Welcome back, fellow conspiracy realist. It is time for us to dive through our archives and discover a classic episode that it gave us some amusement, some gallows humor, and some rueful Facebook post. Actually, you guys remember this multi level marketing episode. I don't know about you, but I received some correspondence assuring me that their MLB was good. Oh man, and it's a great pairing for our recent episode about companies started by cults. Or we go quite into the cult like nature.
Of MLMs, not to be confused with MMA, which is different, different cult, different cult different. I'm in it, by the way. I love it. I got a call from a friend who did well in essential oils a very similar thing, Ben, and had that call. That whole call about like.
Nah, man, the essential to them. So let's check it out. From UFOs to psychic powers and government conspiracies, history is riddled with unexplained events. You can turn back now or learn this stuff they don't want you to know.
Welcome back to the show. My name is Matt, they called me Ben.
We are joined with our super producer mister Paul Act now decand and of course you are you friends and neighbors, and that makes this stuff they don't want you to know. Matt, Matt, Matt. This is something that's been on our mutual minds for some time, is that correct.
Yeah. I've always wanted to, you know, start my own business, really get out there and just be my own boss.
Yeah. Yeah, to bid ado to the endless drudgery of working for some other schmoe or a company, and become finally the captain of your own fate, the master of your own soul, to paraphrase Invictus, which is a great poem.
It really is. So in light of that, let's let's see. I think somebody has an offer for us. So let's let's cut to him and let's see what he's got to say.
Shoo, come on, man, the dreams you told me about, we can actually do them now. We don't have to wait.
Man, it works, and I'm doing it, and I want to help you do it because it's so good. Joe, this is amazing.
We can we can have vacations and sailboats, and we can have multiple homes, and you can give your wife the jewelry that she deserves.
Then you're gonna be a hero.
Come on, Joe, let's do it.
Get up, Joel, get up before it's too let get up.
Wow, Joe is getting the hard sell.
Yeah, he really is. The part you can't see from that is that this man is on stage in front of hundreds of people, maybe a thousand people, and he's yelling at a tombstone of this gentleman.
A tombstone that reads Joe nobody yep, born in what nineteen fifty five.
Something like that.
So the voice you just heard is one of the spokespeople for what's called a MLM or multi level marketing based company, a direct sales company, and in his performance, which is quite theatrical, he is gesticulating wildly in front of this styrofoam tombstone and begging this tombstone or the implied dead, worthless person beneath it, to rise up through the power of multi level marketing and discover his dreams. He names several things boats, multiple homes.
Yeah, all the jewelry your spouse or loved one could ever want.
Right, because of course every spouse defines success through jewelry.
Of course.
But before we get too critical, we played this clip which I think we all thoroughly enjoyed, and we ask you. If you have time to, you can check it out on YouTube. I think it's been featured in a number of places, one of which was Last Week Tonight.
Yes, last Week Tonight with John Oliver. There's an entire thirty five minute episode or thirty one minute episode we however long it was, on this topic in particular.
Right because it's a gigantic industry, and today we're going to learn just how enormous this industry is, how much of it is transparent, how much of it is hidden from the public, from the civilians, as well as from the adherents. Dare I say, the disciples or the recruits of these organizations. And the best way to start off is, of course, with the American dream. What this guy is doing when he's yelling at Joe. Nobody is tapping into
this concept that's familiar to anyone across the planet. You don't have to be one of our listeners based in the US to realize this. I think everybody recognizes the idea two point five kids, a summer home and then a non summer home, a boat and your own business, or a Mercedes and a Mercedes, of course, an extra slow Mercedes, because you don't have to hurry, right, not
at all. So this is an enormously appealing, if intimidating opportunity, the idea of going out there on your own, without a safety net and becoming your own means of income. There are a multitude of various programs, organizations, and institutions in the United States today that claim to assist people in pursuit of this dream. Some may be government supported, such as government loan programs that happen with would be small business owners or even incubators for certain types of companies.
There might also be tax breaks, right.
Yeah. You can even get nonprofit consultation services or even private companies that will just provide assistance in some other form. Yeah right, some assistance will give it will help you out.
And today's episode centers on a genre of company in that private sphere. Today's episode is examining one of the more controversial types of phenomena in the world of entrepreneurship, the practice known as multi level marketing. It's got some other names.
Direct sales. A lot of times comes into it. I'm trying to think there's one big one. It's it's like triangle shaped, triangle plan triangle, Yeah, that's it.
Triangle scheme isasles strategy, Yeah, something to that effects on may people are on the edge of their seats. What are we really talking about, Matt.
We're talking about currently legally functioning pyramid schemes.
It's true, also sometimes called Ponzi's schemes. You might recognize them if you tuned into the television or the radio during the Made Off scandal. You may recognize various forms of con jobs that have existed in the past, in recent history and in older history. And you may wonder, what's the difference between these multi level marketing things and these pyramid schemes? Are they all the same? To answer that question, first we have to ask ourselves what multi
level marketing or MLM. So that Matt and I don't kill ourselves trying to always pronounce that tricky phrase, we have to ask what these things are? How do we define them? So here are the facts.
