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Here’s How Social Tokens Will Revolutionize The Advertising Industry

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Background

Mint Season 2 episode 3 welcomes Jeff Kauffman Jr., who’s building Parachute, a social token-driven consultancy firm focused on web3 solutions for brands and agencies. Jeff has made it his responsibility to provide entry-level social token exposure to many mainstream marketing and advertising executives via the community’s currency, $JUMP. 

In this episode, we talk about the vision behind Parachute and $JUMP, how social tokens will change advertising forever, why he’s building an advertising and marketing network native to Web3, the early days of the internet and mobile adoption, launching creator coins, and so much more.


Thank you to Season 2’s NFT sponsors!

1. Coinvise – https://coinvise.co/

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3. Socialstack – https://socialstack.co/

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5. PrimeDAO – https://www.prime.xyz/

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Adam Levy: Jeff, welcome to the podcast. Thanks for being on.

Jeff Kauffman, Jr.: Good to be here. Thanks for having me.

Adam Levy: You got it. All right, man. Let’s get right into it down and dirty.  Give me a quick brief about yourself, how you got into the crypto space.  What were you doing before and kind of like,  where are you? Yeah, man.

Jeff Kauffman, Jr.: I’ll so I’ll give you the quick 15 year journey to crypto. So my background is marketing advertising then in the sort of the enterprise agency world for almost 15 years, got my start just actually marketing on MySpace, believe it or not. So I really sort of grew up through the web two movement and saw that from sort of start to what I, I wouldn’t say finish, but to where it is today. And so that was super fun, loved sort of the birth of a new industry, a new models for brands and creators. But ultimately web two started to feel a little stale and a little over a year ago, I came across the concept of social tokens and personal tokens and that those keywords kind of triggered for me that crypto and blockchain and Web  were starting to enter a phase that was more relevant to someone like myself, someone who’s not in finance, someone who’s you know, not a coder or a developer by any means, but someone who builds online communities builds brands and builds experiences. So sort of that combination of writing and industry and you know, see riding the ups and downs of all of that to then wanting to be at the start of sort of the next wave of what internet communities could look like.And yeah, here we are today. And yes, it’s getting off to a good start.

Adam Levy: I love it. And you brought up a cool keyword, web two feeling stale. What about web two is feeling stale to you?

Jeff Kauffman, Jr.: So it’s funny because a lot of the sentiment around web was the exact same sentiment that web two had circa 2000 to 2008, which is we’re removing the middleman. The intermediaries are going away. And at the time the intermediaries weren’t Amazon, Google Facebook, the intermediate intermediaries were the large print publications, large TV networks and things of that nature. And so you know, that sentiment was super important for me because as someone who enjoys building brands the number one thing you want to do is connect a brand to a consumer, deliver a great product and a great experience and grow that relationship and web to promised them. Which is the same promises web three is making right now. So I hope we don’t make the same mistakes. But then over the years, what happened? Google, Facebook, Amazon, apple, they all became these huge intermediaries. So we just got centralization and intermediaries all over again. And immediately you start to feel as though you have handcuffs on, so 2010 to 2017 was sort of the heyday. I felt like there was a lot you could do in web two. And then the last three years, the clamps have just started to come down and it just felt like we were in handcuffs and it felt stale.

Adam Levy: So you brought up a point web to aim, to do what web three is doing right now, but people just built quote-unquote data monopolies and these huge islands that were gated and people became the product and very much so what we’re experiencing right now, obviously, what do you think is happening in web three that’s taking change into their own hands, right? Like what are users kind of like experimenting with from a point of view to make sure that web two doesn’t happen over again? What are you seeing?

Jeff Kauffman, Jr.: It seems like social tokens, brand tokens community tokens. They go by a lot of terms, but I like social tokens as sort of the catchall and NFTs again, a little bit adjacent to the world of, of social tokens, but you can still build communities around both. It’s really the ability for the end user to control their access to a community, not decentralized platforms. So right now, if there’s a big community in a Facebook group or an a Reddit group how do you mobilize a million people? If they don’t like how they’re being treated on one platform, how do you mobilize them and migrate them to another platform? There’s really no way to do that. And so that creates data lock-in network effects, lock in, and the innovation sort of stops. And so tokens putting tokens in the hands of the end user and then allowing themselves to organize around the token and not necessarily the UI or the platform or the database for law , at it’s simple, or it’s at its most granular level organizing around the token allows just freedom and mobility across the internet. So as, as we start to see experiences, websites and apps built for tokenized communities. We essentially get this world of online tribes that can just move across the internet together. And that freedom is essentially you know, what, what I think is the polar opposite and counter position to, to web two, which is no ownership and very little freedom.

Adam Levy: Right, and I guess we can both argue that we’re part of that internet tribe that is working in a very much so decentralized manner, me through mint you through jump, which we’ll get to in a minute, but everybody kind of has their own entry into crypto into web three. Right. What was yours? Did you first buy Bitcoin and realize, all right, what is this internet funny money? Was it through a blockchain use case? How did you get your start in this space?

Jeff Kauffman, Jr.: Yeah, it’s funny. My first awareness of Bitcoin was back in 2012, 2013, and being sort of a brand guy, if you will. And not someone who understands deep, deep, deep technology type stuff. The brand of Bitcoin was a bit off putting to me. It just felt really scammy. It didn’t feel right. Just kind of seeing it on the surface. But the general idea of it was like, man, there’s something here and Bitcoin will kind of be the first experiment and then we’ll kind of see what comes after that. So, Definitely put a bookmark in it and kept track of it. And then as we approached 2016 as Coinbase sort of started to gain a lot of momentum and you started to see this really nice brand kind of developed within the space that, you know, brands can often give a lot of legitimacy and credibility started to pique my interest again. So definitely leading up to the 2017 sort of craze and bubble is when I actually started to make some of my first purchases, obviously like super speculative started the devouring every video I could of Vitalik talking about the vision of  Ethereum, along with every other sort of conference or video that had been sort of put out there and, you know, got super interested in it. And then obviously the, the ICO boom, and the crash, and there’s a lot of sort of cloudy fuzziness around kind of what was happening. And I wasn’t deep into this space. So at the time I didn’t see really the, like the builders and the real like use cases that were starting to form. So I didn’t pay much attention to it. I was also highly consumed with building a business within the agency that I was working at and sort of scaling a web two solution. So I really just poured all my focus into scaling a social media business. And then in 2020, You know, it just kind of came to a head and it was just like, man, this is this again, that the web two is feeling stale. I’ve scaled this business, but I don’t really see, it doesn’t seem a lot of fun to keep scaling. And then again, kind of come across the term social token and personal token, and then just the, you know, the idea started.

Adam Levy: Sure. No, it makes a lot of sense. And, you know, Jeff, you bring such a unique point of view to this entire discussion, mainly because one you saw not only the rise, but the existence of my space. And then you also saw that transition to Facebook and pre IPO. Facebook is very different than post IPO Facebook. And I think newcomers who like gen Zs, right, that are coming into the space, they don’t realize these problems, right. They’re just end users. There’s just a product at this point. Right. And now we’re seeing the rise of these new primitive as these new ideas, these new forms , of one community engagement, community building and community ownership and what it means to be a part owner and something that you use, right. Something that you contribute your time, electricity, resources, whatever. Right. So when you’re seeing the development of my space, right, you’re being an internet community guy, right. An early, early user, you’re seeing the growth of Facebook pre IPO and how it kind of delivered a lot of its organic traffic before when IPO and the second one IPO that kind of like disappeared. Right? Where are we right now in terms of where web three is to where, what to was when you entered? What what’s the energy like right now?

Jeff Kauffman, Jr.: Yeah, I really, I feel like web three, social is 2000 to 2003. So like almost pre my space. Like if you go back before my space, Friendster was really. The, the thing that sort of led up to, to my space. And so I think we’re pre my space. I don’t even think we’ve seen. And it’s tough to say like like I don’t think the next wave of social platforms, I just, it, it, that’s too linear. It’s linear thinking. It’s like to think that there’s going to be another MySpace. I mean, another Facebook that kind of dominates. Like, that’s why I’m not, we can get into big cloud, but I’m not big on just a big cloud feels too linear. It doesn’t feel like this exponential just  change. And, and what we’re seeing. So I don’t even think we’re yeah, we’re, we’re like pre to really 2002 to around 2002.

Adam Levy: Yeah. I could echo that. And just, just because you brought up  bitclout for a minute. Right. And obviously, and it’s a point of discussion that I wanted to have with you more intimately, but we’ll bring it up. Obviously a  bitclout is like that social experiment that hit the market, had all the backing of like the top investors that got a lot of attention, a lot of early capital initially. There’s a lot of hype, right? Tokenizing the top 15,000 influencers on a social media platform. And then adding a twist of decentralization. It’s going to get awareness obviously. And like you said, we’re at a stage right now where.   I like that because you’re the first person to kind of tell me we’re in that early 2000, 2003 phase which basically means my space got started in 2003 big cloud is like that early iteration of what it could become, but chances are, or I don’t know, chances are, they might pivot right.

And become something else who knows you can’t really predict. But when it comes to like these creators, right. And now let’s get into the story of jump, starting a social token, just so people understand the difference between the social token that you started versus the ones that  are on Bitclout. Why not launch jump on bitclout?

Jeff Kauffman, Jr.: Yeah, absolutely. The main thing that I see with Bitclout , to me, it just felt, so it just felt led to like, just, yes, it had this kind of underlying blockchain component. They tokenized the top 15, I think, thousand sort of influencers on Twitter. But everything about it felt so web two, to me and to me, the social graph is completely built around the individual and not platform. And, you know, unless there’s like a layer of  Bitclout that, that, like, I’m not sort of seeing, it still feels like they’re trying to build the social graph around the blockchain itself. And it’s like this, oh, we went from a platform to a blockchain and I dont think that’s where it’s going. I think the social graph is around the user. And right now a theory seems to be the, the best place for an individual person to start to collect tokens and build their own social graph. Right. And, and in that sense, you know, still has all of the high level sort of beliefs and philosophies that ,  Bitclout is going for. But instead of trying to build around us a very specific blockchain use case you know, Ethereum is really allowing people to kind of create their own social graph. And to me, that, that seems like a a bigger sea change that we’re building social graphs around people, not blockchains and certainly not platform.

Adam Levy: Yeah. And I guess from that point of view, we’re building social graphs around people, but blockchains are the underlying infrastructure that are making it possible. Right. And just because we’re already on this topic, right. I, I think it’s fair point to now even introduce, jump. Right. And I’d love to kind of hear the story because we’ve been kind of seeding at it and teasing it throughout this conversation. So really quick, tell me, tell me about Jump, the social token you launched and parachute how those two kind of work in conjunction.

Jeff Kauffman, Jr.: So, to set the stage, I’ve got to go back to 2005 again, go for it though. How did the advertising, how did I get into community building? I was in college at the time. Wanted to go to the forefront of where I felt like consumer attention and consumer media were going so very similar to the way, a lot of sort of people who are graduating college and just entering web three right now, just kind of doing the same thing in 2005. I was very big into skydiving at the time. was making a lot of jumps at a local drop zone and just decided that I would start a MySpace page for skydive, Dallas. Didn’t ask permission, just got into it. Launched the page, started marketing skydive Dallas on myspace.

Adam Levy: That’s epic.

Jeff Kauffman, Jr.: In about a month, the manager came up to me at the drop zone and I only had about nine skydives at the time. So I was by no means sort of an expert, certainly was probably not qualified to be representing them on the internet, but he came up to me and he said, “Hey, we have these little comment cards. And at the bottom, it’s a sort of ask about your experience and how you liked your skydive. But at the bottom it says, how’d you hear about us?” And it was like, check a box, radio, TV, outdoor, whatever. But there was a little note that you could write. And a lot of people started writing MySpace on there and we were getting a lot of business from MySpace and I found out you’re the one, running it? We should compensate you. And so that was sort of my first client. It was a barter deal traded skydives for essentially social media marketing that allowed me to make 1800 jumps over the course of 11 years, which was just a blast. And so when I started to sort of move into the next phase of my career and I started to sort of think about really what I wanted to do. I wanted to jump into web three that’s, as simple as it was, and I needed to, and I needed a parachute to do that. So parachute and jump were sort of born.

Adam Levy:I love how it’s that simple. It’s like, that’s the inspiration. You’re jumping into web three. Okay, interesting.

Jeff Kauffman, Jr.: Exactly. And so when I think about it, and I kind of am like everybody needs a parachute to jump in, that’s kind of where we are at this stage. It’s hard to do by yourself. You need a little help. I’ve certainly had help through my relationships at sea club. I’m gearing up junk to help others in a similar fashion, but unique to a certain industry. So when I really started kind of preparing myself to actually jump in full time and leave the safety net of a big corporation. One of the things that I did is I just put together sort of a trends and research presentation, and I presented to just a bunch of smart advertising and marketing people. So think like senior digital strategists founders of agencies Founders and CEOs of billion dollar companies. And really the idea was, Hey, this is what I’m seeing. I’m seeing this crazy. And this was before NFTs blew up. This was before anyone was really talking much about web three from a brand perspective. And so sort of middle of last year, 2020. And the response I got from everybody, super senior people, incredibly smart agency people was, man, this is fascinating. It’s definitely the future. I see why we need it. I see the problems with web two. I see the problems that this solves. I have no idea where to start. This is so foreign to me. It’s like, it’s like seeing the internet again for the first time. And so as I started to formulate, okay. That’s the sort of the feedback I did a little market research if you will, light market research, just kind of talking to people. That’s the feedback that’s most needed right now in my industry, which is fortune 1000 brand marketing enterprise agency services. And the question, the answer was super plain obvious. It was, we need a community for the industry to come together, to start to learn, to start to set best practice, best practices, and ultimately build the products and services that this industry that web three would, would sort of need. So, that’s where kind of jumped started to make a lot of sense and being able to work with a bunch of agencies and brands and help them jump into web three.

Adam Levy: You know what this reminds me of when, like I’m a big fan of, of the history of the internet and the stages of the internet from web one to web two and now web three. And quick side tangent, I’m curious at, what’s going to make web three irrelevant and what’s going to eat web three. Right. But, we’ll get into that even later. But, what you’re talking about right now, because we’re so early in the stages of adopting more retail level type of web three tech, it reminds me a lot of like these early internet advertising bureaus, for example, right. Like the IAB, right. The internet advertising bureau when mobile came out, right. The, the, the mobile bureaus that kind of helped an aim to educate agencies and advertisers. And is that, what is that what the vision is?

Jeff Kauffman, Jr.: Yeah, it absolutely is because when you look at the IAB in the nineties you know, if you wanted to learn about the internet, where are you going to write a print article about it? You’re going to talk on the phone? No, you’re going to build a website. You’re going to start a blog. You’re gonna start an email. You’re going to use the native tools of the space. And in doing that, just to build your community, using the native tools by default, you learn the builders learn, the community members learn. And so when it came to like, what does an industry association look like for this age? It was, well, we, we need to vote. Like if we don’t launch a token and we don’t interact with the token, we’re essentially making a huge mistake in terms of how we’re actually actively learning, not just reading articles and you know, tweeting, tweeting ideas, like let’s actually actively learn. So that’s where, you know, the really formalizing a community around a token became important. With that said, introducing a token is a different dynamic than an industry association that is really classified as a nonprofit, right? When you really look at like structure and architecture. And so it’s not really fair, it might even be a bit misleading to call, jump an industry association because of what that might mean, but it is completely fair to call it an industry community. And then I think it levels up the ideas and the ethos of what association wants to do, but I think it actually turbocharges it.

Adam Levy: So with all these bureaus and associations, obviously they would monetize them, quote unquote, through probably membership fees, et cetera, et cetera, education materials. I’m assuming I don’t know too much, I’m thinking out loud here right? But really this is a network effect type of thing. This is a community thing. And to get the resources, to understand, to really get a better hold of what web three is, you’re giving people that first step to buy their first token, if they haven’t already bought in Bitcoin or Ethereum, et cetera, et cetera. And with that, they get access into a community of like-minded people who are also after the same problems, solutions, challenges, et cetera and going through that tunnel together. That’s essentially what it is.

Jeff Kauffman, Jr.: Yeah, absolutely. And the one thing that I’ll add to that is that to me, a token, having a token isn’t an either or, and like a business model, I still think you can have sponsorships around a tokenized community and we can get into what that means, especially when we’re talking big fortune 1000 brands and how they might interact with tokenized communities. I still think you can have online course material that sold USD or some sort of stable coin. You can still have advertising and sponsorships, and I think there’s a right way to do that within a tokenized community. And so , it’s really, we’re talking about the ying and the yang, the Batman and the Robin, the peas, and the carrots, two things that go together like really well, which is community equity in the form of a token and community cash flows in the term of all kinds of products and services that you can imagine.

Adam Levy: Right. So , my next point of discussion is that everybody can launch a token. And these people that are joining your community will soon realize how easy it is and how quick it is and how cost effective it is to just launch an ERC 20 or whatever the token standard is. But the hardest part behind launching a token is building that network effect, creating utility, creating value. How do you think about that? Is there a framework that you use in kind of deriving this value and creating perks, quote, unquote, or talk to me more through that?

Jeff Kauffman, Jr.: So really, you know , you’ve got to figure out a way to create value around the token, like the value for holding the token for using the token. And in that sense, a lot of the fundamentals of building businesses and building brands actually come into play. Granted, you have to translate that knowledge into the new tactical forms of like, what can you do at a very tactical level that’s new and different, but the fundamentals are the, like the high level strategy doesn’t necessarily change. And the example that I’ll give for that, because I think it’s by far, the best example is Bezos, what he claims is Amazon’s strategy. And it hasn’t changed in 25 years. I think Amazon was founded in 94, which is the goal is to deliver products faster and cheaper. That’s it? That’s the strategy. It doesn’t change. That’s the business strategy. That’s the brand strategy, everything ladders up to faster and cheaper. And in that sense, you can introduce all kinds of tactics and components and ways. To execute against that strategy. And so launching a token is not a strategy that is not new, like you haven’t like unlocked some sort of new strategy. You have unlocked a new tactic and that tactic is super powerful and not a lot of people are using it right now. But the strategies are essentially the high level mission is essentially the same. So if you looked at jump’s mission statement versus the  IAB mission statement in 1994, they probably look very similar, which is create a space for education and learning, create a space for people to meet and network create creative best practices for building brands using web three and helped start and, and sort of fuel the next generation of marTech, which, you know,  the whole new adtech and MarTech stack has to be built for, for sort of web three. And so, that high level strategy is not probably that too  different from many associations leading up, but how we do it. And the tactics that we use are very, very different. So I would just encourage everyone who’s considering launching a token to actually spend a lot of time thinking about just the good old fashioned business plan.

Adam Levy: Yeah. So that’s a really good way to submit faster products in the most cost-effective manner. Right. Amazon strategy, share with me more about what, what jumps strategy is, right. And what that like longterm roadmap kind of looks like.

Jeff Kauffman, Jr.: Yeah, absolutely. So, you know, Creating a space to learn creating an ability to network with individuals and then create a best practices and, and sort of build web threes, adtech and MarTech stack. Right? Look at what a token does to that and how it kind of supercharges that, no industry association has ever been aligned with a token. Really it’s a, you pay a membership fee, you’re a part of a community. And really the value you get is somehow extracting that value back towards the company that you’re involved with. So if your goal is to kind of rise through the ranks and be president of the industry association, you actually still care more about your company than you do the association, you would care about the association to the extent that it helps you in your own company. And what a token does is it aligns your company’s success as well as the industry association success, because you essentially have stake in the social capital now, tokens, you know, depending on how you design a social token and the purpose you give it, you know, you can get in the crosshairs of the sec and it can become a currency. But ideally all social tokens that you launched there, they are utility tokens. And you have to build that utility into it. Now, supply and demand takes effect over any good that can be traded and price discovery can happen into sneakers or some sort of collectible and those aren’t necessarily securities. So the same thing can happen with a social token. And so when you think about sort of the future of what this industry community can look like, we can start to imagine a world where in every top agency, enterprise agency. So let’s take just the top 200 several people holding a jump token, and then you look at every marketing team within you know, fortune 1000 brand, someone in there holding a jump token. And then you look at web three adtech and MarTech, you know, people that are deep in the web three space. Imagine them holding a jump token. And now you have these mega resources in the form of capital from fortune 1000. You have incredibly creative minds at all these agencies starving for new ways to do creative things. And then you’ve got all these innovators in the web three space and they happen to all be aligned with a token. So there’s a much stronger dynamic in terms of win-win across the board, because your stake is not just your own personal desire to benefit your own company. You actually want to see the community grow and your tokens actually give you stake in that social capital.

Adam Levy: So there’s two point of views here. How do you prevent this from being an investor’s paradise, right? Where they pump and dump and speculate on the behalf of fortune one hundreds, tens agencies, whatever they may be there, the capital that they put in there, how do you prevent investors from speculating on that? And two how do you communicate that to people? Right. We get it right. We get it. We’ve seen the reality of what it could become, where it is right now, but agencies who are more, I guess, cautionary around crypto, how do you explain this stuff to them in a, in a more, I guess, meaningful way that resonates with their level of understanding of crypto, beyond it being for criminals, beyond it being a stock market for random shit coins.

Jeff Kauffman, Jr.: So the first question, how do you prevent investors from speculating on it? That question first is a premise that that speculation is bad. I think it can cause some people who are new to the space and potentially holding jump to seeing those wild price swings and a tokenized asset could be definitely alarming or concerning. But, I don’t view speculation as bad. I think speculation serves a purpose. And and then also, I don’t think you can even prevent it like once a tokens liquid, like you can’t prevent speculation, so it’s just going to happen. And so really the idea is to not get distracted by your ultimate goal and your ultimate mission, and then the people that are really aligned with that goal and that mission they’re going to do exactly what, what you as a community leader are doing, which is you’re ignoring the price swings that are heavily driven by speculation. And you’re going to focus more on the mission and the purpose. To start, jump is not tradable. And I don’t even know when the jump token will be tradable when, whenever it makes sense. Right now, you have to earn it. And that’s sort of the first step towards you know, putting the token in the, in the right hands of people that want to use it for the purpose and the utility that it is, you have to earn it. And right now to date, we’ve got about 150 beta members. We’ve got 80 agencies represented from across the globe. We’ve got members from Shopify, Netflix, Tik Tok, Prudential, Amazon. And so these people have essentially earned the token by being the first to request access and and, that’s sort of the way I went about building the community as I wasn’t super public about it. You know, I posted on my own social channels and sent out emails to, you know, really close colleagues that I respect and who want to innovate. But as far as like mega PR releases or some like super fancy website, that explains what jump is. I stayed away from all of that. And it was really just, Hey, this is web three. We’re going to learn about it. It’s jump, request an invite. And so those people that were essentially very curious minds and heard just enough of the story and made the effort to request an invite without knowing  much. And then I had  some zoom calls to sort of onboard people. Essentially their first reward for being curious, people in this field is to receive jump tokens. That’s their first reward. And then moving forward, we’re about to enter season one. And we’ll have two teams. We’ll have an events team and a research team, and essentially to enter the community you’ll have to contribute to the researcher, the events team, and by contributing to the community, you earn tokens, which then give you more access to the community. And at some point, whenever those tokens are tradable it’ll make sense. Obviously, when you start putting tokens into the wild. Anyone can set up a liquidity pool and start trading the token. You know, that’s just the nature of the game. But it’s just like, once you start selling t-shirts, anyone can create a secondary market for your t-shirts. So it’s not like it’s that it’s that different. It just happens at a much quicker pace and probably a much bigger scale, especially coming up throughout the years.

