The School of Greatness - Gary Vee on The #1 Reason You’re Unhappy: Do This to Overcome Anxiety & Unlock Emotional Peace
Episode Date: May 22, 2024Get ready to dive into a captivating conversation with the dynamic and unapologetically real entrepreneur, Gary Vaynerchuk, widely known as Gary Vee. Through an engaging dialogue, Gary shares personal... anecdotes, valuable insights into his business journey, and thought-provoking wisdom on embracing emotional growth and self-awareness. Join us as we uncover the multifaceted world of Gary Vee, getting into topics ranging from accountability and gratitude to the future of attention and social media impact. This is an incredible episode full of authenticity, inspiration, and valuable life lessons.Buy Gary's book, Day Trading Attention, for yourself and a friend!Pre-order Gary's new children's book, Meet Me In The Middle, today!In this episode you will learn:Gary's upbringing and the impact of his early sense of responsibility and financial burden.The need for individuals to fall in love with the middle ground and the importance of instilling positive virtues in children.Overcoming natural instincts and habits in order to improve mental well-being and productivity.The influence of toxic or enabling people in one's life and the impact of family and friends on behavior and mindset.Gary's perspective on Generation Z, work ethic, and the impact of upbringing on instilling a strong work ethic.The transformation in Gary's approach to retaining underperforming employees and his reflections on being a competitive and confident individual.For more information go to www.lewishowes.com/1618For more Greatness text PODCAST to +1 (614) 350-3960More SOG episodes we think you’ll love:Chris Bumstead- https://lewishowes.com/1602Venus Williams- https://lewishowes.com/1591Becky Lynch- https://lewishowes.com/1594
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The quality of me as a human matters to me, not as me as a businessman.
I'm aware that I love it. I love being an entrepreneur.
But it is not how I f***ing think about myself.
Right.
It's my favorite game. It is my passion. It's not who I am.
Entrepreneur, investor.
A New York Times best-selling author.
Founder of VaynerMedia.
Digital media mogul, Gary Vaynerchuk.
Please welcome Gary Vaynerchuk.
Gary Vaynerchuk.
I remember when I was first popping off in that 2007, 2008 Twitter world,
a lot of people were like,
the wine guy's gonna be around just for a year.
This is too much.
It's all sizzle, no steak.
Money and fame and success doesn't change you,
it exposes you.
I just have a very simple question for people.
Explain to me any justification
to on another human being.
If you're not happy, if you're anxious,
if you're feeling a lot of pressure,
the answer is ironically,
you have to start doing the opposite
of everything you naturally wanna do.
That's the other thing that I don't understand
what these people are doing.
As if anyone on earth-
Is perfect.
Is perfect.
You wanna have a real moment in this podcast?
Everybody, I'm looking at all the cameras right now.
I'm sorry about that.
I'm sorry.
But I was going for a fact.
You said you wanna live to 105.
Yeah.
You get to do one final live stream.
Yeah.
And all you get to leave behind is three truths.
I promise you this is the most truth
I've learned in 105 years.
Welcome back everyone in the School of Greatness.
Very excited about our guest.
We have the inspiring Gary Vaynerchuk in the house.
My man, so good to see you.
It's been 15 years since we met each other. You have continued to be a leader in the creator economy,
entrepreneurship, emotional intelligence, and so many other things. So I want to acknowledge you
first, Gary, for your continued evolution, innovation, and leadership as a human being,
and also your friendship you have thousands of
connections that you probably text with on a monthly basis and you have a lot of people in
your inner circle but then outer circle right yeah and i'm i would say i'm someone like in the inner
outer circle you know we don't see each other a lot but when we connect we connect and we we have
a lot of memories together and uh i always appreciate that when something happens in my life, you reach out.
So I want to acknowledge you for just being on top of things, reaching out when things
really matter.
I got love for you.
Yeah, I appreciate it.
And one of the things I want to talk about first in today is you've got a lot that's
always happening.
But one of the things is this book called Day Trading Attention.
Yes.
And we were just talking about this right before we started, you were asking me,
you know, what's new for you. And I said, feeling emotionally peaceful and abundant and loved
is new for me because in a world of online marketing, social media, entrepreneurship,
business competition, I was driven to grow,
grow, grow. And I was always accomplishing and getting results. But in the last year,
there's been changes, ups, downs. For the first time, I feel peaceful about me and love myself,
even if I'm not growing at the rate that I always have financially.
Even if you're ranked 113 instead of seven.
Exactly, exactly.
My question for you to start is,
it seems like people are more stressed and overwhelmed
and trapped than ever,
trying to keep up with the algorithms, likes, views.
Yeah.
Changes in platforms, one platform being hot,
then potentially TikTok going away in a few months.
Who knows?
Right.
And people are on this hamster wheel of needing to grow and create, create, create in order to be relevant. Is that sustainable? And how can people
stay healthy and love themselves when they're hot and when they're not? And how do they not
chase the hamster wheel of success with social and stay more sustainable?
and stay more sustainable? Great question. Is it sustainable? Yes, if you're in the place that I think you're emerging into, where you enjoy it and it doesn't define you,
and you can love yourself and you're good, whether you're making a million dollars a year or
40,000 a year, whether you've got a million followers or 40,000, or the thing that you're making a million dollars a year or 40,000 a year, whether you've got a million followers or 40,000 or the thing that you're going through that I go through and many others, when you have
momentum and you're hot, hot, and then you're not as hot and you go up and down. So I think
it's remarkably sustainable. I also believe that 99%, 97%, 90%, I don't know what the number is,
are not in that place yet. They're not in a place
where they don't live for outside validation. They're not in a place where they've hit that
maximum place of self-love. I talk a lot about my mom. It's very clear to me that
whatever she gave me in DNA and how she parented me and the circumstances of the environment I grew
up in Edison, New Jersey in the 80, created a perfect storm where my relationship with me was so good, even in high
school. I think about it now a lot. I didn't realize it when I was first coming up and getting
notoriety. I didn't realize how insane in hindsight, and Dustin, who's filming me right now,
he also grew up in Jersey, and he really understands what i'm about to say even though i'm older he really knows what i'm saying like 90s late 90s early 2000s like you
know high school in jersey in the in 1990 to 94 when i was there like that was like real kind of
like hardcore you know meaning it now blows me away in hindsight that i did not not only did i not
succumb to peer pressure that it didn't even begin to gain momentum with me really and i had a lot
like the only one in high school that this didn't happen to no i think there's others but i and this
is why i'm trying to tap into it so So for me, what you're entering, I believe
is what I got lucky. And I'm using, I hate to, you know, I hate luck because people love to
weaponize it against people they envy. And it's a real lazy trait, but there's a million variables
that are luck or serendipity or whatever you want to call it. But your parents instilled that in you
and gave you that skill. You know, my dad instilled other things in me. And honestly, I was with my mom predominantly from 14.
And then ironically, the time I'm talking about now is when I started to really get
to know my dad because I had to work in the liquor store a lot of hours.
I just liked myself and didn't think...
You're a perfect example.
You were like, I was 4'11 the day I walked into high school.
Yeah, I was 6'3 the day I walked into high school. Yeah, I was six three.
Right.
Now I'm six four.
Right.
So like, I'm using you because you're a perfect comp.
Like, even if the most handsome,
like big dude who was in my grade made fun of me.
And I remember within the first couple of weeks,
big shout out, if anybody can find Paige Parlow.
Paige Parlow is two years older than us,
or maybe one.
All my high school friends are about to laugh.
She was such a pretty girl.
I think she was a junior.
We were freshmen, right?
And she had, like, cliche.
This is literally September 1990.
Her boyfriend is like a smoker dude,
like literally like a John Travolta type dude.
With a leather jacket, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Literally out of Central Casting.
I somehow get lost.
This is literally like week one or two get lost of which class i'm going
to so i'm like two three minutes after the bell rang and i'm like walking the hall trying to
like literally like a in movie and they're outside i already know who this the those two people are
and we're only a week or two like the legends of high school, yeah. And literally, they're outside either her or his locker,
making out as I'm walking by.
And everything in my life is
just walk by and have nothing happen, right?
Sure enough, I get by.
I'm like, ah.
And it's literally a fucking movie.
It's literally a coming-of-age movie.
He goes, hey.
I'm like, I turn back.
He goes, the nursery school's right over there
you have to understand why this is extra funny our high school was a vocational high school
and i don't know if you know what this is but vocational high schools because we were in rural
new jersey i moved from edison to hunterdon county we had a auto body shop we had a salon
and we had a daycare in our high school and some of the juniors and seniors
were taking classes to become teachers so i was literally ironically i didn't know where it was
at the time i'm telling you this the first two three weeks of high school he goes hey kid the
and they laugh and i'm like uh like literally but here's what's so funny about it this is the most
meta moment i literally said to myself in that moment,
not I'm a piece of shit or I'll never be cool
or I suck or I can't wait to grow or whatever the fuck.
I said to myself, what's happening right this second?
I'm like, huh, that's gonna be a really funny story one day.
Wow.
I literally actually at 14 years old said that
and here I am 34 years later delivering on the promise I made to myself
about that moment. So the answer is, is it sustainable? Of course it is. But the only thing
that is sustainable is when your relationship with yourself is so good, you can deal with the
death of a parent, a partner, even the worst extreme, a child. You can deal with getting laid off.
You can deal with-
Breakups.
How about athlete life that you grew up with?
Who are the kids that are bound to be professional athletes?
Jay Williams was supposed to be the best basketball player.
Got into a motorcycle accident.
Obviously, he has a great career.
He's a great entrepreneur.
He's on TV.
He's a good dude.
But that's maybe not what he thought his whole life was going to be for the first 20 years of his life. Or the ones that don't make it. Or
the ones that come from a wealthy family and then the mother or father die of a heart attack. It
spins out the whole family. Or they get raided by the FBI. People have things. My mom lost her mom
at five. My dad lost his dad at 15. Those are game changing moments. How does one deal that they were in a good place?
Last night I had dinner. One of the people at dinner was talking about their sibling,
their younger sister passing away. This woman was in her sixties. She was talking about her
58 year old sister and she was talking about the children and, and she's talking about the children
in their thirties, just on full tilt entitlement. Like she literally said, quote unquote,
one of them is waiting for the father to pass so they can inherit the money.
Oh man.
