The Money Mondays - UFC Michael Chandler & Wes Watson Talk MONEY | E1

Episode Date: February 27, 2023

Welcome to The Money Mondays! On this episode Dan interviews UFC legend Michael Chandler & Entrepreneur Wes Watson. “Iron” Michael Chandler is a UFC legend with a record of 23-8-0. Winning mul...tiple world titles has kept Michael a perennial top 10 lightweight in the world rankings. He has been involved in some of the most action packed fights in Mixed Martial Arts history being nominated for “Fight Of The Year” three different times. Chandler will be coaching against Conor McGregor in the upcoming season of The Ultimate Fighter, which begins in May, before the two collide in the octagon for the season finale later in the year. Wes Watson is an actor, International Best Selling Author, and CEO of a large personal coaching firm, Watson Fit. Wes became well-known almost overnight, first from his riveting interviews with YouTuber, Big Herc, and then on his own channel "GP-Penitentiary Life Wes Watson". His YouTube channel GP Penitentiary Life has amassed over 75 million views where he shares all about how to live your absolute best life based on what he's learned in and out of the penitentiary. For more on The Money Mondays, visit: http://themoneymondays.com Watch on YouTube: https://youtube.com/@themoneymondays?sub_confirmation=1

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to the Money Mondays. We are co-hosted with the Real Tars in. This guy gets almost 200 million views a month. He is right here with us, talking about animals, his passion, his charity, and our special guest today is a dear friend, UFC fighter, entrepreneur, he owns businesses, he does amazing back flips in the ring. Please give it up for Mr. Michael Chandler. I like the back flips. The back flips is kind of like the highlight of my life, you know, I get excited for it.
Starting point is 00:00:32 So, Michael, the money Monday's we only talk about three things. How do you make money? How do you invest money? And how do you give it away to charity? So, before we do that, give us the quick two-minute bio. Who is Michael Chandler? Oh man, Michael Chandler was a small guy from high-rage Missouri. I started wrestling because I wasn't going to be the star quarterback at the starting point guard. So 100 pounds soak and wet. So I went
Starting point is 00:00:56 into wrestling, parlay that into a college wrestling career, walked on the University of Missouri, and then was blessed enough to wrestle with two guys who ended up becoming successful in mixed martial arts. Tyler Willie, Ben Asker, and they were kind of like my big brothers. And since then, just I'm a father, I'm a husband, business owner, investor, and live in the dream. Fun fact, so Tyrone and Ben are 40% of the people
Starting point is 00:01:23 that Jake Paul fought. Yep. Yes, true. It is true. It is true. Well, there was kind of a running joke where I was like, well, maybe I'm the other Missouri Tiger who's supposed to fight Jake Paul. Is Jake a real boxer? You know, he, in today's society, he is a real boxer.
Starting point is 00:01:40 I always say I would never, ever in a million years hate on Jake Paul for what he's doing. Like people say, oh, he's not the real but I'm like well, he trains He captured enough attention got enough eyeballs got enough interest made people feel something enough to say Hey, if I step in the box and ring people are gonna watch me promotions are gonna get behind me There's gonna be pay-per-view sales So those are checking all the box of him him being a professional boxer now a guy his size who has been a professional boxer 30 and O, like, would he be able to beat that person?
Starting point is 00:02:11 No, as you said, Ben Askerin, not a professional boxer tire-wily, not a professional boxer, but Jake Paul, Logan Paul, coming in and doing what they've done, they are professional athletes, whether we like it or not. And I don't think it delegitimizes the sport necessarily definitely doesn't delegitimize mixed martial arts. It could possibly delegitimize boxing a little bit saying hey This guy who was a youtuber and a Disney star or whatever you want to call him Came in and now is now a pro boxer, but as I said They're hustling. They're getting after it. They know their lane and they've made a huge ripple and they're pro boxers. And it's entertaining.
Starting point is 00:02:47 It is entertaining. I've watched all of them. So, I mean, mainly because they were fighting with friends. But, you know, all right. So, how do you make money? How do you invest money? How do you give it away to charity? The first question is, how does Michael Chandler make some money?
Starting point is 00:03:01 So, my first and foremost, my job is obviously being a professional mixed martial artist. Came into the sport, 2010 or 11, very, very green. Ended up one of the world title within two years, which was kind of crazy. Yeah, very crazy, very fast, which put me in a great position with the number two organization, the World Bellator was with Bellator for quite a while and then just made the transition to the UFC.
Starting point is 00:03:29 And I have, you know, very dissimilar to a lot of guys, but similar to a few of the kind of smart ones, I've always said I want to break the mold of what a fighter is. And I don't want to make my fight person and go blow it on some nice fancy car. What not a lot of it is a testament to how I was raised. I was a lower middle class blue collar family, son of a carpenter, son of a mom who was a secretary and worked at my grandpa's restaurants. So they were just very frugal and I don't need a lot to be happy.
Starting point is 00:04:01 So I've taken all of my fight purses, fight versus and done great things with them. And then have ownership in a couple of different companies, start up on fitness app. So I just wanted to I always knew that I wanted to be way ahead of the curb for that time when I take those gloves off for the last time that I was going to already not I was already going to walk right into the next phase of who I am as an entrepreneur or how I'd make money. So, there's a 19-year-old out there that wants to become a UFC fighter or a strike force
Starting point is 00:04:32 fighter, and they're about to step into the ring. Their first three fights, five fights, ten fights, how much could they expect to make for the first five or ten fights? Oh my gosh. I mean, well, first, you have to start on the local scene. Local scene, you're making Basically a couple hundred bucks, you know, my first fight was at Lake of the Ozark, Missouri in front of 17 people You know after I after I paid for my hotel paid for my food, you know, I was five hundred bucks
Starting point is 00:04:55 So I made like a hundred and fifty bucks, you know But that's the delayed gratification of knowing, you know, you got to kind of you're basically you're basically just stacking up wins in the win column the late gratification of knowing, you know, you got to kind of, you're basically, you're basically just stacking up wins in the win column. Um, so those first couple fights, couple a hundred bucks, thousand bucks, maybe. And then you're, you're hoping to get some sort of a, a promotion or a kind of a entry level development, a deal with one of the major promotions. Um, obviously the sport of mixed martial arts is growing exponentially. The UFC being the biggest, but more and more middle tier to other promotions are popping up every now and then, or often. You're not making much money at all.
Starting point is 00:05:38 You're definitely living with roommates. You're living that, which for me was easy. I came from a college wrestling lifestyle and I not making any money, obviously, to live with roommates and doing the same thing in my fight career. So that 19 year old kid, he's 24 years old now, he's got 15 fights under his belt, he just got offered $100,000 for his next fight. After he pays agents and managers and trainers and training camps, et cetera, what could someone like that think that they're gonna end up making after they pay all those people?
