Does everybody have a get rich or die moment? Well, first of all, you have to be 37 years old and feel like you're a loser and people looking at you like, Who is this person who's that age and hasn't really done anything? Then you will feel like, get rich or die trying. The contrast with where I was five months ago in my smelly, one bedroom apartment in Santa Monica, where nobody would pay attention to me, and suddenly paparazzi or photographing me in my swimsuit.
It was shocking. It was surreal. You don't like your work, your colleagues aren't listening to you. Your boss tunes you out. You are completely powerless. You have no effect on people, no ability to
influence them. Lot. 20 do not commit to anyone. It's
about keeping some independence, some room to maneuver the game of life. The game of power is to have maneuverability. So in life, if you have options, you have power.
Welcome to a Search of Excellence. My guest today is Robert Green, who needs absolutely no introduction whatsoever. Six time New York time, Best Selling Author books you're going to know the best four day, Laws of Power, art of seduction and mastery. Robert, thanks for being here today. Thank you so much for having me. Randall, I appreciate it glad to be here. Let's start with your
family. You were born in Baldwin Hills, raised on the west side of La your dad was a chemical salesman for 40 years at the same company. Tell us about the influence of your parents that they had on you, and tell us a little bit about your mom, which you haven't talked about very much. Well, my mother is 98 she's still alive and kicking, doing really well. She's
She was basically a housewife. She started a business that didn't last very long in the 70s. So she basically was a housewife, but she was an artist. She studied art at UCLA. She's has an eye for design and fashion, and what I got from my mother was her energy, her persistence. She's somebody that just never stops. She's got more energy than I do when she's 98 so the this, this kind of relentless pursuit of something is sort of what I inherited from my mother. From my father. He was sort of a
gentle person. He was a really good dad, and we bonded on the level, mostly of sports. But I think what I got for most from my father was my ability to work with people, because he was a great salesman. Everybody loved him. It was really strange and almost poignant. At his funeral, all these people came up who I never met before, saying how much they loved my father, how wonderful it was to work with him. He was a really, really good salesman, because he
understood people. He was really good in dealing with each person, different cultures. At that time, a lot of his clients were Korean. He got really into Korean culture. He was just a man with a great deal of empathy and had good social skills. So I inherited that from my father. So I think those two sides kind of balanced themselves out to produce Voila, here I am, who I am. You
were very introverted as a kid, and you always love books. Do you remember the first book you read and what impact it had on you? I
cannot remember the first book I read. I can remember the experience, though they back in the day. This is in the 60s. They would hand you this mimeograph sheet with a list of like 200 books, the paperbacks that children could order for like five cents a piece, right? And I checked off like 75 books. My father was like, Paul, you know, order 75 books. And I did a lot of them had to do with war because I just loved reading about World
War Two. My father was, you know, he didn't fight, but he was a mechanic during World War Two. He worked on planes. I was obsessed with World War Two because it wasn't that distant at that time in the 60s. So a lot of the books had to do with battles and warfare and strategy and sports, the two things I loved the most. So that's what I remember. These really cheap, poorly printed paperbacks, just stacks of them that I ordered and read a lot
of people, as they grow up, they get, for whatever reason, into drugs seriously in the drugs, you got into some serious drugs in high school, but now you've done your research, but, but you've looked back. And after that, even though you were depressed, you said, you look back, finally, on the drug experience. How on earth can someone who does drugs and have a drug problem look back and thought that was a good
thing? I didn't have a drug problem. Let me correct that. I was mostly it was a search. For me, it was like kind of a spiritual experience that I was looking for. And so for us, it was associated with being out in nature, going to concerts, you know, like the Grateful Dead and things like that. And so it wasn't just for wasn't an addiction. It was kind of like to have sort of a transcendental
type experience. And I had some of the most intense, beautiful experiences in my whole life, and I remember them very vividly. You know, trips to the ocean and just seeing everything just utterly, you know, the awesomeness of nature. Just being alive, which is the subject of my new book. So it impacted me very deeply on a spiritual level. It was never
like an addiction. So when I left Berkeley and I went to a University of Wisconsin, I really didn't do any hallucinogenic drugs anymore, but it was a period of a year in my life that was so intense. I could still feel it in my body, how exciting it was. So I was using drugs, not not for just fun and kicks, but for, like, something else, something more, something deeper. I was searching for something. So you
went to Berkeley, then Wisconsin. My daughter went to Wisconsin, Madison. Yeah. Badgers, yeah. Go Bad. Go badgers. Although I went to Michigan, Go Blue. So I root for Wisconsin, Ann Arbor, yeah, and I ran. I did. I did root for the Badgers when Michigan wasn't playing grade school. I'm not sure who misses it more, my daughter or me, because all the parents would go, would have the best times. Was it? KK, there, when, when you were around, was it? What the KK, this crazy bar.
