This week on the pod we have the host of the best one yet. what does it do what's a tariff everyone's talking about tariffs what Even is a terror. How does it impact me and should I stop buying coffees? We're bringing on two of the smartest minds in news, tech, and pop culture. They're the host of the T-Boy podcast, the best one yet. And they're going to teach us all how to future-proof your career.
Demoted. What's up, Motorheads? It's good to have you all here. We're back in the stewed, back in the beanbags. Beanbag baddies are back, baby. Back in this bitch. We got guests today. We do. We got some of the best guests, the best guests yet. Precisely. If you haven't listened to the best one yet podcast,
Why don't you pause this right now and go do it? Go do it. Every single day, they are bringing you 20 minutes of the three most important news stories that you need to know. Nick and Jack are what Ross and I aspire to be. Yes.
in podcasting they release a daily episode we were joking at the end of the podcast that they're their own LLM they take in all sources of information from news finance pop culture tech news bring it all into the three headlines you should know every single day yeah a lot of people are so overwhelmed about what publications what sources should I read
Just go listen to these guys. They got you covered. We wanted to bring them on specifically to talk about future-proofing your career. Everything we're seeing in our dear demoteds, our corporate confessions, is this kind of fear of AI, tariffs, the economy, the recession.
what's happening and what should I look out for as a working professional. And as we mentioned, these two guys are very smart. And given that they are reading the news, they are consuming all this information every single day, they're some of the most well-equipped to answer these questions. We're recording on April 29th, so a lot can change in the next two weeks before this is released.
We're hoping to talk about looking ahead in your next year, your next five years of your career event. What should you be doing? Yeah, and using some of the stories that these guys have researched in the past to inform... their decisions and our decisions. So with that, let's welcome Nick and Jack from T-Boy. too demoted
Nick and Jack, we're so happy to have you here. And Nick, I'd be remiss if I didn't mention our sunrise kayak together in Hawaii. I mean, it was the vacation of vacations, wasn't it, Natalie? What are you guys talking about? Yeah, did you guys just see each other on the beach like one day or what? Actually, yes. It was. I was with my boyfriend's family doing a sunrise kayak and they were like, we need another solo to hop in our kayak.
Nick's hand shoots up from the sand. I'm like, where did he come from? Who is this man in a red Speedo? He jumps in the front of the boat right next to my boyfriend's dad. They're yapping it up the whole time. It was beautiful. sunrise that we shared together. It was literally 5am. On Hawaii. And I was, at the time, my wife and our baby were sleeping, and I was like, I'm going to go do something.
existential right now. Yes. And then I end up in the party mode at 5am with your entire boyfriend's family. Natalie's drinking, of course. For those of you who can't picture this, season one of White Love. exactly exactly that was the vibe we were going for it was definitely a whodunit vibe you know someone was overboard at one point on the kayak as the sun was rising i'm sure you wanted just a moment like a break away from this world podcasting certainly me but
We all jumped in the boat together, so that's good. Nick strikes me as the guy who you bring around your parents because parents just love him. Oh, they were obsessed. Just eating it up. Just right out of his hand. Matt's one of three boys. It's now four. Nick's one of them too. I was like high-fiving him in the gym the next day. Everyone ripped their tarps off. Of course.
This category is perfect for parents. It's good to see you with your shirt on, Nick. Jack just had his third kid. Jack, give us your personal update. Third kid. Oh boy, yeah. Just look at Ross's videos about not getting sleep and that's me time. Three. I don't know how you do it. No, I'm just kidding. We got Wilder at the top. He's four. Brooks is two. Oakley is zero.
So, three under four. Is that how it goes? Terrifying to me. I'm rounding down. He's eight weeks old at this point. Can I also just give Jack a shout out for what he's pulling off right now? That's what I'm saying. It was his first son, a.k.a. the pod son's birthday the other day. Jack didn't just throw a... Jack and Alex didn't just throw a dinosaur-themed Easter egg home for this thing. No, no, no, no, no, no. Jack bought a wedding cake Like dinosaurs.
three tears that he brought to the birthday party. It was an anti-recession indicator. Yeah, let's tear up a cake, I dare you. There were some IP issues with Jurassic Park, but Jack said, what the heck? We'll let the lawyers deal with that. And he got this, the most epic cake I've ever seen outside of two people getting married. Oh my gosh.
I cannot wait to spoil my kids. And here I am talking to Becca, I'm like, do we really need to do a first birthday? I mean, he's like two weeks old, but like, who's going to remember that? I was just Michael Scott in the office being like, let's just celebrate all three of ours together. Like, we're going to do individual ones. At this point, you know, I'm an efficiency guy.
Yeah. So, I'm sure I'll do it. I mean, I still have some time. He's two weeks old. He's only two weeks old? Wow. Congrats, Ross. Yeah. He's just like, goo-goo-ga-ga, and I'm like, dude, what are you... Get a job. Please. Get it. I contribute. All you do is poop and eat. I'm lecturing him while I'm changing his diet. It's just... It's a whole thing, but okay. We have you guys on the pod for a reason. We gave your intros before you joined, but can you give us an intro on the best one yet?
your origin story who are you guys how'd you meet just give us your kind of elevator pitch, dare I say. Well, the best one yet, the best one yet, T-Boy, is the daily business show that we call Pop Biz, the mix of pop culture and business that makes you the most interesting, well-read.
fascinating person in whatever room you're in, whether it's a boardroom or whether it's brunch. Because every day, Jack and I create the three most fascinating stories in the business world with our takeaways from years and years of studying business, finance, and everything in between.
It's two best friends talking about business, finance, and economics, but it does go back to freshman year. Nick and I were randomly selected as freshman year roommates. Absolutely wild how that changed both of our lives. After four years of college, we became roommates again in New York City, lived in a four-person apartment. It was our wild early 20s. And both of us quickly discovered that our desk jobs and finance were not what we...
had been romanticizing. What? I mean, New York, big city. So fulfilling. Yeah, the number crunching wasn't cool. I actually worked at a German investment bank. which had the benefit of, like, very generous vacation and, like, no expectation of 80-hour work weeks, which was really nice, but the negative of zero fun. So Nick and I started a side hustle when we were like 23 years old and fast forward 13 years and we're still doing that side hustle.
Oh, really, what we started doing was we started writing a daily newsletter in secret outside of our day jobs at the risk of being fired. We just said, what the heck, we're going to do it. We grew that from a newsletter into a podcast that was called Market Snack. We then sold it.
during this wild summer when we were in business school to Robinhood, the stock trading app, which was trying to build out a media arm. So Jack and I flew out to California, uncertain if we were going to do an acquisition deal. We end up signing a deal. and end up becoming a part of Robinhood, the stock trading company, for three years, where you probably got to know our podcast as Snacks Daily.
