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cover of episode 888. Andy, Nathan Graham & DJ CTI: Elon Musk Says Goodbye To President Trump, Viral Video Of Woman Trying To Board Plane With Kangaroo & Cat Escapes From Florida Vet

888. Andy, Nathan Graham & DJ CTI: Elon Musk Says Goodbye To President Trump, Viral Video Of Woman Trying To Board Plane With Kangaroo & Cat Escapes From Florida Vet

2025/5/30
logo of podcast REAL AF with Andy Frisella

REAL AF with Andy Frisella

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Nathan Graham
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Andy Purcell:我希望大家了解这位年轻人的故事,因为这非常棒。 Nathan Graham:我从2012年开始制作YouTube视频,当时我还在中学。我主要玩Minecraft,并为此制作了大量的视频。一开始我很害羞,但我意识到作为一名YouTuber,我需要打破这个观念,才能娱乐观众。我尝试了574次才让我的第一个视频达到百万观看。达到一百万订阅者后,事情并没有变得更容易,因为我需要不断地娱乐和增长。我不断推出新的频道,并最终离开了游戏领域,开始制作更疯狂的现实生活内容。我接下来的使命是通过Blueprint公司教创作者如何成为创作者并取得成功。

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Nathan Graham, known as Unspeakable on YouTube, shares his incredible journey from a shy high schooler to a successful content creator with tens of millions of followers and a thriving CPG business. He discusses his early struggles, the importance of consistency, and the power of momentum in building a successful online presence.
  • Started YouTube channel in 2012 while in high school
  • First viral video (1 million views) came after 574 uploads
  • Reached 1 million subscribers upon high school graduation
  • Expanded into real-life content and launched a successful CPG business

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What is up guys, it's Andy Purcell and this is the show for the realest. Say goodbye to the lies, the fakeness, and delusions of modern society and welcome to motherfucking reality. Guys, today we have a very special episode.

Where Andy and DJ cruise the motherfucking internet. That's right. You didn't match my energy, bro. Well, I typically try to like. No, you don't. Counter. You got to match the energy. Okay. Do it again. All right. You part. You got to line it up. No, you are. I already did. I forget the energy tone.

Andy and DJ Cruz motherfucking internet. All right, that's what we got. There we go. I got you. There we go. Good job, brother. All right. Now, today we have a very special guest. My buddy Nathan from Unspeakable. You guys know him as Unspeakable on YouTube. He stopped in.

He's on his way to Oklahoma. He wanted to stop in and talk some business, talk some cars, and probably talk some shit too. Yeah, yeah. I'm here. I'm ready. What's up, brother? So, dude, I'm hanging out. We just flew in. Awesome to be here. The facility is incredible. Thank you, brother. I've seen pictures of it. DJ just gave me a tour. It was...

it was unreal so it's all right i mean it's all right it's all right that's what we said in the gym we're like it's not a bad place to work out yeah it's better than a sharp stick in the eye you know i don't know if i want to choose this or the plan of fitness but yeah yeah definitely dude it's about the same but yeah well it's great to have you here dude um

I don't even know how we connected. I think we connected through DMs. Yeah, I think it was through DMs and cars. We both got a huge passion for cars. So I've been following Andy. I've actually been listening to the show since like 2016, back when it was MFCEO Project. So it's awesome to see how the show has transformed over the years. And then to become a listener of the show to then being on the show is awesome. Dude, what's so cool is like,

Your story, because like when you were listening back in the day, you were in high school. Yep. Right. And now you've got YouTube, tens of millions of followers across platforms. You've got an amazing CPG business.

So let's talk a little bit about how that evolved and get right into it. Because before we get into the talk of shit, I want you guys to understand this young man's story because, dude, it's awesome. Yeah. Yeah. So pretty much I started. So for those of you that don't know me, I make YouTube videos. If you're watching this and you have kids, probably.

Ask them if they know unspeakable that your kids probably know me not in a weird way Our demographic is younger tons of kids watch our show I've been doing it since 2012. So I started in October of 2012 That's when I was I graduated high school in 2016 so I started when I was like in middle school going into freshman year of high school and Pretty much just started by playing video games in my room. I

I started with a game of Minecraft. It was my favorite game at the time. I loved playing it with my friends. Just grinding out hundreds and hundreds of videos. Over time...

I'll speed up the story a little bit, but it took me. We're not in a rush. Like, that was relevant. Yeah. But like, I want to hear it. But it was a I mean, it was just a grind learning everything, dude. Like, I didn't know how to edit a video, film a video. My personality, like if you go back to some of my first videos, I was so incredibly shy.

I was a very shy kid in school and that was a belief that I had to break because I was like, man, how's a YouTuber kid going to be a shy kid, right? Like I got to entertain an audience if I want to be a YouTuber. But it was kind of this thing that when I started YouTube, I was...

interested in it. I was curious about it. Um, but I wasn't, I didn't have a huge like passion for it over time as I made more and more videos, my passion grew and developed with it. Um, cause I'm a big believer in like, you don't really know that you love to do something until you do it for maybe a couple of years. So that's what I discovered. Um, a couple of years down the line, I started to grow. I, it turned into an obsession pretty much. Um,

So about three years in, I'm still struggling, still trying to find a viral video, still posting videos. I think my first year on YouTube, I posted 143 videos. My second year on YouTube, I posted like 220 videos. By year three, I was pretty much doing videos every single day, posting one video every single day. And these are all long form videos. I know today people have shorts.

Instagram reels, Tik TOKs. These are all like 10, 15, 20 minute videos, edited stories every day. It's a lot of work every day. A lot of work. You're doing it yourself. Doing all of it myself. I was still in school too. That's a shit ton of work. Yeah. Still in school. So I remember, I remember there's days where I would like come home from school, you know, three or four o'clock. I would just work on videos till one, two o'clock in the morning. I had to wake up at six 30 cause I ran cross country in the morning. Um,

Dude, it was brutal. Brutal. First couple periods in school, I would always sleep because I was just so, so tired. And the teachers, like I told the teachers what I did. I was like, I worked last night for eight hours. Like, I just need a 30-minute nap. And they're like, yeah, you're good. My teachers were super nice. That's cool. Dude, what's interesting is the part where you say, you know, how you were shy. And then the reps helped you develop that.

and get through your shyness, right? Like a lot of people will ask, young podcasters will ask me or, you know, people that are trying to become more, better speakers in public. And I'm always like, bro, just reps, man. Reps, reps, reps, reps, reps. And how do I get reps? I'm like, well, you got to start being pretty bad. So that's cool, man. Yeah, so it took me, so for my first video to go viral,

Um, I consider a viral video, a million views. Everyone looks at viral videos differently, but my first video to hit a million views, it took me 574 tries. Dang. So 574 uploads is about three and a half, almost four years in the process. Um, but after I got my first video go viral, the second one came very quickly, like a month or two after, um, and then the third and then the fourth. And, um, that's when I learned about, that's when I started to learn about the power of momentum. Mm-hmm.

Because it's just compounding at that point. Yeah. Compounding like crazy. I mean, growing anything in business and life is just, there's so much momentum behind it that people don't understand. But it took me five, I think it was about five and a half years to get to a million subscribers. And when I hit a million subscribers, I actually graduated high school, which was cool. So moved out, bought a house, never went to college, never had a job. That's fucking straight, straight to YouTube. Yeah.

So you are the story that all the kids want to be pretty much. Yeah, that's awesome. Yeah, pretty much. But it didn't get easier from there. Yeah, definitely got a lot harder because a lot of people think like, oh, once you get to a certain place, you know, because I thought this, I always thought like, oh, once I get to a million subscribers, things will be easier because then I'll have an audience of people to entertain.

But in reality, it's the opposite because now I have a million people that I could lose. You know, I worked so hard to get these million people and now I got to keep them entertained every week, every month. And I got to keep growing from there on top of that. You got to innovate and you can't get stale. Yeah. Yeah, it's a lot. Yeah. So this was just the beginning of all the other problems that I was going to develop. But yeah, just kept pushing through, kept going, kept going. Channels started blowing up more and more and more.

I was launching more channels. I also decided to get out of the gaming space eventually. So I launched a real life channel where basically we do crazy stuff. I mean, we like we hunt tornadoes. We've built life size Lego houses. We geez, what is, what is something we're doing right now? We're trying to make a Lamborghini fly. We're trying to put wings on it. How do you come up with the idea for this? Yeah. So we have, so we,

As I developed thousands and thousands of YouTube videos, you start to discover like these, these blueprints, um,

that you can basically like, you know, blueprints formulas for thinking of video ideas. One of the coolest things that I, I mean, there's a lot of them that I use, but one of my favorite ones is like the one plus one equals two method. And basically what it is, is where you take two ideas. Sometimes I'll take ideas from different places or I'll take two ideas of my own videos and I'll combine them to make a third idea. So one of my most viral videos is I filled my house with packing peanuts.

I saw that. Yeah. So that was like a one plus one equals two idea. I took an idea from something else and something else combined it together and made a third idea.

And that's kind of my next mission that I'm focusing on is, you know, I've had this huge success myself. I'm obviously having a lot of focus on like the CPG stuff and our fruit blocks company. But my next mission is with Blueprint, which is the next company that we're focusing on, is teaching creators how to be creators. Yeah, you've been talking about that a lot. How to be successful. Yeah, that's what my Instagram is all about. Yeah.

That's when you're a tactician, dude. Like it's really cool, man. Yeah. Like I watched trying to learn. I'm like, cause I had fucking, we struggle with YouTube, dude. Cause like our beast, man, it's, it's, well, it's hard for us. You know, we're still really new to it. And most of our listeners are audio listeners because they, we've been doing it for so long. And sometimes we get frustrated with YouTube. Cause we're like, fuck dude. Like this is not even comparable to what we do on audio. And like,

I don't know. I feel like we put on a pretty good show, but I, you know, it's, so we're going to put some more focus into that, you know, make it a little bit more entertainment focused and let the podcast be a product of that. You know? Yeah. The best thing I try to tell people when they're like starting a YouTube channel, I think the best thing you can do is make your last video, your competition.

So like whatever your last video is, try to make the next one better in some way, shape or form. I always like to tell people to pick two or three things from your last video. You know, maybe it's your intro, maybe it's your thumbnail, maybe it's your filming personality, whatever it is, and apply that to the next video. Because that's what I did for my first 574 videos till I got that first one to go viral. And then obviously I kept doing it. And, you know, now today I've posted 5,000 or 5,000 videos across all the channels. But it's...

It's surreal looking back, man. It really is. You can tell you still like it though. Oh, I love it. Yeah. Every day. It's exciting. I mean, when you get to go hunt a tornado with your friends in the middle of Iowa and document the process and then get 28 million views on the video and it pays you out 300K, it's a pretty good day. Yeah. Now, do you have someone like a camera person documenting all the time, like every day? Not all the time. Or just when you're

Like do doing stuff. Yeah. Mainly. Yeah. Cause like all of our videos, our videos take a, a huge amount of setup. Yeah. So, you know, it's normally a couple of days of planning, um, a couple of days or weeks of setup. Um, and then a couple of days of filming and then two, three weeks of editing. Um, so it's a process to get one video out.

