of work.
Starting point is 01:43:46 I just would, you know, I would be fine with a few million and to enjoy myself. The reason why I want $15 million myself is not necessarily just for me, though. It's for my family. You know, it's for my future kids. It's for, you know, Team Water, if it ever comes around again, I'll donate some money again. So, yeah, it's stuff like that. That's why I want the money. Not necessarily just for me.
Starting point is 01:44:09 I don't need $15 million. So when all of a said and done, what do you want out of the next 20 or so years out of your life? Like, why are you doing what you're doing? What are your main things you're going to be focusing on? I literally just care to make people laugh. Like, my job on Twitch and my life since I was a kid is to make people smile. Like, I love making people laugh. That's worth more to me than any amount of money.
Starting point is 01:44:31 And that sounds so stupid. But, you know, your algorithms are probably going to think that that was an ad read, but it's not. Like, I genuinely love making people laugh. So that's it. I just want to make people laugh, smile, entertained. It's all I care about. I don't really, like, the money's great, but if I'm not entertaining, I won't do it.
Starting point is 01:44:52 I don't care. What would you say is your biggest insecurity? I don't know. Probably if I'm not being entertaining. I literally do it all day, every day.
Starting point is 01:45:03 My personality is this. Just trying to entertain. Is there a rumor about you that a lot of people think is true but it's completely false? Yeah. Do you really want to talk about that? Go ahead.
Starting point is 01:45:15 Say a few list them. Three years ago I got accused of covering up that basically my whole career up for a long time, that was then figured out by a judge and literally everybody within like three days that it was false, but it went so viral that everyone thinks I did it.
Starting point is 01:45:34 And there's still people that think I did it. And there's still people think that they talk about it and it ruined my life. I've been traumatized. I've been suicidal from it. I've been depressed. My brain up. I feel like my brain is cracked from it forever.
Starting point is 01:45:47 And it ruined my image, my reputation. My friends stopped hanging out with me. People started ditching me. Streamer friends of mine backstabbed me and made videos or comments about it when they didn't know the truth. Yeah, that's probably the biggest thing. And in fact, it is the biggest thing. So a judge settled it? She tried to sue me and she lost.
Starting point is 01:46:06 And she's like, didn't get anything because she tried to sue me for millions of dollars claiming I defamed her. It was so stupid. That happened. And I spent hundreds of thousands of dollars fighting the case, of course, because I have to get lawyers. So, yeah, that was the worst thing in my life. I still hear about it to this day. I'm sure there'll be someone in your comments saying, didn't this guy cover up salt?
Starting point is 01:46:27 Sucks. It was bad. I'm still traumatized for a minute. I go to therapy. I do EMDR. My brain is not the same. It never will be. How is your brain different afterwards?
Starting point is 01:46:41 I have, I feel like my brain cracked when it happened. I almost feel like there's a before me and after that, me. The before me was much more innocent and believed in people. Now I'm very jaded and I don't trust anyone. And that's a very sad life to live when you're trying to be funny and entertaining because it's almost like you don't want to entertain because you're just like, I don't like these people or they're going to betray me one day, right? When you're dumb, wild, and free and you believe everyone's your friend, you love to entertain because you're just like everyone's my friend. I want to make them laugh. But when you feel like a lot of those people are just not really there for you and hate you,
Starting point is 01:47:16 it changes you forever. So I changed me forever in bad ways. I don't think there's a single good that came out of it. Do you think that eventually you'll be able to overcome it? I mean,
Starting point is 01:47:29 mentally, no. I think it'll stick to me forever. At least, especially as I'm a streamer consistently, because I deal with the consequences of it every day. What do the consequences look like? I mean, I just see comments about it.
Starting point is 01:47:42 Viewers have left me over the years from it. I'm depressed, a lot more. I'm more sad. Viewers see that and they're like, Ms. is just not happy anymore. I'm definitely better now. Like, I'm not this like sad that I used to be. But it's definitely something that haunts me every time I go live. The thing that I am so discouraged by are all of those, the people that make the YouTube videos exposing certain things without the actual facts and details. Yeah. Because they basically, people don't realize that the people that make
Starting point is 01:48:12 YouTube videos saying, this new scam, this new this new that. They make more money if they get more views and they can get more views by making something seem more evil. That's it. Like, it's, there's, there's no other equation than just that equation right there. And so they are incentivized to make things look absolutely awful to paint someone as a villain because they get paid more. And not only that, but people idolize these people because they see them as their God who's exposing good versus evil. They see them as like the moral arbiter of truth and ethics. Right.