And then after being through Robin Hood during their wildest craze ever, during the meme coins and all that craziness, Jack and I spun off the show. kept our podcast audience, and full-time went into podcasting. with our show, The Best One Yet, and this incredible community of yetis and besties, as we call them, who love getting business news in a really interesting way. They love hearing Jack and I talk about how Netflix's earnings report reminds us of...
Rihanna song from 10 years ago, and they're using the same strategy as the Spice Girls over at Netflix. So since 2018, we've done 1,500 episodes of our daily podcast. And I complain about doing like
one every three weeks. We're exhausted. You've got three kids. You're doing one every single day. You really are the experts and that's why we wanted to bring you on. I think the theme of this podcast is future proofing your career yeah we want to use your knowledge on tariffs the economy everything that's going on in the world
to inform what our listeners should do, how they should approach potential recession, what's happening, what's on the horizon. Yeah, and just get your advice on how you see the world transitioning. Where are we headed? What would you guys do?
Obviously, you built something. It's funny. You guys talk about building your newsletter in secret. Similarly, we're filming videos in secret, hoping nobody eventually catches on, and they do. And it becomes a thing. But you guys took a risk, and a lot of folks who listen to our Potter... similarly asking themselves, do I want to stay in this corporate job? And, you know, tumultuous, scary time right now. Everybody's been throwing around this word of tariffs. I think it's being just sort of a...
It is the pop culture word that nobody knows what it means. Nobody knows what it's supposed to do. Nobody knows how it works. But yeah, I don't know tariffs. How about these tariffs, huh? Oh, it's good for tariffs. People have no idea. Exactly. What does that mean? So, I mean, I think that's where we want to start. with you guys. You guys have talked about it in a recent episode. Generally, US government announcing wide-ranging tariffs.
including high tariffs on Chinese goods. This is like the basics of what we know. I guess from YouTube, what the hell are tariffs? Tariffs are sticking a bouncer at the door to the country and saying, I'm checking IDs and I'm charging fees based on where you come from. And you're basically having to pay a different cover charge depending on what state.
But in this case, what country is on your ID? Okay, fantastic analogy. Now I'm going to take it literal. You got it. U.S. Customs and Border Control. We encountered them when we're coming back. Nat, you encountered them when you were coming back from Cabo. I did. You needed to pass through them and get your passport stamped to enter the country. It is the same with stuff that's made in China.
There's only so many ways to enter the country, like by land, by air, or by sea, and each one of them is highly controlled by customs and borders. So instead of stamping a pass part, when it comes to... A Yeti cooler that's made in China. There's a giant container ship that has like a thousand Yeti coolers and to get into the United States, they say, what's in there? Show me your documentation. Where is it made?
And when Yeti's shipping guy says, we have coolers, they're made in China, they say, okay, what's the value of everything in there? And they say, let's say a million dollars. Pay us a 145% tariff before you can enter. So that's $1.45 million of new costs. for yeti coolers now which are going to find their way into the price that we buy them at
Wow. The factories could pay some of it. The company Yeti could absorb some of it. But most often, because these tariffs are high, it ends up getting passed on to consumers in some way. What is the true intent? The intent is to give... preferential treatment to stuff that's made in the USA. So we're only charging this brand new tax on stuff that's made abroad. So in theory, tariffs are going to benefit companies that decide to make their products in the United States.
There's an interesting angle here, too, that Jack and I were just talking about on the show that involves you, Ross, because tariffs also affect different industries in different ways. So cars are affected because car parts come from all over the world. There are dozens of countries involved in making that Ford F-150. But when it comes to baby products,
We are particularly vulnerable because 97% of strollers are actually made in China, which is an extremely high percentage. Nearly 100% of baby monitors are made in China. So that's why, actually, in this first week of May, the price of the Uppababy stroller is going from $900 to $1,200.
because of these tariffs. Do you think my wife, being a Facebook marketplace merchant queen, should start charging tariffs from different neighborhoods? Because she is out there grinding my Facebook marketplace. The only two things this trade war is good for is the American made cooler equivalent of a Yeti and Facebook marketplace. ¡Gracias! People are going to buy you stuff as a result of these crazy new fees.
that are going to trickle down into the products that we buy. Perhaps more of a nuanced question here. It's not in the list of questions, but the US export that we're talking about a lot of is software. And the intent here is also to bring manufacturing jobs back to the US, which will take, in theory, a long period of time. And then we've got the robots that are probably going to take those jobs. Yeah.
I was going to say, how do you guys think about that? The intent from the administration is that, right? To bring manufacturing jobs back. We covered this just the other day on our podcast. The driver of this trade war is our trade deficit. And the trade deficit is the fact that we import more. From Canada?
and from China and from Mexico, then they buy from us. So we have a deficit. They're producing more than we're producing when it comes to trade. But the problem is that trade deficit only talks about physical things. To your point, Ross, if you're just looking at the trade deficit, you're ignoring all the stuff the United States is best at. And we are best at a lot of different things. Think about Hollywood. If you look at the top 25 highest box office movies of all time,
24 of them are American movies. If you look at the biggest tech companies and the biggest products being used by everyone across the world and in Europe, These are American digital goods. We were looking at the Spotify Global 50 Top Songs playlist the other day. 36 of them were American artists. So when it comes to services, finance, technology,
entertainment. The United States is the absolute leader of the world in all of these things. But when we're talking about the trade war, we're ignoring it. And we're just so focused on the one thing that we are comparatively bad at which is manufacturing. And we're bad at manufacturing because we pay our people much higher. And trickling down to the consumer, the listeners of this podcast, how will tariffs impact
Our daily lives, our professional lives even. What should we look out for? Really, really interesting example of this. Jack and I were just breaking down, which is Domino's pizza earnings. Because this actually tells a really interesting tale. Domino's Pizza, theoretically, should be tariff-proof because that mozzarella
Shocker. They're not importing that from Italy, exactly. They're getting that from here in the United States. A plastic factory, of course. Basically, all of the ingredients that go into your Domino's, including the stores themselves, are American-made. And yet, Domino's just told us in their earnings in the first week of May that they are suffering during the trade war because consumers are making decisions about their pizza choices even though...
Domino's hasn't increased their prices. They're downgrading to frozen pizza. And that's the big monster in the room, which is the chance. So they are downgrading to frozen pizza. They're not just saying, hey, I don't want to order in. Well, Jack, you want to share your Costco research that you did? I believe you went into aisle six at Costco, and we're expensing some research. Oh, your boots on the ground. Tell us more.
Four-pack of Costco cheese pizzas, frozen, Kirkland brand, of course, $13. Domino's can't compete with that. No. So the long story short is everyone's predicting the country's going into... And if these tariffs were trying to stay in place, it's an almost certainty, in our opinion, that we will go into a recession because we depend on them for so much.
