[Music] What? Not show. >> So, we're gonna be open show, but let's do it through the tools. >> All right. You're good to kick it. Go here. >> Yeah. Watch. >> Yeah. Yeah. No. And then you just >> connecting websocket. Yep. >> We're going to need that for >> this one. >> Yes. >> Oh, yeah. >> Yep. Perfect. Okay. Ready to start? You guys ready to start? >> Sure. All right, click start show when you're ready. And >> thank you. [Music] So that's live. Where is um >> social? >> Let's uh give me one second to >> No worries. Try to get this. >> No worries. I get it. >> Um good morning everybody on whatnot. Welcome to Te with Gary V. >> Um working on what's the >> gary.com. Where did that tap just go? That was >> Be with you in a second, everyone. Just got some new setup stuff. Working on a bunch of stuff. Good morning, uh, Tik Tok. Great to see you right here. >> There we go. Social chats are up here. >> Perfect. Let me just pull up Let's pull up and Tik Tok real fast. >> I got Tik Tok right here. It's not It's not connecting. >> Um >> Tik Tok's the one that gonna be Yeah. But all the other socials, you have Instagram LinkedIn Twitch X. >> Pablo, you ready? >> Yeah. >> Oh, Aaron. Hey, how are you? Good morning, everybody. Welcome to episode 85 of the ask uh of team with Gary V. Excuse me. Jesus going back. Um on the Hey team on the chat right there. The new comments is that gonna happen over and over. >> You have a mouse. >> I have it here. >> Amazing for that. Thank you. Got it. Awesome. Um good morning Michelle on LinkedIn. Society and Solitude on YouTube. Ted on LinkedIn. Tik Tok. I see you all over here. Instagram is not Instagram is there. >> Instagram >> is there. I see it. But I'm not seeing comments coming in. So that >> let's get him comments up. Let's pull up Instagram, >> right? Because it's not it won't show through Scandard. >> Yeah. >> Is is that what happens? >> Yes. >> Understood. No worries. All right. Good morning everybody on WhatsApp. Excuse me. On whatnot, excuse me. Uh great to see all of you. Who's here for the first time on whatnot of the 200 of you that are here? Te with Gary Vee is here. Aaron. Uh, the way Aaron will get questions is if you ask me a question on whatnot. So, if you have a question on whatnot, ask your question, use the question mark at the end of it, that will turn your comment yellow instead of white as you can see over there. Uh, everybody else, great to see all of you. Um, hope you're having a tremendous summer as we wrap up to summer life, which is, uh, interesting in its own right. Um, Jen, thank you so much for being here for the first time. Uh, thank you so much, Eno, for taking the photos at MLP. It was a tough weekend for us at the New Jersey Fives. We lost in a championship. That is now two years in a row. Two years of championships. Two years we've made the finals. Two years we've won game one of a three-game series. And two years in a row we've lost game two and three. It was a real heartbreaker. I did that whole thing where like you just sit there and watch the other team celebrate. I like looked around. I was like, "Where is everyone?" I was like by myself. I had to take in the pain to make sure uh we fix it for next year. So, Big Dave, thank you so much for you and your fam coming and supporting. It was a lot of fun. All right, we're going to get into questions. Uh Erin's going to be looking for questions she's going to ask me and then some of you are going to be able to actually go and be on the show. So, if you have a question, you might get a DM. Is this correct? We might have a DM. >> We're DM. >> We're gonna DM you and you may be uh you may be able to pop up and ask your question on video, but all questions for everybody who's on all other socials. Muhammad on LinkedIn, Josh on Facebook, uh Steve that I just saw comment on LinkedIn. All of you, if you want to uh be on the show, go to guarantee.comwhatnot and download whatnot. Uh, I guess without the bar over my face, we should cm those social channels for the URL. Brady, you got that? Are you cming? It looks like so daryb.com whatnot. Um, am I super red on >> It's just these monitors. >> Got it. So, >> cool. Awesome. Aaron, I'm ready to go. >> All right. Tia asks, "I'm 36 and I'm starting over by going back to school, but in the past I've struggled to complete what I start and I tend to lose interest easily. Do you have any advice for people like me?" >> Um, this is an interesting question. Like to be to be honest, there's only two answers to this. One is really good, one's what I actually think both could be good. So, actually, one's very bad. Um, I'll start with that one. Uh, what's her name again? >> Ta. >> Ta. You just might not deal well with adversity. You might not have resilience. You might not have consistency. You might not enjoy the process of getting comfortable with being uncomfortable. And so that might be the issue. Uh audio is very bad. How about now? How about now? How about now? How about now? Yeah, everyone's complaining about audio. 1275. 