Yeah, So a multi level marketing company or an entity that functions in that way. It's really a general term and it describes these strategies for marketing that these companies use.
And they use these non salaried human beings. Their workforce is all non salaried and they sell a product or a service whatever the company is pedling, while the earnings of the participants are derived from a commission system that like most of the money that the people working for the company are not drived from the sales, they're derived from the commission that you get from the sales.
Yeah. Yeah, this is where you hear the allegations that's something as a pyramid scheme. So specifically, a direct sale company might use this strategy to encourage existing distributors to recruit new distributors into this network, into this hierarchy, just like you had established, Matt. So let's say, let's read the room. We're gonna throw a look over at Paul. May we use you as an example in this hypothetical.
Okay, he's nodding a little bit, just barely. Yep, there it is.
Okay, he's he's so tired of these reindeer cakes. All right, So let's say Paul ActNow Decant is an existing distributor for we can make up any company.
Okay, how about vintage jelly beans? Right?
Sure, yes, they're aged vintage jelly beans. Are you tired of new jelly beans?
Yeah? These are the ones you remember.
So let's say that Paul is pitched on this idea of joining the Vintage Jelly Bean LLC or whatever it calls itself. So we can buy product then from vintage jelly beans from their factory and sell these jelly beans to our hearts content. Paul can do that, and he can make a profit of some sort based on the volume of sales.
Okay, so how much he say, how much he sells, he gets a tiny bill, little.
Piece, right right, he gets a bean. There you go, there you go, all right, And Paul is also told that he doesn't just have to sell jelly beans. He can make additional income and possibly quite a bit by recruiting his friends, his family members, his coworkers, and anyone else he can find, making them distributors of jelly beans as well.
So they do the same thing that Paul is doing.
But in the sense they work for him because in addition to the small cut of every bean sale that he makes, he also gets a cut of every jelly bean sale that his people make.
WHOA okay, So that okay, So that means the people, as you're going down, if distributors are getting money and getting money and getting money and getting money on the way up that. Oh oh, this is already feeling like a pyramid scheme.
Guys, I don't know, because if Paul recruits us in this story, then he stands to make more money than us, for sure.
Yeah. And we recruit somebody and we get a little bit of their piece, but then Paul still gets a piece of our piece.
Yeah, yep, and so it does. It does go up. You are right about the cognitive geometry. Hold on, Okay, so that's called a down.
Line, right down line?
Oh, the down line, not the down low, the down line, got it. And the incentive here is that once you or Paul or anyone has the new recruits hooked and working to sell these beans, you are making money not just off them, but off of everybody they recruit. As each of the distributors under you recruit more people under them, you get a percentage of those people's sales as well. And as those people recruit new people, you get Do you see how this is? This is exponentially growing?
Oh yeah, the exponential growth is pretty apparent, and it feels like it could be quite a bit of cash coming into me if I'm at the top, or at least if I start in somewhere and get enough people.
Below me, and let's pause here just for a second. I will I wanted to ask you this on air, Matt. Have you ever been approached by something some entity like this or do you know someone who has?
I would say most people, and this is conjecture, but I would say most people who are on Facebook probably have at least one friend that has maybe either approached you or is consistently putting out feelers to be like anybody, anyone?
Oh wow, Paul's nodding too.
Yo, I got this essential oil. You got to get this essential oil.
Work from home, change your life. Are you an active parent on the go and you don't have time to be locked down in a nine to five?
Check out my mary Kay products.
Saint John's wart, you know what I mean, various supplements. So you have seen it on Facebook. That and I have the dubious benefit of, at times in my college days being approached by people with a sure fire idea. And the weird thing was these would be people at
career fairs. Wow, so they would be they would have you know, they would have a table or booth right next to say, Coca Cola or something like that there's an amway, etc. Right, And I'm not I don't know for sure whether that continues in the modern day on college campuses, but I know we would like to hear from you listeners right in a conspiracy at HowStuffWorks dot com and let us know if you have had direct experience with these organizations.
Wait a minute, is that how how stuff works? Is that how you got picked up? Because the whole thing here is that if you come on and you start a podcast, then you get three other people to start podcasts, and then you get That's how it works here.
Right for our down line? Right? Yeah, yeah, thankfully that is not the case so far as we are right. Maybe we're not far enough up in the pyramid though. That ohone man? All right, imagine just like the dark Tower, what if there's a room the very top.
We got to climb this upline. We have to.
Climb this upline. Man, We've got to convert people, proselytize and have them convert people, and then have those people convert people. What could go wrong?
Yeah, there's definitely stuff that could go wrong, and we'll hear about it right after a quick word from our sponsor.