- Yeah. - For sure. - Yeah. - But we're staggering all of our videos. So we have multiple teams working on different things at the same time. So we basically have like a lot of people when they think of a production company, they have like editors, they have creative, they have script writers. We basically have like three production companies in one. So they're like alternating every single week. - Wow.

on all the different videos. And how many people is that? So right now in house, I believe we have 24 and then we got another 10 just remote, remote people. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. That's awesome. That's, that's freaking awesome, man. It'd be 27 years old doing it like that. That's fucking sick. Oh, he's doing it, dude. I'm doing it. Yeah. I'm deep in this. Yeah. You should see his cars, bro. What's your favorite? What's your favorite car you got right now? Favorite car I have right now. Uh,

It's hard to tell. It's like every other month I switch something out. I mean, I would say the favorite one I have right now, I just got a 997.2 3RS. Yeah, those are hot right now. It is the most exhilarating raw car I've ever driven. I mean, it's just... This one has like an upgraded clutch and all types of goodies. It's a real driver's car. Oh, yeah. Oh, yeah. Like I was driving it the other day and I was like, man, this is not a car where I can like...

grab my phone and like change the music. I'm like, I'm glued to the car, but that's kind of what I wanted. It's cool. Dude. That's, that is one of my main things I love about cars is that if you're driving a car that takes skill to drive or has enough power to literally kill you and you have to be careful, you can't think about anything else. So a lot of people think it's just about like, Oh, you showing off your cars. Well, I mean, there's part of that, right? Like I want to inspire the young guys and know that it's possible, but I,

It's really like the only thing I can really equate it to is if you're not very good at playing a musical instrument. Okay. And like for me, when I was learning guitar, which I don't play anymore, but when I started learning when I was 30, I was very bad, but I had to do total focus, you know? And then, and then when I got done, even 30 minutes, I felt like better.

almost like refreshed and that's how I feel after I drive when I'm driving something that requires all my Concentration, you know, it's it's really cool and you know and the cool thing about driving too is you could always improve like a lot of people think it's just like oh, you know like they think of it like as a commuter, you know, and they don't think of it like, you know with your with your RS, you know

rev matching or downshifting properly or heel towing, or there's just all these cool techniques that the average person doesn't realize can take a lifetime to master, you know? And so like you never, even if you get good, it's, it's, you can still get better. And that's what I like about it. Yeah. They're like engineering marvels too. I mean, just the, the amount of stuff, like I, I just had a McLaren Senna too. And dude, we put that thing up on the lift and I was like, I got to see underneath this thing. I mean, just like the amount of like,

carbon fiber ducting to like this wind goes here to cool this this wind goes here i'm like this is under the car you don't even see this yeah the centers are cool bro there when i first saw them i was like who the fuck would buy this who designed ugly it is but then you start to realize that everything on that car has a purpose you know and uh if you ever drive one you understand why because they're just

ridiculous uh in in almost every way yeah did you have the uh did you have the the round seats in it and yours like the the race car seats yeah yeah they all have those yeah well no you could get two different seats in the center you can get that one that like rounds around and then they have like a more standard race seat oh okay but i've never i've never sat in the ones that round around your shoulder i don't know they're they're no they're not very comfortable yeah yeah they don't look it's just like bare carbon and a little bit of cushion but yeah

That's crazy. Yeah. So, dude, you recently picked up, I've been talking about this a little bit on my show, a GT500. Yes. What do you think? If you're listening to this show and you love cars and you're on a budget, that's the best thing you can go for. Bro, I totally agree. Like, it is the most, I mean, to put this in perspective, I was on the track a couple months ago in a $450,000 Porsche. Yeah. And this thing was passing me. Yeah.

And I'm not a race car driver, but I know how to drive. Like, I've been on the track a good amount of times. I've had a lot of experience under my belt. But, yeah, it's unreal. I mean, the... And what's also incredible about Ford is, like...

you don't have to modify anything. Yeah. Like, you know, it doesn't need an exhaust. Yeah. It doesn't need, like, carbon fiber wheels. I wouldn't even want to change the exhaust because I'd be afraid it would be worse. But it just sounds so good. Yeah. You can't come close to beating it. I would put it up there with $300,000 car. I agree 100%, dude. Yeah. And I wouldn't have said that before I owned one. You know, like I was saying before the show,

Got the first customer delivered for GT new for GT in 2017, which I still have Which I love and they called me when the 500 came out and they were like, hey you want one of these 500s You know, we'll give you one of the first ones would do paint the sample or whatever on it and I'm like They're like, oh no, dude, my buddy Dave. He's like dude. It's it's just as fast as a 3rs on the track I'm like, come on man, like there's no way and then like

Three years go, four years go by and Ryan Hardwick, a good buddy of mine, one of my best friends, he buys one and I see him driving. I'm like, what do you think? He's like, dude,

Go buy one. So like I'm on the internet at night. I'm like, all right. And I fucking buy one and I got it. Cause I think they look cool. Yeah. And dude, I couldn't believe how good it is. And then the inside of it is so comfortable and, and like the, the ergonomics and like everything's right. Like it just feels good. And I feel that way about the three 50 are too. Like, I feel like the three 50 are, you know, you could pick those up for like what? 70, 80 right now. Yeah. And dude,

like if you're a guy who likes to drive manuals, I don't think I've ever driven a better manual car than that car. No, not for the price. You know? Yeah. I mean, maybe like, yeah, maybe when you get into the half a million dollar range and you start talking about the high end three RS manuals and things like that, um, like the one you just got, you know, but dude, that's, that's five times the fucking price, you know, it's just a, or more. It's just, I don't know, man. And then the way that flat six on that three are on the, uh,

on the 350r i mean dude i just i'm a huge fan huge huge fan of those cars but yeah man we could talk about that later i could be going about cars yeah i could talk all day dude have you driven a career gt yet i have not yeah no that's on the list yeah yeah that and a 918 yeah you i got both of those you could drive you could drive whatever you want but career gt for a manual car

It's just different. I heard it's pinnacle. Oh my God. Like nothing can be, it's not, it's just dude, it's got all, it's just, you know how like we were talking about the GT black series, how it's a great car, but it doesn't make the sounds right. The, the, the, I couldn't critique the career GT on anything. It could do better. You know what I mean? Like it's got enough power, but not too much power. It makes the right sounds. Um,

The pedals feel right. The shifter feels right. Everything feels right. And it's super balanced. And I know a lot of people are like, oh, well, that's the car that killed Paul Walker. But yeah, man, that's why you got to respect the car, bro. That's how I felt driving the GT the other day. I wasn't fucking tripping off anything else on my driving street. Cars are getting so fast now, too. Like, I just picked up a 2025 S63. And this is like, this is an S-class Mercedes. Like, it's like a limo.

yeah it's got a thousand foot pounds of torque yeah what what is that a hybrid yeah yeah it's a twin turbo va with you know like four electric motors i'm like why do i need to be hitting 200 while i'm getting a massage in the back seat so like this is crazy but it's cool if you can it's cool it's cool but i'm just like cars cars are getting so fast for the street that it's like it's a little little scary i just bought a uh last august

So when I first got into cars, I had a 2012 R8 V10 manual. And I built it all the way I wanted. And then I got in a cash pinch where I needed some cash. So I kind of had to sell it. I didn't have to sell it, but I decided to sell it. And then I could never find another one. And then I found, last August, I saw a 15 pop up on one of the websites. I think it was Auto Tempest.

And I fucking bought it right there because I haven't seen one in like 10 years come up that was gated. And then I built it exactly like the one I had. Same wheels, same everything. And dude, you know, compared to it's probably the slowest car I have in the garage, but it's also like one of the most fun. You know what I mean? Because, dude, you're right. Like some of these cars.

Some of these cars have so much power that you can't really enjoy them unless you're like way out, you know, on, on some big stretches, you know? Yeah. Um, and I'm a big fan of like actually having to drive the car, you know? So yeah, man, the power on these cars is getting crazy, dude. Um, do you have a, do you have an SVJ? No, I don't. I, I got pissed off at Lamborghini about six years ago and I actually, uh,

So when the SVJ63 came out, I tell the story. It's just, so I had like between when I started getting cars to when the SVJ63 came out, I had owned probably 20 Lambos, 20 different Lambos, like a lot. And dude, everybody knew that Andy Fursella was a fucking Lamborghini guy because I grew up that way. And then when the SVJ63 came out,

They didn't give me an allocation. And like, I was the number one client at our local store. I was also one of the most visible people on the internet. I was post, you know what I'm saying? Like I made it like, dude, and they didn't give me an allocation. I'm like, guys, what the fuck? And they were like, well, you know, and they kind of were like, and I'm like,

Well, fuck you. And by the way, I also sponsored fucking race team. You know what I'm saying? So like we had a first form fucking Lamborghini race car. That was winning. Yes. That won the championship. Yeah. So, so I was like, I got rubbed wrong like that. It pissed me off. And so, dude, I, at the time I had, uh, I had two cars at home. I had an Aventador, uh, SV, uh, Roadster, which dude, I, I'm going to get another one because I missed that car a lot.

And then I had a Huracan Performante that was matte black, which I really liked that car too. And fucking dude, I fucking traded him in on a, like literally like the truck came to pick them up and on the truck was a TDF and the 458 Aperta.

Then they took the two cars away so like and I made a little fucking video and I sent it to him Yeah, so so like I went from like I wanted to like prove a point. Yeah, so like to blow me Yeah, so Lambos went away the Ferraris came in I've got it on my fucking video and I sent it to him like this what this is fuck you guys But here's the cool thing so I was kind of anti Ferrari

Up until that point and a lot of my buddies were like dude, you know, you know how there's like a little thing there and Then when I got into the ferraris, I was like fuck these are great. Like these are amazing cars and I don't they They didn't look as aggressive but the car was more fun to drive and so like now i'm like a super You know, i'm super big on the ferrari v12s. I think the ferrari v12s are insanely good

But they don't have the road presence or the curb presence of an SVJ. And the sound's good. I run a Novotex on my V12s, and they fucking scream, but they don't scream like a Gintani fucking SVJ. That's what mine's in the shop right now, getting the exhaust. Literally right now, they said it's going to be done tomorrow. I'm like, I need to fly back. You can't wait to get back. Oh, dude, I can't wait to get home Saturday. You don't even know. I'm going to get another one. I want to get...

