Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 795: The Beach Broadcast
Episode Date: June 18, 2018Would you like to be coached by Sal, Adam & Justin? You can get 30 days of virtual coaching from them for FREE at www.mindpumpmedia.com. Get our newest program, MAPS Split, an expertly programmed and ...phased muscle building and sculpting program designed to get your body stage ready. This is an advanced program and is not recommended for beginners. Get it at www.mapssplit.com! Going down the Megan’s Law Rabbit Hole. How men are winning the wrong games. (5:03) What elements of the gym setting do the guy’s miss the most? (9:10) The ability to connect with like minded individuals while gaining knowledge. The benefits of starting a podcast and what type of formula they prefer. (17:04) The Purpose Behind Your Mission. How it is harder to fake podcasting than any other medium. (24:30) The Low Barrier to Entry for Podcasters, Dying Model of Radio Shows and the Power of Social Media Currency. (27:55) Do you buy into splitting California into 3 states? The guy’s weigh in on this debate. (35:44) The Fear of Missing Out and Busting Each Other’s Balls. Justin forgets his phone and the guy’s starter pack memes. (41:10) The guy’s tell the story of the ONE TIME they kicked out a forum member. (44:30) Why is it our primal instinct to seek conflict? The guy’s share their thoughts on shows like Jerry Springer and what they find disgusting about human behavior. (52:00) Can you imagine being born into a society, like North Korea, and have complete control over you? The idea that certain people like to be lead vs. having your own thoughts/opinions. (56:10) Motivation of fear or being knowledgeable. Great debate into should people be imprisoned for doing something bad to themselves? (1:02:35) How you cannot put too much power in one direction. The pros/cons of China's social credit system. (1:07:00) How to teach kids “How to think” and not “What to think.” The growth of entrepreneurship and is it losing its cool? (1:14:10) The Definition of Scaling. Can you start a brick in mortar today? Hack your way to the top? (1:19:15) If Mind Pump was a rock band and the future of the business. (1:24:15) People Mentioned: Jordan Harbinger (@jordanharbinger) Instagram Draymond Green (@money23green) Instagram Kevin Hart (@kevinhart4real) Instagram Layne Norton, PhD (@biolayne) Instagram Jordan Peterson (@jordan.b.peterson) Instagram Related Links/Products Mentioned: Organifi California Megan’s Law The Jordan Harbinger Show For Traditional Radio, It's All About Harnessing The Power Of Digital Dray Day by UNINTERRUPTED Three California’s? Billionaire's fantasy world is on the ballot California now world’s 5th largest economy, surpassing UK The Real Robin Hood - British History These Are North Korea's 28 State-Approved Hairstyles China has started ranking citizens with a creepy 'social credit' system — here's what you can do wrong, and the embarrassing, demeaning ways they can punish you Are Millennials More Or Less Likely To Start Their Own Businesses? Get MAPS Prime, MAPS Anywhere, MAPS Anabolic, MAPS Performance, MAPS Aesthetic, the Butt Builder Blueprint, the Sexy Athlete Mod AND KB4A (The MAPS Super Bundle) packaged together at a substantial DISCOUNT at www.mindpumpmedia.com. Make EVERY workout better with MAPS Prime, the only pre-workout you need… it is now available at mindpumpmedia.com Also check out Thrive Market! Thrive Market makes purchasing organic, non-GMO affordable. With prices up to 50% off retail, Thrive Market blows away most conventional, non-organic foods. PLUS, they offer a NO RISK way to get started which includes: 1. One FREE month’s membership 2. $20 Off your first three purchases of $49 or more (That’s $60 off total!) 3. Free shipping on orders of $49 or more You insure your car but do you insure YOU? If you don’t, and you are the primary breadwinner, you will likely leave your loved ones facing hardship and struggle if you die (harsh reality). Perhaps you think life insurance is expensive, but if you are fit and healthy, you can qualify for approved rates that are truly inexpensive and affordable. To find out if you qualify for the best rates in the industry, go get a quote at www.HealthIQ.com/mindpump Have Sal, Adam & Justin personally train you via video instruction on our YouTube channel, Mind Pump TV. Be sure to Subscribe for updates. Get your Kimera Koffee at www.kimerakoffee.com, code "mindpump" for 10% off! Get Organifi, certified organic greens, protein, probiotics, etc at www.organifi.com Use the code “mindpump” for 20% off. Go to foursigmatic.com/mindpump and use the discount code “mindpump” for 15% off of your first order of health & energy boosting mushroom products. Add to the incredible brain enhancing effect of Kimera Koffee with www.brain.fm/mindpump 10 Free sessions! Music for the brain for incredible focus, sleep and naps! Also includes 20% if you purchase! Please subscribe, rate and review this show! Each week our favorite reviewers are announced on the show and sent Mind Pump T-shirts! Have questions for Mind Pump? Each Monday on Instagram (@mindpumpmedia) look for the QUAH post and input your question there. (Sal, Adam & Justin will answer as many questions as they can)
Transcript
Discussion (0)
If you want to pump your body and expand your mind, there's only one place to go.
Mind, up, mind, up with your hosts.
Salda Stefano, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews.
So today's episode is a little like unique episode for you guys.
This is us just hanging out at the beach.
We got away for a couple of days where we create and decided just to record why we're sitting on here.
So it's kind of a cool, I don't know. We've had fun conversations. Super, super random, but just,
we're having a little bit. We were talking, we were talking about, we were talking a lot about
new media, the business, we talked about, what else we were talking about? We were trying to solve
the world at one point. I think we went off just in really, really good conversations. It was good,
though. It was. Yeah. So those, those people that are used to like the, we've done a couple of
these episodes recently.
We have some, yeah, where we just go off.
Part of what inspired us to just get on the mics today
and do that, it's been a long time.
I mean, this is how the structure works for mine,
but we have our claws, we have our interviews.
We haven't had this opportunity to do random episodes
like we used to when we first started.
And so we started sprinkling them in
and we're getting all this great feedback.
So we were trying to see how people react because that was like a lot of what we didn't get a lot of what we did
So it's fun and this episode is is gonna be sponsored by organify
So that's the official sponsor now
We didn't do any sort of a commercial inside of the episode because it literally was us just having a conversation right now on the beach and hanging out
And we weren't thinking about sponsors
We were just recording what we're talking about and you guys know if you if you listen to us, Organify, we work with them. They make organic supplements,
some of which we use quite a bit like the turmeric, which I've talked about quite a few times,
the green juice. Yeah, green juice. We like to take on our trips. Oh, we always run it.
We have it right now. We always go on our trips and it's a staple thing that we all pack.
Always get the little travel packs for the green juice and we do have a discount we have a specific specific discount for mine pump listeners and is it organified now or is it organified shop?
It's organified.com forage slash mine pump and they get 20% off 20% off you use the code mine pump
That's right pretty mugs are on use the code mine pump. Oh, we have a lady. Yes, sir. Yeah, this is a page. You've got a cool
Annie page. Yeah, yeah, yeah, they used it. Oh, they have the beard. I've got the This is a lady page. You got a cool, any page now. Yeah, yeah, yeah. They used to, they had the beard.
I've got the big beard of that one.
You had a very fatherly looking beard on that one.
I was before I was very paternal.
Yeah, because now you're like, you're making it at a point.
I can, there's more and more.
Yeah, like sharp.
It's not as round.
Yeah, it's a little more round back then.
So anyway, this episode is just us having a fun conversation.
Right, give him back to you guys.
Those of you guys that have been around for a long time,
love listening to these types of conversations,
you'll enjoy those of you here that are purely for the science,
exercise science and fitness you may not have.
Sorry, I'm not sorry.
Fast forward to the, or go to the,
the quad episodes that we're gonna answer questions.
That's right, we'll get to you all though.
So here we go.
Wait if we're not good, what if we just like doing this
because we feed each other's egos,
but we're not a good, I will.
I think there's a lot of truth to that
We're so awesome. Whoa. We're so good awesome awesome the high five high fives the first step
I think of of success is first believing that you are right
I mean if you don't you're never gonna be that way that one down
I think I think that's important you gotta tell the audience is different. We are definitely we're out in
Where we at poor Paul Harrow do.
There are.
Oh, God. Who's get the most fucked up feet with putter feet out?
It's me, dude.
All of the stuff.
Wow.
You like starts a survey.
No, bro.
Oh, my God.
I'm going special tell.
Yeah.
Yeah. You have a you have a you have a genuinely special
tell.
Yeah. It's like, it's like, it's like, it's discarded. It's not
what's wrong with it.
It's going in different directions.
Yeah. Yeah. Did you break it or something? Mine's, mine's like, it's discarded. It's not, what's wrong with it? It's going in different directions. Yeah.
Did you break it or something?
Mine's all uniformly fucked.
Yeah, it's like, they're trying to grip for the earth.
Yeah.
Ah!
Hot.
Look at all the, yeah, you're then,
there's some fallen soldiers in there.
Yeah, it's like,
they're definitely going to have arthritis.
Mine.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I do have like,
they showed you. I have excessively long, yeah, but you can still do it. You can still do it., I have excessively long.
Yeah, but you can go to the next one.
Why is that one so long?
You know what?
It's just I have long.
I have long.
Don't touch me.
Do I say something right now?
Don't ever touch another man's foot.
No, no, no.
Don't ever touch another man's foot with your foot.
That's the worst.
That's like, don't know.
No, worst is when hand, hand goes to acid it hand to hand is worse than foot to touch
I think like crossing streams you know ghost busters. They fucking don't touch. Oh come on you cross streams all the time
And you're a kid. Yeah, well, did you?
That's different when you were real real real young when you were little boys in a show time
My kids do that. I mean, I'm the boss. Yes, of course We pee off the back deck, do we do all that stuff?
They're literally leaving the way, that's why.
It's fun, it's like, this is like normal boys.
Listen, you were gonna pee off the deck last night?
You were gonna pee off the deck, you were literally peeing to someone's yard.
All these social constructs, yeah.
Taylor was like, let me be free.
Dude, you can't pee off this deck,
there's houses in front of us.
Yeah, no, I got that much.
And people, somebody could have walked by
and now to been a dick.
That would have been, that's just a dick move.
You would have been on Megan's Law.
I know.
Yes.
I know, there's like a root, like laws,
for indecent exposure.
Yeah, yeah, that's scary.
Did I ever tell you guys that I had a trainer
who worked for me that his dad was on Megan's Law?
Yes dad was yes, I was there with you, but I won't I won't say any names right?
I can't but I remember that I was like
What the fuck at that time I just found out what Megan's Law was yeah, and someone was showing me like
Oh, yeah, no, you can just put put in a zip code or an address and it'll show you all the offenders
Oh good. And the area and I was tripping out on that.
And the immediate horror after that.
Yeah, he's like, ah, like you researched your own zip code.
Well, it's kind of broad how you can get on there.
Right, well, this is what made this
such an awkward situation for me.
It's like, I see my trainer who I've been working for me
for quite some time at that time.
And I see his dad pop up.
We never had that conversation
Yeah, like you don't know what why he was on there right
He and actually if you go on making a lot and I
Here's a thing. I know him so well that I've gone camping or done things with him and stuff like that
And I would never ever suspect never assume that right so that's how it usually works now
Did it say did it say no, it's very vague the way it say it. It's like, no, I wish I remember the exact,
but I knew, I remember then trying to trust me,
I tried to troubleshoot this for years.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I remember like trying to like,
what could it possibly, could it be this,
it could be that, what's most likely?
I know his personality really well.
What would he most likely,
could have got himself caught up?
As you can pee and like, like you said,
like you can get put them on there for some bullshit.
Yeah, if you were to pee outside at like a public park.
Yeah.
If you pee in a public park and there were children present.
You know, even if they weren't present.
Even if they weren't?
Even if they weren't.
If it was like you were strolling by at 11 o'clock now.
I don't know any man who's never done that.
Every man's done that.
That's why it's crazy.
Because that's why somebody could.
Yeah.
But then you also get put on there.