Starting point is 00:06:08 What are some of the kind of ballpark numbers of those people that they have to pay make? Well, I mean, obviously, taxes, you know, in that tax bracket, what do you pay in 20% and taxes? You know, there's always a gym fee that is either a percentage or your paying each one of your coaches. Strengthening, conditioning, coach could be outside of that. And at that age, I wasn't spending a lot of money on bodywork. 24 years old, you go run through a brick wall every single day and you're fine, but bodywork,
Starting point is 00:06:37 supplements and all that kind of stuff, maybe half of that. And then it's living off of it. And I think the biggest the hardest part about it is you really don't know when your next fight necessarily is, you know, you can only hope to have a good enough standing with your promotion where they're they're like, Hey, okay, we like this guy, whether it's his fight style, he's a he's a great ambassador for the brand. He's got he's got a look. He's great on the mic. He's got X, Y, and Z, all these intangibles that we he's got X, Y, and Z, all these intangibles that we want to push him and, hey, in two months, we get him back
Starting point is 00:07:08 in four months, we'll get him back in. You know, that was kind of the hard part with me being in Bellator. Bellator was a smaller organization with less fighters on it. So therefore, there was numerous times I could go out there, knock a guy out in 45 seconds, take zero damage whatsoever. And I'm like, hey, I'm ready to fight. Yeah, I'm ready to fight next month They're like, oh, sorry. You're one of our stars now. So we we can't put you on a card for eight months because that's when our next big paper or not our next big card is, you know, so it's just it's hard to and I also saw that and I thought well
Starting point is 00:07:42 This isn't on Bellator or if it was the UFC, this isn't on the promotion to give me a fight. I should not just have that one paycheck. I'm building a brand. I'm a professional athlete. I'm on at that time before the UFC, whether it was Spike TV or MTV 2 or whatever, whatever we were on. I have a platform. I have a social media presence. I can, I'm starting to create relationships. I can start utilizing said relationships start utilizing The brand and the opportunities to make paychecks whether it be sponsorships whether it be Appearances whether it be anything to start making money just outside of that one paycheck that my promotion has to give me So that actually leads me into my next question that 24-year-old kid is getting $100,000 contract for his next fight. What are some other ways that they can make money? Is it
Starting point is 00:08:29 autograph signings, appearances, sponsorship deals? Like, what else can they do to make money? And is it worth them to do those other things? I think it is. I mean, and so I think I've had a somewhat of a very, somewhat of a unique career in a nutshell. I was, I truly believe, one of the best guys in the world at 155 pounds for a very long time. Did I lose some fights? Yes, did I lost three fights in a row? My career was actually on life support for a second.
Starting point is 00:08:55 I'm not quite sure what was gonna happen next. But for the most part, I came back one the world title again. And I was widely regarded as one of the top guys yet I was outside of the UFC. So I didn't have the massive eyeballs that I have now, but I was creating relationships and I was creating and maintaining and cultivating a really good relationship. So I had a lower platform, but a high standing in the relationship side of things, or in the relationship side of thing and the reputation side of things. So with those reputation, I think I was getting more money for sponsorships and appearances
Starting point is 00:09:29 than most people would because I was reliable. I would show up on time. I was a good ambassador for whatever brand would ever put their name behind me. They knew I would do what they, not just what they asked, but more than they asked, and then bring back value in droves. Because it's, you know, I think people, some athletes think, hey, I can catch a football, I can throw a football, I can punch a guy,
Starting point is 00:09:50 and I can fight. So therefore, pay me money. But it's not just about the Xs and the Xs and the O's on the court, on the field, in the octagon, in the cage. It's about who are you as a human being? What do other people think about you, say about you? And what do people think and feel whenever they see our logo or our name and brand behind you? So appearances, the sponsorships, I've worked very hard making my own luck when
Starting point is 00:10:19 it came to sponsorships. I have great management, a great agent, great, great, he has great relationships with companies, but I have gone out and hunted and killed and it brought in a lot of my sponsorships. And because I think, and you know, this is owning and having numerous brands, if an agent comes to you and says, Hey, I got this fighter, you want a sponsor and you're like, well, he's good, but I don't really know him. I always knew there is people and there's heartbeats and there's the human spirit behind every company. So how do you get to know the people before they're actually gonna put their brand behind you? And then, as I said, not only the appearances,
Starting point is 00:10:54 the sponsorships and investments, when you have a little bit of enough income that you can live off of and you can start investing in things. And then as the platform continues to grow, you kind of just start making decisions based upon how big it is and how the offers start coming in. So Tarzan, when you get these hundreds of millions of views or like you were wrestling with an ostrich last month and you got 30 million views in a video, how does that make you money? How do you make money from social media?
Starting point is 00:11:21 Well, it's more so traction too. And also, Mike, they a really valid point of having a relationship with these companies, you know? So same thing with myself, like I get all these crazy views from different things and ostriches to whales, to crocodiles. You really can't sometimes monetize that because it's like, I can't drink soda underneath the water, you know.
Starting point is 00:11:40 I mean, I may wear a sweatshirt or something when I can't just snigger something, but other than that, I use that to like work with airline companies or like hotels or just different things to minimize My output on finances. I'm gonna pay for a flight. I don't get paid for hotels So hey when I'm back in like pay money for straight dogs and stuff like that But that just brings my content up. It's real raw and authentic and when I come back and I get all these crazy views And then I slap a add in the middle of a crazy YouTube video, they're like, you know, that video was crazy. And now they have an authentic, you know, piece in that, in that, in that project.
Starting point is 00:12:13 So it's all about relationships, man. Yeah. Well, and what you're talking about too is engaging in things also that are somewhat ROI negative. Like you, you might be going to do something that you're not making a dollar for, but you know, you're putting, you're putting the goodwill in the bank of, this is going to be monetized down the line, from a strictly business standpoint. Obviously, it is your passion. You would do it for free. We all, like everyone who knows you knows that you would do it for free, but I think
Starting point is 00:12:39 that's even what I do as well. Like, there's things that I do where it's like, hey, I'm not making any money for this, but I know it might create more relationships, build a bigger platform. It fuels my passion. It makes me happy. So this event today doesn't make me any money, or the next one, or whatever I ever do might not make me money. But in the future, it's going to turn into it from a business standpoint. And my heart gets full. My cup gets full throughout the process. So we've talked about a couple of ways that Michael Chandler has made money. How have you invested money and why should athletes and entertainers be investing money?
Starting point is 00:13:12 Well, I mean, so I think just from a philosophical standpoint, I think we always say, well, you shouldn't have a plan B because if you don't have a plan B, that means you're not fully invested in the task at hand. And I've never, I'm always fully invested in the task at hand. And I've never, I've, I'm always fully invested in the task at hand. There's, there's not, I don't think anybody around the world that I've trained with that would say, Hey, Michael Chandler slacks off because it doesn't do things right. He, he cuts corners here, cuts corners there. So when I'm focused on the task, I'm focused on the task at hand, but that doesn't mean
Starting point is 00:13:40 that just because I have other investments, or if I said, hey, if everything ended today, I can go speak or do this or do these, these other things that I think I know I would probably really like. So I have invested, invested in real estate since I, I mean, I mean, my first real check. So Bellator used to hold a tournament. And if you thought three fights and three months, you went 100 grand. I won that first 100 grand, I bought a house in Vegas where I was living.
Starting point is 00:14:10 I ended up selling that house for triple, what I paid for it, and then actually rented it, well, I rented it out for four or five years, and then sold it for double or triple what I paid for it. And then bought a house in San Diego that also had a rental property. So real estate has been some of it it and then investing in a few companies, but also trading my platform slash influence and reputation for equity and other companies as well.
Starting point is 00:14:40 So being a part of speed fitness, that was a very much a relationship, reputation and relationship play. And and even earlier here and you talk to, I didn't know what speed was. So they said, Hey, we really like you. Hey, why don't you want to be a part of this thing? I said, Well, I can't exactly put my name behind something until I truly know the people and I know the product.