Starting point is 01:48:46 When in actuality, they're just someone who's interested in promoting themselves, making a lot of money and getting a lot of views. They could care less about the truth. Because realistically, when the truth does come out, they're never going to make a video saying, you know what, I was wrong and I caused millions of dollars of damage in this person's reputation and messed up their life. They could care less because they have millions of people every single day commenting, thank you so much for talking about this. This is so great. And they have millions of dollars coming into the bank account. It is so twisted. I'm so over it.
Starting point is 01:49:14 I hate to say it, kind of resent anyone that makes YouTube videos like that. Well, it's also, the truth is never as exciting as the perception. No, everything is more nuanced. Everything is more nuanced. Like it's so interesting to think that, like, I did it and that like you're finding and exposing me and ruining my life. It's not interesting when I come out and say, here's a court that proves I didn't do it. Because they're just like, oh, what does a judge mean? Okay, here's like the entire Reddit community saying I didn't do it.
Starting point is 01:49:42 People are going to come up. They're going to twist it and say, well, that's a whole scam. because you spend hundreds of thousands of lawyers. Right. Go away. I know in a lawsuit, they could claim whatever they want. They could allege whatever they want. And then you have to fight those claims.
Starting point is 01:49:55 And of course, a judge could look at the facts and say, okay, well, fine. We side with you and we're going to dismiss the case. But no one ever covers the dismissal. Yeah, they didn't. They never covered that. When it got dismissed, people were just like, oh, well, you paid the judge. What? You think I can pay a court?
Starting point is 01:50:13 or they don't care at that point. It's like now we're five months after. And they're like, dude, miss, we don't care. And that's the sad truth is like, well, they don't care. And why would they? They don't care about me that much. So a lot of people's perception of me is very wrong. And it sucks because before that I was like a, you know, I act like an kind of guy,
Starting point is 01:50:32 but it was like heartwarming. But after that, you're like, no, this guy's just an ass. So from there, my perception on the internet has been like, this guy is just a bad dude. When it's like, I'm really not. I'm a normal dude. I do care about people. I pay my taxes, kind of, and, you know, I invest in Nvidia, but I just literally just try to make jokes, be an idiot.
Starting point is 01:50:54 The comments, I think, are the worst because sometimes it'll start from a rumor. Like, I've had comments about me where someone just makes shit up, but they are commenting the exact same comment because I see these. They comment the exact same comment on multiple people's videos, and they all like them to the top. and they make this wild claim. And then people underneath them are like, holy, I had no idea about this.
Starting point is 01:51:16 I had no, wow, this guy's a piece of shit. But everyone latches on to that top comment as though it's fact because it has likes, even though the whole thing is fake. It's so twisted. There was this one thing that happened on just a clip that we posted, or maybe it was, no, it was the episode that we posted with Andrew Callahan. Someone said, these people seem so self-absorbed.
Starting point is 01:51:36 These people don't know what it's like to work a real hard job in their life. And then, you know, one comment was, like, oh, of course, that's because Jack's dad was actually a part of the PayPal Mafia with Elon Musk. And so he has a trust fund with like $20 million in it. And Jack's just going to get that or he's already gotten it. So he has all this family money. He doesn't know what actual hard work is. And then that had hundreds of likes. And then there was like people like, oh, really? I've been watching this podcast for years. I had no idea that was the case. Yeah, and never mentioned that to me. And that has like 30 likes. And then the one beneath it is like, oh yeah. And on top of
Starting point is 01:52:06 that like this and this and this and this. And like they're saying that with zero evidence. And the only evidence that they have is someone else also has the name Jack Selby and he was a part of the PayPal Mafia and he has a lot of money. I have never met this guy. Find me a picture with me and him. There's no, I don't know who the guy. We just have the same name. That's like a thing. People have the same name. Juan Gonzalez. There's probably a million of them. Well, the problem too is it's the short form media is such a curse because you just make shit up. I mean, half the time you're on Twitter or Instagram you like really look at it and you're like, this is either AI or fake a story. It's not even real.
