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Earner's welcome to Iowa University, the number one place for business education, charitable bringing. Yes, Iowa University already has over 100 past webinars from all areas of business. It includes weekly webinars from industry leaders and includes access to our investment Facebook group, Movie Club, our book club. It also includes access to monthly financial planning calls with yours truly. But what has been added has access to M.G. the mortgage guys, home buyers blueprint over 14 hours. Everything you need to know as far as the home buying process is concerned.

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And also what has been added is access to our monthly group check. So once a month meteoroid, a whole team is going to let you in on our personal plays, our portfolio, what we're doing, and more so all of that. We are running for a special promo code of 70 percent or for a limited time only. So head to Iowa, our university dotcom right now and take advantage. Not know words. Don't wait. Don't hesitate.

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We'll see you on the site.

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Dan. Monday night, Monday.

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Let's get it going, man. Greetings and salutations to everybody out there. First and foremost, we would be remiss if we didn't do this at the start of the show. We got to give.

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Thoughts and prayers out to the legendary DMX, Jamal Simmons, Earl Simmons, the great DMX is a cultural icon, but especially for us, you know, coming from West Chester, you know, we always got loose like New York City's little little brother.

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And I looked over a lot, even though it's on the border of New York City, never really got the respect, even though we had a lot of legendary acts. Brand will be in and heavy D things of that nature. But Mary J. Mary J. A lot of people didn't know that she was even from chefs at all. But when X came out and said School Street, Home of the brave, you know, that gave us a sense of pride and to see and to be able to see him like, you know, you saw X say bye for now and for that exact I got a crazy story.

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If we have enough time, I'll tell it.

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But just to be able to say he's a true a true man of the people that I ran into him in the barbershop, like the grocery store and like any relative anywhere.

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Right. Yeah. DMX man.

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A true, a true, a true man of the people man legend want that the most just regular down to earth person that you'll ever meet in life. Man I'll tell my DMX story at the end if we have enough time. But just, just it's just one of a kind person. So, you know, it's like I think styles Al Pacino say a prayer for X because or Suess, he definitely would have said a prayer for you. And that's true, man.

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So many times on YouTube, you see him like people just randomly stopping. Are you can you pray for me? And he says, like a five minute prayer, like, you know, I was I never seen him say, like, no, I can't say a prayer, say a prayer in a minute for anybody, any occasion. We've seen it with Nipsey Hussle when he met his his crew at the Breakfast Club. We just have it every time he gets to say a prayer, says a prayer.

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So say a prayer for X if you can. And God willing, God willing, he'll be back on his feet.

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Man speaks out to everybody that went to his memorial at the at the hospital earlier today. It was a big turnout and rightfully so. This guy means a lot to our community, means a lot to the to the world and to the world. And so prayers up to the door through your parents.

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Watch your kids. It was heartbreaking to hear stories that somebody, a 14 years old, that I'm hooked on that and that guy was starting. Watch your kids, please. Yeah, definitely, Max out of our life, man, but you know, he's a fighter, so, you know.

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Yeah, we just don't keep on keeping. I'm sure for sure. So, all right. So on a much lighter note, welcome back to everybody. This is your first time. Welcome our Ilija. Big week for us.

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Of course, we're going to grant cardoon that that was a fun one called Genex can go bigger, go big or go big or go home in this game.

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Yeah, cracka don't tomorrow. That is a legendary episode. I listen to it yesterday again. Funny, funny guy, man. Good to shout the grandchild to his whole team that is coming out tomorrow. Shout suspect shout a spectacular shout to Mattie J.J. and shout to Neil Wednesday Yale University the first professor ever Andre hatches. I get him a Letterman. Yeah, he's coming back to teach a class.

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You know, he's the king of the No business and he's one of those businesses that you never would never really think of money doing a couple of thousand dollars in.

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Like, you know, you could definitely supplement your income doing that. So he's going to teach a whole class on that tomorrow. And then Thursday, we have a limited four part series podcast, new podcast alert. Oh, well, new podcast, Wednesday two. Oh, yeah. We'll get to Thursday. John Henry and Ernie Elisia collaboration, six o'clock Eastern Standard Time. Love you, too. It's only going to be for it's like a NFTE.

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It's only for those crazy like a video. You can't unlock the series. You got to watch the first one to get to the second one you got to watch second one to get to the third one is going to be dope Gonzaga for sure.

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For sure. So we got a jam packed situation. And then Wednesday we debuted a podcast. Yeah. Dupa Castledare, Machaut Cassanova, Brotzman, a good brother. If you've been following him, you know how passionate he is about real estate and anything in the entrepreneurial world. And so we join forces. Missile Dream Nation will be debuting this Wednesday at nine a.m. We are super excited about that. Just got to follow him a little bit earlier. He's super excited about it, man.

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So the network is growing at a rapid pace, man. We just want to be a place that can you know, it could be a home for creatives to express their thoughts and get out the ideas and hopefully, you know, teach them a little bit of the game that we know. That is a fact, ladies and gentlemen. So we'll put the link in the bio. If you are interested in getting more information about Ernie Alysha University into our university, as we call it, we're currently running seventy percent of promo.

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I think that that will run until the end of Tuesday because we extended it for the Easter holiday and oh, happy Easter Monday to all my Jamaican's.

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Get your Kaito. You know how we do all your.

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Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. For sure. So yes, today we have a jam packed episode. We are going to bring on nineteen kids. Are we going to talk about concepts. But first we got to talk about the stock market a little bit so we'll pass it off to the kid brother and Dunlap and what's going on.

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But I'm happy to be here on Saturday, so looking forward to bring some energy sharing, some kudos.

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Everybody in my family, everybody on YouTube, all the news is OK. And I'll get into it quickly. But hold long term. I keep telling guys to and that is the way to go. Everyone's like, no, it's not true. Then it's like Einhorn, Kathy Buffett.

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Everybody is like the whole whole the long term. And we keep killing taxes. All hope for the long term. Don't let people trick you or your stock trading after dark after this sniper's. For those in the trade room, we're done Thursday and Friday. We do not even a session now. So you get double time now. You didn't get the email last night. I'll send it out tonight after the show. And I said, let's rock and roll.

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I want to get right to it so we can bring it in.

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Let me just let me run up the disclaimer before you even start. Right. So do your own research. Say it is intended to be used. It must be used for informational purposes only. It is very important to do your own analysis before making any investment based on your own personal circumstances. You should take independent financial advice from a professional in connection with or independently research and verify any information that you find on our show and wish to rely upon whether for the purpose of making an investment decision or otherwise.

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This is a good word from the good brother's attorney, Lesia, and the good brother in law at the university. All homework. Do your research and when you do that, double check your work as a fact. All right, the floor is yours, yours. Thank you. Let's get those get right to the charts. OK, so let's start at the top, and I'm going to do tonight how I normally do in the trading rooms or any of the drinking calls.

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So I'm going to go to like 20 or 30. Then we bring 19 or so. He can he can school us about NFTE. But S&P 500, let's do quiz time really quick. This S&P 500 is the direction of this going up or down? Everyone type and chat continue to buy hold, so this the 200 day moving average here, you can see this is down last March. Now look how much we've taken off. So to indexes to talk.

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Let's also look at down. There will be Deeyah, please write this down. Same movement to the Dow and S&P 500, those of your value or your safety. Right. And then the two Tecla. So let's look at Apple. Moving up gradually and the Intesa took off. As well, please write this down. We saw it last week with the hedge fund, but the number one reason that most people blow up their accounts is because of leverage.

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We talked about this maybe 12 weeks ago. Please type in leverage if you're going to lose, use leverage in the trades and we're going to see more hedge funds blow up this year if you are going to use leverage. So for those of you that are doing any derivatives or any trading on margin, you have to pare down the number of trades that you want to take because the more trades you take is in the favor of the brokerage houses to make money off of you as a result.

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So let's talk to a couple real quick and I want to call you guys. Imjin, is Imjin going up or down? Because once you know, direction, so 200 day moving average is a great place to start, always start with the month chart and then I want you to then go to the weekly chart. Now, I don't like Mack RSI, this indicator is called balance of market power, balance of market powers and lower study that shows you with the direction of the market is.

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So, please, type of balance of market power insure. Please. Aluminum, aluminum sliding down, so a decent area will be probably three or three and change. If you can catch it, let's look at Moderna. So when you're doing your research and troika says, do your research, doublecheck, I want you to go check your own areas in which you would get into the market. So go to the monthly and then go look at the date chart.

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OK, great. So if this this is too much a moving average and it's the price type and chat, if Moderna were looking for entry, potentially, where could we get in if the 200 day moving average worker with our entry be so slow?

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Look for a little bit. So so if anybody has not made a 200 day moving average is the average of two hundred days or 200 Kandos year.

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But so but when it gets close to the 200 day moving average, that usually is as a buy signal, correct?

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Yes. Because what we don't want to do, we don't want to buy at the top. So if it's that one eighty nine, there's no value about about one eighty nine. And look, if we drop to one oh eight ninety nine or one point eighty nine excuse me, that is where we can build. So people have been talking a lot about value investing. A value investing is just another way or a Oska way of saying buying at a discounted price like above.

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As a value investor, I'm like, but if you actually look at this portfolio in 2020, who is buying at highest? So you have to go do the research and see and pick out your own prices. But yes, if the price is the high back here, we want to look to get in potentially around that area. Let's look at one.

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We normally don't talk about big things like a cold.

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It's like they took over. Yeah, I love it, baby.

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Oh, this is Broadcom Inc. So the five year math is up. What is the balance of market power tell you? So if we're seeing green, first lesson I'll tell Xander, green means up, red means down. Do you see more green at the bottom or red? That gives you an indication, so we're seeing more movement to the upside. Now let's move to the weekly chart. So two ninety eight, twenty five, if it drops there and then go to the daily chart, everyone who's ACSA for entries, please write this down month, week, then day.

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So if a beagle drops a four, three or a, that'd be a good entry to get in. And then you can see the previous high was four ninety five, so the probability of the going back up to four ninety five before eighty is very probable because this is a strong company. The only thing that I want you guys to write this down. The three most important trading indicators. And then we'll let the brother who leads the call on.

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Right. No one is direction, so no one direction. So no matter what stock I look at, I always go look at the direction of the first, even if I'm familiar with it. So let's go for Obama. This is a censure as the direction of a censure, up or down. Born businesses make a lot of money and then a great part about the same born businesses, you never wake up in a sweat in the middle of the night wondering if you're going to lose all your money to the direction of the Cintas up, knowing the direction of the stock or future or derivative that you trade is more important than a timeframe that you're looking at.

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Most traders lose money because they do not know what the true direction is. The five year mark is going to give you what the direction is. No, to the second most important indicator is the selection of trades that you're going to take for the year. So for those of you that are trying to beat the S&P 500 or another benchmark, you need to reverse engineer to see how many you need in order to get to your goal. And there the risk reward ratio, you need to risk one minimum to make ten.

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Ideally, if you can get to a place, we can risk one to make 25. Even if you trade a 15 percent or 20 percent, you can still be profitable. And then let's look at another company, Quick Emet. Is the direction and let's go to since inception, we talked about on Episode 70, so this the entire history of Applied Materials and as a direction up or down towards, we go through that go through month and we will go through the weekly chart.

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And zoom in and then we'll go to the daily and stocks that are moving to the upside is what we want. We don't want penny stocks that have been falling down, a hope that they're going to turn around. We want to buy high value businesses that are going to continue to go up and then we can buy them at debt. That is value investing and growth combined and wants to what use to move moving average the 70 to all the great for those used to use.

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The other indicator that we talked about previously before I said I'll never mention again, those will give you better entries. But it's a three part system. You want to go the month chart first five year month. They look at the weekly, they look at the day, those little your entries and after that you have nothing else to do but buy and hold. I'm going to beg you, don't let people trick you out of your spot saying that buy and hold is not for us and is not fun.

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All the wealth is there. And I would action if you deviated from that plan last year with the other plan work and did make you rich, although that's not thing we're here to do. So I appreciate you guys so much. And let's bring on one of the greatest speakers to ever walk Earth, and I think he's here for sure.

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Let's let let's let the people for a little bit, though, before we bring nineteen on. I just want to talk about something that we ought to speak about.

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Crypto and let's go. What happened?

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I know my crypto accounts looking extremely healthy, healthy. This you. So I got to apologize. I got to apologize. Well, I said it. So that's half the battle you going to try?

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Tron is a position that I always held since twenty seventeen.

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I got tried when it was a penny.

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Huh. How long you've been holding it since. Twenty. Twenty. Seventeen. OK, bye bye.

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How did you buy and get locked out. You bought it. And now this is part of the. You know I don't matter now it is a true story. So if you would they want to earn it. You know that this is a story with shouting and Jamal went to win on a 30 day excursion to Asia, to Asia. And I called them like, yo, I got to come home. I think I found something. And so the as part of that story and they were like, I coming home, they would tell me, oh, I'm like, nah, nah, I got to show you more than I could tell you.

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And so Tron was one of those those almost starts one of those coins, the coins. That's when I discovered them that I was I was bullish on bullish John Transactor.