Here's where it gets crazy. So much stuff can go wrong, plenty of stuff, a cartoonish amount of stuff can and does go wrong, so much so, in fact, that things going wrong becomes more of the rule than the exception in this industry, despite what its advocates may want you to believe. Again, it's very, very important. We are not saying that all of these things are bad. Multi level marketing itself is a strategy employed by a company, right.
Yeah, And it really is marketing. I mean it's in the name multi level marketing. You're marketing your product by getting people to talk about it, mostly on social media.
And it doesn't matter what you're selling. That's the other thing. It's product agnostic. Yes, it can be vintage jellybeans, it can be Adidas wind.
Suits, skincare product.
Skincare products is by far the most realistic thing on this list.
At this point.
So the place where it gets sticky is the definition between MLM multi level marketing versus what you mentioned earlier, a pyramid scheme, or, as it's been known in pejorative terms, a Ponzi scheme. So MLM multi level marketing as a strategy, a technique, or an approach is not in and of itself inherently illegal. In fact, there are some companies that
practice strategies like this that quite well and are fairly reputable. Tupperware, for instance, Yeah, right, they sell they tend to sell products through parties and invite somebody over for a Tupperware party. Very American thing, right. I don't know anyone who has gone through a Tupperware party, but I'm reasonably certainly exist.
Yeah, they do exist. Have you seen that show F is for Family? I have the Bill Burger Show. There's a whole this is just my I'm channeling nols for this. Okay, there's a whole side story where the main character spouse joins a group like that that sells tupperware specifically, and it's this way and her garage is just filled with tupperware.
Oh, I'm so glad you mentioned garages. Oh yes, we have to get to that. So this strategy, while not inherently illegal or dishonest, becomes disingenuous at the very least when new recruits are promised scads of money only to find that there are hidden expenses that they are required to buy in as an investor, for instance, or that they are required to purchase x amount of these products, these jellybeans, skincare products, health supplements, what was Adidas tracksuits or windsuits whatever.
And they're also extremely convoluted rules about what you have to do in order to get the money that you're allocated from all your other people, your downline or whatever. It gets pretty crazy.
And it goes case by case. Yes, it is purposefullly ub touse. Well maybe it's maybe it is unfair. Maybe we are using a broad brush to paint these things. Maybe the people who have built these very elaborate rules for the distribution of money or products on the downline or the upline, maybe they feel that they have found the most efficient and most transparent way and perhaps the most fair way to distribute the money. Maybe that is clearly not true in every case, but maybe you have
to give people the benefit of the doubt, right. So an additional issue with this is that let's say you're required to buy one hundred pounds vintage jelly beans, or x amount of cases cases cases x amount of cases of a miracle water or a skin rejuvenator wrinkle remover. What you may find is that the price you have to buy it at is going to be higher than it would have been if you went and bought X amount of cases at Target or at a supermarket. Right,
and it may not be available in stores. That's another big thing. There's a lot of proprietary branding. But then additionally, you might find out these products are not what they're cracked up to be, they're not quality, they break, or the health claims, if they exist, are wildly optimistic and not research, not proven by anything other than long anecdotes. The Better Business Bureau describes several red flags that you may find when you initially begin conversations with one of these entities.
Yeah, the first one should be a red flag for anyone at any time, and that's anytime someone is promising you, yes, you high earnings, especially without having to do much at all, just very little effort, very little time spent, or any real serious commitment money wise or other.
The money just makes itself. It just frills in.
Yeah, I mean, come on, why do you think I do this?
You did the majority of the work you needed to do when you took this leap of faith, when you recognize this opportunity.
Oh, Ben, have you ever thought about you could? I think you could recruit a lot of people.
I think that I think that you and Paul and Nolan could all do an equally good job.
What if we work together.
This is dangerous territory. This is dangerous territory, especially because, as people will find out, we are ourselves already involved in a type of mL. But it's not it's not well.
So let's get to the second thing. So the second thing is you're gonna do this. You're gonna make money super easy. You're not gonna have to do much. But the one thing you do have to do. You know, it takes money to make money. You gotta purchase a whole hell of a lot of inventory, a lot of stuff. You gotta buy it. That's just how you get started. You gotta have that in your possession so you can sell all the stuff.
And got a prime. The pump can't sell what you don't have.
Oh yeah, and we're also here's the thing. Look, you're you're on this. You're gonna make all this money. The one thing we can't do is guarantee that we'll buy back any unsold product that you have. Okay, we're just gonna you know, well, we might buy it back for like a percentage of what you bought it for. If we have to like a restocking fee, sure, but we're you know, we can't just we have faith in you as a distributor, and we we don't think we need to worry about it.
We also don't take checks. That's gonna be another red flag. The money you're required to invest.
That's the term we like to use just to get started.
Yeah, that money must be paid in cash or a wire transfer or a money order.
Hmm.