I've been looking at this SVJ or I'm sorry, SV Roadster. I would like to eventually I will get an SVJ Roadster and an SV Roadster because dude, like I just, I do like, I do like them. They're brutal. They're raw. They, the sound isn't insane. And like, dude, let's be real, man. Like,

You just kind of feel a different way of driving it. You know what I'm saying? So I love them, dude. I'm over it now, you know, but that was the story of. Yeah. Yeah. Like I like the cars, man. I still like the way I didn't like the way they went about it. And the conversation I had about the allocation with them was just like,

It was just like, it was fucking rude. And then I will say this too. You know, a lot of people dog Ferrari for being, you know, like not wanting to deal with them, bro. I've had nothing but great experiences with them. They have been very nice, very good, very accommodating. And it's like, I, you know,

I don't have anything but great shit to say about how they run their company. And I think the people that say bad shit are people that don't- - They're outside the club hating. - Sort of, yeah. It's kind of like once you're in the club,

It is what it is. It's like that Chris Brown song. We're outside the club. You can't even get in. I get it. I can only say how I've been treated, and they treat me tremendously well. I'm down at Ferrari of Austin. That's my dealer. They're fucking amazing.

but yeah dude i love i love cars bro and you know what's cool it's not about the price of the car either like it's like my favorite car is my 70s chevelle like that's the one i drove i drive that car wait five times to every other one probably yeah yeah you know it's just about what fits you and what suits you and what you like yeah and once you've had like the cool shit

you stop valuing the cars on what they cost and you start valuing the cars on the experience yeah you know yeah 100 yeah i've had all the new stuff i've had all the the techie stuff the cool stuff the fun stuff and now i'm just i'm going back to the to the older stuff yeah to be honest with you like the older cars the stuff i wanted in the beginning but i was like man the news the new one is so much cooler yeah but once you have the new one you're like it's it's

It's all right. Yeah. You always find your way back home, bro. Yeah. There's just so much character in some of the older cars. Yeah. You know, it's hard to beat, but. Yeah. That's, I mean, dude, when I was a kid, I grew up like loving Lamborghinis. That's probably one of the biggest reasons that, that I was able to stick through the hard times of our business and,

was because I desired to participate in that hobby. I didn't want to be a spectator of it. That's why I get so upset when people shit on people for wanting whatever they want. Because you're like, bro, you don't know what good's going to come of that. Now we employ all these people. They're building careers. We have all these people getting in shape and doing it. There's a lot of good things that come from someone's desire. And then as you grow, you start to realize that the true...

Prize is the difference and the impact and your people around you, but you still appreciate that that hobby you know what I'm saying and I just you know, I grew up wanting white Countach which I haven't owned yet I still want to own that even though I don't think I'll fit in it But you know and a 70 Chevelle like that's Chevelle dude when I look at that car. I'm like that I

That's me, dude. It feels right. Yeah, I was the same way growing up. This might sound ridiculous, but one of my friends growing up, his dad...

owned all types of companies, but he had a white Superleggera. He had an Aventador. And I've never seen a Lambo in my life. And I would go over to his house and they lived in a very normal... If you looked at their house from the outside, you wouldn't know there's two Lambos in the garage. I was like that at one time. Yeah. But I went in there and I was like, whoa, dude, this is crazy. And we went on a drive and all this stuff. And I just kind of thought, because I've always been a car guy even before I saw those cars, but I was like...

And this might sound stupid, but I was like, if I don't figure out a way to own one of these cars before I leave this earth, I think I will be in depression. Like, I just don't like... For eternity. You look up depression in the dictionary, it's just a picture. No, but it's just like, he did it, why can't I? That's true. You know, like, there's no... There's just...

There's no excuse. Honestly, I was like, I'm, I'm getting in one of these cars. Yeah. And it's a committed decision. Yeah. Yeah, dude. I get it, bro. Like I've, I've always been the same way. Like I saw my first Countach when I was eight and I was like, whatever I gotta do, man. Like, and I was, I tried everything, bro. I was doing lemonade and selling baseball cards, selling light bulbs, door to door, like fucking anything.

Yeah, internet yellow page like dude all this crazy shit like I could go on and on and on but like yeah, dude I mean that was a huge it was a huge motivator that helped me bridge that gap between the times when it was really really hard and You know Now you know what I mean? And it's a passion. I still enjoy you know and I

If you're not a car person, you're probably thinking like, what the fuck are these guys talking about? But if you are, you know exactly what we're talking about. Yeah. I also remember like going to my local car show and just being like, you know, when I didn't have a nice car, I was, I was just a spectator. I'm like, my parents would take me there or whatever. Um, and,

And now they're putting me in the VIP section and they're like, you're the nicest car here. Like it's cool. It's, it's unreal to go through that. Yeah, totally bro. So totally. Well, fuck man. That's, I mean, first of all, did we cover your, your, your juice blocks?

I think not too much. Yeah, let's talk about that because I want people to support that and know who's doing it. Yeah, pretty much. So we launched a company. So as I got hundreds of millions of views on YouTube and grew my career, I started to realize that I'm basically running a marketing company without a product. So we were signing brand deals. We were signing all types of things. And I was like, I really need a product.

like a real product, a scalable product, a good product, what can I put in my videos? And we wanted to pick something that was going to align with our audience. So we started with Apple Juice for kids.

It went all right. We're kind of discontinuing it because, you know, turns out kids don't actually like apple juice. It's more so the parents that give it to the kids. For sure. So now we're going down the fruit snacks route. So we have fruit snacks. We have sour fruit snacks that are launching. We're in all types of stores, Walmart, H-E-B, Kroger.

It's pretty unreal how fast this company has grown. And I think because I had so much momentum and leverage behind my brand, I was able to get in a lot of doors that I wouldn't normally be able to get into. Like right off the gate, they put us on every single Walmart. That's awesome. Like on day one. That's awesome. So it was...

It was really cool to see, but I think a lot of these older companies, older retail are kind of opening their eyes to people that harness attention, which I think today is just one of the most valuable things that you can have with your company. They're starting to understand the creator economy. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. So it's just people that have personal brands, attention, views, whatever you have. Like that's just...

It's just the most powerful thing that you can harness in the 21st century. And then if you attach the loyalty, the trust and all the other things behind it, I mean, you just become unstoppable. Yeah. So how's that been for you in terms of, you know, learning?

business from a, um, you know, not from books, but from doing. Yeah. It's, um, the CPG stuff is a whole different ball game. Cause you're a big reader like me, right? You, you, I mean, we were talking about this the other night in DMS, like he, uh, Nathan posted a shot of his, his book collection. I'm like, bro, that like is the exact book collection I have too. So we started talking about our favorite books, but like, um,

You know, I could tell you're a tactician in everything that you do. So, yeah, I'd be interested to hear, like, how that's going. You know what I'm saying? Yeah. I mean, it's going good. It's flying off the shelves, to be honest with you. We're having a lot of stories sell out. A lot of people are having trouble finding products. But I think that is...

I mean, that's kind of the results of aligning a really good product with our audience of, you know, we, we average a hundred million views every single month across all our channels. So, you know, we've got a hundred million people across the entire U S the U S is our biggest audience. We have people in the UK, Australia, other, but you know, the United States is our biggest audience. So when you align a product perfect with that audience, exactly what they wanted and you launch it nationwide. I mean, of course you're going to have a crazy effect of

store selling out and all that stuff. But obviously you got to make a good product too, because one of the big things I learned from you is word of mouth is like easily the most important thing. Um, so that's one thing we're working on. We're trying to make not just, not just rebranded fruit snacks, but let's make the best fruit snacks on planet earth, you know?

So how involved are you in the, in the business? Did you, do you, do you like, did you go through the entire, I think you did, but I want to hear it. You know, concept to, you know, formulation to packaging to the dealing with the distribution. And is that, are you doing all that yourself or do you have some guys helping you or did you hire executives that with experience or just, yeah, did you do it? Yeah. So we actually got some guys with a lot of experience because we,

I was running all my YouTube channels. I was extremely busy. I mean, I was already pulling like 80, 90, 100 hour weeks. And I was like, there's no way I'm going to add this on top with the amount of stuff I already have on my plate. So we went out, our management company, we went out and we hunted for people that we thought would be a good fit. We found someone from a big, big company, big CPG company that helped grow it to billions of dollars in sales. And we basically made him our CEO.

And then we picked up other people along the way as well that really knew what they were doing. One of the biggest things I learned about hiring people is like, if you sit down in a meeting that some of the best people that I've hired, when I sit down in a meeting with interviewing them or whatever, if I walk out of that meeting feeling overwhelmed,

That's probably like, I probably need to go after that person. And hiring the team for fruit blocks is how I felt when I was talking to them. Like they taught me so much in this meeting. And I was like, and I already thought I knew a bunch about business. I was like, oh yeah, I know branding. I know packaging. I know this. But they're like, no, no, no, you don't know this. You don't know this. The distribution, whole nother ball game that I haven't touched. So having that help has been very, very valuable to our team.

But it's, you know, it's a lot of working pieces. Everyone has a role to play. I mean, bro, that's the way to do it, dude. You're jumping fucking 15, 20 years ahead minimum by doing it that way. How'd you find those guys?

A lot of connections, a lot of just like people asking people. That's kind of how we operate, how we hire people. We don't really put out job postings very often. Like it's really through word of mouth. Yeah. That's where we built most of our team is just talking to people.

like if we need a video editor, we talk to people in our company and we're like, you know, video editor, you know, video editor, and we'll bring them in. Um, that's another great thing I learned from you is bringing in people from the bottom, having them work up to the top. Yeah. Um, so that's one thing we focus on and we've built some incredible employees through that method. That's awesome. That's fucking sick. Fuck bro. It's so cool to have, like just to have you here and say, you know, you listen to the show back in 16, um,

And now you've gone on to have all this success with YouTube, your CPG companies, your management companies, your scaling of employees. You must have really, really fucking listened. Oh, yeah. That's about all I listen to, to be honest. Well, dude, it's so cool to have you have this come full circle for me because a lot of times...

When I make that content, I'm sure you've heard on the show, I get frustrated because I'm like, fuck, are you guys listening? And just to have you sitting here with all this awesome shit that you're doing is really cool, man. Yeah, I appreciate it. I didn't know this. I learned this today taking him on the tour. Graham is not your last name. No.

Didn't know that. They had it on the locker and everything. It's like, oh, that's fun. I'm like, what's funny about it? You want me to tell the story about that or is that you keep it confidential? Yeah. No, no, I can tell the story. Like, it's not a big deal. So basically, like,

So someone like made up my last name because, you know, I didn't really put my last name out there. So someone just made it up and they made up the name Graham. So I was like, OK, cool, whatever. That's me now. That's me now. So then like Forbes reached out because they wanted to put me on the Forbes list. And I was like, oh, this is this is sick. Like this is, you know, one of the things on my list that I want to check off.

And so I don't, if you've ever dealt with Forbes, they have to, you know, you have to send them like documents. It's very legit. Like they don't, you know, you don't just like tell them how much money you made. They got to like verify it.

So we sent them the documents and they're like, oh, you got the wrong last name on your documents. And I was like, no, no, no. These are real documents. And they're like, oh, we don't. They didn't really believe us. You're about to call the police on your ass. I was like, no, that's my name. He's like, oh, no, we're going to use your other name. We're going to use this name because we don't really believe you. And I was like, all right. It is what it is. And they posted it on Forbes with the name Graham. And I was like, I guess that's my last name. What did you get, 30 under 30? Yeah.