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Steller, which are also oil, is up 21 percent today. SRP, which I also own, is up 43 percent today. Ninety one since this is all we had a crypto class on YouTube last month and all of these things I said and I said it's just like no different from the stock market. We have rotation's in the market. Sometimes Bitcoin is called bitcoin dominant. Bitcoin like makes up like 60, 60 percent of the bitcoin signed out of 50.

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When Bitcoin runs, usually all coins kind of fall back a little bit, but now we can all run. Right now, Bitcoin is still solid. Fifty nine thousand. But everything is running right now to all coins. XP even Litecoin. Is that that etherial. My son at Yale University. Remember a couple of weeks ago last month, Francis was on one of over charts, so that was a good time. I put it up with ten thousand additionally into each area.

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Ethereum just crossed over two thousand and we said Bernasconi we said minus finance coin. I don't know how many times we screen bonus Columbanus going right. Finance is the number one platform to trade crypto internationally. Obviously we can't do it in the United States unless you've got a VPN. And we said, look, you have to do trading periods and a lot of times you've got to trade with the finance to Bitcoin or by Nancy Derian. And so every time finance makes a transaction, they make money.

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And so people are trading in the crypto space and then using the platform then and making money. Finance was at seventeen dollars. I remember we had conversations. It was twelve dollars. We want to go up to thirty finance Coinbase. Three hundred and sixty five dollars right now presently three hundred sixty five dollars March twenty fifth. It was at two hundred and forty seven dollars a week.

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Here's a secret for everything for ten years by investing it like I wanted to take all the illusion out of it. Go look at any period of time, any assets, jewel, real estate, art, collectible automobiles, businesses like if you get to the 10 year mark, there's like a ninety nine percent chance that you'll be profitable. If you get it, like at a decent price, you don't have to be like how to buy and hold all the same thing.

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There's just different traps in a different way, like diamonds, all the same thing shot at the down page like, you know, it's all the same thing. Hold on. You're not going to flip in 13 days a deal. There's nothing else to say. Crypto, real estate, digital art. If we get real estate on Mars and we can flip Moonrocks 10 years, you can get twenty two doors on Mars when it starts to take hold for 10 years.

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That's it, and can we also talk about Microsoft? My baby. Microsoft to the more Microsoft today might have heard this before, you might have heard this one before we go. It's called Pay Attention.

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It's called it's called Do Your Homework, write your notes. It's called all you write your notes.

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The companies that have the most revenue are going to be the most dominant and expand into the most areas is no different than what cash money did not even know Rockefeller did. This is one of the more revenue you have. You can acquire more businesses and expand. I just hold the top company and I know it's not sexy, you don't get the people going, you know, but. Man, go ahead. Yeah, Microsoft, tremendous, tremendous, it's looking promising.

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Yeah, I mean, look, it looks promising from that.

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They got the government contract. Look, we'll talk about the government contract. They look like they're going to be Joseph Biden, Joseph Biden, man. A few sectors are going to benefit from some of this from this new plan that he's putting together. And estimates to save my life, changed my life, changed my life, saved my life, whatever you want to call it right now to the moment the semiconductor space is named.

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Told you this, told you this before you get into the long term, of course, we got to talk about TSM, but Microsoft is going to benefit as well. What about that?

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Yeah, I mean, so I was gonna go from the game standpoint, I don't you want to go into the government. I mean I mean to integrate into cloud computing as most if those are the working government shutdown, you know, there's a lot of inefficiencies. So these relationships have been preexisting. So you guys and we were talking about it during election. Look at the tech companies and who they advocate and who they spend adults with. They're always going to vote on both sides to regardless of who in office.

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You're going to see Tim Cook continue to be in in talks. It was a little bit more visible. And Obama was there less when Trump was there, still present. Same with Microsoft. I could argue that Tim Cook was probably the most underpaid CEO. Freiwald is not a Microsoft, probably the least valued company for how big it is. So now was the government contract. I mean, that's a huge deal. Yeah. And a huge deal for cloud computing.

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And it's taking off in the gaming space to like I invested him and I saw some I say it to I actually wrote it down in my notes. They're going to change gaming and they're going to treat it like Netflix. And so they're going to treat their platform because they already have subscribers. They have over one hundred seventy million people on Xbox platform. Yeah. They're going to turn it into the next place of gaming. And so they have the user base already, you know, I mean, they have the technology, they have the capital, Microsoft.

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I mean, I think last June we were telling how bullish we were on it. We still are. We've invested in it for a long time.

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I thought in 2010 when Obama was it was a terrible company. Obama was there. But you can see the potential and I got a new regime change, like it's like if the Knicks got a great coach, like, you know.

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Yeah, right. Good enough to tip tips. Yeah. But we would be remiss speaking to Microsoft and I'm glad you brought up Joseph Biden because the market is going to take on if you look at what he's what he's allocating, he said he's going to allocate two hundred billion with a B to the EV market and over over five hundred thousand charging stations. And so people automatically are looking like, oh, wait, Tesla. And so we saw Tesla, you know, jump up today, but they had a ridiculous quarter.

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You saw the all time high and deliverables in the first quarter in the history of the company. They don't pace right now to do eight hundred and fifty thousand thus far.

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Are you kidding me? Trying to tell you guys just hold hold quality. You want all the sexiest shit like the sexy thing. That's what the money is.

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And so the crazy part is, if you think about it, last year, the entire year they delivered five hundred thousand cars. They are on pace to do eight hundred and fifty, 70 percent increase, which is ridiculous. Plus the incentive from the the Biden administration is like, you know, they're trying to increase the tax credit on the EVs. And so if that passes through, I think the tax credit now is like seventy five hundred. They're trying to increase it to ten thousand.

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So it's no stopping, there's no stock.

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And so you see, I mean, you now have a great operator. You look at like look at your TV. Right. I probably saw that Hummer commercial fifty times on Saturday. It's coming and it's not going to stop. So it's either get down to lay down, but it's going to be Tesla. It's going to be more accessible.

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And in the same way, when Bitcoin got the institutional backing, government deals like this, it's the same kind of thing there. The world is going to help move the market. And then all the backing that Elon has is put this government deal. It's going to give them security for another four or five years to be able to figure it out. They think the team is going to be game over. They asked Mr. Cooke about his future in the EV market.

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He was kind of shy about it. But, you know, they don't let this money pass. They got it. They're going to take this industry to industry. They're going to tell you this this one on health care. And they might just they might not do both. Yeah. Oh. Elon Musk also predicted that Tesla will pass Apple. He deleted the tweet, but he said that that will happen relatively soon, so he predicts the Tesla will be the most valuable company in the world, probably in less than 16 months.

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I mean, with the backing of the lab and all the funds that are tied, because right now the leg, I pull it off to most investors when I go. So that's like Tesla is the bitcoin of. The ETF space. So for those of you that are late on institutional tussles, still like a safe investment and if you can get big gains there and have blowout quarters and we talked about it last week, like April historically is a great month, second quarter, a great quarter.

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So especially with the end of the. The quarter being shaky, shaky and then going up, now clients are going to say, I'm going to pour more money, the fund flows are going to be way higher. He has things in his favor. But we have to remember that 10 years where he was vilified and he was trying to put them out of business, too. So he's earned his position for sure.

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That's a fact. So, all right. We crossed over 5000. So let's get it, please. Like the video on YouTube. Like the video. Like to share.

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Let's get let's get our Christine guest and alumna, alumnus of Oprah questions ready, he's his audience.

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He's walking toward his Letterman jacket at this point. Yes, yes, yes, yes, my brother.

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How are you doing, man? I'm blessed to be able to achieve how to do it.

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I appreciate you having good synopsis and taking notes. Yes, you have very loyal support.

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And YouTube. They are. They are chanting your name. Well, you know, I value men and they just reciprocate, that's all my relations. So there you have it.

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I said, man, I said, someone, I want to give this introduction. So 19 kids, of course, we had them on the podcast in the summertime. But, you know, everybody's been talking about in 80s and 80s and 90s nonstop. And I think that, you know, we definitely played a part in helping move that conversation along. When we started introducing energy to people that we had on the podcast that spoke about Nettie's was Gary v Mark Cuban twice.

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Jim Jones shot the Jimmy.

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But, you know, before before before, you know, we spoke to Mark Cuban, before we spoke to Gary, before we spoke to Jimmy, the first person that told us about a was 19 keys. So he was in 19 lives in Miami with 19 Keys. And Chris calls out Chris. Chris, what we was we was having lunch in Miami and he joined us was for lunch and we were just having a conversation. And he was telling us about like, you know, NFTE.

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And I'm like, what's in a tease? And he's explaining it to me. And he's like, you know, it's a digital thing. And, you know, artists can use it and you get royalties and did it.

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And I am, like I said, interesting. I don't know, like no say still sounds like it's kind of like a little forum, but it's interesting. And then literally right after that, like the NFTE, like opened up. So we're going to talk about Nettie's a lot on a platform. But before the first conversation that I wanted to have about NFTE, I wanted to have a 19 year since he was the first person to tell us about NFTE.

[00:30:54]

So first and foremost, thank you for joining us, brother.

[00:30:57]

Appreciate it, man. Thank you for having me, man. And one night that one afternoon in Miami, we to going.

[00:31:08]

There was a lot that was discussed that day and I was hyper excited about it. I'll tell anybody that I had an ear to listen. It had a platform to use it, you understand me? And so the conversation only makes sense that just like I want to provide value and give access wherever I can. No, I appreciate that, brother. So, all right, let's let's jump in to it. We'll start one on one level for people that have not just heard NATO, but they have no idea what NFTE is.

[00:31:36]

What what exactly is an NFTE? So NFTE is an acronym for not punchable tokens. First of all, we say every level of consciousness comes with a new language. Same thing with every industry that you break into. You've got to sort of learn the language of the lingo to start understanding, to really interact with it. So you really start to get to what is fungible and what is fungibility. Right. And so it's like I would ask the question and I'm going to ask this to you all and to the audience as well, is go find or not and why?

[00:32:09]

Well, so we can determine.

[00:32:13]

So let's say is twenty four carat gold or not. So it's all in the same class.

[00:32:17]

So frangible means that you can't duplicate it, right. It can be fungible, means it can be duplicated. That's why I like it. That is not. You can't do so. So I would say gold. You can't duplicate gold, can you? You can make fake Gold Towers. I don't know, a 20 foot. I mean, I guess if it's 24 carat, you can you can make another twenty four carat. But but how can you make another twenty four carat gold?

[00:32:43]

When you hear fungible, think of interchangeable. But Cliff Notes, so all right, so I can promise you, but but yet it is more interchangeable. Interchangeable, right. Something you can exchange if you got if somebody says if you go to a dealer and say, I want a kilo of gold, like, this is a kilo go, it don't matter what you go to as long as it goes right. And let's say he loses yo yo Bav go right and he replaces it with another Bargo.

[00:33:17]

What's the difference. Nothing is the same value, right. The call comes from the same class as the same reason we can take a dollar. You get exchanged for four quarters, right. It's interchangeable for the same values or something is unique. So let's say that if you took that same gold, that same gold embossed, a Rohter signature on the back of it, you can't just replace that because now is unique. So things can go from fungible to non fungible.

[00:33:42]

Right. And so what things have not fungibility. That's when they are unique assets, essentially, and they cannot be exchanged for other things where you just make it. You can just throw me something for it is like, no, I need that same thing. Right. And so that's what gives things value. Rarity collectibles and things of that nature is the fact that we have the ability to collect things that other people don't have. Right. And we can easily see the value in that.

[00:34:08]

That's the law of supply and demand. And you see the similarities in art like the Mona Lisa Basquiat, because it's not seven thousand of them available to become more exclusive. The price of them is higher. So there's a relatability there and that opens up a lot of a lot.

[00:34:30]

So I also want to as we talk about and I hope the audience can understand it, I hope I see a lot of comments. And that was a good explanation. I'm trying to get it to the simplest terms so you can understand it, how you exchange, not funded affordable things in your life already. This is just a digital version of born fungible assets. So, I mean, that explanation was pretty clear cut. And appreciate that. I just want to know, how did you come in contact with entities like what was your first experience with it?

[00:34:57]

Who I mean, did somebody put you on like how did it come about? You know what?

[00:35:01]

I was racking my brain to try to figure out what did I exactly come in contact with in fees? And I don't know. I don't know. I remember my first real discussion with somebody when I was with my brother. I just said, OK, so he actually put up on me and we had a cold conversation about it. I'm my highest level a degree, you understand me? And my first experience, I would say, with that world was when we met it was in L.A. and he showed me spatial reality.

[00:35:34]

Right.

[00:35:34]

So let's just let's just I want them to know who he is because he's very important. OK, you can't shout out shout out to first of all, I just said it's probably one of the most important persons in the tech space. And you are going to know why. Right in the future as he has a lot of great things coming. Right. But I just had to was the one who created the small storefront, if you hustle right. And everything else, only him famously in the Starbucks.

[00:36:01]

He also worked on the Explorer page Instagram. Right. He taught himself coding. I mean, you're talking about everybody as somebody in the tech world has reached out to him for partnership and work. And I want to say partnership, because he always comes from an ownership standpoint. You understand, they want to him to go to M.I.T., turned it down and continue to do his self education. Right. He did things like R for for Beyonce, to Rihanna, to Kanye West and anybody that somebody reaches out to him.