Everyone goes, it's fun. Thinks it was on State Street. Yeah, it's called the college club, yeah, yeah, sure, great, yeah, insane. So many people graduate college and then they basically the real world hits them in the face. I want to know what the experience was like when you sat down one day with a guy who asked you to lunch and he was three martinis in when he told you something. What happened? Well,
I was working for this magazine called atencioni. It was a magazine for Italian Americans, very fancy, very glossy, actually a very good magazine. And I had just recently been hired, and I wrote this article on a trip to Italy, which I thought was really good and really interesting about, you know, the Amalfi Coast and all that. And so he takes me to lunch, and I'm expecting him to praise me, and instead, he's basically saying, Robert, I don't think you're a very good
writer. I don't think you were meant to be a writer. You're not disciplined, you don't understand your audience very well. You just write whatever you feel like you don't, you don't have, like, a good sense of communication, you know, like journalistic skills, journalism is all about communicating
quickly an idea. And he says, You know, I think you should go to law school or business school, save yourself the misery that trying to be a writer will will have on you, and just go to law school and go to business school. And I remember because I've always wanted to be a writer since I was a kid. I love literature. I love writing. It's like my main passion in life, you know? And so at first I was like a gut punch. I was like, damn, what's this guy telling
what's his problem? And I I sort of saw him as he's drinking his martinis. There was really his, his issue more than mine, and this image came up to my mind that I've never forgotten, of looking at him in the eyes he's having as martinis that it was like a house with a decent exterior, but the insides were all rotting, and all the wood was full of like termites and just rotting. He was like rotting from the inside. And it was kind of like he was envious
of me. I didn't take it personally, but in the days to come, it sort of affected me, and it kind of weighed on me, and I came to the realization that in some way, he was right. It wasn't that writing wasn't right for me, because I've always wanted to be a writer, and I knew that I was a good writer. It was that I was in the wrong field journalism, and it was a signal to me that I wasn't passionately involved in it, and because I wasn't passionately involved in the work, it wasn't
really of high quality. So I understood I had to get out of journalism, which was sort of the epiphany that I had. And I did get out of journalism. So many
young professionals today, and I have this intern program we talked about a little bit before the show, and I've mentored hundreds of students and young professionals. Have no idea what they want to do. You knew you wanted to be a writer, and they bounce around. You had
50 jobs
before you were at least, probably more more,
and we'll get into your big break in a minute. But let's talk about some of them, hotel receptionists. You were a tour guide. You did a lot of you worked for a screenwriter. You wrote some novels that you didn't finish. What was the worst job you ever had, and the worst experience from that job, and what lessons did you learn? The
worst physical job was in Greece. I was very sick. I was in hospital. I had to pay my way to get off this Greek island. I had no money, so I did construction work. And I basically had to pull nails out of pieces of wood all day long, you know, and getting all bloody and everything. That was the worst physical job, the worst mental job was I worked for a detective agency, I believe, in Pasadena, somewhere like that. And I was a skip tracer, which is basically somebody who stays
in an office. You're not a detective. You sit in an office and you try and hunt down people who've skipped town, who've left debts or have dropped, you know, got from they haven't paid their bail. They, you know, they whatever the word is, and so my job was to find them over the telephone. Now. Google, Van No, no, no. Google, late 80s, yeah. And you had a script you would call, like the mother or the old ex girlfriend, they would give
you the numbers. And you had a script of how you would sort of deceive and manipulate them into believing that you were a friend and that you were just trying to look for this guy, right? And so, you know, you'd have to say, you know, oh, I remember. You would make up a story that would sound like you knew them in school. And unfortunately, I was really good at it, but I felt so depressed. I felt so ugly inside because
you were conning them and these poor
people who knew their story, maybe they, maybe they were doing it for a reason. You know, I felt sympathy for them. I've always felt sympathy for the underdog in life, and here I was the oppressor. Here I was the police person trying to nab them. I felt ugly, and it was a really horrible period in my life. I was only at the job for three months, but it was so soul sucking. I've had a lot of soul sucking jobs working in Hollywood. That was probably the worst. But I could go on
forever. All that stuff prepared me, gave me material for the 48 Laws of Power, the
Hollywood job I'm particularly curious about because we live here and we both have tons of friends in that business who get yelled at every day they do shit work. It's it's a horrific experience. Thank you. What is your worst experience working in Hollywood?
I worked for a television company that produced one of the schlockiest TV shows in the 90s. I'm so embarrassed, but I don't even want to tell you the name. Oh,
come on, you gotta tell us the name. Rescue, 911, okay,
I'm really it's almost like admitting I was a porn star or something. How embarrassed I am to say that. Anyway, I was like a researcher for this show, and God, you know, you're like calling the police chief in some town in Iowa, asking for stories of people that he's like, brought back from death, you know, stories of like a pet pig that was caught in a fire. The firemen had to perform CPR on the pig, you know. And then they were going to go out and film that, you know. I mean, that
kind of stuff, you know. And I, I was always more of an elevated mentality. Not that I'm a snob, but I was always into, like, interesting movies and literature and stuff. And here I'm, like, making phone calls about a police a fireman who's like, had prep do mouth to mouth resuscitation on a pig, you know, things like that. That was, that was pretty bad. But, you know, I don't know. I saw a lot of very manipulative tactics worked on people. And that's where the law of the 48 Laws of
Power came from. And some of it kind of disturbed me, you know, like I would write whole sections of dialog for a screenplay as an as an assistant, but, and it was probably the best dialog in the script. But I never no one ever gave me credit for no one knew that I had done that line that was so funny. So law number seven always get people to do the work, but take the credit for it. That's where that law came from. I could go on and on and on about that.