If you're, let's say you're a, you can also get on there if you're
Rape kids, yeah, oh my god, you don't say you absolutely, there's no, that's a good point. No, that's the same thing. That's why that's why it's not fair. It's not truth though, right? Yeah, it's the truth.
I think he jumps so far.
Me and Adam, maybe a Justinian was like, cut the podcast.
Cut the podcast.
Cut the podcast.
That's too much.
That's a real life right there.
No, but it's true, man.
You know, you can get on there if, let's say there's a guy or a girl,
because this girl's can get on there too, right?
Although not a lot of them are on there compared to guys. I guess you can. We make up let's be
honest you know men make up a majority of the fucked up you know winning in
all the wrong games. Yeah it's it's because we're disposable. That's why we
evolved the way we did we're disposable but anyway you can literally have a
guy who's 19 who has a girlfriend who's say, 17, and they have sex or whatever, and her parents could go after him and say, oh, statutory rape.
But even though they're only like, you know, two years apart, he can get on that list.
Well, technically, you can do that one year apart, right?
Yeah.
There's some laws, I think, in some states where they tried to remedy that by passing, like saying, saying okay if they have to be this many years apart or whatever whatever but anyway
that's okay yeah that's fucked up
i never had that conversation though yeah i think one of those ones like i
wanted to but i didn't want to really yeah yeah
what you just want to know how i've done things with him
no i know i know i knew him you know who to all too
curious what kind of thing what of these camping trips look like.
I mean, I probably meet today would ask,
I think me today would ask, me back then was more like,
shut up if this is the one.
If it's, you would not have, yeah, I wanted to pursue that.
Yeah, but that was in this person word for you.
Yeah, long time.
Well, and I'm, there's dad, like I said, I did things with him.
Like, I should clarify that. Well, I'm trying not to be like I said I did things with him like we like I should actually
Well, I'm trying not to be specific so people can't be that's we can start to like piece it together
Like you went on like you did things like yeah
Family outings yeah, yeah, yeah exactly. He was close. I was very close to his his family
But I was out with a lot of my trainers that worked with me for a long time
So that doesn't narrow it down to a trainer for a regular. Is there any element of the gym working in the gym?
Is there any element of it that you miss?
Of course.
Oh yeah, 100%.
No people, I mean really, just seeing those people, I mean, it was tough to leave that environment,
right?
Yeah.
The team atmosphere.
It's the team and it kind of, I mean, we have a team now.
It was easy to fall into that though, you know, like,
what was established or it's like everything's like, I'm talking
about specifically to the G right, because we have a team now, you know,
we're repurpating that. Yeah, but what about the gym? Like, here's
what I missed. I don't, I don't, I don't miss anything about really.
No, I really don't, I mean, there's like the part of the team,
like, we have it in a cooler way now. Like Justin was saying,
we stepped, you came into an established built structure.
It was established.
We're building and creating that,
which I think that's what satisfies the craving
of why we love doing it so much is because it requires
a whole nother level of skill.
It's one thing to join a team,
it's another thing to build the team, right?
It's all different.
It's all different skill.
But I do miss some specifics about it.
Because you got to keep in mind, I've been out of gyms for a long time.
Because for 12 or 13 years, I owned a wellness studio.
I'm a Santa Cruz, bro.
I'm telling you guys.
That's what I miss.
I miss the gym, that culture that's within,
because people don't realize this,
gyms are, they should,
I don't know why they haven't made a sitcom
that's based on a gym you have.
You have a not well.
Yeah, it's definitely something.
Well, again, that's something.
It's like a bar without alcohol.
Well, again, too, that's also us in our bubble.
It's just human beings.
You know, we're humans beings gather.
It's interesting.
There's still a smaller percentage of people
that have been in a gym than have it.
Oh yeah, yeah.
No, but I'm saying like, we're still,
it's not that big of a deal.
No, but I'm saying what you personally,
because you experienced that you were in it,
like the gym required, it was a different level of energy
you need to have, because you walk in,
there's always music's on.
Yeah.
There's shit going on all the time.
Even during dead time, there's still stuff going on. You kind of, you walk in there's always music's on yeah there's shit going on all the time even during dead time there's still stuff going on
you kind of you know there's your surrounded by lots of people you almost it's
almost exhausting if you think about it it's exciting but it's also exhausting
because it requires a level of energy we all we comment on this all the time
how often do we comment on this we have we have next door to us yes we share
a walk with the CrossFit gym.
And they play, they blast the music that we all love.
So we totally appreciate it.
We've never said anything.
And they're yelling at each other.
But what have we all said?
We're like, fuck that would be so disgusting.
I would be so exhausted.
I would be so exhausted to make one of those words.
I know it would take to make that run efficiently.
And I know it would take for me to do that.
And like, that doesn't sound like fun at all.
When you were coaching at Orange Theory,
because when you're doing that,
you got to have to put out a lot of energy.
I can only imagine you're putting out a lot of energy.
It's like people, what was the most
classes you would do in a day,
and were there exhausting?
They must have been exhausting.
100%.
100%.
But like,
like would you limit yourself
and go, here's the deal.
Here's the deal with that, though.
So how do I say this without selling really fucking
arrogant? I'm trying to think of this. Well, it's too though. So, how do I say this without selling really fucking arrogant?
I'm trying to think it's the only one that can do it.
Well, it's the true.
It's the true.
It's by the time, I'm about to say something really cool about it.
No, no, no, no, no, no, no.
Go ahead, dude.
You're doing it, just go ahead.
By the time that I experienced Orange Theory, I had already, you know, I've been a trainer
for over 10 years by that time.
You were season.
I was very season.
And that's kind of a job and not to knock any trainers.
There's bad-ass trainers that are there,
but it's typically a job that most like beginner trainers
would get into.
It's got a structure for them.
They don't really know human anatomy.
That's a model, right?
Right, it's designed to attract that.
And so when I got in there, it didn't take the best of me.
I've said this before, I think on the podcast.
It didn't take the best of me to really've said this before, I think on the podcast, it didn't take the best of me to really shine
in that environment because I wasn't challenged.
And so I could skate by and still,
but there was moments, and I'm sure people
of taking classes of me that have remembered this
or that maybe for them, they're like,
oh man, that was really good.
Where, I'm competitive with myself.
And so absolutely at the beginning, I turned it on.
You know what I'm saying? I put energy into it.
It's also teaching a group.
Teaching a group is so different from training 101.
Totally. I personally don't enjoy it.
I don't enjoy it nearly as much as I like training.
People one-on-one, but I think based off what you told me
about how you would teach your classes, it's similar to when I would do group training where
rather than doing group training, I would just turn it into like one-on-one training in a group.
That's how I would approach it.
You're teaching.
You're really, truly teaching that.
I'm not teaching.
You're making your rounds.
I'm not here to see, singling somebody out of the group.
I'm not here to teach a class that you want.
I get what you're trying to do.
You're trying to create an environment for these people, so they keep coming back. You like to build community. So I can
appeal, that's why I worked. I can appease the company and give them what they wanted. But what I was
going to do was I was going to make sure that these people left with some sort of an impact.
Right. So I made sure I taught them. I taught, and I gave them pieces of the knowledge that I've
accumulated over my 15 year career of being a personal trainer, and do thousands of people
one on one. And that added so much value.
And that was rewarding, that was fun.
I enjoyed doing that, but it definitely didn't stretch me.
Like this stretches me.
What we do now stretches me to a whole other level.
We're thinking, yeah.
Because it's everything that I've ever experienced
are done in the past.
There's no limit either.
There really is no limit.
There's no structure.
I mean, there's structure, but there's no limiting structure.
Like you're not limited by the rules of another person,
you're not limited by the walls of a,
this number of facilities.
It's literally, we could push and go and grow
as fast or slow as we want to.
And the thing that attracted us the most
to what we're doing into each other
is that we're constantly pushing
that limit, always constantly pushing that limit.
And so it just accelerates that process, accelerates.
It's one of the reasons why I actually liked
personal training so much was what I enjoy,
what I got out of it selfishly was the kind of clients
that I would train.
As I got, when I got really good,
I could pick who I train, right?
And these were people that I would learn from.
I like teaching them things too,
and they definitely hired me to learn how to exercise
and learn how to eat and all that stuff,
and have different food relationships,
and wellness, and all those wonderful things.
But I also selected them for something
that I could learn from that.
Well, I could totally echo that.
And that's why I decided to be even more selective,
like as I developed and went further in my career,
I wanted to find people who are killers,
but where do you find them?
How do you fish for that type of a client?
How do you even create something like that?
I would argue it's the real rewarding piece
of being a personal trainer that the most people
don't talk about.
Most people act like it.
That is the most important.
They act like it's about other people
and serving them and getting them the results,
but in true, true reality, the gym is in what you get from it.
Well, even selfish.
Even when you are helping other people lose weight,
get in shape, change, whatever,
what you get out of that, the reason why,
if you truly do enjoy that,
because a lot of people truly do,
and truly get benefit from that,
it's because that then spurs your own personal growth.
You know what I'm saying?
Like if you truly impact someone in a very positive way, it's a very humbling experience
and it also causes you to, I mean, you self-examine, you grow from it personally.
But I mean, it's, look, one of the reasons why my favorite people ever to train were people
in advanced age or people who I
considered very very well versed in a field that I really wanted to learn. So I
ended up training at the end of my career, my clients were either old or they
were in medicine. Those were my two categories of clients. So I trained lots of
doctors and ecsthesiologists, you know, I trained a psychiatrist at one point.
Explain why you're such an old man about things already.
I love it, man.
You said you're old man.
I got to go to bed.
Yeah, kind of clock.
You got to make sure I give my words just six to clock,
but I got to get my workout in.
Let's go.
Come on, let's go right now.
We got to get it now.
We don't get it now.
Oh, bro, this guy's an old man already.
Definitely, definitely.
But I mean, there's a lot you can learn from talking
to someone who's been on Earth just twice as long as you right
You know what I mean? Just meet someone who's been here two times as long as you are as you are
Oh, dude talking to somebody who's actually full of wisdom like you had broke down the difference, you know
What that it means is it's that that leaves such more of an impact than oh, yeah, you know
Just talking to smart people because it's like because now you're connecting
You know like and they can apply that. Well, don't you think that's why podcasting
is exploding right now?
Yes.
Because it gives us that ability to do that.
It gives us the ability to connect to like-minded
individuals that you may see as, they have a bit of knowledge
that you don't possess or a little bit more in an area
that you want, and then you can consume that
at whatever rate you want.
That's right.
And it's also, it's really pretty cool.
It's also one of the best ways of learning,
I think, is conversation.
And that's what a podcast does.
It's conversation.
And again, one of the things I got out of person,
I don't know if that's necessarily true,
that podcasting is a conversation.
Sometimes it's like, it's a...
What I mean by that is it's communicating.
It's communicating in the oldest way that we communicate,
which is through our voice, through our words.
You can obviously watch people and see how they move
and all that stuff.
We get this a lot, and what do you think then?
Because I watch a lot of these people
that are now starting to get into the space.
And it's natural for you to kind of like,
okay, I'm going to watch what these people are doing
and I'm going to copy that and do something similar.
Do you think it's wiser for somebody to go after
this more conversational type of a podcast
or that they should put some hard work into a structure
and be more of an interview style?
Well, so that's an interesting question.
I think it depends on the person.
Yeah, I know myself.
I for sure copy and learn from observing other people,
but then it's assimilated and it becomes a part of who I am.
So like, I'll give you an example.
I had a client a while ago,
he was an anesthesiologist, Mike,
he listens to the show, so shout out to Mike.
He was this super intelligent dude,
but he had this charisma about him.
That was just a mate, like anytime he was around people,
he could get away with saying anything to anybody
and they would never get offended.
That's how charismatic he was.
And so I loved being around him.
Yes, there's magnetism from that,
but that's not the main reason why I like to be around the guy.
I like to be around him,
because I used to observe how he would do that and how he did that
so effortlessly and try to kind of pick up on that and learn those skills myself.
And I think if you're trying to be a podcaster, listen to your favorite podcasts, I would say,
and you know, you start to assimilate and pick up on the things that speak to you or why they pull you in.