And at the end of the day, tariffs are taxes. Politicians love to say they're going to cut taxes to grow the economy. Well, this is a new tax, so it's going to shrink the economy. And if that happens... Consumers are going to have to deal with higher prices. They might get laid off. companies are going to have to raise prices, which isn't good for those companies. This isn't greenflation. This is companies raising prices to pay for these new taxes that the U.S. Customs and Border Control
company stock prices are going to go down, their profits are going to go down, they might have to do layoffs. It is a very bad story. The reason the United States has not used tariffs in a meaningful way... for a hundred years is because it was kind of an economic understanding that they are a bad policy. The counterpoint to this is that people have shared this is a negotiating strategy and that the idea is to come up with
a set of individual country-by-country deals that will result in better trade terms for the United States. And there are costs and benefits to going through all. So we still have to see what those actually look like. But in the meantime, the direction things are heading in is exactly the direction Jack is describing. Now, on our pod just yesterday, we said...
Okay. If the goal of the administration is to bring back manufacturing to the United States, that is a worthy goal. Like, nobody disagrees that that is a good thing. overnight making the products we get from China 145% more expensive. I mean, that is dramatic. There are going to potentially be empty shelves come Halloween because all of our Halloween costumes are made in China. All of our toys, all of our baby strollers, like Nick said, are made in China. An alternative.
to foreign policy by tweet and executive orders changing tariffs every day, Nick and I came up with the Made in America. Let's say you wanted to bring manufacturing back to the United States. The Made in America Act passed by Congress. It's permanent. It's not changing every day. Year one, tariffs on China, 10%. Year two, 20%. Year three, 30%. gradual, consistent, and give companies the clarity they need. to move their factory, maybe.
from Malaysia to Minnesota. Okay, so we are interviewing two future politicians. Yeah, of course. I'm obsessed. Love it. Welcome to the pod. Made in America Act. One thing I want to double click on, Jack, that you mentioned are potential layoffs. how we should approach our careers and our professional lives. We get a lot of questions on the pod. Is now a good time to switch my career? What would you answer to that? I would say now is a good time to stay with your job.
There's a third option here, Natalie, that Jack and I have been talking about, which is a new concept called Nepopreneurship. Okay. This was our term for a phenomenon that's going on, but... The number of young people in America who have taken a job with a relative's company, like a parent's company, their mom and dad's firm, basically, that number has doubled since 2018.
The number who've done it in just the last year, it's up 13%. It's still a small portion of the overall population, but a really interesting direction people are going into if they want to switch careers, but they still want the security that they crave from their current job. is to join with their parents' company. And there's this other interesting phenomenon, which is we talked about the silver tsunami, boomers retiring in the next decade or so.
and how they'll hand down wealth, and there's going to be a transfer of investment assets. But one thing they're going to be handing down is the businesses that they run. And they'd probably rather have their kid running it, maybe, than someone random who they'd sell it to. So a third option here, and it's not open to everybody, but you could consider working for your mom and dad.
Knock on dad's door. See what he's up to. Bring a resume to dad. Sit him down. Ask for that job. That's what they said. I mean, Ross, you got a baby boy. This could be the third host. Adam, even before the risk of recessions came along, we covered a story in our pod about Nepopreneurs. The next point, the share of small businesses employing the child of the owner. In other words, the owner's son or the owner's daughter has doubled since 2018.
We did another story about this big, booming, boring job. The idea is that entrepreneurs aren't pursuing like, you know, SaaS cloud computing or, you know, artificial corn disruptors. Instead, they're pursuing like an electrician job. Or a plumbing room. By the local laundromat. The trades. The trades. Jack and I joke, we have some buddies from business school who have bought up a bunch of funeral homes. Yes. Everyone's wearing every cup.
Me looking at cash businesses online every day. Med spots. I mean, one business is more reliable than funeral homes. Yeah, yeah. The undercurrent of all this is that, like, even before the risk of a session came along, It's been a tough job market, especially for new hires. For like two years now, Zuckerberg started his year of efficiency. That's still rippling through Silicon Valley. You got artificial intelligence, which is causing...
If you've got a solid job, we say keep it. And keep in mind, it's not just tech jobs that are attractive. There's a serious boom in going back to the trades. Such good advice, especially for people in Silicon Valley. We're all obsessed with the next tech. boom the wave what can we do it's like Maybe it's the funeral home down the street.
I mean, honestly, most innovative business we've probably seen in the last two weeks. Well, there's one we got to tell you about, the AI cheating company. Oh, I saw this. I saw this, yeah. Please share. Kid got kicked out of school for it. The other one is these laundromats in Brooklyn.
that are like nightclubs now. So like laundromats? Yeah. Yeah. It's like young guys took over these laundromats in Brooklyn. You know, by day, it's like a very millennially nice, you know, very smooth, typical laundromat. By night, they're serving like...
Buffalo wings. They've got a DJ come in and they've got this whole other source of revenue. And let me tell you, Jack and I were talking about, that's an AI-proof job right there. Running a laundromat disc. And supply of DJs in New York City, very high. A lot of DJs running in. You can get some good price on DJs these days. Can you talk about the cheating?
scandal oh this is good oh this is this is really good jack you want to share what these uh columbia guys did yeah so about a month ago the columbia university well let me two students at columbia university created an app on the side of, you know, their English degree or whatever it was they were presenting as an undergrad at Columbia. They started this AI app that was explicitly designed to help you cheat.
in school. And then they told all their classmates about this app they created, which helps them cheat on everything. Spoiler, they got kicked out a month later. They did. As if ChatGBT doesn't allow you to cheat enough. Is anyone writing a paper these days? Who's written an essay? It was specifically designed to help them get internship offers from all the tech companies.
So they were looking for like a summer internship at Meta, at Amazon, at Microsoft, and they had these coding... where they had to share their screen with the interviewer. So this app called Cluey now, it's specifically invisible so that the person on the other side somehow can't see that you're using an AI chatbot. Meanwhile, the AI chatbot is listening and watching. everything that's happening on the screen and giving you just the information you need at the right moment.
to crack the code. So these two freshmen at Columbia, they go on to LinkedIn and they go on to X bragging about these internship opportunities they got thanks to their cheating. And then they get an email from the Student Disciplinary Board saying, yeah, you're suspended.
So what did the kids do next? They moved to Silicon Valley. They're here in San Francisco. They've already raised money. They're doing $3 million in the first month on this AI cheating app, and they've expanded it to cheat on anything. of their recent use case? Using this AI cheating app to cheat on a date. A first date. Very slick. I was as a joke going to say to cheat on your spouse.
So here's how it goes down. Ross, have you seen the video? I have not seen this video, no. Okay, so in the video, the founder walks into a restaurant and he's wearing virtual reality glasses. So he's getting data as they're having this conversation over the meal. And the woman he's speaking with as she's speaking, the cheating app is feeding him information through the glasses, which you can do now with a set of meta Ray-Ban glasses.