Adam Levy: Yeah. I love how controlled and how focused it is on trying to achieve like not a validation, but kind of getting the initial energy built up within that community before scaling it and getting it much larger. Right. Cause obviously. There is a problem that needs to be solved here, right? And the social token solve that through community coordination, right. And validating equity, right. And validating proof of participation, et cetera, et cetera. Right. And the beauty behind what I like that you’re doing is you’re keeping it controlled, but also you’re aware that there could be quote unquote, a bad actor within that, that wants to take his experimentation to just another notch and create a unit swap pool or a sushi swap cool and create an ETH pair or whatever it may be, whatever the token pair may be. Right. And just put it out there wild and allow more members that you necessarily wouldn’t have won to join, to get into the community. And I think when creators are kind of thinking about how do they build their social token community, whether you’re a Lil NAS X, and you’re you have a fan base of millions, or you’re an individual like yourself that wants to create more awareness for a topic. I think there’s two models, either releasing it out in the wild, right. And letting people ape in quote unquote and buy it, or having a core individual sort of meant this on their own, in their own wallet. Not really create a multisig quote, unquote, that’s managed by multiple people, but you as individuals, Jeff Kauffman Jr. You determine who comes in and who doesn’t. And I think there’s something unique about that with creating that intimacy behind a community. And just to add on to that, you know, I think one of the biggest misconceptions people have is they’re aiming for masses, right? They’re aiming for millions of people in the community, but what you’re proving it’s use case dependent.

Jeff Kauffman, Jr.: Yep. Yep. Absolutely. And I definitely don’t think it’s wrong to just sort of release a token and let people  ape in and kind of do all that jazz. I think that’s more sort of natural for where the blockchain and crypto community has been up to this point. But I do think that like every industry there’s evolutions and there are different use cases and you know, jump is certainly very you know, it’s very centralized in, in a sense right now. Now the goal is to get it to a very decentralized place, but that does not happen overnight. And I think a lot of people forget how long certain projects took to actually get to true decentralization and aligning with that ethos. Now at the same time, I think we all need to sort of sit back and understand that there are plenty of reasons to have a very centralized and creative sort of actor in a sense. And so, like some examples that I’ll give is that a musician. While they , or a band might have a token and a decentralized community, the community is not necessarily dictating what that musician is thinking about and creating about and that exact song and that like that algorithm that’s in that musician or that creator’s head and how they wake up and how they feel and how they get to that next hit song or that next hit album. Now there’s certainly like that interaction with the community, but that actual song that’s being created is not necessarily created by the community. It’s certainly created in some sense in tandem. But yeah, I think there’s a lot of room for a very centralized sort of actor who partners with their community but isn’t necessarily giving out just full control and ownership and just being like, okay, and now you create every single song and album ever released under my name and that sort of like that’s  Bitcoin .

And, you know, that’s, that’s the, just the full Satoshi goes into the back and there’s now , all these actors that keep that platform up, you know, there are ways to bring the metaverse characters to life and this community-driven like avatar, that’s controlled by the community. And like, and that’s kind of, that’s, that’ll be a fun space to play in, but for the time being, while we still have people that want to be extremely creative allow them to be creative. But these tokens allow them to partner with their fan base in any way.

Adam Levy: What I love aboutthe jump story is, and I touched upon this earlier is the, you can be centralized and still utilize decentralized technologies. You don’t have to go from zero to 100 instantly, right? There’s a process to it. Right? And for future creators who are looking to experiment on this, whether again, your little NAS X or Jeff Kauffman Jr. There are stages to, to releasing and becoming more quote unquote decentralized. Right? And you’re seeing a lot of these fair launch models kind of go into the ecosystem. The biggest one comes to mind is Andre Conje . I feel like I’m butchering his last name, but from yearn finance. Right. And he’s very big on this ethos of fair launch, no premine, no VCs, none of that stuff. Here’s a project. Here’s a problem I’m trying to solve you guys do what you will with it. Right.  All still developed, but. It’s two different models. And I think it’s a misconception that people have with like, okay man, how do I go decentralized? Right . Initially, like, I don’t even know the first thing about decentralization. I grew up in a society where all I’ve known is centralization. I have to rework my framework and the way I’ve kind of approached it, like people don’t realize that there is no CEO, necessarily. There is no CMO. There are no executives that kind of manage. There might be not nonprofits that help fuel and fund these ecosystems. But the majority of the traction, the network effects happen many times beyond someone’s control.

Jeff Kauffman, Jr.: Yeah. And you kind of touched on, we grew up with centralization, whether even though we’ve got a whole new generation of bright minds that are coming into this space, they still grew up with centralized school, centralized government, centralized healthcare, centralization, centralized family. Right. And there’s not necessarily a bad. That’s not all bad, but that is a behavior that is so hard to sort of unlearn, but we do need to get there. I’m a huge fan of de-centralization. and we need as much of it as, as we can, but you can do it in a very progressive manner. And so one of the things that I challenge people to do in launching a sort of a tokenized social tokens and community tokens is to think first about what is one single behavior that you can decentralize. One single thing and get really good at decentralizing, that single behavior. And then, you know, you’ll start to lay the foundation and the sort of the culture to sort of spread that. And then maybe one day you can become fully decentralized. You can actually become a DAO. Cause right now, most DAOS are, they’re DOs. They’re a digital organization. It’s not decentralized and it’s not autonomous, but that’s okay. It doesn’t have to start there. And so if, as long as you’re up front with your community, even if you’re calling yourself a DAO, no big deal. Just say, Hey, we’re not fully decentralized yet. It might take us a year or two. I think two years is quick. It might take us some time, especially when we’re talking about culture and human capital, because that is much different than just software.

Adam Levy:  Yeah. I think like that quote right there, one behavior at a time, right. And starting small one baby step at a time, one stair at a time. Right. And building from there. When people enter the space, it can get very overwhelming, very fast. Right. And that whole point of view is like, okay. And I want to pick your brain on this a little bit more designing one behavior at a time. How do you approach that? What does that look like? So let’s talk about it from jumps point of view for a minute. Okay. You’re trying to build a network of like-minded ad agencies ad tech, marketing tech, et cetera, et cetera, people to educate them on the future of web three and what it can become. That’s the vision, that’s the mission. That’s the goal? What does that first behavior look like in your ecosystem? How does that look like from your point of view?

Jeff Kauffman, Jr.: So the goal is to decentralize research and events. So kind of going back to the two teams that were there. And so the way we’ll do it, we’ll do it in classic agency style, which is, there’s always a briefing and you start with a briefing and then you move into a brainstorm. And then those ideas that kind of the community rallies around will then formulate into the working groups and the projects within research and events. And so in that sense, the ideation of what projects fall within research and events was very decentralized. It was the community kind of came up with it. Now, you know, I had to kick off the process, which was very centralized, sort of planning and structure. You know, then I have to do the work within discord to set that up. So that’s very centralized. And so there’s centralized components of, of bringing that together. But that first, like that would be a huge success for our community just to brainstorm on what the working groups would, would be, and then come to consensus on those working groups and then to start working in those groups. And then if we sort of map that out several months and maybe a year or two, the I, the ideal scenario would that an event idea would happen or would come to someone, they would start organizing the community around that idea. And then that event would happen. Done and that’s the vision that’s decentralized and that came to life without any centralized actor within the jump community. So how do, how do I empower that? And then in turn, create others in the community to sort of empower that. And so one of the things that we’ll have within jump, as soon as the community reaches a little bit larger, still as we’ll have a, what we’re calling city nodes. So ways for agencies and people that are in the same cities to connect. So if jump can sort of put out the resources in the form of tokens to hold the local event, and then that of that bounty and that event just happens and it’s grabbed, and it just goes with very little oversight. Or no oversight from, you know, the centralized team and the, the Genesis team, if you will then we’ll start to see like that actual behavior kind of come into life, hopefully pretty soon.

Adam Levy: And the reality of what you’re saying on paper, it sounds fantastic. But the reality of these organizations is that as you build towards decentralization, you’re really banking on the fact that you’re going to have a lot of self-motivated and self disciplined individuals, more leaders, less followers, right. To an extent, right. And in a world where society has only so many leaders and more followers, right? How do you avoid the bureaucracy that will come and streamline efficiency? I think it’s a problem that a lot of DAOs true DAOs, haven’t figured out just yet. One example comes to mind and I’ll let you answer it for this one example is friends with benefits. They introduced season three and they basically have leads managing events, projects, this and that. Right. And with those, you have core individuals that get, I guess, I don’t know what the pay is, whatever it may be, but they basically get compensated from the Dow and become essentially like decentralized employees, contractors, from what I understand. Right. And they, they are like the leaders that coordinate and manage specific departments. How do you kind of view that when one, all these people, they already have full-time jobs, right. And they’re working at Amazon, it’s already consuming a lot of their time. They’re working on these ad agencies, et cetera, et cetera. How do you build a system that motivates and incentivizes leadership versus being a follower.

Jeff Kauffman, Jr.: Yeah man, that is a billion dollar question. See whatever unlocks that is going to start really do it. Cause what we’re talking about. Talking about coordinating human capital, natural capital. And that’s, what’s so fascinating about this space. And so in the absence of being able to perfectly program everything into software, then you have to start relying on  the human brains form of software. And you have to sort of have these centralized actors. And so that’s where, you know,  you need even stronger leadership. And I think that when we start to talk about the bureaucracy of organizations, I actually, I feel like that’s when leadership is breaking down and you’re having weak leadership. And so you’ve actually got to somehow cultivate even stronger forms of human leadership when you’re really relying on a decentralized team to self-motivate self act and do it without a lot of oversight. So really, you know, the future is the stronger the leader. I think the more likely they’re going to gravitate towards this sort of environment, because really strong leaders, they don’t want to micromanage they want to empower people and these systems give them a lot better opportunity to do that. And so I think we’re going to naturally see our strongest leaders and businesses and society start to gravitate towards this sort of model. And when you have strong leaders, I think that’s what gets us through the bureaucracy component until we can start to code the coordination of human capital into software.

Adam Levy: Yeah, I it’s, it’s a great point. Let’s pivot for a minute and talk about the future of digital marketing, the future of advertising from the first point of view of decency, centralized social networks. Okay. Now the platforms right now, their business model is ad revenue, right? Probably other miscellaneous like fields, whatever, but majority ad revenue. I, as a Facebook marketer, I can go and set up a campaign, target a specific audience based off the interest, demographic, whatever people become the product, but on platforms like Bitclout, it’s no longer that scenario. Right? How should digital advertising agencies. And I guess also brands and it’s probably two different answers. How should they be viewing decentralized social networks when it comes to engaging with their core communities and their customer base?

Jeff Kauffman, Jr.: Yep. I love this topic because I think the natural place for a lot of people who are not deep in the world of advertising and marketing and actually care about doing it in a really in a way that’s has a lot of quality and adds value to the person that’s being spoken to and the brand itself. You know, I like to use a couple of old school examples, but I also like to start with a quote from Peter Thiel’s book zero to one, which was you have product and you have marketing and unless your product is at least 10 X better than the user switching costs, well people wont try your new product. And you’re like, well, why not? It’s a, it’s five X better, but the end user, whether it’s a business customer or, you know,  B2C sort of play, the switching costs are too high, especially when demographics start to get older and you’re having families and you’re buying houses and you’re working, your parents, you know, are getting older and whatnot. When you start to hit, you know, the later twenties and your thirties and your forties switching costs become really, really difficult. And so I love sort of how Peter Thiel sets that up. And he’s like, well, if your product’s not at least 10 X better than you’re going to have to win with marketing and you’re going to have to build a brand. And so what is marketing? And that’s where a lot of people just kind of go to, oh, marketing. If they’re not in this sort of field, they go straight towards, oh, it’s okay. And that’s just one tiny, tiny, tiny, tiny little sliver of marketing and what marketing is. But it’s really important for us to think about, like, as we move into web three, there will not be a less need for marketing and advertising, there will be a greater need. And the reason is there will be more decentralization and a greater importance on building your brand, whether it’s a community brand or a protocol brand or whatever the mission is, there will be a big need to build that brand and do it in the right way. So I see marketing’s evolution is actually coming into a bit of a golden age and, and I think a better place than where we’ve been. And what I hope is that when we look at marketing budgets and where marketing budgets go. You know, we’re talking about, you know, the analogy is the fortune $1,000 marketing budgets and ad budgets are almost, you know, it’s certainly not at the level of the institutional sort of hedge funds that are now considering buying Bitcoin and Ethereum, right. But it’s the institutional equivalent of branding and communities and, and all of that. And so unlocking those budgets in a new way and bringing those budgets into web three is going to just fuel the growth of the ecosystem. And what I hope is that we, that what I hope gets removed out of the advertising and marketing ecosystem is rent seeking marketing dollars where it doesn’t add value to the experience or the end user or necessarily the brand. And essentially that’s what Facebook certainly has become. You’re renting your audience and your ad presence. Doesn’t add value to the experience. And that second part is so important. And I’ll go back and I’ll use a skydiving example real quick. One of my favorite magazines when I was jumping was parachutist. And in that magazine, there were a lot of ads and I love every single ad. Why? Because it was the builders and the creators and the event organizers and all the people that made up the community were essentially advertising in that magazine. And in that sense, those products and those services and those events. Added to the community and those ad dollars fueled the magazine, which supported the community. And so I actually think there’s a huge opportunity for ecosystems and brands to actually advertise within their communities. And it’s actually a value add even more so than the magazine example that I gave, because I was just a membership of the United States parachute association. Well, what if that was tokenized? And so instead of buying an annual membership, I actually bought tokens. And those tokens traded a value based off of the value of the community and the desire of people to be part of that community. And so that’s where I think that there’s actually sort of this opportunity for advertising to, again, start to become a value add and the problem with the print industry and the television industry.

And a lot of those advertising sorts of channels is that we’re talking about atoms and paper is actually really expensive and it’s hard to scale. And so it’s hard to create real strong business models around really tight and small communities that can support themselves. And so I think that we can start to reimagine the world of advertising because essentially the cost of the media has come down hopefully the creators that are creating that are, are being compensated fairly unlike they are now. And then those ads actually add value. Unlike Facebook, it doesn’t add value to my experience, but when I’m looking at my skydiving magazine, every ad added value to my experience.

Adam Levy: I love that example. That’s such a clear example, but what about from the point of view of let’s talk about influencer marketing for a second , and let’s, let’s kind of transition into the five, 10 year point of view where you’re going to have hundreds of thousands, if not millions of creators, tokenizing themselves and their communities and giving their fans and audiences a ride for their quote unquote money and experience, right. And brands like Nike, like Patagonia, Adidas, the food network, et cetera, et cetera. Right. How are they going to be thinking about influencer marketing? And I have a hunch from buying into their networks where I’m buying their social tokens, but I’d love to hear your point of view on that. What you kind of see formulating down the line.

Jeff Kauffman, Jr.: Well, first to start with fortune 1000 brands, the idea of them launching a token anytime soon is especially an ERC 20, like social token, sort of like that, that is a, that is actually a long way off. I think it’s the legal component of a publicly traded company launching a token like that, the learning curve, but also just the regulatory, uncertainty and risk is going to take a long time. That doesn’t mean that the industry isn’t going to move forward. What I feel like we’re going to see is we’re going to see just the explosion of tokenized communities forming in a bit of this mass Exodus of attention from web two social networks. And so wherever that attention goes, then brands sort of need to go there too. And so what I hope that happens, what I believe will happen and what I hope the Jump community sets the best practices and standards for. Is that, when I work with a brand we want to develop, we want to essentially build that brand. And so what is a brand is a brand, a logo. Nope. Is it a product? Nope. We like to define a brand as a promise, and it’s the promise that you’re going to live up to X, Y, and Z as best you can every single day. And that’s where you have to like really work hard to outline your brand values and then how that translates into goals. And so if you’re Patagonia, which is a great example, they’ve been doing this for a long time. You know, they’re famous for saying we don’t spend dollars on advertising. We spend a lot on marketing, which is marketing is not just placing a single ad, but what you can start to see sort of formulate is brands that really understand their values and their goals and their promise that they want to live up to every day. Hopefully those brands are making the world better through whatever product or service they’re providing. Hopefully we will be able to, as an industry, match them with tokenized communities and influencers that just share the same values and goals. And so when you start to think of like, what are the goals and what are the values of this community and what brand can actually come in and play a sponsorship role to help them achieve that. So imagine sort of, you know, what would Jordan be without Nike, where would jump man as a brand be without Nike and that sort of combination? How is that going to play out? When we start to see the upstarts of these brands start to align with these creators and or communities, and essentially the brand comes in and rather than spending Facebook generates $25 billion a year on ads, 80% of which comes from 100 advertisers. So 100 advertisers are footing the bill for the entire ecosystem. Most people don’t know that. What if those brands start to redirect their dollars to communities that align with their goals and values and start to support those communities? That’s where I hope we see things going. And the reason we couldn’t unlock that before, is this just really hard for a community to capture the value and unlock their own social capital. Tokens give them a way to do that now.

Adam Levy: Wow. That introduces a whole new rabbit hole to fall down like brands re-imagining companies reimagining how they’re investing every single penny. Rather than spending it on these paid ads, which all these drop shipping models, right. That kind of came into existence and all these new friggin brand to end consumer companies that drop ship products from China, from local us, whatever may be right. You’re telling me right now that they’re going to have to reimagine and actually plug and play into these individual ecosystems, which one on one makes me think it’s a very daunting task. How do you find and source all these individual communities that align with what you’re looking to promote and get out there? And two, and I guess this is more of like a question that we can talk more about later, but I think it ties into it. It’s like when these tokens fluctuate in value, how does a brand really determine what they associate themselves with or not? Does a token price determine that as well?

Jeff Kauffman, Jr.: Oh man, that’s a big question. I think if we’re being, if we’re really focused on our goals and our mission, then we’re not concerned with the price, whether we’re or a community we’re looking at. Like, it kinda goes back. If you look at early early 2000s videos of Bezos talking about Amazon and he’s just like, I don’t care what the stock price is like. Did we deliver more products? Did we, did we improve our shipping speed? Did we bring price down? Did we give people more selection? And are those the metrics that we’re focusing on and holding ourselves accountable to? And I think if you’re doing that, then the token price just kind of becomes a thing that, you know, it’s obviously going to grab some attention, but ultimately, you know, if that’s the focus, I think any community is going to fail.

Adam Levy: So just to touch up on that one point, the first point. So how do brands find these communities now? Obviously they, right now, they live in discord. A lot of them do. Okay. But how many discord servers can you jump into this court also limits you with how many discord servers you could join. Right. So how do you, how do you do that, right? How do you find these communities?

Jeff Kauffman, Jr.: Absolutely. So we’re super early stage. One of the event teams that I hope will gain traction within the jump community is what we’re hoping to host the first ever web three adtech and MarTech hackathon to start to build the tools that will help brands do this. So, okay. We’ve got. Let’s fast forward two years from now, we’ve got a thousand tokenized communities that have members of 50,000 people, or more soon as we got 50,000 people, that’s a decent size audience to sort of like communicate and work with. And certainly if we’re talking about tokenized communities in the millions. Those are really important communities to get into. And if there’s a lot of them, it becomes tough. Okay. So how do you do that? You start to look at some form of user interface that will allow you to sort of survey the landscape look at what this community is about. And there’s all sorts of data points that you can sort of pull. So if we use just a web two example, very common to leverage social listening tools put in a couple of keywords and then you start to build this cloud of emojis. In other words, and other similar accounts that sort of LinkedIn, you kind of start to understand what that social graph looks like. And you can start to understand if that’s the influencer that you want to engage. And so what I anticipate happening is as the tokenized communities form and scale, we’re going to start to need to have these tools that are so essentially a form of next generation of social listening and community management. And so yeah, those, those are the tools that we’ve got to start building, and that’s part of what we hope jump’s role will be. And when you imagine that world of brands and agencies and entrepreneurs aligned around a token, you start to see that we’ve as a community, we’ve actually created the supply and the demand. And we’re aligned with the token around the creation of those tools.

Adam Levy: I love it. It’s super powerful. When do you think all this is going to come to fruition? Like right now, obviously Facebook Tik, TOK, Instagram, Snapchat, Twitter, et cetera, et cetera. These are things that we use and we rely on.  When do we start kind of like how many years what’s that roadmap you think predict, throw a number out there. What do you think is going to be that point where we feel comfortable with web three tools and strategies the way we do with web two tools and strategies.

Jeff Kauffman, Jr.: So, one thing I feel like we’re going to live in is web two’s not going to just disappear overnight. I think web two strategies are going to support web three strategy long time. So we’re not throwing sort of the baby out of the scene, but so, but what about the scale of web three? And then maybe when does the flip happen right? With like mobile took over desktop. When does web three marketing and community building takeover sort of web two. And so I think on the, on the conservative end, and I don’t think a lot of people who are building in the space want to hear this, but 10 years. On the conservative end. On the aggressive end, I think we start to see incredible use cases that set the stage within the next two to three years, we’re going to see a big brand partner with a huge community that has global reach, and they’re going to do something together that every brand and tokenized community is going to be chasing after and starting to build around. And so I’m really excited about what that first use case is going to be. I hope it comes from the jump community. I hope we find the brand that wants to align with the community and do something super special. Like clean up the ocean. I don’t know. Well, you know, we’ll, we’ll see what happens. So yeah, that’s, that’s sort of the timeline on it. One of the things that you have to realize about some of these transitions and one of the reasons why I wanted to build jump is I want to speed that up. I don’t want it to take 10 years and jump as a way to speed that up. And so what do I mean by that? So when you look at these marketing budgets and a lot of these decision-making you have mostly people in their thirties and forties and sort of the mid-level to senior director type positions in VP positions , and then you have like CMOs and things of that nature. So kind of starting in your fifties and sixties. And so we’re talking about educating and reaching retraining, a generation of people and how they operate. And seeing that change in web two, seeing dollars transition from TV to Facebook and seeing the mental leaps that the old CMOs and the senior marketing directors were having to leap through in order to say, Hey, I’m going to shift just 10% of my TV budget into social. And then now, you know, they’re going to start to have to make those decisions of how do I shift 5% or 10% of my budget into these web three strategies, especially when on the surface to most people, it still feels like a scam. And so how do we do that? Build a community around it. Hopefully people learn by doing, hopefully the jump experience spreads super fast to these brands and agencies. And at the same time, web three communities are rising up and we can start to create those sort of case studies as soon as possible.

Adam Levy: I love it, Jeff. You’re a wealth of knowledge. Thank you for sharing this with us. Thank you for being on. Really quick before I let you go. Where can we find you and learn more about jump and parachute? Give us, give us the rundown.

Jeff Kauffman, Jr.: Yeah, absolutely. So you can find me on Twitter at @jeffkauffmanjr. You can find, jump on Twitter at @jumperstweeting , and then you can sign up for jump and participate in jump at www.joinjump.community.