And for some people, that's going to be the more spontaneous conversation style podcast.
For other people, it's maybe more informative. I'm not quite sure. I do think it's a blend. I think,
I can only speak for us. I know we're very natural conversationalists. It's super easy for us to communicate and have good conversation.
But I don't think that that means that we won't benefit from some of the structure.
For sure.
I think some of the structure will definitely benefit us.
We were talking about this earlier about how we conduct our interviews.
I think we get away with, you know, we talked about this a lot.
Like we get away with being able to just have a good conversation so much so that we don't...
Oh, it's another example of where your greatest strength is your greatest weakness.
Yeah, yeah.
Because I think some of that structure will help us.
Yeah, we've been leading hard on that.
Yep.
And I think we all have recognized that.
And then, and there's other podcasts I've seen that have leaned heavy on, you know,
the information, and that's going to carry them through the whole podcast and like doing
their research and, you know, pride in themselves on all on all that like as far as like, okay, I'm
going to at least out work everybody. I'm going to do all the research and I'm going to
know as much as I can know about this person. So I'm going to have a good conversation
as a result, which works. It's a form of that works.
And what really what it is is because I used to think about it like, oh, okay, I'm going
to research this guest so I can know what to ask so I can know
Questions I'm gonna prepare that's not accurate. I think what it is is I'm gonna learn about this guest right
So I can have a good conversation that's what is 100% yeah, that's exactly what it is
Yeah, so we can just sit down and have a good conversation
What's his name is excellent at that Jordan?
Yeah, yeah, Jordan's he's got to be one of the best
Like podcasters in that sense that I think I've ever heard.
Well, I mean, he's been around for a very long time.
He's put the work in.
He interviews all over the spectrum.
So he'll have an athlete, a politician, a, you know, religious person, a, you know, fitness.
He can go anywhere, you know, so and the reason why he can go anywhere is because he's
a intelligent guy already.
And then he learns all about this person and it's just natural right you
That's the conversational piece is something that I think you need to have. Yeah, I think you or you should have it
Now does that mean you can put the work in to become great at it and teach yourself
I think I think Jordan talks about how he's an example of that
But he wasn't a great. I don't think he was great at conversation right away
He taught himself. That's why art. That's why when he built art a charm with his partners
Why was such a big deal is because he he learned steps to become that guy
He wasn't that guy naturally. Yeah, I think is I think it's important though for somebody that's getting possibly into podcasting
That either one you think about that are do you have that skill set naturally already or two?
Are you willing to do yeah? are you willing to do the work?
Not sleep.
It is, it is interesting the kinds of people
that podcasting tends to attract though, you know what I mean?
You meet this growth minded people.
Well growth minded people work, you know, kind of weird.
Yeah, I mean, I'm saying this is a kind of entry.
I think it's only weird right now because it's still
new, it's early adopters.
Yes, it's early adopters are always kind of weird because they're willing to they're willing to but it's growing. Yeah, that's the only reason why they're weird right now. We love them. I always love them.
Look, we talked about it when we watched the growth of the forum. We watched the type of people that were adding on to the page. You can just see that in general, like the type of audience that we're getting is different than what it was when we first started.
And I think that's less of a testament to us and more of a testament to what's happening in this podcasting space.
Well, it's podcasting. It's an interesting space. What was that article I read from Forbes? I think I sent it to you guys.
It's something like Advertisement Advertising and Podcasts. And I think it was 2012 with something like $200, something million.
They're projecting it to be in 2020,
over half a billion dollars.
That's a major growth of money that's going into podcasting,
because I think businesses and brands
are starting to recognize it as a force,
and that's only gonna attract more people to podcast.
Yeah, we keep speculating all the time about
like how education is going to change.
It's changing.
You know, like it, like what?
Like people are going to like realize one day, oh shit, I can just go on a podcast and
learn everything I need to know.
Yep, yep, yep.
On that one particular, you know, specific subject.
But I think I think as a business, it's still a good, I think it's still a good time to
get into pod.
It's definitely more competitive than it was when we started just three years ago.
It's much more noisy today than it was three years ago.
Oh, big time.
I think it's really hard to come into a space
without either a unique angle or a skill set
that somebody else has or a total different vision.
I mean, I remember when we all talked about this
when we first started MindPomp, is I I remember and I remember actually it was Doug. Doug was really hard on this about like, you know,
there needs to be like an overarching mission that we're trying to accomplish that way. We have something we're
working towards and that's where people will get behind you on something versus just something that you're
tuning in to listen to because oh, I like it. I'm entertained by it or there's good information there Yeah, there's like there's a mission behind it. There's a mission behind it
There's a purpose behind it it now allows for other people to get behind something more than just the podcast
It's important man, right? That's the mission statement like that's the most businesses
They have to have and they have to put it out there. So it's it's something that every like oh, I agree with that
And now you're attracting more people as a result.
I feel like it's harder to fake podcasting
than it is to fake any other medium.
Well, almost.
You know what I mean?
I feel like you can.
I feel like you can fake YouTube.
We already see the people that are trying to creep into it
that already they dominated maybe YouTube or Instagram
and they try and fuck with podcasting.
It's like, oh, negative.
You have to go have a whole conversation with someone.
For like an hour.
Yeah, it's totally different.
They put the staging of photos for two minutes.
We're great.
Yeah, that's gonna give you a thumbs up.
Yeah, yeah.
It's a hard.
It's a much harder medium to fake, which is why I think
if you're gonna enter into the space,
you've got to find that meaning or that purpose for yourself.
And it's got to be authentic because how the fuck are you gonna,
how the hell are you gonna conduct one hour, 30 minute to 90 minute conversations,
weekly for years if it's not something that actually drives you.
It's impossible. You can't fake it for that.
I mean, it's not gonna work. That's why you have to find something that works for you.
One of the, you know, here's a category of podcasts that I see just so many people jumping in because I
don't, I feel like they just don't know what they want to do. It's this whole like lifestyle
optimizing your life and what does that mean? It's everything and we'll talk about everything and it's
like, okay. Yeah, and comforts all of it. I feel like you just want to, like, okay, you think you're
cool, you're super cool. And so you want to have a podcast, you think people listen to cause you're super cool,
but I don't know, I don't know, I don't know,
I don't know what I think about that.
That's a difficult, that's a really difficult category
of podcasting, I think.
Yeah, I'm an understanding.
I'm pro at, I mean, I'm all for it.
I love the space growing, and I love more people
trying and attempting, here's the thing that's cool
about it too, is that it's not a lot of risks to see.
But I think what we see right now is a lot of people trying to do it and then realizing
like either, or they'll change their brand or direction, they start out as something,
they've subject matter wise and then it turns into, I think that the misstabson in is not
responding based off of your feedback. People, a lot of of times don't want to be criticized and you know understand what the audience really wants from you
Or what they're picking up on the most from the most value they're getting and so they just keep on in to do what they fucking want to do
Whereas you know that I also think there's I also think the opposite can be a problem too though
Where you you you bend it every you know that's
Every criticism and win absolutely, you know, absolutely. There has to be something
I think I and I think with now I think that's more of an issue
That I think that's more of an issue today is that oh it was hard you turn on it. Yeah, like you try it for three years
You know for three years straight and then see how you feel and see where you're at with it
You know most people don't't have the ability to grind away.
It's not confident in your message.
You know, if you're confident in your message, you get a fuck.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Do it.
Well, all of new media is just so fascinating to me.
You know, the direction it's going and how fast it's growing, it's very, very strange.
It's a completely different.
I mean, some of the old rules apply, but it's so different than in some ways to old
Media, it's a very interesting. I mean anybody can enter it. All right, I'm not everybody but
Compared to before compared to before anybody could enter it and that you know harder was to get on the radio before
I know that was impossible. We would have you know, it's so weird
I mean how do you even identify with like radio DJs at all like nobody care at all like not at all no I was
looking at like some pictures on Instagram with some old like I just listen to like KSJ
O and you know like all these like radio stations like that was like I would always like pay
attention to shows like Lamont to Nally like all these things like and it's like it's so
weird now because it just seems like when you things. And it's like, it's so weird now,
because it just seems like,
when you listen to that kind of like dialogue,
it's so,
well, many of them are,
many of them also hold podcasts.
They're now in Switch.
Yeah, so most of your most popular DJs and stuff
are radio DJs.
I also have a podcast that they host,
because if you got,
if you don't have it,
they have translated that over.
Oh yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
I mean, they're just smart, right now if I'm a radio DJ right now and I have a job that I get paid
$175,000 a year to be a radio DJ. I love doing it
But also the writing is on the wall that this shit's changed, but see I feel like yeah
I mean so they just jumped over but like podcasting itself is totally different than radio
No, they're not jumping over. They're doing it simultaneously. So they're trying out a whole message. A lot of them might have their own podcast.
Yeah, it's a different show. So let's say you're a DJ at, you know, whatever station and
you're popular, but you see the writings on the wall. You're gonna start your own podcast.
You're just gonna have them in the show. You'll run them at the same time.
Really, it's really smart. It's just another, it's just another medium, right?
Okay, so you're seeing athletes even starting to do this.
So you have like a Dremon Green who has a podcast, right?
Oh, really?
Athletes really started to do this.
Now, imagine you got two million followers plus
or I don't even know where Dremon is.
And you're like, you've got millions,
he's on national TV all the time.
So he's got already a huge platform to the top of the funnel.
And then you bring the people that are like super hardcore fans
and want to know everything about him.
So I don't know what that distills down to that's a very hard clue
That's a rap that's a crazy network of people that you now have and that you can build a business off of that
And you see all of them. Sorry, do I remember my agent buddy when we interesting. Oh my buddy when you said your agent buddy agent
Okay, agent buddy said your agent buddy. Yeah
agent, okay, agent buddy. Is that your agent buddy?
Yeah.
Yeah.
You're just starting, I don't just say all the white people.
Yeah, I'm just gonna put that out there.
Hey everybody.
Making sure everybody knew that.
Yeah, I hang out with other people.
My agent buddy over there.
Okay, good.
No, but when we first, when we first started hanging out, this was like, God, it was a good
five years ago, a good five years,
it could four or five years ago.
Well, whenever it was, when I first started to do Instagram and Facebook or social media,
social media, right, you are used to utilize them, right?
It was around before that.
Yeah, yeah.
But I didn't utilize it.
You were paying attention to it as a business.
Yeah, yeah.
So when I started to do that, that's when he introduced me to Marquette King from the Raiders, total name drop stuff right now, right? That means I'm being to do that. That's when he introduced me to Marquette King
from the Raiders, told name drop stuff right now, right?
That he means I'm being to do that.
Yeah, we don't really do that, but go for it.
Yeah, well we normally don't do that, right?
So I feel okay about it, but he's introducing me to him
because he wants me to show him what I'm starting to do
and the importance of what I'm trying to do,
like back then, and he's trying to convince these athletes that they need to be doing that right now because
five six years ago you just weren't seeing that. I mean, they're sure there might have been a handful a couple here.
They're always looking at ways to help their, you know, client monetize.
Well, that's, yeah, that his, the way his job is changing now. Like that's, that's more of what the agents doing now is finding other ways to,
because what's his name did this really well the community
the way yourself into a brand who's that the the the the he was in the news with
them in the in jumanji with dwayne the rock what's his name
the he can be in the small dude
well this is part of why he does it very well where he can have a heart
can't hear is the best of the yeah yeah absolutely you eliminate the middle
man you build up that audience you don't need a social media currency
Well, you hold separate completely the warriors are an example of why they can build a team
They are because everyone has a salary cap
You can only spend so much money. Well, how do we attract all that well one of the ways is being in a big city with lots of
Opportunities we're in the Silicon Valley so like that's why New York
Miami, you know LA and like Silicon Valley are are desirable places for these athletes.
They'll potentially take $20 million less on a contract because I'm in LA, Hollywood.
I'm going to get connected.
You would do business.
Of course.
So you know there's back doors.
You know there's back doors.
I was like, we have Kevin Durant come over here and say, hey, come over here.
But I'm also going to introduce you to these three VCs that are starting up, these are
connected to these companies. You put a million of your dollars in that.