Starting point is 01:52:39 They just make up stories nowadays. So they do that for streamers all the time. I'll see streamers having controversies. Kai Senat, they'll say, it's like, dude, it's not even real. I was watching the stream. But that's where media's gone. It's like, why I'm going to just take the source that I see
Starting point is 01:52:52 because people just believe it. And that's what happened a lot with me is the Twitch community found out real quick I didn't do shit. It took like a week. A lot of people were like, yeah, I watched every stream. I was a part of this all. Ms. didn't do it.
Starting point is 01:53:03 It's so obvious. But the clips that went viral, the videos that went viral, rule, that's where everyone was like, I will never give Ms. Kiff a chance because this is what he is. Yeah. I've tried to rationalize this that it's just a part of being front facing. Cost to doing business.
Starting point is 01:53:22 It really is. And I've spoken with other people privately about this and they view it as just like the cost benefit analysis of like, if I'm doing this, this is what I get. I would say that for most. It was bad. There was 300,000 live people watching me get canceled. it was bad. Like when I say they were like,
Starting point is 01:53:39 the whole website was about ruining my life. It's the biggest drama that's ever happened on Twitch. Really? Yes, by far. See, it's interesting because you're in it and you're so familiar and as with me.
Starting point is 01:53:50 I heard about it. Yeah. Okay, well, I didn't. Yeah. You know? It was big. And it sucked because it's like, what can I do?
Starting point is 01:53:59 Go live and say I didn't do it? But I tend to not believe the things that I see online. Well, but the problem with my thing was a lot of people that I was friends with, backstab me and made videos or talked about it and promoted it.
Starting point is 01:54:11 And you go back to streaming and I was known as like the bridge of Twitch, the guy that knew everyone was friends with everyone. And I'm like, I don't want to be the bridge. I hate all of you. Or I don't want to be friends with you. Or this is weird now. Or just like, you clearly try to ruin my life.
Starting point is 01:54:26 I mean, I tried offing myself because of it. So it's like, well, when that happens, you have a shelf that you're a wall that was up. and it really changed my content because it went from Ms. Can Talk to Anybody and his friends with anyone, which was true, to Ms. doesn't talk to most streamers and he really does not want to.
Starting point is 01:54:46 And it definitely made me lose viewers, made me lose confidence, made me lose followers, made me lose everything for years. I mean, this happened three years ago, almost to the day, and it's still around. It's bad. Don't be wrong. Most of the internet doesn't even care about it anymore
Starting point is 01:55:03 because they're like, dude, Trump's president, who cares? Or like, they don't give a... Most people probably don't even know about it anymore because the cycle of the internet happens. Or they were like, what did he do again? But no, that hurt me real bad. Mainly what it hurt is my personal life. I heard my mental.
Starting point is 01:55:19 And that just... Yeah. Because any drama or real issue nowadays, like, dude, you did something horrible. Okay. If you don't care and you just keep going, like there's so much news nowadays that happens, it doesn't matter anymore.
Starting point is 01:55:33 Cancel culture is kind of dead. But back then it was different because when I got canceled, I got kicked out of my org for nine months for nine weeks. I lost all my sponsors. They were reporting on that. They're like Ms. lost game fuel. Ms. Loss AT&T.
Starting point is 01:55:49 Yeah. And they fueled it. Where they're like, holy shit, we're doing something. We're ruining Ms. life. This is awesome. When like I, it just kept snowballing to the point where like, yeah, it destroyed me. I went live and I basically had half the followers, half the subs and had to rebuild.
Starting point is 01:56:06 And that's why I like the car content because it's me getting into a new audience that doesn't even know who the fuck I am, which is nice. And it's not like it's like I'm trying to hide for my past, but it's just a very unfortunate thing that's hard to explain. It sucks. Yeah. That does suck that you're still kind of paying for it, especially when. I don't get sponsors. A lot of times. Because of that? It went all around the industry.