1275. >> No, that's not it. See, 1275. >> Okay, audio looks like it's better now. Got it. Awesome. You guys good? Awesome. Great. Uh, what's your name again? >> Tia. >> Tia, let me repeat this. You might have no resilience. You might not be comfortable with being uncomfortable. You may struggle with consistency. You may overvalue other people's opinions. Um, you may have those issues. Um, on the other hand, what you might have is very good self-awareness and you just know that you thought something was good for you and then you changed your mind, which I actually think is a tremendous strength. Uh, you're going to have to ask um that question. By the way, everyone says I'm fully red. >> So, it's not just our Yeah, everybody. Am I red and super tan and weird looking? >> Um, I think yes. So, I'm super red. >> And I That's fine. >> Um, and I don't like like the Patriots or, you know, the Miami Heat or, you know, if if I was green, I'd be fine. >> Even blue, even blue and orange would have been fine, but please get rid of my red because I want no endorsement of those teams I hate so much. Um, >> so, you know, that's the answer. either either you're soft and insecure or you're self-aware and confident. I don't know. Um but I don't beat myself up when I don't finish tasks. Um when they're creative and on office. I do beat myself up when I'm not doing things that are important, right? If I'm not spending enough time with my family, if I'm not going to the gym or eating well. These are very black and white things. You know, I don't view school as a black and white thing. There are too many people that are successful and happy that have not finished school. Um, but that's that. Let's ask another question. >> Okay, this question is from John. How do you love someone deeply without letting their negativity consume you? >> By limiting their the time you have with them. Loving someone does not require you hanging out with them 247. Right? Like I've been pretty consistent on this point of view which is we must learn how to limit very seriously limit negativity what it is in your life even if it's your mom or spouse or best friend. Um and we must cut out negativity complete cut out if it's someone who literally has you know is an acquaintance a co-orker. Um and honestly friends is the toughest one. Um, there we go. That looks like a nice little shift. Everybody, am I back to natural color? Looks like it. Um, and so, you know, I think people confuse loving with enabling. I think this is super important. I think one of the biggest issues people have, and by the way, I've I'm a culprit of this. Um, I think we enable bad behavior. And I think um I think that that's something we have to be uh very very real, you know, about. Um, it's just real life. I think that we confuse loving with, you know, we also put words like loyalty on a pedestal. Again, being loyal to your toxic mom doesn't mean to sit and enable her toxic behavior. In fact, if you love someone, the actual requirement is to have cander with them and try to help them. you know, there, you know, bad behav narcissistic negative behavior. Uh, people are saying, "Is audio low again?" I'm seeing a lot of comments on that. >> Is it like sliding down? >> Are we good? >> Audio is low to a lot of people. >> Now, people are saying it's audio audio is low for a lot of people. If audio is low for you, you may want to close out and come back in. Could be an issue. I'm seeing enough good Um, audio is good enough. Good. Now, I think for people that are bad, you might have gotten caught and maybe just close in and come back in. Anyway, um, again, I think that's the answer to the question. I think again, we put things like loyalty and love and we disguise what we're actually doing, which is enabling. And uh, we have to address that. And in life, like life, I always say life is fair and people get sometimes struggle with that. But of course, if lightning strikes you and you're dead, you know, one could be like, "Wow, that didn't seem fair." And I understand that, but I think a lot of people train. Um, I'm fine with background noise. Um, prefer it. Um, I also think that what we don't understand is a lot of times we are manipulating and enabling the behavior that we get and we blame others without being accountable to our own actions. There are plenty of people who are in narcissistic marriages who need to be honest with themselves to realize they are the enabler of the narcissistic behavior. And if they don't like it, they can force the cander. They can force the therapy or they can force the divorcing papers. They can do that [ __ ] And and that is awfully hard and the hardest and the worst and all that. But again in life you e you either act or you complain and blame and I just think living a life that is grounded in blaming and complaining is a very unhappy life. That's it. Let's keep it going. >> Yeah. This question is from Maria. What strategy would you recommend for posting on social while keeping a somewhat low profile on my personal social media accounts while still employed in a corporate role. >> That's what I do. I don't They talked about sharing personal. One more time. Let me hear it again. >> What strategy would you recommend for posting on social while keeping a somewhat low profile on my personal