Adam Levy: Amazing. Thank you so much.

Jeff Kauffman, Jr.: Absolutely glad to be here.

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Podcast Transcript

These Cyborg Artists Use NFTs to Manipulate Their Biological State

Listen on: Spotify | Apple Podcast | Google Podcast

Background

Mint Season 2 episode 2 welcomes Neil Harbisson and Pol Lombarte, two biohacking artists leveraging NFTs to remotely alter their bodies. Cyborg-artist Neil Harbisson was born color blind but he can ‘feel’ and ‘hear’ colors, thanks to a WiFi-enabled bone-conduction antenna that is permanently implanted into his skull.

Together, Neil and Pol experimented with a new state of NFTs where the buyer can directly send colors into Harbisson’s head. On the side, his friend, Pol Lombarte sold ‘access’ to his heartbeat as an NFT where the buyer can alter his heart rate from afar at any point in time of the day.

In this episode we talk about the early days of transitioning into a cyborg, the curiosity behind selling access to one’s body, fears and concerns behind this level of biological manipulation, how much he’d consider selling the NFT for, the vision behind this level of experimentation, and so much more.


Thank you to Season 2’s NFT sponsors!

1. Coinvise – https://coinvise.co/

2. POAP – https://poap.xyz/

3. Socialstack – https://socialstack.co/

4. Celo – https://celo.org/

5. PrimeDAO – https://www.prime.xyz/

Interested in becoming an NFT sponsor? Get in touch here!


Adam Levy: Cool, Neil and Pol guys welcome to the podcast. Thank you so much for being on how you guys doing? 

Neil Harbisson: Good, thank you. 

Adam Levy: Good, good. I’m so excited to share your story. You guys are two unique individuals in your own respect. So why don’t we just get right into it? Give me a quick brief about yourself, how you kinda got in the NFT world. And we can kind of go from there. We can start with Neil and then go to Pol. 

Neil Harbisson: Well I’m Neil Harbisson and I’m a cyborg artist . So my art is to create new senses , new organs and embed them in the body. Like this antenna is an example is an antenna that allows me to extend my perception of color beyond the visual spectrum. So it’s an antenna that allows me to sense from infrared to ultraviolet vibrations we might have then and I create an NFT that gives access to my tablets.

Adam Levy: Awesome you guys are the first people that I came across to introduce like a bio-hacking element to an NFT drop. Right? What, like what prompted you? I guess you’ve all, even before we even get to that, can you talk to me more about the relationship between between you guys? Like, how did you guys meet? How did this collaboration come to life? Share with me a little bit about that. 

Neil Harbisson: Well Pol is an art student and, we both live in Barcelona and we were both interested in NFTs. Well, we were interested in creating a type of NFT related to cyborg art. So we thought that the best way to mix both arts crypto art and cyborg art would be to create an NFT that connected. The owner of the NFT to our bodies. So that’s why we came out with a lot, to explore that union between these two arts. 

Adam Levy: Yeah. And I guess the, the relationship, I know, Pol, you mentioned as an art student and you guys met at the art school that he was studying at, or how did you guys kind of come in contact with each other?

Neil Harbisson: The street.

Adam Levy: Just like that? 

Neil Harbisson: I was working in this way, then I see him . Well, cause I, my aunt then, sometimes, I meet people because of the internet. So I guess we met because of the antenna and then he was interested in creating his own organ, cyborg organ. So he started project creating this heart, a digital heart. A second heart. And then while he was creating it we thought it would be good to mix both things NFTs and this type of effort , this actual project is to create works of art with the digitalization of these heartbeats. So it’s like, how have you going use these heartbeats to create other, other artworks. Like he’s, he’s grading a clock that keeps going forward depending on his heartbeats. So that’s, if his heart goes fast, the clock goes faster. So, and then he’s also creating a light that works with his heartbeat. So he’s working with his heart and time. 

Adam Levy: Yeah, it’s a super fascinating one. When did you guys get kind of like fall in this, into this fascination of biohacking? When did that start for each of you?

Pol Lombarte: When Neil and me I’m was on a train going, from Barcelona to Matera and talking and talking. We think about NFTs and first Neil said , I want to build , I an NFT of my perception of God. 

Neil Harbisson: But, and then we kept talking, but yeah, my introduction to biohacking or what I say more is neuro hacking because my aim is not to hack my body, but to hack my mind by creating new senses. I started in 2003, when I was studying music and I was interested in using technology even a different way and then I thought that would be interesting to create a type of technology that would alter my perception of reality. So since 2004, I’ve been hearing colors afterwards. I agreed that the, another implant in my knee that allows me to sense the magnetic. And now I’m also creating another, organ that will allow me to sense the passage of time, but by the next 24 hours to go around the body. So it’s the fascination of opening up our senses with technology and exploring new forms of art. 

Adam Levy: where do you find the doctors to kind of do these procedures? I feel like these are very, very unique things to conduct on the, on the body and I remember seeing one of your interviews at Google and basically a lot of doctors actually rejected you from the start, right? They didn’t want to conduct these types of operations. Where do you find these individuals and how do you kind of convince them to go forward with something like this?

Neil Harbisson: It’s the other way around. Some doctors read articles about this movement and they get in touch with me, interested in helping or collaborating. And then we have now a network of doctors and nurses and biohackers that are interested in helping us create these type of surgeries, because most of them are still not accepted by bioethical committees. So we need to do this, procedures, underground for now. Yeah. Pol , I remember 

Adam Levy: I read in the article that talked about your NFT drop, that you were messing with an EKG sensor, right? And you were still experimenting whether or not to install it permanently in your body. Have you actually gone forward with that? Have you done the surgery?

Pol Lombarte: No, that I did not do. We are still developing my music not to be as practical as possible. This is the first prototype. 

Adam Levy: So can you, can you explain it to me a bit? So what am I looking at exactly? I see a few lights flashing. I see a few wires. Can you walk me through it? 

Pol Lombarte: This is a electrocardiogram. We started doing, you know et cetera. And I am-

Neil Harbisson: He’s sending, this work here. Yeah, so this is the exact thing he used heartbeats, and then it’s sending, sending these heartbeats by Bluetooth to the internet. You can see his heartbeats, wherever. If you have the connection, the link you can see his heartbeats live. So now it’s quite the big system. It’s his first prototype , but he’s next. They just know to make it smaller. And then at some point it might be able to have it invented here in this area. And that’s his first prototype now. Okay. This stage, next stage is also that he will be able to receive vibrations in his body so that the person that owns the, NFT will not only be able to see his heart rate, but also heartbeat, but also he will, or she will be able to do an outer heart, his heartbeat by sending vibrations to his body.

Adam Levy: Got it. And Pol , do you, do you have to charge that device? Is it run by batteries? How, how does it get its electricity and its power? 

Pol Lombarte: It was with, this battery and that’d be good. It can be charged. It can be charged, is very big as you see. It will be more practical the aim is to use body energy, not external energy, but now this is the fastest way of creating this system. But it’s, as you say, it’s not very practical yet.

Adam Levy: Mm sure. Can you can you share with me more about the story of you guys kind of discovering NFTs for the first time? What was that first instance of an NFT you came across? Was it a piece of art? Was it a piece of music? Tell me a little bit more about that. 

Neil Harbisson: Hmm. Wow. People kept emailing me, asking why I have you done any of these though? Have you got an, I have no idea what it was. So I kept trying to understand what it was. And it took us quite a few days. We both started to understand the system and then we wanted to find out how to make them ourselves. And then it was a, because people kept asking if I had any NFTs . That’s how I suddenly became interested in NFTs . And then once we learned about it, we find it very, very relevant. It’s an art that’s going to live forever. So it’s. A very interesting area for us to explore also a good space where you can innovate because it’s such a new art movement that you can actually create new types of art forms with there. 

Adam Levy: Yeah, no, for sure. I think when I, when I came across your story of how you guys were basically, I know you don’t like to call it biohacking, but basically whether it be messing with your mind, messing with your heart, right. In attaching a crypto primitive to it, that’s like the first of its kind that I’ve come across. Right. And did you guys have any, any fears or any concerns kind of going down that route with allowing that level of experimentation in the hands of someone else, even though you guys purchased each other’s NFTs. Right. But let’s talk about scale for a minute. If you guys plan or when you guys plan to do that, and we can talk about that as well. Is there any fear, any concerns that come to mind when taking this and scaling it? 

Neil Harbisson: Yes, because we are basically selling access to our body and to our minds. So it is that’s why we decided to buy each other first, but then we need to be very careful of who will help. Well, I mean, we can’t do anything about it, but once we, once I sell access to his heart and he sells access to my head it will be, yeah. Anything can happen. The person that purchases this access can potentially annoy us a lot basically or alter my perception of color. In a way that might alter my life. And also if we finished this access to his body so that people can other, his heartbeat so it can alter his life, but it’s an art that has some risk. And we both like art that has a little bit of risk there’s many cultural things like sports that have risk or learning social activities that have risks, like finding mountains. This is an art that has some risks, both because we don’t know who will buy access to our bodies and how they will treat us that secondly because this merging with technology also has the a bit of an unknown. 

Adam Levy: Yeah, sure. Actually let’s backtrack for a minute, right. Because I don’t think we got into the full story of what the NFTs were. Exactly. So can you, can you quickly tell me like the story from a to Z on what you guys put out on open sea and into the crypto verse and both you and Pol and how that kind of collaboration.

Neil Harbisson: So I have an antenna implanted in my head then allows me to perceive the vibrations of color from infrared ultraviolet and the other one has internet connection. So my NFT is basically access to my head via the internet. So the person that purchases this NFT . Send colors to my head, which is with a mobile phone, you can use your camera and then you can just string like images directly into my app. So I can certainly sense the colors from the mobile phone. So people can alter my perception of color by sending colors to my head. And then Pol sold an NFT where you can visualize and see his heartbeat, real value. And the next stage is that the first one will also be able to alter his heart rate by sending vibrations through his heart. So he has sold his heartbeats in a way, and then I’ve sold my perception of color. 

Adam Levy: Crazy. Absolutely like absolutely crazy. That’s so cool. That is such a cool use case to attach to a non fungible token. And I know it feels like an everyday thing for you guys, but from an outsider, who’s not really in tune and ingrained with your level of experimentation, your level of art, right? That risk art that you talk about. I see NFTs as either music pieces as either a digital art or video pieces. And you guys are really introducing like a new level and you add a new layer into the crypto verse that you don’t, you don’t really see. Do you guys ever think about that or has it just become so ingrained in your process that you don’t really think twice about it?

Neil Harbisson: You know, the. We just, yeah, we just thought it was, it was the best way of merging our current art form because if we were musicians or even white papers, I guess we would have done something. But if our art use our body, if we want to create NFTs related to our art form , you have to be an NFT connected to an organism because it’s, we see the cyborg. Cyborg art is not only cybernetic. It needs an organism. So the NFT have to be connected to a living organism, which is us. Now, the thing is what will happen when we die? Cause the NFT will still be alive, but we won’t. So that’s also something that we have to to think about. And the, when you purchase the, the NFT, this is also state that what happens because at some point our organisms will die and then the NFT will still be alive. So but then surely you will still be able to send colors to my head once I’m dead and you will still be able to send vibrations to his body once he’s dead.

Adam Levy: Yeah, that’s going to be an interesting experiment and how that plays out.

Neil Harbisson: Our cybernetic organs can then continue being alive once the rest of our body dies. But there’s different ways that we can solve this problem, but the, the NFT will still be able to work properly.

Adam Levy: I understand the concept. I understand what the NFT is, but how would I actually, okay. Let’s say someone purchases an NFT. How do I go about changing the color that you actually hear ? Right? It’s not necessarily see it’s the vibrations that in the frequencies, right. That go to that, your inner ear. Right. That’s how it works from how I understand it. Right. So how do I actually go about doing that? What does that process take me through that flow? So I purchased this NFT. What’s next? 

Neil Harbisson: You have a link that allows you to use a camera or from your phone to send colors to my head . So it’s a unique link that allows you to connect to my connection in the back of my head. And then the mobile phone. It’s just, it’s an app that allows you will see and hear the colors that you’re sending. It’s the vibration of the, of the actual color .

Adam Levy: Got it. 

Neil Harbisson: It was a thing that I already used before there was five people that had permission to send colors to my head with, with their mobile phones, but now it will only be one person and it got it being done through an NFT .

Adam Levy: And the same process is for Pol as well, if I want to change his heartbeat. 

Neil Harbisson: Yes.

Adam Levy: Okay. So, there would be a similar link that I would go to and. Got you. But how do you actually, and I guess this one’s more for Pol , how do you actually alter your heartbeat? How do you do that? Like does the NFT holder need to do an action that will then increase it? Do they send heat waves that spike up your temperature? Or like how does that work? 

Pol Lombarte: Well, that is still my NFT. Then send me and we arranged them in, in a part of my body once I got here. And when I received the duration I’m sounding as big as it is. It’s something unexpected. Exactly is not expected. So these are done by fabrics and the owner of my NFT can visualize, in my car. So it basically, I view it if someone, yeah, I don’t know if it’s unexpected, if you receive an unexpected vibration in your body, even if it’s a small vibration. If it’s unexpected, you won’t be able to alter his heart rate is something that they.

Adam Levy: Got it. Got it. That’s, let’s, let’s play more in this scenario where now it’s in the hands of the open public and someone random purchased it. You guys are sleeping, right. And they start increasing your heartbeat. And some person starts changing the colors that you hear and you feel. Does that worry you at all? Like one day you’re gonna wake up, like at three in the morning, you know, let’s say it were to happen. Let’s just say, okay. And your heartbeat starts accelerating and you start hearing all these frequencies and all these vibrations. Does that concern you at all?

Neil Harbisson: A little bit, but I mean, in my case , the person might be able to wake me up or annoy me while I was sleeping or this person might be able to color my dreams. If these colors interact with my dreams, this person might be coloring or altering my dreams by sending specific colors the same way that if he’s sleeping and someone I’ll just hear his heartbeat, it might wake him up or it might alter his dreams. So I think as long as we see as a, an art performance then, and we keep track of what, how we are experiencing those interaction with the stranger or the owner that is interacting with our bodies. I think we willlike it. I mean, we won’t be, I mean, and if it’s an, if it’s a bad experience at least it will be an interesting experience. 

Adam Levy: So cool how you guys are ballsy and daring like that. Because to the average person, that sounds like a nightmare, but you guys actually welcome that level of experimentation, that level of risk taking. And with high risk comes high rewards and great stories. So I really applaud you. I I’d be curious to follow up later when you guys do decide to scale it and you do decide to put it in the hands of the public and kind of retrack and hear what those stories that you probably didn’t really estimate or expect kind of occur. Let’s talk about more I know you guys are very vocal on cyborg rights. It’s something that you’re very vocal on and you talk to a lot of governments about and recognition from the materials that are in your head to to how you should be treated and how you should be classified, et cetera, et cetera right. What is the current state of cyborg rights? What does that look like right now?

Neil Harbisson: The basic right would be the freedom to decide which body we want to have as a species, which is a right that we still don’t have. If you want to have an antenna implanted, in your head , for example, you will find it very challenging to find a way of doing it legally or in a clinic. Even if you want to pay it, it will be difficult to do it in a way that it’s legal right now. So that’s the first right we think we should. Allowed to decide which organs and which senses we want to have as a species. So that’s a basic, right. And there are still no countries accepting these type of experimental surgeries most bioethical committees will not find it ethical if you go beyond visual perception or if you go beyond human perception or if you add new body parts. So that’s one of the challenges. A country that will, at some point accept adding new organs and new senses. And then also accepting that these implants are parts of ourselves, not property but organs. This is also another challenge. So if someone pulls the antenna out . It shouldn’t be treated as damage to property, but physical aggression, that’s something that we’re not accept that in any legal, not legally. I mean, it would be challenging to see that. So it’s slow a process, but I think it will, we will see. In the near future when now we have laws regarding humans, laws, regarding technology, and we will soon find laws regarding humans that are technology. 

Adam Levy: Sure. Do you, do you feel the same way, Pol? Do you feel differently? 

Pol Lombarte: Yes, I am.

Neil Harbisson: He doesn’t identify so much as a cyborg. 

Pol Lombarte: Yes because at the moment I’m not feeling like cyborg cyborg. I am, I am doing cyborgs.

Neil Harbisson: He’s just creating, he’s a cyborg artist, but his sense of identity is still, he still doesn’t identify as a cyborg. I defined it as a cyborg doesn’t necessarily mean that you need to have an implant. It’s just, if you include technology as part of your identity, I think you are already a cyborg. Many people have implants and don’t identify these implants as part of them. And that’s why they don’t identify as cyborg and then many, people don’t have implants, but they identify technology as part of their identity. So, and they identify as a cyborg.

Adam Levy: Yeah, no, it makes sense. Makes sense. Do you guys see NFTs kind of improving the future rights of cyborgs somehow?

Neil Harbisson: Probably. I mean, in NFTs, this can be used for legal documents and legal things that once this is normalized, I think we will see yes, a way of using NFTs also to help cyborg rights , you know. 

Adam Levy: Yeah, cause right now, the way I guess they’re being used right now is through art through fashion, digital, real estate music. Like I said, you guys are the first instance that at least I’ve came across where there’s some bio element to it and sooner or later legality in transferring ownership through NFTs for larger assets. I could see it bridging into human rights. I’ve worked rights and whatnot. And so I guess like what’s in store for you guys in the future, when it comes to integrating your way of life and how you guys identify as with this new form of technology, what do you guys have in store? Share with me some alpha leaks. What can we expect in the future? 

Neil Harbisson: Well, the fact that the NFTs . Never really died because once they’re in the blockchain, they’re very undestructible. If we enter the blockchain, we ourselves enter the blockchain then which inspired me we’ve started to go by, in my case. My sense of color is in the blockchain now in, in, a part in some way, my color perception won’t ever die. If his heartbeats are in the blockchain, Part of his heart will never die and so, you know, the way we try to find ways of entering the blockchain, not only this example, but many, maybe more parts of ourselves can enter the blockchain and how to connect the blockchain with our bodies. Once our bodies, die. This is something that we’re thinking about. 

Adam Levy: Yeah. Yeah. How would you go and price these I guess interactions? Cause again, I know you guys went ahead and purchased each other’s NFTs just for the test run, but, do you have like a dollar amount in your head? What does that look like?

Neil Harbisson: No idea. We use the smallest possible amount of in .00001 Ethereum this area we bought each other. And after that it’s really. No idea how to.

Adam Levy: I feel like if you’re going to let someone take over your state of mind, right. Or your state of your heart, that comes at a big price tag, especially if they’re able to alter that your perception of reality and your, your heart speed at any given time. Right? That’s a, that’s a premium type of feature, right? Do you think a hundred thousand dollars for an NFT of that sort is too much? Do you think it’s too little? I know you said you don’t really know, but let’s, let’s tinker with them. Let me test your mind for a bit a million dollars too much? 

Neil Harbisson: We would sell for 100,000 for sure. 

Pol Lombarte: No, no, no. I mean a hundred thousand. 

Adam Levy: Paul Paul’s like, no, at least 10 million.

Pol Lombarte: 100,000 Is a lot. I think I would. 

Adam Levy: You would do more or less?

Pol Lombarte: More 

Adam Levy: More. Okay. 200,000? 

Neil Harbisson: I don’t think if you, if you had an offer now, I don’t know. I would, I would, that’s a lot. I there’s there’s that you can buy a house here. yeah, but yes, it’s maybe this thing, I like this. I we’ve put ourselves in a situation that makes us think, and that’s why we enjoy it so much. It makes you think of, and also where does the level of cross as well? We need to trust each other now because I have his heart. He has my head. So at least we trust each other, but from the moment we have to trust strangers is yeah, we have to trust that they will be good to us. They won’t be annoying. Part of the it’s. Yeah. 

Adam Levy: Yeah. Wow. I really stumped you with this. 

Neil Harbisson: I have no words of describing this , especially when we talk to our parents, it’s really difficult . Your parents don’t understand what you’re doing. 

Adam Levy: What was the reactions when you guys will Neil for you transitioning into a cyborg and Pol kind of tinkering and experimenting with your, your heartbeat? What, were the reactions? 

Pol Lombarte: So reactions they understand, or my friends they understand that what is, what is that I am doing. But my parents after two months they understand they like it. 

Adam Levy: They like, they like it. They’re like, okay, this is cool. 

Pol Lombarte: Yes, yes they like it. 

Adam Levy: Wow. Hmm. Interesting. 

Neil Harbisson: Parents, I don’t think they, they understand the NFT thing. Yeah. But then this was in 2004 and my mother was a bit scared. You can just ask for that? Well, lots of news about the dangers of mobile phone antennas. And that was when I said my mother will have a, I will have an antenna implanted into my head that in my head, she said, this was not, not a very good idea, but now they’re completely used to it. We never talk about the, antenna just a part of my body for over 17 years. So it’s completely normal, but that at the beginning, my mother especially didn’t like it. 

Adam Levy: Crazy crazy. Are you open to talking about, cause I know it takes a specific unique surgeon to do this type of surgery. Are you open to sharing how much it costs to do something like that? Are you public about that? 

Neil Harbisson: The surgery was free

Adam Levy: It was free? 

Neil Harbisson: He did it for free. Yeah. 

Adam Levy: For free?

Neil Harbisson: Yeah. Yeah. 

Adam Levy: Just to be, but he also stayed anonymous too, right? 

Neil Harbisson: Yeah. 

Adam Levy: So free and anonymous, 

Neil Harbisson: I paid for the materials. Renting the space. So in total, it’s less than like around 7,000 or 6,000, having all the material within didn’t have to be done very small, the biocompatible material the machine to drill the head renting the space, was around 7,000. But that doesn’t mean that this past 7,000, it could cost much, much, much less. I mean yes, all the new organs on your senses can be done in, very variety of prices, because it depends on the material you use. How big, where you have it done. If the rent, the space you rent is more expensive, less expensive. It’s difficult to say how much it’s not like a, it’s not like a mobile phone that big cost.

Adam Levy: Yeah. And is that $7,000? What, what currency? 

Neil Harbisson: Euros. 

Adam Levy: Euros. 7,000 euros. Okay. Yeah, super. Super cool. Yeah, guys, I’m excited to see your journey in the NFT space and what you guys come up with. And before I kind of let you go and we conclude the interview quickly, tell me where we can find you guys and kind of stay tuned with what’s next.

Neil Harbisson: Instagram. We both are in Instagram, like my name’s Neil Harbisson and because this long back there and a hash definitely. That’s why we are constantly posting story. 

Adam Levy: Amazing guys. Thank you so much. I, and I, and I hope to have you again. 

Neil Harbisson: Thank you. 

Pol Lombarte: Thank you.

Categories
Podcast Transcript

How Iconic DJ Don Diablo sold $3 Million of NFTs

Listen on: Spotify | Apple Podcast | Google Podcast

Background

Mint Season 2 episode 1 welcomes Don Diablo; an industry-defining NFT artist, Dutch DJ, record producer, musician, and songwriter of electronic dance music who is known for his electronic style of production and vocalizing in most of his songs. He led a multi-industry career ranking sixth in the 2020’s top 100 DJs by DJ Mag, as well as amassed millions of dollars in sales for his crypto-inspired fine art.  