Starting point is 01:56:30 Everyone's like, yeah, he did that. Or like AAA sponsors are at 18 and 10. I was like in this big AT&T annihilator cup every year, paid 100 to 150K every time. It was good content. Nope. They still don't want to work with me because they're like, you have a bad rep. It's like, yep. So.
Starting point is 01:56:48 What we're going to do last is a streamer tier list that we've procured. I'm going to grab my computer. Put the laptop on the table. And you're going to let us know your honest thoughts about these streamers. Walk us through who you're grading and what you're grading them as. Okay. I mean, I am a prolific Twitter. streamer viewer. Like, I watch streamers all day. It's all I do. So, like, I can actually tell you
Starting point is 01:57:09 probably more than almost any other streamer who I think is actually a good streamer and who's not. Cool. I would say Hassan Piker is the worst streamer of all time. I'm kidding. I think Asan is actually, I would put him in the C category. I think Asan is a great with politics. He's excellent. He's on time. He's every single day. This is removing politics, obviously. He's always working. He's always doing more. he's progressing, he's very passionate. But one thing Hassan sucks at is when he has guests on his stream, he just cannot talk to them a lot of times
Starting point is 01:57:41 and he's very awkward. And then something also Asan's not good at, IRL streaming. He sucks, he's boring, he doesn't try, he just looks at his phone half the time. So I put Hassan in C. I think Asan is a really good political streamer though. Where would you put him in terms of attractive level?
Starting point is 01:57:58 Hassan? Yeah. He was hotter like three years ago. What? I would probably put Asan at like Asan is a very objectively attractive guy That's like someone went outside And the, huh?
Starting point is 01:58:11 Yeah After he said he was already three years ago, what? Every time you say that, just sirens What do you think went wrong? Why do you think he went down in attractiveness? Because he got more stress And you can just see his gray hairs popping up every two seconds now.
Starting point is 01:58:23 Like he's just definitely a stress ball. I can just look at the guy Or look at live stream fails. All right, Vitality, I would put Vitality as a F-tier streamer. Now, I put him a D. The reason why he's D is the problem with him as a streamer is he's very entertaining, but he's not long-lasting, right?
Starting point is 01:58:42 So why, as a streamer, you want to make sure that you can last longer than a few months or even a year. And things with Vitalius, his brand can't last that long because he's just put such ridiculous content out there that if he goes to anything else, people aren't going to watch. Right? So Vitaly is doing, like, pranks or figuring stuff
Starting point is 01:59:01 out or trying to find pedophiles, whatever it may be, you can't go and play Roonscape, well, you might be able to, but you can't play most games. That's not how it works. So longevity-wise, I put Vitality as a D, and obviously, as nowadays, he's an F. But me, myself, I would put myself in high A. I do think I'm definitely one of the better streamers on Twitch. I think I'm one of the most entertaining streamers on Twitch. My big problem that I have a lot of times is I would get bored.
Starting point is 01:59:31 very easily and I don't like content and also I think I've been limited over the years because of that drama that happened to me and I also think I yeah I just get stressed and then I get pissed and I'm not in a good mood. Johnny Somali is an F like this is not even an option. I'll just take Jack Daughtry and put him lower than that somehow. I think Jack Daughtry is just the worst person ever when it comes to streaming. He sucks at it like Johnny Smalley sucks too and he's terrible but Jack Daughey doesn't even look at his stream. He just streams himself. And I'm like, dude, I,
Starting point is 02:00:06 Soldier Boy can do that, no one else. Ludwig, I would put Ludwig in A. I think Ludwig is a good streamer. Eh, put Ludwig in B. I think Ludwig is a good streamer. But I think he's a better YouTuber, right? There's a difference. I think as a streamer, I would say that he's not as strong.
Starting point is 02:00:24 But I think as a YouTuber, Ludwig is probably the strongest. Like, if you gave me, who's the best streamer YouTuber? probably Ludwig. I think he's definitely figured that game out really well. Speed is, in my opinion, one of the greatest streamers of all time. I think speed is really good in any situation. He's charismatic. He's energetic. He's doing stuff that no one did, which is traveling and using that traveling to grow his brand. Genius idea from him from taking soccer and utilizing that to grow a completely new audience. And now that he's a spectacle whenever he goes around the world, he's athletic, he's talented,
Starting point is 02:00:59 he's young as I think speed is one of the greatest streamers if not the greatest streamer of all time. I don't even know who this guy is. I've just seen him in Twitch clips and YouTube clips and that tells you I don't care. Who is it? The dude with the sailor hat. Josh Robloch.