social media accounts while still employed in a corporate role? >> Yeah. To do exactly what I'm doing. I don't know. Like if you're here and you know who I am, then just address it the way I address it. I I literally I literally do not post content that can be controversial or negative. I literally post nothing about my personal life. The end. Again, this is a game of you being in control. The end. You can like literally post anything you want. People post things that really expose that they're actually addicted to the insecurities of the algorithm. People post their children. People post their personal relationships because they get more likes and they compromise what's in their soul and they do it for something that is so not real that it's a mistake for most people and ultimately rears its head. And uh that's that you know like you know again the theme of today's morning so far is you're you're in control. And until you realize that, you uh you lose. All right, let's keep it going. I want to keep going like this. >> All right, Luke asks, "I work in finance, which I love, but I love singing and playing music. I'm 25. I'm nervous to even try it because I'm not sure I'm good enough. Pretty much no one makes it. No one listens to myself. Please help. I love your advice." >> This is a very simple question. Either you decide to live with regret or you don't. Right. Also, when you're 25, you have the capacity to do both. Like, when you have that 25 year old energy, you have 12 to 18 hours a day to get to both. You can work. You don't have to quit your job, you know? You don't have to quit your job. Um, you just have to balance both. Real quick, H-Town Astro says, "Everyone's saying audio is good, but it's silent in my office and audio is much lower than normal." Htown's always here. Htown, can you do me a favor? Can you escape out and then come back in? Close out and come back in. Um, audio drop when the color was fixed for a lot of people. But Htown, do that and come back in. Let me know. Closing out doesn't work. Auction spot says as well. All right. Um, I exit and came back. Can hear you, but the volume all the way up. Uh, real quick, a poll right now. Whose audio is good and whose audio is not? We apologize for inconveniences this morning. We're doing a lot of changes on this side. [Music] All right, looks like it's good enough. All right, let's go to Raina on video. I'm sorry. >> One second, Raina. I'll be right with you. I don't see you on screen. Raina, I apologize. very bad at reading. >> Is she on? >> She's not on. One second right now. >> Do you hear her? >> I hear her, but I don't see her on She's not on screen, is she? >> Not yet. >> I'm okay. I'm I'm fully focused on logistics today. >> Thank you. >> Have people seen this cover rips? [Music] This one. >> Not neither. >> All right. How are one more time with your name, darling? >> Raina, how are you? >> Good. What's your question? [Music] Well, you need to do both, right? So, I would market both, right? At the end of the day, when you're marketing, you're marketing with purpose. You would like something to happen. It sounds like you need both, right? So, for my dad's liquor store, he needs to sell wine and liquor and beer and food, and we market all of those things. He he also needs local employees, so we may market locally to get employees. I think that people are obsessed with the word or in our society. And the answer is always in the word and. Right? So I I think for you the answer is and. Now the reason I have an acronym called pack at Vayner X platforms, algorithms, culture is they rear their heads in your world. If you're recruiting for people, LinkedIn might act differently as a P as a platform for you for what you're trying to do versus the way Tik Tok would work or Twitter versus YouTube. There's different audiences on different platforms for different reasons. Most people are on many platforms, but that's that, you know. Yes. Stick with me. Do you understand what I do? Do do you understand what I just did there? It again you're ask this is so how everyone thinks you know what to post. Do you think do you think you should put sales tips? [ __ ] yes. You should do sales tips. You're in like like what like most people aren't asking me what they should do. Most people are asking me how do I get lots of views for the posts that I do. Right? you know you should be doing it. My question to you is are you doing the things that you know I talk about? Are you posting 8, 10, 12 times a day or not? The answer is 99% of people are not before I let you go. Did you understand? It's it's just that. Do you understand? It's like consistency. It's volume. The algorithms are the great opportunity of people and businesses in the history of communication. They are free. Newspaper ads were not free. PR companies to get you written about in articles were not free. Billboards were not free. Radio ads were not free. Television ads ads were definitely not [ __ ] free. Direct mail was not free. This is why I was obsessed with email. Email in the 90s and today is freeish. You obviously have to get people on it. They're [ __ ] free. Like, and now we have