In this episode we talk about the origins of his early inspiration into music, how his dad plays a major influence throughout everything he does in life, his career as a top 10 global DJ, how he broke into the NFT space, getting featured at the iconic auction house Sothebys, his latest NFT drop, and so much more.


Thank you to Season 2’s NFT sponsors!

1. Coinvise – https://coinvise.co/

2. POAP – https://poap.xyz/

3. Socialstack – https://socialstack.co/

4. Celo – https://celo.org/

5. PrimeDAO – https://www.prime.xyz/

Interested in sponsoring future seasons? Get in touch here!


Adam Levy: Mr. Don Diablo. Welcome to the podcast. There you go. Hexagon. How are you doing, man? Welcome.

Don Diablo: Good. How are you doing?

Adam Levy: I’m feeling good, man, at ETH CC in Paris we’re finally in the same time zone. And yeah, I think every time we call, every time we chat, it’s either 5:00 AM your time. Cause you never sleep. And it’s like 3:00 PM somewhere for me. I don’t know. But anyways, dude I’m so excited to have you on. You’ve been so busy during COVID and this last year and I’m excited to kind of break down your vision for how you see NFTs, how you’ve been experimenting with NFTs. But before we get in there, for those who don’t know you, which I find is pretty hard, but for those that don’t know, you tell me about yourself. Who are you? And we’ll start there.

Don Diablo: Don, that’s actually my real name. My father named  me after and before it was his real name was Don van fleet grew up in a family, two brothers, the youngest brother in the east of the Netherlands, very much near the German border. So I speak German as well. My dad sold peat moss yeah, he was the sweetest man alive. So he’s taught me a lot of things. Not only just how to be a human being or be a man, but also how to be creative. And so he’s been very supportive. So it has been a big force for me going through this creative journey especially in the last couple of years after losing him. And yeah, it just made me realize the concept of time. So from there on, you know, I started to  value mostly the concept of time. I started building my own sort of future both musically aesthetically, visually, emotionally initially through music. Then I ended up adding all kinds of different layers, fashion comic book series visuals, video, and yeah, that’s just kind of grown into something bigger and to tech and eventually now into NFTs, which I love because it’s, you know, it’s bringing all of my sort of different backgrounds together, all of these different disciplines. And yeah, my nickname was the diablo growing up. So it became Don Diablo. That’s kind of a little, a little intro to yours truly.

Adam Levy: Amazing. You know, you’re very vocal about your father having a very big impact on your life. I’m curious, what were some of those, like early instances of creativity that he kind of introduced to you that sparked kind of where you are right now.

Don Diablo: You know, he really like he  showed me it was okay to be different. Right. I guess I kinda grew up in almost like a big fish kind of way, cause I wasn’t really much around. So he, you know, he kind of just made us dream bigger and just had a lot of imaginary friends growing up because where I lived there wasn’t really, there was no one there. There was literally a monkey living next door to me, he’s older neighborhood. So they had a monkey as a pet and over like,  no one from my sort of age bracket was there, didn’t really do much with my brothers. So it was very much a sort of a solo approach. And my father, he traveled a lot for his work, but he was a massive like talking fan. So in my second name is Pippin named after the character from Lord of the rings for like knights and king Arthur And yeah, that just kind of formed a big part of my childhood, I guess, just that imagination. And also musically, you know , he listened to captain Beefheart Frank Zappa Roxy music, Tom waits you know, he wasn’t listening to the stuff that was on the radio that he used to have songs that were like sometimes have like 28 different temporal changes, different key ranges, like literally, maybe songs that are 20 minutes long, but sometimes these guys would just go into the studio, not even have a song written that would just go in and just do it. Just kind of let their creativity speak. Later on, my name giver, captain beefhart, Jonathan Frakes he went from music into into painting. So, you know, that also showed me as an artist you can have like different disciplines, you know, that you concentrate on. You know, kind of grow into going from music into art was kind of a normal thing to do. Later on obviously when you kind of go out of that protective bubble, you’re like, oh shit, the world doesn’t really work like that. The will is actually horrible. You know, like people are horrible and you know, you have to kind of like just thrusted into the world and then it just reality starts dawning upon you. And my struggle has really been, I kinda just always wanted to keep that kid inside of me alive, making sure that, you know I would always have that spirit and sort of that you know, will to push things forward or to think differently.

Adam Levy: Yeah. You know,  your early, I guess, inspiration with music, right. Coming from your dad and all these unique artists and albums that kind of influenced your,  Genesis as a teen producing music. Are there any albums in particular that come to mind that stemmed your music journey that he, that he introduced.

Don Diablo: Oh, that’s actually a good question. One of the earliest albums, I remember my dad playing was Trout Mask Replica by captain beefhart. Obviously like pink Floyd played a role growing up. But then I remember one day , it was almost dinner time and my dad pulled up in front of the house and he just sat there. My mom was like, can you get your dad because we need to eat. Right. So I was like, okay, I’m going to get my dad. So as I approached the car, my dad was just sitting. There was kind of just holding the steering wheel, just like, forward facing. I was like, what’s happening here? And I heard from, I heard, I heard this sound coming from . I’m like, okay, let’s do this. So I opened the door, music comes out loudly and I see this tape like lying next to him with this smiley on it. Right. And this is like, It’s an asset. It’s like, okay, cool. What’s this? My dad didn’t say anything. It’s just like, come in and just sit down. So just kind of like we were listening through these bleeps and blobs and I was really into rock music back then. And yeah, I was like, well, what’s this music made with computers. Wow. Cause I always wanted to make music, but I didn’t, there was no one to be in a band with. So it was like, how do I do this? Right. I’m 13 years old. So nobody wants to play in your band. So you’re, like no music making  that is, I guess. And then yeah, I was just fascinated. Just started wondering like, wait so you can, this music is made by one person on a computer and it sounds like it’s from the future and it’s looping, it’s evolving. It just kind of fascinated me. So I asked my dad, can I have the tape and later on he introduced me to the prodigy, got this album music for the geo to generation. He’s like, you should check this out. I was like, okay. And that’s kinda, just kinda, yeah, I guess took me over, still into rock music, but then the idea of being able to start your own band with a computer that’s that gave me the ultimate freedom, right. To learn to , I guess, just become a one man band and have all these voices in my head, talk with each other, become their own band. And that’s kind of just started off a whole new era in my childhood, I guess.

Adam Levy: Do you ever revisit those albums as you produce songs right now and kind of like look back and listen to their, their harmonies, their, grooves, and like compare it to what you’re doing right now. Do you ever do that?

Don Diablo: You know what? I never did that until the pandemic hits, to be honest, I never really listened back to my own music. I usually, I hate it to be very honest. I mostly just generally hate everything I do after I did it. I have like, ah, yes, I did it. And then I’m like, ah, that’s the worst thing ever . So it’s really, really hard to, it’s always been an internal struggle for me. That’s why I’m always, I, you know, I always have discussions with this about, you know, my friends or a family or girlfriends. So like it’s never going to be enough for you. It’s never going to be good enough. It’s never going to end. There’s always a next goal. And I think the same goes for the music. Right. It’s funny when the pandemic hit, I was like, okay, I gotta, I’m just sitting here. Like all my friends everyone’s locked in. I’m alone. Right? I’m a single guy. Like I’m just sitting here in this church that I was just built walking around these different floors creating music, but also like just having time to reflect. Right? So started opening these old boxes, found these CDs from when I, you know, started out making music when I was 13 or even 12. I’m not, I don’t remember. I think I put out my first record when I was 13 and all these little ideas and I was like, that’s cool stuff in it actually, if you think about it, because the thing is when you start, you have the innocence, right? That’s what all creativity, when you start, there’s no pressure. They’re just ideas, thoughts of just randomness of you trying to be not actually, they’re not, not trying to be anything, just a hundred percent being creative without thinking about what’s going to happen with that creativity afterwards. Right. So you’re just doing, and I think not overthinking and as you make music and you become, like, there is a point where you decide, okay, this is a hobby I’m just gonna, you know, get into real life, get a job. Life takes over you do your thing. Right? So in my case it, it went the other direction. I was like, I never wanted to be a full-time musician. I started out making film actually. And I guess it just kinda like yeah, it just happened. And I think I was already like maybe 10 years into the game making music professionally. And I think my mom said to me, like she said something to me that made me realize like, oh yeah, I’m a professional musician. You know, like, this is what I do. I make my income with this. And I live from this it’s actually, but up until that day, I was like, this is a hobby. Like I’m just having fun and just, oh, you know, never thought about making any money from it. So hence the fact that in the first, first 10 years of my career, I never got paid for anything. I was in a strangled contract. I was ghost producing for other artists for the first five or six years of my career. Just literally sitting in a basement somewhere, just grinding away, making music for other people, other projects. Now I’m looking back on those projects and they they’re actually, it’s cool because I don’t look back on that period with bitterness cause those different influences and styles have really kind of made me more diverse as a creative, I would say otherwise, I might’ve been stuck in just making one type of electronic music for instance. Becuase in the electronic music scene it is very judgmental. If you are chosen for this, then you have to do keep doing this. If you kind of vary from that, you know, you really kind of risk your fan base, like getting really angry. So I, for me, moving forward was always a goal to have a very open minded fan base. So I guess basically just become a fan. Of me, of what I’m doing rather than of a certain song. Right? I think if you want a real career, you have to think ahead. You have to like always surprise people will be a step ahead. Sometimes shock them a little bit. Sometimes disappoint them because that might not be what they want at that point in time, but it might be what they want maybe five years down the line, 10 years down the line for me, it’s always about, it’s been about not running a sprint, but running a marathon. Right? So, you know, during the pandemic went into these boxes found these CDs, that tape mini discs, actually, that also brought me back to a funny point, because I remember it’s, you can only work on one thing at a time, which is a crazy thought that, right.

Adam Levy: Which, I find hard that you’re saying right now, because I feel like you have always something coming up and once that’s about to go live, you have like three other things that you’re building in the pipeline.

Don Diablo: Yeah, well back then, if you’re like you, I need, so let’s say you make music. There wasn’t any, there wasn’t total recall. Right? Right now, just you open your laptop, laptop, desktop, whatever MacBook you have, all these projects, you can work on them at the same time or different people all over the world. But back then, it was like you had a mixer. You had all these gear was incredibly complicated. To be honest, if you look back on it, you’re just literally reading manuals of samplers, drum, computers synthesizers of machines delays. All of these things are like, where do I start? It’s not like you could go on the internet, look it up because there was no internet. So it was really just like pioneering with no one around you. Like, how the hell am I going to do this? Just hooking up all this gear. If you look at all these picture for me and my old studio, I’m literally, I literally weighed 60 pounds more than I do now. Literally just sitting on a chair all day eating and just figuring stuff out, right? Yeah, just looking back on that I’m actually, that actually made me pretty proud like that the patience that I had, and it also gave me the discipline to understand if you really want to learn a craft, it’s not just about watching a YouTube video, downloading some loops and throwing some stuff around. I think a lot of creativity has become a lot easier, right? Like you want to be a photographer? Well, I have a filter on my iPhone, you know, it has like three lenses can even do a portrait mode. You know, or if you’re a musician, you know, there’s, you can just go on splice sticks with some loops and, you know, whatever. It’s like, I think arts become, you know, people have become more indifferent to it because it seems like it’s easier to achieve something that looks quite, you know, acceptable professional or impressive sometimes even. So I think that’s why a lot of creators are struggling mentally because how do you stand out from that? I got lucky in that sense that I grew up in that generation of you know, really having to figure out how the hell to do this. And there wasn’t really that much out there yet. So yeah, I went back found these CDs.  There was a track on there that I sampled by a group called enigma. I really liked them because they were literally an enigma. Nobody knew who they were or was it one person, it was all this sort of church sounding, kind of music, choirs and very mysterious. Obviously I had no idea how the world works. So I was like, this is a sample. I can’t use this. How do I clear this? They’re never going to allow me, but I, I want to do something special for this album. And, really, you know, this, this is why the album it’s going to sound different. It’s going to be influenced by the pandemic. Not literally, but indirectly, I guess. Because a record like that wouldn’t have happened. What I did as I sampled my old record from when I was 13, then turn that into a completely new record. Like the way I would make it now in 2021. And yeah, I just sent it to, to to enigma. We found them it’s some mysterious story of a man living on an island. It took like a year, so actually to get a reaction it’s clear now. And it’s now coming out on my album, Don Diablo and enigma from the deep. And it’s, especially if you listen to those lyrics, you know, we came out from the deep to learn, to live, to learn how to love. No, it’s really simple, but it’s that those words still resonate me after all those years. And it also, to me, it shows like good ideas, good arts. They will stand the test of time. So yeah. Yeah. It’s been, yeah. It’s been definitely a journey.

Adam Levy: Yeah. And  you brought up a few things that I want to dive into. So you brought obviously the pandemic and all the activity that you’ve seen in the music you’re producing, the art that you’re creating the idea of building a brand that exists beyond yourself. Right. And doing more things that, like you said, usually artists, they drop a single and then when they try to pivot and do and do something else, their audience kind of backlashes, but you’ve somehow managed to, to build not only your brand, as future and open-minded so that people that get attracted to it already expect that stuff. Right. And you, you talked about also the point of view of basically producing music that you love and that’s important to you, right. And, and how you did that and stayed independent, which is a very common theme in crypto when it comes to ownership, owning your stuff and centralizing that process. Versus being attached to devious labels and all of these contracts that take you as an artist. So we have a lot to break down here. Okay. I want to, I want to pivot really quick and talk about like your early days in crypto. I remember seeing articles about you in 2017 about you experimenting with, with cryptocurrencies, launching your own token, et cetera, et cetera. How did you get into crypto? What, what’s that story exactly? Was it through Bitcoin? Is it  through Ethereum? Share with me a little bit about that.

Don Diablo: You can do this and you can, it can make you very rich, yada yada, but again, the idea of potentially jeopardizing other people’s lives or, you know, endangering people when it comes to finances just, it didn’t sit right with me at the time. I don’t want to become popular or wealthy over other people’s backs. So I, I, I felt like I couldn’t control the narrative enough with like doing 200 shows a year, still making music, doing a radio show, running a fashion line, running a record label. It felt like it was too financial for me then. Even though I already had invested a lot of time, energy resources into it, I decided to pull out and kind of had my eye on NFTs shortly after, because this is exactly. What I was missing. Right. It was, it’s the idea of, you know, combining everything I just mentioned. The blockchain for thinking is transparency and arts, you know, that’s, to me just was like, okay, this is the thing I should be diving into. And this is where I think I can Excel. So that’s short kind of lead in to how that’s kind of just the, how that developed for me is I really, do,  take my time for a lot. I’m a very patient guy, like literally I can even this, like when I started this sort of this new music genre and people were like, Hey, I’m cool, but who’s going to play this. Like, there’s no, there’s no platform for it. So it’s just you. So my idea is cool, but I got like eight years. And in those eight years I’m going to build. You know, a platform I’m going to build other people that are going to make the same style of music that will be a community. Once those people pop up, I’m not going to resist other people trying to between brackets copy, or maybe even improve my sound. If you will, in a more positive perspective, I will embrace them and we will create something of a new, a new era, a new sort of you know, a new community, I would say where it goes beyond music, right? So  it became hexagon, hexagon became a platform for a lot of young talents to discover who they were, because, you know, for me, it was like, okay, this is an opportunity to not just make it about me. I created a radio show so I can support other people’s music. I created a fashion line because I was, you know, I like to wear, you know, dope clothing, but it’s usually very expensive. So it was like, what if I can make exactly what I want to wear, but also make it affordable for people. So you don’t have to pay like $700 for a jacket, but still, you know, for a reasonable amount of money can buy something that has all the extras, all the ideas attached to it that you would normally pay for very expensive item. And you can really sort of the idea of just not just being a part of people’s lives through music, but also through fashion, something you, where you take the work just grew into this whole world. And then the comic book series game. And then it was like hexagon hexagonians . Those are the fans. And it became hexagonia as a planet we want to go to cause that’s kind of where everything is, you know, it’s in the spirit of everything we’ve created. So I think if you’re an outsider, you’re like, who the hell is this Don Diablo guy? And what the hell is he talking about? And why? You know, you want to go when you go to a concert, like people are dressed the same way. They’re like, there’s this logo. Well, this is the logo stamp. The logo is such, it’s like a, the logo I created because I didn’t want to have a don diablo logo. I wanted to have a logo where everybody could feel they’re a part of this too. You know, we’re a part of this together. It’s not just about me. Like I rarely use a Don Diablo logo. For me, it’s kind of all interconnected, you know, it, it all works together, whether it’s my arts it’s the music, fashion, comic books it all comes together and it stands for futuristic anarchy. Right. So it’s really kind of just this symbolize of the idea of like in the future, we can rewrite the rules. And even I guess my fans know if you look at pictures from me from back in the days to think actually I have one from my yearbook, if you look at like where I came from maybe…

Adam Levy: I’m so excited to see this.

Don Diablo: One second. If you’re listening on a radio, you’re you got to tune in on the video things. I don’t know if I can.

Adam Levy: Wow. Wow.

Don Diablo: Okay. So people know my journey, right. I decided it was either go left or go, right. It was like either I’m going to just stay or in my room, never go out. Never make any friends. You know, just be the loner, just you know, spend my life just, you know, with the glass half empty then I just went through these phases and I think, you know, music gave me that freedom to be like, Hey, I, people are interested in me now. Right.  They don’t hate me anymore. Cause I’m, I’m making dope beats. And it gave me a sense of belonging to somewhere. Right. And I think it wasn’t until I had this, this record that did really well in, in the UK. I  never really was embraced by my own country. So I think as well, if you’re an artist, you kind of have to look beyond the border sometimes because sometimes you’re the right person born in the wrong you know, the wrong place sometimes in the wrong body. Like there’s so many different things that you know, that can make you feel a certain way, but then later on you realize, wait, it wasn’t me, right. I was born in the wrong place. So later on that switch, when the, when abroad started to embrace me, my home country started to embrace me. And now it’s, it’s, you know, it’s, it’s, it’s been good. But it’s definitely started outside of my country for me. And I had my first booking in the UK. I saw this picture because you have to imagine, I don’t really have, there’s a period of my life where I don’t have any picture. This is the only picture I have of that period almost. So there’s like a, maybe a seven or eight year gap. Where I was taking the pictures and I never wanted to be in those pictures. And then someone took a picture of me doing my first gig in the UK. I was like, holy shit, who is that guy? You know, like it just made me realize like, damn, I had a bad skin. I had a, and I didn’t go to the hairdresser for like nine or 10 years. So my hand was like right up to my bum pale as, I don’t know what, so I just started realizing I don’t have to do to be, you know, to be like this. So that’s kind of where I started switching my life up a little bit. And then as obviously you go through ups and downs, you let it go a little bit more. And then now during the pandemic, I was like, okay, there’s no excuse anymore. I need to catch up on a little bit of sleep. Cause I used to sleep two, three hours a night, max, you know, before the pandemic. So I’ve switched it up. Like now two to five hours I have a trainer comes by every day. Lost again about I’d say like 30 pounds and kind of just on the right track again. And now we realize, okay, well, if I feel healthier, I got more energy. If I got more energy, I can do more. But I, you know, usually I’m, too stubborn to realize that.

Adam Levy: Your brand of future anarchy. It’s such a, those two keywords future anarchies is something that really trickles down within the crypto and blockchain space. Right? And you’ve like, somehow you’ve already positioned yourself years ahead of your time with, with hexagon to already align with this niche that you really broke into, that you’ve already been like experimenting with, but had a lot of success over the last few months, starting March, 2021. And I want to, I want to talk more about these NFT drops because one, a lot of the trends that you’ve been seeing from these successful jobs have been strictly digital, right? Digital audio, digital video. You’ve taken it to another level. You’re combining the physical with the digital super on par with the whole future  anarchy. Right? So everything that you do is calculated to the T. I want you to tell me a little bit about these drops and I’ll go ahead and read them really quick. So March, 2021, you had the Genesis NFT, April, 2021. You had destination hexagon and May, 2021. You were featured in the one and only Sotheby’s, which is wild, right? Which is crazy for infinite future collectively bringing in over $2.4 million in sales in three months, right? As a musician, now you’re transitioning into becoming a fine artist, right? And you talked about artists releasing singles, fans being attached to that core brand, but you’re pivoting, right. You’re growing with this future  anarchy point of view that aligns in so many different niches. Talk to me about COVID talk to you about quarantine. What the hell happened these last few months? Like, dude, it’s, it’s crazy to see that those transitions, right. And how you’re really taking your level of creativity , your level of experimentation, how you’re thinking about that in a new fashion, using cryptography, using blockchain technology. Right. So talk to me about COVID and the creative process behind launching those three projects.