That's happening. Yes. That's how that's what about so LeBron, you think he might go
LA? That's why people think it's a very desirable place for them. Yeah. Yeah. And they can
take less money because you can backdoor do you think, but the agents job is money too,
because you can feel the amount of that for the athletes too, dude, because you've got to cuz gotta think long term man like it's great to be the hero and I'm all pro and go
I think it's not oh but now it takes less it takes less power from it takes the power away from the NBA
I love that. Yes. Oh, yeah
Yes, and and let's be I mean in athletes historically have been terrible
I always want to retire. Yeah, they've been terrible with it terrible with it. You hear about a lot of them going bankrupt
and stuff like that,
and it's because they didn't manage it well
or they didn't get themselves set up or whatever.
So I'm all for that.
We pick on athletes,
but I would argue almost anybody that has gone
from a certain amount of money
to the amount of money that they make, right?
So whatever that ratio is,
like from an average income of less than six figures
to all of a sudden making millions of dollars
I don't care if you're an athlete or not I bet you you can look at that percentage of people that end up losing all of it
It's probably so that's why we and we see that with the lottery see that in these things where people get a whole bunch of money
I don't know where it's like it's almost
You and nature to do it could be that it just came too fast. Yeah, you know, that could be part of it that it came too fast
I do this lightning rod like yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, but it's funny
You were talking about LA and how that's such a place for those connections stuff
You can feel that energy when you're there and I don't mean it in a positive sense
I mean it in the sense that you can feel everybody's there to try there to try and get on your bandwagon
Yeah, I leverage each other and what do you have for me?
I've heard stories of like there's a guru for a guru for a guru
Yeah, this whole train of like people that are falling you around and shit
Guru train the guru
Sounds like it's like
Just a little more scrap brought water back. I mean almost
You know, it brought it back. You did I feel like it seems pretentious at times
But then I'm also smart enough to know that it's such a big city that that could just be my experiences.
Of course.
That I've had and I could have taken a whole different path of experiences.
Yeah, of course.
Within this giant city.
But there's definitely say, oh my god, it's the most real awesome experience in city that there may be.
Yeah, you know, say absolutely.
Yeah, yeah.
It's a different, it's a totally different vibe from where we're at.
That's for sure.
Yeah.
It's, you know, it the Northern California is a completely different
No, did you see that they wanted to the on the ballot?
Oh, they were split up on the on the on the ballot
They actually got this on the ballot so they got enough signatures to get this particular measure on the ballot
And it would divide California up into three Californias. Did you know this? Did you guys see this? Yeah?
I saw so Northern California. I saw graphs. There's going to be Northern California, Southern
California, and New California. So what's new? Yeah, what's new? I gotta look this up.
Which one is new? Yeah. I gotta I gotta look this up because I feel like so
good. Well, let's talk about this because they want to be new. Yeah, let me look at
a three Californias. I'm gonna look this up. I feel like I could divide our state up if I had to. Okay. Yeah, let me look at a three California's I'm gonna look this
I feel like I could divide our state up if I had to okay, okay, hold on
Yeah, so I'm gonna show you a picture of it
I see what they're doing there. It's definitely Silicon Valley's like by itself
You know, then you have like all southern and then kind of like central valley and then the top was like like Mendocino and
San Francisco. I mean, I could try to do all the other is like its own
Shastasgin kind of.
Okay, so here's the pictures of them.
So that's Northern California, right there,
which it looks like, is like San Francisco,
San Jose, the peninsula, whatever.
This is the new California.
It's like on the coast, but in the middle,
which I think, Justin, you may actually be driving
into the new California. So you work in the Northern California, I think just then you may actually be driving into the new California So you work in the northern California
I think you drive into us messed up bro
You could live in two different states or you can live in and work in two different states if this passes like a toll if this passes
Bullshit it probably fuck you so it has
And then you got southern California with zoning issues, which is like obviously San Diego
But then also kind of that central like
Deeper part of California that's not near the coast,
you know what I mean?
But it's so different, it is true though,
we are very different, but.
Why are they even bothering with this?
Why?
Because politicians, of course, think separate.
Separate divide.
Yeah.
I mean, look, there's definitely a different,
there is.
Well, I think there's also.
We just all do something awesome together.
I also think there's people in California
that do not feel like they're being represented by
sure california politics
like let's let's let's be real like california
california has been a very very dominant liberal state for a long time for
decades well you don't think of it as
as like a farm you know i have a picture yeah there's parts of california
that are very huge very different very, very conservative, very right?
And so they don't feel like they're being represented.
You have parts of California that have way a lot of money, like way a lot of money.
There's parts of California that they don't have that much money at all.
Like you could, I could drive from-
It's very diverse.
Oh, it's very diverse, so I can understand that.
That's what I like about it.
Well, and well, no, what I was to say is sometimes splitting up means that you're
Closer to your representatives and they they'll reflect the people
That's why states exist to begin with that's why there's different states anyway or not why they exist
But why you know what's kind of good about them is they can they can reflect the people a little bit closer or whatever
But I don't know
I ideal way to do things in the first place? What? To have states?
Oh, I think so.
Why?
I think it's brilliant that we have states.
Absolutely.
Brilliant.
Well, the representatives from each state that go in and then pass laws on our behalf.
So I really appreciate that for sure.
And it also, the way it allows you to.
Listen, if there were no states, California, New York, and Texas would run the country.
There's so many people in those,
in so much money in those states that all the other states,
nobody, they would have had a very good point.
They would have had a very good point in itself right there.
That's a very good point.
Yeah, like people in New Mexico, Mississippi,
fucking, they wouldn't, they wouldn't matter.
Yeah, they wouldn't have a voice.
No, they wouldn't have a voice because, like,
look at California bites, I think California alone alone if I'm not mistaken is like isn't it the sixth largest economy in the world
Huh if California was a country it would be the sixth
Biggest country in terms of economic output in the world is that true? Yeah, I believe so Doug thought and yeah
So that means it is I think it's actually the fifth fifth really the top 10
Yeah, let's see. I think it starts with well, let me do a little more research
Yeah, you know what it is. We have shitty shitty internet here. Yeah, I was gonna sound help you guys out
I've been phone lists. Oh, yeah, okay. Here it is
this was on May 4th
California has surpassed the United Kingdom. Oh, Kingdom to become the world's fifth largest economy.
The UK actually had an economy bigger than California by itself.
It's still recently.
California makes it.
California.
It's the tech industry.
Well we had Hollywood, we had production, we had media, and then, fuck man, tech is just,
I mean that's insane.
Well that's why.
That's insane amount of money.
That's why I think all the tech giants are here.
Yes.
That's why I think we'll end up.
Not all of them but a lot of them.
I think Amazon's a problem.
I think we'll suppress LLA.
What?
As wealth and money and all that.
We already have.
By a long.
Oh, Norton, you mean Silicon Valley?
Oh yeah, we for sure have.
Yeah.
We're the richest by, was a was a cent so terrible. We are
Right
You
There's definitely some
Super There's definitely some
Black true
What how funny is that? We do it sports too. They remember someone called me out on the forum was I was going back and forth about something to do with
The warriors, you know, and I and I talk about the words about like us. We did exactly the reason why we did this
We didn't do shit. Yeah, no, you know what pisses me off It didn't call me what we fucking don't don't so hard what pisses me off is when people are proud of shit that they have no
Yeah, like yeah, I can laugh at it like like okay like like my heritage is a tie-in I get all that but to say I'm like proud
Of being a tie-in like I didn't do anything
I don't do it the other boring. I was born into this. Yeah, I'm pretty good. Yeah. I'm proud of just you know chance
Just proud. Yeah I'm proud of the chance. Yeah, that's born into this. Yeah, I'm pretty good. I'm proud of just, you know, chance. Just proud.
Yeah.
I'm proud of the chance that happened.
I had no choice.
You know, hey, how is it with your phone, Justin?
Oh, it's an interesting experience.
Dude, the funniest fucking thing ever, right?
So we're sitting on the couch and we're having conversation.
We're doing work.
And then we took a break and we're all on our phones.
And I'm like, oh, we're just a 3D magazine. I can't, I can't, I can't. I'm like, oh, Bridgestin's reading a magazine.
I can't, I can't, I can't,
I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't,
I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't,
I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't,
I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't,
I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't,
I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't,
I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't,
I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't,
I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't,
I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't,
I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't even want to be back in there. It's so boring. Wait till like the last minute, you know, you're like, okay, it's gonna
Okay, and I go
You know, there's no like I don't want to spend any time there
No, because there's nothing to do nothing. It's nothing to do. It's just this is weird
Yeah, are you being bored again? Do are you reading the shampoo bottle in the bathroom like we did back in the day?
We're only on is it been a full 24 hours.
How many hours?
Has it been?
Because yesterday, since we dropped off the car,
yeah, so it's been about 24 hours.
Bro, we're on our way up here.
We're driving.
We're already like 45 minutes into our drive.
It's just like, fuck.
Dude, because I left my phone.
I left my photo in my car.
Like, no, I don't, and I went through,
I hear from your voice.
I was like, panic, like searching everywhere for it.
And then I was just like, me, like,
I said, well, what's the worst?
You know, like, yeah, so it's my truck, but, you know,
like, people can get ahold of me through sound at them
or whatever, we're not to be that annoying guy
that borrows the phone.
You know, I'm gonna go through that part of it.
And then I'm like, oh my God, I'm not posting on Instagram. I have no stories coming up, you know, I'm gonna go through that part of it and then I'm like, oh my god I'm not posting on the Instagram. I have no stories coming up. You know, this is all content. We're here for content
Like oh fuck you know, I'm gonna miss you out. Like you guys are making memes without me
You know, I'm just like dying inside. You know, that's what bothered him more than that. That's the moment
That's like one of his furthest that was
I was so pissed. That was like so had so much fun with it was so man
It was like disappointed. I would have been so much better
Bro those guys please bro those memes are so money. I got to look at them again
Those are the most money memes of all time
Just Adams was great. They didn't am I yeah, you're okay
What was I don't know about the plunger though?
That's hilarious. So Justin's had Han Solo a a flannel, a big block of cheese, and a plunger.
That's so flingered.
And it says on the justin'-
Essentials.
The Justin Andrews starter pack.
So this all started because one of our listeners, who is it that did this for us?
We got to give him a shout out.
One.
He also did that mad mic pick.
He did a Sal one first first and what was on mine?
I forgot what mine was a wife beater. Sardines wife beater.
Samba's and then the third rail the third rail and then Adams is accurate row games
But wipes a whole bunch of shoes and we it took like three to get to that. That's perfect
There was three iterations before that one came out. Yeah, well the first two were too nice to me. Yeah, ice cream and red velvet cake
You made our
Because brother is scared to fucking joke with you
You're too case through it. Yeah, you're not sure you can't hate it. It worked
Dude on the forum today they were talking about that time you went out there to hammer that
Bring that a lot of people don't a lot of people don't know about that time you went on there to hammer that Oh, God, bro. You're gonna bring that.
A lot of people don't know about that for sure.
A lot of people don't know that that happened, but that was hilarious.
Sometimes Adam feels the need to lay the hammer down.
It's the one time you went off.
Yeah.
I was like, right in the middle of it.
Yeah.
You know what?
I tell you what, I tell you what happened.
I don't want, I don't think we'd have to do it today.
But at the time when I did that,
and it was funny because I did do it before, Sal got to work.
Yeah, because one of our four, we got to tell the listeners don't know what's going on.
One of our four members actually went on, we were going to have a guest.
It was Lane Norton.
Oh, it was Lane.
Yeah, it was Lane.
And it was the first time we were going to meet with them, and you know, we disagreed on a few things,
but we were, we were, we were, we were, we were, we were,
Well, here's, there's exchanges online.
Here's why, here's why it pissed me off so much, okay?
Because that was early on when Lane and I were starting to become friends.
Like I was just starting to communicate with him back and forth,
texts and like, I wouldn't consider us where we're at now, right?
Where I think we've been hanging.
Well, now we're actually boys, yeah.