[00:36:33]

He is like the first superstar black, young black man in that tech world. You understand me? That's just knowing you might be known as a tech architect genius. But he's a tech architect and he's somebody very important to be known. And we often don't highlight figures such as himself. Right, because it doesn't come with the flash of a celebrity. And that's what Nifty Hustle was trying to get people to understand, like y'all pay attention to him.

[00:36:59]

He can do hardware. And software is very rare.

[00:37:02]

And he was just he was also. So Nipsey Hussle made him the CTO, chief technology officer of all money in. And that's the first time I got introduced to him. I was watching an interview with NBC and he was talking about, like how he wanted to have the Crenshaw's historian. All smart. All smart. Yeah. Yeah. And of course, we know he was going to Krypton, all of that. But yeah, the brother was actually like the brains behind a lot of the technical stuff that he was doing and he really, really championed him.

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So, you know, once again, I feel like he's our Zuckerberg.

[00:37:41]

Yeah. And I see a lot of really they're trying to figure out who he is. That that's a great homework assignment. Hopefully we get the chance to we got to kind got to connect with him and get them on and really champion him because he's doing amazing.

[00:37:54]

Listen, ever since I met him, I always use what we've done a few conversations. We had a high level conversation on my podcast. And to that point we had a great conversation about NFTE, spatial reality of everything. And I don't know what happened instead of me. But when I went back to upload that, because he was like, we will upload it. I'm like, I'll get to it. I got this diamond right here. I'm like, Oh, this goes then.

[00:38:19]

And I went to go upload it and, you know, it was gone. I don't know if Zuckerberg took it down a somewhat in tech giant disapprovals. Got it. Yeah, because it was before it was before the NFTE thing took mainstream conversation. So we would have really blasted it out at the forefront of breaking it down on so many different levels that that was actually part of the conversation.

[00:38:42]

Like we would talk on the podcast. I mean, like I just did this interview like Tulear or where you guys are. We have to meet them. And then I heard when we did the lab the other night, I'm like, wait, you lost it now because.

[00:38:54]

No way. No way. Yeah. And it went everywhere. Exactly. Yeah. But if I want to publicly give you a credit, because I tell you when we talk and g you're one of the one of the best picks ever hurt. And one of the hardest working brothers I've ever met, so I got a three part, you know, the Oprah thing. So can you walk us through? Let's go you.

[00:39:18]

Because in order to get to this level that you're at. Can you walk us through your study habits? Because every time I hit you, you're working on something so that work can begin investing in NFTE. And then can you walk us through how you network? Because everyone I talked to like you and, you know, thanks to the collaboration, I got a little bit like, you know, like Dewsbury going Crayolas all the time. I got a car who was like, Yo Nightengale.

[00:39:43]

We got like so everywhere I go, people. Are clamoring to take your information and like you said, you're very resourceful, but can you walk us through networking, your study habits and then where they actually can invest? Because I think there's some great lessons even for the business owners that may not be interested enough to use the networking and study habits may help them as well.

[00:40:04]

Yeah, that's a very great question. Shout out to to any and everybody that sees value in the platform in my platform essentially started off just speaking truth to power, understand me, and showing an example of the things that I was doing by the first time I was ever hired to speak. I have 500 followers and I was in my own store. You understand me? Just talking about my process of evolution and in my thought process of design, you understand me and the students there as the person I was ahead of the program, like, can you have kids come here and speak to us?

[00:40:35]

And I had a vision already for everything that I do. I don't just go in and say, OK, I will collect this money and do it right. So I went in there with the idea of building a global brand instead of the speech, which is a lot of audacity to say that this is like go go viral in the world, going to care about everything. And you got to say, but what I understood from the many conversations is to have people on a daily basis is that they will nobody ever put it like that, like, yo, you think different things of that nature.

[00:41:07]

So I know that it already had value against me because it's not fun. The conversation is not fun. You can exchange it for anything else because of the pattern of thinking is different. Because of the way I grew up is different. Right. I grew up in Oakland, California, under a very militant black Muslim paradigm. So I see things different. So once I engage with the digital world, the first video that went viral, right. The second, third and I learned a lesson I believe is Kevin Hart.

[00:41:38]

This is something similar to, say, when you have a fire lit, it's easy to keep the fire going on than it is to relight the fire. So I decided to make sure that I've never stopped you understand me? And I just kept going. I kept it in motion and I continued to work and build out my plant. Now, when it comes to networking and my ideas towards research, particularly the way our network is, I just work right.

[00:42:04]

Like I'm the type of person that if you meet me, you'll know who I am. That's OK, right? I'm allowed to work, speaks for itself. I'm not going to introduce myself. That's up to you to find out if you in that same world, you care about those things that I care about. Right. And so I do that to people all the time. Like I'm 19 kids, but I'm not about to explain. I do this, that and the third.

[00:42:24]

I feel like focus on the craft. I'm focused on the craft and eventually is go you will fall into that world. Oh, I just meant that by oh, I heard your name. I didn't know what you look like. You understand me. I heard your conversation. I work for that. Right. I work to be in the minds of all our people. You understand me like that's my target audience is our culture. So I don't ever want to be in a room.

[00:42:47]

It is ten black people in one room. Don't know me. I need to know at least one out of ten. Let me know that I'm reaching the minds then I target to reach. Yeah. So that's my networking is putting out the information. You understand me being genuine, sticking to my values, my mission and my vision. And people gravitate towards the message and then they type in people from all ranks and all lives. So I hope that answers your first question.

[00:43:13]

I know it wasn't like super direct, but I'm also a person that you understand me like. I call people behind the scenes and just ask them how they doing. You understand me? Like, I don't need anything to nobody. So it's never like, oh, my health to start a business with somebody that this is just let me converse because communication lacks in our community. Right. And that communication is how we give each other access to resources.

[00:43:36]

A mastermind I've started multiple mastermind organizations. Right, because I started out being a part of organizations when I was younger and I felt that the thing that we was always missing was inclusion like is what you are. Practice here, have a seat at the table for everybody with great solidarity. You understand me with everybody coming together for Common Core, with great unity. Now we are unified and solid on the same agenda and then we go towards organization. Right.

[00:44:07]

So then we organize the order in the flow of these things so that we have a hierarchy in the system, how we will build it out. And then the system allows us to build an institution and an institution allows us to build our own world. So I think in formulas when it comes to anything that I want to do and the way that I even. Research is from that same formula base, right, like I do, everything is steps and layers, like I got to ask myself the question even prepared for this, you know, what is the value?

[00:44:36]

Not just new knowledge, because all knowledge does not value new knowledge. Could be, hey, we're going to be on EIO tonight. That's new knowledge. But that doesn't mean it's valuable to you at this moment or to your life whatsoever, which is why a lot of people don't dove in things such as digital assets. They don't know the value of it. And so somebody can frame it in a reference to where it's valuable. So I like to take concepts of things that people can't understand and conceptualize it without losing so much data.

[00:45:07]

I mean, with all of the information that allow me to understand it, how can I bring it to the masses where I can understand it simply? So even that analogy that I gave earlier was me thinking about how can I condense this down so a third grader can start to understand the idea of NAFTA. So I know that I do sort of like deductive reasoning in a time. I think that my way of going about things sometimes is and there's like three different reasonings.

[00:45:33]

I recently just looked up. I think it's abducted inductive, deductive, and they all talked about your process of going about a hypothesis and then filling in the gaps to see if you're right. Right. So for me, I call it being a high level observer. Observe first. Right. And then I go get the information to verify my hypothesis. Right. So I'm going to learn language first or I don't need to know what it is. I need to look at what is fungible and what is fungibility, what is not fungibility.

[00:46:05]

Right. What does that word come from then? I need to go look at what the early thought leaders on this conversation before it became news. And who were some of those thought leaders and what are some of the sites for those who want to know at home?

[00:46:18]

Well, in a recent thought, leaders, I want to shout out Lady Phenix. Lady Phenix is the one who brought people to the platform. She brought people to what's the one with the audio clubhouse? Right. So she'll want to introduce them to the world. And they built up the hype for this campaign. Wow. Yeah. Shout out to lady fame lady that she's a black woman. I believe she's from Oakland. And she is really like one of the curators of that community right now.

[00:46:48]

Like, she she just had a conversation with a lady who said that is documented in her transaction like she was the first woman to produce digital art, but she did it on the black chain rather than as a NFTE because she was trying to prove the concept, what this thing was to her fellow art buddies. And so they're really creating a curation of it, you understand me, very heavy in this space. And that's really the only person I want to shout out in that space.

[00:47:13]

But there's also in just to be quite frank, there's a whole culture community, right? Like the crypto punks, you understand me, that made a mess with all these projects within that world. If you really want to go to, like who the thought leaders you are, look at the early creative's because they might not had a platform to partly, but they were the ones who actually pushed the projects out that everybody else is curating information around. So like shout out to the early projects and we got to block change so nobody can lie.

[00:47:40]

That's the whole point of the black chain is off it. You can check transaction history and see who did it. And if you ain't that person, they handled that transaction. Did you enter early thought leaders? So the block chain is a and I'm sure we'll get into that is a great verifiable system to see who did what, when and where. So, yeah, part of my process is finding those early thought leaders because I want to know who shape the conversation as it is today.

[00:48:05]

Right. And that's important because you lose originality. You don't know whose money came from because we start far with technical thinking, like, oh, this is not how do I interact with that's not what you posted. Think you saw the go automatic drive this. All right. Let me see how I want to use that's your thought process. And when you go back to the early thought leaders on it, then you can figure out, OK, everybody's thinking about it like this because this is the person that steered the conversation and it got built off that way of thinking.

[00:48:37]

But that doesn't mean that's what it has to be like early. Probably about three or four years ago when I really started talking about black change on my platform without wanting black people to understand, like, yo, don't you know this thing like black chain and cryptocurrency and Bitcoin machines out there. And so, like, I'm heavy and like going hard on artificial intelligence and telling people about neural networks and stuff. And, you know, luckily I have the ability to articulate myself.

[00:49:05]

But you still always ahead of your time, right? Well, people don't have the time to focus on it's not until it becomes standard. So my process is always finding the technology, the updates that our people need in order to be ahead in this race because we behind. So my research is finding early thought leaders, finding the. Which they have put into my own language, because I can't interpret it for myself, I don't want to be somebody who takes verbatim knowledge and then just insights that that doesn't mean I understand it.

[00:49:36]

That's what we learned in school. Right. Technical thinking. That's just technique. It requires no abstract thought, no creative application whatsoever. So I always knew that when black when our people that were black as well is that we're going to find a creative utility for it. And that's what the world has, mass adoption. It has great penetration. And so I think about in a roundabout ways and that's why I'm answering this question like that, because this is actually how my research works.

[00:50:03]

Understand me, any time I have a thought and I need to fill in the gap and I can identify the what then I want to research that what interests me. And then it leads me down this rabbit hole until I start to form my own way of thinking. And then I no longer have the research. I have my own understanding of this world. I'm going to use it.

[00:50:21]

So let me ask you a question.

[00:50:25]

And then also we found our open seat A that's open see as an easy way out. If you're going to do open seat, you have to get a browser first. So therefore you have a cryptocurrency wallet attached to it. But that's the easiest one for you to be able to buy a Nifty in like five minutes.

[00:50:47]

It doesn't matter which currency while you use or should.

[00:50:50]

Are we going to be doing a Ethereum right now? Of course, the whole thing about it cerium is the gas prices and they say that they are working on ways to make that better and also earth friendly. I know Tron is one. There's a few of them my brother Idris gave me as well. And I'll make sure I put that up before the end of the program. But Ethereum is not the only one. And that's an important thing for people to also know.

[00:51:15]

And I want everybody to think about this space is that it's not set, it's not solid. It's just the way we use it. The technology right now, this is not the gatekeeper of this technology. This is the early beginning of it. So you should take this information and say, oh, this is fresh, this is how I'm going to use it. Don't say that. This is how you have to engage with it.

[00:51:36]

I'm glad you brought up trying to show it to you to six thousand people want to check in, hit the like button if you can. So much. I had a question for you.

[00:51:46]

Nineteen souls are one of the top things about it for me. And you explain it to us when you met. It is like especially for creatives, but really anybody is that, you know, you get royalties on it ongoing in perpetuity. So it's like, yeah, if you as opposed to like if I'm an artist and I sell a painting, no matter how much I sell it for myself for one hundred thousand dollars is a good payday. But that's it.

[00:52:11]

Now I got to go and make a new painting, whereas with the NFTE you sell for one hundred thousand dollars or whatever it sells for. Now you say and you set the royalty on it. So when we spoke to Mark Cuban, he said his first royalty at ten and he kept raising it to like fifty percent so you could potentially get up to whatever you want, but in his case, fifty percent. So now if it gets sold again, he gets fifty percent of that and then each time is selling, keep in mind, is selling probably for a higher amount.

[00:52:41]

So you might have sold it for two thousand dollars. But then when it gets sold again next year for four thousand dollars, if you get fifty percent commission you get the same amount as the first time that you actually sold it because you sold it for two thousand. And now I'm going to get sold for ten thousand and you get five thousand, you actually get more from it then the price that you originally set. So you don't actually have to like try to charge a crazy amount because you're thinking about the resale value as well.