Don Diablo: Yeah, that’s a, it’s a deep, long question actually. First of all, I was like, this is the scariest thing I’ve done in a long time, literally. Right. It’s like coming up with my Genesis piece and dropping my first NFT was super scary. It was like back going back to school or releasing your first record. I literally waited around in clubhouse rooms for maybe six months, literally just listening in to people and just, you know, being a part quietly, being a part of the community until someone brought me a stage, it’s like, Hey, are you like the real Diablo? I was like, I guess I think there’s only one. And then we started talking like, Hey, what if you’ve been doing? And I started telling them about my work and then it just started rolling from there. I got embraced by the community. I felt really supported, which was great because I felt so lonely because of the pandemic. You know, I was missing my fans, missing my friends, missing my family. And for the first time I felt connected with these people. I didn’t know, right. Through an app on the phone. And they so graciously made me part of the community and all these people from different backgrounds kind of came together to right whether it was photography or digital arts or music or finance sometimes all of these people came together with a vision. This is, you know, this is a space where we’re going to be innovating and we’re going to be pushing things forward. So right at the beginning of the pandemic actually did this I MTV saw, they kind of follow me on on my socials. Like, Hey, we would like to shoot on a script special with you for our new season. Usually I would say no, because I’m very private about my private life, but here I was like, Hey, well this just how’s everything I build is such a part of me. And I’ve always been making art. Right. But what is art like the whole concept of what art is in general? Is arts a painting or sculpture? Or could it be music or could it be a combination of different things? It slowly started to shift. So. I wanted to create something that I want to make my own mark. Right. Because everybody at the time was just the role, like out there on the, all the platforms, whether it was super rare.  Nifty gateway or foundation beautiful digital visuals loops infinite loops with music attitudes, beautiful arts, I was like, great I can do that because I have about 3000 different loops that I’ve created over the last 15 years that I’ve never shared with the world, because for me in general, making art and being creative, doesn’t always mean I have to share it with the rest of the world. I think that just kind of trickles back down to me being that little kid and just creating and sometimes just being very insecure about, Hey, does the world want this? I think they know me making music, so they’re not interested in my art. So in comes this whole new movement and the definition of art starts reshifting right. Somebody who is layering different textures of sound we’ve seen as a, as an artist versus, you know, a painter who’s layering, different layers of paint, right. Or a sculptor. I think when it’s 2021 and we’re in a different era. So all these things started to shift. Then I was like, Ooh, but everybody’s already doing that. So I need to add my own my own flavor, my own twist, something unique to it. So I’ve always been very physical you know, with, with, I mean, physical instance that I like collecting physical things, even as a kid, right. Collecting star wars toys. And for me it was like, Hey, I need to, I need to combine everything that I am about as a person into my Genesis B. So I created actually what I really wanted to create was something actually based on my love for star wars, a holographic piece that implement. A piece of music. The music piece actually was a piece that I started almost 19. Never finished it, or maybe I did finish it because when do you really finish anything? When you’re creating art, sometimes it can take you 20 years to create something. Sometimes it takes you a day. But I was like, Hey, I put, I put so many years of working through that song. I, really want to share that with one person and also you know, I want to make this sort of a combination of everything. So created this digital animation of my first keyboard that I bought as a kid that got me into music. Even before I started making music and then I added this cabinets with a cartridge. If you put the cartridge that actually holds the NFT into the cabinets, then boom, your artwork pops up. It actually isn’t part of the NFT. It Because, the NFT is the video and the music obviously, but made me sort of a different type of artist, I guess, within, within the scene. And yeah, I, after that, my mind just exploded because I, to be honest, I’ve been working on this for a couple of years. So I already had these pieces in my house. Even if you look back at the  MTV cribs episode which was recorded I think, you know, almost a year before, so for me it felt so full circle because there was all that I, there were so many ideas, but the idea of creating something then you know, perfecting it, cause there were like many prototypes and then the Genesis drop game and it just scariest thing I’ve ever done, but it got bought by an amazing collector. I actually ended up flying to Dubai to meet him. We had these great conversations and it changed my whole state of mind because the thing is  when you become an artist, you started really small and you’re looking for human connection. Right?  You want one person. I remember growing up, I, the first thing I did, I made  a mixtape   with my music on it. And I went to the local record store and I said, I have five of these tapes. I want to sell them for five euros. Right. Do you think I can put them here in the wall? And they were like, so cute. This kid. Right? So every day I came by, never sold anything until like maybe a year later, someone was like the owner of the store was like, were like guess what? Somebody bought your tape. Right? The idea of one person listening or interacting with what I created just blew my mind. So then life takes over right?. You were like, if you have a few hundred followers, a few thousands for me, grew into a few million. Then the pressure comes and you’re like, you’re playing these massive shows. You’re playing in front of 60,000 people. Right. You’re just gazing into you trying to look at the faces, but it just sometimes becomes very blurry. So for me, I, at some point I just ended up and the last shows I ended up playing with this, these, these glasses that shine light into my eyes. So I could just kind of zone out a little bit and not focus on how many people were in front of me, just be in my own zone. And I think once I take those glasses off, I’m completely comfortable. And you know, then I have full vision. So for me, the, it just became so big. I never expected that. And now with this, you bring it back all the way to the origin, which is like, so it’s something, the one person I really love the idea of, of, of making one of one art actually born out of necessity because time I never really got accepted to platforms like nifty gateway. And I was received with open arms by the kind folks at a super rare, but they’re, they come from a fine art background. Right. So, but they immediately understood my vision, my idea, they followed my journey. So I felt like, Hey, I need to make them proud as well, trusting in me because they don’t really let any musicians on there. So I now need to make something that’s worthy of their fine art approach to NFTs. So all of these combinations, all of these things together made me push harder, create something you know, that I will be proud of. That will be unique. And hopefully we create a bond where the connect with a collector.

Adam Levy: So, one of the things. People know music for when they produce music, it’s meant to be enjoyed by the masses. Right. You’re like, re-engineering that from, from that drop, which I found super interesting when you’re working on a film for over a year. Right. And you’re producing and, and this is for the second piece. Right. And because the, the, the first of the Genesis piece was a really beautiful holographic keyboard, organ kind of thing, right that you were building and iterating  and tinkering with, as a kid that you then brought back.

Don Diablo: Now I have museums just calling me up and they want that piece in the magazine, in their collection. So it just switched quickly. But there, I was like, Hey, what am I going to do? Am I going to do the same thing again? But you’re right. Again, I was like the art, isn’t just the piece itself, right? The art is also delivery the whole story around it. So that, that, that’s, that’s what I love about NFTs. Right. It’s it’s not just. Okay, well, here you go. There it is. It’s a loop for me. There’s so much you can do with, you know, creativity beyond traditional art or with a smart contract. Here was like, okay, I want to make this film. And I want to  work on it for a year, make it the dopest thing I’ve ever done. And then maybe just have one person see it because you know what, like the thing is, people will consume so quickly, you work on something and you work with it on it with your whole heart and you have your fans or sometimes haters or whatever people from outside, they look at it, they scroll through it, they consume it and the next day they’ve forgotten about it, right? Because there’s so much out there. So to me, this is like, Hey, also bringing back to realization. I was like, Hey, this is a lot of work that went into this. And it’s just gotta be one person that’s gonna see it. And, you know, That also is part of the art. It’s the realization for the rest of the world that you have to take in account that these things take a lot of time, a lot of effort, especially now. But everything with music and film and everything is streaming, right? Everything is digested. That’s also where my first Genesis piece idea came from because I wanted to stream art. That’s why I started creating these cabinets. And that’s how I started controlling people’s wifi. That’s how my third piece came about, which we’ll talk about in a second. But the second phase really was about disrupting right, doing something that was bigger than ever, also because people were doing a loop here, a loop there, which is amazing as beautiful, but I was like, Hey, I’m Don Diablo. I need to go over and above. Like, what if instead of a 20 second loop , I can create a film, right? Like a film that trickles people’s imagination. I’ll create a trailer. And then the one hour film stays inside this box, inside the box. Now, there’s a flash drive. That’s password protected. And then yeah, that film is there maybe 10 years from now. Some people will see it, maybe not, but it will always , keep its value. And the thing is, once you share something with the world, or once you it’s almost like being a relationship, right. Once you, you give yourself completely, sometimes people take that for granted, right. Because they already have it. It’s like being in a marriage, you have to work really hard to keep appreciating each other. Right. So that’s kind of where, so I think it’s good to be able to talk to you about it now, because sometimes you’d be like, there were like, some people were angry, like, what is this elite approach to things like, don’t worry. Like I’ve got stuff. I’ve been giving you guys music for free the year, you know, you don’t, you’re streaming it to take it. You know, you can have a subscription, but at the end of the day, you get it for free. You got music videos for free, you get everything for free and I’m dropping a record a month. So I’m literally overloading you with contents because I love you guys, but I also need to do something for myself and I need to make a point. So did, this was the hardest thing is like, how do you merge that new world with that world you used to live in? And people that don’t understand it. So some fans became angry or like, oh, this is horrible. You’re just, you’re making millions now. And just, you know, these people were like don’t respect or understand what you do, but it’s, I can assure it’s actually the complete opposite. It’s this, this is, these are, these are people coming from a very interesting backgrounds or very interesting visions you know, are very woke if I, if I say so. I appreciate fine art. Like, you know, I I’ve sold some pieces, not off the market as well to people who would own Renoir. So Monet’s, you know, and they’re, they’re now see, Hey, this is a different generation. I would like to own a Diablo, but Don is very picky. Like I really kind of sometimes source. I want to know who’s going to buy my piece almost right. Because I want to know it’s going to end up in the right place. They’re like children, you need to make sure. So for me, it’s never really been about making money because I took big risks like this. I already invested a lot of money upfront into something. I never knew if it was going to actually give me anything. And to be honest, I’ve done that my whole life. I had less literally I’ve I have in my garage, 10 projects that didn’t work. That costs me everything. I just earned on the, all the projects you just mentioned. So I think that’s what people don’t see. It’s all the effort, all the craft, everything you put in. Before you come with that, that they actually eventually will learn to know. I would get to know. And I think it’s hard because you can’t communicate in that way with people on social media. You can’t tell them the full story. You just have to give them the snippet because the span is, you know, it’s minimal.

Adam Levy: And one thing I love about those, those two drops is, again, it ties back to the whole concept of future anarchy right. And experimenting with what’s possible from a NFT point of view, because the main narratives around NFTs is that all digital files will be pegged to these ERC 721s , these NFT tokens. And there’s going to be a level of ownership on the internet versus copying. Right. And you took it upon yourself to merge the two. And I think part of being in hexagon, being a hexagon, and from what I’ve seen behind your cult-like community, Like we talked about at the beginning, there’s this level of open-mindedness there’s this level of futurism. And with that comes your ability of tinkering and messing around and trying sorts of things to keep hexagon alive, keep it fresh. And I think that also ties to your third piece now with Sotheby’s right.  What’s that story like? Did they hit you up? Did you hit them up? Because what is it? It’s like one of the oldest auction houses and only the best of the best.

Don Diablo: Yeah. I, I need to get one thing off my chest. So because of what I said previously. I’m very grateful in this sense cause I have very open-minded fans. And I think if you know my story now a little bit it’s then you understand how this came about. Because the story is, is, is long and it has a long, a lot of winding roads. And I think a lot of people, when I, when I do a show, for instance, it gets kind of emotional because. A lot of this music, especially when you make electronic music, people see it as throw away culture. But a lot of these records, you know, these are really records about my life. And that’s why I’m also creating a futuristic theater play at the moment which will be premiering end of the year. Because they kind of, if you connect all of them together, sometimes you have to take a helicopter view and just kind of see and put everything together. Because nowadays it’s very hard to have a career as an artist because, you know, we need to be on Tik TOK or whatever. That’s the only way to have a hit. So people just having the patience to really understand, look into your story and then use that as a mirror to look at themselves because at the end of the day, that’s, to me, that’s what art should be, right? It’s whether it’s music or photography or painting or sculpture. To me, it’s all art, you know, or, or it’s not art at all, whatever. It doesn’t matter. It’s creativity. I would never say that I’m creating art. Like that’s, you know, again, I think it’s kind of all up to the people and for me yeah, you have to. I’m very grateful because I have people who’ve been on this journey with me for a couple of years. And if they get into the boat, now they can, it’s very hard  an outsider to understand the scope or , you know, the whole sort of helicopter view. And that’s why I’m grateful, you know, for the fans that I have, because they have been very supportive even of me 99% of my fans for you know , this NFT journey, because they understand that this is something that’s going to be part of the future. And they know that I am all about the future. And the same thing goes now, I’m doing this huge project with the United nations, with the idea of what can you do with music, right? So. Came up with the concept stream to be green . So every time you listen to certain songs we will be re greening planet earth or Africa in this case specifically. And that, again for me, is something to think about moving forwards, changing the way we consume and also changing the connection between between people. I think sometimes it’s better to have you know thousands really connected fans versus a couple of million people following you as an influencer. I think it’s really about human connection. So that brings me to my third piece for Sotheby’s, which was like pretty insane. You know, when I got invited to, to be a part of this, and to be honest, that’s just the start, what I’m doing. Cause there’s, there’s, there’s going to be more together with Sotheby’s. No, just, they have a very forward-thinking vision and I love you know, they’re very traditional, but at the same time, you know, they, they, they accepted me with open arms. They understood my story. They gave me you know, an opportunity that now has changed my whole life to be very honest because that opened so many doors to so many new endeavors beyond NFT. You know, for me, NFT it’s it’s it’s a lot of people don’t see it as, as real art. But my concept is my idea that I have is to bring that into the museums, right? And to, to keep pushing forward on, on combining traditional collectors of maybe, you know, more traditional arts versus people who are, forward-thinking bringing those into the scene, versus maybe even people will never collect the art at all. Young people getting them interested into art and collectibles have always been a big thing obviously, but everything is so tied together. I think we’re in a, such a paradigm shift where everything all thought processes are changing and everybody’s kind of just opening their brain. I think also, obviously because of the pandemic, because we have to think differently because the world has changed, it is changing. And I think, again, my whole idea when this pandemic started the first day, I said to my mom never let a good crisis go to waste. You know, I have to, you know, this is the time I have to kind of put all the pieces of the puzzle , my whole life, everything I’ve done from making videos and film to making music, to making fashion, to making collectibles already for myself or for my friends making furniture, making arts doing all these things, combining them into one piece. That has been my, my journey in NFT. And now, you know, it feels so special that everything that’s coming up is merging all of these things that I’ve learned in my life. And the third piece at Sotheby’s really was the main feature of that was the idea of like, you have a cabinet in your house, which brings me back through streaming art into your house. Right. You buy this piece  and from there on, we will be connected for life, right? So this means I don’t even know what’s going to happen. And I think if you’re listening to everything and what the hell is he talking about? So the idea is, is a cabinet comes with a cartridge. The art piece is on the cartridge. It’s a beautiful see-through cabinet , which is an art piece in itself. If I may say so, and the then after that you take it home and then I log into your wifi. And from there on I, it gets, it gets interesting. I can literally just go and share messages when you aren’t in there maybe 10 years from now. Maybe there’s nothing for a year. Maybe there’s something every, every week. Maybe  I put a piece in there that as a new piece that, that never got released or so it just, again , there’s a connection. That’s very personal. And I think, again, that brings me back to that being part of the art it’s literally cause everyone’s like, well, it’s just for one person. The whole point is it’s not because it’s meant to, it’s the message. That is also a very big part of the art, the message that other people get from it. So that means we appreciate into human connection. You know, it’s the whole story around it is part of the, piece, if that makes sense. So it’s not just about what that one person does with it. It’s how does that make you feel? How does it make you feel when you hear about this? What can you do with that? How does it inspire you? How do you value my music, my arts, whatever. Now, after hearing this. And I think, you know, we have to slowly start bringing back the idea of what’s great. If people are creating has value. I think also this is why someone like Beeple now, I’ve known Mike for a long time. I’m actually in the 5,000 days piece if zoom in, there’s a picture of me in there of something we worked on a couple of years ago. And I’ve always seen him as an incredible artist, but the thing is when people see it on Instagram, for free it’s, it’s nice, but they never considered that to be art because art has to be in a museum or it has to be you know, sort of valued or seen in a certain way that, you know, people wouldn’t see musicians or digital creators as real artists. And I think it’s  2021 , right. We have to shift, obviously, as all of this is moving along, a lot of people came in you know, when there’s opportunity to opportunism. So I think it immediately instantly became a lot harder obviously then the crash came . So then everyone’s like, what am I doing now? But I think this was really about pioneering. Right? Right now I’m working on a piece with Trevor Jones and a lot of money. I mean, they were there from the beginning.

Adam Levy: Is this some alpha leak right now? Is this an alpha leak?

Don Diablo: It is an alpha leak. It’s fine. It’s all good. Okay. You know we’ve been working on this piece together where we have these, one lives in the UK the other one is in France, there’s myself and in the Netherlands for different generations, different backgrounds. One is a digital creator. One is a painter one, you know,  has been making music. So. Bringing these worlds together, these different generations, it’s never happened. We’re living in a time where people get to work together from such different backgrounds and disciplines creating such new forms of art. It’s exciting. And I think, you know, if you can get your hands on one of those pieces, it’s going to have emotional value is going to have historical value. And also at some point, maybe even financial value beyond what you’re probably grasping now, because this is the start of a revolution. Right? So I think whenever we look back on it, years from now, this will be something that has changed a lot of things beyond NFT it’s been a way of thinking much like, you know, the whole web and crypto community in itself. It’s growing. Obviously it scares a lot of people. It scared me in the beginning as well. But what you don’t know scares you obviously. And, you know, especially now with all of the governments, kind of just the NFTs really put the spotlight on it because people started mentioning numbers and it was like, oh, damn, like, where does all this, where does all this lead to, where is this going to and how can we control it? Right. So I think it’s going to be a very interesting couple of years moving forward.

Adam Levy: Let’s talk about that for a minute. Right? You’ve seen the NFT space. You’ve seen the crypto space grow over the last few years. Right now, NFTs are having their moment of fame. There was a little bit of a dull moment, but now we’re seeing that snowball effect kind of kick in again, with all these  avatars from the board apes to the cool cats, et cetera, et cetera. So,  NFTs are having their moment of fame again, but what would you say if any, are the challenges right now for getting new users and new creators kind of on boarded into the NFT space? What have you seen kind of stifled that process?

Don Diablo: To be honest for me. I never look at… everything you’re mentioning is based on finances. Right? So it’s like people would see something maybe being less successful because of finance. It doesn’t bring in as much money. But I think again, when there’s a beginning, there’s, there’s these, these pioneer pieces, right? These,  OG pieces, you know, if you go and grip the r.io, you will see, I think I have two pieces in the top 20. Right. But I think that’s like an extreme, it’s like it put a lot of pressure on myself and a lot of people like, you know, I talk about it with Trevor on a lot of, and some of the artists I’m working with, like when you get like all of this pressure on your shoulders, like it can also change the whole concept of, you know, freedom and creativity, which we refuse to do. And I think we have to let go of that a little bit. It’s not really about, you know, It can grow.  It was here and then these people came in and that people wanted those pieces because you were getting pieces from pioneers. Right. And when you have, whenever you get something like that, that’s going to be valuable 10 years down the line. If you’re  patient, if you’re a HODLer. Right. So for me, but it’s, not a hot potato game. Right. So I think it’s really now, if you want to come into the game and your creator just do it. If somebody, at the end of the day, if you were creating a, somebody who wants to point, they 0.1 ETH for something you’ve created, it’s a great start, right? Grow,  to 2.1 ETH and grow from there and, and grow. It’s like every normal way of approaching success, you have to begin, especially even, it might even be harder for people who are already successful because they have the concept of why can’t, you know, if I go below a certain threshold, I’m taking a step backwards. So that’s even more scary. I think when you’re starting out, it’s exciting because it means it’s a way for you to communicate with the world, to reach them and, you know, to build something new that wasn’t there before. And I think, again, there’s no, a lot of people came to me starting artists, but also like mega stars and music, art fashion. They wanted to collaborate with me. And it’s like the big question, like, what’s the hack? Is there a life hack? I’m like, there is no hack . I’ve been working on these pieces for, you know  the three pieces we mentioned specifically for over like almost two years. Right? So it’s not like, Ooh, NFT is hot now. I’m just gonna go,  what can I sell on the blockchain? It’s not, that’s not the way it works. You have to come with something that has real value, like a company, right? The same with when you launch. If you want to launch a new currency or coin, right.  There’s the white paper has to have a story. You can’t just expect people to just buy it. And just so I think it’s the same for art. People are not just buying the art. People want to buy something from an artist, right. So they have to understand the story behind you, and then they will value and understand the art. So I think that’s the way you have to approach it. You really have to bring across the story and why the speech is valuable because it literally could be three lines. You know, that’s what we know from minimalistic art from back in the days. Right. So it’s really how you perceive it within your mind versus how you value the person that created it. Then add to the actual piece. If it gives you some type of emotional feeling, then it’s worth something for you. And that’s always been the foundation of art, right. It’s always really about what does it do for you? For me when I buy art, I buy something that makes me feel something not because I think it will be worth something or will be worth more somewhere down the line. And I think that’s why a lot of big creators got anxiety. Cause they felt pressure. I talk with a lot of creators you know, regularly and they’re like, I’m like, why haven’t you put out anything anymore on the platforms? They’re like the pressure. When I had the last drop wasn’t as hyped. I did just drop a nifty and it wasn’t as hyped as the one that the guy before me did. And I felt like really pressured. So I think what we have to realize is that that initial boom is stabilizing now. And now it’s really about valuing real arts  and real efforts. And I think the same goes for, you know, anything moving forward. It’s, we’re still learning. We’re still growing. And I think. It’s exciting because for me personally, I get to work with all  these different people. If I, can mention all the stuff I’ve been working on now it’s insane. Right? So one of my things that I, one of my dreams I wanted to do, actually this isn’t an NFT, but it’s still, it’s a collectible. I will be launching soon together with Star wars and Lucasfilm and Disney them trusting me. I’m actually-

Adam Levy: Is that another  alpha leak?

Don Diablo: Alpha leaks all over the place. It’s going to be super dope. And I, I was like a little bit, like I got a little bit like impatient, cause I was like, Hey, why is this taking so long? And they were like, well, you’re like literally the only person, the artists like artists that they work with, you know, the whole franchise of star wars. They work with brands and companies, but they don’t really work with a person. So it actually, sometimes I have to take a step back and realize, Hey, what is happening now is insane. Right? All these things. It’s like, it’s a movie. It’s yeah, it’s one of those things you’ll tell later for your kids and be like, yeah. Or even do it through your grandkids. You’re like, sure. Grandpa sounds good. We’re part of the future map.

Adam Levy:“Alright”.

Don Diablo: “Alrighty. It’s all good”. It’s not to, I think the one thing I have to realize, I sometimes I just have to stand still appreciate it, enjoy it, but I’m just excited to really keep blowing things up, you know, to keep disrupting. I feel like that’s my position that I have here, it’s really taking the medium and then not just being lazy with it, but just cause to be honest, I could have made a lot more money cause I could have done collections, collectibles, you know, but for me that was-

Adam Levy: You could’ve done  the open editions. You could have done those big hype drops, but you, thought about it differently.

Don Diablo: Because yeah, I saw people like people like do it, please. Come on. I had all these platforms approach me. Let’s do an open edition. Let’s, you know, make a couple of million. I was like, it’s the thing is now you see it, right. The secondary markets have crash for a lot of artists and they’re like, you know, you know, I don’t, again, I don’t want to do that to whoever, you know, is collecting my work. I want it to stay valuable to them emotionally, not financially forget about money, you know, too, this has never had to be about money, but sometimes  it has to be to make an impact to show people that, Hey, this piece, boom, this is what it’s worth. Right. Because when I first, when I did shows, there  were always promoters, like, Hey, we also want to do the live stream for free and just added on top of that. I’m like, yeah, just kind of sold my last last year for 1.2 million. So kind of shows that you shouldn’t always be taking things for free. Because you’re, you know, you’re already, for me, this is about the people that are in front of me. I don’t want the pressure of the rest of the world watching me and this being on the internet for the rest of my life. This represents a certain value, but also it represents a certain pressure. And when I do something like this, I want to spend a year on that because I put this on the internet . So it needs to be pretty good, amazing because you know, that’s what people deserve. And I think because there’s already so much out there, you owe it to yourself or to your fans, your, to your new fans and I think that really was what that was about for me. And, and yeah, I can understand that it gets misinterpreted, but again, the whole thing in itself as a whole is a part of the art. It’s the message that is the art.

Adam Levy: Yeah, and this very much ties into the next point. I want to talk to you about, of how NFTs are kind of going to change the music industry as a whole. Right. And right now people see NFTs as art, maybe even a little bit of a music, but they got their moment of fame through art. But I think what people aren’t really noticing that these collectibles they’re they’re proof of ownership, they verify status. They verify symbol. For example, when artists are growing and they’re producing music and they’re starting off on sound cloud, they have their core listeners of let’s say a thousand listeners per month, 10,000 that are like starting to pick up on their work. There’s no real way to validate, improve that you are a juice world fan before juice world became juice world. Or that you were a Don Diablo fan, right. And NFTs allow the fans to be a part of a journey. Right. So imagine you could issue an NFT. Two juice worlds, a thousand listeners, and be like, congratulations, you’re within my first a thousand listeners. I want to show some appreciation and you can prove people now by the NFT that you are.