Starting point is 00:15:01 And I know like what is going to happen? What's the purpose for this thing? So went out to Chicago, spent 48 hours with the whole entire team and it felt right. And here we are. Cram nutrition as well. It's a PB&J company that we actually will have here tomorrow. On the go PB&J awesome co-founders Ruth and Austin out of co-facts, California, Newt Northern California.
Starting point is 00:15:23 You just you start to meet these people and they have this, this passion for what they are living or what they've created. And because of your, because of your reputation, your connections, and also them knowing that you've done this in the past, you do it in your career, you do it in your family life, you do it in your relationships, you do it in every other area of life. So why wouldn't you do it with us? You just get this reputation that they want you to be a part of it. But going back to the Plan B thing, I have no problem if anybody would sit here and say, Hey, well, it doesn't sound like you're 100%
Starting point is 00:15:59 focused on fighting because I'm not, you know, when I get done with a fight, I wanna spend a month or two or three if I want to, spending every single day with my family filling up that part of my life. And I wanna spend every single day for those couple months thinking about the other things that I'm standing up between, you know,
Starting point is 00:16:17 now and the day that I take off those gloves. And I don't think it's a bad thing. I think we were created with enough bandwidth to be able to have multiple irons in the fire, or at least I am. And I've been very blessed with that, and it's worked out well so far. This question is for both of you, both Michael and Michael.
Starting point is 00:16:36 I always call you Tarzan. So you have so many brands and options that come to you. How do you decide what brands you're willing to align with? Let's start with Tarzan. So I like to go with brands that are more congruent to my message. And once I don't actually want to work with, a lot of people always ask me, why do you have much more brands and sponsorships? I like actually handpick who I want to work with.
Starting point is 00:17:03 I can have six different end-to-dren companies hit me up, but Arizona who I want to work with, you know, I can have like six different engineering companies hit me up, but Arizona I see what they say, hey, I'll offer you this and they'll pay me a quarter of what the other ones will do, but they'll give me all the freedom to create content, you know, so I like to build up my portfolio with the quality more than quantity, you know, the money thing is also great, but I also like to have a repertoire and a plethora of high class clients. So if I can put Arizona IST commercial out or Ignite commercial or a full lock of commercial, that's better than me to have 10 commercials.
Starting point is 00:17:34 I'll take three. So I like the pick and choose. That's great. Well, and the authenticity of it too, I mean, you know, when you're talking about a certain brand, I mean, I could sit here and talk about product X. And if my, my viewership and my platform doesn't actually believe that I'm actually using the product or that I'm endorsing the product to be, you can tell your endorsing the product just because it's a money deal. And I've never wanted to feel that way.
Starting point is 00:18:01 There's, I mean, the temptation is always there when they're like, Hey, we'll pay you this. And but you're just like, yeah, but it's not even, and it's not even, it's, it's just a intrinsic, this just doesn't feel right because I know what I'm saying to the camera doesn't really hit home, right? But yeah, I mean, I do think too, and I think we talked about it today, you know, as, as, as people who are, who are driven, as people who are always trying to create more and they're in more in their life, we always have this idea that more is more, or more is better. But at some point too, you can, you continue to build the reputation and you build what you're building by having
Starting point is 00:18:41 a laser focus on a couple rather than a big old wide net where people can't even tell why is this? Why are you always talking about things or why are you always? For me too, I just love adding value to, I mean, a lot of times it's social media stuff or it's like posting stuff. It's like, I want people to get value out of what I'm saying. And if I have to always talk about a brand that I don't really feel 100% congruent with or 100% invested in emotionally, then I'm just really filling up my timeline with stuff that I don't believe, and then I'm also not adding value
Starting point is 00:19:16 to people. So I've actually never done a paid post for myself as I've gotten so many offers to pitch different affiliate programs and info products and consumer brands and cigarettes and nicotine and everything between I only done three deals. I did Wells Fargo. I did one year deal with Wells Fargo to be on the Wells Fargo.com. I did Folger's Coffee and I did Hertz Renekar. That's it. The reason is, I actually like Wells Fargo, I've been using him for 15 or 20 years. I like Hertz Renekar, it's the only one I rent from.
Starting point is 00:19:50 Like it was just things that I actually enjoyed and someone offered me 2K, 5K, 10K, or 20K to post something doesn't feel realistic because as you said, like if I hold up Product X, people are like, why would you post Product X when you invested in, why is it like you invested in the company just like that, why would you ever hold that up? And so I think it's important for people when you do get approached, because you are
Starting point is 00:20:11 micro influencers, medium-sized influencers, everybody listening out there, you have some sort of a following. If you ever get a push-bride brand, make sure that it's not just about the money, because your followers will remember if you just hold up some product that they don't like or some product that they know that you don't like even that's more important. Okay, we talked about how do people make money? We talked about how do you invest money? The third topic and our final topic of the night is how do you give money away and why is charity important to athletes, influencers and entrepreneurs that are out there? I think it's extremely important. I mean one of my favorite quotes that I live by Zigs-Zoo says, you can have everything you want in life if you will help enough other people get what they want in life. And a lot of that doesn't always have to be monetary.
Starting point is 00:20:50 Obviously, a helping hand, helping people out when they're down. It doesn't always have to be monetary when we're talking about kind of that philosophy. But for the most part, I think it's, it just fills up your cup. I mean, the funny thing is I have a book that I read to my son often and I love when he grabs it. It's called How Full is Your Bucket. And you talk about, talk about whenever you do something good, it fills up your bucket.
Starting point is 00:21:13 You can fill up other people's bucket. You can dip in other people's bucket. They can dip into your bucket. Whenever you dip into someone else's bucket, you think you're just dipping in another bucket, but you're really dipping out of your own bucket as well. I think we are created for relationships and we are created for community and we are created to help one another.
Starting point is 00:21:30 And we all go through these series of seasons where we need a helping hand. So for us, tithing at our church, doing charity events, spending more money on an auction item that I would normally, that I probably actually won't use it. I'm going to give it to somebody donating and donating my time and energy as well to different charity events. But I just think it's extremely important and it was something that I did struggle with
Starting point is 00:21:58 for a very long time and in Candlely, I just talked to you earlier because you gave your awesome talk about the 40, 40, 20 rule and you talk about how much money should you have in your bank account? And you use the air quotes and said, well, I won't have a million dollars in my bank account to look cool. And I said, Dan, I really do to this day. And I do think that I've done very well for myself.
Starting point is 00:22:15 But I do deal with that fear and that scarcity of mindset when it comes to money. And I really dealt with that for a very long time when it comes to charity. And I think a lot of people do. I mean, especially your audience and your viewers. I mean, people who may have been dirt floor poor and somehow made it on this entrepreneurial journey and now they're a millionaire, but they still might be dealing with that scarcity mindset
Starting point is 00:22:41 that those old habits die hard, die hard. And the way that they were raised, you know, I can still hear people chirping in my ear from my childhood about money, about people who have a, you know, a nice car, so they must be a bad person or, or, you know, like, where I came from, that was kind of the mindset that I grew up with, grew up in. So charity, charity helps me by giving something away, Like you invest money in a company, you know, you talk about all the time, you invest money in a company, you could make money, or you hopefully will make money. But you know, when you're giving charity, giving to charity, no money
Starting point is 00:23:17 is coming back to you, per se, from that quote unquote transaction or that giving, but the intrinsic feeling that you get, the feeling of value, the feeling of purpose. You know, my first, I launched a little clothing line called Blessed Threads many, many years ago. And we gave a portion of proceeds to Friends of Kids with Cancer, which is a small organization that helped families of kids who were affected by cancer. My wife and I are behind the scenes right now and talked a lot about working with adoption. My two sons are adopted, so that's definitely a passion of ours.