[00:53:12]

That's a lesson we can get into some real creative thought processes here when it comes to the utility, that is the secondary sale process of it is amazing because it puts ownership in the hands of the creators, you understand, and you get to own your digital assets. Essentially, digital ownership is something that should be in everybody's vocabulary and understanding that life is going to be it for me. All about your business. Right. Everybody is saying that this whole thing can be a bubble.

[00:53:40]

That's because a lot of these parties. Right. Are going to start off but not expand. A lot of I'm going to shrink the value of it is going to become less and less over time, you understand me. And it definitely will bubble for a lot of different people. And that's because they don't have any long term business models, which is what you need for assets. Like my brother Ian just talked about something for ten years. If it doesn't have 10 year growth plan or value, then what is the point of holding in the first place?

[00:54:06]

What's the point of buying unless you're just buying into trade? So it just becomes something that you trade very quick to make some money. That's the whole reason is going to be a bubble because people want to be holding things that's not worth anything. So my point of it is once you go in there and this is something that you want to think about as well, then I think that the luxury space is starting to get into or think about getting into the bushes and things of that nature to where they think about having digital twins.

[00:54:33]

Right. And the digital twins is essentially, if I make a shirt like this, then I also have or crown. Let's go to the crowds there then. It's also a digital crown that you own as well. That's equal to this crown. Now, let's say and I will be doing my nifty drops, you understand me? And let's say that one of my NFC drops as an example that I have a digital crown to 3D replication. You understand me?

[00:54:58]

You buy this beautiful picture of it, but it also gives you access to a physical crown as well, that only you, the person that bought the digital one could actually have. So not only is it verifiable that, OK, how do I know that that one Crown Keys made you understand me? You have that one is because here's the transaction for I also have the digital twin to it. Right. But also you can think that the digital twin doesn't always have to be connected to the physical.

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But if I was to give advice right, then I will say always think about creating a physical item that connects to the digital one. I believe that the digital twin model is the way to go. So it is backed by something. Think about the dollar, the dollar. It was like the digital asset as it is today, you understand me? But it used to be backed by something which was gold, right? Actually gave it real value.

[00:55:51]

So if I want to have my digital asset, I need to have it back by something. So it actually has intrinsic value. Right. So it can never really go down to zero. So from that standpoint, I'm thinking I'm creating business models to where when people collect this digital asset, it also represent a physical and almost like a certificate in a stamp of authenticity, even though the digital asset itself has its own value. And that's the whole point of the nafees is giving digital assets real value the same way physical assets have.

[00:56:25]

An example of that is let's say you have a digital painting, right? If you got a digital painting and somebody and they've already started creating these things right. They got the little Appalachia's where they have they put the notes and they're saying somebody hang up a gallery to where they have the incentive plan. And these TVs, TVs are sideways and you walk into somebody's house. Here's the digital painting plant. The thing about the digital painting is you are the only one who has and only want to have that real one.

[00:56:56]

So if I walk into this house and I look up, then if the people are people like this is real, this is real. Right. Then you show me your transaction on the block trying to be like, this is real. Look at it in my wallet. Now, it gives real value. Right, because I know he bought this from the estate of people. And that's the same thing with celebrities getting into it and selling things. And you start to understand, well, how is that valuable?

[00:57:24]

That is just digital. Well, think about this. Imagine if you can own a piece of your favorite celebrity estate. Right. So imagine if Malcolm X, if you own a dish, he sold a digital red bow tie, right? Even if he just so that digital red bow tie. That was the only net he made. It would have value because you now own a piece of Malcolm X. Right. Right. Like now you are part of that life experience.

[00:57:54]

And the longer things grow, the more valuable they become. And you're thinking about 10, 20, 30, 40, 50 year window. This generation is going to be the one who's buying all of the expensive benefits in the future. Right. All the memorabilia, all of the things that are nostalgic to us right now, all the like. If I put out something and let's say I continue to grow in a 30 year span, you don't even know how valuable my NFTE will be to you.

[00:58:21]

So some people are buying it up, but they like your, I don't know, like what this person may do in the next 30 years. This person might die tomorrow.

[00:58:28]

It's like you have one.

[00:58:31]

It's like I have to decide t shirt or big E kouji sweater or something like that. I think about like scrounges. So I think I think the problem with some people that that's not fully understanding it is because they they still haven't fully bought into the world of virtual reality, which right now we're moving towards. That's exactly what I was going to go with you, because that's one of the most interesting things we had at this afternoon in Miami, was and I'm glad you brought up the digital twin, because we we spoke about that when we saw you could buy the stock in the virtual world in like six months later, you would actually have the physical shoe.

[00:59:03]

I want you to talk about adoptee's in virtual reality world, because we had spoken about digital fashion shows and these type of things that could digital museums and paintings talk about that a little bit. So. All right, hold on.

[00:59:16]

My my sister just text me. She said he's answering all my because she's been asked me about all he's answering all my questions with the Mindil.

[00:59:26]

That's that's my goal. I'm trying to get over all the question marks. The part of the languages of this is understanding that NFTE is a utility of the Placek. Like really no physicist is a clever way to use the block chain. Right. So it opens up a whole new world. But you also have to understand augmented reality. You have to understand virtual reality. And you most definitely have to understand spatial reality. Right. Once you start to understand this, then it changes the game.

[00:59:58]

Now, I had the unique experience to be part of the one percent in the world who experienced spatial reality. Thanks to my brother right now, being able to experience this, I now can understand how immersive it is, what is space? What is that was spatial reality. So spatial reality. And that's what I'm about to go into with the art of VR. Right. So let's say first, let's start with VR. If it's VR, put on these glasses.

[01:00:24]

I'm immersed in this world so I can't walk with VR glasses on. You understand me? If I'm playing like a running game because I'm running into something, I don't know where I'm going. Right. If it's a are the same way, like we have Pokemon go and people was able to put, they followed and now they can see a little chance are jumping up like, oh we put digital items layered on top of the real world and then we move around.

[01:00:49]

So the spatial reality essentially and this is what I had the opportunity to try and was to have only of Microsoft software that Microsoft s I know Microsoft is ready. One player, they could take it literally. Listen, understand, Microsoft is a serious player in the game, but I see them going down. I said they just big discount right now. Grab everyone you can, right? Yeah. And then and this is why you got to really, really understand in space.

[01:01:20]

So space your reality. And this is what's blow a lot of people's mind when they actually try it because it's going to make regular really boring. It is very addictive. You're not going to want to come back to me six hours easily. Yeah.

[01:01:34]

So think of it like this. I put on these glasses and they looked just like this, so imagine my glasses look just like this, right? But now it gives me the opportunity to see these digital assets in real time. Right. So let's say instead of having a phone, I now have a digital phone and I can see with my glasses and it rolls my blues, I can pick it up just the same way. Right. So it's three days the same way that you look at Minority Report.

[01:02:01]

They had versions of it as well. You can you can move it. That's what we are in the present. We call it the future is the present. Right. So now I don't need a phone anymore because I can take my phone and it'll come up just like my real phone with all the apps and face time somebody. Right. But it no longer takes up space. Right space, but it doesn't take up any physical space. So now I have all of these things on me, but they're not physical.

[01:02:26]

They're not cardboard. So now that replaces the phone and I don't need that anymore. Right. But also think about this. The ideas that can come along with digital architecture. I can look outside my window and an architect can build layers on top of the city that only I see you understand me by. You can now buy digital assets. Let's say you got a digital pen is sitting on your shirt that you bought from some luxury company that you really love and want to put on the glass like that.

[01:02:56]

You paid one hundred dollars for that in the same way it is in gaming. All gamers don't have the same exact assets in the game. Right. Some people pay a lot of money for it in the armor. Right. So that goes into things like decentralizing the central land is a virtual space that is owned by his users. You understand me in this space, like people can live in it, kind of like your sense. So you are in these things have an avatar, right.

[01:03:23]

And imagine like I don't I want my avatar to dress like me. But let's say a person won't want a crowd like a real crowd or the avatar they are to buy from our digital store so that the avatar can now wear. Right. So it's like not only you can actually wear these digital clothes that kind of go along with who you are, you understand me. And it could be the same way you walk around with a whole story line when a person put on hold, put on those glasses, you got your book float next to you right in a person, get the tablet and be like, yeah, you want to buy it.

[01:03:56]

And then it takes the money out the wallet and is yours. Right? It goes into so many use cases because you can walk into a black museum, you put the glasses on and now the digital art around. Yeah, right. So you see all of the stores clearing out. Now, it gives an ability for this space to actually be useful. So when you start thinking about that and I had an idea I did a whole masterclass on this and I'll share one of the ideas because, yeah, I'll get this free now.

[01:04:33]

So this is like you see NBA top shot right over the top side is essentially trading virtual digital cards. And you get these moments that you get to play like a real but you get the. All right. And of course, all the those will be valuable in the future because everybody don't care about all the NBA players of the future. Only certain things are actually valuable when you revisit it over time. LeBron stuff, I mean, Kobe stuff like all of those top players, people really care.

[01:04:59]

It has an emotional connection. But imagine if the issue is that the players don't actually they not get paid off this. Right. They don't have digital ownership or they digital sales, they contract everybody contracts is different. But imagine if you could tell me this might be a good idea. Nine NBA players are ahead, but imagine if LeBron is in his backyard. Kyrie in his backyard KD And instead of doing top shot they sell the blacktop you understand me to where they in the back and they play in a one on one get instead of seven months from the NBA they set in motion a backyard, your neck more valuable and they say that we only going to sell team moments.

[01:05:42]

That is right. How much would that actually sell for? So I want to get people to start thinking in like different creative ways to where you can start owning yourself and ownership changes in a digital space. The same is different as it is in the physical space. Different laws apply different copyright and trademark in different ways that you can actually get around it. So like this. And that's just that's a million dollar idea I just threw out one night.

[01:06:12]

Nineteen is what you're referring to is the the Microsoft project. Is that similar to Oculus?

[01:06:19]

Yes, it's better, but it's better. Much better.

[01:06:24]

I would say social media to Estonia to what we're talking about is twenty eight point four.

[01:06:30]

I'm saying to people in my mind, this is this is, first of all, net three point. Oh, first of all, this is a high level conversation. It's like when Connie said to her manager, what do you say? That's how I'm always like with the most capital and then behind the scenes with the. I don't want to go too deep into esoteric, but they're fun. And a lot of the stuff that is coming out, go look at Black Mirror.

[01:06:55]

Yeah. For those of you interested in NFTE, go study the entire history of Sothebys and how they move aren't the same. Metrics and laws are going to be applied here.

[01:07:03]

And this is my bady. But it's like you've got to pay attention to what's going on, because the future is right now and this is like Evelyn gave, like when he comes on a platform and he's like, this is the only thing I'm focused on in virtual reality, that it is not like in Cuba sitting still in seven hours.

[01:07:23]

There's a reason for it. And I the landscape, this is like digital Wauconda.

[01:07:28]

The problem is that the majority of people it's like it's like the pyramid. Right. Like people at the top have the information and then it gets down and it's trickle down. But most people, they're not really thinking about the future until it happens. Most people are just reactionary like they are in it and they're living in it. But the conversation now is what's going to happen and what is happening. So even if you don't fully understand it, it's important to be aware of it because you're going to be moving in that direction whether you want to or not or not.

[01:08:00]

And this is worse. They're going to create more virtual landscapes for us to like for the parents that they were born in the 60s and 70s. You see how much your kid is on this. They'll be on these lenses nine times more. Yeah, they'll be older kids.

[01:08:17]

I think I heard you say that in some people, life happens for them. Some people life happens to them. And if you look at the technology from the standpoint where a two year old is able to function on a technology device way more efficient than a sixty five year old, that tells you something like my math again. Now we're just going to say that like we are thinking about the children. But our problem is once you try these lenses, you want to take them off instead of me, like in it, only because it makes so much sense.

[01:08:47]

Because you realize that and I was having a conversation, I'd like somebody say, well, when people just be sitting there staring at screens that we already do that. Yes.

[01:08:57]

And this is not good for our culture. Yeah. Instead of us standing and having to be stationary and look at a screen, it adds the layer on top of reality. So we went to Egypt. I'll give us a game away. Right. So imagine if you went to Egypt and instead of saying Egypt in ruins, you see Egypt as it was before. Yes. And we walk around, you see the digital architecture. They can build out a digital clone of the pyramids instead of letting people go in.

[01:09:27]

They can experience walking around in a real time, like you can go to empty spaces and build our whole vidro of virtual worlds. You understand me? You can block it out to where a person can't see you there. You actually have privacy like this. There's like so many different ways that you can build around it. But going back to, like, decentralized people who are selling digital real estate right now, trying to connect like digital life, you can connect your deed to your house, to NFTE, anybody, even if they bought the house.

[01:09:57]

You understand me like people are selling real estate. So but at the same time, you have virtual real estate in his virtual real estate matters because on these platforms, there's only so much real estate agents that may become just as valuable as physical real estate. And I know some of them, I think just not enough to cut you up domains. Huge. There are people that are. So you're not supposed to buy Instagram accounts. I know people that have sold Instagram accounts for hundreds of thousands of dollars.