Don Diablo: That’s the next step for me is really yeah, it’s, it’s always been about the fans. Like everything I do is for the fans, right. I, wouldn’t be alive to be honest, if it wasn’t for the fans or people who appreciate what I do, because on this vast planetit’s filled with emptiness and shallowness, like what’s really why am I here? Right. So it’s really hard to find any purpose. So doing this together with people who are in the same state of mind and understand that is really what it’s about. So obviously this being my new sort of being the big thing in my life right now the ultimate goal will always be, how can I make this you know, so that it’s, it’s a valuable for my fans . So, you know, it’s the same with an album, people getting impatient, right? They’re like, why is that? Why are you not like, why no album, why this or that? Well, it’s already there. If you look closely, it’s being formed, right. Nowadays everything is formed publicly. It’s it’s being formed in front of your eyes. It just, then at the end of the phase, it will just kind of just some box we’ll move around. And you’re like, oh, here it is. Oh, Dan, was it? It was there all along. Right. I think here it’s the same case. I’m creating, I’m doing this so that  at the end, obviously we can, oh, it will bring us all together. It’s not to alienate anyone. It’s always bringing people together. So, but in order to do that, you sometimes need to disrupt. You need to try things you need to experiment, need to learn. You need to also make sure you have the finances to do these things, right? So there’s a lot of factors that come into play, but most of all, you need is great value. That’s always been my thing. Like I don’t value myself as a human being.  I’ve struggled with that my whole life. I don’t value myself as an artist. I’ve struggled with that for my whole life. But sometimes there was this, there’s this momentum that you create and there’s an undeniable value it’s cemented in this case, on the blockchain. Right. So that’s what really gave me goosebumps. It was, you know, in these club houses kind of just, everything went full circle and it felt like, you know, this is something that will be there, the rest of your life, because the internet is a fleeting thing right in. And especially when you’re an artist, people will forget about you. You will be forgotten the one day you’ll be in the grounds. Nobody will remember you, but that’s what I love about what we’re doing here. This is what this will always be there forever. Right. So we’re trying to be that pile of money. Well, so it’s really about yeah, I guess what we should learn from this as well as artists starting in this, this can create a value that you will, you can kind of hang on to the rest of your life because it’s always going to be there because nowadays you create something it goes on the internet, then, you know, the next day there’s a bunch of articles that topic you know, or you make or you make something. And the next thing doesn’t do as well, people will always go on about that. The last thing you created, then that’s all of a sudden who you are. So I think here, it’s like really creating these moments that are everlasting, that are there for forever, for everyone to see. And hopefully that can add to your value, the way you value yourself as a, as an artist and as a human being. Yeah, and I think the same goes for crypto in general, right? People are , if you were woken up,  have you changed your life. You know? And, people say that these are life hacks, shortcuts, whatever. But at the end of the day , They’re not because that’s just the type of person that you are. You know, you, you actually do deserve this because hopefully what you’re doing you’re putting that, whatever you earned into creating , something bigger, that’s going to help more people or help people around you. Or you can just have one person in your family or maybe, you know, a friend. And I think that in itself has created so many positive news that people are just forgetting about it because they’re all just like, oh, we’re trying to go around the system. You know, breaking rules, anarchy, chaos. It’s not really what it’s about. It’s really what you do with what you’ve earned and making sure that you’ve earned it because I’m not religious, but I do believe there’s something up there that’s watching me. And I feel like, you know, this is a reason why as a kid, I never, I never drank alcohol. I never did drugs. I I’ve never done it until this day. I don’t know what alcohol tastes like. Right. I’ve never smoked cigarettes because that was the only thing at that time when I was 12, but I had to offer as far as like, Hey, to show whoever’s up there. I really want this. I’m really serious about this. I’m going to work 19 hours a day, seven days a week for 20 hours straight to have a shred of success. Right. And then people come to me, they’re like, Hey, yes, I’ve been making, I’ve been taking pictures. I’ve been creating digital arts. I’ve been making music for the last two years, but it’s just not working. I’m getting depressed. I’m stressed. My family won’t support me anymore. I’m like, I’ve been in a situation literally where I was like doing this for so many years that people just like, what’s this laughable. They were like, Don, let it go, man. Let it go. You’re doing this for 15 years. You had your best time. You know, you have a decent brain go and do something, you know, grown up. But I think.

Adam Levy: Go get work in banking Don, go, go, go, go.

Don Diablo: No, I was good at school. So they were like, Hey, well you could be a brain surgeon. Like, you know, you could save people’s lives. I’m like, that’s not what I want to do. I want to save you know, people’s lives in a different way. Right? I want to start with my own. I want to find a value and a place on this planet. And from there on, hopefully give other people hope , and maybe inspiration, but the whole concept of being successful, like, because you see this so easily on social media nowadays, you’re like, Ooh, I just need to put some, you know, to be an influencer or whatever, or like, have some certain aesthetic. And from there on like, I will be successful. Even for me, my first, the beginning of my career, I remember I’m on Facebook. I only put pictures of the back, cause I didn’t want people to see my front . And I think like , after four or five years, I’ve put a frontal picture. I’d be like, oh shit, there’s a, that’s the face of the music. But I never wanted people to have a face to anything because it’s like, I want, I want the concept, the music, the arts for it to speak to them, to, you know, do them for themselves. Right. But I think what we’ve forgotten again, I guess the point of this story is that it takes a lot of hard work. Right? All the stuff we see on socials, they’re like the exceptions to the rule. Like, oh, this guy became successful. It happens in my scene a lot as well. Right? It’s like someone comes in scores an accidental hit, career blows up, but that’s what you see on TV. When you hear on the radio, what you see on social media, honestly, shit is hardcore. You really have to, I always ask you know, someone was starting out. So how do you go about it? So you really want to be successful, right? It’s not working for you. Do you have a girlfriend or. Yes. Okay. How much time do you spend with that person? Yes. Okay. So do you eat three times a day? How many times are you going to sort of the toilets? How many, you know, how many hours are you asleep? That’s all too much time that’s spent on not being successful. Literally you have to grind, grind, grind, grind, grind, bleed bleed bleed, take all of these, you know, deceptions take all of these failures, take all of these people that really are just going to screw the screw you over. Cause that’s the foundation of my career. Literally people taking advantage of you, but then slowly because they take advantage of you. They give you a little platform. You just take that. You’re like, okay, cool. I’ll take the beating. I never got paid for it, but Hey, I’m going to move on because at least two or three people saw what I did. And then you just keep building, building, building it’s really about just constantly letting go of all the frustration, anger, and fear and disappointment, and just still being able to be positive and be creative. Because at the end of the day, with all of this pressure , you still need to be that kid creating without any influences from the outside, add up all of this together, you might have a chance of a very good career.

Adam Levy: Yeah. I think those are really wise words for someone starting out. And I think from your point of view being as successful as you’ve become in the music space, and you’re starting to see like the experimentation between audio NFTs, video NFTs, what do you kind of seeing the music space looking like five, 10 years from now with the intersection of NFTs? How do you,  imagine, like, do you imagine publishers having the same business model as they have today with them being very capital intensive, being like VC’s essentially giving artists an early paycheck taking all of their, or a lot of their, you know, their ownership or do you imagine creators kind of reversing that model and publishers just riding along for the appreciation by NFTs buying social tokens, rather than actually owning? Like how do you imagine this space kind of looking like in a few years?

Don Diablo: Well, you hit the nail on the head, right? So I think, again, it’s not just, even if you’re not into NFTs, it’s much bigger than that. Right? It’s the same with crypto currency is even if you don’t have crypto, it’s really about, can it change the way you think about banking, about systems, about regulations, about the world around you. Right. If it does then, you know, that’s already a very positive effect. I think here it’s the same thing. If you’re not even into NFTs, maybe you can embrace the idea that artists haven’t been given, what they are but they’ve been deserving off. Right? So for instance, take, let’s take my label. I have a record label hexagon. One thing I changed immediately was usually you get like 15 to 20%, right. At a record label at 80% goes to the record that I really started to go like, Hey, okay, cool. We have costs. But if we kind of break it all down, if you want to go break even maybe have a slight profit. If we give, if we have the artists maintain 50% of their rights, it would be a partnership, which seems a lot more fair. Funny thing is that a lot of artists don’t even care about it that much. You’re like they just signed the contract, like cool. They never really think about that because they’re used to just getting abused. Right. Which kind of annoys me because I want them to value what we’re giving them. But unfortunately it’s really just about hype and moving along and just doing as much as you can, from a label perspective, there isn’t really much loyalty, I would say then which sometimes hurts from that side. But I think you really have to start realizing as an artist and people from the industry as well, that we haven’t been getting what we deserve. And I think the reason why I was able to move so quickly  in the space, in the NFT space, because I didn’t have a publisher, I didn’t have a record label cause I’ve always been independent. I’ve always done this alone. It’s just been me. People always ask me, who’s the team behind you. It was doing this and doing, do that. It just all comes from me. Right. So obviously I have great people that work for me with me but all of the creativeness, all of the ideas, all of, all of that plus all of the ownership lies with me. I think that’s very important because somewhere along the line, as artists, all of these different you know, things come into play that that are not important for the actual art. And I think now. What I want to see this to come out. What I want to come out of this is the idea and the concept of that, what we are creating is has value and that there are too many people around it, right? That there’s so many people that have to make money from other people’s creativity and to take advantage of them that has to change. So especially obviously the first one, I mean, one of the, the basic foundations of NFTs is that once somebody resells your piece, you’re still able to get you know, you can, you got a percentage of the resell, the secondary sale. And I think that, you know, that’s something that’s not just amazing for NFTs . It’s something that has to happen on art. It’s sometimes happens on art still, but generally, you know, speaking to a lot of my friends who are from the traditional fine art industry, it never really hardly really happens.So they’re now considering moving their physical pieces. To you know, to sell them through the blockchain. So I think , it’s just the beginning. I think everybody wants to crush this whole thing. Everybody wants to go and now look at like, Hey crypto. Yes, we, you know, it all went down, you know, we’re in a, in a pickle, but obviously we’re HODLers as well. It’s all going to go off again. The same goes for NFT. It’s not really just about what you see and what you’ve seen. And you know, it’s really about what is to come and what we can do with smart contracts and how we can change the world in general, how it can connect people, how it can cut out the middle land, which is a shame sometimes because I know middleman has to make money too. And I feel for the middleman, but at the same time, just does allow people in this case, artists who probably wouldn’t would have never been able to sustain themselves, suddenly become a full-time artist and they are able to sustain themselves without actually other people from the traditional industry, believing in them, they can start believing in themselves again in themselves. And I think that’s the beauty of this, right? It’s those are the stories that are untold. And I’m telling you a story that’s that maybe is an exception. But there, the beauty of this is, all these artists I talked to and I  buy smaller pieces. You know, I buy a lot of smaller pieces because if, you know, two, $300 can change a person’s life. If you get that , if you sell 5, 6, 7, or eight pieces, it’s sustainable, you have a, a way of living from your art, which was never possible before all this was happening. So I think to me, that is the real revolution. It’s, the underlying foundation of everything that we’re not seeing everything. It’s hard to explain that to people. It’s hard to show this to people, but at the end of the day, it’s always going to be about , you know, the, the, the bigger picture it’s always going to be about the, what do you know, what does you know, the sort of the bigger number of people have to benefit from this? And obviously there’s the exceptions and anomalies. They’re exotic . They’re interesting to talk about, you know, but to me, that’s, hopefully just something we’re talking about now, and hopefully down the line, this will be a change of mind, a change of vision, an opportunity for people to hopefully realize their potential as artists.

Adam Levy: Yeah. I want to ask you about your community Hexagonia , the hexagons, right? You have Hexagonia, you have this virtual kind of like brand that you’ve built and many people when they’re building brands and they’re building communities, they have a hard time getting the cult-like like element. Like if you do some in-depth research on Don Diablo and hexagon, you’ll see the tattoos that people have imprinted on their bodies permanently. That’s crazy. There’s a level of alignment. That’s unique to your brand and the people within. If you had three tips right now for future creators, whether they be in crypto, in the music space, wherever they may be creators in general, what would be those three tips you’d give to someone that say, this is what I suggest when it comes to building this community in the sprint. How do you do that?

Don Diablo: Tough question to be very honest, the honest answer is honestly honesty. It is really just about when you think something is too scary. It’s too different that’s when you know you are on the right path. I always kind of look at it. Let’s say it’s always something that I miss. Right. So when I started creating the the music that I’m creating at the moment, which has a very futuristic element, it wasn’t there at the time you have music that was being played at these big raves and you have music that was being played in underground clubs. I was like, I want to make something out, you know, that has the energy it can, so it can be played on the big stages, but at the same time, it has a sort of a, you know, it’s a little bit more subtle, so to speak. And at the same time I created the signature. So it doesn’t matter if I hop into a different genre. Now there’s a signature sound, a small signature that now people will know like, Hey, this futuristic. I could produce something for another artist. This is a Don Diablo sound, right? I think that is important when you, when he wants to build a community or when you want to build something that goes beyond one art piece, you have to create something that is a recognizable signature. And this takes time. You’re, you’re always going to go like, Hey, it’s not that unique, is it? But it really, sometimes you have to grow into it as well. And sometimes it takes years. So there’s that. And also, I think, you know, other than that, you have to do things from your guts , right? Personal ly you have to also gamble really big, to be honest, I’ve always literally invested everything I have into my career. I never really, up until two, three years ago, I lived in the same house since I was 19. My accountant was like, Don, you’ve done pretty well. You know, you still  live in this apartment that you’ve been living in your whole life. You don’t really have a car. I always wear the same shoes. It’s like live a little, but again, for me, I’ve always reinvested everything I had into my career because that’s the biggest, best investment you can do. It’s not really about you know, just all these other things, going out to expensive dinners or showing other people that you have money is the most useless thing you can do. It’s really, really cool to me to invest. I used them, you know, even when I was 19, I did my first music video. I, the record label wasn’t at the time, it wasn’t going to support me. So I worked three jobs, saved all this money and I put my own money into the music video that then the copyright was owned by the record label. But again, you have to let go of that idea of. Things are not being fair because this is the biggest tip I can give you. Life isn’t fair. It’s never going to be fair. Things are never going to change. You just have to plow through it, find a way somewhere and there at the end of the road, that will be something that hopefully will give you a shred of happiness. And again , nobody can be happy, right? But there are moments of happiness that we can experience. And that is all that I’m trying to do here. And I think a big part of that is letting go of all the things that happened to you because otherwise as an artist it’s going to kill you. So I think it’s really, those are the pillars of how I got, where I got to and sacrifice. You have to be willing to just go hardcore, man, just go hardcore. This has to be your life. Yeah.

Adam Levy: I think those are wise words. All right. I want to finish off with three last quick round questions. Okay. Let’s do it right. Most memorable concert you’ve ever played. What was it?

Don Diablo: Wow. Good one too. If I may, one was I was shooting a documentary for MTV 15 years ago. I’d like to stay in South Africa and I went to all these aids orphanages and it was intense. I remember interviewing this lady holding her hand and we looked into each other’s eyes and there was such an intense connection. I never met her, but there was a human connection. Right. And then after I wrapped the item and we were standing outside, I was just kind of like, just kind of literally just kind of getting my breath. Right. And then she, she literally was rolled out of the hospital.  She had passed away while I was standing outside . So I was the last person she talked to. Right after that I was brought to a school for aids orphans. Right? So it’s there. I was like the, there was the gear that they gave me. It was literally one CD player and a mic. I was like, you understand? I have to mix, I have to have two players because I have to mix from on to the other. I was like, okay, what am I doing here? So I just, what I did, I just put in a CD press play. I was literally on a table. All these kids were around me. And to be honest, it was the worst show I’ve ever done, but it was also the best show because these kids, they went in, they loved everything I did. At some point I found a CD on the floor, blew the dust off of the CD and they had this quite old music, this traditional local music on it. And they went,  exploded. best show ever I did. Another one I did was  the Chinese wall. Honestly.

Adam Levy: The great wall of China, really?

Don Diablo: The Great  Wall of China. It wasn’t allowed to do anything there, there was  a lot of politics, a lot of things and they were like, are we opening it two, three days before we got canceled. And then miraculously, they said, okay, we’re opening it. I did my show that the energy was insane. Then it started pouring rain and everything stopped. So I was literally the only person that played on the great wall that day. And , I will never forget how bizarre that was, you know, doing that. So there, yeah, those are two of my sort of weird, not very obvious, but yeah. Well, remember,

Adam Levy: I wonder when they were building the great wall of China, there would be like, all right, we’re going to have Don Diablo.

Don Diablo: Yeah. If you think about it, there are so many great stories that are untold, but yeah, that’s definitely one of them. It’s a longer story. That’s actually what’s cool is because the funny thing about that was actually had a better slot later on in the evening, but I got, I got screwed literally by an agent and they pushed me down on the lineup, which is the story of my life. Right. So I was like, okay, I’ll just do it. You know, that’s just how it happened, like how it goes. And at the end, that ended up to be the one slot that actually you know, ended up playing. So I think again, sometimes you just have to take the beating, probably this all happens for a reason. Yeah.

Adam Levy: All right. Second question. Favorite song you’ve produced.  Which one is it?

Don Diablo: Oh, wow.

Adam Levy: I know, I know you said , you don’t  like listening to your music. But, there has to be a song that you’d like you felt the most connected to, to an extent whether you’ve remixed, whether you created yourself. Which one is it?

Don Diablo: It’s probably going to be a song. I wrote for my dad when he was sick in the hospital, he had cancer. I, there was this xylophone     in the hallway that is for kids to play around with. And I was just like playing a little melody . And I just turned that into the foundation for a song later on that I wrote as a letter to my father that I never got to reach to him. So I turned that into a song. And so hopefully, you know, maybe he’s up there and he could still hear it. And that ended up becoming the main theme song for standing up against cancer. This is a huge television fundraiser, and that really opened up such a new dimension to me, people suddenly felt like Don Diablo isn’t a robot. He’s a human being. It opened up the doorway to my country. They embraced me as a human cause I always tried to do everything so well. And I really, I was there on TV. I broke, I had to speak about my father who had just passed away a few weeks before. I heard the song in the background, the melody that I’d written in the hospital hallway. And it just kind of just became, you know actually ended up in the top 10 funeral records in my country which is weird, but very honorable, I think like it’s nice to be in a, in a chart, but this was a very special chart. And I got these letters from hundreds and hundreds of people who understood the letter. They were like, Hey, I don’t, I didn’t really communicate with my father either. And I played him the song right before he passed away. And if we held each other’s hands and it was exactly what I needed. I got postcards from people like one, I remember one postcard from a father and a daughter, and they were somewhere standing in front of a mountain. They were like, we want to thank you. We haven’t had contact with each other for many years. We heard your song. I sent it to my father. He cried, we didn’t have to say anything else. We met up here, we’re together again. And it’s all because of that one song. So we want to thank you. So I have these letters and, and sometimes, you know, it makes you realize the impact of the arts of music. And so that record will always be special to me. It’s maybe not my best production one or the sickest dopest beat or whatever, but it’s, or really came from the heart and the beautifully sung and, and co-written with JB Cooper who then became a mega star. After that, I actually discovered him in a bar while I was living in the UK. It was still just literally playing bars. Then after that he had a, I don’t know, his record or had a billion streams, whatever I did. So it all just kind of went full circle there. So that record will always be special to me.

Adam Levy: Nice. Okay. Last question beyond your parents who has been the number one influence beyond family who has been like that, number one influence on your life?

Don Diablo: Ooh. Very good question. Okay. It’s funny, like, I wouldn’t say there is a number one influence, but I think you look like if I look from a music perspective, I grew up with music from, you know first of all, like rock music rage against the machine and Nirvana , then I went into electronic music, was basement Jaxx chemical brothers, Fatboy, slim, daft punk, later on, I got to meet all those people. I got to tour with them and you know, that was amazing. There’s always been one artist also in music that kept changing and evolving constantly mobi, you know, he started out like really aggressive hardcore music. Right. And then he really went into like making elevator music and he did all these things were very left, very right and always had these amazing visualizations with it. There was always a story behind it. You know, I love the idea that you can be that all that, that person in all these different things wrapped into one person. So that also made me, cause when I started out as Don Diablo, I started assimilating to mobi into hardcore music, which was like literally just raves and hauls of people just going absolutely berserk. And that showed me like, Hey, you can go from there. Your music being used for all of these massive movies and, you know, making this music that’s being played on elevators. Literally you go and go from super left. Super. Right. Right. So that, that is always been something I kept in mind like, Hey, cause I, there was a point where people like, you should not change your name because you have this history and this history is, you know, it can maybe change the way people perceive you for what you’re doing right now. Because you know, some art people see a history that’s not in line with what they expect as a dirty thing, or as a bad thing or something that could be, you know negative the same goes for this. Right. And like, nowadays I’m talking to museums like very traditional museums, right? Like should now be erasing what I’ve done before, because like I’m talking, you know, I sometimes feel, I feel like I’m not worthy. Right. Or I’m like, Hey, they’re just, I’m literally like talking about. Being a part of these, these legacies of these museums that have all of these, artists there, that I’m, I feel tiny. But then I think back about that concept, like, Hey, no, it’s not, there’s no reason because this is a part of your journey, a part of your story, because you have to have to have gone through all of this. And that is what makes you an artist and him going from left to completely, right. And I’m back to the middle and then reinventing himself over and over. Funnily enough really really changed my perspective and to finish that off and to make it full circle, there was one other person. His name is Tom Goldenberg , he’s a Dutch guy and is one of the few people I really looked up to musically in my country. His artist name is junkie XL. I had a poster of him in my bedroom. You know, I love what he did. I love he went from rock and he went into making electronic music and he did it so well. So sophisticated pushed the envelope. Then when he had this huge hit with, with Elvis, right. A little more, little less conversation became number one all over the countries. That’s cool. I’ve done that I’ve got to move into. Hollywood became the right-hand of Hans Zimmer. You know, did all these huge scores from Batman to God knows what , then he’s just like, okay, I’m ready to venture out. Became one of the five biggest composers in Hollywood, himself doing anything from Madmax to justice league to the dark night. And then boom in came, this thing got contacted by his team . Like, Hey, we’re doing an NFT drop. You know, we know you’re killing it in the game. Can we have some advice? I said, what are you offering? It’s the score of your life? It’s like, it’s the sidetrack of okay. Like, okay. What does it mean? Well, he’s going to create 20 minutes of music based on your life as a soundtrack . I’m like, so you can buy this in an NFT, right? Like 20 minutes of music from one of the top five Hollywood composers in the world. Right. I got to be honest,  I want to buy this, you know, like, I don’t know how to help with this. So long story short, I ended up winning the auction and now I’m talking to Tom, constantly friends, and it just blows my mind. Everything is now going full circle, right? This, this person who you grew up with now, you’re talking to, and he’s, he’s going to create music for you based on your life. And I am a musician. So what is life? This is so meta, right? Like it’s crazy. So I asked him, can I use this for my documentary that I’m making you know, and they’re like, yeah, of course. So full circle exploded there. And I know the thing is, you know what I know, like, I know he’s a better musician than I am. Right. So I think this is not a thing that I it’s the same with games, like, right. I can take my loss. I guess that’s what it is. I think, as an artist, it’s very important to realize there are going to be people that are better than you. You’re never going to be the best, right. You might be the best for a second, but then the next second, you won’t be the best. And I think yeah, me knowing that he, this is just inspires me so much and I’m still learning. And this is another thing as well, think to round it up is if you want to grow, if you want to learn, if you want to be successful, you got to still get out there and still learn. That’s it. Right. You still, I’m still educating myself every day. I’m still not in the state of mind that I’m successful or I’m there, or I’m still at the bottom of the mountain. I reached the mountain. I will acknowledge that I reached the mountain I’m climbing, but I have a huge bag of rocks on my back because all of the luggage that I’ve had, all the disappointment, all the anger and all the fear. And sometimes I throw a stone out because I know that’s not right, but I’m still struggling to get out. It’s things like that. Yes. And I’m like, wow, this is so mad at us. So cool. And this is all because of, you know, because of what’s happening now because the, the, the whole crypto community NFTs the way digital art, the way art is being revolutionized right now. And man, what a time to be alive, dude.