And you know, I think about those things and I'm like, what, what does that? And that's the
extreme in the other direction. So there's the, I love myself. You know, listen, you know this
about me and you brought it up in the intro. I love being nice. But I'm in, of course I'm nice,
because I'm good with me.
Of course most people that aren't nice,
aren't nice because they're not good with themselves.
So for me, you know,
this is why entrepreneurship has been so easy.
I'm not scared to lose.
And it is the direct correlation.
Your capacity with losing has an incredible correlation to what you're going to achieve as an entrepreneur sustainably.
Because when you're deeply insecure and it's not good,
you equally might create massive success because you're using it as the makeup.
If I put up the points on the board, everyone will think I'm good,
even though I secretly don't think I'm good.
And what happens when you succeed, but you're not good with yourself?
Exactly what you know what happens.
You better, you and I now have, I have way more than you, but you're starting to get
that.
I saw that the other, saw the last time I saw you in New York for a second.
I'm like, uh, so fun to see you.
Yeah, we're maturing.
And you know this, many of our contemporaries or guys and gals we looked up to, we've watched
get to high levels and collapse
yeah crash crash some of it the public knows because it's very famous others we know where
like someone was in our circle speaking or writing books like made a lot of money but like
gone through really bad stuff and drug problems and worse and like like we know and that's what
happens you know money and fame and success
and followers doesn't change you. It exposes you. Right. And so, you know, I think, you know,
for me, it was the, the serendipity of being in that good place. And it's probably why I,
if you look at my journey, it's funny day trading attention is a funny book for me.
It's a little bit back to 2009, Gary.
It's very tactical.
Social's changed a lot.
And I just wanted to give people like, here it is.
Like, go run for the next 24 months.
But, you know, my last book, 12 and a half,
you know, and you know this again
because we've been together through this journey,
somewhere along the line, six, seven years
into giving tactical black and white marketing and
business advice that will work, I got to a place where I'm like, wait a minute.
Oh, people are doing this not because they don't know what to do. It's because they're not in a
good place from a perspective, from a mentality, from an internal place. And that's when my content
started to evolve into security kind of stuff.
Emotional intelligence, generosity.
I mean, I didn't even know what the term emotional intelligence.
Not tactics.
Yeah, because I thought when I came out in 2009, 10, 11, 12,
that I just built from 96 to 2000.
That was the other thing that was a little bit different
about me in that era.
I was also someone who had already really done a lot.
Yes.
And so I was talking about shit I did,
not shit that might happen
yes and i think that's what made me explode pretty quickly besides ability to communicate and that
kind of level of communication charisma it was there was meat there i remember you may remember
this this is actually an interesting question to you i remember when i was first popping off in
that 2007 8 twitter world i'm so animated i'm so over the top what i always used to laugh about similar to
getting made fun of that day in high school was a lot of people were like oh this guy's gonna the
wine guy's gonna be around just for a year this is too much yeah yeah there's it's all sizzle no
steak and i would read those tweets because i'd go and give a talk at the affiliate summit and
and i would read the comments and someone's like this guy won't even be around in a year and it
was very similar to getting made fun of in freshman year of high school.
I'm like, I can't wait to recall this because I know who I am.
I'm an incredibly patient operator.
And I build slow and quietly.
VaynerMedia, VaynerX, has 2,000 employees.
That's incredible, man.
I thought it was only 1,000.
It's 2,000 employees.
You were there.
I was there when we got four.
Correct.
I remember there with like, you guys were in, I can't remember, Soho or something.
Sunshine Suites down on Debrosa Street.
I remember.
You got a ping pong table and like four people around the table.
That's right.
Yeah.
That's right.
Like three, four clients trying to figure it out.
That's right.
And now that's a $350 million a year business.
It's a real business.
And that was built from me and AJ in Mike Lazaro's Buddy Media Conference Center's office
six months before you saw us down in Debrosis.
And that rent for the first year was free because I traded marketing services for the
space.
Wow.
Because the story that most people don't understand about me, and I know you know this, is I didn't have any money.
I built my dad's business.
Right.
And he didn't pay me much.
And I'm not even past the debt.
Yeah, yeah.
But like $60,000 and $70,000 a year.
Not much in New York City.
No, I was in Jersey living in a shitty apartment in Springfield, New Jersey.
But it didn't matter.
And I was able to save money
because I worked 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. Monday through Saturday.
I didn't even have time to spend money.
And the internet didn't work the way it did back then.
So it wasn't like I could gamble or buy.
It was just like a very,
I'm starting to realize in my late 40s i'm like
man my life was weird weird like like like it was weird i was like in a very weird emotional
place which is amazing like off the charts lucky just like being an athlete or any work you know
beyonce's born with her voice she put in the work she developed developed it, but she had it. LeBron was born with what he is.
Put in the work. And that's how I feel about myself. I was given a lot of talent emotionally
and a lot of entrepreneurial talent. And I've put in an obnoxious amount of work and here comes the
outcomes. But like also just like anybody else, I've gone through my journey along the way. My
last book, 12 and a half, I talk a lot about candor being my weakness. My kryptonite. Candor?
What do you mean
by that well gary b's candorous next hour here i'll fucking shoot i'll be like you you know and
i do that well as gary v but as gary vaynerchuk when i have an employee that stinks i for my
whole career to this day it's a problem to this day i'm a five out of ten media 4.7 i'm being
honest or being up see that even like,
honestly, that like made me crumble.
I hate that candor is-
Well, I mean-
No, no, no, no, you're right.
No, no, you're right.
Candor is a synonym or whatever the fuck it's called
of honesty.
My ability to be honest with an employee
that has been around my company for a period of time
and now I like them, who's underperforming,
has been the disproportionate kryptonite of my career,
which surprises people
because Gary Vee on stage or on podcast,
that's my strength.
But I'm talking to the world.
But when it's one-on-one and you care about someone.
And I know everything about them.
I know that their dad this and their mom this and I know they're having struggles at home or i know they came in and had
fifty thousand dollars in college debt and i'm like oh like and and so i've realized one of my
great weaknesses of my career is that i believe i believe too much charity into my work oh man
and one of our biggest connection point in our friendship is, you know, pencils of promise,
right? And I've done a good job in doing charity work, but I haven't been able to take off like,
I really envy the people who like, don't bleed in charity. Charity has been an element of my
investing. I've invested in companies that if my life depended on it, I would never have invested in.
I 100% knew it wouldn't work, but I wanted to write a $20,000 to $50,000 check because I liked the person. Wow.
I have kept many employees within my companies for a long time.
And here's the worst part.
I've taken the brunt of that because it's lost profit, right?
It's reputational damage.
People are like, why is Gary keeping around Sally?
And then what ends up happening is eventually there is a moment where that person goes,
but it's always been sloppy because of the lack of-
A year or two after they should have.
And then I'm the bad guy. And it's all because... And so candor has been something I've developed a
lot more. A lot more. It's still-
So challenging.
Back to, we were joking about, I just read the audio book. There are a couple of things on earth
that come incredibly hard to me. One is candor to nice people when I have to let them go in a
business. And two is reading my audio book, which is a grind. I know, man. Although you mentioned
you're in your late 40s now, is that right? I just turned 41 a couple weeks ago, 48.
If you could go back to 40 and think about all the things that you struggled with in the last, I guess, eight years.
People see your wins and successes nonstop.
Like all the exits and investments and the growth of VaynerMedia and the books and the old time best, NFT, all these different things that people see that.
But for you, what do you think are the two or three things that have been beyond candor,
your biggest struggles or the hardest things you've had to overcome?
One is very real right now, which is I am atrocious at smelling the roses
because the whole game for me is smelling the roses.
However, I'm sensing like,
but would I have enjoyed the memories
of the more extreme version of smelling the roses?
Let me explain what I mean.
Yeah.
So when I have wins, I don't celebrate them.
Like there's no, like in my world,
we just landed a $20 million client.
Wow.
It's a lot.
It's a big client.
And a bunch of the people at Vayner,
they've worked at other places.
They're like, so when's the,
so when are we doing like the celebration thing?
And I'm like, what are you, I don't,
like my brain's like,
I don't understand what you're saying.
Right? And not that like I'm like, what are you, I don't, like, my brain's like, I don't understand what you're saying. Right?
And not that, like, I'm, like, some tyrant.
It's almost like just my energy goes to, like, problems.
You know, as I continue to go through my own journey, it'll be very clear that I was blessed with many things as a child, but I was also burdened with some.
Like, I was the oldest from the old country
i mean when i tell you since the time i was five years old i remember being ingrained like
responsibility responsibility sister yeah take your like my mom and i admire that from my mom
do i also understand like anything if anything's too extreme one or the other between that and
then don't forget at 14 i come into my dad's business by the time i Between that, and then don't forget, at 14, I come into my dad's business. By the time I'm like 15
and a half, when you still used to even
use a half, it became
clear like I was a talent.
Back to the great Kobe Bryant that you got to do
a podcast with. We're up 20-30%
this year because you're in there freaking razzle
dazzle people. So guess what happens? Now I'm 17
and 18 and 19 and I'm feeling
the financial burden.
Right? And now that was, I want to be very careful here.
It's not like my father came to me and said,
you need to, absolutely not.
I did that to myself, but it was hardwired early.
And my environment's like my responsibility.
You know, I think a lot of first generation
oldest immigrants that were born in the old country
and their siblings were born here.
Actually, that's really cool.
Anybody who's watching, email me gary at vayner x if you're this exact person you're an immigrant yourself
you immigrated to america or any first world country london anywhere else uh and you're the
only sibling that was born in the old country but you have siblings that were born in the new world
i think there's something there.
Of course.
There's something there.
I felt half parent my whole life.
Wow.
AJ, who you know well,
I mean,
minimally I feel 50% dad, 50%.
Wow, really?
Of course, he's 11 years younger than me.
That's true.
You know, so you're 18 and he's seven.
And forget about the 11 years,
like I just told you earlier.
I felt that way towards my sister
who's only three and a half years younger.
There was just something like you're the,
and again, I think back,
this is where I'll say something very important right now,
I believe.
I think we judge our parents too much.
Yeah, of course.
Like I don't sit here and say,
mom, like I think people really dwell too much.
I understand.