[01:10:24]

It's no different. So also to like and that's I keep saying, if you guys go look at what Microsoft, regardless what you think about Gates and his involvement in Microsoft and then where they're going now with this platform, what do you think that would do for the value of the stock and how long people will be on the Xbox platform?

[01:10:43]

And that's why I think he left that in the first place, because he doesn't want to have his name attached, especially what a company is about to take over the whole world. Yes, that's another thing. Are they already talking about buying all of the physical land now? He's going to own all the virtual land. And so I imagine having his world built out where you will buy a billboard space. And it's actually worth something because all of the people that go into this virtual land, they now want to see your they got to go past your actual virtual real estate to get to wherever they want to live.

[01:11:13]

They navigate in this virtual space. So you also want to think about it in terms of marketing. Branding, right. Like just this is the biggest player, but they are also my brother.

[01:11:27]

I'll top derby platform.

[01:11:28]

So if you want to be the shot in my back pocket, we can use it.

[01:11:35]

But but to that point, the biggest crypto player ever, they have like a smart contract and they are much better at explaining that to me than I am. But understand the concept of it to where they basically utilize this contract to circulate money. And from this one contract, they was able to get fifteen hundred people to circulate a million dollars and they have to do nothing to get people signed up and it works for itself. And then they start showing me the models.

[01:12:01]

One is doing a masterclass about how you can build your own virtual galleries and sell them. Right. So they're. Building an architect in space and then selling that space that people are buying into real time right now, not in five years and 10 years, like all of these industries have, like less than one percent world penetration still. So it's only like the creatives in a very smart people that actually have time to get into the business world and actually be the future of millionaires and billionaires.

[01:12:30]

That is.

[01:12:31]

Let me let me say this, because also all this stuff is connected when we talk about cryptocurrency, when we talk about NAFTA, when we talk about VR are so intertwined because it's like from understanding. But you have to buy NFTE with crypto. I heard somebody in a comment saying, like, the American dollar is going down. How that affecting of teeth. But Nettie's is actually bought with crypto understanding and is built on a block chain. Most of it is don't do it.

[01:12:59]

There are no actually that's even better, too, because it's like when we talk about like Charlotte to be black world order, when we talk about like the new world order in a new world and all that, people think it's like some like movie where like Russia is going to come and all of that.

[01:13:16]

But the new world is already has already been here, is happening in all the world of systems and institutions. Yeah. Like when people think about the world, they think about Earth. But that's not the world. The world is your view is inhabits is the systems that we live in, the institutions. The bank is this own world. You understand me? Like even when you talk about fungibility coming back to the word Fungai, you're talking about a particular kingdom, right.

[01:13:43]

That makes up its own world of fungus. So all of this connects in the cryptocurrency. Reminds me of just the arc, right? We go to the arcade. You have what? You had tokens. These tokens had value in the arcade to where you play the games. You exchange fiat currency for these new game tokens. Right. The world has become this huge arcade like we go back to ready for player. But really, the initial arcades when we were children and we go to cheese like the world has become a big Chucky cheese.

[01:14:13]

You can the pay scale drive and now that's where we get with it.

[01:14:19]

You understand me.

[01:14:20]

So like and they've been pushing virtual for thirty years. It's now finally getting there. Yeah. Yeah. We can grown children in the game. That was preparedness. And now as my brother taught us a little bit about like even physics, you talk about a simulation, right. Like what is real now. Like they talking about creating it to where you have stimulation. When you touch a digital item in it, you can actually physically feel it. They got a vest on and things that do so long and sound like so much is going to change in the World Health Organization.

[01:14:51]

Automation, digitization is a matter that's what I talk about. You don't have mass. You will be left behind. Mobilizations, automation, digitization, study everything you understand me. Machine learning, study what that means, study the Internet of things and people are still so slow and behind on these terms. That's why everybody was so scared of Farje because they didn't understand it. Everything being connected.

[01:15:15]

Yes. Apple, Eiris, Microsoft, Hollonds, health care, financial. When it finally going to fintech, I'm virtual biggest game like I think up and screaming for five years in fees.

[01:15:30]

And if they like how much you read inside it, that's, that's, it's a formula for one or the and it wants you in a thing. I'm like I'm always going to like support resistance and you know, like and levels and but once you know how to buy one thing, you know how to buy everything. Yes. There's one pricing system. That's it. I don't care. Pepsi, Coke with his real estate, digital futures index. Is this all the same thing?

[01:16:08]

If it's the top ten, the bottom is one. Five is the middle. I don't care what it is, you have to know how to buy at the same price. When you go look if you go look like even with the iPhone, you guys know Microsoft make the first iPad and ninety four. They had an iPad table, no one wanted it for Microsoft, and then when Gates own 15 percent of Apple, that's why Steve and him hated each other.

[01:16:35]

The technology was then released over to Apple. And then Steve didn't even want to have it come out and the engineers made him put it out, study the history of his company.

[01:16:44]

It's fascinating. But what if you can watch the finals, like you said, in Egypt, where you can watch the finals or the Super Bowl from your house on Hollonds through Xbox Live? It's going to be like two hundred bucks a month. You want to kill probably a 400 million people. Subscribe to Xbox Live. And six years off, this study will study its bloody Star Wars.

[01:17:04]

You will see the hottest of the year they go. Be careful to change your name that they will change your name. NFTE in there.

[01:17:12]

No, no. That's just a study, of all things. Yes, it's very strong emotion.

[01:17:21]

You know, he got emotional, but I see him like this, you know, out of the room trying not to. And I'll stop here. My mom told me the story, my mom's birthday. All right. So you to wish my mom my birthday.

[01:17:34]

Happy birthday. My one day tomorrow.

[01:17:37]

But but she told me when my grandma rose, God rest her soul, left midway, Alabama, came to Chicago, Indiana, she sold coathangers and pop out of the money.

[01:17:47]

We don't understand is black people talking to us what kind of information we have for those of us a family member served in a war. You know how much our grandpa's what a sacrifice to have these conversations like it was illegal to have these conversations when they were in the war on illegal.

[01:18:06]

For those of you that have people that served in the 50s and 60s when I got to live with the did not get there. Only thing I can read is the Bible. And you'd like your reading 50 pages too hard. How they sacrificed for this, but you want to talk and all that and then everybody else go run and get the back of technology that we make popular tourist and a float of us.

[01:18:25]

And nobody monitors on Twitter. They've been pushing this forever, just study. We are so powerful that we link like tonight. We can run markets, but you want to put the work in, but, you know, this is this has always been a thing like we talk about this two thousand and fifty three wealth prediction in twenty seventy three. What position is that? Brown community worth two thousand seventy three. Black community, no less than three. And reality of it is, is why.

[01:18:58]

Because we don't own assets. Right. And we would have to we would have to to be the equivalent of making three to four times as more than accounting for a white family to be considered in the same middle class. Right. And so our goal now is the studying of assets, not just the present one, but the future future ones. If you can give a person a breakdown and say, don't you know that there's only going to be so many Bitcoin and just about only five hundred dollars that you insure yourself a certain amount of wealth for your family, then you start to understand that, wait a minute, these are industries that even if you're not going to get in on the creative side, invest into pocket that invest into the real, invest into etherial, invest into the technology that are going to be the assets, the clean air and water.

[01:19:45]

And we go to Mars.

[01:19:47]

We're like anything that is going to be of value. Every black family should be back by that. Everybody in the quarter should be back by that gold. It might not perform as much as Bitcoin, but it will always be valuable land. Is it not fungible thing? It will always be valuable stocks, businesses. These are things that we need to make sure that everybody has a portfolio to say, well, yes, I'd meet the standards of wealth building.

[01:20:14]

I have a twenty fifty three plan. I have a trust. I have my digital assets. Ladies, don't talk to a man and I know crypto. He can't take care of you in the future.

[01:20:22]

In fact, if you take romance, finance, make romance and buy stuff like that, that's how you test to see if your man can take care of.

[01:20:37]

If you first got to study and nobody asked these questions like where should I invest more money in crypto right now? I been out. It's like you got money.

[01:20:45]

Follow no digital money for what? If I met a guy today who came up, put my desk together, he said his friend is twenty eight, is like bottle and I'm like, what does he do? He said he works with service businesses to eliminate 80 percent of the employees. He has four people on the staff. He has nine hundred and ninety three businesses signed up in three months for service.

[01:21:08]

So if he's doing that, what do you think? What made him man? What do you think Salesforce is doing? Quarter data and what do you think Square's doing? Greystones your CRM?

[01:21:19]

I, I mean, we don't soldier on.

[01:21:22]

The jobs from ninety nine had recovered from the two thousand crash we have recovered. And the reason why all of these assholes are getting popular. Here's what nobody saying. The job market is never going to come back to what it was.

[01:21:34]

We're not going to happen. And unfortunately I don't care how many jobs reports come back. Well, a lot of these jobs, a lot of these jobs are never coming back. And that's the harsh reality of life on go.

[01:21:43]

Compare it to heart from nineteen fifty four to now. Don't look at quarter by quarter. Did you can you can find those numbers, people making two dollars an hour and they put them in the jobs report. Go look at fifty six and compare it.

[01:21:55]

It's a comparison you'll look at when it comes to the job market because this is an important topic. Same thing with education market. You understand me. They both get squeezed out because the world is shifting to different institutions. Right. Institutional power. No governments, no systems, no everything was also means that you need and hold the line right. In new skill sets that will be valuable in the future, not just in the now. Some of the things that you're good at won't matter in the future.

[01:22:24]

Right? Even engineering may not even be as important as designing because you're going to collaborate with artificial intelligence to create. So when you think about that is artificial intelligence skill sets that will be valuable regardless of what happens now when it comes to jobs, who are going to be job creators, not job seekers. That's what Muhammad Yunus talk about. Shots of my brother Cresco put me on it. And when I think about that is like we in the future, if your child has great creativity, imagination, and he has a certain skill sets, a certain skill sets, they can create their own job.

[01:22:57]

Why we are in a different industrial revolution. Right. So it's not about how hard you work. That's not what's going to be your effectiveness of value. Human capital as essentially went down. And that's represented in the bond market. Right. And it's been in since World War Two. Yeah. And then we say, OK, well, then when the Internet came, the smartest people that learned how to use it, you understand me, that dove into the study and learn the knowledge, build the businesses.

[01:23:24]

They say, OK, now you've got to work smarter, don't work harder. Right. And now we at this point, what a smart people don't created all the technology. So all. We got to do is learn how to use it in the most creative ways possible, so it goes to the creative worker. That's why Kanye was supposedly be the most wealthy black man in American history. Whether you want to believe it or not, the news itself is going to help him appeal to those numbers.

[01:23:47]

But what is a creative right? So when we look at it from Robert Brothers to Kanye West, why is that out of all people in the history of black America? This was a creative. So how do you not study the top and see what things are going back here? That was a class clown. The school is now a global celebrity. You understand me as a comedian, hire in the kids, learn just technical education to take to learn the rules.

[01:24:15]

So when new things come, they always ask, how do I use it? So you have to deprogram your way of thinking, forget the institutional education and relearn from the experience model of going out there and getting your degree and experience and interacting with things to say, OK, go back to the childlike curiosity. The child always asked why things have to be this way. Why can't they like this? How can they can be like this? Go back to that way of thinking because by for 90 percent of children test highly creative, but at age nine, only four percent of you understand most of society has no creativity whatsoever to really know how to follow instructions.

[01:24:54]

So even if you listen to this right now, you're learning this to figure out how to use it in your way. I never want to be the one that has to always lead you. I only want to teach you how to lead yourself.

[01:25:05]

And I want to say this in closing, every recession is a marker and change in society. Go look at every I tell you guys. So I always do to break something. If you go study every recession, every major one, it was a cataclysmic event that changed society. And a lot of this stuff is preplanned. Yeah, planned. I'm not I'm not psychic. It's just the conversations that I was having with people. And Evernote 2012. This was already talked about in 13, 14.

[01:25:39]

So when this happens and companies are planning because for your own safety, you have to stress test of everything, even for me. I'm like, what if necessary? It goes away. What if it goes away? What if it goes away in every contract cost two hundred and fifty thousand dollars. What is my exit plan? You have to know when disaster hits, when every recession hit, it is a marker in time that you're going to be a changing of the guard and the new plan is being put in place.

[01:26:03]

But go study and you'll see the parallels. And when you study eighty seven. Ninety ninety one. Ninety four ninety nine twenty thousand one hundred seventy eight, you'll see what the changes are like. Oil used to be the big thing. It cracked and gas prices were high seven that went away. What has become a big because all the runoff and pollutions and pollutants into our water supply, that's going to be one of the biggest commodity water and replacing coal.

[01:26:28]

And it may wait for Tesla. Please go study every depression. Every recession is a changing of the guard.

[01:26:34]

Can we just get a few questions in before nineteen? You got you got a few more minutes when I got out of it and we got the scoop up. So 11:00 the night.

[01:26:44]

It's so much in this space that I think it's a lot to cover.

[01:26:47]

But I'm here for the people to get a few questions from the public or see what we got. That's who we got. No amuse yourself. You been on mute. What's going on?

[01:26:57]

How are you doing? I'm good. How are you? I'm doing all right, man.