Let's get to the book in a little bit. But I want to talk about the period we graduate college. We're usually 22 years old, and for the next 14 years, you were kind of lost. You didn't know what you're doing. Things are not going well. Your parents were worried about you, and you had suicidal thoughts. So did you ever actually think about killing yourself?
Oh yeah, yeah, my girlfriend, then my wife, now she can attest to that I was I was pretty low. It's this feeling like you know that you're good at something, you know that you're destined for something I was at, a feeling like I was destined to do something interesting and maybe even great, right? But you haven't done it. You've kind of wasted. What is it? You're lost. If I never felt like I was really meant to do something important. I wouldn't have
gotten so depressed. But the discrepancy between what I thought of myself and what I had achieved was getting wider and what bigger and bigger and bigger. And as you say, I'm in my mid 30s, and I'm seeing all these young people come up who are so smart, who've already directed their first film, who produced their film, they've written their first novel. Here I am, 3637 and you could put, take that word loser and attach it to me. At least I felt that way. It hadn't really added up
to anything solid. So, yeah, I was deeply depressed, and at moments I thought of suicide. So
many of us have a big break, right? Things are not going well my own life, I came to LA I lost my job five and a half weeks after moving here. I had $3,000 in the bank. Got fired from that job six months later, well, I got a job in Orange County. They wanted to move. I said, No, fired from that job eight months in, wow, got a record, yeah, big time record. Worst legal start to a legal career that you could
probably have. Well, yeah, and so Eli Broad hired me after this terrible stretch I had, and that was my big break. Tell us when you were in Venice, Italy about a guy named Joe stauffers. Tell us what happened next.
Well, I was there on a project that a friend from Berkeley, a college friend, had invited me on to write a book to help launch a school that Benetton was starting, a media School, which is a really weird concept, a book to launch a school. And
for those people who don't know Benetton was in such really cool clothing brand, they had, like, the rugby it was blue and had wife.
Yeah, it was a bad experience. It was just like all these Italian people drinking espresso all day and arguing and discussing, and nothing ever got done. Nothing, you know. And so I like to get things done. And this man, Yost offers is in New York, is a book packager, which is basically a man who produces books, like a man who produces or a woman who produces movies. And he was there to produce this mythical book that we were going to
write. And we were both walking on the caves of Italy, of Venice, one of the most beautiful locations in the world, in the Piazza San Marco. And he suddenly asked me, in his nice Dutch accent, whether I had any ideas for a book, and suddenly there's like a light bulb that went on in my head, like, wow, I could write a book, not a novel, not a screenplay, not a play, but a book, a non
fiction book. Never really thought of that before, and I got kind of really weird and excited inside, and I improvised an idea that turned into the 48 Laws of Power. I told him a story. I said, I've been through all these terrible experiences like we were having in Italy with all these Machiavellian characters. I told him a story of King Louis the 14th and his Prime Minister, or his attendant, his finance minister, sorry Nicholas Fouquet, who threw the most magnificent party
in honor of the king. Right? The party that people were talking about, it was like the greatest party they'd ever attended. And the day after he was thrown in prison, and spent the rest of his life in prison, he had out shown the master. He people were liking him more than the king, and because you were he was offending the king's ego. He was thrown into prison, ostensibly for financial reasons, for
corruption, right? Never outshine the Master, I said, Yost, this is an example in history of something so elemental, a pattern in people, their insecurities, their egos, that if you inadvertently trip their ego, and it's your boss, you're going to pay for it. In the old days, you would be beheaded or thrown into prison. Now you will be fired. He got so excited by that, he said, Robert, I'll pay you. I'm not going to do this accident. I'll pay you to write the rest of the
book when we'll sell it. He paid me. This is 1996 he paid me 3000 a month, which, back then wasn't bad for somebody who was pretty much living paycheck to paycheck. My method was I would work six months in Hollywood and make a fair amount of money and then quit and write for six months till I had nothing, and at that point I had nothing. So 3000 a month was pretty good for me. You
call this moment a get rich or die moment? Does everybody have a get rich or die moment? And if you don't, what do you say to people who are hoping to get one?
Well, first of all, you have to be 37 years old and feel like you're a loser and you have your parents, like, kind of whispering things and these phone calls that are kind of disturbing you, and people looking at you like, maybe, who is this person who has who's that age and hasn't really done anything, then you will feel like, get rich or die trying kind of thing, right? So if you're in your 20s, it's hard to feel that kind of desperation,
right? Unless you're so ambitious that by the time, and there are young people like that, you're 23 and you haven't made your first million you feel like that kind of thing. But it was mostly that I was so desperate to save my life. And it was really like saving my life at that point that I was going to work, I was going to kill myself to make this book work, and I did, literally. I didn't kill myself, but I worked so hard, night and day, day and
night. Just poured every last bit of energy I had into that to make it something great. I call it in my war book, my strategy book, The Death ground strategy in battle, when an army has its back to a mountain or to the ocean, and it's either defeat the enemy or die that army will fight with three times, four times the energy, right? Well, my back was against the ocean. I was gonna, like, kill myself if
I didn't succeed. And because of that energy, I worked so hard with so much desire and so much emotion that I. It all into that book.