phones. It's not like it was in the 90s where you had to like hire a film production company and they came to your liquor store and you made a video and they gave you a [ __ ] VHS and you had to figure out how the [ __ ] to do with what and how. Every [ __ ] human starting at the age of six can take their [ __ ] iPad or phone, produce a [ __ ] video, and post it on the biggest platforms that have attention in society for free, >> right? >> People People are excited about sales, Ra. People are excited about sales. You can't convince people that are not excited about sales to be excited about sales. You need to just find the oh I don't know hundreds of millions of people that are excited about sales people. This is the problem with everyone. You're not going to convince Ry. Let me promise you something. You do not want someone on your sales team that you have to convince to get excited about sales. Sales is a [ __ ] DNA game. You are either a [ __ ] salesman or you are not. You're not convincing someone to be a [ __ ] salesman. Right. Braden on my team. Great hair, tremendous rebounder, like [ __ ] workhorse, like country boy, strong and morals, like would trust him with my children, right? Like believe in him the most. Can't wait to see him dominate life for 60 years. >> But that [ __ ] is not going on the sales team. Got it. What what a lot of people like you make the mistake of is you're trying to hit you're a saleswoman and what you're misunderstanding as a saleswoman is the most important part of sales in sales. And this is not a common thing that is said which is why it's misunderstood which is why I'm beating this drum to the ground. In sales, you cannot convince people. They are not good customers. If I convinced someone here who smokes weed that wine drinking is better and they're going to like it, I'm telling you, nine out of 10en of them will not be great customers. Even I'm great at sales. I can get all 10 to try, but I'm telling you, nine out of 10 of those people are not going to be great customers. They're going to do it because I sold them. You'll get salespeople because you sold them on sales. a lot of times and you know this those people are [ __ ] losers like like they're looking for and and of course people are not losers I'm trying to say they're a losing sales player they're searching for the next oh rain looked dynamic and you know this sales people that are trying to sell and convince people to be in sales also suck at selling they're showing watches and [ __ ] trips and you hey you non-salesperson if you become a salesperson like me you can have a [ __ ] Bugatti, too. Are do you understand how how bad the people that are going to be excited about that are going to come to you? Because I'm a great [ __ ] salesperson and I'm not falling for that dumb [ __ ] Get that word convince out of your [ __ ] vocabulary. Find people that are already [ __ ] salespeople. Got it. Cool. See you. You're beyond welcome. Aaron, what are you doing here? S >> restart. >> Parker asks, >> [ __ ] it up my shelves. >> Parker asks, "What's more important, experience or money? I'm a 24year-old who asks myself this question quite often. I make great money for my age, but I don't know where to go from here." >> Both are good for different situations. Experience is always good. Money is often bad. Money exposes your truth. The amount of people that have made money and lost money, like made lots, lost lots, is a lot because they weren't prepared to know what to do with it. Experience means you know what to do. No matter what it is, hanging a [ __ ] picture on the wall, if you have experience in it, you will be better. Experience is dramatically more universal and more consistent than money. Money is a catalyst. The problem is it could be a catalyst for bad. If you are broken inside and you end up inheriting a million dollars from your grandma and you're like, "Yeah, my life is good now." You cannot comprehend how bad the next 24 months are going to look. It is the story as old as time. People consistently misunderstand how to use money. People consistently believe it is the great trick of our society. People are addicted to this concept that it's going to solve their problems. I've literally watched people get way worse when especially if they didn't earn their money. You know who's a real [ __ ] loser playing when it comes to money? I So I grew up with real [ __ ] scum buckets and like dirt kids and like a lot of people were flawed. Do you know that between like [ __ ] 11 and 25 in my life, the amount of kids and people around me that literally spent almost all their time trying to figure out how to fake an injury to collect insurance money? Yo, if you're from the dirt and the gutter like I am, please explain to everybody in the chat how common this conversation was amongst your other loser friends. Watch. Watch the chat right now. People will tell you. Look, look at this. You see this? This is real below lower middle class life. If you grew up in this below lower middle class life, again, I'm going to say it again. People don't believe me because they don't know me like that. Now, I had a college. 