No, I got Forbes highest paying YouTubers and like top creators. We made it on two different lists. Fucking awesome, bro. Yeah. Sick, man. So I was talking to a buddy about Forbes list yesterday about the billionaire list. Like, I don't think people realize this, but like there's way more billionaires that there are on that list. Oh, for sure. Yeah. A lot of people think like, oh,

This is the list. That's it. Yeah, right, right. You guys got to realize that there's a lot of billionaires that want to stay quiet and don't want to, because like Nathan said, you have to basically allow them to do a dive into your actual finances. And a lot of people aren't comfortable with that. But it is great for like exposure. Yeah. For sure, man. Yeah. But yeah, people think that's either pay for play.

or made up and that's not, it's real shit. It's just that there's a lot of people that don't do it as well. Or like Inc. 100 or Inc. 500, there's a lot of companies that belong on the list but don't submit to it. So a lot of people get confused by that. Just like they get confused with net worth. - Yeah, right. - I think net worth is like how much you fucking sell or how much cash you got. It's like, okay, man.

But yeah, dude, that is super cool, man. Super, super cool. Yeah. It's really surreal sitting here right now, too. Just soaking it in. I mean, look, man. I always took the approach of I felt obligated to share what I knew or what I had learned because I know there's people coming up that need to hear it.

And I was very fortunate to be around people growing up that were entrepreneurs. So I learned a lot of shit. You know what I mean? And Vaughn is the one that pointed it out to me. He's like, bro, you got to understand. Cause like for, you know, when you live your life, you don't think that you think you naturally think that everybody else is just like you. Like they know what you know, you're not that special. And Vaughn pointed out to me one day, he's like, Hey man, he's like, you know, you have like this information that we're talking about, right?

like people don't know this like and i'm like what do you mean he's like like this and this and this i'm like well that's common sense he's like yeah to you because you grew up around that and so like dude i've always felt obligated to help people learn those things

and not gatekeep them. You know what I mean? Yeah. Yeah. And you inspired me to do that too. Cause that's, that's the next company. Yeah. You do give up. You give a lot of dude, you know, what's cool. This is cool. So now I'm fucking learning from you. I'm watching, I'm watching your year, your Instagrams trying to figure out how to, you know, think about our YouTube. So that dude, I just thought about that. That's really cool. But yeah, that's, that's my next company is like that, that blueprint stuff that I've been doing. It's, you know, it's basically like,

everything I know about YouTube. It's, you know, we split it up into all these different chapters and sections and difficulty levels and all this stuff. But that came from you. Cause I was like, I remember you talking about that a long time ago. Like, you know, you really need to share this advice. And I thought the same way. And then I also reflected back on my story, you know, when I was three years on YouTube, struggling, trying to get a viral video. And I was like, man, if I would, I would kill for this information.

And like literally I would do anything to get this, my hands on these, this information, these blueprints, like how do I make a good title thumbnail? How do I make this? How do I think of my next video idea? How do I, how do I schedule my content? Like there's just so many of these little tiny things that I had to learn and suffer through like years of failure just to try and figure it out. But yeah, your podcast has been a huge, like just,

jumpstart ahead. Even some of the simple things like, you know, when you hire someone, start them at the bottom, start them by sweeping the floors and then bring them up to that executive level. And they got to work for that for 10 years, 15 years, whatever it is. Or it could be, you know, two years, but just they understand they're going to prove they need to understand that we're none of us are above that. Right. To create the proper culture. It's just,

Yeah, dude. But, but, but like my thinking was reversed. Cause like when I, when I was talking to friends or other business people, they were, they would always be like, no, you got to get someone, you got to hire an executive from another executive of a company. And I'm like,

I'm like, okay, I guess that kind of makes sense. There's places for that too. But yeah, there is, there is, there is for sure. But then your philosophy was just like kind of backwards, but it made more sense, but it just kind of opened my eyes to perspectives that I've never heard of. Yeah. Yeah. I mean, look, there's a place for both, you know, like when, when we innovate something here at first form,

you know, we, back in the day, we would try to learn it and figure it out, you know, cause we didn't have the resources to hire people, you know, uh, of that level. So we're like, okay, well, I guess we'll figure it out. Um,

And then, you know, now it's like, okay, we're going to go into this category. Let's find someone who actually has done this and we'll hire them in. And yeah, it's, it's, it saves a lot of fucking time. Yeah. But, um, there's a place for both, man, for sure. But bro, it's, uh, you ready to talk some shit? Let's do it. Yeah. Let's do it. Ding, ding, ding. Yeah. Let's get some cruising guys. Remember, if you want to see any of these pictures, articles, links, videos, go to Andy for seller.com. Guys can check them out there or come check us out on YouTube.

And follow along with us there. Before we get started, I got a question for you guys. It's a very simple question. Okay. Can a man call another man to say goodnight? I've seen this trend. Can we? You know the answer, bro. Well, so there's a viral trend going on right now.

um and it started with this guy's name is deandre scarborough he's 24 years old um and uh he decided to give his friend a call several of his friends are called to wish them a good night and uh knowing that they'd be thrown for a loop so here's the og video all right uh let's check this out yo bro yeah yeah all right yo bro

i would just call you say good night bro oh yeah bro yo you good you getting active or what like he's telling you giggling getting your butt played in when you call me bro bro just saying good night bro yo yo larry and he he calls the wrong number he's freaking out he calling me

Yo, bro. What's up, bro? Shit, bro. I was just calling you to say goodnight, bro. What you talking about? What you talking about, man? What you talking about? You calling me to say goodnight? So I tried it. I tried calling some of my good friends and just seeing how it worked. You got a video? Yo. Yo, what's up, dude? What's up? Oh, no, I was just calling to say goodnight.

Shut the fuck up. No, I mean, yeah, that's just, that's all I wanted. Just saying goodnight and sweet dreams and stuff. Oh, well, goodnight, man. I don't even record. It didn't work as well, but you know, it's fine. Bro, I thought you were calling me because like he don't ever call me at night unless there's like a problem. Like somebody showed up on the property or something like something's going on. Something wrong. Yeah. Yeah.

Fuck you, man. That's all right, man. Dude, I think, listen, I think that's something we need, man. Like, bros, it's okay to call your bro and tell him goodnight, man. Is it? Yeah, ain't nothing wrong with that. I don't think nothing's wrong with it. Yeah, ain't nothing wrong with that. All right. Men always hide their feelings, too. You know, you got to open up a little bit. Yeah, man. You know, I'm just checking on you, bro. All right. All right. It feels a little weird. Yeah.

I don't know, man. It's a new trend. I don't know. Guys, shut us down in the comments. Bro, I snipped that shit out immediately. Yeah, you did. You did. So the thing was, so I was supposed to do it like, like that was what? I don't know. It was like. It was the past 10. I was supposed to do it like fucking like days ago, almost a week ago. And me and my dad originally planned it out.

And like it always get there. Like it'd be like fucking 11 o'clock. I'm like, dude, I'm not calling him at 11 o'clock where I'm not doing that. No. Cause you know, I'll freak out. That's too late. That's way too late. You know what I'm saying? But I'm like, all right, it's like fucking nine 30 brothers. Give it a try. And I, and yeah. Yep.

I'll try it again. Well, I mean you didn't get me bro. Just like why don't laugh at your jokes? That's fine. Yeah, that's fine. You need to practice up. I mean, hey listen reps. That's right. Exactly. It's reps. It's reps, man. Yeah, man. All right. Let's get into some headlines, man. Let's talk about what's trending right now. What's happening? Let's go to DC first. Got some interesting things happening there. Elon Musk. He's out.

Are you even following the doge stuff at all? A little bit. Okay. Yeah. So Elon Musk is out. Everybody's freaking out over this. They were like, Oh, you know, it must be him and Trump are having some issues. No, like they, they, they said what it was going to be from the get go. Uh,

But, yeah, Elon Musk thanked President Trump late Wednesday as he officially stepped down from his temporary gig leading to the budget slashing Department of Government Efficiency. So you tweeted this out on Twitter. You're saying, quote, as my scheduled time as a special government employee comes to an end, I would like to thank President Donald Trump for the opportunity to reduce wasteful spending. The world's richest man posted on his social media site.

And he continues saying the Doge mission will only strengthen over time as it becomes a way of life throughout the government. So it was 130 day standard expires on May 30th. That's all it was. Nothing really crazy to that.

Um in other news though there has been some interesting things you know like the courts been fucking with you know Trump That's neither here nor there Got judges. Don't arrest you how they've been trying to spin this really shot like they do everything yeah They do every this is being spun as a huge rift and egos clashing which I mean is believable but possible, but that's

Yeah. Really the reason though. Yeah. You know what I mean? No, it's just fucking expired. That's it. You see him come out though and say that, uh, he didn't like, uh, Trump's big, beautiful bill. Yeah. But I mean, isn't that the point of having good friends? I think he's right. Like, I'm not going to agree with everything you got going on. Yeah. You know? Um, but, uh, but outside of all of that, there's been some interesting stuff happening. Uh, one of the powers of the president has, uh, this has been causing some risks is the ability to pardon people.

Okay. And so he can party anybody, pardon anybody from any federal crimes. And he's been doing that. The first one he released was Todd Chrisley. You guys remember this guy? He had a like a reality TV show. I went to prison. Oh, yeah. For what? I mean, I'm sure you wouldn't. I think you probably enjoyed it, but.

Because he's a little, he's a little. That guy is a little different. He's a little different. He's a little different. I always sense a little difference from him. That was a little difference. Yeah. You know, so I don't think he, you know. What did he go to jail for? So he went to jail for, let's see. He was convicted of fraud and tax evasion. Federal prosecutors found him guilty of faking documents to obtain over $30 million in loans and then dumping them by declaring bankruptcy.

So, yeah. Wasn't this whole thing that they were like super wealthy? Yeah. Super wealthy. So it was total bullshit. Probably. Yeah. I mean, probably. Huh.

Yeah, but he just got pardoned. This was a phone call from Trump to his daughter. Check this out. That's a terrible thing. It's a terrible thing, but it's a great thing because your parents are going to be free and clean, and I hope we can do it by tomorrow. Is that okay? We'll try getting it done tomorrow. So give them, I don't know them, but give them my regards and wish them a good life.

Mr. President, I just want to say thank you for bringing my parents back. Yeah, well, they were given a pretty harsh treatment based on what I'm hearing. Pretty harsh treatment. Was your brother fighting also for this release, right?

Hey, I go to the University of Alabama and I saw you speak and I thought that's the greatest presidential speech I've ever heard in my life. Oh, that's good. I was just there. I gave the commencement. What a great group of people. If you were in the audience, you have to be good. What a good school it was. And I love Alabama. You know, I love Alabama. It's...

That school is really, that was very impressive when I was there. Yeah, I think I did a good job. I got a lot of good comments on that one. So that's good. I love doing that with great young people.

As we freed them now, I mean, I think they were facing like 17 years. They just got sentenced in 2023. But there was a bunch of pardons. This other one also is causing some stirs. Rapper, NBA, young boy thanks President Trump for pardoning him. You know, young boy, you listen to any of this stuff? I don't.

I listen to some of his stuff, but I saw him at the Lambo dealership buying a car once. Really? That was about it. Yeah. He's an interesting cat, man. I don't know anything about him. Dude, I think when he first came out, I said to myself, he looks like he was the type of kid to bite people.