Saying she likes flowers. Her birthday was this day. She majored in physics. Ask her about her favorite book that she posted about from last weekend. So he is just... full-on, basically, cheating the date by knowing all this information about him. But then that brought up a really existential question. Jack and I were wondering, which was, is this cheating, or is this just an advantage? It's like your personal chief of staff. Yeah, it's like Gary from Beaton.
Kind of whispering to you all the things you need to hear right in the moment, but less creepy. That was reminding me of when I was dating in San Francisco and guys would have watched all of my corporate Natalie videos before I met them. And they're a completely stranger to me. I'm terrified of them. I feel like I know you because of your videos. Yeah, like I saw that video you did.
Who are you? You're terrifying. And they wait to bring it up. They wait until two glasses of wine. Now I'm trapped. And you're like, oh shit. That's the perfect time. What do you guys think about the massive
education gap that we're going to have as a result of this. Everybody's papers is going to read the same. Everybody's thoughts are going to be the same because they're all being fed the same stuff through this AI. I guess the AI can get better. Well, this is a creativity analogy Jack and I have used before, which is the iPhone, which is
The iPhone camera revolutionized how we all became photographers. Like overnight, by having an iPhone, basically the entire population was capable of photography at a level that we never could have before. However, to this day we still have professional photographers. People still pay millions of dollars for legendary photos. And if you're doing the photo shoot with your family, like on Hawaii, and you wanted to do one with Matt's family,
Now you'd probably hire a pro photographer. So there is this element that like the average is being brought up by AI. But the question is, The perfect, the highest quality, the curated, the tastemakers. that may still be protected because that's operating at a just different level that the AI isn't hitting. Funny thing about this cheat on everything app though, just to, you know, they're getting kicked out of Columbia.
for cheating. And they branded cheating because that is a wild cutting to the chase marketing-wise. We clicked on it. They're not branding their app as being able to boost your productivity. They're branding the app as helping you cheat, which has some appeal. But bear in mind, 40 years ago, using a calculator was... 20 years after that, using automatic spell check was considered cheating. So what's considered cheating at one point just gets added into the rules and it's like, actually okay now?
And that's what we think it's important for everyone working a job right now to think. Like, using AI, don't consider it cheap.
you shouldn't lie like that kid was lying that you know he was a marine biologist didn't know anything about marine biology right it's like I'm bilingual and then they say something in Spanish and you're like working proficiency but use artificial intelligence to make you better at the thing because soon it will not, just like using a calculator today is not feeling like cheating, neither will using it.
Yeah, until everyone's like, sorry, babe, I can't talk to you. I'll get my glasses on. Oh, God. So scary. Okay, so that's actually a really good segue. And so the CEO of Shopify recently said that he'll only hire more headcount if his team, quote,
cannot get what they want to get done using AI. So how do you guys see the job market being affected by the proliferation of these AI agents now, which can do a ton of things? And what are the most valuable skills that you guys see in humans in this age of AI.
Honestly, Jack, you want to share the takeaway we had from interviewing the Duolingo CEO? We just interviewed Luis Vaughn on our show. Yeah, he just came out with an article about Duolingo. He came out with an article very similar to what you're saying happened at Shopify. He said that everyone at his company, they are a tech company. And so a lot of his engineers are concerned about AI. A lot of them ask. Is AI going to take my job? And his answer to them, AI is not going to take your job.
but somebody who uses AI well. or better than Carson. could take your job so like that's that's point number one point number two he had this really funny story it was kind of self-deprecating so i'm gonna like use his words yeah yeah pretend i'm louis fun on for a second he said you know Math nerds, like 50 years ago, we had a hard time. We got like shoved into lockers and we were kind of the brunt of the joke. But then...
The tech industry started booming, and we had a really, really good run. And we started becoming CEOs and founding tech companies and becoming billionaires. And so math nerds had a really, really good 50-year stretch. I think with artificial intelligence, that run is coming to an end. His idea is that taste is going to be more important than ever in the age of artificial intelligence. He specifically said artists will beat nerds.
in the age of AI. Interesting. I'm ready to bully both. It's a counterintuitive take and it's like contrary to everything you see out there but in a basic level you see this with like AI's ability to do coding and kind of like core engineering skills. the limits on creating something totally new from scratch.
And the example he gave was like the Super Bowl commercial that Duolingo did where there was like an owl, the famous Duolingo owl, that had another owl come out of its butt and then another owl appear out of that owl's butt. And it was like increasing owls coming out of each owl's butt. Genius. Was it the Russian dolls? Those dolls that you keep stacking up? Yeah, exactly. And his point was, you know, that's the kind of thing that like...
ChatGPT isn't exactly coming up with, you need an artist to kind of come up with that. I think he was also saying that a lot of quantitative work or sort of process-oriented work is just going to be purely commodified and ultimately...
by artificial intelligence. Their content at scale has to be automated. That's what they taught. He talked about that too, right? A lot of their work has like their contractors. They're going to lose a lot of their contractors because they got to do content at scale in all these different languages and something that AI can do really well is translate. and sort of build curriculum around the things that they've already built. So maybe the engineers are okay, but...
I don't know. I'm curious what you guys are using AI for. We're all podcasters here. But we all have a process for creating the show. And it's so funny because a lot of listeners probably don't know. how much work, and we know how much work you guys are putting into the show. You're hearing the episode today, if you're a listener, but we know both of you and your entire teams have poured hours and days into preparing for this. So how are you guys using it as part of this entertainment?
Not enough. I don't think the comedy has been... fully match but the relatability is i think even in the last three months it's gotten better on prompting for script ideas and bits that we do outside of the pod but like more of our filmed content yeah i mean like
It's great for idea generation, like on a sort of micro level. You guys mentioned the tastemaking. It has no genius. AI has no genius to it. So like that's what differentiates the content that goes crazy versus the ones that are just kind of fall flat, even if they are quote unquote relatable. You're not allowed to use AI, so I'm working on scripts for...
TV, I can't use AI for that. I can't really go near that because if they find out or they can figure it out, then it's against... Because of the writer's strike. Exactly. And same with our branded content on socials. All the contracts include you cannot use AI to generate any of the concepts.
that you do in our brand and content. Right, but you may have a script and you're like, okay, I need a good example as I was like trying to figure out what would be a good gift for a salesperson, right? That would be funny, right? And it just sort of listed out a few ideas. I just needed it. super small kind of like mini joke inside a much larger skit and it gave me a bunch of good ideas that was that that was great
But it doesn't have the cleverness. It doesn't have the wit. It doesn't have the sarcasm. Or the personal history that you guys pull from? Like Jack and I, you know, we go back to freshman year, so like we pull from, you know, we're like, wow, the analogy here for...
for this economic trend is actually, you know, honestly, it's like a Beirut game that we played when we were in college. I'm like, you know, this strategy Jack would have. And we're like, that's a personal thing that you can't touch if you're coming through ChatGPT on it. And you guys are talking about the creative side. It's interesting, Ross, that you asked ChatGPT, what gift should I get this client? Because I think that's the first step.
to harnessing the power of AI is just rewiring your muscle memory. to stop thinking and stop Googling, even though that's what we've done for our entire professional careers is think and Google when we need to come up with ideas and find information. And instead, rewire yourself. can I ask an AI chat bot to save me time here or to come up with better ideas or to just brainstorm so that I'm not starting with a clean...