90% of the kids that I went to college with were on [ __ ] financial aid and from real [ __ ] ghetto life. 24 hours a day. Oh, what if I stop my car a little short and get hit in the back and then get a neck brace and collap insurance. Oh, look, a puddle. Let me slip. Like, I'm being dead [ __ ] serious. Money is going to solve my [ __ ] Every kid that I watched play that game and I saw it. Look, every day was a hustle. Look, look, like people lived that life. Look, I'm an insurance adjuster. I see it all day. This is real [ __ ] I'm telling you. And I've seen people collect on it. And that money is gone within six months. Until you [ __ ] get your fundamentals right internally, you have no shot. Go win the lotto. Why do so many lotto winners lose? So, I don't even remember the question, but I know something. Experience is a hell of a lot better than money. Chris Lions, my brother, how are you? I can. Yes, sir. Oh, I do like that. I love that. I love it. The can I'm aware. I know that card well. Thank you, brother. I Are those 3D printed little things back there? Optimus Prime and all that. It's [ __ ] How are you? Oh, that's fun. Let's do it. Well, why why can't you do them all? Well, how much time and energy do you put into work? Don't [ __ ] me, Chris. How much time and energy every day do you put into work? So, it sound it sound it sounds like you're doing both. And you also know this. The memecoin thing worked out, but you could have gotten caught. Correct. Again, back to my question. How much time do you spend on the tire business that has nice cash flow? As you called it, you as you as you called it as you called it, the real business. You you did hear that, right? >> Yeah. So, let's let's let's focus on the subconscious of what your brain even thinks. Let's focus on the thing that you called the real business. Let's break this down. You have a real business that takes you very little time that has cash flow and is working. You've played highly speculative crypto behaviors. Thank God it worked out. As you know, for hundreds of millions, it did not work out. Yes. What do you think? >> Well, I would say it sounds like you're giving it very little. It's kind of like relationships. Let me break this down for you. Let me paint you a very different picture. Over here on the left, you have this really reliable wonderful solid girl. She requires very little, you know, just, you know, even in fact, I'm mad at her because she should be asking for more, but she's happy with what she's getting. And you're getting all the dividends of love. In fact, in this story, she's cooking dinner and doing right. And then over here, you've got a [ __ ] stripper, right? And you're addicted to the glitter and the fake tits, and it's all very exciting. And it worked out like this one time you hooked up. But what do you think's gonna happen, brother? Please. >> I'm wondering if chat Gary GPT gave you the stripper analogy. I'm going to I'm going to go with AI's not there yet. Go ahead. [Music] Yeah. I mean, look, again, I want to have a logical conversation with you. I'm pumped that memecoin trading worked out for you. I'm also just like the reason I stay Ethereum and Bitcoin in the crypto world is, you know, I haven't done enough homework on the others like and I just feel comfortable that I understand the rails that Ethereum is building with layer 2 and base and all this stuff. Obviously now that stable coins have been legalized by the Genius Act, it gives a lot of understanding to why Ethereum's got a chance. Bitcoin, you know, money in the history of our time has always been does the collective believe it's money, right? Whether it's the dollar or coins or like gold and silver when cavemen were running around was gold and silver. It was in the [ __ ] world, but people didn't value it. Consensus of humanity is important. Bitcoin's dangerously close, if not already, at consense of humanity. Definitely very different place than when I bought it for the first time in 2015 16. Big shout out to Aaron Battalion at South by Southwest Jam Sessions for teaching me these things. I I just think that you gambled and it worked out. And I have a I'm concerned to say like gambling is a consist like gambling works once in a while. It's why it's gambling. it consistently does not work. Now, building a personal brand in crypto is a different thing. Meaning, I've I've got a personal brand in crypto. My belief is that 1% of NFTts on Ethereum will be the great collectibles of the next generation. And so, I'm comfortable building out my befriends world and taking a real stab at trying to build Marvel, Pokemon, Disney. Um, I I believe in crypto punks. I think they've been proven to be very resilient. You know, they're a couple hundred thousand dollars for the cheapest one. Right now, NFTTS have sold hundreds of millions of dollars over the last two weeks at a time where 99% of the world thinks that they were a scam. That is a profound data point, which makes me bullish long term. Bitcoin is being eaten up by all the biggest financial institutions in the world. Literally the CEOs and executives and boards of the biggest financial institutions