My mom lost
her mom at five. And then her dad went to jail for 10 years in the Soviet Union because every
entrepreneur did. And so her and her brother were the world. So she made, I mean, Brat and Sistra,
Shana Galeva was like propaganda into my head of like my relationship with my sister.
But it's hard when you're eight
to think that way, to not think your parents should be trying to protect you and educate you
and elevate you. But there is no should. I get it. You don't want to have a real moment in this
podcast. Everybody I'm looking at all the cameras right now. There is no should. That's the biggest
thing, right? Because then we could say your parents should do this. And then I'll tell you the biggest pandemic
in the world right now,
which is 22 to 30 year olds
who are really struggling
with standing on their own two feet
because their parents went too far
to what you just said.
They took care of them too much.
Too much.
So this purple, by the way,
look at these two books.
Yes.
This is purple for a specific reason.
I'm not a Lakers fan.
Yeah, yeah.
And meet me in the middle.
What I can tell you has become very clear to me
is I believe that the world desperately needs
to figure out how to fall in love with purple,
not red or blue.
Because they both have major valid points
and they both have major flaws.
Wow.
And the middle, especially parenting. One of the reasons I started V friends is
I knew what was happening with Gary V. You know this, we run enough similar circles.
I've been very blessed that because of where I was, I was then able to be what my mom and my
circumstance in a lot of ways did for me. I've been able to do for a lot of people, right?
a lot of ways did for me, I've been able to do for a lot of people, right? It feels nice. You get it too. It feels nice for people to say, hey, you've really helped me. For me, children, you
get in that early. It's one thing if I meet you in 2009 in St. Louis and could be a positive deposit.
You've been built though. There's a lot of shit there. You had to do a lot of your work.
You've been built though.
There's a lot of shit there.
You had to do a lot of your work.
I had, I couldn't do, I can't do that as an outside, outside motivation or inspiration or perspective.
Right.
But when you get in early, so for example, in V Friends, there's a character called Accountable
Ant.
I'm obsessed with this character.
I believe that if I can make that character cool, like Pikachu or Spider-Man, right?
That if you're a kid that falls in love with the cartoons
I'm gonna put out or the kids books or the video games
and you're like, I with accountable,
and that's my guy, right?
I am accountable for everything in my life.
Think about what happens if you love Spider-Man
or you love Wolverine or you love Pikachu,
like you're subconsciously getting in virtues of that. Like,
or you envy it because you don't have it. If all of a sudden accountable ant is you're dying to
wear hoodies with it, it kind of gets hard if you're like, I with accountable land and you're
not being accountable or at least strive to it, or at least even know the existence. There's many
people watching, listening that don't even realize that they live in a full dwelling complaining blaming framework i've had many friends relatives and
relationships acquaintances and business partners because i'm my parents too far
went with no complaining which meant keep things in right but as you can imagine if you're visceral
to complaining you smell it from a mile away yes and then, if you're visceral to complaining, you smell it from a
mile away. And then if you're really visceral to it and you smell it from a mile away, well,
you're aware that someone's constantly dwelling and blaming. And so to me, what was most fascinating
in my 30s and 40s as I've gone through this journey is they don't see it, which led me to
the great breakthrough of candor. Lewis, I didn't know
when we met that that was my kryptonite. I thought it was my strength. How about that?
Because you're being honest online and you're being honest on stage, you mean?
Nope. Because I didn't even realize the dichotomy of that. I just thought I was being nice. I was
like, look what I'm doing for Sally. Two more years of payroll when she sucks. Look what I'm
doing for Ricky. This guy blows. He'll she sucks. Look what I'm doing for Ricky.
This guy blows.
He'll never be okay out there.
There was probably a mix of little ego,
like jump on my shoulders, I'll be Superman,
which is why I'm using the kryptonite example.
But there was also, I thought it was being good.
Life's hard lessons.
I had to wake up in my mid forties and go,
why is anyone that's ever worked for me not like me?
Because, you know, you'd read a tweet and be like,
Gary, like, I'd be like, fuck, how is that possible?
I was so nice to Johnny.
I had to really do that work.
Why do you think that people maybe don't like you?
Well, people in the outside world who don't know me don't like me.
The reason they wouldn't like it is because
either my communication style isn't their jam, which I understand.
Like, when you're aggressive and confident
and competitive and Jersey and like my stick in their mind,
like it doesn't work for them.
I understand that.
Some people are more chill.
Like, you know, like the reason people don't like,
I love to live in New York City.
Some people come to get me the out of here on that.
Right, it's too much.
That I respect.
Number two.
The people that know you or work for you or...
Yeah, let me finish this.
I think because I think this will help people
because what I'm really trying to do in this
is not say it about me.
I'm hoping that people can start having a better relationship
with people not liking them that don't know them.
That's good.
So number two, it's their own.
They want to be a successful entrepreneur
and I'm triggering affirmation of like,
they're not there yet.
And they're like, you'll this guy, right?
Three, they've overly put me on a pedestal
and then I do something that they don't agree with
and it picks them up,
which is very flattering, but very understanding.
But it's all wrapped up in who they are with themselves.
On the version of people that do know me,
the only thing,
the black and white thing was the inability. It's only the people closest that didn't get
the candor that I actually ironically liked the most. Now what's been nice, you know what got me
away with it for a long time was people's own accountability. Why I was getting away with it
in my own mind to my own self was people would hit
me up three, four years later with emails like, I'm sorry. Cause they had gone through, look,
if you're, if you're like, if you're a C player, you're good with me. Cause I think you need all
kinds. It was D and F. So you could imagine, and that was a subjective opinion, whether I'm right
or wrong. But as you can imagine, it's not like I'm bad at it.
I've been doing it my whole life.
So a lot of those people really were DNFing it.
And they, through their own work on themselves, actually were able to go back and actually see a lot of the,
they were able to see so many of the nice things I was doing, even though I was sloppy on the candor and on the firing.
It's kind of like when you get older and you look back at your parents.
Correct.
You blame your parents as a kid. Oh, they didn't give me this. They didn't do this.
But then you understand. I know they were just doing the best they could or they really tried
hard here and they were giving you so much here. They sacrificed you. Especially if you become a
parent yourself. Of course. Then they're like, oh. I get it. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Of course. I get it.
It's almost like the way I think about athletes. Like, boo, you suck. I'm like, you go out there.
You go try that. Yeah, yeah.
I mean, speaking about this topic, I mean, just start with, you know, still kind of with
this first question, is this sustainable?
What you just said right here, I think is one of the biggest things that holds people
back, whether that's creating content online, starting a business, or putting themselves
out there in any endeavor endeavor is people care so much
what other people think about the end. How do people overcome the opinions and judgments of
others with their craft business or art therapy, um, positive consumption, new friends exercise psychedelics um true in work that is starting with do you understand that
that's what is actually happening i believe that that is a blind spot to everyone they don't
realize why they wear designer clothes they you know many people, it's attracting the opposite sex
because they're looking for that closing of the gap of love.
So, of course, alpha guys, like, I got to get a...
Think about all the trends we see, right?
Like, these f***ing girls won't like me if I'm not rich, right?
But it's all deeper than that.
That's the surface level pizzazz.
It's like they're looking for love.
And love is important as fuck.
And so because they're looking for that,
they believe they need the proxies to get it
without realizing that's often going to attract
not the clean version of love you're actually looking for.
It's a whole...
You know, it's funny.
I said something to Nick, one of my key executives at VaynerMedia.
He came from Saatchi and Saatchi, a very classic, you know, Mad Men era, right?
And about six months in, I could see he had it and all this.
And then he was like doing a bunch of stuff.
And I kind of recognized what was happening.
And I sat him down and I said, Nick, I want you for the next year in this company,
if you want to grow,
do the opposite of everything
you intuitively think you want to do.
What was he doing?
He went to like, for example, at Vayner,
what I try to teach people,
talk about the irony about what I'm saying.
So-
Be candid, be candid.
Give me your hand.
This is so crazy.
I launched,
you know Dustin,
we just launched something called
Elephant Meetings.
Let's get the elephant out of the room.
Oh, that's good.
It's saving our company, bro.
Wow.
And when I say saving,
our retention
is going to explode because of this.
Wow.
So what he
and every advertising person,
I'm laughing right now
because I know every single ad agency,
marketing agency, social media agency person
is about to smile.
Whether they consciously or subconsciously do it,
everything is based on save the customer,
which means you're just eating,
like you're just yesing them to death
even though they're wrong.
Like I'll give you an example of social media.
Louis, I want you to post on fucking MySpace.
That's where we need to be.
And you're like, yes, sir, Gary, we will. And my space. That's what we need to be. And you're like,
yes, sir,
Gary,
we will.
And you know,
that's not what you should do today.
And so just like classic stuff
or like putting a television commercial
on a pedestal
versus a social media post,
which is my whole thesis.
So there was just a lot of stuff.
It was coming with a lot of baggage.
Anyway,
I know he's going to smile right now
because I know
it's been a big factor in his life
and it's kind of what i want to say to everyone right now it's almost like if you're not happy
as you're listening right now if you're anxious if you feel a lot of pressure
the answer is ironically you have to start doing the opposite of everything you naturally want to
do so right so you naturally want to be at night, right? So you naturally want to be at night
dealing with this and you're all stressed.
So what you want to naturally do
is go grab another bottle of vodka.
What you're supposed to do is not do that
and wake up tomorrow morning and go to the gym.
Like, you know, like I do think the other thing is,
let's talk about,
people like to say the toxic people around you.
I'm going to give you a different one.
What about the enablers? Right. What about the people like to say the toxic people around you. I'm going to give you a different one. What about the enablers?
Right.
What about the people like your mom or dad or brother and sister or best friends who
are letting you get away with your bad behavior because they have my flaw.
They don't have candor.
So what people understand is like-
They're not going to give you tough love or tough communication or just challenging
communication.
It's really crazy, right?
It's like in my real life, in the Gary V part of it, all the admiration comes from like,
you're the one that told me like, shut up.
Right?
But in real life-
To the public, right?
But in real life, I'm very fortunate.
I'm a pretty stable, epic family situation where there's like, we don't have any
like off the reservation family members
where like, but like friends and stuff like that.
Like I was taught and it's ingrained in me
to be the superhero I want to fix.
But that's what gets parents in a bad place
of paying for their kids and all that.