Right, that's a clean slate thing. Yeah, and the best way to pick up a new habit, work with an existing habit. So when people want to give up alcohol, they typically don't go cold turkey because that's really hard. They typically replace it. with something else. Maybe get a tea instead or, you know, a ginger drink. Right. So you're still enjoying the habit, but it's just not alcohol. Same thing like Jack's saying. Like, instead of Googling something, try chat, she'd be teeing it.
and see how that's the same habit. But different use case. When we did that story on why the NBA should expand to other countries, like the whole NBA basketball business model, we needed to know, like, how many MVPs in the NBA were born outside the United States. Googling that, you know, doesn't really give you an exact answer, but AI does. So like with research,
You know, that's how we've been using it the most. It gets you over the blank. You mentioned the blank slate. Like that's the hardest thing for so many creatives. Just like, give me something to work with. Show me some clay. And you're mentioning kind of rewiring those habits. I guess just more specifically, I want to ask about.
maybe some of these tools or just current things you can add. So the CEO of Uber said that most employees do not know how to properly leverage AI tools in their daily work. how can listeners start leveraging AI tools in their current work roles? And maybe it's just going from Google to ChatGBT, but any tools or recommendations you have,
Stop Googling, go to ChatGPT. Anyone I know who has sort of moved their page one of the internet from Google to ChatGPT says they're never going back. And it's just a total game changer for their internet. So I do think that's step one, because you're going to stop Googling and you're just going to start using artificial intelligence just by accident due to the nature of going to look for things.
Any tools you've seen in emailing, these general presentations, things that... every worker is doing. Well, here's a risk to be careful about, which is that it's also, and Ross was kind of highlighting this earlier, you can start to sense now what's got a little chat GPT flavor. Oh, yeah. Jack, you can suss out right now which emails with the hyphen or the one-two punch are kind of using a form. I'm guilty. I use the hyphen all the time.
I feel like it plagiarized us, man. But that is a key. And one art form, Jack, and I think that is going to be developed more is prompting. And this kind of gets at the why artists may succeed well with AI, which is Actually asking, and this is the difference with Google. With Google, you can just kind of like, you can have 12 typos in there and Google will just like show you the results.
With ChatGPT, you do want to create and spend the time investing in the right prompt, which is a series of guidelines to get you to the right answer. And that prompt, that art of prompting, that's a skill we think you can improve on and get better at. And part of these prompts that Jack and I say will be like, we want this to, you know, what are examples that are not expected from AI? What are things that are more outside the box?
you can prompt AI to not sound like AI or not do things that are cliche AI-like. The role prompt engineer is that Similar to what you're saying? What is a prompt engineer? Yeah, similar concept of being good at prompting. And it is a skill, we think, just like learning how to write a cover letter was a skill before or how to craft.
A thesis statement was a skill. Actually having the ability to write a thoughtful prompt with guidelines of, I want it to be colorful. I want it to mimic this style of writing. I don't want it to sound like AI wrote. Here's how you become a great prompt engineer. You act like a boss. And you pretend you have an assistant and be like a really awful boss who's super anal about all the details. So Wilder's fourth birthday party and the dinosaur themed Easter egg hunt that Nick mentioned.
That idea came from Chachi Petit. I said, I'm having a birthday party in April in Vermont. I want it to be outdoors. I don't know what the weather will be, but it's probably going to be wet and cold. Easter is the day after the birthday party. I don't want to get a bounce house because that's cliche for four-year-old birthday parties. What activity can I do for the 40 people who have RSVP'd, 20 of whom are top?
They came up with that idea and like six other really good ideas. Act like you have an assistant. Act like you're Ari Gold. Remember Ari Gold? Yeah. Who's unbelievably productive. and Ari Gold was aggressively demanding of that assistant, I think that's how you become a great prompt engineer. Demand absolute excellence and say all of your preferences and all of the things you need down to a... like down to the final detail and
ChatGPG doesn't care about manners. They're going to produce a better product because you are such a stick. Yeah, Sam Altman Like I said, please and thank you. Yes. Yeah, they're losing like tens of millions of dollars of people being polite. Yeah. Well, I saw this video. I saw this video. I was like, how are cheating chat GBT these days? And it's like, now make it better. And the guy was pretending to be chat GBT. He's like sweating. Please let me out.
And when the robots come for us, though, if you did drop the occasional please and thank you, I think they keep a record of this. Yes, I do too. 100%. Yeah, gotta be nice. Gotta be nice. Your behavior score is just being logged every second now. Should we shift on to our deer demoted? We had some folks write in to us. And so I'm going to attempt to read this to you guys. We don't show this that often, but Natalie and I really struggle to read. Yes. So I'm going to read this anyway.
Dear Demoted and T-Boy, I was recently laid off from my tech startup job. They said the decision was due to the, quote, hesitancy of venture capital firms to invest in the market during economic uncertainty.
Do you think this is a temporary measure or could this be the start of a rough time to be an early stage tech? Would it be unwise to look for another job at a startup? Any insight would be very helpful. Thank you guys. So taking a job at a startup is always risky, just given the nature of that. Most startups don't. There's data out there that businesses that get formed, chances are in five years won't be there anymore. So startups are always...
You're also probably not going to get paid as much at a startup as you would a big company, especially when you consider the benefits that a big company can offer you and the number of hours a startup demands of you. That's like number one. Startups are always more risky. And you should only do so if...
The failure outcome, like the company going under or you're not making it there, can you handle that negative outcome? Do you have some savings or something to fall back on if you lose your job? If you don't... Maybe a startup is not the right move for you because that adverse scenario is just unacceptable. Like Ross, you have a kid now. I have three kids.
Once you get those kinds of family responsibilities, your risk tolerance just goes down a little bit. It's just like the nature of life. Depends on the going rate for a child. I don't know. If all that sounds great to you. then there's with all that risk comes greater reward. So you get the upside at a startup of being promoted more quickly, of gaining responsibilities more quickly because there's so few people who work at the company. Maybe you get stock and equity in the company.
If that company gets acquired or IPOs, that's how you could get rich someday. And honestly, maybe you have some leverage now. As we're hearing this question, I'm thinking, Jack, Yeah, maybe people are averse to going to startups right now. And so maybe the desire to need some people talent kind of works in your favor. And therefore, if you are pursuing a startup and...
they're having trouble hiring, it's an opportunity to ask for more. Maybe this is when you ask for equity. We always say equity is exciting. There could be some leverage here if you are pursuing a startup when most people are not. Yeah. Equity is exciting and terrifying. One thing I would add to that is also try to look at when they raised money. If they raised money four, five years ago now, chances are they're not going to achieve their valuation. and are at much higher risk.