Right, right, we're cool.
At that time was right when the relationship was kind of, kind of building.
Yeah.
And, and you know me, I've never not said to Lane how I feel about Lane or any thoughts
I have on anything he has to say, and I would never hide that.
And so, it's came out on the show before where I disagree with something that he's doing
or talk about him some way that I talk about him when he's here.
Right, right, right.
And this kid had felt the need to go and try and talk shit and start a fight between.
Yeah, he was messaging Lane's stuff.
Like, oh, they're going to ambush you.
Or they just want you on the show.
He was scheduled.
And this, at this time, I think we were actually paying
for his flight from 4 to 12.
So we're flying Lane in.
We've already bought a flight for him to come in.
And he's coming in and stay.
And so he's coming in to see us.
This is the very first time we're going to hang out.
And this kid's over there trying to sabotage it,
thinking that, and I'm like, you fucking dumb shit.
So the ones that provide a great interview.
Yeah, so here's the one that's showing angry.
So cock blocking this.
So the funny thing is, and this kid was in our forum.
And so Adam and Justin are at work early.
And you're pissed off and you're like,
I'm gonna get on the forum, I'm fucking hammer on this kid
right now. And you wanted to do it you're like, I'm gonna get on the forum, I'm fucking hammer on this kid right now. Yeah.
And you wanted to do it.
Wait till I get there.
You wanted to do it before I got there, because you do it.
So I'm in my car and I'm watching the live video of you ripping into someone on the forum.
And I'm looking at this video, driving and I'm like, stop, stop, don't do it, stop.
And I'm driving there too late.
And Justin was so, just so it was like, oh, we't do it, stop it, I'm driving there too late. And Justin was so,
Justin was like, oh my god, we even got into it afterwards.
We've got it afterwards.
Yeah, because you're like, you should have done that.
I'm like, fuck yeah, we should have done that.
And stay in.
Stay in.
Stay in.
Here's the thing, what I was worth, I really was,
I was concerned that I didn't want like this culture to be okay,
that you could do that.
And we have guests that we have on our show.
And you're gonna go talk shit and cost.
That was a boundary that was crossed.
And you need to be addressed.
And you're in our private forum.
Like I can't control the whole world.
Well, we consider people.
I can control someone who's in our private forum
who's close to us and I've helped you out
and I've done things for you.
Like I can at least ask for that respect.
There's definitely people that need to be checked.
Yeah, and the forum is like our,
it's like our, it's the closest thing to us
I would say it's and I believe I believe the kid got into the forum for free
It was something that we allowed into someone who got free access to that too on top of that other people pay to be in there
And you're doing that you could be putting it potentially ruining it for every relationship
Yeah, that's not not cool. That was the point not cool
This is my sandbox you know, I'm saying like yeah get the fuck out my
shampoes yeah it's right yeah here was one of those you know but I felt like I
felt like it was received okay right don't you feel like I don't think so you
know I there's there's you know there's three of us so if one of us goes off it's
okay because there's always the other ones to kind of pull things back in right
you know I mean?
If we all did that, I was going to play out.
That's why I didn't.
Oh, yeah, the ugly if all three of us.
If all three of us.
Yeah, absolutely.
And we all have our own, we all have our own triggers, our own like point, not triggers,
I should say, we all have our limits.
And they're all a little bit different.
Like there's certain things that are going to push us over the limit.
And I think that's the important thing to say here, except like there's, and I think
that's what it means to stand for something.
And I, in relationship, relationships, communication,
radical honesty, all these things are very important
values for me.
Yep, yep, yep, yep.
And you, you're jeopardizing that,
or you're, you're fucking with my values
and my integrity, my character and my business.
Many things you're fucking with.
Well, I think the biggest, I'm gonna say something.
I think the biggest problem, my character.
Unintentionally or intentionally. Well, I have to recognize that and like put them into it. Here think the biggest I'm gonna say something I think the biggest problem I intentionally are intentionally well I have to recognize that and like
put them into it here was the biggest problem the biggest problem wasn't that
you know he's going on there saying do go in my pump and my pump says that
that's not the problem it's that he's mischaracterizing yes us so badly
because there is nothing that we like the if we say something on a show we know
it's a fucking public show
it's not much hide anything
i've said that on a show
i have said many times that disagree with certain people's dances
who i also consider friends and who i will say to their
it is saying it to their face it's on a public podcast
so by you messaging lane and saying you can ambush you
like i said it on the fucking podcast we disagree disagree on artificial sweeteners, for example.
We think I, I, I, F, I, M can turn into a fucking eating disorder.
I said all this and I say, you know,
it's like the door out of me.
I also recognize to the part on me, right?
It obviously, it was a perfect storm for that kid
because it's a tiny that it happened was where I was in,
he doesn't know where
I think you said on the video don't you poke the bear don't poke the bear I was like oh
my god there was a part in that video where you were going up by the way it's been
it's we took it off the form sorry not so only the OG so I'm not going to repeat that
one yeah there was just in the my favorite part of that video was watching Justin
because there was a one part one part where you got unhinged and you can see Justin's like, oh
fuck. Oh, what do I do now? I gotta pull it back in and you did he tried to pull it back. Hey guys,
what we're trying to say is what Adam was trying to do here. We just want to recognize that we're
wronged and that we didn't appreciate that.
Yeah, yeah, yeah. It's like it's like when you had a staff, you know, when you had a staff,
you had to go off on them, you know, every once in a while. I know that was. What is that about?
It's human beings. What do you think that is? What do you mean? Do you think that's because it's
human nature to want like to almost like conquer and submit and like it like that alpha alphan like i think
no i think i think you have to you have to show that you're someone uh...
not that not to be contending with your somebody that is
you know you can't just be a jellyfish
you know i mean and that's okay to show that you have to show that you have to
show that you're
like look i'm gonna stand up for myself i'm gonna say what I believe know that I will defend myself and be assertive but also know that I'm a kind
empathetic that's all the retriever shown his fangs again again I think it's different for every
person and it goes based off of your values and what you see and of course you just that happened
to be someone who touched on something you know that, that we have, we have not a lot of issues where somebody is, you know, attacked
or dead something that could potentially harm the business or harm my character, you know,
with a relationship. Or just this character as well. Yeah, with a, with a relationship that I
evaluate, I could give two shits about someone I don't value, go talk shit, do that, so whatever
that, but I value this relationship and you're trying to, you're trying to sabotage it, you know,
by causing shit, that's not, I'm not okay not a not a funny right right and at the same time
to be in my private forum and be considered part of our network this isn't
fucking Jerry Springer like yeah like it's a different show that might have
worked for that environment but I want to have a people who don't even know who
that is now
every time if you don't know what that is.
You're checking me on the one YouTube
of the Gold Drive.
Doesn't he still have, does it still repeat on the show?
He's like a mayor, does he?
Doesn't he still repeat on TV?
What a terrible, you know what,
you know what, it makes me so sick about shows like that?
It's not the show, it's the fact that there were enough people
interested in watching that that it was a show.
It's a reflection, the lowest common denominator.
It's a reflection. Everything just common denominator. It's a reflection.
Everything just has its primal instinct
to want to see shit happen.
It's at some point, because you know,
Jerry Springer show up when it first started
was a talk show.
And then it turned into like,
How did it get so ridiculous?
Because it got ratings.
Oh yeah.
It was like giving the people what they want.
It's like the ultimate example right there.
Well, we seek conflict, right?
The social media people.
Yeah, we always seek conflict.
You know what, it's so he's so right. People social media people. Yeah, we always seek conflict. You know what?
It's so he's so right.
People blame social media and say, it's so stupid.
Bullshit.
Before social media, we had Moripovic and Jerry Springer.
We had tabloids.
New media is, it's still reflecting people.
It's still reflecting people.
People still interested.
And what you find that's disgusting in media,
what you find so repulsive about media, the reason why you find it so repulsive and so uh... because you're
switching you with the with the yeah it's within us it is it's a reflection of society that's all
it's a different part of it yeah like we're you don't like to recognize it that you're attracted to
it still yeah well even if it's not you like us is a as you miss us yeah us as a society yeah yeah
yeah absolutely it's a reflection.
It's still the majority.
You're the minority for thinking that it's not.
God, at what point do you think,
do you think we'll ever get to the point
where we don't?
No.
No.
That's the problem, bro.
That's even my problem with when we talk,
when we, when you get political and you talk about
free market is unfortunately, there is a more
of a majority of people that need to and want to be led.
Oh yeah.
And be told what to do and to be separate.
I just don't care.
And to be put in boxes and to be cataclysm.
I just don't think we should give people the power to force other people to do things.
That's what I don't like because it's funny.
Human behavior is very interesting.
You have individual behavior and then people start to act differently when there's a mob behind them or when
they feel like it's interesting like like nobody would ever come up to you and say give me your
money regardless of what the cause is like let's say I said give me your money so I could feed the
poor and they hold a gun to your head like people would still consider that theft right like that no
no you can't go steal that guy's money even if you want to feed people interesting or you want to
build something right you can't you still can't do that you can't go steal money but's money even if you want to feed people interesting or you want to build up you can't you still can do that you can go steal money to give this to
yeah you know or if you still can't do that regardless right is that what
is that what made the robin hood story so unique
you know what robin what people got robin hood wrong
robin hood
what you robin who was stealing money from the government and giving it back
to the people it was the government that was taken from the people he was
taken it back from the from the government it wasn't the money from the rich giving the poor it was stealing from the government and giving it back to the people it was the government that was taken from the people he was taken back from the from the
government it wasn't the money from the rich giving the poor it was stealing
from the government giving it back to the people is what it was that true yeah
that's the old story that's the true all tax on the shit that's the old true
story but i mean like i said like nobody would ever nobody would ever come up to
you and and and tell you give me your money you know where i'm gonna shoot you
regardless of the cause everybody would think that's theft,
but if they do it like through proxy,
all of us are voting that this is okay.
Now I feel okay with the fact that I'm,
it's kinda weird, right?
No, it's interesting.
How, like, think about that.
We're okay with it,
because, you know, all my neighbors are cool.
No, my belief.
Peterson talks about the natural,
the natural hierarchy, dude.
Yeah, yeah.
Some were just meant to be there. Yeah, yeah
No, I understand that's hard for a hard eyes than how do we create? There's nothing there's nothing wrong with that
I just don't think we should allow structures to be put in place that allow
People to tyrannize each other. That's all. I think there should be structures
But I think the structure should exist solely to protect against that
I think there should be structures, but I think the structure should exist solely to protect against that. You know what I'm saying? Like, look, here's the deal. Like, if enough people vote that everybody in the world should get a certain kind of haircut, or excuse me, everybody in this country should get a certain haircut, that could potentially fucking happen as crazy as that sounds.
I feel like they've tried that.
That's weird, right? That could potentially, so we should have things in, and we do, we have things in place to protect against that kind of stuff. That's why we had little stash.
You know North Korea has,
they have like a fish, they have haircuts that are approved by the government and other haircuts that are illegal.
What?
Illegal haircuts?
Oh, man.
Oh, yeah, there's real rebel.
There's state, there are state approved haircuts.
I think they have like three or four haircuts to get a real man.
Definitely have a mohawk.
Yeah, yeah. No, no, no, no, no, you can can't if you get a mohawk that's a little bit of your
done
yeah yeah it's a little bit more how some of these trends start like over here
is because it's so where it's represents rebellion somewhere else
and so that's what that makes it so popular well because we're relatively free
even in a free yeah we have nothing to rebel over so we have to find something
right sure i'm gonna put a mohawk up yeah, oh yeah, oh yeah Oh, yeah, oh yeah, of course if you were expressing if you were expressing your if you were being rebellious in North Korea that maybe just that you
Say out loud that you disagree with the government that may be like a really big form of rebellion
Yeah, in America that's not like oh, I don't like the president who gives a shit nobody cares
There's fucking comedy shows about that. It's not that rebellious, you gotta do something else,
that's really crazy.
Yeah, well, they'd shot people for not crying hard enough.
What, so I wear?
Google it, yeah, and you're too good.
For not crying hard.
Oh, when they died.