Those are three red flags when yeah, when you see them waving. The consensus from most financial experts is to run, to leave, to remove yourself from the situation. And you would you know, it's easy for us now, all of us, all of us listening today, and for us exploring this in the safety of a re phones, yeah, in the safety of headphones in our Swell podcast studio, it's easy for us to say, well, I would immediately leave. I
don't fall for that sort of flim flam, right. Yeah, But as we will learn, there are tried and true techniques that are used to make people feel obligated through some sort of psychological manipulation to buy into these things. It's similar to the way that somebody might win a vacation. I know, Matt Paul, I know you guys have both probably received those mailers that say, oh, it's a chance to win a vacation.
Dude, No, you already won a cruise.
That's what it is. You've already won. All you have to do is travel the book of Raton or something like that, and what you what happens is that you arrive at these places only to find that did win the cruise. But first we want to give you a tour. Yeah, of these condos.
Yep.
And you know, in the market today, real estate is the best investment.
It really is. And can you imagine look here at the Windham Resort in Boca Raton. I've actually been on one of those recently. Yeah, yep, a.
Cruise or one of those switch try to sell you a condo.
Let's see if I can do this the right way. Some family members that I was with on a small vacation saw that there was at this mall an opportunity to have dinner paid for for our entire family. All we had to do is take a trip over to this condo and hang out for a while. Answer some questions, talk to some people, watch some videos, we did it. We had to like sit for a long time with somebody.
They split us up into groups, into like husband and wife groups, and like my wife and I just had to calmly say, no, we really don't think we can afford it right now. Oh but what if you know, we could give you this platinum package and I'm sorry we can't. Oh but well, the double platinum I think you can really afford and it's an investment for your future. And it went on and on and on until we finally got to leave with our visa check card.
Oh wow, so did you ultimately end up getting We.
Got dinner, but it was like two hours out of our day, and if you calculate the money for all of that, you go, wait a second, are you sure we should have done this? Guys they're like, yeah, we do this all the time.
And they all said no, no, they loved it.
Because they some members of my family do that kind of thing a lot. Ah.
Okay, I've never heard this story. Kudos to you for resisting the psychological pressure that might apply right.
Well, I mean, how are they going to apply pressure if there's no money in my accounts? Ha ha? You think that.
Now I'm picturing that internet meme where the guy's leaning in and touching his temple with his pointer figure. So it's true. What can happen is that maybe you were invited to a seminar for an MLM and you hear these very theatrical, very motivational speeches, right, and it's difficult to leave. It's sort of like standing up in the middle of church if you're religious and walking.
Out the social pressure alone.
Yeah, it's not a good look, right, and this becomes doubly powerful at the very least when you are there with a family member who was already active in this organization. You don't I mean, who wants to disappoint Aunt Linda or uncle Greg right, yeah.
Or you know, yeah, your mother in law.
Anyway, Oh man, that off air. I gotta follow up on this, okay. So another thing we find is that this all means, in the case of multi level marketing or PEERMID schemes, that initial recruits are essentially paying an organization for the opportunity to work for them. Let's let's sit in that just for a second, or think about it. Everyone listening. Imagine your last job interview. Let's see went to the job interview, you'd already submitted your resume or
something online. The management of the company sits down with you and they say you're qualified. As a matter of fact, you're not only qualified, you are superb. You're the perfect person for this position. And for seven hundred dollars you can start today. And you know, everybody's initial assumption would be, oh, holy smokes, you're giving me seven hundred dollars to start today. But no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no no, you are paying this organization some amount of money.
Yeah, in any other place or time or organization or job opportunity, that would be just ludicrous, that would be absolutely not. I'm out of here, right.
And a multi level marketing strategy becomes an out and out pyramid scheme when the bulk of the actual profit you make comes not from selling your jelly beans. The bulk of it comes from converting other people in your social network to work for you, with the same carot extending for them that they have to actively recruit other people. This business model has several deeply disturbing aspects. And first
there's that inherent bait and switch. You're not selling an herbal supplement, and those are very common in the world of multi level marketing. You are selling your friends, the idea of them selling their friends, on selling yet more friends. You are selling a borderline and arguably exploitative type of communicability. Right, so we should pause tumat and talk about herbal supplements.
Oh really, yeah, just for a little bit. Now.
I know this is controversial territory in many cases, and again, we don't want to paint with a broad brush. We don't want to paint with the wrong broad brush, which we'll get to, okay, But it's a common type or genre of product in the world of multi level marketing, and herbal supplement could mean anything from vitamin B twelve to a proprietary mix of vitamins to things that are supposed to help certain medical conditions. These are not held to.
These claims. Erbal supplement claims are not held to the same level of rigor and research that out and out drugs are held to by the FDA. Absolutely, at least in theory, the FDA is supposed to do that. Yeah, we have an episode about the opio epidemic coming up as well. God all right, yeah, but so with an herbal supplement, the legal restrictions on what you can and cannot claim about any given thing, any pill or juice
or paste, what have you. Those legal restrictions are much looser, you know, and you can you can have people come up and say all sorts of anecdotes all the livelong day about how it changed their life. But what they probably won't have, what they're much less likely to have, is a peer reviewed, reproducible study proving what they said is true.