Starting point is 02:01:14 Oh, that's World of T-shirts. Oh, the dude that bites people. I think he bought one bit one person. That's pretty entertaining. I'll put him in day. And that's pretty good. Pokey name. Why not see? Why not see for Josh?
Starting point is 02:01:27 He's the only one that's bit someone as far as I'm aware. Yeah. It's pretty original. It's pretty good, but I just think that like he's a one, like, you just watch him and you're like, oh wow. He's autistic invites people.
Starting point is 02:01:40 It's like having like a pidgy and all it can do is use a like one tackle, right? Like you needed to have new abilities and Josh literally just has. So what else do you think if you're talking to Josh right now, what do you think he, what do you recommend he does to increase his arsenal? I would probably, if I were Josh,
Starting point is 02:01:55 I would get a mouth clamp. I don't know. I would be like, Jude, stop biting everybody. But then he's a zero trick pony. There you go. He sucks. You want me to say? Josh is a streamer.
Starting point is 02:02:08 He just bites people and runs around an acts autistic. Like, he acts autistic? He is definitely autistic. I don't think it's an act. It's not, no, Josh is not an act. Josh is a biter. But, okay, Pocume, I'd put probably as a low seam.
Starting point is 02:02:22 I don't think Pocene is that good of a streamer. Local news is in decline across Canada. And this is bad news for, all of us. With less local news, noise, rumors, and misinformation fill the void. And it gets harder to separate truth from fiction. That's why CBC News is putting more journalists in more places across Canada, reporting on the ground from where you live, telling the stories that matter to all of us. Because local news is big news. Choose news, not noise. CBC News. tired.
Starting point is 02:02:59 I don't really watch honestly streams. Like I don't watch Twitch, so I don't really know. Yeah, I mean... Seems like she's good at business. Sure, but she's just, as a streamer, she's whatever. I mean, I think she's just jaded and tired from eight years of getting beat the shit out of on streaming. I think she just, yeah, like, is very reserved in a lot of ways nowadays compared to what she used to be like. And even then, she just was like, she's much more of like a personality outside of Twitch.
Starting point is 02:03:27 She's a star, you know? She's Pokemon. She's an Instagram, Twitter, TikTok. I feel like that's much more her speed when I think streaming is much more just a relaxed time for her and chill. So I just put her at C. Myself again, definitely have a big ego. I put myself yet again above everyone else at this point. I can't I?
Starting point is 02:03:48 There. I'm a double A streamer. Lacey. Lacey. Lacey. I think Lacey's really good. I think Lacey's a really good stream. I think he's very funny.
Starting point is 02:04:02 I think he's good with his chat. I think he's entertaining in general. He knows how to farm clips and use his community. He's got good ideas. I like his cameraman a lot. I think Lacey goes above me. I think Lacey's a really good streamer right now. He's very witty.
Starting point is 02:04:19 Neon as a streamer, I'd probably put him in C. I don't know his content at all. I can't really judge him. No idea. Agent, agent's a good streamer. I think Agent has really good ideas and a good team. I put Agent I put Agent A.
Starting point is 02:04:34 I think Agent's actually a really good streamer. Tim the Tapman is one of the goats of streaming. He's always been one of the goats of streaming. He is a high A, in my opinion. He is up there. Tim is really good at entertaining, and he's got a great community, and he's just always doing good shit.
Starting point is 02:04:50 I like Tim. Aiden Ross. Okay, I think Aidan Ross, in my opinion, was an insane. insanely good streamer. And I think nowadays he's very mentally and his brain is fried and I think he's jaded and tired.
Starting point is 02:05:07 So I would put Aiden as a A for sure. But I think Aiden at one point was S and I think his mental sph him up so he's not there. Kai Sanat. I would put Kai in A. No, I put him in S. Kai is definitely one of the best streamers.