Starting point is 00:23:54 Also, as entrepreneurs too or as business owners or me as an athlete, we're dagum busy. Nonstop busy, always chasing the next thing, thinking about chair, thinking thinking about charity, something that isn't, I give this to get this back and less transactional. It's all just giving it unlocks something to in you that just makes you feel so much more happy. And as I said for me to growing up with kind of that scarcity of mindset when I came to money, charity as well, or giving back really helps me loose that those fears and that scarcity, if you will.
Starting point is 00:24:32 And I'm sure a lot of listeners right now could kind of test to that or feel like that was part of their journey. And someday hopefully I'll get over it. We'll see. I did charity because I want people to copy me. I want them to see the different types of charity that I do. And then pick and choose what might be exciting for them.
Starting point is 00:24:52 So I do a back to school drive where the kids bring in their report cards. We do report card drive actually too. So that's in June and in August, there's two different trademans. But we have about 300 Latin families that come over and we look at the report cards or right before they're going to school, we give them backpacks and shoes, et cetera. I don't go out there and raise money for that. I do that so people can do their own back to school drivers, their own report card day in Alabama, Arkansas, New York, El Salvador, wherever they are in the world, they can do
Starting point is 00:25:18 the same thing. We do our Thanksgiving food drive, which is obvious. You're not going to do Thanksgiving food drive in foreign country, but in America, wherever you are, you can do a Thanksgiving food drive, which is obvious. You're not gonna do the Thanksgiving food drive in foreign country, but in America, wherever you are, you could do a Thanksgiving food drive too. And it's not about the money part. And I, again, I don't ask people to donate. I want them to go do a Thanksgiving food drive in their city of Philadelphia, New York, Chicago, Miami, et cetera.
Starting point is 00:25:36 Then we do the toy drive. That's not so. The toy drive, this is our ninth year that we did it. This is coming up on our 10th year. Nine years ago, there was four of us on the floor wrapping toys for the same 300 families. On year two, there's 12 of us. On year three, there's like 30 of us. And now, obviously, a few weeks ago, we just broke the Guinness Book World Records for the world's largest toy drive. Yeah. That stemmed from just compounding of like four kids, 12 people, 30 people, volunteer,
Starting point is 00:26:04 volunteer, volunteer, volunteer, and all of a sudden a snowball turns into an avalanche. I don't ask people to donate. I want people to go and do a toy drive in their city. There's no reason you can't do a toy drive in Albuquerque, New Mexico or Austin, Texas or anywhere you are, it doesn't take money. It takes community, power, and energy.
Starting point is 00:26:21 And there's one other kind of version of charity, which is an exactly charity, but it's kind of like charity, that's called the $100 tipping club, where you just get like 70 of your friends or 14 year friends together and you all pitch in a hundred bucks each and you tip the waitress, $1,200, $1,400, sometimes we do a baller one, which I make out all these entrepreneurs if they want to come meet me. And I'm like, I always get DMs like, I want to pick your brain. I want to meet you. Okay, come to my $1,000 club. Don't give me any money. Pitch in a thousand bucks. And we're going to I want to pick your brain. I want to meet you. Okay, come to my $1,000 club. Don't give me any money
Starting point is 00:26:45 Pitch in a thousand bucks, and we're gonna give it to the waitress And we'll get like 20 30 people that donate 20 30 thousand dollars to the waitress plus the kitchen staff Wow, I mean that's like you're right, but more importantly People started replicating it. I have to get tagged dozens and dozens of times per week People that are doing a tipping club in the most random cities in the country. And it got so big that I see people doing it, tagging me and the people that didn't have no idea who I am. Which is great.
Starting point is 00:27:12 I don't need them to know who I am. I want them to go tip these waitresses. I want them to go tip their waiters all over the world. And so I say that because a lot of people look at charity, they think it's rude to talk about charity or if you talk about it, then it's not real charity. I promise you, the people that are receiving the charity, don't care how it happened. The person that's receiving the money
Starting point is 00:27:29 or getting the toys or the laptop at the school drive or getting the Thanksgiving food or getting the toys at the toy drive, they don't care how it happened or what you did to get there. They care about the end result. I'm getting the toys, getting the food, et cetera. And so I implore people that are out there,
Starting point is 00:27:44 be proud when you're involved in charity. Be proud when you win a fight, a baseball match, a poker match, a golf match. Be proud no matter what the media tells you to do and try to like, cower and not say, because it's eco-tistical or bra, what do you call it? Bravado.
Starting point is 00:27:58 Bravado, whatever you call it. Be proud when you win. You worked hard to win that fight. You worked hard to win the resting match. You worked hard to win the poker tournament, the hard to win the resting match. You worked hard to win the poker tournament, the baseball match, the golf tournament, et cetera. The same concept applies. When you go out there and do a successful charity event,
Starting point is 00:28:12 where you go help the homeless, be proud of that. And hopefully people will replicate what you're doing and the butterfly effect will be much bigger than that one thing that you did. Yeah, and it is contagious, by the way. So if I can just call myself out real quick, I just got done saying, you know, as an athlete or as business owners
Starting point is 00:28:27 and entrepreneurs were so busy, right? I mean, people probably listening right now, there's, you know, I think I'm a hard worker, I think I'm a pretty busy guy, definitely not as busy as you. And the amount of charity that you do, it is inspiring and it also unlocks the door to unlocks the mind to say,
Starting point is 00:28:44 well, I'm not too busy to do it. I mean, look what Dan's doing, you know? So that's a testament to you It is it is inspiring and it also unlocks the door to unlocks the mind to say well I'm not too busy to do it. I mean look what Dan's doing, you know So that's a testament to you and also anybody who is listening right now because obviously your your viewership and Your audience is like-minded and they're probably very busy and they probably have the same thoughts Of what I just said and I have to call myself out and say hey, you're definitely not too busy You're never too busy to give back so all all right, last question, Michael Chandler. What is next for you? Are you going to fight Connor McGregor? Who's up next?
Starting point is 00:29:11 After we saw that amazing knockout you had with 20 Ferguson, like the world is talking, the world is watching. What's next for Michael Chandler? Man, I wish I knew we're definitely working on getting Connor, definitely working on the Connor fight. I do think I think at this point, it's, it. I'm looking at it. I'm looking at it. I'm looking at it. I'm looking at it. I'm looking at it.
Starting point is 00:29:27 I'm looking at it. I'm looking at it. I'm looking at it. I'm looking at it. I'm looking at it. I'm looking at it. I'm looking at it. I'm looking at it.
Starting point is 00:29:35 I'm looking at it. I'm looking at it. I'm looking at it. I'm looking at it. I'm looking at it. I'm looking at it. I'm looking at it. I'm looking at it.