[01:27:01]

So I got index in an NFA ETF in after the in Illinois.

[01:27:09]

We love our I appreciate your giving me this time of. My initial question was just about my portfolio. Currently I feel like I'm overextended and ETFs. I have like eight ETFs right now too.

[01:27:24]

That's the easy answer to what are the best two out of the eight that you have probably got to go research. Go, go, go. Look at the five year period. Did a comparative analysis of the performance. If you don't have two kids, go for the ones that are most aggressive.

[01:27:40]

OK, most aggressive. Yeah, I was going to say that that's going to be me. It's my second question. I'm so I'm twenty four and just what you guys have been talking about gets my mind going so fast. I want to get in everything. How can I capitalize but not overextend my means and finances. And when it comes to getting into like investing in stocks and I'm right now I'm in a position where I want to invest in everything.

[01:28:08]

You have kids? No, I've got a girlfriend. Yes. OK, I'm a let keys take. I'll tell you, when I was twenty four, what I was somebody told me whoever you helper work, whoever you want now. Only 34 may not be there every day you came into the market and then the digital assets, even if you like Bitcoin, the thing that I hated about Bitcoin, my stuff got stolen.

[01:28:34]

Right.

[01:28:35]

Because if I had those coins back then, I may not be the market money.

[01:28:38]

So maybe may be in Dubai, but take 50 percent of your money if you can't literally invest it until you get about thirty two or thirty three. Life would be different. Life would be very different for you, but I like to think of it in that part, I would say when it comes to the project, you have to research to figure out what is actually going to be there for the artists in the projects themselves and understand why would this have long term value, like don't just go and buy everything that everybody else is buy because you can I mean, you can go take them out or you take some of your capital.

[01:29:16]

You just spread it across projects that are popular. Right. Like so like you can go forward, you crypto punk sort of made of masterpieces. Like these first ones just want to have value because they connect it to the history of it. Then go jump into those or and when you can follow the market and win like celebrities such as Snoop and Weekend and you understand me, Logan, all of these people start dropping stuff, then do it in that manner.

[01:29:41]

But figure out what is the reason that you're buying it? Does it have any real gravity? You understand? Why does it have real of value based on the actual plan of the project? Right. And look at all these things from 10, 20 years, because the reason you're buying this is so that it stores value in the future, not just now. Like I want to buy these digital paintings and my child owns a digital Basquiat. Not for me, none of this.

[01:30:07]

That will be for me. You understand me? If I buy assets, I'll catch a flip and I go up to three million. Best believe in have to sell it, that's for sure. But like my brother just broke down. Like, just think about your portfolio going there with a plan before you do anything. Nobody just go in there and just rush on bye bye bye. Because I heard about excitement leads the way to mine. So you first want to come with a plan and then just stick to your plan.

[01:30:35]

Whatever your reasoning and your logic is, give me or follow that logic unless you figure like, OK, the hypothesis, not work and figure out somebody else has a better way. I'm sure that over the years myself and youyou you understand me will be teaching in this space on ways that you can get in as we continue to learn and grow. So here's your marketplace right now to learn the space, then execute, but don't go in there.

[01:31:01]

Have cut or something that's nostalgic, too. Like that's how I look in this space is still new. So we're not really sure how the future's going to play out. But in my brain, my educated guess is something that's nostalgic, is always going to live forever. So it's like if my ex had a NFTE of his shoes or his, you know, twenty fifth anniversary.

[01:31:24]

Yeah, yeah. Like I said, if it's like if Biggie Smalls had NFTE of his kouji sweater, that's something that's nostalgic.

[01:31:33]

Beatles or like while I don't know and they say like if I had a had a picture of the dining room table where we first started and twenty years from now I was like, you know, the biggest media company in the world, like that's nostalgic.

[01:31:53]

Listen in here talking to it.

[01:31:58]

Listen, I'm just getting this. This is a whole forget you already take the pans out, relax, take a breath mint. Instead, you can make this your whole investment thesis. NFTE keys drop. You better get it. Look it up with a real business model to make sure that you don't even and this is what I do it every day.

[01:32:26]

You won't even know that you bought gold. It's just that is going to have extremely more valuable than when you bought it. Not because I'm waiting on a market, is because I'm going to make sure it's more valuable based on a business model that I plan to put behind it. So it's different when I'm making sure that I control the market. I'm not waiting on outside variables to make this value. I'll give you a. I wait to the end of the episode.

[01:32:50]

Let me ask you this real quick, so we'll mooting put out the album, sold four million and Strully bought it. So what you have had the physical value of the album be higher or the NFTE. Well, I think they would have both been about the way the market is right now. Wu Tang was just ahead at a one for one that if if right now to say that I only have one album drink, put out a 50 million dollar album, then he can put out of 50 million.

[01:33:19]

He can put out a verse that nobody else here except the owner. It doesn't for five million is right. Same thing I talked to. I talked to a lot of different people. I talked to Jim Jones about this talk to my broken leg about this, like the music space. They have so much because all of those raps we didn't get to hear because they didn't make the album. Now I have so much more value than me. Those those pins and parts that Lil Wayne threw away and he freestyle with, if he still had them, they would be worth million.

[01:33:47]

And that's why he never gets billions of dollars, like is basically the garage sale little world.

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It's like it's like art to where it's like you go home, like if you've got a dope house or whatever, and it's like, yo, I'm showing off my Drakensberg that nobody else in the world has.

[01:34:02]

It's great. When you said that, it made me think like if not, if he actually sold his book around me, like he had the book around series. But imagine what that looks like to a collector, like especially us.

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And for context, for those of you who kept seeing me post all those esoteric posts. Right. Go look at all the information to Nikola Tesla went and got the kinetic scrolls from and recreated the technology here. And then when he had a little bit competition from Edison, Edison sent the people to his house to go get all the scrolls and they deem Tassos crazy. And then all the money went into G. And a. This is a dirty game, you have to go study history.

[01:34:50]

So for those who don't want to be game changers, you have to remember who you're looking at. And I'm a big winner. Even in the hedge fund space, I imagine most of the more hedge funds than I ever do in our space.

[01:35:00]

They know our science is way better than we do Autumn Samarian text go exact meaning if you ever run across them, Bill, if what he knows about Samarian science and then if you understand the equatorial circumference of the earth, how that ties in to how many days the market is going to be up.

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And if you divide that by 30 like this, time is different. Yeah, I love it.

[01:35:31]

I want to go high level or high level, like that's what this is. I'm just going to talk about so so we get a couple of more questions.

[01:35:42]

Go. May I see some site building piece of the gods go study Fibonacci next time. And just a moment. Lisa, we're coming to you. Amuse yourself. You've been unmuted, Lisa. Oh, that's not this time. And now I'm coming to you. So you amuse yourself. Good. Nehemiah, what's going on?

[01:36:06]

Well, it's one thing for saying appreciate company, at least right now. But I made two teas last week. I'm just trying to see how and soul right now. So I know about the gas being cheap at a minimum a week. So I missed a little window last Sunday. So the price prices on weekdays like 180 a.m. I'm just trying to see what's the best way the list is sold out. But what kind of NFTE did you make? What is those two pictures like I've done one of.

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This little flower outlooking for battles and another one also got me in the famous player, a stack of money in damages for. So this one was art, both photographs that is, you know, took to on.

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So one thing that we talked about here, and I believe it is connected to a physical item. Have you sold physical art before or photography?

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Not have. So why would you think something about a digital art? Hey, I would try to give the shot to that. That's what I'm mad at you for the shot, but go study Sothebys like those you want to make anything, get related and go look at where the origin of the business started and how they migrated into that space.

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How much of a role does social equity play in this? Right. Because like you said, like Nina, Nehemiah is a perfect example of somebody saying, you know what, I see everybody else is doing it. I would take my shot, but he hasn't even sold out in the real world. Right. So talk about the importance of social equity in the space. So it's very important, especially right now, to stress those are the people who are going to expand more because it's easier to see value over time.

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Number one, and they already have value, like let's say I mean, you can pick out any celebrity that you've already named. You understand me like you've got to have some hype around what you're pushing in the first place. People have to believe that the fear of missing out is very real. You understand me? The scarcity model really works in this space. I was on air when I believe his name was a pool. Hopefully I'll get the artist wrong.

[01:38:30]

But he was on clubhouse there, was pushing on me maybe like ten minutes or so. He sold by almost a million dollars worth of Tee's. They came on, they spread. I think Tyra Banks had posted a bunch of different people in a small window of time saying that this baseball player got into art. He had a story that went along with it which gave the value, the social value instead of you had all of these people that was back in it.

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And now people like, yo, I don't know much about this space, but I don't want to miss out on this possible opportunity. Right. So Cuomo played a lot in today with the social value pieces like. It's a reason why when you look at who has a million followers in the world, who has half a million followers in the world, who has one hundred thousand followers in the world, you can see where all of the attention flows right there.

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Those are all of the people who have the ability to sell something right now about because at least one percent of the audience care, you understand me. And so if you have a million followers throughout the history of time, you are in the one percent. There's never been a time where a million people knew about just one person unless they were kings. You understand me as pharaohs and presidents. So you really have to understand the influence that comes along with this.

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Like I talked about it last time, like don't look at these are social media influences. These are influential people and influential people like politicians. They can move the people. That's what makes them incredibly valuable. Right. So when we think about that, if you have social equity right now, you have to build that up. Number one is the model that you take, the Garvie model. He says that I want to be a thought leader in space.

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Right. I want to fund was pop. I'm fund was high and I want to touch my name to it. So I have documentation in that era. I can always go back to and say that I was a futurist. That was hot on this tape. There's always people before that. But if you have a higher platform, you can push it and then you can be the one who attaches the name in that space. So NIAMBI, if I was you first, I would have talked about it.

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The people that you're trying to sell it to, that, you know, people always buy your products first family and friends, you understand me, and then the outside audience, but they don't even know what value they like. Why should I buy this digital picture? You have to tell me why is important. You have to put something behind it of value. Now, I might buy a digital boardgame. I might buy a Cresco stock on that.

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He's going to teach me with it. I might buy a next digital real estate money car that he's going to give me a lesson or something. I might buy a tale of Jacob's family blueprint because it's going to come with a real physical one that's attached to it. The testimonies of people who've already helped people who believe in them, they look at them as important figures and they will be talking to a etc. They can create what they call thought form.

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They can create rituals. They can create like Oldtown country or what's that thing on Netflix? What a guy has to cook, like creating cult right. Creates the culture right. And the things inside that court becomes valuable. You have these cult like personalities that people believe anything attached to them has the same value of that belief by extension of connection. So you first have to go on the journey of producing value or it's not that your business is not successful.

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It might be a business model that's not successful. So figure out a creative way. Partnership is very important. It is. You might not the person I had a social equity might not know how to execute. You may be the artist to have the talent get with them. You understand me? So you like the rock in a slingshot to work. Now you can push that together because you all came together to work together. So I would look at partnerships in this space and collaborations was going to be huge.

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If you have the talent work with somebody who has the platform work, if you have the disvalue work with somebody who has the social equity so that they can actually push it out there, like, don't just think about being a lone cowboy in the space. You understand me? I used to back in the day I was working with a collective car, travois. We traveled around the whole country and we would host parties. I like I'm sure they probably have the biggest collection of underground under artists in America right now.

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Right. And I was thinking about this. I'm like, yo, we used to literally find artists who had never sold a piece of art curator space for them. People are in that environment. People that have never bought art now by our people have never sold, are now selling art because they also have the opportunity to meet the people, attach a story to it which gives it more value. All I heard was a flower like why? What was important?

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Abutments million worth it. Yeah, yeah. So sales is very important. Your branding is important, your marketing is all important. It goes into to this. This is not just a market. You jump in and say it's valuable, curated the value around it so people can understand how to interact with what you design. And a copart you can see in the biggest brands always, so it comes from all like I went to Catholic school, so I got the chance to study Catholicism at a high level, which are mob and drug businesses are dictated off of.

[01:43:44]

Right. So now, Steve Jobs, Jesus. The Bible, iPad, iPod, right, Apple stores, church, see what Eli, Eli, Jesus, messianic figure, chariot, Tesla infrastructure. Those are all his disciples. If Elon brings in more disciples on operational scale and tell the story better, the upside is, is endless, endless. And you need all of those things to be able to build a brand and also to be able to move the product and get initiatives behind them and do it while you're living.

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Because I would hate for some of you to make these entities and they become more popular post death or posthumously, and then someone takes them from you the same way that most artists get their creative works. Stoehr, like everybody, love Muskat now, but they wasn't heroin in him and he wasn't as wealthy as he should have been while he was living.

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That's a fact. I mean, I've traveled around the world enough crowd people literally in multiple countries, uncrowned queens of countries. I've I've traveled around celebrities and the question are always coming arise like, why do people allow you to crown them? No one is an experience, right. You watch other people go through this experience. You want the experience to when us sports, we have mirror neurons, we see what other people do and we imagine that space.

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Right. That's what digital items like if you have a bike physically, like your body becomes connected to wherever you connect it to, you understand me? It's like no car crash. You felt like you felt that even if it doesn't jolt you, you felt like, oh, it was pain that hit you because your body becomes extended to everything. So when we talk about simulation in a digital world, there will not be a difference the same way.