There's something ingrained in us that our parents know best, right? Our parents want us to go to law school or I'm Jewish. You know, you should be a doctor, and everyone believes that your parents, yeah, I'm Jewish. We share that. So thankfully my mom, thankfully. My mom didn't say that I needed to be a doctor. She wanted me to be a doctor, but
you a lawyer. Second best, don't want to
admit that to people today not proud of that moment. Did it? Did it because I thought $70,000 back in 1993 I was rich. There's nothing I could do on $70,000 I made after tax, they $48,000 like all right, do parents actually know best? No, why not? Because
everybody's different. Everybody is born with a different DNA, with a different wiring of their brain, with different tastes, with different proclivities, different inclinations, and when parents try to impose their own values, their own experiences, on their child, they're doing a disservice. They're harming the soul of that child, right? So I can credit my parents in the sense that they put a little bit of pressure, like Jewish parents
always will, right? But they weren't too forceful with it, but I know a lot of people who felt that pressure, you know, got to be a doctor, got to be a lawyer, got to follow this path or that path. And when parents do that, a lot of times, what happens is, you enter a profession under the belief that I need to make money, that I need to be comfortable, right? Because that's the most
important thing, you know. It's to have the insecurity of not knowing where you're going to how you're going to make a living, is terrible. I understand that, but it's not connecting to you, right? And I'm not going to say this about you, but a lot of people who go into becoming lawyers, they do that out of the desire to make money, not out of a connection to law, not out of a connection to the rhetoric of law, to the back and forth element, to the to the confrontational aspect.
It's because they want to make a living out of it, money. And then they get into their late 20s, their 30s, and there's no connection to it. They don't feel that. There's no energy, there's no desire, there's no emotion. And they start tuning out, and their work suffers. And they start, you know, being distracted and thinking of other things. And then slowly, as they get older, they feel like, damn it, I missed it. I should have
done something else, right? So you have to learn at a very early age to not listen to your parents and to listen to that voice inside of your head that tells you what you want to be? For me, that voice was writer. Be a writer. Be a writer, not be a lawyer, not be a doctor, but be a writer. And if that voice gets drowned out by the voices of your parents, you're in a lot of trouble.
I know a lot of lawyers. I fucking hated every minute of law school, couldn't I mean, I got to read these cases. I had no interest. It's like, oh my God, how do I read this and understand it. I practiced so unsuccessfully for two and a half years, there wasn't a moment I sat on my desk where I thought I love what I'm doing. This is rewarding. This is just the best thing ever. And most lawyers I know today are absolutely miserable. Oh, good well, but they get golden hang.
I mean, we had dinner. Maybe we have some really, really good friends. He's a lawyer, very senior lawyer. Charges $2,000 an hour. And I said to him, and I'm not going to mention his name, but we'll call him Jim Bob. I said, Hey, Jim Bob. I said, Do you like what you're doing these days? He said, I fucking hate it. And I said, Well, you're making a few million dollars a year. You have all these fancy clients. He said, Well, I'd rather be doing something
else. Yeah, very common scenario, and it's
too late, you know? He said, What am I gonna do now? It's the only thing I know what to do.
He's 50 he's 58 too late. 58 book. It's two kids,
mortgage, private school. Yeah, nice vacations. $4,000 a night, hotel rooms. When they go away, I tell
people that as a cautionary tale, because I've heard stories like that. You do not want to be that person. I tell them who's 55 years old, who looks back on their life and says, God, I could have been this, or, in the words of Marlon Brando, I could have been a contender. I could have been great at this, and I never did it right. And then that feeling of regret is like a wound, a pain that never goes away. It's going to haunt you till you die. You don't want to be that
person. Is what I tell people.
You write this incredible book, your first book, it's unheard of almost for your first book to be such a best seller. Everybody knows the book. When I told people that you were coming on my show, I was like, Robert Greene, I love that book. 48 Laws of Power. They're telling me about all the lessons. Let's start at the very beginning with the title of the book, the word power. When I think of power, and before I read the book, I thought, all
right, well, power. Power means you can dictate everything. You're in control of everything. You got it all, and everyone's got to listen to you, and you can basically do whatever you want. That's not the definition of power, is it?