Starting point is 00:29:43 I'm looking at it. I'm looking at it. I'm looking at it. I'm looking at it. I'm looking at it. I know, you know, the UFC wants to give me big fights. I want big fights. Go out there. We want to see it. You want to see it. We're sitting at the edge of our calculating, like watching those fights and waiting for that backflip at the end of the match. All right, guys, you're listening to the money Mondays. My name is Dan Flaschman here with my co-host, the real Tarzan. We just interviewed Michael Chandler, the UFC star, the backflipper and investor the entrepreneur Now we do have a favorite ask go out there and share the money Mondays because we want more people to talk about money
Starting point is 00:30:14 Because we think it's rude to not talk about money Ladies and gentlemen welcome to the money Mondays. I have my co-host here the real Tarzan What so I'm very excited about our guest today Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to the Money Mondays. I have my co-host here, the real Tarzan. I'm very excited about our guest today. When I was planning out this podcast, actually, he was one of the first guests that I wanted on it. So I'm excited that he's one of the first guests to be on it. Wes Watson, I don't have to go over too much of the backstory.
Starting point is 00:30:37 You guys have seen him online, crushing it, yelling at you, screaming at you, making you get right and act right, do push ups on the spot. I'm actually gonna do some right now while we're talking. You can kind of hear him in the background breathing hard because we're just so I'm working out as we're walking up. So West Watson, we're going to dive right into it. Give us a quick two minute bio about you just so we can get right to the money. Quick breakdown. West Watson GP penitentiary life was my YouTube channel I started with. I did 10 years in CDC, California Department of Corrections. I got out five years ago.
Starting point is 00:31:06 On December 17, 2017, I got out. Now we're at my mega mansion right here in Rancho Santa Fe San Diego. And I mean, the whole point is, is that I just figured out what worked. I finally got out of my way. I finally figured out what was truly working for me. And that was over that 10 years, I healed myself and I taught others to do the same.
Starting point is 00:31:28 It was one big stage of growth that started as like self-actualization. How can I get myself out of fucking prison and stay out? So I had to, I didn't have a second chance. Like I have four fucking strikes and people were like, four strikes, wouldn't you be struckin' out at three? No, they're four in one case, they can only ride two. So I mean, I didn't have another chance. I had to make everything perfect, make everything count. So from the, from the day I made the choice to never drink again, smoke again, engage in any negativity that brought me into the penitentiary
Starting point is 00:32:01 from that day, I never took a back step. And I just moved forward with the positive mindset, positive actions and a daily plan. That daily plan brought me here today, as far as I am, because it works for everybody. And the plan is that we literally listen to our conscience to let it be our guide, and correct, correctly walk this path that we know our hearts been telling us to do forever.
Starting point is 00:32:24 Like I knew from the beginning, I was a fuck up doing wrong shit and it was gonna it was gonna land in the penitentiary. I wanted to go to prison. The other day my boy said you never lose, huh, Wes? And I said, well I did go to prison for 10 years and he's like, yeah, but was that a loss? I'm like, no, I wanted to go. And by even literally walking that path and going to prison, those 10 years of just monotonous fucking grinding, that's what built the discipline in me, the unbreakable mindset that I have today, that I share with people on social media to overcome what they
Starting point is 00:32:55 call challenges out here, which I call fucking affluenza. But I mean, the whole point is is that it's not as bad as you think it is and you can overcome fucking anything. So five years ago, you were in a penitentiary. Now, I'm looking to my right and there's 10 luxury cars, Maybacks, two rose rises that look the same and you're like, well, that one has two doors, that one has four to three. Sorry. Let me correct myself. There's three of them.
Starting point is 00:33:20 Fucking Lamborghini's and everything. How do you go from five years ago to being a penitentiary to now sitting here at a multi-million dollar mansion with the whole freaking real of cars? Monatizing your content, monetizing your passion. Even in prison, I was posting on Instagram. I saw Rich Piana and I saw him posting positive quotes and I didn't want to be as rich, he was just way too big. But I was like, I can do that because I like that.
Starting point is 00:33:47 I liked the positivity. I liked that he's showing these workouts and the message you is put now. And I'm like, I saw that Instagram was like a powerful tool. I'm like, this is going to be a massive like marketing tool. And this, there's huge growth right here. So I started posting in prison in black and white in 2014 was my first post on Instagram in prison from my prison rack. And I never missed a post even in prison. Every day I would have someone bring the phone to me. One of my south side homies would sit
Starting point is 00:34:15 on the phone and charge it or one of my one of my people, one of the whites, they would bring me the phone. And I would I'd already have my post written out the hashtags I'm going to put. And I would just fucking post up, get the picture. How so I'm take it, take that shit with you and I would get the post up. Now the cops were like, they got caught wind of my Instagram. They're like, take that shit down. I'm like, nah, fuck you. And they're just like, you're not going home.
Starting point is 00:34:36 If you don't take it down, I'm like, I am home, mother fucker. What do you mean I'm not going home? I've been here for 10 fucking years. Fuck yourself. Now one of my favorite pictures that I took in prison is now the cover of my best-selling book, Non-negotiable by Wes Watson. And literally it just, I saw it as a tool
Starting point is 00:34:53 and I never stopped. And everybody says that's the key to success as just to never stop. Just pick a path and just tell you become undeniable. But I really live this shit. Like I really never missed a post. And I had a plan, like I was in black and white posting the whole time in prison for like from 2014 to 2017
Starting point is 00:35:11 when I got out, the day I got out of prison, I put up a color pick and I'm like, I'm out. They gave me a $200 check, which is called gate money. And with that $200 check, I bought a pair of chucks and a gym membership and I just never accepted a fucking plan B. A lot of people say these quotes, like they threw me to the wolves
Starting point is 00:35:28 and I came back back leader, fuck a plan B. I live these motherfuckers. When I hear a quote that resonates with me, I just take it as full truth and I will not back down from it. I'm just, I'm so unrealistic and just so determined that I'll make it happen. And now I've basically used the content,
Starting point is 00:35:47 monetize the platforms on YouTube and Instagram, and I've helped people overcome challenges of their own, and then teach them to do that for others. So one of my favorite quotes is, I tell people our purpose in life is to create the man you admire and give him to the world. So that's what I'm teaching people to do. Create the person they truly admire unbiasedly and then give that person to the world. So that's what I'm teaching people to do. Create the person they truly admire unbiasedly
Starting point is 00:36:06 and then give that person to the world. How does that translate into the internet? Well, are you fit? Are you sober? Do you have money? What is the man you admire? So on your page, you're creating this person you admire and then you're building a program around that
Starting point is 00:36:19 to help people become that. And that's really a quote that I came up with on my prison rack and I was like, that's what I'm doing. And then when you look at, say like, Maslow's law of growth needs, the hierarchy, there's self-actualization and then self-transcendence. You're in a phase of actualization when you're creating the man you admire. And then finally, when you give him to the world, you're in that phase of self-transcendence where you've given your all to something. And I tell people it's not about you, like, fuck me. I don't even give a fuck about me.
Starting point is 00:36:48 I've fully given myself to this process as if it's like a religion. And because it is to me, it's saved my life. So I teach people this process and teach them to teach it to other people. And the thing is, it's not like every other business where you have to buy it, to try it, and feel it. I've changed your life before you ever fucking do anything with me. So that's what people don't get with a business. It should be so front and valuable that people are already bought in. Like you've given them your heart and soul and everything on the front end.
Starting point is 00:37:17 I break down the whole fucking program for free on my page, exactly what I'm going to teach you, but it's just not customized to you. So I'm showing you what I do. And then once you want to do it and want me to customize it, I customize it. And by then you've already been changed by the mindset tactics I teach, the belief side preach, and the way I just showcase that a man can live. So they come in already changed. This is what people don't get.