in the world called it a scam a decade ago and now are running writing substantial tens and hundreds of millions of dollar checks to get it. Those are black and white things that are happening. You know, buying vomit coin for 0.00001 cent hoping an influencer tweets about it so you can sell it for 0.004 00004 cents doesn't feel like a sustainable model. What are you going to what are you going to what are you going to build your personal brand on that you get that you you guessed on the app hype and it worked out or you know like that that you got to be thoughtful about how you build this I think that's I I think I I think I think that's great. How are you going to monetize that? It's a hard game. I mean, I'm I'm for it. If you can build a big enough audience, you can monetize. Here's what I would say. I I think the way you're playing it right now is working. I like that you're happy, right? You're happy doing this other thing. I just want to make sure a that you're not gambling. B, if you're trying to build a personal brand and then do sponsorship against it, that's a regular business. By the way, no different than your tire business. To your point, it's a lot more fun for you to play with the crypto stuff than the tire stuff. I'm fine with that. I would just tell you that in a world where you're 7 pm to 12 in the morning, you've obviously are able to do that because you're enjoying the [ __ ] out of, you know, community engaging Twitter spaces, whatever you're doing to get into the space. It sounds like you just need to double down on both. Meaning, not more hours, being more effective. You know, it's not about working more hours. It's it's for example my team around me, all of them, I think the second they get close to me and really look under the hood, they're like, "Oh, [ __ ] This guy works, right?" It's like, "Oh, he has 39 meetings every day actually." And like 20 of them are 15 minutes and I take an hour and a half to do the same thing. Maybe I don't need an hour and a half. So if you know the tire business can get three times what you're giving it by you being more efficient. And a lot of people that that are playing in crypto or any other genre that plays out online gaming, personal brands, live social shopping, they end up spending all their time consuming the scroll instead of feeding the scroll. Yeah. Uh right. That's the big aha for a lot of people. I was excited to deliver that for you because I think it's going to resonate with you, right? You're And listen, consuming is good, by the way. I actually consume a lot more than people realize. That's why I know [ __ ] I'm constantly consuming. But I'm consuming with purpose, right? Like, I'm in my feed for like seven minutes and then I'm out. Like, I don't derail. I know why I'm there. I'm not there to be [ __ ] entertained. I'm there to know what the [ __ ] the world is into right now. Get my latest New York Jets news and be the [ __ ] out. Yeah, because what what you realize is, oh [ __ ] Gary's right. If I just stop listening or watching, so I don't you know what the [ __ ] you're consuming three hours a day of something that only took 30 minutes for you to grasp it. You're just using it for more entertainment and leisure than you realize. In that two and a half hours that you save, 45 minutes can go to working out and getting your body right. And the other [ __ ] hour and 45 minutes can go to your [ __ ] tire company, which oh by the way will allow you the oxygen to continue to enjoy the process of the thing you like. Thank you is good. I love you, bro. Love you, bro. Good luck. You're welcome. Aaron >> Jimmy asks, "You talk about not taking money from parents, but what if they insist on helping you and almost don't let you do it any other way, so you are stuck in there with them? So, the only >> You're not [ __ ] stuck. >> Jimmy, Jimmy, you're not [ __ ] What the [ __ ] are you talking about, Jimmy? Jimmy, read that question one more. This is really going to be a good one." Jimmy, get ready. Jimmy asks, "You talk about not taking money from parents, but what if they insist on?" >> Stop. Jimmy, you're a grown ass man. What are you talking about forcing you? What? Your mom rolls up on you, punches you in the head, and stuffs dollars in your [ __ ] pants, Jimmy? The [ __ ] are you talking about forcing? What forcing? What [ __ ] forcing? Read it again, Erin. By the way, real quick before you do, everybody on social, not on whatnot, go to garyve.comnot. The reason you can't hear the guests or see the guests is because they're only on whatnot, which is the primary platform for tea with Gary B. You're on all my other socials right now. This is new befriends cards, by the way. These are out of control. Please go to eBay. I'll tell you more about befriends in a little bit. Go back to Jimmy one more time. Jimmy asks, "You talk about not taking money from parents, but what if they insist on helping you and you almost don't let them and almost don't let you do it any other way, so you're stuck in there with them, so the only way around is to break completely free and cut the bonds. Is it worth it? >> Jimmy, I don't believe you. Mike, you like