So these are complicated things,
but I would say to people,
pay attention to your circle because it's everything. You know, it's a cliche. and all that. So these are complicated things, but I would say to people,
pay attention to your circle because it's everything. It's a cliche. It's not like I'm inventing a saying. The five people you're around, all that. It's real. It's real. I really watch
that and I'm like, that's real life stuff. How worried are you for Gen Z?
Not at all. You're not worried? No. I'll explain why. Because there's unlimited entitled lazy boomers.
Now, do I think that stereotypes have merit in them?
Of course.
That's how they happen.
So, like, do I think that the circumstances of parents over coddling as a generational truth,
eighth place trophies as a generational truth,
and then COVID where the government paid you more money to
stay home do i think it's created entitlement and some vulnerabilities i do and i get it like if
you've been over coddled you're scared to lose we were laughing a little bit before about our famous
dumb wrestling match where you destroyed me on summit at sea i viewed that as like fun like
literally every time i see you my chemicals go in a good way of like,
that dude, I got to get him.
You know, that's a good thing.
Not like I'm a loser.
He's better than me.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
You know?
Yeah.
And I just, you know, I think I'm not worried about it
because I know too many,
like I think about my company.
We have a lot, right?
We have both full extremes.
There are people walking around currently in my company
who are out of their mind expectation
wise like literally like if they could say it they they want me to like come to their house
pick them up walk them to like like you know what i mean like once they want yeah there's just like
a lot of expectations we've demonized companies you know the problem for companies is they're not
governments or schools or your parents governments schools or your parents
don't have merit with you meaning a company if it runs out of money it closes it can't pay you
it's over and you know your parents like they'll constantly run up their own credit card for you
that's if they're those kind of parents the government is full of print money in perpetuity.
Just put more money.
And by the way,
if I can print money,
I'm getting.
Right.
And,
and schools that's fake.
Oh,
land.
Right.
Right.
You're talking to somebody who this is real.
Now in that famous four years of high school,
never opened a book once,
never did one piece of homework.
Never,
never spent one minute studying
for a test how'd you pass i figured out somewhere around freshman year that school was going for
blue ribbon status and they needed everyone to pass wow they were just enabling people to get
through wow i was like good this works for me and i'm i'm an entrepreneur yeah one day i'm gonna be
i also knew that i was gonna be like such a workaholic that i was like, good, this works for me and I'm an entrepreneur. Yeah, we go hustle on the weekends. I also knew that I was going to be like such a workaholic
that I was like, let me take these last couple years
of enjoyment and get some, bank up some rest, you know?
And so this goes back to being weird.
Like I have a lot of weird dynamics now
that I realize like the world.
I'm like, oh, yeah.
Because before it, I lived in my own life,
in my own family, in my own neighborhood with no internet.
I didn't know that my life was weird.
Right, right.
You know, And so anyway, uh, and then I've got Gen Zers who are 20 year olds, you and me
fire coming out of their work. Yeah. Like, you know, not because they eat spicy food,
because they're just like, I'm going to like look me dead in the face and saying,
I'm going to run this whole company one day. And I'm like, let's go, Sally. Let's go.
So what would you say to someone in their twenties who maybe wants to accomplish a lot
and maybe didn't have it that hard growing up and they feel like it's going to come easily to them?
Force the hard, create the struggle. Why is that? I said it to a friend, you know, it's crazy. My friends I grew up with, like in
our era, their kids now are
18. Right? It's crazy.
It's crazy. So I'm now having
the craziest talks
ever. I'm like, I knew this kid when he was
two and I'm talking to him now like my
audience. And I tell a lot of these kids
and a lot of them, especially the ones I was close
with and we did a lot of business, some of these
parents really made money. You know, like those early Facebook and Twitter and like, you them, especially the ones I was close with and we did a lot of business, some of these parents really made money.
You know, like those early Facebook and Twitter
and like, you know, like venture.
So these kids are bougie.
Right.
They're wearing bad clothes than you.
I told, hell yes.
Yeah.
Though this gap would be fresh.
That's pretty money.
Richard, good.
I tell them like, yo, bro,
I had a very, very real conversation two weeks ago.
I said, bro, I said, you got two choices here.
You take mommy and daddy's money
and create some sort of fake picture
and all the real ones know,
so you're not tricking winners
and you're tricking 98% of the losing players
and you can live that life and many do.
That's the easy way.
Or if you're telling me,
because the kid had good words coming out of his mouth,
I'm like, if you mean it,
well, then you need to go work at a company
and work your ass off.
And you need to eat,
and you need to get three roommates
instead of your own place.
If you do not take their money,
then you can do it.
So if you were fully taken care of your whole life, you were allowed
to say, mom, dad, no, you're allowed. The problem is too many people like to talk out of both sides
of their mouth. They want to shit on mom and dad, but they want the unlimited credit card.
They like that they bought them an apartment.
How are you teaching your kids about life?
I'm doing it right now.
My kids can watch this.
They're going to watch it, right?
Think about this.
No kid listens to their parents.
So like me and my friends who like think about thoughtful,
we all laugh.
They're like, can you talk to my kids?
I'm like, yeah, but can you talk to them?
My kids are like, you Gary to my kids i'm like yeah but can you talk to me like your kids my kids are like you gary v they really don't i'm very fortunate but but no no in the way that i'm saying it they're not they're fully saying it they're like dad it's dad yeah of course they're
not about they didn't find me on the for you page and be like who's this cool guy they're like no
way bro i'm not listening to you and i'm smart enough i don't know if smart story um i'm aware
enough to know like i'm not gonna be listen i'm dad and every dad and mom has have obnoxious impact
on their kid but i'm gonna be dad to them which means an outside voice like i'm able to be a
contributor to so many i can't be that for my kids because i'm the main thing that's interesting so
other people have to be contributors.
Right. But it's cool because I understand it. I'm pretty fortunate. I know a lot of people that I
think are really positive contributors to the conversation. And I can't wait. Just like my
friends now are like, like the last four years have been phenomenal, especially five years
because of TikTok, because even started a little bit earlier, there isn't a week that doesn't go by that a business acquaintance all the way, you know, that's over here to you, to the inner circle,
right? That my social graph, that I won't get a text and be like, and like, it's so funny because
it's happening so common. It always the same thing. You'll never believe this. And at first,
I didn't know what it was. And then then and then a couple years in i was like
what but i knew and i would smile but now i reply immediately i'm like your kids follow me on tiktok
and they think i'm cool they're like how'd you know i'm like you know i'm like that's how
day training attention works but you know it's really really cool i can't wait for my son
in who's 11,
in like four years, six years,
text me like,
Dad, do you know who Lewis Howes is?
Or Dad, how do you know Lewis Howes?
Or Dad, you've known him since,
take a picture of us at World Cost Plus Market or wherever we've been, right?
That's going to be interesting,
but I'm aware that I'm Dad,
so I'm trying to give them all the shit I believe in.
But I know it's a different version
than what Gary Vee is
because they're going to have supplement,
compliment voices to their world,
and it'll be interesting to see what they gravitate towards.
They may be like many kids.
They may gravitate away from my message.
They may reject it for a while.
They may be like purple.
I want to be extreme blue or extreme red.
They may.
Wow.
Notice how I'm saying that. I'd be like, purple. I want to be extreme blue or extreme red. They may. Wow. And I think, notice how I'm saying that.
I'm not scared of that.
When you love, when you try, when you have intent,
when you're ready for it, it's like a game.
It's like business.
I'm ready for the trials and tribulation of fatherhood.
I'm ready for the trials and tribulation of a human being. I anticipate heartbreak. I anticipate my parents passing away because it will happen. It would be
very good for my parents to pass away before I pass away, mainly because I wouldn't want that
for them. Right? So like, I mean, like, you know, but those things don't cripple me. Those things,
I actually are the enhancer of me enjoying a day like this. That is a good day.
Everybody I love is good. Yeah. You know what I mean? What does cripple you?
Not much, brother. I think the thing that cripples me is I haven't had the extreme heartbreak of
losing a family member that's within my inner six or seven. Yeah. You know?
That scares the shit out of me.
Yeah, it's tough.
I couldn't comprehend losing a sibling, a parent,
a niece, a nephew, a child.
That just, it's, I'm not ready for that game.
I really, my heart cries deeply for every human that has ever had to taste the sorrow of losing a child yeah and then for the
people that are lucky like me who are deeply grateful in love with their parents that's also
a crusher right again now i'm 48 i have so many 60 70 year old friends like it's really fascinating
you can see it i mean i have friends who i can see it on their face
they genuinely not that they want their mom or dad to die but that relationship is so not good
that there's a part of them that's a cleansing and like they kind of like a freeing of yeah they
kind of like you know they definitely don't think about it the way i do which is like please god
don't let it happen for another 40 years yeah You know what I mean? Yeah, of course. So, you know, that's important to me. But I keep life very basic. I keep it very binary.
I mean, you say that, but from the outside, people see that you have, you know, 2,000 employees.
Yes.
You've got, I don't know, 100 bazillion social media followers. You've got 1,000 pieces of
content going out every day.
And VaynerSports and VFriends and the pickleball team.
All this stuff. You've got all of these different, going on every day. And VaynerSports and VFriends and the pickleball team. All this stuff.
You've got all of these different, you invest in, I don't know, a million different companies.
You've got thousands of relationships that are constantly texting you.
That's because people don't understand the root cause of why that's happening.
The root cause is because it's simple.
Really?
Sure.
But how do you navigate all of these businesses, relationships, content?
How much do you bench?
I mean, I can, well, I recently did 225 11 times.
Okay.
I cannot do that.
Yeah.
How did you do that?
Two things.
You were physically gifted in your birth and then you put in work.
I trained.
And I have a funny feeling.
Am I wrong?
You've benched more at certain parts in your life, right?
Yeah, yeah.
How much did you do it the most?
15 times maybe, 225.
Great.
So why 15 that time and 11 this time?
I'm building it back up.
Right, exactly. This is where I'm going.
Training.
You would put in more work.
How am I able to do this?
I was gifted in being a purebred entrepreneur, which means I want to do a lot of different things.
Purebred.
There are not a lot of people who never opened up a book,
even the worst of the worst.
I'm telling you.
Because I was selling baseball.
Come home, put the book back down,
start pricing my baseball cards for the card show.
And then the next year, it was my dad's world.
Come home and read the one.
It wasn't that I wasn't working.