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What's in our mind has the same neurons that light up when we think about it, then when we experience the reality of it, because it's already taking place in this digital world. It is a real world. Do not think about these separate right. That's what we start to lose. We already cyber connected. Our memories are in our phones right now, just taking the ability to take our memories and put them in front of us. You understand me is it's amazing.

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And Tabernacles, which upset about Krauss. Right. What cybersecurity. Cybersecurity going to be even bigger here and way to Harvard and Princeton. Start selling all the Nettie's of your certificates and degrees. Yeah, it's a different story, so high right now is the day. Go study all this stuff that has been talked about in the 1960s and 70s. Yeah, you can't take away that. I got to create a quote, one of the cult terms in the culture.

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Yeah, that's it.

[01:46:36]

That's actually extremely. That's an extremely valuable document. That's why you guys always seem to do my literal back and two thousand and one knows I buy it. There's value in that because you have proof of concept, then you build trust. Trust leads to follow up fellowship or follow. You got to know they did a while, you built the foundation and partnership collaboration, you guys have seen this business school in real time. So the light went. When we look at the top companies in the world, they have influencers now for their companies.

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You understand me? Elon Musk is an influencer. At the same time, he's a billionaire influencer. He means the world now has a somebody operated by one of my tweets. I got not to toot my own horn to say it. I'll do it for you. But but I have some of the greatest quotes in the world, right? So somebody has sent me one hundred and nineteen quotes, a line in email, and I'm doing my these are magnificent.

[01:47:38]

Right. But then I thought about it like being able to buy someone quote, like I have a quote. That's what you do frequently becomes your frequency. Right? I have one of my first viral videos where I drop it on Facebook to this day is still will probably hit a million. So I thought about like, what's the value of me being able to sell my first viral video? You walk in a role and be like, oh, you bought the keys, bam, I love that video.

[01:48:03]

You know, for a fact that five, 10, 20, 30 million people have seen it already. They liked it. It has value already. Right. So like even in that space of content creation and I look at this, all this concept of the content creators really want to buckle down on this is that auto's time in my post went viral or somebody else went viral. You didn't get paid for it. Was it connected to you? And they now created platforms right to where you can actually get paid when people watch these, not just talking about monetize for Instagram, but they'll be connected to the block chain, you understand me, which allows you to get paid every time somebody else or likes it or watch it, because we've created content where you may have gotten more views that SNL sometimes and you got pay none unless you know how to connect the product to it, but not directly from the product you already created, which was the content itself, which was a transaction for attention.

[01:49:03]

So what we think about in those layers, it also has opportunities to where now your content becomes an opportunity for you to get paid. It becomes another asset for your legacy to go into your trust in your estate. So when you start thinking of these models, think about how all things are going to change when things change. This is a whole universe and the world changes. July one for you guys. What if you pardon me? I'll just go to Holovaty like Pardonable NYU and put all the content in a library that's in NFTE, inside Classrooms and NYU.

[01:49:38]

Now we're talk, but the only reason it's a competitive advantage because most people can cruise most content, as you already have, it's the same model from the record labels and store and content, but repurposing in different places. I mean, is it so much like they got the hologram, right, holograms or something people forgot about? Stewpot was the first hologram that the world came out of nowhere. These that's going to be crazy in the space. I just think Disney hologram to its birthday, you understand me?

[01:50:13]

So if you take so imagine if I do a speech that's already preprepared, right. That the same way when they do those concerts and Kevin Hart is like nobody can feel. Minear I do a speech super powerful, you understand me. And I tell the world that this can only be it's going to be released as a NFTE hologram. So now the universities, instead of booking me the booking my hologram that has a 30 minute speech that the children come to an assembly and they all watch.

[01:50:41]

Right. So now I'm on the stage and the moment is done, it disappears. And I rip this out to somebody else because they can only be at one place at a time. So it's like even the idea of having partial ownership, renting things. You understand me? We used to do it with Blockbuster. You have to rent. You have to bring it back. The difference is physical. The same thing. We rent things on our TV all the time with movies.

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They're not yours.

[01:51:05]

You get almost nothing right now, but digital assets that cost nothing. The terms of the service space. Yes. And so those convenience. Yeah. That's a hell of an idea, something like I feel like star and this is always this has always been around us, right? Like, I feel like we've seen this in Star Wars. All the messages would come out of our and it would disappear and be gone. That was like I'm picturing Keith doing it at once.

[01:51:34]

Once to go look at like even if you look at the state and look how far big brothers come, like we hold a big brother.

[01:51:40]

Oh, you go look at any movie, they'll tell you what's coming. The critic go look in the credits. The creative consultants are the people that's already put the infrastructure in. Go look at all the NBC, CBS and Fox shows when BONOS is popular and how much infrastructure Apple pay for. People thought that was product placement wasn't the one product we specified that were telling what was coming. Go look at Limitless the movie and go look at everything. That limitless pool shouldn't exist.

[01:52:12]

And that's one of my favorite. That's class that was totally bogus and it's close. And in that movie of the foreshadowing of what was going to come even in the market, go replay the movie. Yeah, I mean, Matrix isn't a place, for example. Yeah, yeah. I mean, like that's the world we live in and just it's not please don't be scared. Don't think about Black Mirror all day and think about it.

[01:52:42]

I always filter things from this sentence how we're going to use it for our pop. Right. The reason that I was spreading information is not just because I just want to be in a space. I want us to understand it because we're always reacting to everyone else's success. Right? Then we get in it. Once it becomes the standard, it's always the fourth stage is the revolutionary songs they hear about it. Those are early adopters. They jump in and do a research.

[01:53:05]

They buy it. They don't even need to hear much. I heard enough. I think it's a great idea. You understand me? The second people I need word of mouth. Tell me what's going to tell me. What was that good? What was that you thought? Right. Once they hear it, they're convinced people don't like to be the first. You don't like to be the last. Right. Then the third one, which it's enough for the people that got it.

[01:53:25]

Word of mouth. It starts to spread and become standard. You understand me? Just what I found was everybody had home. Everybody needs to understand me. And then it's the last group. These are the people that had a poverty based mindset because these are people, regardless of what's going on, they're never going to interact with. Right. So you have to ask yourself, what group of people are you in? How do you normally react to investments and opportunities?

[01:53:48]

Because Bitcoin machines have been in the hood for the last five, six years. We want to go buy our cigarillos, our blintz, liquor and everything else and never asks, what the hell is this machine? We could have put money in some crypto and became a millionaire. So if you present what's around you, then you can be a synchronicity, which is finding the meaning in otherwise meaningless. The words mean that you don't know the language, but the moment you learn a language, it increases your ability for opportunities that are around you and you can understand the language being used.

[01:54:18]

So learn the language.

[01:54:20]

And the last thing I want to say is bring somebody on real quick. Yeah, I level conversation man producer Elysha and we bring some shit.

[01:54:34]

So something was going on.

[01:54:36]

Perdu is listening. Tell the people, first of all, who are you gonna sell that you.

[01:54:43]

I can hear what's up champ. How are you doing. Orlando. Are you open. Was was that with stocks that you invested in them, invested in Tesoro, invested in Amazon, zero zero more? That's a fact.

[01:55:07]

That's right. My that's my son, man. He was tuned in. Oh, OK. Yes. My son is tuned in and he wanted to go in this weekend to.

[01:55:18]

Yeah, I see it, that's their man blessings to you, your pops, your family appreciates you tap tapping it. Yeah, man, yeah. Congrats on your when I saw you in real well, man.

[01:55:30]

Lobster bisque in all my fancy, your diet, that sort of investments and where he's you know, he's proud of his investments.

[01:55:44]

He wants to talk about his investment account all the time, that's for sure. Well, yeah, I'm stoked that, you know, he able to have that conversation with him. So I want to bring him on just to let him talk about that a little bit, because, you know, we talk about investing for our kids a lot. But he's ten years old and he just told you Heroes, actually, ETF, a gaming ETF. The reason why I got here was because he loves video games so much.

[01:56:06]

So I just thought that it would be a cool thing for him to actually be investing in some video game companies. So, you know, he talks about it with his cousins and his friends and things of that nature. So, you know, I'm glad that he's he has an appreciation of what he has. And, yeah, I not go to bed, maybe go to a man and not.

[01:56:25]

You said I was going to let you go. Tell me a YouTube channel, man.

[01:56:27]

Don't let him get out of here without saying so. Everybody subscribe to our YouTube channel. It's nice to go. I'm a type it in the car.

[01:56:36]

Yeah. Like I described like homicide squad. Let me go to it right now. It's a boy.

[01:56:44]

You see the you see how your dad was going to do. I got you man.

[01:56:49]

That's my username with this guy.

[01:56:53]

Subtyping in the trash. You guys read it.

[01:56:57]

I got you. I got you. I got it. It's all my kids these days.

[01:57:07]

But now you got to go back to school. You got to go to bed just a little the morning. We got to put it in the chapel. Entrepeneurs, please make adjustments to the investors as well, just like the job market has been under attack over the next 15 years. You see the entrepreneur class go under attack. I know a lot of you like. I'm telling you, we're going to go to a frictionless kind of ecosystem where there's going to be less communication and it's just going to be more transaction on the investments.

[01:57:34]

So that's why you see. Go look at how Amazon runs their practice to even the first hour like baseball season. They're not talking literally like going through the memos a lot more corporations because of now they're going to save on commercial costs as Facebook is the only company that still invests in heavily commercial real estate in New York. They're going to have an excuse. And for those of you that are working, begin to invest more because they're going to have metrics be so high that they're going to try and push you up because they're trying to literally go to like a classless society where it's like either are incredibly wealthy or incredibly poor.

[01:58:08]

And the stress middle that we call it the wealth transfer, but it's the rich get richer for the poor. We just sit up and make it sound sexy. But the reality of it is. Yes, right. The conversation we have right now is the most important because we're trying to prepare you right in your family for wealth. Like we can disrupt it, but we have to be intentional with our disruption in tsunami, which is one thing that we've never valued enough in our communities, is the reason that we don't have the same standards of wealth that everybody else has where you don't have to take these conversations to the Asian community where they are already going to be appointed.

[01:58:51]

You don't have to be like, hey, focus on this industry because it's about the boom they already in it. You don't have to say, hey, invest in gold because it's a place to store value. They're going to be on it already because they they value education. He will be the number one financial education podcast's in the world. Understand me is very important that we are able to have this particular conversation with the culture and our people, because what education and economics become a part of the culture?

[01:59:21]

What is sure to follow? We didn't know the science of economics, the loss for our country, the science of economics, the science of warfare and the science and make you understand me without that science and all that old bill to family. Well, so we've been robbed of our opportunities to learn in the correct way. But here we are today. This is the new school in a state university. This is these are the new institutions. Do not look at it as a podcast, even calling it a podcast.

[01:59:52]

Is it Zilong? What is the reality of it is because this is this is not exchangeable. Somebody else podcast. This is not fungible.

[02:00:01]

Yeah. And I've said look at how many in other cultures they didn't begin to share all the secrets like Akman. Bill Simmons, a renaissance, they still being quiet, so if we are one hundred and twenty two years behind on technological and information infrastructure, what do you think they're working on now that they see that we've been. Talking all our business, and that's why I put here like we we've got to catch up fast because this gap is going to get real.

[02:00:30]

What? Yes, I mean, the job market to recover two to twenty twenty six, but you're out and then I don't I don't want people to think about a job like that. One of the things we're doing right now, and I know I'll be I'll be heavy on it and people will be nice about it. Right. And no, I don't want to be in a stampede because I wouldn't be shocked by it. I need people to really go home and think about it instead of me.

[02:00:56]

I want you to be hurt by the fact that he told me, like, to get that degree and that a boss, like we literally have equal fire in a job sending us. My younger brother just sent me a message to say, you know, I fired my boss.

[02:01:13]

I'm going to be you know, how good that makes me feel that that can decrease the recidivism rate because we can either teach you how to create your own business. We can employ people or we can give you skill sets where you can pay yourself 90 percent of crimes just because of money so we can solve the money problem in our communities. We are the revolutionary activists, you understand me. And people just haven't changed the thinking of it in the right manner.

[02:01:39]

We're just directly attacking the problem. You understand me? Everybody else brings awareness to the problem. We're creating the actual solutions, the ills of the woes of the world, all the solutions that our ancestors hope this generation will produce. We just have to be to zero point zero point zero zero zero one percent. So it has to become standard. But the word of mouth is your job. You go tell everybody else, hey, this is what we should continue to get, get them mad.

[02:02:08]

And so they try to hear you talk about it in a semi just because they know we're executing more than Tampa, because I don't want this to of church. So I'd like to execute in the work, because that's how value is exchanged and that's why every time I interact with these like is genuine, that's why you guys call me, you ask me questions, but I'm interested in learning. I'm humbly always coming by. Hey, brother, what you working on?

[02:02:32]

And then you then I sharpen my tools and I come back with some other information and then I'll go dig deep. That's why I say if you only are looking at eight companies, they can change the world. It's impossible to read everything about every article that's been written on that company. If you look at it. Twenty five companies, you have to master something like read every every article on Microsoft since nineteen ninety six one gentlemen.