that? I got you, right? I I don't know what else to I think you're probably laughing because you know my content so well. I'm not sure I've ever even said that. Like this drama that Jimmy's trying to paint us. I'm like, "No, no, Gary. Guys, everyone, you don't get it. My parents are stuffing cash so into my body that my only option. I'm really stuck here. Like, I'm in trouble. Like, you don't understand, Gary. Here's what's happening. You just pull these out. >> You got no I just >> like you can do whatever the [ __ ] you want. Like Gary, you don't get it. Like they're just, you know, they're drilling me with free money. Just credit card. Like just everywhere. Like I can't. And the only way to get through this barrage is I have to break free and never talk to my parents again. these awful humans who are drilling cash down my [ __ ] throat. And I Gary, you don't get it. I can't stop it. The cash is too much and too aggressive and there's just no way. Jimmy, you're [ __ ] in control. And by the way, let me throw a curveball to this little comedy skit. There are people who aggressively as parents try to push money down their kids' throat for one reason. They would like to parent their kids in perpetuity. They want to control every one of their decisions. And they are manipulating you to be able to control your decisions by being your bank. That is true. Here's the problem. Every spoiled kid that I've met on earth, and I've met many of them in this situation, can just say no. Jimmy, I want you to Google Nancy Reagan. Can somebody pull up a Nancy Reagan video for me on their phone where she says, "Just say no." This is a profound, simplistic, you know, the Reagans were many things, but let me promise you one thing. They were definitely some of the greatest marketers of all time. And the simplicity, >> I have a very personal message for you. There's a big wonderful world out there for you, >> Jimmy. There's a big wonderful world out there for you. >> It's exciting and stimulating. >> It's very stimulating. >> Don't cheat yourselves out of this promise. >> Yes. Do not let your parents cheat you out. >> But it needs you to be cleareyed and clearminded. >> Tell them. >> I recently read one teenager's story. She's now determined to stay clean, but was once strung out on several drugs. And when she says clean and drug, she means payments gave her money. >> About her recovery was that during the time she was on drugs, everything appeared to her in shades of black and gray. >> And after her treatment, she was able to see colors again. >> Once you stop taking the money, you can see the colors. >> Life can be great, but not when you can't see it. >> Just say no, Nancy, or anything. This video, Can I get a Nancy where she just says no? I mean, that was very beautiful, but all I really needed was just say no. Bro, what is that [ __ ] saloon choir there? Listen to me, >> Jimmy. You're full of [ __ ] I don't know what else to tell you. I have a weird feeling. You're Jimmy, you're not going to believe this. This is wild. Ryan, I apologize. I know you're in back of the screen. We'll get you next time because I'm actually 9:45 today. Um, Jimmy, I got a I got a stunner for you. When you say no, even if your parents are the most [ __ ] up on earth and try to weaponize their money on you so that you pick the girl that they want you to marry, take the job that you they want you to take, join the country club that they want you to join. Even if they're the most [ __ ] up parents on earth with obsession with using money as the manipulating super tool, after their quick disappointment of, "Oh, [ __ ] we can't control Jimmy." They'll actually respect you. How about that Jimmy? That's it. So, read that question one more time. Erin, >> you talk about not taking money from parents, but what if they insist on helping you and almost don't let you do it any other way? See, you're stuck in there with them. The only way around is to break completely free and cut the bonds. Is it worth it? >> You are a [ __ ] [ __ ] Jimmy. Jimmy, you're an [ __ ] You're full of [ __ ] And I'm really doing this out of the love and depths that you cannot comprehend the love and intent that is coming out of my out my mouth trying to make you like I don't know clearly it actually looks like you don't deal well with good. That's why I'm trying to give you a little bad. I'd really love to see the truth of this situation. I have a funny feeling if Jimmy's parents are watching, they're [ __ ] cheering right now. I feel like Jimmy's dad just went and got the [ __ ] expensive champagne and they just popped it at 9:46 in the morning. I have a sneaky [ __ ] feeling that Jimmy's parents are [ __ ] pumped with Uncle Gary right now. >> Jimmy's mom. I have a funny [ __ ] feeling that Jimmy's mom and dad are about to sip two glasses of champagne and [ __ ] get dirty with each other at 10:15 in the morning cuz this is the greatest [ __ ] day of their life cuz [ __ ] entitled full of [ __ ] [ __ ] Jimmy got some [ __ ] cander this morning. Yes, I'm ready. All right. team with Gary V85. Hope you enjoyed it. See you next time. >> Should we read out? >> You can read out.