Starting point is 02:05:26 His production team's insane. I mean, they go balls to the wall with everything. He clearly produces content. He knows how to engage with his guests. He's a really good streamer, and his team just carries him so hard, as well as him being a really good entertainer. Jason the ween, Jason's a really good streamer.
Starting point is 02:05:45 His community's really strong. I think Jason has a lot of potential to grow in audiences that are new, which I think is more interesting on Twitch, which is more K-pop and Asian-style streaming, rather than just like the normal mundane, stuff. I would probably put Jason High A. I'd probably
Starting point is 02:06:02 put him like right here. Who's this? Togi. Who that? You don't know Togi? No. Really? Skip Togi. Who's tog? Put him S tier. Who that? He does these like crazy fun gambling streams. But he's like...
Starting point is 02:06:22 To be your favorite. Oh, and steroids and gambling are his thing. Say no more. He's top S. He is. Ninja. Okay. Ninja Ninja he still's got the low taper fade meme I still think Ninja does well
Starting point is 02:06:37 I think he's a great streamer because he's very loud and energetic I would put Ninja probably in the B I think Ninja is actually a good streamer for sure XQC X is A
Starting point is 02:06:52 I think he's probably like right next to me I think XC was insane but he's definitely more tired now and that's just how it goes from doing this for nine years, but he's still, in my opinion, one of the greatest streamers. He knows what he's doing. This is just basically robotic to him because he's just done it for so long.
Starting point is 02:07:10 He knows what to do to farm. But I would put him, he was at one point, I put him in A now because I think his content, he just is more like chill compared to when he was going very hard in streaming. I think he's definitely taken a step back for sure. And Fuzley, Fuzley is honestly straight up when he's on. his streams were great. When he was on in good content, it was because you just never know
Starting point is 02:07:35 what the fuck he was going to say and you need to watch. I think he's one of the best entertainers honestly of our general. It was so funny, I never watch any live streams, ever. I watched some of Fuzis. Because of how crazy it was
Starting point is 02:07:49 and he was like in a hotel like calling the police for something and I was just like sitting there glued to the like the screen. I couldn't believe it. Yeah. He's genuinely a great entertainer. I think he's nuts, but as an entertainer, the beauty of him is, the reason why he's so good is you need to watch what's going to happen next, you truly don't know what's going to happen. With a lot of streaming nowadays, you know what's going to happen because it's planned. It's, I'm going to play peak with friends. Like, okay, I don't really need to watch this. Nothing's going to happen. No interesting thing to the point where I need to be here for four hours. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:08:21 Foods could be in jail in 20 minutes. You don't know, right? Yeah, but that's such an exciting thing. Is that just mental instability, though? I think it's both mental instability And he's just a good entertainer I mean he's been in this for 15 years He just knows what to do to entertain So I would say He's 100% there I
Starting point is 02:08:39 He's a that's good content I would say that's my list Love it It's good Thank you Where did you put Stable Ronaldo Ron?
Starting point is 02:08:49 I think Ron is a streamer Is an S I think he's an S right now I think Ron's in his prime I think he's funny Good He's entertaining as He knows he's very
Starting point is 02:08:58 witty. He knows what to say. I'd put Ron in S-tier, if you put Ron there. I thought that was Ron the steroid guy, but... They kind of look similar. Yeah. I bet Ron an S-2, for sure. For sure. Cool. Mizcif, thank you so much for coming on the ice coffee hour. Really means a lot. I mean, you gave us a lot of your time, so... Yeah, is this normally how long these things go?
Starting point is 02:09:16 This is a little on the longer end. Yeah, we're usually about two hours. We're at three hours and some change. Yeah. So thank you guys very much for watching. If you made it to the end, really appreciate it. It seriously, we would not be here, if not for you. Thank you to White Glove Estate also. They really hook it up for this.
Starting point is 02:09:35 You have no idea how nice it is to have a place that we could film in Los Angeles. They have more. This is all of them. This is all of them. We'll link them down below so you guys can click on their link in the description. If you're interested, if you're interested. Home remodeling, staging, things like this, they do it. Word.
Starting point is 02:09:52 Thank you guys so much for watching. Until next time. Bye.

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