You know, everybody's trying to fight to meet these valuations that were crazy just five years ago. You know, if you've raised money very recently in the last year. They probably are going to go lower and slower and have a little bit more, be a little more conservative, burn a little slower. That's my hypothesis, at least with what VCs are telling companies to do now. So you might have a little more runway to, if you do choose to go there, they might be a little bit safer.
Again, still highly risky. Good advice. This listener mentioned tough economic times for tech startups. The reality is that this is a tough economic time for the whole economy. Nick and I just covered a story. Companies are just frozen. From Fortune 500 down to 5-person stars. announcements just aren't happening. They call it like a corporate update Ice Age, basically. There's this great capitalist freeze across our economy right now. M&As are not happening.
IPOs have been canceled. New product launches aren't being announced. It's all on pause. adversity faced by like the tech industry and venture capital backed firms. It's really, that's the status quo across the whole economy right now. And like, when will that end? There's never been a period of bigger uncertainty. We're all in this together. Maybe the solace here is that the uncertainty faced by this listener, we totally feel for somebody who's been...
That anxiety is really present across all of us. We're all in this together. This is an uncertain, unprecedented. Your podcast kind of started as a side hustle. Our content started as a side hustle. Everyone's like, How do I make ends meet now? Should I get another job? What can I do? Do you have any advice on side hustling or how to find other sources of income in these uncertain times? Yeah, I mean, first of all, create an LLC for yourself.
If you're gonna start side hustling make sure you have created a business Because all of the expenses related to the work you did, whether it's your computer, your internet service, that is all part of the product that you're working on selling. Great advice. If you're going to start a side hustle, that is a business.
Even just the thought of starting a side hustle, you think? If you're going to commit to someone, you should do that. There's a funny little bit of accountability. You know the theory...
that when you share something with someone, you're just more accountable because now there's a little bit of reputational risk. Almost similarly with the US government, if you file to create that LLC like Jack's talking about, and you're going to get a notification from the government the next year saying that you owe a certain filing fee or something, you're going to feel like, you know what?
I've got to make this $400 worth, and I really should turn this into something. Yeah, I love it. Speaking of existence, I've got to put it out there. Accountability. No, we recently started a second show, actually, called The Best Idea Yet. We launched it last fall. Instead of... a daily podcast about news. This is a deep dive weekly podcast. So far we've covered 40 of the most viral products of all time. And it's basically the untold origin stories of the products we're offering.
So we did Super Mario Brothers. We did the Birkenstock Sandal. We did the Ferrari. We did the Super Soaker. We did the Reese's Peanut Butter Cup. Here's a wild detail about all of those products. Just about all of them. started during economic recessions. It is wild, but a recurring character in our series, The Best Idea Yet, is that an economic downturn caused somebody to be in a tough situation.
And with their back against the wall, they innovated and created something awesome. Recessions are the recurring character on all the shows. And then on top of that, to go even further to tie into Nat's question, So many of these products began as some kind of a side project. The Peeps Candy side project.
invented by a frog salesman. They were a side project. A frog salesman? Yeah, a frog. You know when you need a frog? You know when you're in the market for a frog. He was running a little peanut butter business on the side. The super soaker. NASA engineer side hustle at home created a super soaker. Wow.
So many incredible success stories of these that all began during moments like this with side hustles like you're talking about. So you're saying it's a great time to build. One more dear demoted for you both. Hey, Nick and Jack, I listened to T-Boy, and damn, you guys are smart and well-read. What do you rely on as your source of information? What should I read or listen to everyday to sound smarter at work?
T-Op, T-Op, what is it? Listen to our shop because we have some advice for people who want to find the right news and information. But we know that your time is limited. Nick and I spend our full day job. Finding the perfect mix of stories for a 20-minute podcast. We literally say content is king, but curation is queen, and we are curating it for you. We have a wildly diverse diet of news and information.
that we spend hours consuming every day, including on the weekends. We consider it like our personal board of advisors. We have like an automotive blog sitting at that end of the boardroom. We have a tech podcast right there. Nick has the biography of Enzo Ferrari over there. I listen to a conservative-leaning podcast. I listen to a liberal newsletter. We consume so much information from so many different perspectives.
so that we can figure out what are the three stories our audience needs to know and how can we give them that 20-minute news shot that just prepares them perfectly to understand the trends. the exciting stories, and the boring stories that are actually really important that you need to know about. Wow. So if you want to become an LLM like Nick and Jack have,
with consuming every source of information. If you don't have time to do that, listen to T-Boy, I think is the answer. One lesson Jack and I have learned in this daily pursuit of the most interesting business stories in the world is that Jack and I like to say the formula for interesting is bold plus specific.
And what we look for when we're going to choose whether or not a story will be one of our three for the day. And it's something you can look for in your lives when you're looking for interesting news. is we like to find the bold and specific example. For example, we did a story the other day on how fashion chains are launching coffee shops.
So high-end or low-end, they're launching shops. The data point that led us to that whole story was about Ralph Lauren's Ralph's Coffee and how they were doubling the number of stores and the retention rates were a super high number. We took that hero stat.
researched it further, discovered there was a whole story here of Zara launching it, Gucci launching coffee chains, and we turned that into a story for the pod. And Jack and I think that's part of a healthy news diet. If you're not listening to our show, something you can do on your own, which is... Pursue when you see the one interesting detail or data point. Go down that rabbit hole a little more, and you'll find there is usually a bigger, broader story with a bigger, broader takeaway.
I think something that you both have that's just, I love witnessing firsthand is just such sheer curiosity that's what made you start this podcast what made you start your second podcast being curious about the world and things and trying to find things that excite you will make your day a little bit more fulfilling, I think. Totally. And you're just tastemaker kings. You really are. So...
Pursuing curiosity is a very proactive move, Natalie. And whether or not you listen to our podcast, we do have advice for how to be well-rounded information-wise. And that is to break your social media side. Our algorithms have pigeonholed all of us. They have figured out what we like to click on and what we like to view and then just fed us tons of that same thing. We're all in these information silos based on our algorithms.
To break out of that, you need to proactively search for an account that the algorithms are not feeding. to diversify your information. So, like Nick and I have, an automotive blog, an international newspaper, a British economic magazine, of which that is a category of one, by the way. That's The Economist. It's a very proactive thing. You're going to have a very...