Yeah, when King Jung is ill or, or,
it's ill, right, the first one.
Yeah, it was a dad.
Yeah, so when he died, there was like a gathering
and they were like monitoring everybody to see how hard
they were like weeping.
And, you know, you had to cry.
Yeah, you had to cry really hard
or they'd take you aside.
Could you imagine growing up, what a society like that?
Imagine being born into a society like that.
That has gotta be the most.
I can't imagine.
Same thing of all time where everything is controlled.
What I'd be most curious about those, how insane does it even feel for them or does it feel insane at all?
They probably don't know like right any different. No, I think oh no, dude
You know how much and psychological like?
Training they have to go through when when North Koreans escape to like to try through China and then come to the US
Yeah, it takes them years and they, many times they never really understand
like what the fuck happened.
Right, how could you let people in?
Yeah, like it's weird, like imagine this,
imagine your entire life, you're told what you should do,
how you should act, whatever,
what you can say, what you can't say,
and then all of a sudden everybody's like,
yeah, do whatever you want.
Like, what do you mean?
Tell me what to do, no, no, no, no, no,
no, no, do what you want.
Like, I don't know what that means,
I don't know what I like. Yeah, they've never like practiced that's I don't know what I like
I don't know what I want so please tell me you know what I mean? They could be a they could be a
That could be a psychologically speaking that could be very difficult yeah for people to deal with kind of crazy
Right no, it's very crazy. Yeah, it's crazy. It's also why I feel like again
Why people some people want to be led, you know, that's why, like, let's some naturally were meant not to.
And they were meant to.
Oh, no, all of us follow.
All of us want to follow and learn from, yeah, I get that.
That's not a problem.
It's just the whole forcing.
I really think if you want humans to evolve,
you have to let them be free enough to express
how they're gonna grow and learn,
but limit them so that they don't hurt each other
and steal from each other.
And if you let that happen,
we tend to like evolve and figure shit out.
We're not perfect by any stretch of the imagination,
and we tend to make mistakes along the way,
but we tend to figure shit out pretty well
when you let us do that.
Plus, it's morally speaking.
It's like, how fucking arrogant is it to say
that you know what's best for other people?
I don't know what's best for you.
I can have my own opinions.
I haven't always thought that.
You know, I have my own opinions and stuff, but you could try this.
That'll probably help your life out a little bit.
Here's my opinion.
Who the fuck am I, right?
Yeah.
Like, like, here's a deal.
Here's what works for me.
Like, here's a deal.
Let's take an easy example.
Let's look at alcoholic.
Let's look at an alcoholic.
Now, from the outside, I could clearly be like, that's terrible for alcohol.
Not the answer, but maybe it is the answer for that person.
Maybe they're in so much fucking pain
that drinking alcohol is the answer for them
and that's what's keeping them going.
I mean, who knows, you know what I'm saying?
We don't know, we don't have the answers for other people.
I think people have to figure out for themselves.
It's a very arrogant way of thinking.
It's very controlled.
That's a crazy analogy to give,
but I think it's a great way to have empathy.
You sure? Yeah, I think it's a great way to have empathy.
You sure?
Yeah, I think it's a great way to teach yourself empathy
for others like that,
because we don't know,
we never know the full story, you know?
No, no, no, no.
And I think it's crazy how we don't understand
that we own our bodies.
That part's wild to me.
Like imagine if somebody had a truck,
they owned a truck, right?
And then they were like,
I'm gonna paint the truck purple,
and the government's like,
no, you can't do that, we'll throw you in jail.
We'd all be like,
that's fucking crazy.
Why would you throw that guy in jail
for painting his own truck?
But that same guy can be like,
I wanna stay in my room,
I wanna be in my house,
I'm not gonna go outside,
I'm gonna be in my house,
and I wanna take drugs for my body.
I just wanna experiment with my body.
No, no, no, we're gonna throw you in jail.
And nobody, a lot of people think that's okay.
That's weird.
Like, what do you own more than your body?
You don't own anything more than that.
You know what I mean?
It's so controlling that we control people that way.
Do you think it's controlling or do you think it was necessary
for us to evolve as society?
Otherwise, most people would self-destruct.
No, no, no.
So it's their body.
That's a point, like, I can think. Well So it's their body. So that's a point.
Well, do you think a lot of it, though, comes from...
It's up to you to self-destruct.
The parenting mindset that never sort of...
So if I'm trying to protect everybody,
thinking from my kids, there's a certain age limit
where I want to make sure that I instill everything I can
so they understand the consequences.
I do this, then this happens.
I do this, then this happens. I do this, then this happens.
And then eventually, I mean, the more you can get comfortable with letting them figure that out themselves,
obviously, the better it becomes.
But I feel like a lot of people like they keep that mentality of like trying to make sure, like, you know,
I want everybody to be safe and happy.
I mean, it's just weird to me.
It's just very strange.
Like, like, look at prostitution. I think it's so fucking weird that we can,
we have thrown people in jail for doing something
that people do all the time,
that it's your body and people choose to do it.
We don't make it illegal until you pay for it.
You know what I mean?
And I know why, it's because people don't want to see it,
or at least they don't want to acknowledge that people do it.
But they do it anyway. It's just very controlling. We're very very controlling.
Well, prostitution I think is different for me than drugs is because I feel like part of us putting the laws in place
And I know most of them were bullshit. I know that's the
The why they got there originally, but they could serve a purpose or if we were in a society
Would would most of us self-destruct or would most of us end up getting addicted to all these things you have to ask yourself that is it
better or worse for us.
I mean, statistically speaking of very, very small percentage, look at you know how many
millions of Americans have used drugs have tried drugs.
I'm not counting and I'm not even counting pharmaceutical drugs, which are also drugs
by the way, right?
People have used pharmaceutical drugs, still drugs, still still powerful in fact kill way more people than legal drugs
But that's a different subject
But how many Americans have tried cocaine
marijuana
psychedelics like you know
Methamphetamines like how a lot of Americans most Americans have tried one illegal drug and the vast majority of us
Haven't self-destructed and turned into fucking addicts.
There's a very small percentage of that is that motivation through fear or knowledge of
them.
No, I think we've tried it and people just have no knowledge of them.
You think it's because of knowledge of them?
I think becoming an addict isn't so much the substance as it is, the conditions that the
person uses the substance.
Why would I disagree?
I'm just challenging your thought process.
Yeah.
So here's a thing. Let me put it to you this way. Okay. If we want to really be
in, but if we really, really think that it's bad for people to do lots of drugs, because
then they're more likely to, you know, do terrible things more likely to be violent, more
likely to steal and the last stuff. And yes, you can definitely make that argument 100%.
And we all agree upon that. Why is the answer that we're gonna throw people in jail for it?
Why isn't the answer take that money?
And yes, if they hurt someone on drugs, you throw them in jail.
If they steal something while they're on drugs, you throw them in jail.
If they do something to someone else or someone else's property, throw them in jail.
But if they do nothing else, why don't we take that money instead of throwing them in jail,
saying, here's some potential ways you can help yourself
if you think you have a problem.
Because the reality is you're not gonna be able to,
you can't help someone just wanna help themselves anyway.
I mean, how many addicts do you know that
you can throw all the fucking resources in the world,
you can throw them in jail, you can do whatever you want,
if they don't wanna change, they're not gonna change.
I know, I agree.
You know what I'm saying?
So why not take those resources
if that's what we really believe in and say, okay, maybe
instead of throwing you in jail, we're gonna offer you these resources to help yourself
when you're ready.
And by the way, while using these drugs, if you're hurting you, but then we're gonna
put you in jail.
I would just throw them in a box and expect that we really need to take a step back.
It's a very interesting problem. It's a very strange.
How weird is that that you can get thrown in a cage for doing something to yourself?
I think we're just watching that. We're watching it unfold.
In our lifetime alone, let's be're just we're watching that. Yeah, we're watching it unfold. I mean, we look in our lifetime alone
Let's changing. We're realizing that it was a grand experiment. Right. It was a grand it was a grand it was a trillion dollar experiment
They destroyed a lot of communities a lot of people
Well, I mean I hate to be the conspiracy guy always following the money
But that's like where I always end up, you know, like, where are the motivations in this entire process? Like, you know, why did we build all these, like,
we're so greedy, dude, we see if we didn't have money in all these, all the storm, that
we still have that, that, that, that, that, that, that greed that money is just a tool.
Right, right. Money is just a thing right now, but power, like thousands and thousands
of years before we have, like, humans are very, we're very interesting like that.
Like would you be trying to steal others, you know,
wives or partners, would you be doing,
would you, would you, would you have that natural desire
to do that, you think a lot of people would have that?
I think, I think that's a natural,
look at everybody thinks everybody else is greedy,
they never think that themselves are greedy.
Like I'll tell you what, here's an example.
That's naive.
It's very naive, but that's a lot of people say,
like, those greedy business people, those greedy,
now there's some.
Yeah, well, look at yourself.
No, no, hold on a second.
Greed is a natural wanting for yourself
is a very natural human emotion or human need or desire.
We want for ourselves, that's how we survive, right?
That's how we take care of ourselves.
There's nothing necessarily wrong with that.
What you wanna do is you want to encourage a system
that where you want more for you,
the only way you can get more for you
is if you do something for someone else.
That's what you want to do with that.
But you can't erase that part of us
that wants for ourselves, you know what I mean?
You can't erase that.
So what you want to do is you want to create a system
that prevents me from stealing and prevents me from beating the people up to do it.
You just reward them for certain things.
Yeah, you want to be like, oh, you want lots of money?
Fine. Here's a system that lets you get lots of money.
So only way you get lots of money is everybody gives it to you.
All that note, how do you know that's that we're trying to get to you fat,
trying to help evolve their nation faster?
Wow.
Oh, there's there's there's that through that through the through the whole scoring system of that's not where China is trying to get to you fat, trying to help evolve their nation faster. Wow.
Oh, there's, there's, there's, there's,
through that, through the, through the whole scoring system
of how do you know there's not like a huge positive spin
and they're trying to help force their entire country
to move in a direction to evolve us to where we can do that.
You gotta know that's gotta be the spin that they put in there.
Well, look, here's the difference.
I don't know what it's like to grow up in there.
No, no, here's the difference.
The difference between what they're doing with with that
Social media, you know program or whatever
The screens can and the difference of between what we're using here. Yeah, but again, that's also the screaming control the control right away
All that the power it's the power. It's the difference between always a skeptic. Yeah
Yeah, yeah, it's like put too much power in one direction
Well, it's they can, yeah, they can still,
and again, I agree with you guys,
but I mean, thinking like that,
that's gotta be the reason why it works and why so,
so many people still do it and get behind it.
Yeah, it's always, it's always a bunch of,
it's always people thinking they know better
and they know the direction everybody should go
and here's a deal.
Sometimes, here's the kicker, okay.
How do we, how do we know that their way
isn't better than our way?
Oh, because I'll tell you why. 100%. This is 100% why.
The goal, I think the goal of all societies is always to get is for everybody to work together.
I don't think anybody can argue that humans aren't capable of incredibly amazing things when we all decide
when we all work together, but the kicker is it has to be voluntary. It doesn't work when you force people.
It's not the same. It's not the same at all. Take a group of people and force them
to be creative versus a group of people coming together. Well, and out of their own
violence. Is it really forcing you if you're just making it aware and revealing their
scores based off of the good deeds and the things that they do, are you really forcing
them or you're just revealing to everybody else in the rest of this economy and world that they live in?
Where they're at?
It's like, oh, Justin has five stars.
Well, because he's done this, this, this, and all these good things, it's credit's good,
he's shook the people, he does all these things.
Therefore, but here's again, like your concern, you know, with the free market and all that,
what my concern is that there's always going to be somebody within that fabric that's
going to be able to hack in and manipulate things which is that you're gonna like take
it out of your head.
Well, no, they don't have to hack in, they don't have to hack in, it's the owners of that
program and they've created a monopoly for it.
So in other words, let's say you're in China right now, you live in China and you've got
this system now that the government now has put place forth.
Well, yeah, you design-
And you design-
You like, you know what?