Starting point is 00:37:41 Their product isn't very front end, you know. So when you say the word content, we're sitting here with the real Tars N, you get hundreds and hundreds of millions of views on your content, and everywhere we go together, and people like, I don't know how you do it, or holy shit, I'm like, how do you, just a quick, like, how do you make content with ostriches
Starting point is 00:37:59 or wild snakes, or things that people are normally scared of? How do you comfortably make content with those type of animals? Keep the camera rolling, you know? It's like, it's like how you say your home with animals, I'm home, man, in the jungle I'm home. With certain animals that just, I feel like even more comfortable with them than I am with people,
Starting point is 00:38:16 you know, or even with my own family. And I love my family, but there's just a different level of love, you know, admiration, and have all different types of species. I've said that with my followers. Like I've been like, dude, I would trade, I wouldn't trade my followers in my Instagram page and those people for anything.
Starting point is 00:38:33 He's saying it with his animals, he brought up compared to his family. I say the same thing about Instagram and my subscribers and my followers because they were there with me through everything. They were in prison with me. They watched me get out, they've seen me go through everything, and that's what people aren't realizing
Starting point is 00:38:46 when it's creating content is like, if you don't love what the fuck you do, if you don't, I love my fucking followers. When they fucking fuck with my page and shut my shit down, I'm like heartbroken and they know it. Like you have to really care and fucking love this shit. And he does for his animals, and Dan does for all of us with the content he puts out.
Starting point is 00:39:05 And the whole thing is how do you prove that? You don't deviate. Like I'll never miss because I know some kid on the other side of the world is like, man, like West is he gets up every day. I don't know how he does it. Like I'm going to put down the drink. You know, I'm going to put down the dope or whatever the fuck he's doing wrong. But you just get people hope by living out with him on camera like that.
Starting point is 00:39:24 It's, it's massive. I mean, I, I was in a place of such despair in prison that I was just reading books and quotes just to keep my mind right. And I know that's what I am for people. So I'm not, I'm not jaded to the fact of people are struggling, they're suffering. And the words of someone else that have made it, that's their, that's their fucking salvation. Like they're like, man, if that guy made it from prison in five years, I could get half that. I could get a quarter of that. The mother fucker just said he had three fucking rolls, Royces.
Starting point is 00:39:54 Like, I just want one. Like that's a third, you know, and we could get him that meat. When you mess with someone like Dan, like, he knows how to do this shit. When you fuck with someone like me who built it from scratch, I know every fucking hurdle you're going to come across. So I'm going to be able to help you build your, your coaching brand online and monetize it very fucking easy, very cheap for what you're bringing. Some people invest with me, like 3000 months, 7,500, 12,500 for six or 20,000 for a year.
Starting point is 00:40:22 I brought people back two million dollars off of $7,500 for six or 20,000 for a year, I brought people back $2 million off of $7,500 investment and a 30 minute fucking phone call. Like that's the skill level that we possess when we've done it this fucking long. So the money Monday is we only talk about three things. How do you make money? How do you invest money and how do you give some away to charity? Talk us through how does West Watson make money? West Watson makes money by literally just giving his soul online,
Starting point is 00:40:46 but I have three main programs. And don't you mother fuckers hit me up for the cheap one. The cheap pro fuck that you're never going to get the best out of the cheapest shit invest in yourself. So I have a high ticket program where I teach you how to build your own coaching program like I built. I'm not one of those coaches who's teaching you had a build a business that he didn't build. I made $10 million coaching people personally online just one on one for a on very low ticket $299 a month $754 three months $1299 for six months $2000 for a year. That's my mid-level program. I made millions upon millions off that program before I, and had click funnel awards, all the shit before I ever went into business coaching.
Starting point is 00:41:29 You mother fuckers who haven't made millions coaching, what's your about to teach, there's a fucking problem. Okay, don't do that yet. At least be on the scoreboard first. But, so I have a mid-level program that teaches you how to be better. Mind, body, and soul program, it's mindset training and nutrition.
Starting point is 00:41:46 We have an app that tracks your nutrition and training and then we get on a Zoom call to talk to me directly for mindset, that's a mid-level. Then I have a high level that is just more, it's bi-weekly calls with me one-on-one. That's 3,000 months, 7,500 for three months, 12,5 for six, 20,000 for a year. Those are people who are like mainly CEOs or top people
Starting point is 00:42:07 or people who just are really struggling. They wanna get their mind right. That's a mindset program. Then I have a business program. We're actually sit down and I tell you every fucking post, every app, all calls to action, your offers, I structure your whole business. You will leave that first phone
Starting point is 00:42:23 called able to make money as a coach online. So I have the one where we actually build your business. I have the Elite Mindset program where I work on you one on one. Then I have a group program that's the same as Elite Mindset, but just group. Then I have a low ticket program.
Starting point is 00:42:37 The low ticket program is like a Patreon page, a membership area, where we all can get together. It's a community app. And then they can access the group Zoom call. The lower ticket has 47, it's 47 bucks a month with 13,500 members. It does about 700,000 a month. Then we have the mid level with about 4,000 members
Starting point is 00:42:56 from 299 to 2,000. I have the coaching group that, I mean, which is clocking so fast, we're getting five to seven people per day over the last year on a high ticket program. And so I don't even, I couldn't even calculate how many people, because it's been growing so fast. After I did realist fuck with Andy Frazella, I mean, I don't even, the monthly of the high ticket
Starting point is 00:43:19 doubled and hasn't gone down. And he's a man, but it hasn't gone down since then. Last month we did a new sales, 900,000, and total 1.7 million. But the whole thing is, is what do I do? I do what I love for a living. This is how fucking started. I just went online with no hope of making money or anything. I was just proud that I was finding out on my fucking way.
Starting point is 00:43:42 I'm like, I'm not a dumb alcoholic, drug-using fucking bitch of a man anymore, who's gonna cause problems and go back to prison. I literally, I got everything down. I'm not on my way anymore, and I'm proud, and I share that online. My mindset, what I do each day, I'm just showing my day, and then that caught on, hey, teach me how to live that day, teach me how to do it, teach me what you're doing,
Starting point is 00:44:03 then that turned into the middle-level program. And then I taught so teach me how to live that day, teach me how to do it, teach me what you're doing. Then that turned into the middle-level program. And then I taught so many people how to get into shape and feel better about themself. They said, can you teach me how to do what you do, which is coach other people? So I didn't just have these, I don't come up with ideas. My people, my clients, my followers, tell me what they want for me.
Starting point is 00:44:20 And I'm like, oh, dope, yeah, let's do that. I'm not that fucking guy plotting and planning how to make money. I'm the guy who dope, yeah, let's do that. I'm not that fucking guy plotting and planning how to make money. I'm the guy who does what he fucking loves, sits in the space, and waits for the fucking, the shit to come show itself. So now we're sitting on my compound right here. It's nine acres in Rancho Santa Fe. And I just had an idea one day, I need to get a big place into a mastermind.
Starting point is 00:44:40 So all my people could come hang out with me one on one. And so that was my next endeavor, which already is on track to being another seven figure stream in the first year. But that's mainly all off coaching is how I make my money, but it's the best service known to me. And it gave me my life back. I've saved thousands, if not millions of lives
Starting point is 00:44:59 with this program and these teachings. And I'll do it the rest of my life. I don't give a fuck. I don't feel people burn out or have fatigue when it's something they truly love and they have positive self talk about it. If you're always pumped up, you love it. How the fuck could you get tired?