Not homogeneous information diet unless you actively pursue new... matt and i try to read the economist every sunday night and by that i mean matt reads it to me because i have zero interest but it makes me smarter which is good final question answer or not just says two of my favorite pods ask t-boy their favorite stock or etf when nick and i were in our 20s We were highly active. Stock job. let's call it. We've pursued lots of individual stocks because we believe
we could outperform the rest of the market. Just like every cocky 20-year-old. Spoiler. I mean, it's going to go up, right? That's what I was told. We're the smartest two dudes here. We got this. Yeah, this just came across my desk. If you've got one minute, let me tell you about finance class that you can't beat the market and it's futile. But we didn't believe it.
Until we tried it in our 20s and failed. Yeah. Well, honestly, in my 30s, I have stopped trying to beat the market. And my favorite stock... is Berkshire Hathaway, which is half private equity firm, half actively managed stock portfolio led by a 94-year-old investing legend. You can basically, for free, with no management fee, piggyback off the smartest mind in the United States, which is Warren Buffett. And for the last 59 years, his return, owning that stock, is double as good as the S&P.
It's not a stock recommendation, but that is where most of my money is. What's a single share of that now? They've got the base. Oh, that's right. The base share of $300 or something. Okay. A share is like $500,000. $500,000 for a share. Funny detail about Jacksonville investing, which we always kind of shocks people, but you know. Jack and I, like, we invested in a car charging stock during the pandemic when we were bullish in buying electric cars and we're like, this is going to work.
hasn't gone anywhere. Peloton, we were all in on that at a pretty good point during the pandemic. Still holding on, hoping someone will Our best performing stock, S-P-Y. The ETF and the S&P 500, the most boring of stocks, has been our best performing stock. That's Reddit's favorite stock, too. Honestly, the key thing Jack and I do is people BTD, buy the dip. Jack and I like to say now we BTD, we buy the dip.
We basically invest on specific dates on a calendar year consistently. So instead of choosing based on what the price is of the stock. Because anytime we try to buy at the bottom, it's kind of gone down further. We just take that variable out of the equation. We don't even think about it. We just buy on the first of the month kind of a thing. And if you're holding long term, it doesn't really matter where the buy-in price was.
because eventually you're hoping it goes up from there. So rather than stressing yourself out about BTD by the dip, another thing you can do is BTD by the date and just focus on buying stocks at specific dates. Now, I got some recurring buyouts. I have a caveat to all this, which is early in your investing career, buy a single stock of a company you frigging love. and eventually it's hopefully going to go up, and when it does,
sell it, and then splurge on something for yourself with that game that you did. Oh, totally. Because that's sort of like, you need to... to bask in the glory of capitalism by making a $300 return and just buying that freaking pair of sneakers. I think that's how we bought these snatching Shinola watches. Jack and I got a nice business dev. I love it. Before we get into promoted or demoted, I just have to do a quick update on what I did this past weekend.
You were in Cabo. I was in Cabo. Tell me everything. And do you want to know the one thing I came strapped with, not just for me, but for my friends? Tell me. Z-biotics. And what exactly is Z-biotics? If you don't mind me asking. Z-Botics is a pre-alcohol drink. It comes in a little, almost shot glass. You pop the top off and take it as your first drink of the night before you start drinking.
Start drinking for me in the Cabo terms was going to Bagatelle and dancing on tables and ripping shots. Right. This was no joke. And you needed something that worked. I wanted something invented by PhD scientists. So I'm going to tell you how it works. When you drink, Alcohol gets converted to a toxic byproduct in the gut. It's this toxic byproduct, not dehydration, that's responsible for those rough days after drinking. And so pre-alcohol produces an enzyme that actually breaks down.
this toxic product in your gut. If it's your first drink of the night and you drink responsibly, you'll feel your best tomorrow. So go to zbiotics.com. slash demoted to learn more and get 15% off your order when you use code demoted at checkout. Zbiotics is backed by a 100% money back guarantee so if you are unsatisfied for any reason They'll refund your money, no questions asked. I'm bringing it to my next two bachelorettes. Sales kickoffs, presidents clubs.
anything coming up work happy hour weddings oh my gosh it's the season game changer remember to head to zbiotics.com slash demoted and use code demoted at checkout for 15% off Okay, we want to do Promoted or Demoted, our tried and true segment with YouTube while we have you on. This is just quick answers. Do you like it? Do you not? A lot of these might come from some recent T-Boy episodes. Promoted or Demoted peeps.
the marshmallow candy tried it for the first time after we did an episode on it I'd never tried it in my life until age 37 two weeks ago. Amazing. What? I think it means. Jack went to the dentist this morning. So Jack, what did your dentist think about that? Nick, my streak of having cavities at dentist appointment continues. Have you heard of a smeep? A smeep is a s'more with a peep instead of a marshmallow. Yeah, and we're not just promoting the peep. We're actually, we've made it the CEO.
Yeah, I would love to see a peep burn in between two graham crackers. I'd be shocked to light that on fire. The ingredients are sugar, sugar, and artificial coloring. Also... A story we covered on our new show, The Best Idea Yet, The Peep. Wild business, by the way. The most seasonal of products in the world, and yet they've managed to turn seasonality into an advantage. Just a cool story.
i love peeps i was wondering who kept peeps alive my birthday is april 3rd and every year i get all my friends peeps and put them around the table they're like we don't want this okay i mean name a brand that owns a holiday like peeps owns
True. True. I got a monopoly on it. Promoted or demoted torpedo bats? Promoted? Nick, what are you waiting for? Yeah, you kind of got promoted. Although, Jack, at this point, I think we've promoted everything. You can promote everything. You guys are... I positive that coming in the mail.
For me, I've swung a torpedo bat a couple times in my games. You must hate torpedo bats. No, I hit now. I don't pitch anymore. My arm's shot. So I hit, and I get jammed a lot. I'm just going to say that barrel coming a little closer to the hands is just nothing but good for me. Has anyone actually bunted with a torpedo bat? I'm just curious. I have not bunted with a torpedo bat. In a men's league, it's kind of bush league to bunt. It's like you're paying money to be here. I want to get a bunt.
Ross, it's going to end the phenomenon of the broken back. Ross, you got to keep him guessing your next move, man. I mean, I'm a leadoff guy, so it's true. I show bunt, but I never actually bunt. That guy's got a blue torpedo bat. He ain't bunting. That is the most Ross thing I've ever done. You showbunt, but you never showbunt. I showbunt, but I never bunt. That's so you. Like I said, you gotta keep him guessing. Play the game.
Playoffs a bunch if I have to. Promoted, demoted, the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles. Who's your favorite? Nick, you have a disclosure to me. Yeah, I mean, I only wore Ninja Turtle underwear for the first four years of my life without fail.
And I think that's pretty common from what I understand. I was a big Ninja Turtle guy too. I don't know if it was four years straight. So, you know, just because we're on a roll here, let's promote Ninja Turtles. And the reason why is when Jack and I did a story on the Ninja Turtles, It is the first company, the first brand we'd ever heard of that was started as a complete joke.