Yeah. You know what I'm saying? Yes. He fucking just bit people. My chain is better than his. Yeah, it is. I'm just saying. But yeah, he had a couple of gun charges and stuff on him. He got pardoned. He posted this out saying, quote, I want to thank President Trump for granting me a pardon and giving me the opportunity to keep building as a man, as a father, and as an

artist. This moment means a lot. It opens the door to a future I've worked hard for and I'm fully prepared to step into this. Big thanks to the pardon czar, Miss Alice Marie Johnson for fighting for second chances for so many people. And to my lawyer, Brittany K. Barnett for being in my corner and all of your hard work to make this possible. And thank you to everyone who believed in me. I'm grateful. I'm focused. I'm ready. Can trail. Yeah, that nigga definitely bit some people.

But yeah, so... Quintrell, quit biting people. Dude, I'm telling you, bro, listen, everybody knows those kids, bro. He looks like... Mr. Johnson. But... Quintrell... Yeah. Bit. Right. Ryan. He's biting people for sure. But he freed a couple of other people. Other people... Another person he freed was Larry Hoover. That was... Uncle Larry. Big Meech. Yeah, right. Like, that's... Larry Hoover. Well, so...

Yeah. Larry Hoof is a big deal, bro. Like he's, that's a big, big deal. Um, I got a lot of boys in Chicago that are pretty happy about that. Um, gangsters, the cyber Rick Ross, probably happy. Yeah. He's probably pretty happy about it, but he committed his, uh, commuted his sentence. He was, uh, imprisoned in connection with the murder in 1973. And, uh, and then also had a Rico charge in 98. And, uh, so he's out too. So a lot of pardons, a lot of stuff happening. Any thoughts, theories, anything on that?

Free my nigga? I mean, you know. I mean, they can't stop that. They're stopping everything else he's doing. They can't stop a party. I mean, that's true. You know? But like, what about all the other people that are in jail for the same shit? That's what I was going to say. Yeah, I mean, it's definitely, it's marketing, it's branding, it's Trump trying to appear like he's, you know, being generous, but...

I mean, let's be real, man. Like, should people be going to prison for 40 years for financial fraud when violent crime can get two or three? That doesn't make sense. Or are the politicians doing, you know, financial crime? Yeah. They're walking free and immune. So, I mean, I don't know. Like, to me, it's... I don't know. To me, I feel like everybody should be held equally to the law. I don't feel like...

I think there's more of a problem in the way that people are sentenced and held for the level of crimes. Like, and I know this because I've been through this, but

A lot of times the sentencing on violent crime is actually very easy compared to financial crimes or drug crimes. Or they consider white collar crimes. Yeah. And they'll throw someone away for 40, 50 years for fraud, which, you know, I agree is not good. But what's worse, you know, stabbing someone in the face or killing someone or shooting someone or running them over with your car or, you know,

lying about some shit. You know what I'm saying? And I guess like, I mean, we could debate about that all along, but you know, I think physical harm is much worse than, uh,

drug crimes and these other things. That's just the way I see it. There's violent and nonviolent. I think it's also about the effect of what the crime is, right? Because if you stab someone, yeah, that's very bad towards that one person, but if you steal $40 million, how many people did you just bankrupt? Is that 100 people? 200 people? That's what I'm saying. It can be debatable. You know what I mean? Yeah. It's definitely an argument for sure, but...

Yeah, I don't know. I think the way personally that people are sentenced, I think it's kind of backwards. And I think that – I think violent crime for sure should be dealt with much more harshly to be a deterrent so that it doesn't happen. I mean, and then, you know, we can talk about the other crimes. But, I mean, dude, if I was sitting in prison right now for some of the – like for –

documenting or fraudulently, uh, you know, obtaining loans and this dude's getting out because he had a TV show. Fuck man. Like that's kind of hard to swallow. It was kind of hard. You know what I'm saying? So, and like, what about all the other, uh, people that are in jail for gun charges? And what about all the other that, you know, that are in jail for Rico? Like,

I mean, dude, I get it, but I don't get it, if that makes sense. Like, it's clearly, that's clearly a pandering marketing play for Trump's favor, in my opinion. I mean, is that how you're seeing it? Yeah. No, I kind of see it the same way. I feel like there's got to be some level of...

or layer of information that we have to be missing behind the reason he's partying like certain people. - So he hired the lady in the video, this is Alice Johnson, and he parted her. She is now his quote unquote pardon czar. So she's the one that's really actually going through and reviewing the cases, going through the stuff, and then she just presented like, this is who I think should be pardoned.

Yeah, but I mean is that based off celebrity status alone how many people got pardoned on this part that were not celebrities There was one guy the only one that in this round. Yeah, that was he was a Farmer army officer who flaunted safety measures during the kovat pandemic well that and they put him in prison for it Mm-hmm. That's insane. Yeah, I

Now they've actually come out and said that all of those rules were made up. Wow. He was a labor union leader. Yep. Yeah, that's bullshit. Yeah. So, I mean, you know, I don't know. I feel like there was somebody that, oh, Tiger King.

He's trying to get a pardon. He didn't pardon Tiger King? No, not yet. What's he in jail for? He fed that guy to the lions or something, didn't he? Allegedly. I don't know. Is there proof? I think it was all conspiracy shit. I think we need people. No, that was the charges was conspiracy. It was a conspiracy to commit murder. I think it was like, double check that. But didn't somebody get fed to the lions or something in that show? No, I think he claimed that Carole Baskin fed her husband to some lions or some shit. Well, did she? Like, fuck Carole Baskin. Well, did she? I don't know. Probably. Probably.

I mean, that seems like a pretty good way to get rid of somebody. That's what I'm saying. How do we know? You know what I'm saying? There's no real proof. I don't know. But he's been crying. I think his boyfriend or something got deported, though. Who? Oh, yeah. His boyfriend got deported. Oh, I forgot. Yeah, I forgot he was gay. Yeah. It was super gay. I did, yeah.

I just thought he was like a redneck, bro. I forgot about that part. That was super gay. Yeah. That was super gay. It's fine. It's fine. That was the whole thing, right? Like, weren't they like fighting over dudes and shit? And they were like...

The enemies? Wasn't that what it was? Yeah, so he got a federal jury convicted exotic on two counts of attempting to hire individuals to murder animal rights activist Carole Baskin. So he hired two dudes to try to kill her, and that's what they busted him for. Yeah. Murder for hire. That's crazy. Yeah, why would you hire? You got lions. Yeah, they're already there. Yeah.

and they're hungry yeah oh one of one of the individuals he went to was an undercover fbi agent oh so yeah they definitely got his oh you gotta be a dumb motherfucker to try to hire someone to kill someone i mean like you think they're not gonna say something or it's not gonna be a cop it is tiger king bro i mean yeah he's not i don't think he's up i think he's just in character dude i think it fits the show you know would you do content with him would you do a um

Yeah, it wasn't really on the list. Bro, if he gets released, I feel like that'd be a big deal. We did have a video where we wanted to survive in like a tiger cage. There you go. I mean, it could work. You know, we just can't really get around the legalities of it or figure out how to not die. Yeah, exactly. So, you know, we've reached out to zoos and they think we're psychotic. Yeah. We're like, hey, can we get in the line? They're like, what? Bro, if you ever do that, I'll do that with you. Yeah? For real. Yeah. I love animals.

yeah i mean they'll probably like purr and with you yeah you see all those crazy videos like in dubai where they're like in the cars and like they're wrestling them and stuff i got my ducks trained now yeah yeah i got well they don't do very many stuff but they they they at least come up to me and let me pet them now which took a long time like because they're not they're they're prey animals so if you like move too fast they freak out

So I've finally got them now to where they will come up without food and like let me scratch their chins and rub their beaks and stuff. You gotta get some like robo dogs too. Have you seen that robot dog with the flamethrower on the back? Yeah, dude. It terrifies me. Fuck, it terrifies me. Like think about this, man. Like you've seen the...

You've seen the Optimus bot from Tesla, right? Yeah. Yeah. Like, bro, we're like people think, oh, man, 20 years. We're going to have robot. No, dude. It's here now. Yes. We're like three years away from like robots walking around and like the shit we've seen in iRobot and Terminator probably, you know? Yeah. I think we're going to go Terminator. We're trying to order a like a what do you call it?

transformer robot right now from china for a video yeah like an actual transformer yeah like that yeah well you control it so it's kind of like iron man yeah um we're talking to a couple like manufacturers trying to order one what so you like get in it yeah shut the fuck up i'm being dead serious wait they're not even that much wait wait wait how much are they they're like well it depends i mean we're looking at a couple different models i think the one we were looking at was like around 100k hold on

Hold on, bro. I'm being dead serious. Hold on. I'm looking it up right now. So you get in it like an Iron Man suit. Well, I mean, it's a lot bigger than an Iron Man suit. It's huge. I mean, it's definitely like the height of the ceiling. So is it like, you've seen Alien, the movie Alien? Yeah, yeah. Is it like the loader robot? Kind of. Yes. Yeah, yeah. Kind of like that. Or like the ones in Avatar. Okay. Yes, bro. Hold on.

You're going to get one. We're trying to get one. All right. Get two. Okay. Because I want one. They make battle bots, too. They'll punch each other. Hold on, dude. They will knock each other out and you can get inside of them. This is the most exciting thing I've heard in a long time. One of my favorite movies ever is... What the fuck is the name of the movie? Yeah. Pacific Rim. Yeah. Good movie. Yeah.

Bro, so there's no way. I'm in, dude. I am in. The only place we can find them right now is in China. Well, I'm still in. I'll paint an American flag on it. I'll have to hit the tariffs when it comes over. I don't care. We'll figure that out. I don't care. I have to have one. I will live in that thing.

I'll run it to work. I'll walk around the office in it. Dude, it'd be fucking awesome. Yeah, we're trying to figure out what we can do if we could mount a flamethrower or a minigun to it. Oh, yeah. Has to happen. Yeah. Has to happen. Or like the Iron Man. I forget what Iron Man it was where the minigun pops over your shoulder. Yeah, bro. It's War Machine. Yeah. Right here. War Machine. Oh, yeah. There you go. There you go. That's crazy.

I'm in on that. I'll let you know. We'll spend the money. We'll test it out. We'll see what you want. No, no, no. I'll test it with you. Just order two. I can't wait. Like if you get it and then like I have to wait, I'm going to, it's going to suck. All right. I got, I am in. I got you. Say, Hey, can we get a two for one deal? You got it pulled up. Yeah. I don't remember what company we're talking to, but there's a bunch of. No, that's not what he's talking about, bro.

Not that? It's more of like a... It's like a suit. Yeah, it's like a suit you like sit in. Oh. I don't even know what to call it. I think they called it like a Cyclops something. Jesus. Cyclops robot, rideable robot. Bro. I don't know. That sounds awesome. Yeah. Dude, I...

I would kill to have a Pacific Rim. Yeah. Some of them get expensive though. Really? Talking to this one company, I think they go up to like three or five million, three to five million dollars for some of the suits. Yeah. How big, how big are they? They're huge. Like this one, this one that we're looking at was like two stories. Shut the fuck up. It was huge. Yeah. Where do you store it? I don't know. Like an airplane hangar? Yeah.