What did I do on Wednesday, October 9th, 1991, when I i got home i went into my room put on sports center and got the latest issue of the
wine spectator and read it or beckett or whatever was back then beckett was 90 and then it started
because in 91 and then it started being wine spectator it wasn't complicated i was going deep
and so you know how do I do it?
It's because- How do you navigate and manage all of it?
By not being scared to drop it.
That's the key.
Because I have 43 balls up.
I'm going to have 17 fall.
I think we live in a world back to insecurity and confidence where people have one ball
and they're petrified for it to fall.
I have 43 and 17 fall. And I don't care if somebody um let's pick a business
vayner speakers our speaking bureau if there's a press release that says vayner x is shutting down
vayner speakers i like a logical human like anybody else would be like oh they couldn't pull it off
it didn't work gary couldn't do it it It didn't go good. That's a loss.
That's right. I just don't know how to be concerned with Lewis and Dustin and everybody
right now reading that and saying, what are you going to say? Gary's not as good as he thinks?
I don't think. Have you never been concerned about what people think about you with a
loss or a challenging time? Not a loss or a challenging time?
Not a loss or a challenging time.
Really?
The reason I've spent so much time trying to figure out candor is I really care.
Let's use Max Bass.
Great former employee.
I love him.
We just want to give him a shout out.
Plus, I'm looking at this purple and yellow.
He's a big Lakers fan.
And he's an LA.
So that's probably the way it came to mind.
I care if Max Bass thinks I'm a good dude.
Spend too much time with him.
The quality of me as a human matters to me not as me as a businessman i'm aware that i love it i love being an entrepreneur i'm famously an entrepreneur i was one of the entrepreneurs
that happened to be in place when it became the thing but it's not how I fucking think about myself. It's what I do. It's my favorite game.
It is my passion.
It's not who I am.
So it's made it very easy.
Plus, I'm very fucking, you know,
I'm very like happy-go-lucky,
but I'm competitive.
Meaning, you know, like meaning like,
let's say a coconut hit your head
and you became a totally different kind of guy.
And that, let's keep playing that scenario.
Vayner speaker shuts down and you text me,
ha, ha, ha, bro, you thought you could do everything?
I'd be like, bro, you've lost too.
That's the other gear I have.
First, I'm empathetic, which is like,
oh, you must not be in a good place
if you want to kick me when I'm down.
And then second, I'm like, you.
That's the other thing that I don't understand
what these people are doing.
As if any human on earth today
hasn't up multiple parts of their life.
Maybe they're not a good dad.
Maybe they're not a good mom.
Maybe they're not a good employee.
Maybe they're a bad sister.
Maybe they're not good to their mother.
Maybe they're bad at driving.
Maybe they don't know how to cook.
Maybe they're 400 pounds overweight
because they don't have a good relationship with like, as if anyone on earth is perfect.
I mean, this is insane to me. When you see people getting things, Michael Jordan is not good at
Tom Brady is not good at. You can be the greatest at something and suck at something else. I can write six New York times bestselling books,
but I'm aware based on the last three days that I'm not in the top,
in the top 4 million people that should be reading an audio book.
Now everybody will love it.
And this is why I do it because I get the feedback because they want it to be
me.
And I go off script and I add stuff,
but the skill of reading,
I blow. That's why i was a
bad student in hindsight i didn't know what was going on i was like yes and that's why i was good
at history the only reason the only class i did well at was history is because i listened during
class my audio was tough oh shanghai shek yeah You know what I mean? Oh, that's what Germany did?
Oh, that's who the president was?
Oh, Walter Mondale lost every state but one to Reagan?
That's why I know that, because I listened.
Wow.
When people criticize you for being too busy or doing too many entrepreneurial things,
and they have no clue about your personal life,
but they'll criticize you. Oh, he's probably not showing up for his kids or he's not
there for his relationships or whatever it might be. How do you navigate that conversation when
people say, oh, he's just a business guy, but he's really not good at family, intimate relationships,
personal life? I mean, if my mom said that, then I'd be
like, let's have this conversation. If JohnnyPants49 in the comment section says it, I'm like,
JohnnyPants, I don't know you. Usually it's a direct reflection of their own anxiety.
Lewis, think about this. Could you imagine taking time to going to somebody else's account?
Criticizing them. To try to make them feel bad?
No, no.
I don't like, you know, I'm trying to change some words in society.
Let's take criticizing out.
It sounds like classic.
No, no, no.
You are going to some, I want to go back to first grade talk.
To try to pull them down.
You're trying to make someone feel bad.
Yeah, shame them.
You're trying to make someone feel bad.
I don't know, man.
Like, I just don't have that gear.
Yeah.
And I don't judge those people either.
My lack of judgment against haters, trolls, negative people is a very big power.
How do you not take that personally when so many people do?
They don't know me.
Yeah.
Honestly, brother, it's logical.
It's actually very logical.
Yeah. Honestly, brother, it's logical. It's actually very logical.
I would have to think you care more about what I think about you than someone you've never met because we've interacted 31 times. It would just be logical. Yeah. I had to learn this probably
the hard way for many years, really until the last five years when it started to be like, okay,
when people are saying nasty things about me online or leaving a nasty comment or whatever it is, I could literally take it as a neutral
information and not take it personally anymore. But it took me a decade of being in this world.
Look, brother, I'm not a robot. It's not like, you know, especially like, I'll give you a big one.
The proudest thing I have in my life professionally is that I sacrificed the first 12 full years of my career to build a business for my mom and dad.
Right, right.
It is the single thing I'm proudest of.
It has also been the thing historically that people weaponize against me.
Really?
Don't listen to him because they don't know my story.
You know what?
On TikTok, he inherited a winery.
Right, right, right.
Okay, first of all, it was a liquor store in New Jersey.
I didn't inherit.
I'm one of the few people on earth that
was the direct correlation for massive
growth for their family and extracted
no financial value. Yeah.
I'm the opposite of what you think you're
weaponizing against me. Yeah, yeah.
But you're weaponizing that against me. It's all just logic.
You're saying that because what I'm
saying in this video is hard.
I'm saying saying you stop blaming
the government the school system your parents and get what about you you're a grown-ass kid now
you're 26 the are you crying about you don't like it put in the work you've got unlimited people
look up to you're talking about over five years putting in the work i'm sitting here saying man i'm still working on i'm not even i'm not even like i'm 4.7 is what i scored me and i'm and think about i'm
creating my own homework which means it's really a 3.2 like like why are you not capable of being
accountable or like trying like we all like you eventually have to man and woman up, no matter how toxic.
When people say to me,
well, but my dad,
I'm like, bro,
there are people who had their uncles abduct them.
There are people who watched their parents drive out of the driveway
and get hit by a truck and get killed.
There are so much extreme.
As if your circumstance is the single worst one.
We both are very active in a charity that is trying to help 800 million people.
I'm sorry about that.
I'm sorry.
I was going for a fact.
Brother, 800 million people on earth did not have access to what I just dumped.
Water.
You and I spend real time on that.
800 million people can't get clean water within a day right now on earth.
Yeah.
And you're telling me your mom hurt your feelings?
I get it.
That's real.
But you're not capable of being accountable and saying, you know what?
I'm going to be the one that fixes it. How many? I met a man. I'm recalling now. You're not capable of being accountable and saying, you know what?
I'm going to be the one that fixes it.
How many, I met a man, I'm recalling now,
had drinks the other day.
Gentleman who said,
I was the one that broke the pattern of alcoholism in my family.
My great grandfather, my grandfather, my father.
And I said, no.
And everything was there for me to do it.
I was on the streets at 13.
I started to go down it.
And I was like, no.
So why him?
He's not special.
I'm not special.
You're not special.
We have talents.
The thing I love about what you're doing with Meet Me in the Middle is you're teaching,
I mean, adults, anyone, kids, but adults as well, emotional accountability.
You're teaching emotional
intelligence. You're teaching skills that can be applied towards day trading and content and
business and just navigating the business world. High, low, right? Exactly. If I can get you right
here, like if you read this as a kid, then like the amount of people that are going to- This is
easy then. Bro, the amount of... You know me pretty well.
Yes.
I know that this book
is going to slay
because I'm straight up
feeding you like,
here's the medicine.
Like I was bored
reading my book.
Right, Dustin?
Like my first half
because it's so in detail.
It's like...
Step by step.
Do this and then add this
and then do this.
Jab, jab, jab, right?
I hooked it really well
and I was like, okay,
because they get so much top level for me every day on social.
Let me in book form give them something that they can, like, right?
Yep.
I know this will crush.
Here's the problem, too, where you're about to go.
If they don't have their shit together, they're going to start.
It's double screwed.
It's going to start working a little bit.
And then they're going to get Johnny Pants saying, fuck you.
And they're going to be like, ugh.
So it doesn't even matter. Exactly. That's why I need yin and yang. Yeah, that's why I had
all the drive for most of my life. I was like, I need to be successful. I'm going to get better
in sports. I was willing to put in the work and do whatever it took to win, right? And that helped
me become accomplished, but it left me feeling insecure, alone, and still not enough inside.
No matter
how much I had, how many accomplishments or success or accolades or whatever it might be,
people telling me, followers, it didn't make me feel loved. It didn't bring me peace.
That's why I was telling you before, you were like, what's different in your life right now?
And I said, I feel peace. I feel abundant. I feel grateful. I feel blessed. And I feel loved.
I feel abundant. I feel grateful. I feel blessed and I feel loved. And it wasn't because I've accomplished more. It's because I went inside and I started really connecting with my heart,
my emotions, childhood stuff, and just allowing myself the time and space to heal.
And that, and it's, that's been the hardest work that has been harder than building business and
doing the podcast for 11 years every week and all these different things.
But actually looking at the insecurities in front of me from as far back as I could go, looking at my younger self in front of me and developing a new relationship with self.
Brother, it's everything.
And it's given me peace with the ups and downs.
You know, it's just given me a different perspective of gratitude. I've always been
grateful, but this has given me more gratitude towards everything. And I want to share the,
the skill that I think has really helped me. The thing that I've had to learn that I didn't have
for most of my life that has really given me this perspective in a I've had to learn that I didn't have for most of my life,
that has really given me this perspective in a moment. But I want to ask you with Meet Me in
the Middle, if you could only give people three talents that they should work on, focus on,
develop, that is going to help them in this, is going to help them with relationships, health,
everything.