Adam Levy: I think that’s a beautiful place to end off, done. You’re a pool of knowledge. Thank you so much for coming on. And best of luck with all these new drops with star wars and everything else that you have coming up. Thank you for being on.

Don Diablo: Thank you for being an enlightened man.

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Podcast Transcript

Buy My Token, Get My Time

Listen on: Spotify | Apple Podcast | Google Podcast

Background

Mint Season 1 episode 10 features American entrepreneur and author Peter Shankman. He is best known for founding HARO, an online service for journalists to gather feedback from the public. His fight for creating more positive awareness around ADHD has led him down the rabbit hole of monetizing his community through $SHANK coin.

We talk about the launch of his new book and how he’s incentivizing his audience to get access to that book by holding $SHANK tokens. Peter breaks down some tips to future creators who are exploring the path of launching their social token and what he wish he had known before doing going live with $SHANK.


Thank you to Season 1’s NFT sponsors!

1. Coinvise – https://coinvise.co/

2. POAP – https://poap.xyz/

Interested in sponsoring future seasons? Get in touch here!


Adam Levy: Peter, Mr. Shankman. Welcome to the podcast. Thank you for being on how are you?

Peter Shankman: Good to be here, man. I’m doing well. It’s a, you know, another, another week, another day in New York city, which has been a crazy, crazy time for the past. God knows how long, but yeah, we’re doing okay this weekend, you know,

Adam Levy: I know, I know we’ve been locked down, but I see you innovating and pushing the barriers as a creator, which is why I wanted to have you on today, specifically, because you recently launched SHANK token.

Adam Levy: So it will be, we’ll be diving in on that, but before we get more towards the currency side. I’d love to kind of get at your background and tell me a little bit about yourself, or what’s your background?

Peter Shankman: What’s my background. Well, I have a weird one. I started my career, at America online. I founded the newsroom back in 1995 when AOL was the internet.

Peter Shankman: And, did that for a few years, sort of ahead of the game ahead of the time as it were moved back to New York city, Back in 97, I guess, and sort of the first PO one of the first PR firms that catered to the.com boom. , had no idea what I was doing. I was 20 something years old and I was just, you know, figured this might be fun.

Peter Shankman: And we had like a, you know, God. 10 15 clients, a rep, Napster and Juno, and just, it was crazy, crazy times. A lot of fun sold the majority of the agency back in 2001, kept the name, decided to take a year off, booked a flight to Asia. Two weeks in, I booked a flight back home called my mother from the airport.

Peter Shankman: I said, I said, I’m coming home. She goes, why? What happened? This was the year I’m like, you never taught me how to relax. And I slammed on the phone. So came back home consultant for several years. Eventually we ended up creating something called help a reporter out and HARO sort of changed how journalists and sources, found, found each other.

Peter Shankman: It was, sort of, an immediate blow up, in about just under three years. It went from launching to, being acquired by PR news wire. And it was, a pretty crazy time. So that was 2008, 2007 to like 2010, actually got acquired damn 11. Let me at 21, 11 years ago this year, or this, this, this week.

Peter Shankman: Wow. So yeah, it’s crazy how fast that happened, but, no, that’s good stuff. And, so, you know, that was, I sold that company and then, started speaking consulting and still doing mostly that, you know, it’s been a weird, weird year and a half with, with, with COVID, but mostly speaking consulting, traveling around the world, consulting to brands, on both customer experience, customer service, as well as neuro-diversity the concept that, that, different brained

Peter Shankman: individuals are going to be responsible for more and more of the benefits and the, of your company. And as well as, as you know, both from a hiring perspective, as well as a customer’s perspective. So you have to sort of understand the different brains. So add ADHD, autism, spectrum, executive function, things like that.

Peter Shankman: So I’ve written several books. Most on customer service and PR, but my most recent one was called, “Faster Than Normal,” which focuses on, on ADHD as a gift, not a curse. And it’s also the number one podcast on ADHD online called “Faster Than Normal” same name. And, we’ve had everyone from Tony Robbins to Keith Krach of DocuSign, to Seth Godin, to, to, to the band Shinedown, politicians, authors, porn stars, you name it all on this podcast about, talking about how they use their add and ADHD to their advantage.

Peter Shankman: So yeah, it’s a lot of fun. I’m, I’m, I’m very fortunate in having a really good time and.

Adam Levy: Here I am. Here you are. So what was that process like of getting acquired? That was a, that was a three-year type of project company you were building out. And then one of the largest, if not the largest PR companies came in and took you guys up, what was that process like?

Peter Shankman: It was pretty crazy. You know, the company sort of came in out of the. They were our largest advertiser and they were basically like, why aren’t we continuing to advertise from you? Why don’t we just, why don’t we just, buy you shit. Okay. That could, that could work, you know, sort of out of the blue type thing.

Peter Shankman: But, it was, yeah, it worked really well and it became, it became, an incredible experience for me going through it. You know, I always joke, it took about four months. If we didn’t have lawyers that would take about four hours, but, That’s why I have lawyers,

Adam Levy: I guess. There you go. So, so kinda dumping more, down your crypto route because you’re very unique in where, where you’re at right now, because he recently launched $SHANK on rally.

Adam Levy: And many, many people have been talking about doing their own cryptocurrency, but very little have actually kind of followed through. You’ve you’ve been one of the first few to kind of go towards that route. Hence why you’re here today. , and I, I’m curious how long you’ve been dabbling with crypto for?

Peter Shankman: Well, I, yeah, so this is always a fun story. I bought, my first 10 Bitcoin at about $94 a piece and I sold them. $1,004 a piece I’ve since more or less gotten over that. I really haven’t, you know, look, I made money, right. I made what almost 10 grand. So I’m, you know, that’s cool. But yeah, that, that hurt a little bit, but you know, I look, it, it hurts a lot less now seeing, seeing the price of crypto now versus, versus what it was, you know, I guess a month ago, but yeah, I, I am always into interesting things.

Peter Shankman: My whole premise is if it’s something exciting and interesting, It can’t hurt to put a few hundred bucks into it. If you have it and see what happens, what’s the worst thing that happened. It’s like play money, right? It’s the premise that you probably gonna blow that money on something else, blow it on drinks or a night out or whatever, you know, so you blow it here.

Peter Shankman: And, worst case scenario, it has a really nice return. I mean, I sort of buying a white point at five bucks and I get out of it, get out of liquid entirely. There were a couple of hundred, but it was still like what a nice, nice hit. Right. So, you know, the premise is I’m, I think a lot of it comes from ADHD as well.

Peter Shankman: Just the belief that, you know, What the heck, right? There’s, what’s the worst that can happen. Right. And so, so I, I tend to, I tend to live my life on the premise of what’s the worst that can happen, which is ironic, cause I’m a skydiver, but, I do enjoy, you need to stop chewing on this, on the window.

Peter Shankman: I’m not even joking. I will kick you out. I will throw you out of the window. I have a nine month old dog who, has decided that his new fund is chewing on the windows. So this is waffle needs to stop. Stop showing on the windows, but he’s a good boy. , so now here, we’ll go get that. So, yeah, I was, this was a cat guy and then, my last cat passed away and my daughter’s like, I want a dog.

Peter Shankman: I’m like, we’re not getting a dog. And of course, you know, every dad is just the, not getting a dog, went up with the dog. So here we are. But yeah, I mean, I just, I like experimenting. There’s something called earth too. And that I’m playing with right now, which is sort of like, you can, you can. You, can purchase quote unquote, land virtual land above real places.

Peter Shankman: Right? So it’s the earth to.io. And so I own the apartment building in which I live. Right. And I own the apartment building, which my parents live a few blocks away in Midtown. And, and, and, you know, it’s gone up 50% in value since I bought it. , of course now I have to figure out how to sell it. Right. And, and, and, and so, you know, I just, I look at these things.

Peter Shankman: I figured that one day. In like 15 years when I’m like, I don’t know, 64 or something, I’ll hire someone to just investigate my entire life and find out where I put all this money in, what, in, what should I put all this money? And, you know, he’ll come back and be like, well, okay, so here’s some money that was, you know, you made somebody on this and then you didn’t.

Peter Shankman: But yeah, there’s a lot of stuff out there. I just figure again, it’s one of those things that you never know. Right. I never, you know, I remember, Right before when Peloton went public, right for lockdown. , I I’ve been a Peloton junkie for years. I love my bike and I’m like, I want to get on this Peloton train that sort of buying Peloton.

Peter Shankman: And just because I know how much it does for me right now, it helps my brain. And of course they were getting older overvalued to this and then COVID hit. Right. And I’m like, when I saw COVID it and I saw, wow, they’re closing Equinox. I can’t go to the gym anymore. I’m going to buy some more Peloton stock.

Peter Shankman: And it’s done very, very well. So it, you know, at the end of the day, for me, it comes down to, is this. , it’s a different, I don’t, I don’t know if it’s the same strategy as most investors. I think if the same strategy is Warren Buffett where he’s like, yeah, I like this. I like this company. I use their product.

Peter Shankman: I’m the same way. I’m like, this is interesting to me. Let’s see what happens. Right.

Adam Levy: So, so when you’re approaching, like what’s the worst thing that can happen, with social tokens is your worst case scenario, cause you kind of use that as your strategy, explaining your thought process, how you approach things; When you were kind of dabbling or getting more down the rabbit hole for quote unquote social tokens, what was that worst case scenario for you?

Peter Shankman: I’m the worst customer for me was okay, this, this, this, this turns out to be ridiculous. , no one buys it and it was, it was, it was fun. I mean, it didn’t cost me a lot of money, right. It wasn’t, you know, rally picked 110, I think influencers, I hate that term with a passion, 110, like creators.

Peter Shankman: We’re going to call them, you know, and gave us these tokens. Right. Go play with them. Talk to your audience about them, help us build this brand. And so to be able to watch it has been really exciting and really sort of fascinating to see how it felt, you know, what are the things that I’m doing that affect that?

Peter Shankman: What are the things that, that Rally is doing that affect that? What are the things that Elon Musk, who won’t shut the fuck up is doing to affect it? You know, all those types of things. So, it’s like, who’s, who’s speaking about what who’s talking about. What, in the meantime, I’m just trying to do what I always do, which is grow my brand and produce great content.

Peter Shankman: And if I can continue to do that, Well, the people who have bought my tokens will probably do a little, well there, you know, which is how I look at it. But again, it’s, it’s, I find that the, the, the, the worst thing that can happen is that people invest in something or get involved in something. And then that’s all they look at and all they think about for the rest of their lives.

Peter Shankman: Right. Which will totally screw you. And, and the key is, you know, I, I learned this lesson when I worked at AOL. If you went to keyword and typed in AOL, it would bring you your stock price, right? The AOL stock price. And this is back when we all had options, pretty hidden nothing, 400 times a day, right.

Peter Shankman: It’s not moving that much. It’s a long-term game, is how I look at it anyway. And so, so I learned that early and so I just, I put it in and my job is not to increase or decrease the value of $SHANK. My job is to continue to create great content and do great deals with companies and get my name out there and improve what I’m doing and, and benefit people.

Peter Shankman: And by default, that will benefit, the $SHANK coin and benefit crypto as a whole and benefit rally as a whole. But, you know, I think too many people look at how can I increase my value, increase your worth increase, or I’m sorry, people say, how much, how can I increase my worth, increase the value of the content you give out?

Peter Shankman: You know, what a lot of people don’t realize, especially about these tokens that are up, you know, the concept of a creator economy, right? People don’t realize that. And I’ve been trying to explain this since day one. I tell this to all my clients where I speak about. Good, consumer, the minds behind the consumer and customer experience, having an audience of any kind is a privilege.

Peter Shankman: It’s not a right. No one has the right to an audience. No one in the world is right to notice. We have the privilege or we have the right to create great content, which hopefully can build us an audience. But yeah. Having an audience is a privilege. You create great content. You continue to earn that privilege.

Peter Shankman: Right? I, my mom was director of performing arts for the city school system in New York city growing up public school. And she always talked about having ha how music education. Was a birthright, not a privilege. This is the exact opposite, right? We don’t have the right to an audience. We have the privilege of creating great content, which will give us that audience.

Peter Shankman: If we screw up and they go away, we lose that audience. And I think more companies need to understand that it’s not about increasing your worth. It’s about creating better value for the people who are helping to drive your economy, help you to drive you. , coin your NFT, your token, whatever it is, right.

Peter Shankman: Create great content, create stuff that people want to see, create stuff that your audience understands that appreciates, and that will help drive everything.

Adam Levy: So when you’re building great content, when you’re building your brand, there still comes the question that people will get lost in the dollar amount.

Adam Levy: Right? A lot of creators might get lost in that. And I think you’re actually, you’re preaching to the choir here one, but you’re, you’re, you’re preaching facts. These tokens should be driven by something more than just a price, right. It’s underlying value is, is the people is the content like you said, but go ahead.

Peter Shankman: I’ll just say, I think that a lot of the value, that people don’t necessarily realize about these tokens, especially the ones on rally for the creator economy is the concept of access I get all the time. Hey, can I pick your brain about something? Hey, can I do the take into that? And I’m usually happy to do it right now.

Peter Shankman: I have this option of, okay. You know, Yes, you can go buy 25 tokens, become a coin holder, right? It’s it’s not that expensive. It’s actually relatively cheap right now. Right. Become a coin holder and let’s see what creates, let’s see what we can do now. You’re now you’re a viable part of this group right now.

Peter Shankman: You are a, you have a, an influence in what happens to my economy. Go get it. So, yeah. When, when someone, I used to talk about this, when I ran HARO I would create or help reporter I’d create, surveys every month and say, Hey, are we doing this the right way? Or should we do it this way? Or move it, change it this way.

Peter Shankman: And, and anyone who replied the more people that replied one way we change it. And then the people who saw the change, oh my God. They listened to what I asked them to do. They became invested in what I was building. Right. Because they helped design it. Whatever it was, right. Whatever change they helped make.

Peter Shankman: It’s, you know, saying that you’re invested in my economy now is actually, it’s funny. Cause it’s true. If you are invested, literally invested, but there’s also the investment that you believe in what I’m creating and you believe in my value. If no one believes in my value, this is all a pointless conversation.

Peter Shankman: Right? Right. You’re wasting your time talking to someone if no one believes in that value. So the premise of being able to create something solid and something good that people see value in is more important to me than the concept of the price of the coin of the price of the token.

Peter Shankman: So if I can create value, and then return that to people by saying, Hey, you have 25 coins, you’re a coin holder, come hang out with me. Right. Come backstage. It’s backstage pass, essentially. Right? You wanna chat about this. You want to go for a workout training for the, for the, for the Ironman in Kona, Hawaii right now, cause I’m really stupid. And, it’s an October and I got like four and a half, five months. Die, but you know, I’m, I’m, I’m, I’m training, I’m out there every day. And so, so that, I’m also a single dad who has my kid the maternity time. So that severely limits the time I have to do anything else. Right. So, you want to meet me?

Peter Shankman: You want to chat with me? Great. Meet me outside. We’re going for a run, right. Or we’re going to go for a bike ride, or we’re going to go for a Peloton class and I’ll take you for coffee afterwards. But you know, now you have an easier way to get there, right? Now you can say, Hey, I’m $SHANK holder coil, can I get some time with you?

Peter Shankman: By all means, we’ll figure out a way to do it. And so, it’s, it’s that access level I think is, is super important than not enough people.

Adam Levy: A hundred percent. And that’s what I tell everyone, social tokens, equal access, or at least right now with how people are using them. But that could also work the other way around when you have these token holders that want your time, they want your energy, and they think they’re able to get that now because they hold your tokens.

Adam Levy: It could work both ways, right. It can work really well and you incentivize really good behavior, but then you’re going to have the bad actors. How do you kind of approach those bad actors? What have you thought about that? Has that happened to you already?

Peter Shankman: It hasn’t happened to me yet, but you know what?

Peter Shankman: Here’s how I look at it. I’ve been telling people that they can, they can get to me, they can get . Access to me, since I had any kind of a following right. 2000, 3004. , during that time, maybe I’ve been approached by five people who have less than a positive intentions. That’s five people out of hundreds of thousands that I’ve met, spoken to keynoted for, been on TV in front of, you know, I don’t do Fox TV, Fox news anymore, just cause like I can’t in good conscience, but backed by the thoughts I get the majority of them from there.

Peter Shankman: Right. You know, I’d go on O’Reilly and I’d get. Unbelievable horrible tweets afterwards, but now it’s just like, you know what? I believe the majority, well, here’s a couple of things you didn’t know. The first thing is you have to believe that the majority of people in the world are not out to hurt you.

Peter Shankman: They’re out to better themselves. And that’s a huge distinction because that allows you to take the personal out of all this, right? The premise that, oh, I can’t believe he did that to me. He didn’t do that to you. He did that to benefit himself. To get it happened across you. Right? I just, this morning I was walking, I was walking the dog back from the dog park and, I was, I was crossing the street and I passed some woman who was, I guess, on her phone and didn’t see me.

Peter Shankman: And there’s plenty of rooms, like two feet in between. She’s like, excuse me. I’m like, okay, we have plenty of room. We’re not going to do this. You know? And I just get this New York city, I just kept walking. I said, you are so rude. I’m like, all right. I stopped and I wanted to have this conversation I did, and I just kept moving, kept walking, but I’m like, I want to be like, do you really think that I started my day, I woke up this morning.

Peter Shankman: I’m like, I’m going to find some chick and just mess with it. Like, it’s my life. That boring way. I have nothing else to do. That’s how I’m gonna know it’s a sidewalk in Manhattan. Shit happens. Right. And, and so you have to sort of understand that. And also you have to understand that you can’t control people.

Peter Shankman: All you can do is control your reaction to what people do. Right. And so once you learn that. It’s not always easy, but it’s, it’s a lot easier to, to be able to understand sort of how you can get through things. , without having to, like I said, take them personally or let them drive you crazy. I remember my ex wife and I had a great conversation once we’re still very close friends.

Peter Shankman: She, she came up, she was over one day to get to drop off my daughter. And , oh, I had the worst day and she tells me this one. I lived in Ireland. So that was the, that was what happens again, it just ruined my whole day. I’m like, was it really this terrible day? Or was it 15 minutes that you’ve managed to milk into like 12 hours, you know?

Peter Shankman: And I think only ex-husbands can say that to them. So I was like, you know, that’s, that’s how you, I guess, become an ex husband, but it was the premise that I was 110 where she was like, you know, you’re right. And, and it’s, we just got to let the most, let’s let the shit go. So in terms of bad actors, you know, it hasn’t really affected me, especially not yet on Rally.

Peter Shankman: They’re bad people everywhere, but there are good people everywhere too. And I’m just a believer that there’s more good than that out . There a lot more.

Adam Levy: When you were, when you were kind of putting this token together and rally reached out to you, what were some of the biggest questions or concerns you had for them as a, as a newcomer.

Peter Shankman: Yeah. I mean, my first thought was, okay, they want to give me this token. , do I have to buy a whole bunch of computers and mind this shit? I mean, I didn’t know how any of that was going to work. Right. And so they were really forthcoming and I learned so much so quickly from them, about what to do and how to do it.

Peter Shankman: And that just made life so much easier because I’m like, all right, all I have to do is do what I always do, which is promote my brand, right. Create good content and share that content. And now there’s a new way to do that. And that really sort of made things so much easier, so much. , you just need to think about it.

Adam Levy: So did you like approach a lawyer at all with doing this?

Peter Shankman: No, I did talk to him. I haven’t had dinner with my lawyer and I was mentioning it to him. He’s like, oh, that sounds fun. So it wasn’t really that bad.

Adam Levy: I think it stays fun because it’s coming from the point of view, from a legal, at least standpoint of membership and loyalty points kind of thing. Right. And rewarding, rewarding fans, or incentivizing fans to get, to become greater stakeholders in someone’s quote unquote economy in someone’s self-someone’s, quote unquote, I guess, influence to an extent and providing access, like you said.

Peter Shankman: But I mean, I’m the first person to go in there and say, look, this isn’t financial advice.

Peter Shankman: You know, I’m not, I’m not selling stock here. You know, I. I’m just sharing it and I give away so many; The nice thing about rally. What I love about rally is how easy it is to earn additional rally coins. Right? So every week with the, with the, with the rewards system, they have set up as long as I continue to grow my audience and grow my, my, my, my, coin.

Peter Shankman: I continue to get rewarded with rally, which is that going to convert into more $SHANK, which I can. So I’ve given away thousands of dollars worth of $SHANK coin like a lot. , when I first launched, I remember, giving it to, a bunch of people and it was really cheap and it started blowing up and they came in, was like, holy crap has happened.

Peter Shankman: Look at how much this is what, and I’m like, okay, great. Don’t think about that though. Think about continuing to stay in the, whatever in the margin of the mindset.

Adam Levy: Sure. A common keyword that you kind of see appear in crypto. And, and I’m not sure how familiar I know you’ve been buying Bitcoin early on.

Adam Levy: You sold, you bought lite coin, et cetera, but a common key word in crypto is a governance. So a lot of these tokens that, that people hold at least with more traditional DeFi projects or other crypto projects. That one token equals one voting, right? And if you hold enough tokens, you can actually make quite the impact on the project’s destiny.

Adam Levy: Do you envision    like at some point, integrating more of that point of view into $SHANK where you’re creating your, your, your fans, your audience, they hold $SHANK token, you’re building a greater brand around yourself that continues to grow, continues to prosper, and now they can actually have a say in the future of, of Peter Shankman to an extent.

Adam Levy: Yeah. Do you see that kind of development?

Peter Shankman: Yeah. When I was talking HARO, I used to, I used to ask all the time it’d be so busy right. In HARO that I’d be like, okay, I haven’t eaten. I tweet out what should I have, which I, what kind of foods to have. And other people are like, dude, you trying to be healthy. What are salad?

Peter Shankman: If I could order a pizza. But, I mean, I’m, I’m, I love the concept of, of, of, sorry, ADHD just kicked in. That’s it. Wow. That’s a G six flying really, really low, which I live on 42nd street and eighth avenue. And there’s literally a G six flying really low over, over ninth avenue, which should probably shouldn’t be, but I’m sure it’s fine.

Peter Shankman: Sorry, governance. I think that. I love to listen to people’s advice. I love to get people’s info in terms of what they’re thinking about, where the next thing should be, what should I focus on? , it was a great line from a song. It said, listen to everyone, but be careful whose advice you take. And I’ve always been a believer in that.

Peter Shankman: You know, I, I, I want to learn as much as I can from everyone. Everyone you meet knows something that you don’t, right? And I don’t think enough people remember that. I think that, that, that being able to, learn from other people, by letting, by giving them access to you, you know, one of the biggest problems is that as a society, we don’t listen as well as we should.