No, it's not, because it's a social game. Power is a complete social game. It's pure psychology. It's creating the appearance of power. It's making people like you, making people want to be on your side. And if you're a bully, if you're forcing people, if you're telling people what to do, it's like you create a counter reaction, and they secretly resent you, and they're going to work against you,
right? The game of power is to play on people's psychology to the point where they do what you want them to do, but willingly, of their own volition. They think that they're helping themselves, but they're really advancing you. It's a very subtle game where you think what you're doing is helping you, but in fact, it's having the opposite effect, right? You're not aware of the consequences of your action. You're talking too
much. You think by talking a lot you're going to impress people with all of your knowledge and all your intelligence, and in fact, you're making yourself look weak and insecure. Always say less than necessary. Law number four, some of the book is counterintuitive, some of it is kind of common sense, but some of it is counterintuitive. I'm trying to show you the subtle gradations of the game of power, the social aspect, because knowing how to deal with people
is not easy. Nobody hands us a book when we graduate college saying this is how it works. People are very tricky. They never tell you exactly what they think about you. They smile, but they're not really on your side, and so you have to be very alert, and you have to understand the subtle nuances of the game of power.
You said that the feeling of being powerless is more corrupting than the feeling of power itself. What does it mean to be powerless, and why is that more corrupting than power?
Well, you know, put yourself in this situation. It's very it's very simple. It's not it's not that complicated. It's not rocket science. Your children aren't listening to you, your son, your daughter, they're tuning you out. You yell at them screaming. They don't they have nothing. They won't listen to you at all up to a certain point. No, no, I'm just pending a scenario. Okay, so your children are tuning you out. Your wife won't listen to you or your husband very annoying habits that you wish
them to change. You don't yell. You try to change it, but they're not changing. You don't like your work. Your colleagues aren't listening to you, right? Nobody cares about you. Your boss tunes you out. You are completely powerless. Nobody will listen to you. Nobody will do you have no effect on people, no ability to influence them. I think we can all relate to how miserable that feels right to have the fact, because we're animals that you know, life is tricky, it's chaotic. We want
some control. We want the ability, to some degree, to direct the circumstances that are happening around us, and the feeling that you can't influence your children or your spouse or your colleagues or your boss is the worst feeling in the world, and I know that feeling very, very deep, profoundly, because I had it right, but the sense that you have control over yourself
and you can control. You can move people sort of in the direction that you want, that you can kind of, you know how to appeal to their self interest to get them to do what you want them to do. Is a different, much different feeling. It's not joy and pleasure. It's not ecstasy. I don't say that, but it's a calming effect. It's a fact that I can dictate, to some degree, the course of my life. Let's
go through some of the laws right now, and as you said, some of them are counter intuitive. So I was raised in Detroit and was always taught to be humble, right? You shouldn't be the person that everyone is pointing out. You shouldn't be the person who's
louder boisterous. When I was in law school, there were people called gunners, and gunners were the people raising their hand every time the professor would call on them, they wouldn't shut the fuck up, and they wanted everyone to know how smart they were. And a lot of times they weren't that smart. They just like being heard. Our company goes public. Company has a $14 billion valuation the day it goes public, it shoots up to 35,000,000,086 days later.
Witnesses. This is 1999 october 29 1999 and I'm 31 years old. What company is this? Akamai Technologies.
Oh, yeah, sure, I remember that post IPO. Everybody
want to talk about the wealth, right? I didn't want to talk about anything. Eli Broad told me this reporter from Detroit called me up, Jerome Levin, he was the business reporter. I read him growing up. He calls me up and he says, Hey, I'm Jerome Levin, yeah, I know I want to write this profile about you. I said, Wow, thank you. I'm flattered. Not interested. And he said, why not? He said, I just, I want to keep my life private. He said,
Well, you really can't. And he said, so I'm going to write the story with or without you. I call Eli Broad, who's also from Detroit. I'm sure he knows Deron. He knew Deron. I said, Hey, what do you think of him? He said, Yeah, he's a good guy. He's going to treat you fairly. Said, Well, you know, I really don't want to, don't want him to write the story. And he said, This will be your coming out party. I said, I don't want a coming out party. And he said, then there's one reason to do
it. And he said, you can influence the outcome of the story. So I had to do it. He was writing it. Either way, it influenced me, but I had so many opportunities. He invited me on bloomer television. I had nothing to talk about, and they were going to what's it like to be a founder of this company. So law number six, court attention at all costs, doesn't make any sense to me. Why should we do that? Well,
I try to make the point, which is a very important point that people miss. I think it's in the preface. I'm pretty sure it's in the previs, because I wrote it that each law depends on the circumstances, so you can't be blindly applying each law, no matter where you are, no matter how old you are, no matter what your position is, that it's foolish. Life doesn't work like that. Each person faces different circumstances. In some circumstances, you want
an interaction with boldness. In other circumstances, you don't want to outshine the master. When you're in certain businesses, courting attention at all costs is extremely powerful. You want attention is power, particularly in the age of social media. But sometimes, in some situations, courting attention is the worst thing you can do. It makes you look aggressive. Makes you look over eager. It makes you look
insecure. So damn it, stop applying my laws willy nilly, no matter who you are, think about your circumstances and your situation be intelligent. Apply them intelligently. And the last law of the book is assumed formlessness. And I explicitly state in that law, throw out all 47 laws that you've just read because they're ridiculous. Just learn to be in the moment and apply what matters in that
particular moment. So it all depends on where you are, and in that particular moment, court attention was maybe the wrong strategy. I think a lot
of the people who are raising their hand and talking the whole time, I think they're insecure. And so many people I know who have made money, especially younger people who have never made money more before, I think there's a lot of insecurity that goes into courting attention themselves. Yeah,
but look at this, people in social media, in quote, unquote influencers. They're those people who are raising their hands like that in law school, and look how, you know, they've got 5 million followers. They're making seven figures. Whatever it is, they're doing pretty well by courting attention. It just depends on who you are, the kind of person you are, and the kind of world you're in, the culture you're in, and the circumstances.