I like that system.
It's kind of cool. But I want to make a system that I think is gonna be better. you designed that built it. You like, you know what? I like that system. It's kind of cool.
It's cool.
But I want to make a system that I think is going to be better.
You can't.
It's illegal.
You can't put out a system on their competition.
No, they monopolize.
It's control.
And that's the problem.
We have the same.
That's what it is.
There's no, there's no.
That's not some balance.
The difference is here, we have that too.
We have Facebook and Instagram and we have Twitter and we have TV and radio and podcast.
We have all that shit here too, but it's not illegal to create something that may work
better.
You see what I'm saying?
Over there, it's like, it's a monopoly.
It's a state-sponsored monopoly.
And, of course, the people sponsoring it have the power to, let me put it this way, if
that system lets it win.
Let's say that system explodes and does very well for them and everybody buys in
and of course, because it's forced, there's no competition.
But let's say they do do a good job
and they figure it out.
What's to say that they're not gonna be like,
okay, let's take all the people with a score
less than a hundred.
Let's just go round them up and throw them in there.
Oh no, I already see all the,
where it could be bad, but that's again us looking at it
from that perspective. What if you looked at it from the other perspective of what could all the, like, where it could be bad, but that's again us looking at it from that perspective.
What if you looked at it from the other perspective
of what could all the positive things?
Imagine how easy you could bring everybody up.
If everybody, like, could actually see all that stuff,
you would naturally migrate to people with higher scores,
especially if the scoring was based off of good things,
being a good person in society.
That already happens.
That already happens.
It kind of does, but this is just exposing it on another line. It's not exposing it. It's monopolizing it
Well, I agree because disagreeing because think about this our perspective in the way we look at it
Yeah, but think about it this way when you meet someone. I know it challenges your your your 100% your belief
Yeah, liberty and free mark. I mean, it's everything against that. No, no, no
Let me put it this way when you meet someone. It's very natural for you to
To score them yourself.
There's many things, what my friends said about that person,
how that person's carrying themselves,
maybe the car they drive, the way they walk,
the way they present themselves, how they dress.
Maybe I can look up their credit score.
You're allowing somebody else to create that for you.
That's right, and it's monopolized.
And the argument could be,
a majority of people don't do a good enough job that.
Now you are a different person
You're a really intelligent person. You have the you have empathy. You have experience. You're knowledgeable. You're well read
You have the ability to decipher all that information when you're processing. Okay, meaning this who are these who are these all knowing and
Jealousy is not some people not necessarily all knowing, but maybe they're they're they're in a better position to help guide them.
Go find them for me.
Think about this way.
I agree.
Find me to challenge you.
The very people that seek that kind of power, or the very people you don't want to have.
I know.
That kind of power.
Go find me these altruistic angelic, all-knowing fucking leaders that can decide these things
for us.
It doesn't work that way.
Nobody has that knowledge, that information,
nobody, no one, no group of people can do that.
The best chance we have is to let everybody,
and I mean everybody, I mean everybody,
decide that through his system.
You can't just say the smartest people
because a lot of times they lack the most empathy.
Oh my God, some of the most evil motherfuckers
in the world were super intelligent,
super smart, smart, smart people. That's like the argument a lot of times. I just got to the smartest people in the world that have them some of our
Prouds. No dude. No, you know the you know you know the
Progressivism the now modern progressiveism is different, but it started
Long time ago with very with intellectuals and intellectuals thinking that they could shape society. And they came up with cleansing society
of getting rid of, you know, races that were not
eugenics, killing off these races.
They're not as smart as us.
And oh, dumb people are gonna be,
we're gonna kill them over here to ensure the,
because they were trying to sculpt
and shape society.
It's all about control, man.
And when people need to realize
is stop trying to control people, people live just protect yourself from you know
protect you know make sure that nobody hurts each other whatever I understand
that part and that's the only way that that things progress you can't control
everybody doesn't work that way well it doesn't work I mean think about some of
the very first laws what were like the first like as far as like a society right
what was some of the first rules were just societal pressures, I think.
They weren't necessarily laws in the sense that they were just,
like think about it this way.
Don't murder me.
Yeah, like, like, like, I don't think it had to be a law that,
you know, you're living in a tribe and,
oh, that guy's killing people,
we're all gonna kill him.
Yeah, we're all gonna kill him.
As he's dating rid of that guy.
Or, oh, you're lazy?
Well, because you're lazy, you're not gonna eat,
you gotta go get your own food or whatever.
It was easier, I think, to manage. but a lot of the original laws were based around things that are older than us, older than societies that help us form these societies that kind of function, you know, well together.
That's what I think.
But it is interesting, though, that control that we want over other people and feeling like we know what's better for everybody.
We just don't know what's better for everybody. We just don't. You just don't know what's better for people.
I think we're all susceptible to that feeling though.
Like when you get a certain amount of knowledge and you're like,
oh, well, I could do it so much better this way.
They should raise their kids like this.
Yeah.
They should say these things.
And these are things people should learn.
And, no, man, it doesn't really, I don't know.
It kind of doesn't work that way, you know?
I mean, look at education, I think,
when we plug that into education,
we create a bunch of robots.
You know what I mean?
Rather than teaching kids what to think,
like teach them how to think, or how to think.
Yeah, and give them kind of like,
you know, tools to expand their own knowledge
by what they're interested in
and kind of watch what happens.
You get a lot of innovation that way.
That's why you're seeing an explosion
of non-prenourship right now.
100% technology's creating that.
100% I agree, though.
You know, it's been a long time since
entrepreneurship was cool.
It really has.
It's been, I mean, it's always been kind of cool,
but it's losing, it's cool for me.
Right, when everybody else is thinking it's cool,
I think it's losing, it's cool for me.
We gotta call it something else.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah, why don't we get to call it? I don't know. I think it's losing, it's cool. We got to call it something else. Yeah Yeah, why don't we get to call it? I don't know
I think it's losing. It's cool to me because I think that people think it's way easier than what it really is
Entrepreneurship. Yeah, I think the perception of it has changed a lot. Yeah. Yeah. I think I think a lot of people
um
Because you I mean what what defines entrepreneurship right going into Going into work for yourself is not nine to five really.
Right.
It's working for you, basically, right?
Not working for anyone else.
Right.
So I have to say, that's a very wide spectrum.
Yeah.
Very, very, like, we need to separate that.
There are different ways.
I've got to be lumped in with like, you know, pictures and that's it.
Well, but I make money, well, it's true.
It's an entrepreneur.
Loan officers and real estate agents
are kind of like entrepreneurs.
I mean, there's a little bit of a structure
but they're kind of building their own business too.
So there's different levels.
Sure.
Then you got people who open up a business.
That's a different level of it.
I just feel like it's getting bastardized right now.
Yeah.
That's how I feel.
Whatever, I don't care.
Well, I don't care.
Yeah, it's less cool to me.
Yeah, it's less cool.
Yeah, it was how it like.
It's just what happens. It's like not cool anymore. Yeah, it's like a term or something like your
Maybe we get saying like
Well, getting jiggy with it like you know, you catch your parents saying that you're like what the fuck
Bro, that's us now by the way. I know we're all saying this stupid shit
That's I know
I've catch my referencing sitcoms
30 years old. You guys remember else?
No, I think no.
Entrepreneurship is cool and I like that
because it's allowing people to go in
and create and express themselves.
I like that, but you're also a lot of people
are gonna learn that.
It's not for everybody, that's for sure.
I think it's not for most people.
Let's be honest.
Entrepreneurship is not for most people. Although, you know, because it's not for most people. Let's be honest. Entrepreneurship is not for most people.
Although, you know, because it's easier to become an entrepreneur,
it might be, it might be,
I mean, entrepreneurship might be for more people today
than it was before though.
Think about that.
Like 20 years ago, if you want to start a business,
you need to be able to gain capital,
save up, risk it on a business.
So there was a smaller pool of people willing to do that.
Today, it doesn't necessarily mean that.
You can start a business with way less capital
and way less opportunity, you know, chance or risk.
There you go, he's called risk takers.
Yeah, it's no different.
It's allowed you to be very degreeed of it.
I mean, I was telling you guys this,
a lot of people, you'll see that,
what are we seeing in pocket,
let's talk about our spaces,
that's what we know more about right now and anything, right?
Like our space, you're gonna see a lot of people
that will come in and they'll reach kind of,
they're sealing potential, they'll get,
and that's because what's cool though,
is they can do that really fast today,
then that faster than what they could have done
a whole time ago.
Like you have to get a,
before are you to do a brick and mortar
and build a business around that,
you know how long it takes before so many people pass by your building or so many magazines or newspapers or radio
I was talking to my buddy who owns a gym and I was trying to explain this to him
And I'm like listen man because look we all I came up in the state in the gym business
It's like you guys did but it's so different. I was trying to explain him. I'm like look man
You own a gym. Let's say first of all you got a fucking bus your you're here and look you got a bushy ass no matter what
But you got to be here bus you ask differently when you got a fucking bus, you're here, and look, you got a bus you asked no matter what,
but you got to be here, bus you're asked differently
when you own a brick and mortar business like a gym,
and you're limited to how many people you can reach
because there's a certain perimeter of, you know,
how many miles around you that people will come actually
work out at your gym.
You're not going to get people from across the country
buying a membership at your gym because they can't access
your gym, so you're limited in that respect. But let's say you do succeed and you do well and you want to
open another gym. Well, now you got a risk of another half a million dollars in another business.
And then you got to do that all over again and now you've lost. And you have to duplicate the same
environment that you created to make that one successful. Yeah, and it's a whole other
monsters. Layers of the onion. Yeah, you just you just accomplished like a center and I was trying to tell him like how hard it is to scale that versus an online business where
Scaling it is way easier. Oh, you know, I mean like you could create an informational product that people really value build some authority
I think it's and then just duplicate it. I think it's equally as hard. I don't know man
Going through this funnel process dude. This is so complex. Yeah
It is but to scale it people don't understand like the behind the curtain
What's your definition of scale? It's not easy at all. What's your definition of scaling? Well, let me put it this way
Let's say it's not easy to scale. Well, hold on. Let's say you want to sell a hundred dollar a hundred dollar
membership, right a hundred dollar, and you had a gym,
and you want to reach 10,000 people.
That's fucking gonna be very, very hard.
To reach 10,000 people, and then that's the one
to reach a million people, 10 million people.
Online, scaling that can happen a lot faster
and it's a lot easier.
In the brick and mortar, it's gonna be like ridiculous amounts
of capital having to dump in and
Tied up into you know like restaurants or gyms or businesses like look at like look how much money
We have invested to reach as many people as as I think I think how hard would that be in a brick and mortar
Right, but there's also a lot of just different years different don't understand yes that are monumental barriers
Right until you reach that freedom. Yes. That are monumental barriers until you reach that freedom. Yes. I think it's just as
hard. It's different. It's just a total different way more upside. You know, like it with online.
Way more upside because of the access to more people and just the whatever product or whatever,
you know, message your putting out. Also way more risk for it to come crashing all the way down.
True. I mean, I have you look examples of like shreds. It's a house of cards. Look how down. Right. whatever product or whatever you know message your problem also way more risk for to come crashing all the way down
i mean i have you look examples of like trest it's a house of carl
lookout down right
and i mean it's you you you see
rise and fall so fast
so that's right i don't know if it's such a better time or it's it's so much
easier i don't think it's any of those things
what difference i think it's easier to respect but you're right is very i don't
think it's easier well let think it's easier in a lot of respects, but you're right. It is very good. I don't think it's easier. Well, there's barriers lower, much
lower. The money barrier is much lower. Yeah, but with that, okay, because of that, now
means the competition doubles and triples, which means it's even more competitive, which
means it's even harder to stand out. So for everything that you say is positive, there's
a bad side to that. Yeah, that's the window there. So it's not dreaming. It's not really as easy as everybody thinks.
I hear you're saying, no, I'm thinking of specifics.
You're right, generally speaking, yeah, no, it's not easier.
No.
But in some respects, it is in the sense that like the barriers alone were, you know, the
barrier to open a brick and mortar is capital.