You've got a lot of different things
with Meet Me in the Middle
and a lot of different characters
and archetypes and identities
that people can build into.
But three emotional skills
that people can master
in their 20s, 30s and beyond.
What would those three things be?
I'll tell them in VFriends form.
So for people that don't know,
there's 250 plus, I think it's 283 VFriends, and they're named as alliterations of things I believe in.
So this book is Patient Pig and Eager Eagle.
So you can imagine how they can meet in the middle, right?
To answer your question directly, I will start first with self-aware hair.
Self-awareness.
And self-awareness becomes the gateway drug to self-love.
Once you can see it in yourself,
like I didn't see the lack of candor.
And my superpower is self-awareness.
This is why I was so good.
I was like, I'm this, but I'm not this,
and I'm this, and I'm not this.
And I didn't envy or have jealousy towards that I wasn't 6'3".
I wish I was.
I wanted to play for the Jets instead of own them one day, right?
But it didn't happen.
And I wish I was like, could sing.
Because I want to be a backstreet boy.
But that seemed fun.
But I didn't have that.
And there was never like, I got really, so self-awareness was really, really strong.
And I think it would help a lot of people.
It's okay to be what you are,
but do you even know what you are?
How do you know what you are in development?
Do you know that you're tenacious?
Do you know that you're competitive?
And I think you need to double down on those things,
not smooth them out.
Or what a lot of people do,
over obsess of what you're not.
You need to tweak things. Yes. Anyway, so self-awareness. Yes. How do you develop more
self-awareness? I'll go into that in a minute because I've thought about that a lot. I actually
think it's about communication around your inner circle to let them feel safe to tell you the truth.
Wow. It's a wild one. Like, tell me what?
Tell me, like, what my strengths are,
what my weaknesses are.
I'm going to give it to you right now
because I just can feel
the listener on the other side.
Hey, everyone.
Real talk.
If you're like,
ooh, this is hitting me,
I've got a big one for you
because I said this in my last book
and I've got a lot of reach out on this.
Just pick the two or three people.
Probably your sister,
your brother,
probably your mom or dad
definitely your best friend definitely your best friend and maybe like an epic person you work with
like your favorite boss ever or current and literally invite them to a dinner literally i'm
not joking and say this is going to be a weird fun dinner i'll surprise you when we get there
because you don't want them to overthink when When you get there, you're going to say, you'll never believe this. I was listening
to Lewis's podcast. Gary V was on. I'm really not joking. I don't, I don't, this is a very
important part of this little narrative thing that I'm telling you. You're going to say to them,
it's unlikely you'll be able to deliver on what I'm about to ask right this second.
But if you're wondering why my best friends here
and my boss that none of you have ever met
and my sister and my aunt are here,
let me tell you why.
I'll bring them all together in one.
Yes.
Wow.
Because what you want to do is suffocate.
It's kind of like posting your weight on the internet.
And like, you want to suffocate yourself.
You're saying, I want to be more self-aware.
I need all of you to tell me
the full truth. All of you are the people I deem that I think love me the most, which means it's
going to be hard for you to say, but I'm bringing you all together to say what I need is this. And
you don't have to do it now because boss, you might feel weird saying it in front of my mom,
the first time you've ever met her. But I need it ASAP.
Tomorrow's fine one-on-one. And every family. Things will open up. Every circle is going to be different. Every circle is going to be different. This is like almost creating a
self-intervention. Correct. Most people aren't willing to do that. Correct. This is, again,
I think three to 11 people listening right now. And I know a lot of people are going to listen
between both of our platforms. I think only three to 11 people are going to do this. And they should send us a message after they do.
It's going to be amazing. And so that would be how you find self-awareness because someone's
going to, like, if I hadn't done that, either my mom who struggles with it as well, my dad who
recognizes it, Brandon Warnicke, my best friend who runs Wine Library and Wine Text, also struggles
with it. So he might've not even been able to say it.
My brother might have been able to come through.
My sister now would have been able to see it
more than 10 years, but if I had done it,
somebody in that circle might have been like,
you're too full of, you're too nice.
Wow.
Somebody might have, if I did what I'm saying here,
which is like, say it, it's okay,
I know you don't believe me, and you're even, and I was very, I was a I'm saying here, which is like, say it. It's okay. I know you don't believe me.
And I was a challenge for people always because I was always providing so much emotional and financial value.
Of course, yeah.
I'm a real piece of work for most people because it is very common for me to be either and often both the emotional and financial financial values in the relationship.
They don't want to,
they don't want to ruin the relationship.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Like it's,
you know,
it's a vulnerability for me.
I,
it's,
it's my,
it's my coping mechanism.
I always have the leverage.
Take care of people.
Yeah.
I just always have the leverage.
I mean,
there's,
those are the two things on earth,
emotional and finding that's the game.
Yeah.
And I'm good at both and generous with both
wow okay so that's number one uh self-awareness number two gratitude gorilla
i think if you can learn and this is just killing people on earth you would be flabbergasted what
would happen and i've seen it with people around me recently
where you just decide right now on this podcast
that instead of waking up in the morning,
which so many people do,
being all upset
and having all of their perspective and energy
towards what's not good,
I should be making more money.
I don't like my job.
This person I just woke up next to, I don't like my job. This person I just woke up next to,
I don't like him anymore.
Like all the tough stuff.
Instead, deciding to be like,
I'm glad I woke up and didn't die last night.
Simplicity.
Gratitude comes from simplicity, Lewis.
Back to your point, everyone's like,
Gary, social media's up everybody. They think they need this stuff. I'm like, do know back to your point like everyone's like Gary social media's up everybody
They think they need this stuff. I'm like, do you understand that? I grew up watching lifestyles of the rich and famous
Right. Look like do you have you heard of MTV Cribs?
Everybody saw that everyone showing the over my ride like if you
$400 used car that felt yes. This is not a new phenomenon
$400 used car that felt yes this is not a new phenomenon like as if what you didn't go to school and one of the kids was the richest kid in school yeah you didn't have envy that they had a brand
new bmw and you had to walk to school get the out of here with envy and jealousy it's as old as
like time yeah so gratitude what do you have, I said something to somebody who was complaining
in my inner circle about three, four years ago.
And they were just like, but you, to me,
and then to other stuff, right?
And I finally said, I said, X person,
let's bump this dinner because this is not like fun.
Instead of telling me like why I have it better,
why, and this is somebody I really know,
why this person has it better,
why your older brother has it better,
this is the real example.
I'm like, for the next 20 minutes,
while we eat this chicken,
can you please tell me?
Hand it to us perfectly.
You're going to like this.
I said, can you tell me who you have it better than?
Who?
And it was a really interesting moment,
and I know that person's smiling right now,
and I'll probably get a text.
I think it really had an impact on them. i suffocated it they're like oh i was
like no no just appease me we're like we're here who do you have a better than and then he went
into like all our common people which he definitely had it better than and then i went into my, and I'm like, okay. And what about everybody who is in Africa right now in concentration and the people in China?
Like, like, like people, like what about real?
What about somebody who during this dinner got diagnosed with terminal cancer and during this dinner,
look down at their phone real quick and got into a car accident that took their life.
And what about the two 14-year-old twin daughters that lost their mom in that picture I just painted?
Since we've been sitting here, I just don't understand how people don't understand what the fuck is going on.
Since you and I have been sitting, recording this podcast, of the 8 billion people on earth, thousands have not only died, correct, but have gotten devastating news.
Mm-hmm. I saw this stat maybe five years ago that has given me a completely different
perspective on gratitude, that roughly 150,000 people a day die. We woke up today. We're not
one of them. And if we can just have that one perspective, 150,000 people a
day die. Bro, I live on that, Lewis. And honestly, death is less scary than something, notice where
I went with it. Sickness. You said die, and I jumped in with devastating news. Yes. Right?
I asked this to myself and I asked it to everyone. Is it better for you to die or is it better for
the person you love the most on earth and can't live without dying?
I think most people are going to choose themselves in that scenario.
Wow.
So there's just a lot going on.
So I just think gratitude.
Number three, and we already talked about it, but I can't get away from it.
If you can learn that pointing a thumb will lead to ultimate happiness and pointing a finger will compound your unhappiness,
you will realize that accountability is the, I, I almost have delusional, not even healthy
accountability. That's how much I like it. Like I really do believe what I'm about to say. Every
single thing at Vayner X and V friends and Vayner sports and every one of my
companies that is a problem is 100% my fault. I'm at the top. So if Sally screwed up, well,
I hired the person that hired the person that hired the person that hired Sally. I did. So,
you know, I think that accountability is the anecdote. It's the formula.
It's the solution.
It's the medicine.
And I believe the reason everyone's talking about a lot of rough stuff right now
is we are in the greatest era of blame
in a very long time.
It is everyone's fault but yourself.
Right.
And that's because politicians are f***ing up everything.
So it's very easy to be like,
either this side. Parenting has definitely gone awry where it goes too far one or another in general there's
tons of great parents i just think you know we're in a little bit of a pickle people lack civility
we're just not nice to each other people just talking so negative people being excited about
people's downfalls,
right?
I mean, I had a real moment on all this stuff very recently with what happened with Kate Middleton, right?
What happened?
You know, I don't know.
I always, I hate talking about things I don't know.
So I'm going to go very headline reading.
I guess, you know, recently, like there was some,
she was missing or something.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And it was like a cropped photo and everyone had jokes
and everyone had jokes. And then she made a video and said, yeah, yeah. And it was like a cropped photo and everyone had jokes and everyone had jokes.
And then she made a video
and said,
I have cancer.
Wow.
And everyone was like,
I'm sorry.
What do you mean I'm sorry?
Or I'm embarrassed.
What about not doing it
in the first place?
The f*** are you f***ing on people for?
I just have a very simple question
for people.
Explain to me
any justification
to shit on another human being.
Yeah, I guess the only thing I could think
they might be thinking is,
well, to hold people accountable
if they're doing harm to others.
Who the fuck are you?
Yeah.
I have no...
I love when people are like,
like I have...
Humility would have been the next,
as if I'm supposed to,
who the fuck are you that you're,
you're supposed to hold Kate Middleton accountable?
Who the fuck do you think you are?
I don't think I'm supposed to hold anybody accountable
at some level, including, including employees, children.