Starting point is 00:45:13 You only get tired from it when you have negative self talk about the moment, you know? So in Tarzan, with hundreds and hundreds of millions of views, how does the real Tarzan make money? Is it brand deals? Brand deals, Traveling YouTube Instagram. I was actually one of the first influencers to get paid from Instagram So when I did IG TV, I think I was getting paid like seven bucks per thousand views. Oh, wow
Starting point is 00:45:36 I first started so it's like a CPM or CPM Cosper thousand eyeballs. Yeah, so I mean I mean YouTube I'm gonna see, be on rate. So see, be on the cost of $1,000 eyeballs. Yeah, so I mean, I mean, YouTube, monetization, Facebook monetization, I'm gonna write, I set up my Facebook years ago, and I was getting like literally three cents in,
Starting point is 00:45:53 cause I wasn't using it. And I'm like, man, they're still sending me three cents. Maybe if I do post on there, when three cents, 300 bucks, 3,000 bucks, most of them made for me, I was like 30,000, but I'm not, you know, as active on YouTube, as I would like to be, you know, I mean Facebook But YouTube brand deals, you know, merch, you know, I do I have a company called Wildbreed and I sell
Starting point is 00:46:14 shirts t-shirts protein shakes, you know, and the fitness is well too, so I just you know push it everywhere I can only fans, you know I'm on cell phone and told pictures though, you know. Just regular shit, you know, behind the scenes of travels and trips and stuff. So this question's for both of you. What is it that makes people scared to post their real life content on social media? Fucking ego. People's ego keeps them from posting.
Starting point is 00:46:38 They don't think they're good enough. They fucking, I didn't look good from this angle. I don't have the right thing to say. It's all about them. I've dropped my ego completely. I don't give a fuck about me. This is a message that I know works and will help people. So I have to get it out. It doesn't matter how I look, how I feel or anything about that. And that's what I teach people. It's like, how the fuck were you okay with posting your bonk pick, your beers out with your buddies and all your debauchery?
Starting point is 00:47:02 You didn't even question them night out and all the fuckery, but now I'll send your post and something positive and you're all questioning it. And people are questioning you for it. There's something wrong with society when that's happening. Like, oh, hey, look at that big ass joint homie role. They're, look at that fucking huge dude. Look at how many bottles he bought.
Starting point is 00:47:20 But then when you're like talking some real positive shit, people are like, the fuck are you saying, man? Or they're, they're questioning their own positive shit. I just tell people that's the wrong mindset. And I'm just making being positive, being a being a solid man. What's cool? Fuck all that bullshit. Like I just the coolest thing to me is someone you fully just can trust, man. They hold their word. They're not chasing stupid shit, they're literally consistent as fuck. That's my whole goal is to make that what's admired. So Tarzan, how can people not be scared to make content?
Starting point is 00:47:54 To be transparent man, the more you're transparent what we got going on in your life and your business and what you're trying to do, the more you keep it real, the better. And that's why the whole aspect of me being positive, positivity is key, even in my negative parts of my life, I share the transparency with my fans and followers, and I walk them through that turmoil. So they see me come out the other side, like, yo, you stay positive.
Starting point is 00:48:18 I was like, I got a arrest before an ankle bracelet, and I'm like, yo, shit happens. You know what I'm saying? You got to keep the train moving. House burned down one day, and I'm like, yo, she happened. You know what I'm saying? You got to keep the train moving. You know, house burned down one day and I'm like, hey, fuck. We got to rebuild. We got to rebuild.
Starting point is 00:48:29 You know what I'm saying? I'm going to move in my back house, you know, I was on five acres for one acre burn. I say, I got four acres left. Fuck, I'm not going to cry about it. That's the best part about being on social media long term. Is there stuff like that's going to happen and they get to see how you react?
Starting point is 00:48:44 Yep. Everyone seemed plenty happened to me. I mean, I was in prison, got out, started a family, it fell apart. I mean, everything like that possibly could have like derailed me, didn't derailed me. And they're like, man, this dude isn't, this dude's solving my problem right in front of my face. Like when life happens, he doesn't quit and when life happens to them They go run to vices or stuff that breaks them down and where they quit
Starting point is 00:49:11 They take their foot off the gas and that's the one thing I won't do I just will always stick to what works I run to growth not to what breaks me down I run to what builds me up, you know like that all right So we went over how to make money. How do you invest money? Are there things you'd like to invest into? I mean, I invest into my brand massively. I don't, people see this shit I buy and they don't realize that I expect a return
Starting point is 00:49:33 out of everything I buy. But I mean, right now, one of my base investments, it just been always safe was a Blackstone Brett, B-R-E-I-T, which is like Blackstone real estate equity income trust. And it's just I've shared real estate. I don't have time to invest in real estate. I don't have time to flip houses. I just give so on my money and get a return.
Starting point is 00:49:52 And at the height, they were doing like 25% fucking annually. Like literally crazy. I mean, it's probably a lot less now, but they guarantee 10%. But at the height of everything about a year ago, it was that high. And on four to six million dollars, I mean, you're making a million bucks clean off not doing anything.
Starting point is 00:50:09 And I know no people that were flipping houses, putting four million to house, getting that much back that quick. But I mean, yeah, it's fluctuating. That's really the only stuff I've really invested in was, you know, just standard stuff that so a CEO would do like their IRA IRAs and just my account net UBS instructing me what to put stuff in. I don't know that shit. I've never been money motivated.
Starting point is 00:50:32 I've really been like purpose driven. I'm not motivated that much by money. That's why I let it go a lot. I just bought another 650,000-dollar car cash. People like, that's not the wise thing to do. I'm like, I don't have scarcity in money. I was in was in prison forever like I don't give a fuck you know like I still have the fucking money It's just in a fucking car. Well, you lost a little bit. Well, I make a lot. How about that? Like the the amount that I lost is your year, but it's my day. So are you okay with losing a day for some good
Starting point is 00:51:01 Content and some good fun. Yeah, it's fine with me, but I mean, they just, a lot of people don't know how much we really make. And what would you do if you made 30 to 50 to $100,000 a day? And you didn't really have that much expenses because it's online. They really could never judge it correctly, but I really think in 2023, everybody should put more money into their online personal brand than anything. I just, because I've never seen anybody's investment pan out this much. Like, I'm making over a million. I could buy one of those cars and still save over a million dollars a month.
Starting point is 00:51:37 And like, the thing is, what the fuck investment is going to do that? Put all your money into your personal brand. And what am I selling? I'm selling a product that's changing lives, a product that I fucking use. That's the one thing I want everyone to be. Like, if you're into money and this is your shit and you're a fucking man, literally you have to be the man you always
Starting point is 00:51:57 needed and the customer you wanted. Like, everyone's too often not the customer they want. I fuck like when people like try to make me sell them, I'm like, do you realize what you're doing? You're not the customer you want. Like, you're, I'm always the customer. I'm very easy. I know what I want. And I buy it. Just people just aren't really fair with giving what they want and return a lot of life. And they don't understand why shit doesn't go their way. You know. So there's how to make money. We went over how to invest money. Now, Tarzan, let's talk about how to give away money
Starting point is 00:52:28 or how to spend your time and energy for charity. What charities do you like and why? I love giving money away overseas, like actually in hand going to feed people, going to have different animal organizations. There's a company called Vet Paul in South Africa. They deal with potards, anti-potion, help raise the money for them.