[02:02:59]

I know you got to go. Come on man. Come on. It was a hot night for dropouts. Will not be breaking news. Come on now.

[02:03:12]

Breaking news on this market Monday as we've had Mass Effect and it's valuable conversation. And I appreciate you and the 19. I got to have you come on a stock club to. I'm sitting here writing notes myself.

[02:03:22]

That's how crazy the 19 keys man. A legend, a true legend, a genius. EIO We only give you the finest level of production at the highest quality possible.

[02:03:34]

And this was, you know, brilliant, brilliant, brilliant conversation, man.

[02:03:38]

Don't let that go a level. Not at my level, not high level. High level.

[02:03:43]

It's going to be hard to get this level of information anywhere else on Internet 19 keys for the people that I don't know how. They don't know who you are, but tell them who you are, what you've got going on. Tell them how to follow you. Tell them you know, give them the whole rundown. I'll go by 19 keys, then number 19 represents or understand all numbers that are one to nine always say that, you know, we can all be the ones you understand me.

[02:04:07]

It ain't just about one person being in space. We weren't horizontal. We're all the ones. You understand me. I want to know what encompasses all mathematical language. So the key is the knowledge to unlock the mind. So when you hear 19 keys, you talking about universal knowledge, universal truth, to be able to unlock and enlighten the person. I got that from massive for our Muhammet now. Me, you can follow me on Instagram. You can find me on YouTube, you can find me wherever we have BWL, which is an acronym for Black World Order or Wealth Opportunities to understand me, because we focus on giving people the skill sets to be able to fire a boss and get rid of the institutions that never serve our best interests.

[02:04:47]

And we make sure that our culture has a checklist of all the things that they need. And once they go through this, they are the person that knows how to do the things that they found. They family is no longer ignorant. They know how to set up a blueprint. They know how to do all of the things necessary. So it was important for me to be a part of that because I grew up organizations that I think fail when I was a child because of lack of communication, power struggle and a multitude of different things.

[02:05:14]

So I've spent my career putting together organizations and structures of black men and women, not we have that thing that we call unity because we've never seen it work. And one thing that's always been missing is this wealth education. We hear that what is the right thing to do, but how do you do it instead of me? So last year we created the wealth standard. We had an initiative to give a million dollars worth of Bitcoin the way our people didn't understand Bitcoin enough.

[02:05:42]

We couldn't even give it all the way. You understand me? We did the same thing with silver and we seen silver skyrocket. We we we make sure that we come together as black man and say, how can we create a conglomerate? How can we monopolize all industries? Why? And this is super important because everybody else is doing. These companies are becoming governments. They have the same power. They just don't have any more power, you understand me.

[02:06:08]

And so once you understand that, you say, where the hell will we be if they're constantly taking over a new landscape? Well, I'm definitely not going to be one of the ones is at the bottom looking at everybody at the top, continue to complain about oppression. You understand me? I'ma teach people how to become my own savior through education and they can execute and get the skill sets. And I leave on this thing. This is how it works in our culture, and we talked about this last time we started off with motivation, we just needed somebody to motivate us a little bit.

[02:06:37]

You understand me to yell, that is like, go get it. And that got us going there. We said, no, we need to show me how to do it. You understand me? We seen the people that we became inspired by. People move on from motivation to inspiration. Then that wasn't enough because you have to continue to expand and grow to nudge people in excitement. Then it goes to education. Now you teach the people what you did and now you found out that the education system mess people up so much it ain't enough to just tell them what to go do or even give them the education that you've got to literally break it down and give them instructions to hold their hand right.

[02:07:13]

And even that doesn't become enough eventually for people that it just becomes automation. Well, that we don't do it for you. And that's why all the companies that invest it's artificial intelligence to have organization and they have systems. When in the world system, you're brilliant and you always have a future. I'm 19 Caseman. I appreciate your help. I'll make sure you tap into the bwl to understand me for your job and become a boss.

[02:07:40]

I appreciate you, brother. Shout out the keys and keys. I told you my wife had a job, right? Yeah, let's do it. So another shot.

[02:07:51]

My brother, 19 keys man. Always a pleasure. Every time we get to link up man nine by legendary to know to present.

[02:08:02]

Ain't one thing I want to learn from you and I want to know how you go about is your creation. You have an interesting way that you curate your sticks. It is damn. And I know all of it is intentional. I'm just look at some time for stock information. Look at his curation, his design and brand abilities, whoever whoever's behind what you do in a thought process that you put it in. That's what I was in advertising before to see Tumba.

[02:08:33]

Before I went to see it, I put it all together. So that's what a tough testing and a biodome. AP wire. Yeah, I'm grouping all together, but ya ya ya have created a brand that is magnificent. But more than that, the values that's within the brand is what the court you love the most. The inclusion of solidarity that your practice, however you grew up, it was the right way because you added that into your business model, which is why you have the success, which is why I am 100 percent behind your anywhere, everywhere all the time, because I've waited to see black men build a campaign like this, build an institution like this.

[02:09:14]

I want the world to respect it. I want them to understand what it is, the three, four black men that you see up here and everybody else in the audience. I want you to applaud yourself for even being here because you can be somewhere learning nothing. But you're only here to grow, get value, to earn your leisure. All the flowers in the world. You will always be the greatest podcast in the world.

[02:09:34]

But I'm waiting on that day where y'all literally are the biggest media company in the world of some concrete, some concrete and yeah, shout everybody out at two a.m. and have seven thousand people tonight of a national championship game is not easy to do.

[02:09:50]

And that just goes to show you that you chose education over entertainment. And kudos to you guys for being with the band with us for over two hours. That is something that I was, you know, was an extremely impressive feat. And yeah, my love is love, miss. Is this, though, for me? I got a bunch of different ideas that I would implement. Oh yeah. I'm obviously to.

[02:10:14]

So in it, in an ideal fashion, if the students want a discount then they can always go to kids to get a discount on everything we got. Going to be W.O. today for better parties for our kids.

[02:10:28]

You have to but yeah, I'll definitely see you tomorrow when we talk about curation and all that too. But I appreciate you like it, but also to like to represent us back to back. But look at how masterful he is known as information and also be culturally aware of everything that's going on. It's not easy what he's doing to be able to talk off the cuff. So like I always set a trap, in my opinion, at the best interview, especially when it comes to investing.

[02:10:54]

Right. And then what you always tell you, like the brilliance and to make it flow like to me like it, like the group. For those of you that a business, people go back and study how he presented his information versus how Tiffany does it merged them.

[02:11:13]

It's very intentional, and even like when I come home, I look back and that's what I'm Amy to emphasize, even when I'll talk fast to get you to go replay, because there was something, a line before this really important.

[02:11:25]

And all of it made Chicago listen back to this replay. Obviously, it's going to be on audio platforms out to market Monday, the podcast itself. I'll be up at midnight tonight, which he was able to keep you up so late to the game.

[02:11:41]

Shout out to my niece, Blessin. She asks why and give a shout out to my mom. This is my birthday, April 8th. To love again. Hey, it's my birthday as well when I was shot to my knees.

[02:11:59]

Oh, you got to do your DMF story. Although you're to do that. Just let me give a birthday. Today is her sixth birthday. So happy birthday. Uncle Troy loves you.

[02:12:08]

Yeah. Next, we got to DMX album too, by the way, shouted Darkman, an unknown man. Quickly, quickly, because we definitely are over Tom-Tom right now. But you know, X-axis, somebody that you know is not EXIS. You know, he's a man of the people, like I said. So a couple of years ago, I was in my neighborhood and it was like it's like this this thing is called the city center, but it's like a movie theater, grocery store, restaurants, a whole bunch of different stuff, all in like one complex.

[02:12:35]

So I was going there for a party and it was like eleven thirty at night. So I see somebody like wandering like in the distance because I'm like driving into the parking lot, they're like two hundred feet away. But they were trying to open a door to door was closed. So they came back to me and as they as I was walking back to me I realized it was DMX. So like I said, it's not uncommon to see DMX.

[02:12:57]

So especially like he's from our neighborhood. So I was like, yo, I never knew. I didn't know DMX. I never spoke to him. I never met him ever in my life. So it was just me. It was like I said, I was like eleven thirty at night and I'm like ex split up. You like it was kind of right. Right. Oh that's crazy.

[02:13:15]

I never met, I never met Alex, I never spoke to him out of nowhere.

[02:13:20]

He like hanging around like us a while ago.

[02:13:26]

So he tells me that he just he just left the movie theater and he got locked out. He's trying to get the valet parking lot where he parked his car. He couldn't get in. So I'm like, oh, how the movie like that. He's like nails with my arm. He's like, oh my my wife and my oh my my girlfriend, my ex-wife. I'm like, he's like, no, no it's not like it's not like that.

[02:13:47]

Not like what you think or whatever. So, so he it so we drive in like five minutes because I had to watch what it really took me like one minute I had to go around the whole block so we got like a five minute conversation. He's like away from like a Oh yeah.

[02:14:02]

I remember that back a year ago. The bridge did it so we just talking randomly hitchhike. I just hitchhike a ride, hitchhiking around with me randomly at eleven thirty at night. And that was just a dull moment man. We to let him drive. Did you know I was going to be driving until I heard was at the end of it.

[02:14:21]

So I'm like yo about yo we got a party. This is where we first started. I'm like we got a podcast like you to like I'll do it like what's it about.

[02:14:30]

I'm like, it's a business show like business like I'm probably not the person I'm like now but you know, we talk about a bunch of the stuff. He's like, I'm actually starting a podcast myself so maybe we can go, you know. So then this is another like X is crazy X so like twenty million records. So the fact that he gets in a car with a stranger is crazy within itself. And then he's like most people will be like I, I saying like Bush a no like no.

[02:14:54]

I'm saying like he gives me his phone and was like yo put your numbers up on my number and then he's like yo call it so, so you can have my number. So, so I called it I, I had his number, I still have it like me, like he's like I'm just like who does that. Like what, what is a different superstar. It's just that never happens.

[02:15:15]

They're very different. The perception of him is way different than what he actually is. That's why I was so heartbreaking to hear that. So, yeah, but that's a crazy story. That was the highlight of my year. I've met him in a barbershop. It was like a crazy story. He comes in and he's like a dog. He's like, I go in front of you. I'm like, I guess he's I've got a body of like Sölvi.

[02:15:44]

And that was it. That was just one moment. But then after that, he kept coming to the barbershop. He ended up playing in the pool right next door to me. So, yeah, this is a legend and prayers up to him. We got the album up today and I got a few more on the way. It kind of got lost in transit, but the is up to the dog man and his family. Definitely No. Two albums, man.

[02:16:04]

He has a number of kids, so we pray for them as well. And so shout everybody out our floor, shout everybody. I pulled up today for the memorial and we got we got to keep them in premie. Shut up, everybody. That's going to do some mental help for you in I mean, as you're struggling with it, like it's very real. We have something that happened in our family recently that really are close to home. And you realize how the lack of resources, you understand me, that revolved that to where you don't have too many options.

[02:16:34]

Right. And that's probably one of the biggest issues that we still don't deal with, is that we call people that have mental issues and diseases criminals and crazy instead of them actually getting the help that they need. Society doesn't know how to look at black man and see black men who have issues and who have mental health issues. You just lock them all in and say he's crazy, he's a criminal. You understand me? We call crazy uncle instead of actually diagnosing it, allowed them to get assistance.

[02:17:01]

Right. So, you know, shout out to everybody that's going through that. Don't be afraid to talk about it. Don't be afraid to seek help, seek counsel before it gets worse and worse and worse. Addiction is something that everybody deals with instead of me. So shout out to anybody that's going through that now. It may go through it in the future. You understand that you're definitely not alone and there are resources, but you just got to make sure that you express yourself so it doesn't become a place of depression.

[02:17:25]

And it it gets to that worse. Place your keys.

[02:17:29]

You just took my my my Rowlatt in the shoulder and said, now we said that at the end of every show. So yeah, we encourage everybody like we like we say every week, reach out, call somebody, check somebody. One conversation, one piece of dialog can change the trajectory of somebody's life. And you never know who that person is and it could be you. So, yeah, we encourage you to do that. Yeah.

[02:17:55]

All right, guys. Hey, and keep a shot until eleven case, OK? You see, that's the way you see Kimoto eleven.

[02:18:04]

You see, that's what we're sure you got the top of the phone passes. I put those up and out of the national championship. The first time I see Nasho, Mike Bibby was there in nineteen ninety seven. Every person in our neighborhood that had it was James was nasty, James, Steve, Jane, HIMYM and butat that that with that form passed it meant a lot when it came out.

[02:18:23]

That was the first sneaker that caused one, two, one and one ninety nine. I couldn't understand how sneakers can cost that much that just never I just couldn't understand. A ninety seven man Arizona my baby photos before Penny so yeah. Man shot at the Penny Hardaway man without the penny.

[02:18:40]

A real guy. A man. We love ya again. If y'all want to hit back we play it back four times. It'll be out at midnight to rewind replay to right now. That's a fact Mike. You got a whole bunch of clips, the clip up boy.

[02:18:56]

So love your ekis. Love is love, bro.

[02:19:01]

Love is love and appreciate your blessings. I love. This. Announcement in London on Monday.