You're part of it.
That's ego.
That's delusion. I i'm gonna hold you accountable
for what that you married into the royal fit what the doesn't matter with you and sometimes when
people play this chess game with me they go but what if somebody came up on you and punched you
in the face my brain goes into that person's at a really the place yeah before i like you know like
i just i don't think people have a good relationship
with understanding where anger,
negativity, and darkness comes from.
Yes.
It always comes from a place of weakness.
Yeah.
I struggle to be mad at someone
when my first default thought
is to have compassion for them.
Yeah, that's a superpower.
It's a blessing.
I see it in my mom.
I know she gave me that DNA
and then she obviously fostered it.
But it is how I see the world.
And I really wish the rest of the world
saw it that way too.
Wow.
Because I will tell you what happens with that.
You don't have the capacity to hate someone
for being different than you.
Right, right.
When that happens.
It doesn't mean you have to allow it
to continue to happen.
No, well, this is what I'm... Create boundaries, you know what I mean. It doesn't mean you have to allow it to continue to happen. No, well this is what I'm-
Create boundaries, you know what I mean?
Yeah, this is where, I love you for that.
I just feel super in charge.
Well, Gary, what if, I'm like,
well then I can stop talking to them.
Well, what if it's your mom?
You can stop talking to your mom.
I don't recommend it.
I'd rather you go through therapy, push,
like I'd rather some think they're being,
but you are fully in charge.
Gary, everything's,
man, I had this dinner the other night.
God, a lot of dinners, as you can hear.
I want to be respectful of your time.
No worries, but I'm getting hyped right now.
This guy's like, everything's up in America.
I finally looked at him and said, move.
Quit blaming.
Move.
You like Canada?
Epic.
Mexico, epic.
I don't know.
Sweden sounds nice.
Spain's lovely this time of year.
I don't.
Shut the up.
And I'm not saying that negatively.
I'm saying that encouragingly.
Uh-huh.
Dwelling and complaining and envy and jealousy are massive weaknesses.
I go on Twitter and I look at all of this and I'm like,
insecure, insecure, insecure, insecure, insecure, insecure,
and left, right, left, right, insecure, insecure, insecure,
insecure, insecure, bad place, bad place, bad place, bad.
And I'm not with judgment, with deep hope that I
and many others that are in a good place can figure out the single word to say,
do the single podcast, write the single book, post the single quote that might help one of
those people say, fuck it. Because for me, what has definitely made me successful and was a kissing
cousin to my inability to be candorous is I care about positivity.
I don't do well in negativity.
And so I have this yearning to do it for the world
because I'm already full.
It's like back to the cup.
Okay, my cup is full.
Well, when you're lucky,
and I think you're going through this journey right now,
so this is going to be really understandable to you.
I'm good.
Yeah.
So what do you do next?
Help others. You don't know what to do's it's the only thing that makes you feel good because you
don't need any more water yeah your water's full you don't have room i'm good now i'm gonna end
with this multiple times a day i have micro moments of like but they don't have sustainability
yeah yeah Got it?
You catch it and you move on.
We lost two big clients yesterday.
One in Asia,
one in Europe.
There's a lot of work to be done.
But I'm not like,
I'm dead.
Or like,
there's always something.
Two books you got going on.
Meet Me in the Middle.
I think everyone should be getting this.
Especially parents get this
so you can have this for your kids. Well, the cool thing was Meet Me in the Middle. I think everyone should be getting this, especially parents get this so you can have this for your kids.
Well, the cool thing with Meet Me in the Middle
and the cartoons I'm doing this summer
that are going to be launching on YouTube Kids
is I'm making them both for the parents and the kids.
So what I'm most excited about
is when the parents read this,
I'm poking at them too.
Of course.
And that is going to be,
if I pull anything off,
if I pull off the dream I have
over the next 40 years,
50 years of B-Friends, hopefully, what am I, 48, 98?
I want 105, so over the next 57 years,
is that I got to own both.
Like, I dream so hard right now
that a parent is laying in bed with their five-year-old,
reading it, and they're like, yeah,
and they're like, oh, I'm so excited about that.
So you guys can get up a copy, go on Amazon or anywhere. Books are sold. Meet me in the middle.
Make sure you get this. Again, I don't think day trading attention is as valuable unless you get
meet me in the middle first, because then you can appreciate what you're creating in your freelance
business, solo entrepreneur, you know, if your career, whatever it might be, uh, do trading attention. That said though, I think about you a lot. Cause
I met you when you were the LinkedIn guy in 2009, right? And then you were a pioneer in podcasting.
What is exciting about what tricked me for so long was the advice that's tactical of the moment like
this. It works for everyone. It's not sustainable work if you don't do the
thing you're talking about. Absolutely. Right? So 2011, you would have read this and tripled.
Oh, yeah. And you would have texted me and be like, bro, I love you. I'm crushing it.
To your point, you would have still had this day. I still have a problem with me. You still had to
get to that place. Exactly. And then that place becomes where you become the ultimate version.
Exactly. So get both, obviously. But day trading attention is about how to actually build brand and sales in the new social media world.
Again, this is required reading from anyone in online marketing, social media, content creation,
business. Make sure you get a copy of this. It's step-by-step. It's 20 years of experience with
Gary on social media and obsessive with data and results and putting into one book.
So this is required reading.
Of the moment, right?
Of the moment, yeah, of course.
So this book was called Jab, Jab, Jab, Left Hook until the last moment.
It's like, I need to write this book every, I should be writing it every year, like the
dummies.
Yes.
But right now I'm every 10 years and hopefully I'll close the gap.
But what I'm excited about is it is pattern recognition expertise, but it is of this second. Yes, absolutely. So get that book.
Two final questions before I ask them, I want to acknowledge you again, Gary, for just being a
real human being, for being a real friend, for showing up consistently for so many people,
again, personally in your life, but for the world that follows your content. I just appreciate how
you continue to evolve, show up. And the thing that I think I love the most about
you is how you took your health to a whole nother level. Seven, eight years ago, I think you went
all in. Ten. Ten years ago. And I think that is, for me, the most inspiring thing because people
can see the business success and be like, I want that, and then miss out on the health. Yeah.
So the fact that you keep going all in on that and you look better now than you did 10 years ago is something I really appreciate and respect because I think that's what
the world's going to need more of is focusing on their own health.
I asked you about your three truths before. I'm going to skip this question. I'm going
to go to the final question, which is what is your definition of greatness?
to the final question, which is, what is your definition of greatness? That you gave more than you took. I really love this talk. I'm excited about this podcast. I think the extra time,
usually I do 45 or, you know, I think the extra time slowed me down. I think one of the reasons
I'm not good at being a podcast host is that they're very,
no really, they're very tight times. I always have a meeting after and people get frustrated
with me because I talk over my guests because I'm not relaxed because I know I don't have a lot of
time and I want to get to a bunch of punchlines for them, but then it becomes awkward and I'm
talking over them and I'm interrupting. They're like, Gary, he just wants to talk. And the audience
is not wrong
that gets frustrated by that version.
Some people love it because they have brains like mine.
But nonetheless, I really do think we touched
on the thing that is greatness, which is like, look,
one of the things I've done well in my life
is I was attracted to older people my whole life.
When I was seven, 10, 13,
I'd always go and talk to 80, 90 year olds
at the bench, at the park.
It was big. And I used to think it was because I didn't have grandparents because I lost three of
my four grandparents. I had my grandma, Esther, thank God. But, and I was like, oh, especially
grandfathers I would go to a lot. So more specifically, I didn't have grandfathers.
I've come to realize that's not true. It's that I'm addicted with to wisdom and like
the, the, the actual game. And I think, you know, greatness comes in like, you know, I think about
like, there's been a lot of great athletes. And again, I'm bringing up Kobe again, because I'm
so glad you got to do that podcast. It's so devastating that he's not on this earth,
but Kobe was different because he was more like us in the way that like, it wasn't that he's not on this earth but kobe was different because he was more like us
in the way that like it wasn't that he was just a great athlete he gave a about like higher
thinking and like competition as a healthy like it was just more thoughtful yes and you know i
think that i think the reason he's revered is he gave to us. Yes. Right? And I think greatness comes in like,
I think my mom is the greatest parent of all time.
And when I think about why I believe that is,
the reason I believe that is,
there's others that tie her,
but they could only tie her.
Because my definition of a parent is,
there's many things to it,
but my personal subjective definition is,
how much did you give to those kids?
And I just think my mom gave it all, like all of it.
And I just know that that means for every other mom
and dad that has done that, they can only tie my mom
for the greatest, but it is a giving game.
And so I do a lot of things of gaining,
building my companies and dollars and followers
and attention, I understand that,
but I'm outpacing it with my giving. And I think I will continue to do that. And that is where the
VFriend strategy came from. I was like, oh, I can take this. This is what Disney, and actually now
I realize this is why Sesame Street and Jim Henson is a legend. And I'm going to do that too. I'm
going to create characters that people are going to fall in love with. But I'm going to do it around collectability,
like Pokemon.
Because what I know about Pokemon and Marvel
is that OGs still like it.
Whereas Big Bird and Cookie Monster,
we're done with.
But if I take what's epic about,
the Pokemon doesn't bring the value
that Sesame Street does. But if I take the value that Sesame Street does.
But if I take the best of Sesame Street
and the best of Pokemon and I smash that together
and I put my marketing capabilities
and my collectible and business strategies
and I build something,
man, I can really leave a positive impact.
The one question I wanted to ask you is,
oh, so many of them,
but one that's on my mind right now is,
you've always
told me and a lot of your followers ahead of time, this is what's coming.
Yes.
You know, you are early Twitter, be on Twitter.
This is what's happening.
This is what's happening now.
Early Instagram, Facebook, LinkedIn, you were like always pushing TikTok.
You were like the first one on TikTok, Snapchat.
I remember you looking me in the eye saying, be on Snapchat.
That was the only thing that like didn't work for me but everything else has worked for me who knows what's going to happen with tiktok instagram facebook all these
different platforms uh when we're thinking of attention and the future yeah ai and the freaking
mobile devices and all the things that have a chance as you know what i'm great at is not
predicting but moving so goddamn fast when it happens and then going all in yeah that i have And mobile devices and all these different- Here are the things that have a chance. As you know, what I'm great at is not predicting,
but moving so goddamn fast when it happens.