Okay, so we're not going to take all these literally, but I still want to go through some Okay, so I had a boss in South America, not really a boss. He was a junior boss. He had been the assistant to the chairman, which I was as well before, and he was not a good person, not a good person to learn from. We do all this work, and he'd take all the credit for all the work, and you'd sit there in these meetings with Eli, and we created these 80 page, very complicated financial models,
and his name is Jim. Jim's giving it to our CEO, Eli, and I'm sitting around the room. What's going on here? But you said that get others to do the work for you and don't share any of the credit. How could you be a good leader or learn from somebody? If that's the case?
Well, first of all, a lot of the laws, I'm not preaching. I'm not saying what's good or bad. I'm saying this is how the world operates. Do not be naive. Do not be a naive yokel like I once was when I entered Hollywood, thinking that if I wrote it, I was going to get credit. Understand the law of the jungle. The Law of the Jungle is that there are vultures out there who are circling around you at every moment, willing to take wanting to take your work and eat it up
for themselves. They're scavengers, essentially, is what they are, okay? They're there. Do not be naive, all right. And so the best thing to do is to understand the dynamic, understand that people are going to take credit for your work when you're younger, when you're starting up. I mean, if you look at people giving speeches, politicians or newscasters who or comedians who seem so eloquent, 1000s of people are writing all of their material. Comics aren't writing their own
jokes. They have a team of writers who are writing their jokes. Newscasters aren't writing their reports. They have all these researchers doing it. That's how the world works, right? You. Don't be stupid. Understand the dynamic. And yes, when you get to a position of power, you're probably going to be using that yourself anyway, because it's hard enough, if you're like somebody in the public to do all of the work yourself, right? It's too exhausting. You've got a team of
people doing it for you. You don't put their name on every single thing that you do. That's just the way the world works. I'm trying to open your eyes to the way of the world and not make you not so damn naive
when we're terrified of things, our prefrontal cortex makes terrible decisions. You freeze. It impairs your ability to do a lot of things, and law 17 in the book is keep others in suspended terror. So how on earth can you do that in any way, shape or form, and still function as a rational, objective person making good decisions you're taking
you know, as I said, everything has a context, right? So if you're completely predictable as as a leader, as a boss, if everybody knows what you're going to do next, you don't have much power in the situation, because people can read you like an open book. They know exactly what's coming, right? And they're going to use that against you. Even if you are a boss, the people working for you are going to manipulate you. They know that you're this is the next thing that you're
going to do. If you're unpredictable, if they cannot guess what's coming next from their leader, it keeps them on their toes. Well, I don't know how he or she is going to respond to this report that I have. I better make it really good, as opposed to if I write it this way and I calm the leader into thinking, there's a great report. I'll just give the appearance of that, and he or
she will love it, right? You want to get the best out of people, so sometimes that little touch of unpredictability keeps them on their toes. Now, obviously, creating terror is a bit of extreme thing for me to say, but please understand, I'm writing a book that is, you know, a marketing tool. So if I said, keep people in suspended, you know, anguish, whatever doesn't have the oomph of it. So I use the word terror, but the idea of being unpredictable is an extremely powerful tool. And
it's a book about power. It's not a book about being nice. It's not a book about people loving you. It's a book about power.
Law 20, okay, do not commit to anyone. Once
again, it's not about relationships. It's not about your wife or your husband and not committing to them, okay? It's about keeping some independence, some room to maneuver the game of life. The game of power is to have maneuverability. It's like warfare. The army that has room to move its soldiers has more space, can maneuver in different directions, has more power, okay? So in life, if you have options, if you have the ability to go here, here or here, you
have power, okay? But if you've committed to this person, I'm going to help you when, no matter what happens, you've lost your independence, you've lost your autonomy. Now you have to go this direction instead of perhaps choosing this, this or this to serve your own
interests. Okay? So it's so easy to fall into the trap of always giving, of always committing to these people and losing your independence, and I'm trying to make you aware that power lies in keeping being the middle man where people want your services and they have to fight for it, as opposed to just immediately joining this side or that side. I
think so many people who read the book don't take the whole context. I mean, as you explain it today. I've talked a lot of people about the book, and I crush your enemy, and they talk about all this stuff. Oh, Robert is a bad ass. You know, he's telling us all these things, and I'm taking it to heart. But you said that you don't follow all 48 laws, and if you did, you'd be an ugly person. I'd be a monster,
yeah? But you wrote them, yeah, but, I mean, I never intended for anybody on the planet to follow all 48 the person who came the closest that I knew who followed the 48 Laws of Power was 50 cent, right? I wrote a book with him. He's a really nice guy. He's a really good person, actually. I mean, I know his reputation and the kind of thuggish front that he gives, but he's actually a very decent person, very wonderful to work
for. He's got good he's got good values, etc, so, but he follows the laws, and he's he's not a bad person. But, you know, there's everything is for your circumstances. Some people, the laws would be terrible to apply, because it's not your personality. You're not a bold person, so interaction with boldness will just look ridiculous. You'll make all kinds of mistakes, you know. So you have to know what fits you as a human being, what makes you comfortable, what makes you not
feel ugly inside. You have to know what your circumstance. Are you have to know what could possibly work in this situation or that situation, and apply the laws. And all 48 will never be in play for you.