Absolutely. I've recently watched one where a person said this specific herbal supplement helped her to become pregnant when all these other ways did not. She kept trying to get pregny about this rble supplement helped get there. This one person was recovering from a cancer because of this herbal supplement. And that's when you get into that territory of like, how dangerous is this to allow this kind of thing to occur? But you know, the rules are the rules, and in a way they're following them.
Yeah, it's the letter of the law and if not the spirit.
Right.
Often, the hidden fees and the required buy ins of these various products put already financially disadvantaged people into some in some cases, life ruining debt, not to mention the emotional trauma you might experience of discovering that your friend either purposely deceived you or has misled both of you. You know. Yeah, that's a painful thing.
Yeah yeah. And one of the biggest problems we see here with all of these people trying to recruit everyone else to get into this thing, whether they get hurt in it or not, is that you run up on a math problem.
Yes, that is true, and you don't need a calculator for it. Let's do the math. The math comes to us courtesy of a fellow named Robert Fitzpatrick, a former business consultant and now a prominent opponent of pyramid schemes and multi level marketing strategies, which he pretty much equates. He says, they're the same thing, and it's a false dichotomy, and he explains the unsustainable math in pretty simple terms. We have a quote from it.
The math is a distortion, a manipulation of what they call exponential expansion. Exponential expansion is two times two times two times two. And almost all of these schemes tell you that you can make money by just recruiting three or four or five let's say five. Then you let the five do their five, and that gives you twenty five. There you go. This is out the side of the quote right now. Yeah, we've got our twenty five people already. Right yeah, let's get back into the quote that right
there is exponential expansion. That's the trick of the whole thing. What they don't show you is that you can only do that thirteen cycles, and then after that, he says, you would exceed the population of the earth.
So thirteen iterations of this sort of growth will eventually reach a point of saturation such that there are no living people who are not part of this scheme.
Yes, and most of them will be on the most bottom level.
Right right, still required to buy in, depending on the specific case, still required to purchase a product or make some sort of initial investment.
But at that point they literally have no one to sell any of it too, because everyone has a garage full of whatever it is.
Yes. Yeah. In the most fundamental terms, this means that the business model as it is explained to new recruits is not meant to work. It literally cannot if everything goes well and every single member of this thing, or even if you know what, honestly even if sixty percent of the people are who are entering this sort of this sort of business, even if sixty percent of them succeed,
then it still won't work over the long term. Additionally, there are several other important points that new recruits are not told. First is that, according to Fitzpatrick, something around the order of ninety nine percent, at least more than ninety percent of investors or distributors don't turn a profit full stop at all, just won't just won't happen. And additionally, there's no recognization that something will go wrong, that the market will sat rate, that it will not forever grow unbound.
And that's kind of the problem we have with our economy in general, isn't it.
Yeah, arguable, depending on which economic model we're talking.
About, just exponential, constant.
Growth, nothing will ever stop. The factories must expand yeah, you know what, let's start a planet Hollywood on Mars.
Oh can we?
I don't know, I haven't. They're gonna need one eventually, They've gone every every planet will need a planet Hollywood eventually.
And it'll be all like Mars based celebrities.
Right, and think of the food puns. Oh my god, Yeah, we gotta get Jonathan on just to drop in some food puns. That's Jonathan Strickland, the host of tech Stuff and several other fascinating shows. He is also as an active charity volunteer to be our complaint department if ever you feel that there's something that needs to be corrected on the show where if you have a complaint, please do not hesitate right to Jonathan Dott Strickland at HowStuffWorks
dot com. But you know, joking aside, This shows us, This shows us a little something about the potential size of the problem. But what's the actual size.
Well, it's big and we're gonna get into it after a word from our completely not multi level marketing sponsor.
Why do that? I can't help but notice that you're panting with a skippy brush.
Well, this is the only brush I had. I've got to do the fence and then the wall, and I just have so much to do.
Don't waste time Like all, I'm in Macaroon rotting on this on my friend. What you need is a better brush, a bigger brush. I'll broad up brush.
A broader brush really would get this done faster, and I could just paint the whole thing in one go.
Maybe, why simply buy broad brushes when you can sell them? Why simply sell them when you can have your friends, neighbors, loved ones, naives, strangers on the street sell the broadest of brushes for you.
This sounds like a plan. What do I need to do?
Why You've already done the most important part, which has opened your eyes to a new world of economic opportunity. Your next steps are relatively small, easily handled, and we can take care of them today. All we'll need is a slight seed money investment. And of course you can't sell what you don't have, So with a minimum purchase of sixty eight broad brushes, you will be set to go.