And then going all in.
Yeah, that I have that advantage.
What is coming?
Here's things that are coming.
One, for people like you and I,
all of our content in every language at scale.
We've got a million subscribers on Spanish on YouTube.
In our voice.
Oh yeah, that's the key.
That's what we're working on now.
Yeah, yeah. So I, and you've seen it key. That's what we're working on now.
So I, and you've seen it already, Dustin,
we're pretty close.
We're almost done.
Mommy's speaking every language in my voice, in my little high pitches,
in me.
That's going to be huge for every...
Through AI, right?
That's right.
Is there a tool specifically you're looking at?
We're using Respeecher.
I mean, it's moving so fast.
50 of them. Notice how I hesitated even though i'm a big fan of research it may be gone
that game is ai eating itself up it's just like crazy yeah um so ai virtual influencers
oh yeah that's coming i've seen the people are blowing up already with you mean just like made
up influencers that's right yeah aka
very attractive people on instagram that you're like and that will go that will go not just right
now the early movers like always are like models and like all that but it will be full pledge
ricky thompson 47 year old marketing expert who's gonna have 14 million followers and it's Joanna Thompson in Australia
that actually owns him.
Isn't that crazy?
Oh, it's going to be huge.
So virtual influencers.
Are you getting into some of that too?
Yeah, I'm really starting to go deep on that.
Live streaming as a more scaled everyday thing.
Let me explain what I mean by that.
Me saying live streaming is important enough.
Kysonette and Aiden Ross and Ninja and Clix.
Plenty of people are crushing on Twitch and other things.
No, I mean what I'm up to now,
which is I have a camera in my office on mute for 13 hours a day and I'm just sitting there
and it's entrepreneurial ASMR.
It's mute.
Mute, because I'm having real meetings.
So people are watching you
watching me i'm hearing you that's right and i try to unmute and dustin did a good thing for me
create an unmute counter and i'm like looking at him like oh i haven't unmuted yet hey everyone
like literally wow 13 hours a day that's right people making pizza people i predict in five years, someone who loves to mow their lawn,
mow their lawn, dyslexia,
mow their lawn,
will go from like,
that's that classic dad who does it,
to the modern dad,
the 28 year old who's destined to be a 48 year old dad who loves to mow their lawn,
like loves it,
is destined right now as we're speaking
to one time in seven years as he's on that journey,
streaming it for some weird reason.
Today, every 42-year-old, 61-year-old man or woman
that loves to mow their lawn for an hour and a half,
a big lawn, does not think,
let me set up a laptop and stream live on Twitter.
That doesn't cross their mind.
I believe it will become known.
I believe one of them will do it.
I believe for whatever reason, it will crush. And I believe
that person will, a year later, retire
from being a principal in a high school
to making a million dollars a year
mowing their lawn. Live
streaming it. Live streaming it.
Think about how different that is than what I predicted with Crush It.
Remember what I predicted with Crush It, which was
insane, which is influencers
are going to make money. I didn't call it influencers influencers we didn't have the term yet right people will make money on the
internet being themselves that was like right now somebody's like wait a minute i will literally
make a full-time living by screaming making breakfast for my family every morning dude
let me just say that you know insane that that is? Like literally a mom or dad,
let's say a stay at home dad or mom
is literally gonna start streaming her 6 a.m. to 7.30
of prepping breakfast for everybody.
And it's gonna capture a fever.
And they're gonna get millions of viewers every morning.
And they're gonna get subscribers for two bucks a month.
And they're gonna get merch deals.
And cookbook deals.
I'm seeing if there's a guy on TikTok who goes live.
It must be all day he's live.
He owns a little fruit stand.
He's just cutting up fruit.
That's right.
And he's got a massive line every day that just wants to be in the stream for a second.
That's right.
Live streaming, cutting fruit.
It's crazy.
The extreme version of what I saw happening with Crush It is about to happen with live
streaming because it takes it to passive instead of progressive.
I had to sit down and do the wine show.
Now it becomes passive.
I will stream while I'm running my wine store.
But will people watch hours of content
when you need to be five seconds of videos
that people are like losing attention?
No, because people are watching
long form content at scale right now.
You know this.
You just don't want to be in the middle.
You want to either be great at short form
or you want to be great at long form.
You just don't want to be the middle
or you don't want to be bad at long form
or bad at short form.
You could make people binge watch
an entire season of something on Netflix or sit.
I have people that sit with me.
You know this.
Sit with me the whole day.
That's crazy.
They sit there the whole day and talk to each other.
That's crazy.
Well, that's community.
I mean, it's amazing.
It's crazy.
It's cool.
It's funny.
It reminded me.
You might remember this.
When I was coming up the game on Twitter and Vidler and YouTube.
What was it?
Periscope?
Well, that was later.
Uh-huh.
And Meerkat. Meerkat meerkat but
what about before that booth you stream you stream man yeah that was and that was big for me wow i
remember that i would have been a huge streamer but now i'm too busy yeah so my by the way a couple
hundred people i have nothing because i'm not there's nothing right now to dustin and team's
credit now they're playing my recent videos in
the top right corner during the live stream so right so i'm on mute but on the top right corner
in a smaller box is going to be this literally this and like so like you know like we're figuring
it out and like and again i think there's gonna be way more compelling asmr i can tell you right
now it would have been much more compelling to follow me tasting wine all day. What I'm doing right now is really boring. I'm sitting in an office for like
12 hours a day just doing meetings. I'm not even in the old DRock Daily V World where I was moving
around a lot. You're just sitting there. Because I'm in full operations mode on VaynerX and
Deep Reds right now. I'm in one of those modes. I'm not in Gary V land as much.
Yeah. One final question then.
Be respectful of your time.
Three truths.
I think you answered this probably five years ago, last time you were on.
You said you want to live to 105.
Yeah.
Imagine you get to create everything from this moment until then.
Okay.
Your vision, your relationships.
Yeah, I've followed it.
All of it happens, but you have to take everything with you.
So once you leave, no one has access to VeeFriends, VaynerMedia.
It's all gone.
All the content you've created, gone.
Erased from time.
Okay.
Hypothetical scenario.
No, I like, you got me intrigued.
Go ahead.
Yes.
So I die at 105 and everything disappears.
All the content you've made, gone.
Okay.
Everyone lives.
What about the relationships I've made?
Those are there.
Okay, got it.
So content, got it.
Content is gone. Got it. So content. Content is gone.
Got it.
Business content. Yeah, everything's gone.
But on your final day, you get to do one final live stream.
Yeah.
And all you get to leave behind is three truths.
Yeah.
Three things you know to be true.
If you could go 60 years in the future.
I could do it right now.
I would talk to them and say, listen to me.
Three things and that's all they're going to have to remind you of.
I would say, first of all, thank you for this journey.
I'm going to miss every one of you deeply.
This sucks.
I really wish I could go to 110.
I don't know why I said 105.
Right, but three things you can leave behind.
I would say to them that like you're in life.
I would say to everybody, I would hope that I would have the entire 8 billion people on
earth watching me on this last day if we all knew it was going down.
The first thing I would say to them is, I on earth watching me on this last day, if we all knew it was going down,
the first thing I would say to them is,
I promise you this is the most truth
I've learned in 105 years.
In life, you find what you're looking for.
If you are looking for negativity and pain,
you will find it.
And if you were looking for joy and happiness,
you will find it.
And I would expand on that in my three truths,
because that's the game.
You find what you're looking for.
If you're in a good place, you're gonna find good.
You can't imagine, I'm just breaking out of this question
for a second.
Bro, I consume positive content all day
while everyone's telling me the world's never been worse.
The world's never been better.
Like, I read some the other day of like,
pig liver or whatever, something's about to go
in our body now, like we're gonna cure that one too.
Like we're fixing.
Like the world was worse.
Like, they're like, it's never been worse.
I'm like, have you heard about the Holocaust?
The Black Plague?
Like, COVID was fucked up.
The Black Plague wiped out like the majority of us.
Like, World War I was nasty yeah like i just
don't understand people's lack of perspective so i really am hot on that okay number one number two
that love is worth fighting for that you must destroy yourself for it meaning not destroy
yourself meaning like up what you think you value,
if you don't have it.
A current relationship,
that might be comfortable,
which is very hard.
I appreciate your reaction to that.
That's probably the hardest advice I just gave,
which is,
you know that you're in a relationship,
but it is not the right one.
But if you have children,
it's comfortable.
Oh man.
Real stuff, you know?
You like them.
Like, you like them.
That love is worth fighting for.
Wow, okay.
You know?
And the third one?
Man, it's so funny how simple my brain goes.
Those two really, really, like choosing happiness and love
are so obvious to me.
You know what?
I'm going to go with a funny one.
Cause I have a funny feeling that I would go out funny.
I would go out with a good curse.
I think I would say this cause I feel it very heavily right now.
Until you realize that competition is one of the great traits in life,
that it is good.
That like anything out of balance, it's bad.
But the elimination of merit,
the demonization of alpha skills has really fucked it up.
Telling a six-year-old that it's just a game,
who was born with the gift of being an alpha
and on fire and competitive competitive is the worst thing you
could do as a parent. Wow. I, I despise it. And I don't like that word despise watching parents
that are wildly well-intended systematically suck out the magic of a kid who was born a magician is devastating. And one of the real issues that I
hope in the next 50 years it gets figured out, but right now, so I'll use it as an opportunity
to make this point. Competition is one of the best things on earth. And we have gotten really bad on
the left side of things in understanding it. And it's people up because
if you're successful in sucking out competition of an alpha six year old, if you're successful
in those 12 years that you have them in your roof, you've put indifference on a pedestal.
And so what you've done is you've taken someone who was destined to do some really good.
And you've actually put a kid into a place of thinking things don't matter.
And when you don't think anything matters and you don't think anything's worth anything,
you go down a very dangerous road.
And I'm going to go very, very cautious here because what I'm alluding to is almost inappropriate,
which is I worry that a lot of the things that we most worried about, I'll say it, suicide and other things, are not a product of social media.
They're a product of us not recognizing things out of whack.
And competition is one of the great traits in society.
And we must, at all costs, stop demonizing it.
Gary Vee, love you, brother.
Thanks for being here, man.
Love you, bro.
Amazing.
Wow.
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