Starting point is 00:52:49 Someone out in the Great Barrier Foundation, they needed a new boat. So we're like, yo, let's raise his money. So we get my man's $100,000 boat to go out there and restore coral. Where we got another coral farm in Bora Bora, that we support named coral gardeners. And we was like, yeah, they need cameras
Starting point is 00:53:05 to check on the coral growth to watch it all day. So, I mean, anything involved in animals and people that are actually really about that life, I'm down to help them. And that's where I got all my Instagram started from. What's gonna help people? I think I've given away and helped raise more money than I've made.
Starting point is 00:53:21 You know, and I made some good money, from an animal aspect, you know, there's no money in the animal world, people say, but fuck that, you know, I'm here to prove and tell y'all and show y'all that there's money in it, you know, and it's also money to give away, you know, so. Why do you think it's important that there's a charity element to people
Starting point is 00:53:40 as personal brands? I mean, personally, I honestly give my whole life to bettering people all my time and energy. We've been offered this thing recently that it's after one of your friends to, and I don't really think that way. That's not like my terms of thinking, but I was looking at my girl and I was like,
Starting point is 00:53:59 I remember her saying her dream was to build a school. And there was someone that you know that you introduced me to that they were doing that. And they're in Guatemala or something. And it was so inexpensive. I'm like, oh yeah, well, like when she feels better off what's going on in her life and this planet, it'd be awesome. Like, then I just see that as such like a bonding thing that if that's something someone really cares about and that's a bucket list for them, how amazing is that? I just always like, I'm more like charitable with who I am. Like I coach 24-7.
Starting point is 00:54:28 If I'm fucking, I literally do this. I'll leave it all day long I coach people. So I get off a call and then I'll go park somewhere. And this guy comes rolling up. He's like, taking pictures of the car. He's like, is this your car? I'm like, yeah. And he's like, what do you do?
Starting point is 00:54:43 And I'm like, I do this. And he's like, what do you mean I do, you do this? I'm like, yeah. And he's like, what do you do? And I'm like, I do this. And he's like, what do you mean I do, you do this? I'm like, I do this right here. And he's like, what do you mean? I'm like, I coach people. And he's like, so, and I'm like, I was waiting for you. I'm like, yeah, and I'm like, what do you do? And he's like, I lost a bunch of weight.
Starting point is 00:55:01 And I'm trying to like motivate people to do that. And I'm like, well, frankly, I'm probably one of the biggest people in that space. This is a real story. I show my phone. I said, this is who I am. I do exactly what you're trying to do at the highest level. Sit down. And he sits down.
Starting point is 00:55:14 I start showing him everything how it works from YouTube videos to how they click the link and it goes to my website and it comes in the form of a lead. I close leads in front of him. Like they would come through my high level CRM and I would show them, I'm like, look, this person's coming through this, what I'm offering them. And here I'm sending them the link and they just bought. He's like, no way. You just made $7,000 sitting here right now. I'm like, yeah, I do it all day.
Starting point is 00:55:34 And he's like, what the fuck in his blowing his mind? And like, I just, I really go to places knowing like I'm called to sit somewhere. And he's like, how what the fuck? He walks away like talking to God. He's like, no way. Like this dude was waiting here for me and it's like, I live a whole different type of life. I don't even pay attention to I was in prison forever. All this shit's weird as fuck to me.
Starting point is 00:55:58 Like the sensory world and the tangible, it means nothing to me. Like I live in a space that's between both spots. And I'm like always reading shit differently, placating like contractions and expansions of energy and people and things. And people are like, what's your posting structure? I'm like, well, this time of the week, people are going through this and they're sensing this.
Starting point is 00:56:19 So there's like hypnotic rhythm this way. So we would do posts like this. And this time of the week, people are engaging in this habit. So this is what we would say and do at this time. And they're like, what the fuck? And I'm just always reading behavior patterns and shit like that stuff that prison makes you learn which reading people's behavior.
Starting point is 00:56:34 Like if it's about to kick off on the fucking yard, you're like, damn, Dan's looking kind of pissed right now. Someone's going down. He's sharpened his piece last night. You hear that rinky, rinky. And you're like, damn, what the fuck, the motherfucker? Fucking silent next to me. Sharpen his piece and his cell.
Starting point is 00:56:48 It's about to go down. But I mean, you just gotta, I read people. I read energy. I read environments and I read everything. And I just sense people. I know what pain is in their life. And that's what I do. Like I'm like, I know what you need help with.
Starting point is 00:57:01 And they're not honest enough to say, yeah, I do. But I'll tell them and I'll be forceful about it. And I'll literally show them that I can help them. And I've just brought a lot of change to people's lives that way. But the charitable way, like, I just, I need direction in what would be so valuable in, like my sector or whatever,
Starting point is 00:57:22 because he said he's works with like animals and everything that supported him. And so me, people would say go talk to people in prison. And I'm like, fuck, man, like in all reality, I don't think if people are like, I've had a lot of time working with people that aren't ready to walk a certain path, they have to come to you.
Starting point is 00:57:42 So I think the content is a perfect thing for them to hear what you're saying and then come to you. So the way it works is it's optimal in helping people in my area, which is my background, which is prison. But like you said, the introduction to the thing of the schools, that's probably something we're going to do next year and you'll see content about because it's fucking crazy how much we make and how much that would support a life in another country. We've already been speaking to people about that right now, but that's mainly something on the agenda.
Starting point is 00:58:10 Yeah, me and Travis are both about a school. I mean, they told me about that. Yeah, we both did it. Where are you going in April to on the March 27th March? Yeah. All right. Last question. Why do you think people are scared or think it's awkward to talk about money?
Starting point is 00:58:24 It's because it's scarcity right there and it exposes their weakness. Like why would you want to talk about your weakness? It's like if you were like talking about fat people and you're the only fat person in the fucking room, you'd be like, ah, you'd be picking your fucking shirt out your titties and your crevices and shit. My fucker be all uncomfortable. Like, god damn, you had to talk about fat people right now. Fuck this shit.
Starting point is 00:58:42 But I mean, that's the thing. Like anything that makes you uncomfortable, you should be addressing if it's things fix it. And if when we talk about money, or you see my dumb ass pulp and a fucking phantom with a driver, you're like, well, what the fuck? That's awfully flashy.
Starting point is 00:58:56 Why would you need that much attention? Look at it. Like that's the whole thing. Like people are like, that's like a, like a tension seeking or whatever, or you want validation. I'm like, I do. I want your attention. I do want validation because guess what? If in there, you're trying to impress people. I am trying to impress people because guess what? I would only listen to someone who
Starting point is 00:59:16 impresses me. If you don't impress me, I'm not gonna listen to you. So I have to impress people for them to listen to me, fall the path that I have set. And then I can create more impressive people who are actually working on themselves and showing up as valuable assets. I mean, I don't get why people don't want people to succeed. It's so fucking weird.
Starting point is 00:59:36 But it's an insecurity there's because they're not good in that area. They haven't spent enough time thinking about it, be gathering knowledge and actually attaining money. All right, guys, you're listening to the money. Mondays, make sure to like and subscribe. You can do me one favor, share this content on your social media so we can help more people make some more money, save some money, invest money.
Starting point is 00:59:55 I'm here with my co-host, the real Tarzan. We're here with West Watson. Now one last quick thing. It is rude to not talk about money. Let's see you guys soon. It's rude to not talk about money. We'll see you guys soon. It's rude to not talk about money, 100%.

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