My friend, okay, I guess you know I've been meaning to sell my home so I could do that. I'm not sure where I'll put the broad brushes. They probably need a lot of space, don't they. All Right, well, I guess let me go ahead and sell my house and then I'll get back to you. I guess no.
No, Now, listen, this is a tremendous chance to change the course of your life and the life of all your loved ones forever. All you need to do is imagine yourself ten years from now, would you rather be living in a sumptuous, opulent man or will you be a wash in mounting final notice bills, rotting in this dump, lamenting the chance you could have taken to save your own life.
I guess I'll take the mansion. This message for broad Brushes International has been brought to you by Illumination Global Unlimited.
And we're back. Uh. You know what, Matt, that last ad felt a little bit now. I don't want to go out on a limb here. Yeah, that last ad felt a little bit like a multi level marketing thing.
It was kind of pushy. I noticed that in the end, the one guy really seemed to want the other guy to do whatever he had to do to sell those things.
It's really, you know, it's eerily in line with what we're talking about, but sometimes those strange coincidences happened.
I still have issues with the size of the brushes, the way they were described, like, I don't understand. I feel like that's more industrial strength brush situation. I'm not sure.
I did appreciate how the other guy in the ad did ask how he would possibly wield these, But you know, let us let us know if you have experience with broad brushes, or of course our returning sponsor Illumination Global Unlimited. Just let us know how those products shake out, because look, we're not gonna knock a brush a broad brush.
If it works, right, Yeah, absolutely, speaking.
Of broad and expansive things, what's the size of the problem when we're talking about multi level marketing.
Well, let's go back to mister Fitzpatrick. He has a book called False Profits, Seeking Financial and Spiritual Deliverance in Multi Level Marketing and Pyramid Schemes, And in this book he speculates that the just the size, the full scope of these various companies that make up this industry of multi level marketing is currently unknown. Oh wow. There Essentially, there are so many functioning right now that it may be impossible to know.
And those entities certainly wouldn't want you to know the full nature of their financial transactions or their techniques. So, according to Fitzpatrick, this goes back into just the sheer amount of money that is involved. So in this quotation, he says made Off Bernie Madeoff cond a relatively small number of people with investment money. Multi level marketing, he argues, is using a different system instead of taking a million dollars from ten people, you take ten dollars from a
million people. That is the way the system works. I'm just using that as an analogy, but the numbers add up to staggering amounts year upon year upon year, and this leads Fitzpatrick and other experts to believe the amount of money involved in this industry overall ranks in a billions with a b wow.
And here's the thing there are it's not just the problem of setting up something like this that ultimately benefits, you know, the person that started it. Like in all of these there is some group or a person at the very top that gets all of the downline. Every single person sends money up to that one person, right, the founder, right right right, And in some cases there are allegations of these people taking advantage just fully and knowingly, taking advantage of everyone working for them.
So not making an honest mistake, not getting the accounting wrong, or acting out of negligence.
Correct.
Yeah, Unfortunately, there are numerous multiple cases in which founders are members of these types of companies have been found guilty of fraud, of conspiracy to commit various financial crimes,
and more. For instance, there was a guy named Paul Burks here in the US who was convicted of conspiracy and fraud during his time heading up a company called Zeke Rewards, and in the course of his trial it was characterized as one of the largest Ponzi schemes in US history, bilking more than one million investors across the world out of eight hundred million dollars. Later that amounted to be about nine hundred million dollars.
Wow.
He was sentenced to around fifteen years in jail, and he got off relatively easy because going into trial his penalty could have been as much as sixty five years in jail, and he's an older man, so fifteen years even maybe a death sentence. But what they did essentially was old school Ponzi schemes. Stuff. They made extravagin promises and they got people to invest money with the with the assumption that that money would later be paid off. As these as these schemes, this penny auction site began
to deliver the mail, deliver the goods yea. And for a while, for the earlier investors it seemed like this was happening because of what they were doing is they were taking the money that later investors put in and using that to pay off their old investors.
Oh wow.
So it just kept growing, passing the buck, passing the buck, and then eventually it created under its own numerical success, not financial, but just the sheer amount of people who bought in.
Dang. So that was Zeke rewards.
Zeke rewards.
All right, I need Yeah, that's a whole thing. I'm just going to go down that rabbit hole later. Thanks Ben, thank you.
So what what next? What's another example?
Oh, another huge issue that some of these founders have come into is tax evasion. And that's specifically when these multi level marketing companies expand into various countries. So like, you're not just starting out in the US or wherever else, Malaysia, maybe Australia. Now you're in all of these countries and all these people are paying money to you, but you're in one location and now you've got a whole lot
of taxes you got to pay. And this one couple, Thomas E. Moher and his former wife Leslie D. Mower, they founded a company in what Springville, I believe it was called New Ways or Knee Ways Nways, And yeah, they didn't pay personal income tax to the tune of about three point two million dollars. And it's it's money that they owed for their companies, for this new A's company in several in several countries Malaysia, Australia, and in
the United States. I mean, that's that isn't necessarily a big problem specifically for multi level marketing companies, like not paying taxes. That's just something that this couple decided to.