That would be the coolest thing ever. Yeah, but a lot of them are in prototype models, so they're not like... You got to send me the links, dude. I got to check this out. I got you. That's crazy. That's crazy, man. Well, yeah, guys, jump down in the comments. Let's know what you guys think. With that being said, let's go cruise some of these. Yeah. Shall we? Yeah. We got comments to cruise. The dude guy, he says, new grape energy, you say. You can almost taste the missed child support payments.

That sounds racist. That's racist. And statistically accurate. It's also hilarious. What? People have been ripping, man. Yeah. It's fine. You guys got to remember, not everybody has the same sense of humor that we have. That's what it is. That's all it is. Same, same. All right. Thanks, dude guy. Like, dude, that guy's out here saying this shit. People are wanting to kill him. No, no. It's just a drink. It's a drink. You should hear the show.

Yeah, thanks, dude guy. Sarah Waggle, it is now my dating requirement. If a dude is unwilling to do 75 hard, be gone. We need more men with testosterone. Yes, we do. Less grimaces. More men with testosterone. 100%. Apparently the internet...

Didn't like hearing that. No, not at all. Not at all. It's fine, though. It's the truth. It's the truth. Truth doesn't always taste good. Yeah. And we got one more here. This is a request of you, Andy. Yeah. From Firespitter52. Oh, and you should do a giveaway for that chain. I was actually thinking about doing that. I was actually legit thinking about that today. I'm like, you know what? I might do a giveaway for this chain, but I'm not sure what I want the giveaway to be yet. Yeah, we got to figure out some standards here. But...

I've been thinking about it. Dude, you can't get them. No. There's only a very few. Very limited. So like I can't get, it's going to, I'd have to give away my chain because only like it was a, it was a VIP type of thing. You know what I'm saying? Oh yeah. I saw it. I was on a desk. Yeah. A little bit, a little bit. I'm trying to get them to do a great one for me. Great chain. It looks heavy. It is heavy, dude. Here we go. What will you do for this chain? All right.

That's what we got to start talking about. Bro, hand this over there to him. Oh my God. Yeah. Dude, that's like some real deal Holyfield shit, man. Yeah, put that bitch on, bro. Yeah. Put that thing on. You can wear it. Yeah. Hold on. Let me figure out how to link this thing. Oh, I see it. I see it. Pop it open. See, Nathan wears it and I wore it. It's a fucking legendary chain, man.

Help him out, Syed. Geez, help him. Thing's heavy. Oh, he got it. Yeah. Yeah. He definitely has tears. Damn, dude. Your swag just went up 100 points, dude. You can grab now. Yeah, look at that. Look at that. Play some basketball. Credit score just went down. Oh, my. Yeah. Bro, that thing's real. It's heavy, isn't it?

I'm just, I'm just, I'm just blown away. Yeah. Yeah. It's so big. It's almost the same size as the can. Oh, it actually is the same size as the can. That's what she said. Oh, Nathan. Oh, man. You knew that was coming. Oh, fuck, man. I've never worn a chain in my life. Yeah. Well, you know what? This is my first one. It suits you, bro. I think it's a good look. Where's a good steakhouse around here? I'm trying to pull up. Yeah. Yeah.

Guys, we do appreciate you. What kind of giveaway should we do for the chain? Let us know in the comments. I think that's a good question. What are you guys willing to do for it? I'd be willing to give the chain away for the right thing. I don't know what it would be, though. Yeah, we got to figure it out. Kind of like, you know...

Feed someone to the lions. I don't know. Carol basket level stuff. Yeah. I don't know, man. We'll see, man. Guys, let us know. I'm open to ideas. Let us know. Yeah. Let's keep it cruise cruising. Headline number two. There's a new viral video out. The truth behind viral video of woman trying to board a plane with kangaroo. Have you guys seen this? No. I've heard of it. I haven't seen like, I didn't know there was a video. Okay. Yeah. There's a video. So let's, let's check this clip out.

That's AI.

It is AI. Is it actually? That is actually AI. It's made on that Veo 3 shit. It looked real for a second, but then when the kangaroo started walking, I was like... I agree. That's where I caught it. Yeah. But dude, that's pretty damn good. Yeah, no. AI is getting... That's scary. Dude, we got to talk about it because now... So that video was produced, like you said, is Veo AI, Google's new AI video tool. So that's how... We talked about this and I would love to get your take on this as a content creator, right? Like with...

i guess tech moving in this in this like field man how how do you how do you compete what what do you think is going to be the number one i guess differentiator between real content makers and all this ai where do you think it's going to be it's a loaded question it's it's it's hard man i haven't really thought of it too much to be honest because i know we we're still a ways away of

producing full-blown like TV shows, you know? But then it's like, because that, then it's not just me that is in trouble, I guess, if AI can produce a whole TV show, but it's Hollywood, it's movies, you know, Avatar spent- It's editors, it's fucking scripters. Avatar spent a billion dollars developing a movie and what if they could just make it all with AI? Right.

You know, it's a family guy, TV show, you know, all types of stuff. So it's concerning, but at the same time, you know, because AI is going to get so good where it's going to be able to put that human touch into the videos.

because right now it's like you can easily tell you know like that video we just watched like you can still kind of tell it's ai you gotta look pretty hard it's getting really good there's just one so one that google released this is this is one that i mean it blows the kangaroo out the water check this out please don't finish writing that prompt i don't want to be in your ai movie please leave me alone please man please write a prompt that will make us happy do it for once

Really?

Of all the years you could have put me in with a single prompt, you chose 2020? Please! This prompt is killing me! Change it! Please! Write something else! Save me! I love everything about him! But please just say, just write a prompt where he's taller than me!

Dude, that's crazy. So that's all AI. That's all AI. That's insane. That does not look like AI. That's all AI. Is that all that Google VL3 shit? Yeah, VL3, man. So VL3 generates clips that most users online can't seem to distinguish from those made by human filmmakers and actors. So they shared it online.

videos online. They're amazing viewers with their realism and also terrifying them with the sense that real and fake have become hopelessly blurred. So this new, this new prompt through the, the open AI's video generator, Sora, they've been releasing stuff since December, but Google deep minds, Veo three can include dialogue, soundtracks and sound effects.

um it's it's it's a whole new game man and so like from december to now you know six months that much has advanced through man i love how they put in the article it says including five fingers per hand yeah right well because that was a big thing yeah ai cannot do fingers yeah not that long ago people would have like 10 fingers on one right dude it's moved it's moved really really fucking quickly man

I mean, dude, what is your opinion? Because we talk about it on the show, bro. There has to be some type of safeguard to content creators through legislation that is protecting AI from not fucking just taking over everything, man. Because that's a massive industry. Is it true? I mean, trillion-dollar industry, I'm sure. How do you protect it? I mean, I think the way to protect it is it's kind of up to the platforms. Yeah.

To be honest with you, because if the platforms don't do anything, then people are just going to pump out AI stuff all over the place. And they're already doing it. They're already starting. So it's kind of up to the platforms. I know some platforms are putting disclaimers on it. Like, this is AI generated. It will actually be the platform that puts it there, not the creator. So I know they're kind of starting, but...

It's hard to say, man, to be honest with you. It's hard to say what it's going to do for the future. I mean, I think it's definitely going to change the way content, movies, TV shows are created for sure because it's like,

but then it's also going to get rid of more jobs. Because it's like we employ a lot of editors and graphic designers. And one thing that people aren't talking about too, but like not just AI video, but the AI tools that you can use, like how many jobs is that going to get rid of? Because like we have a lot of that. We have like eight full-time editors on our team just to edit videos.

Is there going to be a day where I can just upload all my footage to some AI bot and it just edits it in 45 minutes? It knows your content style. It knows how you like stuff. Yeah. So, you know, like I was, there was a software I was messing with the other day because I was curious about it. I forget what it's called, but it's a software where you literally can type in a prompt and it will build you a software.

So it built me an entire app and it was an app where it could like track these things and track my, my videos and all these different things. It built it in like eight minutes, fully functional. And it allowed me to connect a domain to it and I could launch it right then and there. That's crazy. That's something a software designer might take a month to build. It did in eight minutes. Yeah. Well, so dude, I've,

Yeah, I think there's a lot of people that aren't realizing how powerful this is and they're thinking that it's not going to happen. It's not going to happen to me. It's not going to take my job. It's going to happen to everyone. That's what I'm saying. Everyone, like, I mean, there is some things that AI can't do, right? Like if your toilet is leaking, I don't know. Yet. Yet. If you combine that with the robots, though, man, we might be in some deep shit. Yeah, at the speed of which it's happening,

It's, you know, like it's happening fast, man. And dude, it does. It's hard to tell what's going to happen, man, because of the job thing, you know, like what, what are people going to do? You know? And I think there's a, there's an ethical responsibility that business owners have to train their people to use these tools versus using the tools to get rid of their people. And, and,

Yeah. It's, it's, it bothers me. It does bother me a lot because I really am concerned about, I mean, fuck dude, it's going to, it's going to take almost every middle-class job there is. Yeah. You know what I'm saying? It's yeah. So it's just going to create more of a separation of the people in certain areas. Yeah. It's a, it's definitely, I spent a lot of time thinking about it and trying to pay attention to where it's going and it's, it's so early. It's,

It's really hard to tell. Yeah. I mean, I think first it's going to affect anything technology based. Yeah. So anything that touches technology like, you know, calendars, I know AI virtual assistants are getting huge. Any type of tech stuff, video production, I think it's going to be harder to touch the stuff like, you know, like,

a roofing company, right? Like how is AI going to build me a roof? How is AI going to build me a house? I know they have, they have a, they have a roof robot now that can run on. I mean, I don't think we're too far out from that. That's my point. We're not too far out. Like we can say, okay, well it's not happening now, but I mean, yeah, two years, three years goes by fast. So what's going to happen? You know? Yeah. Yeah. And, and people are going to,

Because I know you talk about this a lot, but the human connection, that human interaction is just so important. Yeah. And it's going to be so much more valuable. Like imagine, you know, I know Amazon is trying to do like these fully automated grocery stores where it's like you don't talk to anyone. You just like grab your stuff, walk out. You don't even have to like scan it. But I think that's going to make the other grocery stores like Trader Joe's and these other places more valuable. I agree with that too, to an extent. You know, I think...

the way that technology is going. And I think even young people, like someone brought to my attention one time, they're like, well, young people have been trained to buy on convenience. And they, and I'm like, yeah, but you know,

human contact is a need, it's not a want. And I totally agree with you. I think there's going to be certain things that are going to move all the way over there, and then there's gonna be things that we value that are not that way. For example, when I go out to dinner, I don't wanna deal with a fucking robot. I wanna have an actual human experience. And I think the companies that have mastered

a great customer experience are going to do much better utilizing the technology to handle the administration and the logistics and everything on the back end, but present themselves with a human user interface, so to speak. You know what I mean? I mean, think about like a concerts too. Yeah. Like you're going to want to go to a concert with an AI robot singing on stage. Yeah. Right. Like why just stay home and listen to it in your room.