Like, the guys who created it just were riffing on a couch and trying to come up with the dumbest idea. They were stoned as hell. They were definitely, yes. Northampton, Massachusetts. They were stoned as hell. And they said, I'm going to make a cartoon about turtles. And then they said, wait, ninja turtles. Hang on. Teenage Ninja Turtles WAIT!
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles. Let's name them after Italian Renaissance painter. They called it the dumbest idea they could think of, and it became a billion dollar idea. And something so dumb like that, you kind of just got to promote it. That's like Ross writing, sales are dope. from here. As stupid as possible. I'm just taking it seriously. Sadness is the best acronym I've ever come across. Thank you. We were so impressed with it. It's USA Patriot Act.
and sadness. Yeah, please. Two best acronyms ever. That's what it's going to take to get it passed. That's what it's going to take. I'll throw in a promoted or demoted for you. Cornbread's organic THC gummies. I'm going to promote. You are. I'm absolutely going to promote. Each night, I take one little gummy.
And guess what? I sleep like a frigging champ. One gummy? One gummy. That's great. Yes. Are you talking about America's only USDA organic THC gummy? What other gummy would I be talking about? The same one. That is a one-to-one ratio. CBD THC. The same one that's real THC with no synthetics? Yes, obviously 100% legal hemp. You can't be talking about the one that was fast and free shipping. That's the one I'm talking about. I knew it, Ross. That's the one I'm talking about. This is cornbread.
organic THC gummies. I take the CBD ones. There's also the THC, and then the ones we're talking about specifically are the one-to-one ratio of THC and CBD. If you're looking for a healthier way to relax and have a guilt-free good time, you have got to try Cornbread's THC Gummies. Right now, demoted listeners can save 30% off their first order.
Just head to cornbreadhemp.com slash demoted and use code demoted at checkout for 30% off your first order. That's cornbreadhemp.com slash demoted, code demoted. Cornbread hemp. This is the good life. I have one final one here. As the only non-business school goer of the group, I'll let you three answer. Promoted or demoted? Going to business school. Say promoted.
minimal contact. You don't get to give a ton of context here. I'm going to promote it personally. I'm going to promote it so that Michigan likes me. As an alum. So they invite you back to finally speak. It's all about the network, guys. It's all about the network. Promoted for the sake of the kids who may apply. Yeah. Love that. Love that. Well, Nick and Jack, you've been amazing. Thank you for coming on our podcast. Thank you for sharing your wealth of knowledge with us. Absolutely killed it.
People are going to be blown away. They actually got smarter for once on a demoted episode. They're going to freak out. We had so much fun. And we had so much fun having you guys in our podcast. But also, can we just pivot the spotlight a little bit to... how much we respect you guys in terms of what you bring and create into the world. And there's an example Jack and I were thinking of in particular, which is no one enjoys ads.
They're kind of like the bottom of the content totem pole, right? That's not the highlight. You too have managed to turn advertising into a form of content that we look forward to listening to when we listen to every episode of yours. And that is a skill that like as peers, we deeply admire about you because it says you're willing to do like the tough thing. Absolutely best in class, Brandon Post.
The funniest posts I can remember that you two have done have been paid posts. I'm thinking of when Ross tried to sell Nat. Some Chomps beef jerky. Oh, yeah. That was so good. I mean, Ross's Mr. Coffee morning routine. I can't believe they approved that. And then recently, the two coworkers.
whose entire personality at work is I'm too busy for this. That was Staples, right? Staples. How do you come up? Do you like write the stuff? We just think about the insufferable versions of ourselves, which is us. Yeah. And go from there. and then we kind of weave it in. All the motorheads out there, something that we should additionally appreciate about these two as an incredible podcasting pair are that they put the time to something that honestly most podcasters don't care about.
And a lot of podcasters try to act like they're reading because they like think they're above the ads. Yes. And we don't like that approach, but like you guys do such the opposite of that. So for all the motorheads out there, just another reason to love these two. Yeah. Did you manage to offer your product for free? monetizing through ads that people don't always like, but you make that entertaining too. So that's really interesting class. And on that note, just put in promo code.
where can we find you we know your podcast you want to shout out your personal socials where can we pay you guys for what you just said about us Follow the best one yet. We're also known as T-B-O-Y, T-Boy, at T-Boy Pod on Instagram, TikTok, and everyone on social. The show is the best one yet. A.K.A. T-Boy. That's all you got to follow. Follow the best one yet. You can find next to my personal handles from there. The quality you guys put on every day is just...
And enjoy our heart, our soul, and to our brain into every episode. And enjoy our new show, The Best Idea Yet, which every week, the most viral products of all time, Jack and I tell you, where they really came from. And that one has been a blast. We just did Frappuccino this week, which... Oh my old dream. We just probably lost all of our Motorhead listeners because they're now going to just transition.
to the best one yet but this was great. It's the right thing to do though. It's the right thing to do and we would support it. Thank you both and enjoy the rest of your day. Thanks for having us guys. Thank you boys. Thank you. Thank you Ross. What an episode. Yeah. I feel smarter. I feel kind of ready to take on the day. I feel elated. I feel uplifted. I feel like I need to maybe drink a coffee. Yeah.
their goals they're aspirational as hell their goals i love them every time i talk with them i feel better and i think you can all feel better by listening to their podcast truly i cannot plug it enough yeah sometimes you know people do 1.5 speed when they're trying to just like digest things quickly I do .5 speed for them. Right, then it sounds like a normal speed. It sounds like a normal speaking voice. But like I said, they waste no work.
They say a lot of words, they waste not a single one of them. Zero. It's all just so concise, so to the point, and so digestible for a simple mind like myself. I am a simple minded gal. We are simple minds here. Thank you to our first time listeners.
Yes, if this is the first time you're listening to us, we do have other guests that have previously graced the pod. Simone Stoll's off talking about the good enough job, how your career doesn't have to be the only thing that defines you. Vivian too, if you liked some of those finance tips, she is a... finance expert. Hers was a great guest episode. And we also do corporate hotline episodes. Where we get crazy, raunchy corporate stories about the things that happens in the office.
the holiday parties, et cetera, et cetera. Makes you a little less bad about blacking out at your company holiday party. Exactly. Let's read one shout out. Get everyone out of here. This one is submitted by IULittle5! congrats tommy d and claire on your engagement congrats guys and shout out to anybody who listens to t-boy as well as demoted you're obviously
The cream of the crop, the most educated, and also lowbrow in terms of your humor. All the yetis and the motorheads. We hope we can do a meetup one day soon. As always, send your corporate confessions. Dear demoteds. guest suggestions if there's people you want us to interview. People who can bring some value to the show, not just because you're homies with your CEO. Yeah.
absolutely absolutely if you want to come on the show and get real with us and talk about some real shit doors open doors open like comment subscribe on youtube comment interesting post on everything we release and as always we will see you next week on demoted Demoted.