Do, right. That is not a necessarily multi level marketing only crime. Yes, and we can provide more examples you very well. Fellow conspiracy realists may have some examples of your own that you remember, and a simple cursory search online will turn up dozens and dozens and dozens of things like this. But let's you know, we should also mention that the inner workings of these organizations can also
get very weird. We talked a little bit about the psychological manipulation involved in making people feel obligated to do something which is not restricted to time shares or Amway or anything like that. A lot of advertising is built on the idea that it is possible to make people feel obligated to do something, they have to do it right. Not your life will be better, but your life.
Depends on it.
It depends on this. Yeah, and we did a video that you and I were thinking about off air as we were working on this episode. We did a video that had some eerie parallels. It's our old YouTube video about the techniques that colts use. Yeah, so there's isolation. There are long speeches you're forced to listen to. There's a lot of jargon. Right, A specific type of lexicon or terminology arises such.
That only you can talk about this with other people that know what you're talking about, or else it's just gobbledegook coming out of your mouth.
You can find this, for instance, in the ranks or the names that are given to levels. Right. There may be there may be a hierarchy of sales or position in the pyramid that is described by any number of imaginative phrases. Yes, specifically, I think we're both thinking of a company called Youngevity, Yes, that has levels based on precious stones.
Yeah, it's pretty awesome. But some of the other ones are even more abstract and strange than that, and you just kind of gotta look through them. There is one in that John Oliver episode that we played where this guy is discussing its specifics about how you get paid for people on your down line and the things the requirements you have to meet on your upline, and just I just it made my brain want to explode.
Yeah, it's something along the well, maybe saying along the lines is a poor phrase here, but it's something to the tune of a vertical series of dots labeled A two G going down. And then the guy is attempting to or appears to be attempting to helpfully explain how one actually gets cash in your pockets or in your wallet or your purse or the empty mannaise jar in your backyard by the body, you know, like wherever you
store money. What he does is the following. He says, Okay, you're a So let's say that B buys four thousand points at forty two percent.
Yeah, value point levels, and.
That goes that would go up to count as your qualified commission. But it's under it's an encumbered line, and that's remember you need one thousand unencumbered point value points. Right. And this this may again to be completely fair. This may be that specific word organization's best good faith attempt to simplify the distribution process. It sure does not sound like it. It sounds our kine. And that's just one example.
Well, yeah, and one of the like we said, one of the effects of having something like that, is that you have a more insular.
Group, right, right, they're outsiders and insiders, And just like some some cults do you know, it's a sensitive word, but just like some cults, you may also be taught that you have a mission beyond a financial goal. You have a mission to free people that you care about or.
To save them with this supplement. They need this.
So not only are you helping yourself out financially, you are helping these other people out medically. You're helping them out by providing them opportunity because you care about them.
Yeah, and if they won't join up, then there's something wrong with them.
What gives? What gives? Right, So we're being a little dramatic, but there is a lot of truth in those statements. Here are some examples of companies currently being accused of functioning as pyramid schemes. Amway probably all heard about. Amway was big in what the eighties maybe, Oh yeah, And my only encounter with it was hearing it referenced in comedy and for a long time, is it. Yeah, for a long time as a kid, I think I confused
Amway and Amtrak. Oh, and they kept wondering, why are people making fun of Amtrak for things I don't understand? Is Amtrak so broke that the people have to also sell like dish detergent.
It's been around for so long that I honestly don't even know what Amway sells. Do they It's like bath and body stuff, beauty products, oh and nutrition?
Uh huh, so this is like activated water.
This is a shipping company. Essentially, it's like an Amazon, but it's an MLM. Yeah, this is wow.
Now again, neither of us and Paul and Noell also none of us have actively participated in this stuff. So it is quite possible that there's something to it, you know, that we have missed. But these are the facts. These are the legal cases we found, and these companies are for their part, they say that they're very transparent with the claims they're making and they are pretty pretty responsive, you know, if mass media reaches out to them and stuff.
But that doesn't mean problems still on't occur. Next to Amway, another really popular or well known company employing the strategy would be erbal Life.
Yes, this is erbal Life, the supplements, right like herbal Life. Almost with its Herbal Life.
In twenty seventeen, they were forced by the FTC to pay nearly three hundred and fifty thousand people back some amount of money.
And the final settlement that they came to was Herbal Life had to pay two hundred million dollars. And then not just pay that fine, which is generally what happens with a company. You get your handslapped, you pay a fine, it becomes a cost of business. Well, in this case, they had to fundamentally this is a quote, fundamentally restructure its business.