So how many of the 48 should we master to be great? You
know, in some cases, it could be only one law to understand and master. You know, you certainly don't want to crush your enemy totally. That is a law that has to do with businesses, because you better believe it. Believe it that businesses use crush your enemy totally all of the time, particularly in the tech world, where it's very competitive and very cutthroat. You don't think Google or Microsoft or Facebook don't operate by crush your enemy totally. Come on, they do.
But you, as an individual who's like a lawyer or an artist or a rock musician, you're not going to crush your enemy totally, right? Obviously, anybody who thinks that doesn't understand how to read a book, right? It's context. It's who you are. So, you know, it could be just one law always say less than necessary, not always spouting out about things. Or it could be, never outshine the master, because I got fired several times for outshine the master
was very painful experience. You know, at some point in your life, one law will save you from from some misery, from some painful experience. One law will do it the trick for you, and maybe over the course of your life, there'll be 12 or 16 of those laws. I don't know. I can't put a number on it. One of
the human conditions that has always surprised me is that when you're successful or something great happens to you, people are not happy for you. And your book comes out, and the New York The New Yorker magazine calls you a total creep, and you had a lot of haters. So what, what was the, what was the reaction when people started criticizing your book? Did you care? And how should people deal with the haters when something good happens to them? Well,
you know what? I don't I didn't really have that experience. It's one time. I have to correct you a little bit. I think it was the New York Magazine. They had an article that called the book Chicken Soup for the solace, right? And I took that as kind of funny. That was kind of a funny thing. I was surprised that I didn't get as much criticism as I did.
To be honest with you, I was expecting a lot worse, and the only people who were a little bit difficult or nasty or hard to deal with, were friends, strangely enough, because here they saw somebody who they knew as this guy who was just struggling to get by to pay his rent, who never really had any success, and suddenly he's being interviewed on these television shows, and these magazines and newspapers are doing articles, and envy came in, and they weren't so nice to me anymore.
They were kind of mean spirited. So I had some of that from friends. A lot of friends weren't like that, but in general, people treated me with more respect than I actually deserved. I didn't have to ever face a great deal of criticism, and I'll tell you this coming from a place where my life up till then, was such a struggle, you know? I mean, I'm not to exaggerate, because there are people who had it worse. There are always people that have it
worse. So I don't mean to be overly dramatic, but I had struggled a lot through life, so to have a couple of people criticize me for this, that and the other go away. I don't care. It's like a mosquito on an elephant. It doesn't bother me at all. You know, I'd been through already so much that it didn't matter. I had a pretty thick skin. What you
say about friends is just so true. I was young. I made all this money, I went to good schools. I did well, and there's a certain competitiveness among people, whether it's outwardly or inwardly, subconsciously, and when someone does really well. I mean, I have friends investment bankers, and they're making the most money. The lawyers are kind of the second tier in terms of making money, but when one of your buds makes tons of money, it really, really, really affected some of my closest
friendships. Yeah, and you really find out who your friends were. I remember walking through an investment bank, and they separated the management part, the money management part of the firm through the bankers. Investment makers is what's known as a Chinese wallet. You know, they can't talk to one
another. And I remember one of the colleagues, one of my best friends, said, you know, and it's, it's, I mean, it was a big deal, you know, I'm 31 years old, and we're, I've at least on paper worth over $100 million hundreds of millions of dollars on paper. And one of the guys who was an investment banker doing really well, and said, and I'll call him Jim Bob again. So he said, Jim Bob's never going to catch you. I was It's like someone hit me over the head
with a hammer. And I thought, Gosh, and I had to keep walking. We're having a conversation. And I remember thinking that night as I sat. Around to it. Why? Why can't people be happy for you?
Why wasn't he I didn't understand what showed that he wasn't happy for he was happy.