Lots of capital.
Right.
But because of that, now that I have, now I have fucking five Joe Smose, I have no
business even being in myose, I have no business
even being in my business, I'm opening right next door to me and using gimmicks and doing
things to get attention that I got to deal with as a business owner now.
So it's the monster is the same dude.
It's the same monster.
It's still very, it's still difficult for sure.
What's different now, I feel like, is that the things, the core things that are so important
to be building and scaling a very successful business
tends to get lost in all this minutiae, right?
All this shit that we have with people with social media
and post and pictures and pretending to be more successful
than what they really are.
At the end of the day, the basics are the same.
The rules are the same.
You gotta provide some shit with value.
You gotta be able to produce it efficiently
so that you can sell it at a profit. And you need to be able to build a team that can scale and work under what you do.
Kind of have an incredible product.
Yeah, and I mean,
Kind of an incredible product,
and I don't care if it's an old new, that's the bottom line. You can't,
because we do see people who reach a lot of people through new media that don't have a business.
No, they don't have a business.
Every time I talk to a young person that's getting in this space,
they always want to ask me questions around like the algorithms to YouTube and the Facebook and Instagram
I hack my way to the top right you can't you don't want to that's my argument
Yes, you don't want to hack your way to the top you don't want to receive a million people following you for some weird ass reason
That you don't want to keep up for the next 30 years of your life
No, if you're listening right now fucking think about that for a second You don't want to hack the system unless you 30 years of your life. No, if you're listening right now, fucking think about that for a second.
You don't want to hack the system
unless you want to come in and out just as quickly as you can.
Right, yeah.
Plus, it would be short live.
Plus, the thing that trips me out
is how people, they want that attention so bad.
And it's like fame without,
that's why it's really deceiving.
It's really deceiving
because it's also fucking with your ego at the same time too.
Because now all these people are comparing, and that's why you see everyone.
I got a million followers on it. Like you want that much attention on you for what?
Yeah, what are you doing?
You've done nothing with it. Why do you want that?
Or you make, you know, six figures.
You've got 10 million people watching you for six figures.
Yeah.
Like why? Why would you want that? It's a total ego game the entire time.
Look at all these people liking it.
Well, yeah, and I think it's a little bit of BSB in naive too.
I think at that point a lot of people that are reaching that
maybe they haven't put the hard work in.
They haven't failed that enough businesses.
They haven't built something up the hard way.
They haven't gone and done the long work first
before they can get that success, long term success.
That's what it's got.
Actually, I mean, it is true.
It's like one of the worst things you could possibly get
is what you think you want and realize you don't want
that that's not what it was.
Like, you could chase success and maybe through some fluke look,
get it because you did some viral video, whatever.
It is not the same as like learning the process
the entire time, struggling, failing and succeeding
and failing and succeeding.
Like that may actually be your worst nightmare.
It is, it 100% is.
I've always said that about our business.
I don't want us to get a fuck, I don't want to go viral.
I don't want to all send a million people a flood
and that way we're learning all these other processes
that we have to get in place
and look where we're at right now
and what we're doing today.
It's just another example of so important to have all that.
This actually echoes and I always bring music as an analogy,
but it echoes really, really good musicians who put in
an insane amount of time to...
You still want us to be a rock band?
Yeah, that's not bad.
You want us to be a rock band, so I can't sing, bro.
I hate it.
You picked the wrong guy.
Yeah, no.
The least fucking musical.
It's just so ironic to me that this is like exactly what I was bro.
I was going for right.
This is something there's like a dream of mine, but it looks so different now that I'm,
you know, doing it this way.
Yeah.
Does that make sense?
Like I have this vision of like, I don't know, I get in this flow state,
you're playing music, everything's awesome and you're just in the moment,
but I can recreate that by just, you know, podcasting and the...
Meaning cool people and all that same thing, but it's just, it's just weird to me that didn't take off.
I will say this, like, creating a business where we can literally express ourselves
and do it in a way that where we feel like there's a real
meaning and purpose behind it. Like we really want to help people. We really want to help
bring the right kind of information. We really want to train people like we did for years
as personal trainers, but be able to reach a lot of people and help shift, you know, the
way people think. And that we've actually created a business around that is a real amazing
blessing. And I swear to God, man, especially days like this, and that we've actually created a business around that is a real amazing blessing.
And I swear to God, man, especially days like this, like we're literally sitting on a balcony.
I think we're lucky.
I think we're lucky because timing and business means everything.
And we are coming, we're authentic people coming into a space that is not authentic at all
at the right time.
I don't think you're lucky at all.
I feel lucky, but I also feel like, I feel like it's a responsibility that we've
That we've taken on yeah, you know and I only mean that being that that we all had different pass it let us hear no
No, no, no, right they took that for the formula to work
But our timing is fortunate because let's put this way if all that fast forward in 10 years
This will be in my opinion
The market will be hard to break through the space the space will will demand this will demand that people like I want to be
No matter what brand I'm dealing with we give it this way. We tried going the app direction. We tried the gym business
We tried personal training. We tried you know car washing. We tried fuck, we tried a lot of fucking shit.
This is the one.
It's not luck.
Yeah, I know Adam, fuck you, man.
No, I know what you're saying.
You're saying the timing is, it's a big one.
And it's perfect for us where we're at also
in our own personal journey.
So I've had our collective journey together
I think is important.
Oh, it couldn't have happened at a better time.
Yeah, yeah, I definitely am not discrediting it.
Press you. We all put plenty of work in.
I am so, I am so, so thankful that I did not meet you guys
when we were in our friends.
No, really, right.
In our 20s, it is totally different.
I think if we met in our 20s that this would have never,
it would have never worked out the way, the way it has.
No way.
Yeah, it would have been a lot of ego, a lot of fucking,
you know, it might have been fun for a second,
but I'm out of here.
Yeah, I don't know if it would have been like it is now.
So, I love that the hardest part of our job
is making sure that we get our episodes up.
And so we actually have to podcast on a beach sometimes.
I hope it's like that.
In 10 years now.
Whoops.
Yeah, I hope it's like that in 10's like that. It's like that.
It's like that.
No, really cool, man.
It was really nice going out there today.
And so, you know, what we like to do,
some, what we, and this is something I really appreciate, by the way, guys,
I want to say this, I really, really appreciate this, that we value this process so much,
that we actually schedule time to go away in order to work,
but really it's not just to work,
it's also to foster this creative energy,
because we value it so much and we see how important it is
for what we do.
And like a piece of that was like, a few hours ago,
we were out on the beach sitting down
and we always talk about business,
it's always about the business.
We almost don't talk about anything else,
because we're so passionate about it.
But it's just being able to be on the beach
and being in that environment,
be outside of the studio, outside of work.
And we come up with our best ideas.
And every time we do something like this,
I really feel driven in a different way.
Well, it sounds woo, it sounds woo to say,
it keeps us grounded, but it really does.
Yeah, for sure.
Yeah, for sure.
Because easily your ego can take off with something like this.
Something as big as what's happening.
You know, for sure, I can.
And I think allowing us to disconnect from,
that's why I kept asking Justin,
like, where you're at with your phone right now,
because I remember when my phone broke in Seattle.
And it tripped me out.
I spent the first day every five minutes
like trying to fix it.
Yeah.
Literally, you can't even fix it.
Because I had it. Well, you know, you don't have it. Like, you went crazy and tried to find it. Yeah, I really you can't because I had it.
You don't have it.
Like you went crazy and tried to find it for about 10 minutes
and realize you don't have it.
The worst.
Imagine having it and thinking I might be able to fix this thing.
Like I was fucking with it for a whole day
and then I just accepted it.
I accepted it.
I'm not going to have it.
Then it took another 24 hours of being disconnected.
Then it was the 48 hour where I was like,
this feels really nice.
Yeah. So the best is yet to come, bro.
Oh, no.
Yeah, the best is yet to come.
I think I would fare much worse than you guys without my phone.
I have.
You guys have made me well.
I brought my laptop, too, is like sort of, you know, that was like one last electronic
outlet or like, you know, I could tap into that.
And then that just died. Listen, I tell you what, I tell you what, I could tap into that and then that just died Listen, I tell you what I tell you what I think
We should schedule a time where we go off and we literally and I know you're gonna say no Adam
We go camp where we have no electronics, but
Because we are
He wants to go yeah, he's like we can stay in a hotel. No, no, no
I want to go, yeah. He's like, we can go stay in a hotel. No, no, no. I want to go.
You know someone sent me that,
someone sent me a meme the other day,
and they sent me this meme of like,
it was a camping reference or whatever.
About how you would camp?
Yeah, it was like a five star hotel
and like room service.
So I think we should go out into nature
for a few days, disconnect from everything, be lost.
And I think we'll come back
with some of the best fucking creative information that we've come up with.
You know me, I'm not your boy.
But hold on, here's a deal now.
I know Adam hates that.
He does not want to go to nature.
He doesn't want to rough it.
I get that.
I don't like it either so I can relate.
I grew up in it.
But you're also a fucking, you're also a fucking team player, bro.
So what we're going to do is we're going to vote.
We're going to vote.
We're also a team player.
Raise your hand if you think that's a, Raise your hand if you think that's it.
Raise your hand if you think that's a good idea.
Oh!
Looks like that's what we're doing at him.
Yeah!
Fuck you.
Go team.
No, I just don't want to turn it to the on it crew.
We go get do Ioska.
Fuckin' it.
No, we're not going to do that.
Let them do that.
There's plenty of people that are into all that show team bonding.
And they want to talk about that every
Fuck thing and getting closer to becoming like God like that aim. I think you know, say like
We're just about camp but I definitely see lots of value and us going out to the beach and they we got that's how he starts
Pro he starts you there and these are slide you into somebody else come
Warden you just I've never even done I was
I've never even done I wasca. I've never even done that.
I've never even done that.
So funny.
We are.
100% we're going to do something like that.
Because I'm super game for that.
And I think it's good in general.
Katrina and I have talked about that.
We're unplugging, leaving everything just for two or three days.
And go be with each other and go camping or go out on the beach.
And to me, it doesn't have to be roughing it like fucking crazy.
Stop trying to close us.
Yeah.
I mean, we can just turn everything off.
Yeah.
But you know what else?
That's how I'm gonna be.
I knew that was his angle.
It does it get much more peaceful than what we're sitting at right now.
Yeah, well, it does though.
It does.
It does.
Really?
Yeah, yeah.
If all of us were going to go to Alaska.
If we were in nature and there was nothing
Not even this podcast and it was just us
Well, you know, that's a little bit different. Yeah, yeah, that'd be good. I like this better though
My life is nice. Yeah, I a good conversation nice breeze on me sons blame it on me
I can hear the waves crashing right you're not gonna be it
Except if I had a Moscow Mule, I think that's where I did you bring stuff for drinks at all this
True, no man. No, we gotta go get a sober trip. This was sober sober. So British why did I don't have a phone?
It's so funny how we don't you know consider weed
It's sober
Exactly I don't know about you guys, but I'm hungry. Yeah, I'm too. Let's grab some food. I'm down
Hey, look check this out. You can find us on Instagram. I'm mine pump
South. We have mine pump Adam mine pump Justin also we have free
Resources and that crazy. I can just turn it on like that. I just turn it on your professional. God damn it
Free resources
You didn't think that episode was enough of joking yourself
You did it to do some more
Like two hours of just that. At least one of us do.
I was like, you have to people already two days.
That's such a fine profession.
Do it just to kill and kill.
Take it away, just to see what I'm working on.
I find the freak guys.
You should have find us and it's at mindpumpfree.com.
That's the new link that the day, I don't wanna do it.
I don't wanna do it.
I don't wanna do it.
I don't wanna do it.
I don't wanna do it.
I do it straight.
You're doing so well, Justin.
I know my strengths.
They're self-conscious.
Free guides.
We have all of our free guides on there.
Flabby arm guide, flat tummy guide,
build your chest guide, build your quads guide,
well-written guides.
The problem.
The problem.
I did.
And they're all free.
Mindpumpfree.com.
Go check it out.
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