There's nothing amazing about that. Yeah. You know? Yeah. So, yeah, AI can't touch everything, but it certainly, you know, you know, it's going to affect a lot for sure. And I think people's main defense against that is to become highly effective at using it in their position that they're in.

meaning you know using it like a weapon you know hey this makes me this much better at what i do yeah um instead of like just looking at it like oh man i can hack my emails i don't have to write emails and yeah those people are going to lose yeah you know yeah the only thing i've found ai useful for so far is just like you know throwing data like one thing i've done is like throwing data and spreadsheets like i will just send it you know

200 lines of data. And I'm like, can you organize this into a spreadsheet and put it in these date ranges? And like, you know, so like small things like that, like just the tedious things where it's like, I don't have to go like line by line and like touch all these. But other than that, I haven't found it very helpful. There's tons of like, there's tons of like companies making AI tools for like creators too. And like YouTubers. And like, there's this one I tried the other day and it was like,

a service that would rate your social media pictures and thumbnails. It would like rate it and it would tell you like what you could improve or whatever. So I was like, all right, let me give it one of my best performing videos. This video has like 30 million views. So I'm like, surely it's going to give me like a high rating and it's going to tell me like, oh yeah, this is great. It's got 30 million views, blah, blah, blah.

And I didn't tell it how many views it had, but it was like, it gave it like a two out of 10. This is dog shit. And it was like, it was terrible. Your facial expressions could be better. The color could be better. This could be better. And I'm like, this video has 30 million views. All organic views too. Accuracy is a big deal with, with AI that it lacks right now. Yeah. So accuracy, but that's going to be hard because it's, you know, AI is going to get good, but it's still not human. And as we go through life,

humans change, right? Like, I mean, think about how people acted in the 90s versus how they act today. So AI also has to evolve with that. So...

I don't know. Yeah, man. No, I think it's a very important, urgent, and interesting conversation all at the same time. Because everybody's scrambling, trying to figure out what to do or how to use it. And I get asked this all the time. And I just tell people, like, look, dude, you need to start learning it. You know what I mean? It's going to become part of your life no matter what. Yeah. And, you know, I...

Yeah. Fuck, man. I wish I knew. Yeah. You know, this is one of those things where there hasn't been enough presented for me to be able to draw a conclusion. It could go so... I mean, bro, it could unlock the golden age of humanity. Yeah. It could become Terminator. Yeah, right. Like, I don't know, you know? And even Elon doesn't know. Like, he talked about it. He said there's a 20% chance that it... I think he said 20%. Yeah, bro. That it fucking wipes out humanity. And it's like, bro...

That's a lie. Yes. That's a big risk, man. So out of five poison chocolate chips, you're willing to pick one out? You know what I'm saying? Right, right. I don't know, man. It's a big risk. Or one poison chocolate chip out of five, you know, like...

- I don't like those odds. - Yeah, it's scary, but it's also exciting 'cause it does kind of remind me, I was just getting born at this time, but when the internet came out, everyone was scared of the internet and they're like, "What's gonna happen to my business, my retail center, my this, my that?" And obviously the internet changed everything, but retail still exists. Retail is still very strong. You can't smell a candle online. - Yeah, that's correct. - You gotta go in person for some of these things.

But, you know, so that's kind of the way I'm viewing it right now. But I do agree. Like, if you don't take advantage of it, it's going to be shoved in, like, just like the internet is. Yeah, that's how I, like, I was like basically 20 when the internet started coming around. Damn. Yeah, I know. But, I mean, like, one of my biggest advantages in business is that I was in business before the internet.

After the internet and then as the evolution has happened, so I've seen a lot of things happen Yeah, and I'm still young enough to be in the game the internet man Like when it came around there were lots of people that were like no, you know fuck. It's a fad. It's this it's that it's this and bro those people are out of business and Then there was people who said this is the greatest thing ever and I didn't really understand what they were talking about Like I didn't get it, you know, but I didn't shit on it either and

And you know the people who got it right away They did very well and the people like me that were kind of like in the middle You know we didn't do as well had I adopted the internet right away back in you know Let's say 99 whenever we start. I mean bro. We could have built We we could have built a massive e-commerce platform not just for nutritional supplements, but for anything You know it's

Being at the right place at the right time. There's a lot of there's a lot of to be said for that You know when you think about like the richest men in the world now, you know Bezos not taking anything away from any of these guys But he was in the right place at the right time with the right idea and that matters and

Same thing for Elon with everything he's done. Okay. Same thing for Peter, Peter Thiel. Same thing for fucking, uh, you know, Zuckerberg, right. Uh, or Jack Dorsey or, you know, these guys from Google, these people were able to see above the horizon, uh,

With what they were doing faster than other people and get something out in that time that caught. Yeah. And dude, the only way to really become that level of wealthy is to have those things align. It's just, I mean, unless you're Warren Buffett, you're going to take your whole life. Yeah. But yeah,

So I think there's a lot of opportunity here for sure, no doubt, if people are paying attention. Same thing with social media. When social media came about, you know, there were certain people that got it. You look at Jake and Logan Paul. They were some of the first guys that really hit YouTube hard and hit social media hard. Now, you know, they're very, very, very successful with their own CPG companies and their personal brands, and they've done all this crazy shit. You know, they executed at the right time. And I do agree with you that,

This thing that's happening with AI there like it's there we can sit here and talk about principle all we want we can say we don't agree with it I don't like it

But that doesn't change the fact that it's it's fucking not coming. It's here now Yeah, and you know, I get I you know people I saw some people because like I was so anti-ai For so long. They're like, oh andy's flip-flopping on no, that's not flip-flopping That's recognizing that no matter what I say or do i'm not going to stop it and you would be ignorant to

Think that just because you don't like something that that's that's an arrogant egotistical point of view Just because I don't like something doesn't mean it's not happening and your job is to figure out how to Not lose with the and I'm not saying you have to go pour yourself and make it your whole life. I

But I am saying you should be comfortable with it and you should understand how to utilize it in relation to whatever it is that you currently do. How can it help you be better? Because the truth of the matter is, is that employees that, let's say you work for a company and you're an employee, you're going to have to

Because it's going to be so easy to replace employees with AI. You're going to have to become exceptionally valuable in order to maintain your spot. And the one way that you can insulate yourself to become exceptionally powerful is to be someone who knows how to use the tools properly to produce the result at a better level, higher level than what you are currently doing. And

you know, I'm pretty good with seeing strategy and seeing over the line, but that's the only thing I can see right now for people. Like it really doesn't matter if you're a plumber or you're a this or you're a that or whatever, you need to be comfortable with what it can do and not resist it and say, Oh, you know, I'm just because dude, it's here. Like that's, it's not coming. It's here.

They're building humanoid robots that run on AI. And once you dig into AI, like the first time you open up chat GPT and you start asking it shit, you're going to get it in fucking 10 seconds. You're going to be like, holy fuck. Because a lot of people think, oh, it's just like Google. But no, it isn't. It's...

It's highly impressive. A lot of people just use it for dumb shit too. It's like, hey, make me a picture of my dog. They're not really using it for that. That is fun, but we should be using it to make ourselves better at what we do. And I think it's something that if people don't get serious about and they think they're going to ride on their performance without it,

Bro, it would be like going into battle with a minigun versus going into battle with a fucking slingshot. That's what it's like. So if you maintain and you keep saying, I'm the best slingshotter there is, it really doesn't matter. Yeah. You know? That's real, man. Guys, jump down in this conversation. Let us know what you guys think down in the comments. That's insane, bro. What are you guys in?

Run a cargo van? He said a minivan! Let me see it. Holy shit, that's badass. Oh, bro. Yeah, I would do that in a second. I think that's awesome. Crazy. Is that no filter? That's what it looked like? Orange like that? No, my phone's just kind of tinted. I took like the blue light out of it. Dude, I would 100% do that. Yeah. I'm into that, bro. I'm into that. Dude, it was wild. It took so long to get a tornado like that. Are you guys going to keep doing it?

We were going to do it this year. This is actually the time that we chase like right now, this, this week, the last week of May. That's like the most active. We've had a bunch up here, bro. It's the most active time of the season usually is the last week of May. Um, which our problem is, is like, there's no way we can level up what we got last year. Yeah. It's like we were chasing with guys once in a lifetime. Yeah. We were chasing with guys that have been chasing tornadoes for like 15 ish years. And they're like, this isn't our top three. That's crazy. I was like,

I mean, it was just a beautiful, beautiful cone. Like a lot of times you'll see a tornado, but it will be wrapped in rain. You can't even really see it. Yeah. It's just like a big straight up. Yeah. Yeah. So,

There's so many like conditions a lot of times like we chased another tornado and we were about to see it It was about to drop down you could see the funnel coming down But then the road ended and it was just into it was hundreds of miles of just forests in the middle of I think it was in the middle of like Colorado somewhere so we were like oh well there goes you know, so there's just so many like conditions dude I've got so many close calls with tornadoes like back when I was living over in Sunset Hills, I

there was one that went right up behind my house, destroyed a bunch of shit on limber. You remember that? It was like Christmas. Yeah, it was like Christmas time. Yeah. And then this last one that ended up hitting the city. And I mean, dude, it fucking smoked the city. I mean, it went right here, bro. Like right here next to our building. We got a picture of it. It's like right behind the building. It's...

Yeah. Well, I was up at... Yeah. So when that happened, dude, I was up on Manchester in West County and like I didn't... All the alarms came off and I didn't realize like where it was. And then as we got closer to my house, I started seeing shit on the road and I'm like, fuck. And then, dude, like it went right up the road behind our house. It tore down like, I mean, a ton of houses, dude. It wasn't like...

Yes. Yeah. Yeah, it was weird. Yeah. I do remember that. Well, anyway. So we got to give thumbs up? Yep. All right. Well, guys, that was two. On to our final segment, guys, as always. We're skipping ahead? Yep. All right. Damn. Doing what we want today, huh? I mean, yeah. Yeah. Or did you only get two? Oh, no. I got three. Oh. But just time. Yeah. All right. It happens.

Let's get to our final segment of the show, guys. We got thumbs up or dumb as fuck. That's where we bring a headline in. We talk about it. It'll get one of those two options. And got to go to Florida. There's always some good stuff going down in Florida. A cat tried to escape a transgender surgery. What? Yep. Is that AI? No, it was real. Cat escapes Florida vet takes nearly three mile journey home.

So a cat still with anesthesia in his system following surgery, escaped from a vet in Florida and made the nearly three mile trek home to his favorite chair. Bob B Sock said his cat George was at the SPCA Florida in Lakeland to get neutered. And right after the surgery, the feline managed to break out of the cage, climb a fence and flee into the wilderness, all while still still feeling the effects of anesthesia. Let's check this clip out.

If Disney ever makes another sequel to Homeward Bound, we've got a nominee for the role of Sassy the cat. George lives with a family in Lakeland, and after a recent trip to the vet for a little surgery, he decided to check himself out of the animal hospital early. As FOX 13's Evan Moon tells us, George was homeward bound, even though home was three miles away.