He was unhappy because he was envious. Oh yeah. You know, these guys were the top of the top. They went to Harvard, Stanford and Warren, their investment bankers. Well, that, you
know, look, I've written a lot about envy in the 48 Laws of Power. Never appear too perfect. It's all about envy. And if you appear too perfect, you're going to attract envy like a magnet, and you're going to suffer for it in the laws of human nature. I have an entire chapter just devoted to envy. How what a prevalent human trait that is. And first of all, you have to understand that it's human nature that we're built. Our brains are built through comparison. We compare
information. That's how intelligence, that's how our language works. It's how the human brain has become what it is by comparison. Information as a social animal, we're also comparing ourselves constantly to other people. It's ingrained. It's wired into our systems. So the point of my book, The laws of human nature, is, stop feeling so superior. Stop feeling like, Oh, there. Envy is I'm not there. He's a narcissist, but I'm not. No, you all share that trait. Everybody
feels envy. To this day. I still feel envy, but I'm able to confront it and realize that I have that flaw, and by understanding it, then I can be more compassionate to people, but also I can understand what I can do to deflect envy from other people. So maybe I'm not criticizing you, but maybe you were doing something that was making them feel you were kind of rubbing it into them a little bit.
I never did that. Never did that. Never. In fact, I would never want to talk about the money. I was embarrassed almost. You know, you have imposter syndrome. You know you think at night, I really you deserve all this money. I rewind,
I take that back. Yeah, but a lot of people trigger envy because they boast too much they want to display themselves to the world. Look how great it is. Look how wonderful my life is. You're naturally gonna stir up envy. So it's your own fault sometimes, right? I
mean, we built, I built my dream house. When I was 31 years old, my friends were all living envious. Well, they're, they're in apartments, you know? They're, they're an apartment and but it was, I mean, it's almost embarrassing to have your friends come over, because they're looking at this house, and it's spectacular. And you know, I remember talking with my wife at the time, do we buy it or do we not buy it? And this crazy thought would be, are our friends going to come visit
us at the house? Are they going to be envious? Is it going to be weird? I got to tell you, it was weird for a lot of people. Yeah, very weird,
yeah. Understand that. Understand that it's natural, it's human to feel that way and to kind of, you know, don't take it personally. We take too many things personally in
life, I hurt, huh? It cannot hurt,
yeah. But in some ways, I understand it. You know, I understand it. When people, like friends, would kind of give bitchy, passive aggressive comments about my book, they would say things like, Well, Robert, you must be making a lot of money with that book, as if I wrote it just to make money, which is the case at all, right? But they were trying. It was a little subtle passive aggressive dig that they were getting in
there, right? And I would get other digs like that, and it just goes off my back, like, that's what people are like, you know, that's the animal that we are. I'm not going to take it seriously. Yeah, it hurts a little bit. I understand in the moment it hurts, but in the days to come, it doesn't bother me at all, because I understand that's just how humans are wired.
Like so many people, it takes years and years to become successful. What was it like when it became a best seller?
I compared it to Disneyland, where you have here in Anaheim, you have the Mr. Toads wild ride. I went from like, kind of living in this crummy, one bedroom apartment in Santa Monica, to being jetted off to Italy and meeting the Prime Minister, former prime minister of Italy, it was like Mr. Toads, wild ride I was having. It was like being on drugs. I was having a wonderful time. It was surreal. It was
really surreal. And I mentioned this Italian junket, it was probably the first, it was the first press trip I took, I think, no, no, maybe the second, but it was like early 1999 and I'm invited to Italy, to the island of Capri to present my book. And so, you know, sure, I'll, guess I'll do that. And I'm suddenly like flying business class, which I've never
flown before. And I'm taken to this island to this if you ever been to Capri it's one we've been there spectacular, spectacular, very ritzy, very fancy, put up in the finest hotel. And then weirdest thing of all is I'm walking around in my swimsuit. The paparazzi are following me and taking
photographs of Me. You. Know, Like the contrast with where I was five months ago, in my smelly, one bedroom apartment in Santa Monica, where nobody would pay attention to me, and suddenly paparazzi or photographing me in my swimsuit, you know, it was, it was shocking, it was surreal. It was hard to understand the discrepancy, and kind of, you know, make sense of it all, but it was still a thrill, and nothing will ever in my life, you know, to the day I die, will ever compare with that trip to
Italy. It was so weird, and I had such a great time, and it was so exciting. It was like, it was endless thrills, but it was also like, Why Why all of a sudden now I'm getting this attention. Do I really deserve it? You know, it's kind of weird. Did
you have imposter syndrome, little bit, a little bit, but you got over it?
Yeah. I mean, I had a sit down meeting with the former prime minister of Italy in the magnificent palace, where he still had an office, and he was considered the most Machiavellian politician in Italy's history. He had a very kind of sketchy career, and he'd written an article praising the 48 Laws of Power. And Harry was in office, and he didn't speak much English, and my time is a little bit weird. So he was talking to each other in French, because I speak French pretty
well. I was sitting here talking in French in this magnificent, gilded office in the palace in Rome to this former Prime Minister bantering about power. Oh, this is so weird. It's like I was like I was on drugs or something. You're
listening to part one of my incredible interview with Robert Greene, a six time New York Times best selling author whose books include the 48 Laws of Power, the art of seduction and mastery. It's an incredible interview, very insightful and educational. Can't wait for you to listen to it. Be sure to tune in next week to part two of my incredible interview with Robert
you.