Right, that's a quote from the FTC itself, specifically from Jessica Rich, who at the time was the director of the agency's Bureau of Consumer Protection. And that sounds like a good thing. Yeah, And so the company continues. The company, for their own parts, said that they had not done anything wrong and that they didn't need to make any
substantial business change. And there were also some people who said that this company was being unfairly targeted, Yes, from from some other entity or individual who had an ax to grind. So you'll hear from both sides. We'll hear the government side and you'll hear the company side, and those those sides just aren't going to agree. Yeah, it's really it's up to you to decide what what you
think is the the straight poop, the genuine article. There's also Avon, that's one of the more famous ones, right. There's also young Jevity.
Yes, Youngevity, one of the companies that I was gonna say pedals. They sorry, that's not right. They sell products that will help people feel and look younger. There are there. That's another big theme that occurs in a lot of these.
And in each of these cases, the organizations mentioned will typically prefer a description. They don't want to just be called MLMs. They certainly don't want to be called pyramid schemes. Who prefer a term like direct sales. There's something similar. It's what you said at the top of the show.
And you know, Avon has been around long enough for the idea of the Avon lady quote unquote to be a cultural trope, you know, and that means that on some level people have succeeded working with or for Avon. Same thing with Tupperware. So we can't say that in every case this has been terrible for people.
Yeah, it's not all bad, and you could be really good at it. If you're an amazing salesperson, then maybe this is the you know, a way for you to make some money.
I guess it just all depends on when you get in at the pyramid. Right. And despite the massive controversies and the various convictions for conspiracy, literally for conspiracy, these companies, many of them thrive in the modern day people who are opponents of these practices or techniques. The biggest question is this, why is this still legal? How? According to Fitzpatrick, we have no law in the US explicitly defining a pyramid scheme or explicitly defining multi level marketing. They didn't
as of twenty thirteen. But there is one thing that might help us out, and it is an article from Skeptoid. According to Brian Dunning over at Skeptoid.
I always love reading what he has to say about these topics.
According to him, he says that network marketing plans, which is another euphemism or synonym for this, they differ from illegal pyramid schemes in one important way. Commissions can only legally be paid on sales of a physical product. If commissions are offered on recruitment of new distributors, then it's defined as an illegal pyramid scheme. But the out and
out illegal plans are pretty rare, according to Dunning. Instead, most companies are smart enough to stay just on the right side of the law.
Wow, literally on the edge.
Living on the edge of the law. There we go. Yeah, and he's got some really interesting statistics about this stuff too. It's illuminating, it's not particularly inspiring. According to the rather poultry financial records that have been released. Newsweek, for instance, found that fewer than one percent of distributors for an outfit called Mona VI ever qualify for any commission at all. Un Less than one in one thousand recovered the cost
of their required monthly purchases. Oh weish you put that in. It's not a one time purchase. Yeah, you gotta keep buying.
Yeah, you gotta keep buying because you got to keep selling. That's the whole point. And again, like I said, if you're a great salesperson, right and somehow you're just unloading Mona, then you are that one percent, that one in one thousand.
And so the FTC is still working to create policy or business guidance concerning these MLMs as we record, and you can find their various fact sheets. They have a great thing available on tips and trick well, I don't want to say tricks, tips and advice, okay for MLMs, And if you're considering one, we do we do ask you to read that in conclusion. For us, at least, if something sounds too good to be true, well, there's
a reason we call them cliches. Yep. And the reason you've heard that phrase so many times is because if something sounds too good to be true, there is usually something hidden behind the curtain. And this isn't to say that these MLMs have no ever worked for anyone. It's just in most cases, the majority of people lose much more money than they make, and they lose much more than they were led to believe was possible.
Yeah, but they made so many friends in a whole new family while they were doing it.
No, boy, are you saving that one. And the people who make the cat the most cash, overwhelmingly are going to be the same people who founded the company.
Yep.
So please please please be extremely careful when you were approached by MLMs and when you hear a pitch from your friend's family or innocent strangers. Remember, there's probably something that company doesn't want you to know, and it's probably something that they don't want the person who's talking.
To you to know either, or the people you're talking to.
The people you were talking to, or the people that you convinced to talk to other people. Kind goes on. It's like two mirrors facing each other.
Yeah, if you are facing one of those mirrors and you find yourself in that position, all we can say is we hope you get out if you can. If it's a problem, if you're in some kind of debt due to this and it becomes a cycle, there are places you can go online to start getting some help, and hopefully maybe you can go the way of the Herbal Life lawsuit and get your money back at some point.
Just knowing that that lawsuit occurred or at least was finalized in twenty seventeen, that gives, I think, or should give everyone hope.
And if you have an example of a positive experience that you have had with one of these companies or these types of entities, we would like to hear that too. We want to see, we want to see provable positive stuff.
Absolutely.
In the meantime, we are going to head out. It looks like we've been getting blown up with emails from this broad brush LLC act Now, folks.
I believe they're coming in already. We just put this episode out right right.
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