But where's George? This courageous cat has a tale to tell. He was able to pop that cage open and he sprung out of there and he was gone in seconds. George the cat went to SPCA Florida to get neutered, but turned into a feline fugitive on an impossible mission.

escaping from staff and into the record books of backyard legends. George was able to bust out of the trap and he literally scaled some dog fencing and went into the woods and

And our staff were literally hoisting each other up over the fences to try to chase George to capture him. The SPCA employees ran off into the woods to find him, and they're not going to chase down a cat. That's not going to happen. And George, even for a cat, wasn't thinking clearly. So he still had silly drugs in his system. But miraculously, days later...

George made it miles back home to his parents. His owner describes his journey. If I had got stuck at the SPCA, I would have called an Uber. But George didn't have that option. But coming back from there, he has to go through two or three subdivisions.

He has to go around the lake, another lake that's between us and the SPCA, and probably five or six roads. A cat behavioralist explained their incredible internal navigation. So evolutionarily, they evolved to be able to naturally find that way back. And we think that it's due to a combination of... Hold on, wait, hold on. How is that even a fucking career path? He's a certified cat behavioral specialist. How do you get into that?

Bro.

I got a lot of things to say. Let's finish the video. So evolutionarily, they've evolved to be able to naturally find that way back. And we think that it's due to a combination of send or visual markers and possibly geomegantism. And the truth is they love their humans. Contrary to popular belief, cats are very attached to us. So they will want to find their way back home eventually. And it's certain George's human loves him too. So I was distraught. I mean, I was

And heartbroken. He needed a human touch, you know, and that's what he got. Evan Moon, Fox 13 News. Wow. Now there's a great backstory here too. Evan and her facade. All right. Go ahead. I don't, um, you know. I think you know is the problem. He just wanted to keep his balls. I think you do know. The chicken just stops and you know. I'd do the same thing if I was a cat. I want to keep my nuts. Yeah, bro. And not only that, like...

This seems made up. Does it say hi? Yeah, that's what I'm saying, bro. This is real. Like, why are these people so chipper? And where did they get their jokes from, DJ? No, not from... Maybe they do watch the show. Because I'm just saying, there was a plethora. If I was a cat, I would have called an Uber. Terrible jokes, yes. What was that? We gave them some silly drugs. I want to know why everybody, like, if...

I want to know, and I know I'm not the only person thinking this, why everybody in that video looked exactly how I felt they should have looked. Dude, no shit. That's what I'm saying. It's got to be made up, bro. No, it's real. How do you know? I mean, it's on the internet. Okay, well, that doesn't qualify as real. First of all, I agree with you, though. The lady looked exactly like the vet lady that's a little bit off. This is not going to my vet. I love my vet. They are good people, but she looks...

like she sounds and he was still on the silly he was still feeling the silly drugs he he little george the troublemaker you know what i'm saying then this guy boner oh god looks just like a cat guy owner

And this guy looks like a cat consultant. Yeah. Certified. Certified. Dude, this has to be made up. This is bullshit. You're the YouTube expert, bro. Is this just content? Is this a good content creation? I mean, sometimes the news needs content. Yeah. Sometimes they're a little dry. Yeah. They got to cover something. Fuck, man. Yeah, man. I don't know what to say. I don't believe that.

I mean, is that really true about the cats? It's real. No, I mean, how the fuck would you find... How does a cat go into a car, go to somewhere far away, and then get out and then know it's way back? They got geomagnetism. Is that what they said? Is that what he said? Is that what the cat expert said? What did he say? Go back to what he said. I was laughing at him. I couldn't fucking listen to what he said.

But that is kind of true, though, because I had a cat growing up. Oh, you're a cat guy? Well, he would go, like, across my entire neighborhood. And maybe he knew his way back because of the way he came. But he would disappear for five, six hours and then just show back up. And, you know, I don't know. They got good sense. I mean, there's been more crazy shit than, I mean, you know, I've heard, dude, I heard a story a long time ago about, like, a cat and a dog, a couple dogs. Mm-hmm.

And they went like way far away and then they found their way home. Where are you going with this? I'm just saying, I saw a movie about that one time. They were Homeward Bound. Isn't that a movie? Yeah. It's a true story. Based on a true story. You ever seen it? Nope. The girls will like it. Homeward Bound? Yeah, it's about, there's a dog in there. His name is Chance. Yeah. I know DJ didn't get the reference. No, I didn't. Yeah. That's why I got into American Bulldogs because of that movie.

Okay. Yeah. That was the best you got. That was the funniest shit you could find. That's what Medat sent it. So it went didn't go very well. So Medat did it. No, he did. I saw the fucking text messages. Yeah. Keith sent it. He definitely said that. Keith's the cat guy. Yes. Yeah. I mean, but listen, I would be afraid to get my balls cut off too. So didn't you say that you would eat Keith's cat one time? No. Yeah. You said that he got upset. Did I say that? Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.

I mean, I would. I think you said you would come on it. Okay. All right. I think that's what you said. Yeah, you said some nasty shit like that. He got upset, bro. That guy definitely running away from that. Yeah. Okay. Eating piece, maybe. What did he say? He said something about Keith's cat. He really got upset about it.

I think it was the eating piece because you throw some orange chicken glaze on there. Like stir-fried kitty? Yeah. Meow, meow. Yeah. Meow. Yeah. That'd be fine, man. All right. What are we giving this, man? You know what? Good on George. Yeah. I feel like this is bullshit. It's real, Andy. It's right there. Look at George. Mildest George. No, there's something off about this, man. It's just a cringy news article. It's very cringy.

Dude, why is the sense of humor on those like street reporters always the same? Have you ever been to a news station? No. Okay. Well, it's just... It's very corporate-y, I imagine. Yeah, yeah. Super corporate-y. I mean, everyone's just so just uptight, but also very left and just... I don't like every corner you look. Yeah, but bro, the funny thing is you see those motherfuckers out at the bar and they're shit-faced and they're just like everybody else, man.

Why you guys tell your shitty jokes on TV? Tell the good ones. You'll be the most popular newscast out there. I don't like how they talk. It's the anchor voice. I don't like it. What's the anchor voice? This? Oh, the anchor voice. Yeah, the anchor voice. I don't like it. Oh, I thought you said the anger voice. Oh, no, no, the anchor. You're a little sensitive over there. No, no, no. I don't like the voice. They all talk like that. Do it. Do it. I can't do it. I'm not going to do it. Do it. I can't do it. You do it and I'll do it. You go first. No, I fucking made up the game.

I don't want to play this game, Andy. I can't fucking, like, no. It's just. You'll lose your black card. That's why. That's what it is. There's a line, and that is it right there. Bro, bro. That's the greatest. That's one of the greatest videos. That black dude on the reporter that the bugs start getting him, and then he goes from news guy. A man was murdered in Augusta. That's how fuck was that? Get the fuck out of here. This fucking country ass shit. Yeah, that was good. That was good. Bro, that's a great video. You see that one?

No, I haven't seen it. Oh, damn. I'll find it real quick. Hold on. Because that's a classic. News anchor. Bro, what's... Have you... I mean, do you remember the old YouTube legendary videos? Oh, yeah. My new haircut? Yeah, yeah. Yeah, bro. Or like Unforgivable? Yeah. Dude. What really happened on that Thursday here at Augusta High School that led to Chris Wood's death? The fuck is that? Shit!

I'm dying this fucking country ass fucked up town Shit flying in my mouth the fuck I can't see pilot and let's get the fuck out this country motherfucker. I can't see where Okay, bro That's what i'm talking about. Why don't they just be that?

Just be yourselves, man. It's going to rain. Man, it's going to rain like a motherfucker today. News would go so much more viral. You don't know Unforgivable, do you? You ever seen my new haircut? You ever seen it? We could put it on there. Your new haircut? My new haircut. This is the shit we grew up on. You know that video? Did you see that thing about that Vitality dude going to prison? Yeah.

Like, I think he's going to go. Yeah. That stuff is wild. Yeah. He was in a, what was he at? He went in Thailand or something like that? Yeah. Yeah. Prank guy. Yeah. Fucking with the cops and shit. Yeah. He was like doing some pranks on some cops. Dude, that's a crazy conversation. Because I feel like there's also been a lot of YouTubers that had a big rise and a fucking terrible fall, bro. Yeah. Because I used to watch Vitality, bro. I used to watch his shit. And then he started doing some stuff with the pedophile hunters and stuff. And I'm like, all right, that's cool.

you know but then he like fell off again but foozy was another guy like that yeah who's he too yeah a lot of them went crazy dude what what is that it's just uh i feel like being a youtuber is kind of like being a professional athlete or being a music artist sometimes people just go off their rocker when they get famous you know who knows what gets to them i think there's also an element too right of like having to do new thing over you know what i'm saying yeah

Like how far like like like mr. Beast right biggest fucking entertainer in the world I mean, what's he gonna do like kill himself next? You don't say yeah, bury himself for a fucking year like Like the shits so crazy now. It's just like and they're like what's next and that's this whole recipe But fuck you talk about dude with some mental fortitude, bro. Yeah, yeah Have you ever ma'am?

What's up? Have you ever met Mr. Beast? I have, yeah. Is he cool in person? Yeah, he's cool. Bro, he's super fun. I've not met him, but I know people that know him. He's fucking really smart. Yeah, very, very smart. He's very like... I don't want to say... I guess out of touch with reality isn't the right word, but he's just so...

into what he does that like if you told him something else like if you told him like oh stakes exist he'd be like what you know like i'm not saying that in like a weird way but he's just like so he's very in his thing yeah into his craft exactly yeah yeah i mean that's not bad no it's not it's not a bad thing but it takes that level of dedication to get yeah where he is you know yeah that's real yeah fuck dude he's he's uh yeah he's doing it

You say whatever you want. Anybody can say whatever they want. Like, he's doing it. No, he's killing it. Yeah. Well, sweet, man. Well, guys, Andy, Nathan, that's all I got. You're not going to watch my new haircut today? Oh, shit. We can watch it another day. It's all right. Wait, is it a movie? Don't worry. Okay. We'll do it next time. All right, brother. Nathan.

Where can everybody find you that doesn't know who you are yet? Yeah. So, I mean, I feel like for the people on this show, probably the best place is Instagram at unspeakable. Yeah. That's pretty much it. Yeah. And then all my other stuff is just unspeakable as well. We also have our blueprint stuff, which is, you know, you can find that through my Instagram as well. But if you're trying to grow your YouTube and learn about how YouTube works, he's given out unbelievable amounts of free game. Yeah.

uh dude let me tell you before we get off i just really think it's again i think it's fucking awesome to have you here uh congratulations everything you did so far but i know you you're just getting started so it's just the beginning yeah i know day one yeah exactly and uh you know anything that i or the guys can do to to help bro um you know just say the word dude it's it's really cool to see you doing it brother yeah for sure i appreciate it yeah what an opportunity thank you guys you're welcome

Thanks for teaching me a little bit about YouTube. Yeah, I got you. That's just the surface level stuff too. Yeah, yeah. All right, guys. Well, that's the show. Don't be a hoe. Show the show.