Peter Shankman: We tend to, listen to someone else, just so we can get to a spot where they’ve stopped talking so we can start talking about ourselves again. Sure. And I find that, that one of the funny things about ADHD, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder is the hyperactivity part can actually be controlled and I can sit there and listen.

Peter Shankman: And one of the most valuable lessons I’ve learned is to when I’m on a plane, right. And I travel all the time and I want to play if you’re next to me, If you in the seat next to me, unless you fake your death, I’m gonna know everything about you. By the time we land. You’re that guy I’m like, I’m not the guy talking.

Peter Shankman: I’m the guy who listens. Okay. You’re not going to anything about me. I’m going to listen to everything you have to say. And once in two minutes, you’re gonna start getting comfortable with everything I have to say and be like, oh, well, yeah, I’ll keep talking. This is what a really good listener. I’m not a good listener.

Peter Shankman: I’m listening to you because I want to learn about you. And what wound up happening over years is that I wound up putting that together as a database. I know everyone and reporters started calling me. Hey! Peter, who do you know, I’m doing a story on blah, blah, blah. Who do you know? Oh yeah. I met this guy called he called this guy, how important from that?

Peter Shankman: Right. So I think the ability to listen to an audience is great. And if I, if people are invested enough in me to the point where they think I’m valuable enough to buy coins, and then they want to give me advice or talk to me about something, you know, chances are, that’s a win-win for everyone. I’ll give you another example.

Peter Shankman: I am @petershankman on every single social media platform out there. And the reason I am is because for the past 15 years, with the exception of last year in COVID, both my parents were teachers, when I started doing all this and they’ve since retired, but I asked them to give me some of the children, some of the students, every day or once every three months on a Saturday.

Peter Shankman: And I meet these kids, the ages range, age ranges from like nine to like 21. And I, I. Take over a pizza place in Midtown. And I invite these kids and their parents and the parents would sit in the other sides. They wouldn’t bother the kids and I’d just feed the kids pizza. And I would listen to them for like three hours.

Peter Shankman: And that’s it. I’m just, I’m just here. Just talk amongst yourselves. I’m about to get your phones feel free to, and I’d watch them. And I occasionally what happens that, oh, it’s a new one called Snapchat. Oh, wow. Shit. Write that down. Right. I have, I got my username on every single I was on snap. God in 2014, I don’t remember when it came out.

Peter Shankman: Right. But, but layers of urban now, same thing with TikTok, which was musically before that, you know, all these things that just because I like listening and learning, I remember being on a plane once and I was sitting next to it. It was, it was, it was, I was in the front of the bus. It was me and this older woman and her two daughters were.

Peter Shankman: We’re on the other side, on the other side of the cabin, that was in one and the one was in B and then these kids were in like DNA. And I sit in the mother, like, do you mind if I switch with you so I can ask them questions? I spent five hours learning from these two high school kids about what was important about these graphics.

Peter Shankman: There’s a, I don’t remember the name of it now, but there’s a, there was, an app that the kids really like all this stuff. Right? Who wouldn’t, why wouldn’t you do that? If you’re given the shot, why wouldn’t you take that opportunity?

Adam Levy: I think, I think that’s part of the process of being an early adopter, which kind of correlates to why you’re such an early user for, for all these social tokens and, and whatnot.

Adam Levy: But you, you create a lot of utility for yourself, a lot of value for yourself and others without tokens already. Right. For example, you gave, you gave the perfect example of reporters hitting you up. Who do I reach out to? I’m writing this story and X, Y, and Z. Can you connect me with blah, blah, blah. Right now, do you kind of see yourself adding that level of utility, like you want me to connect you with someone by my token, see yourself, telling reporters that?

Adam Levy: I don’t necessarily doing it that way. No, I still, at the end of the day, because here’s the thing. If you have to force someone to do something, then it’s all about what can you, what can I get out of it?

Adam Levy: And I don’t, I never want to do that. I get stuck at, I give away in about three minutes. I have an email going out automatically that I wrote, this morning. , I send my stuff. , I give away 99.9%, my content for free, because I know that the 0.01% of my content, I still have, you’re gonna buy and you’re gonna spend money on it.

Adam Levy: And so I don’t see that where I ever told reporters, oh, you want to, you know, go, go buy this. That’s not who I am, but rather I would say, Hey, you know, if this has been useful, feel free to grab a few coins, maybe they go up in value or they won’t, but whatever, it’ll give you access to more of this stuff, but you know, you can always call me when you need me.

Adam Levy: So it’s, it’s sort of running that fine line, right? I don’t ever want to be that guy who says, oh, you have to pay me for this or whatever. It’s also the reason that I, that I allow my, allow my assistant to book all my speeches. When it comes down to how much I’m going to charge, I let her do it. Cause I, I would, I I’ve done this before.

Adam Levy: I have way under priced myself because, oh, they seem nice. You know, I, let me cut them a break. They’re not kidding. They’re not cutting anyone a break. Why should I cut them a break? You know, I’m the one people are coming to say, yeah, it’s that, it’s that, it’s that, you know, you gotta learn that. So yeah, I definitely let, I definitely make handle that, but I’m telling you to stop chewing on this stuff, but at the end of the day, again, it really comes down to knowing what the right thing is to do and knowing what benefits my audience.

Adam Levy: Right. And how I can put that too.

Adam Levy: Yeah. So talk to me more about this utility that you envision benefiting your audience. What did you, what, what kind of like access have you planned? Is that still in the works? Like talk to me more about the utility.

Peter Shankman: So I, have a book, called, I have five books, but one of them them’s called “Zombie Loyalist,”

Peter Shankman: And it was a really, really beneficial, people called it like the, the, the customer service Bible. Right. And I wrote it in 2015, the rights got reverted to me in early 2021. And so now, I am going to redo the book and update it for, you know, post COVID customer experience world.

Peter Shankman: But in doing that, anyone who is a coin holder over 30 coins, and I’m going to self publish it this time. It was published by Palgrave and villain last time. But this time is publishing. Anyone owns over 30 coins is getting a copy for free, right? And so that’s, there’s an easy sell, right? Who wouldn’t want that? Right. It’s beneficial.

Peter Shankman: It’ll help you, whatever. So it’s those kinds of things that I, that I, that I imagined.

Adam Levy: So 30 coins right now, that would be, so let’s say your tokens trading at what? Around $4. That’d be like $120 for the book, but it would be a long-term incentive to continue participating in the Peter Shankman community.

Peter Shankman: Plus you’re not, you’re not buying the tokens to get the book you’re buying the tokens for all the other stuff you’re gonna get as well as the book.

Adam Levy: Right. So can you, can you talk to me more about that other stuff? So the book, the book is a beautiful example. I think that’s actually a very unique kind of approach to doing it. What else did you kind of have in mind?

Peter Shankman: What else am I doing? So I’m definitely doing things where, you know, if I’m in your city, let me buy you a cup of coffee, right? If I’m in your city on a, on a keynote and anybody could probably let’s go for a run, let’s work out. , whatever it is, are you in New York?

Peter Shankman: You know, come as my guest to Equinox, let’s work out there, let’s go home. Right? Whatever, you know, and it’s stuff that I would do in a lot of ways for free. Sorry, he’s he found the one squeaky toy, but now it gives him now it gives people a way to, really connect and have a, you know, it’s not just like, oh, if I have the time, it’s like, Hey, you bought this toy.

Peter Shankman: You bought this, this token let’s make this happen.

Adam Levy: I hear you. What, what, what about this? Cause I feel like some listeners will be thinking, okay, they bought the tokens, they got access to the book, they got access to all these perks, but then they sell it once they get it. How do you, how do you control that?

Peter Shankman: If that is what they want to do, you know, by all means they have every right to do it. I don’t necessarily believe that’s going to happen because I believe that it would benefit them to hold on as I bring more stuff to them. Right. As I create more, you know, I I’ve back in the day back when I was running HARO, I would throw events.

Peter Shankman: I remember, I had a friend who did handle PR for Ted’s Montana grill and was one in Midtown. And I would like once a month, I just take it over. And then I put a mesh on a HARO, Hey guys, whoever’s in town, come have a drink on me. Yeah. Right. And we just take it with, so I fully intend to keep doing that in different cities when I’m on the road.

Peter Shankman: Once, once you know, the world is starting to open now again, post COVID. Once that’s once that happens. Yeah. By all means I’ll be in, I’m going to be in, Dubai, in I’m going to be south African, early July and then Dubai in mid-July. But for work, anyone who’s out there wants to hang out. Let’s schedule something, know, grab a couple of tokens and I’ll come on and buy you lunch.

Adam Levy: Nice. Maybe I’ll just have to meet you there and do that myself. When you, when you think, I guess let’s, let’s talk five years from now, 10 years from now, assuming, a lot of creators of this new generation of creators are going to be launching themselves on the public markets, quote, unquote, grading incentives for the audience to get more ingrained and become more intimate with their brand, by creating more intimate and personalized experiences.

Adam Levy: Right now, we kind of determine influence as a society or at least a lot of people through how many followers you have, how many subscribers you have. Do you think people will start determining one’s influence based off what their token price is trading at? For example, this person’s trading at five dollars, but they’re not as good because this person’s token is trading at a hundred dollars, right. Rather than, rather than associating their influence with millions of followers.

Peter Shankman: You that’s a really good question. Problem is is that we were cited in the very short attention span. And so when you give people the opportunity to attach a number to something, It works for them because they don’t necessarily want to do the homework to find more. It’s why for a small period of time, that WebsiteClout was so successful. Remember Clout?.

Peter Shankman: Oh, he’s a 94. He’s a 91. He’s 38. It was a way to, to qualify and quantify. Problem was it wasn’t very accurate, and what the hell did it mean? Right. Really can get a bit of room at the Bellagio. I think that that will always be those people who were always a society that’s going to want to work on numbers.

Peter Shankman: The people I want to hang out with are the people who see past that. I see beyond that who see it. There’s more to that. Definitely.

Adam Levy: So do you think we’re going to get to that black mirror type of situation? Because, because I would have heard that too, right? Because I prefer that too. Obviously you got to find the quality in people, right.

Adam Levy: And if people are just clout chasing or, or token chasing, right, based on value, obviously that’s one type of human being versus another, right? Not categorizing you that obviously, but I’m saying in general, right? Because these social tokens, it’s a social experiment. The closest thing we have to that right now with a public stock market is Bitclout, right?

Adam Levy: Where people are trading other people’s influence based off what they tweet their interactions with each other. And Rally’s kind of like the less aggressive version of that, by, by incentivizing more utility behind these tokens. In general, you’ll be having public markets of people and communities, that are going to be publicly traded.

Peter Shankman: It’s nothing new back in 1988, there’s a website called Hollywood Stock Exchange. Right. Which is the, exactly, literally the exact same thing you could, you could buy it wasn’t real money at the time, but you could buy puts in calls on what actors you thought could be successful. What movies you thought were gonna be successful?

Peter Shankman: It was a huge thing. It was eventually acquired by, I think the internet movie database. So, you know, it’s, it’s one of those things where it, where, where it’s nothing new. I mean, we’ve been putting, we’ve been assigning value to things for years and putting money on things for centuries, you know, Look at it, go back to ancient Rome.

Peter Shankman: People would, would, would have speaking podiums, on the corner where they would talk and they would try to explain their points and Plato and Socrates used to do this all the time or so crates as it were, you see this all the time and, and based on how many people understood him, determined how much bigger he got.

Peter Shankman: Right. And, and, and. The crazy thing is that back then he had actually dumbed down his thoughts. Right. Because if he talked in, in, in traditional philosophical way, no one understand it. But again, that’s the, you know, it’s not, it’s not a surprise and it’s not a coincidence that these guys became hugely famous.

Peter Shankman: Right, right. So that’s nothing new. I think that, that with any luck, this democracy helps democratize that a little more. You know, I remember back when, Back when the verified accounts came out, everyone was clamoring over my God. Everybody got, I need the blue check mark check mark. Right. So I’ve had the blue check mark.

Peter Shankman: I’m pretty sure it’s never gotten me a date, right. I’m pretty sure it’s never gotten me an upgraded car. I don’t know. But you know, I just don’t look at it like that. Again, my job isn’t so much to care about that shit. My job is to get great contacts, to create great content. Right.

Adam Levy: Right. And I only bring that up because it’s fun to speculate.

Adam Levy: It’s fun to kind of, to think about what this may unfold to. , and there is a large group of people that do like, kind of depend on, on influence, based off follower counts, subscriber counts, et cetera, et cetera. And this might just be the next thing that kind of falls in line with that. , but, but, but we’ll see how that plays out.

Adam Levy: Kind of like a final question over here, if, if there’s a new creator, right. And I’ve been coming, whether they be gen Z millennial, what advice can you kind of give them? Like what, what, what is something you wish you would’ve known prior to launching $SHANK?

Peter Shankman: It’s the same thing that I’ve known for years in that things don’t happen overnight. Even the things that look like they happen overnight, take 20 years. Right. Nothing happens overnight.

Peter Shankman: The premise of creating something, work really hard at it and it will come, but it’s not going to be very few overnights. You know, everyone’s like, oh, HARO only took three years. No, HARO took 20 years of me talking to every God damn person next to me on the seat and on the airplane and everywhere where I made their name.

Peter Shankman: Right. I created the name, you know, and then had built this Rolodex. That’s what built Hara. Right? So it didn’t, it took three years to actually start a company to sell it. But that was 17 years in the process. So I think that again, just, you know, things take good things take time.

Adam Levy: You mentioned something about state in the beginning, and then you, you kind of, it

Peter Shankman: Was a different thought I was going to go into, into a long diatribe. It’s not worth it now, just the premise that, that it’s a lot of, a lot of what happens is state of mind, right. Where you are in terms of what you’re building. Oh, I’d love to what’s my coin. Wow. It’s up 33 cents from where it was, you know, my entire portfolio. It’s ridiculous way to think. Right, and, you know, check it every once in a while, but live your life.

Adam Levy: I love it. Peter. You’re the man. Thank you for being on. , and I hope to have you again soon. You’re always welcome and thank you.

Peter Shankman: Good time timing. Stay in touch.

Categories
Podcast Transcript

Crowdfunding on Kickstarer vs. Ethereum using Social Tokens

Listen on: Spotify | Apple Podcast | Google Podcast

Background

Mint Season 1 episode 9 features Matt Mcdonald who is the lead vocalist and guitarist for The Classic Crime – a rock band formed in Seattle, Washington in 2004. After leaving a record label in 2011, TCC pioneered the use of crowdfunding and other middle-men bypassing tools, continuing to make music, content, and community experiences for supporters a decade later. Their latest experiment with crowdfunding comes in the form of their social token – CRIME, ticker $CRIME. 

On this episode, Matt and I look back on the early days of Kickstarter crowdfunding and how it compares to today’s ICO and IDO models that persist throughout the cryptoverse. We also chat about his frameworks for utility generation, how he’s onboarded his existing fan base to hold his band’s social token, how platforms like Facebook and Instagram help build their audience, but stripped them away from their power to monetize them, and so much more. 


Thank you to Season 1’s NFT sponsors!

1. Coinvise – https://coinvise.co/

2. POAP – https://poap.xyz/

Interested in sponsoring future seasons? Get in touch here!


Adam Levy: We’ll just get right into it Okay? And start with the basics for those who don’t know, you, how’d you get your start in the music industry and kind of where you are today with, with the classic crime?

Matt MacDonald: Sure, well, I joined a band when I was 19, dropped out of art school to pursue that, and we ended up getting signed and, you know, toured the country for several years, you know, played on Warped Tour and summer festivals, and, you know, went out of the country a few times too, and, you know, we had a pretty successful run. But by the end of our tour, our, our record contract, we’d spent about six years on the label. You know, basically, every time we have a record, the label provides the money, and then they recoup the money from the sales of the records, we went through this crazy transition from music being a physical thing that people you know, we would, you know, ship CDs to now being a digital item, and then it, it actually just being a service, like, like streaming. And so it was just this crazy chaotic time to try being in a band really. And so we kind of rode that wave. And by about 2010, we put out our last record on the out on the label. And, and we were, we were off the label, and I decided, you know, I was going to do this thing independently, I was to see if I could, you know, there’s enough tools online, people had started crowdfunding records, and I thought, you know, we’ll give it a shot, we’ll do a Kickstarter. And you know, if this works, we can do more record. And then that’s kind of what I thought was, that would be the end of it. But our fans and supporters showed up big time, you know, we raised over $86,000, which we only asked for about a third of, in a month, and this is in 2011. And, and that kind of kick-started our, you know, no pun intended our independent career, and just making records directly for the people who want a year in advance. So that’s all there is. For us. It’s a way for us to take the time, you know, the six months to write and record an album. And then we print all the packages and the vinyl and the T shirts, everything, we ship that off to everybody. And basically, when the record comes out, we’re no longer recouping once we ship all those packages it’s paid for. And then the royalties are just a stream on top of that, as far as the streaming goes. So it’s been a really cool model to help kind of pioneer and I’ve, you know, run a bunch of Kickstarter for a lot of different bands, normally using social media to promote and, and so that that’s kind of led me into the crypto space and decentralisation because I’m always looking for ways to get behind and around these algorithms that are focused on Well, you know, farming your data and then right and then selling you ads or selling your users or your subscribers ads. And so trying to figure out how to game the system. That’s been my main job for the last decade, in trying to kind of figure out how to access the people who we brought to Facebook, you know, 15 years ago. Do you have a finance background at all? Not finance, no, just marketing. I’m a musician, predominantly. And I became sort of a digital marketer just because I needed to because it was, you know, that’s how I could be fun to my music.

Adam Levy: Crazy. Yeah, you guys, you guys are obviously pretty early in the whole crowdfunding game as well. And crypto is just that natural progression next into crowdfunding. 2.0. I will kind of get behind that the story behind crime your social token, but I was kind of interested about more of your creative process. Like what how would you describe the classic crimes like genre? Where do you guys fit for those who don’t? Don’t know? And what’s that creative process, like when you guys are making music?

Matt MacDonald: I mean, every record is a little bit different. And, you know, I am on one on one hand, you know, when I do these song writing workshops, I’ve done a few of them, where I’ll teach people the very sort of left brained, structured way of step by step process of writing up, you know, like a pop song, like it all follows an order in a structure. And then there’s this other sort of very right brained, chaotic, impulsive part of writing, any making art in any way that that you kind of need to engage with and confront. And so it’s hard to it’s hard to really speak to the part that’s unspeakable, but my process in general is in the last two weeks It’s I actually funded before I’d written anything. And the goal is to bring people alongside into the writing process. But it’s mostly just the start of my process, I can often be just picking up an instrument, or double clicking on the Pro Tools icon on my, on my computer, just doing the first step. And because the process can often be kind of linear, and you just start going down a path and you start chasing a thread of something, you play something like how it sounds, and you just keep playing it and it goes somewhere else. And as long as you’re there to follow that process, you can often get someplace kind of cool. So it’s usually just my processes just to start the process. Taking too much. And then and then hopefully, it takes me somewhere.

Adam Levy: Nice. And how is the classic crimes, genre and style evolved over time? Would you say?

Matt MacDonald: I mean, we were 19 when we started.

Adam Levy: Crazy. That’s so young.

Matt MacDonald: Yeah, so we were just in, you know, just starting college. And, you know, this would have been, you know, the early 2000s 2003. So there was a lot of bands that we kind of like wanted to emulate that were like more in the sort of emo post hard-core punk rock realm. And so we probably sounded a lot like the early 2000s in that regard, as far as like rock and roll goes. And so over the years, we’ve kind of just broadened out into different, mostly stills, it’s still rock music. It’s still melodic, it’s still energetic. But, but you know, implementing different, different genres within the rock umbrella, you know, and some of our stuffs been heavier, darker, and some of us have some of the lighter and poppier and, you know, every record, we try to do something a little bit different. Just because we don’t want to do the same thing over and over. But yeah, I would say rock music very generally, is what we sound like.

Adam Levy: Yeah, no, I, it’s pretty cool. I’m a fan of your stuff. I haven’t been listening to it. I guess, since that early on. I graduated, what college in like, 2019. But I’m a drummer myself, right. Like, I’ve been playing the drums since five years old. Music is like, like, essential to my core, and I fell down the crypto rabbit hole accidentally, which is kind of like my question to you is like, how did you get into crypto, right? Like crypto as, as it seems, at least over the years has been a very financial type of interest, a point of view, right? And now you have yourself and a bunch of other creators kind of tapping into this weird, like grey area of internet funny money, like, how did you get into that?

Matt MacDonald: Well, I mean, I think it’s most it’s not necessarily being a musician, although that’s part of it, I think most of is just being independent. And knowing that, like, so much of what my life has been over the last decade, has been dependent on what centralised corporations decide for me. So like, we were talking about Facebook, like we basically on boarded 85,000 people to Facebook, crazy. And that that’s how many people like their page. And we had this unmitigated access to them up until about 2012 13, when Facebook went public, and decided to start charging pages for access to the people. You know, and naturally, because, you know, to clean up the feeds, and whatever, I mean, everybody was following everything. And so it would have been chaos, if you didn’t have an algorithm that sorted, you know, high value content from stuff that isn’t, but it is, it was sort of under this promise that like, you know, you bring your people here, and then you’re going to be able to connect with them directly. You’re going to bypass middleman and then turns out, no, we’re the middleman. Yeah, and now you have to pay us and, and for a while we did you know, or for a while, we would use whatever, whatever the algorithm was favouring at the time to try to gain the system. Like, you know, they wanted to compete with YouTube. So they were really favouring videos. So we’d do a lot of videos and they wanted to compete with Twitch. And so they’re favouring live stuff, you know. And so we would just do whatever the algorithm would favour for a while. And, but I just hated it. I mean, I hated I hated like, that I had people who wanted to hear from us and what, what projects were working on, and we’re interested in that, but they couldn’t see it. And they couldn’t. It wasn’t a true subscription, you know, and I just hated being sort of extorted for ads. So, I was always looking for like, is there a decentralised way? Is there a way that we can communicate directly with people? I mean, even if it’s less people, you know, like it can be, it doesn’t have to be 85,000 people. I mean, that’s a lot to ask for all at once. But if we had 1000 people, you know, there was all those marketing, you know, podcasts and books about 1000 true fans and all that. And so, I sort of got on that kick like, Well, you know, we’re not really here for the masses anymore. There are people who will support us, as long as they know, we’re doing something, they’ll back it. Why, why can’t we quit sort of nurture and, and gather together a community in a decentralised way. And then, of course, in 2017, there was the big Bitcoin went sort of parabolic. And so, you know, that’s when I sort of I knew about Bitcoin before, but I was like, holy shit, this is something real, you know. And I was, I had a podcast at the time called, don’t feed the trolls. And it was me and my co-host, Nate Henry, and Nate bought, like a whole Bitcoin at like 8500. And rode that to the 20k, or whatever. And so I got in a little after him, but I thought around the top, but then we and then all season followed, and then we were nice. Like, whatever that criminal john McAfee said, we lost harass a few times on him, when we were just learning about it, you know, and so, but the promise was that like, there’s, there’s, there’s this way that you could sort of, you could guarantee digital scarcity, which is something that like my band going through, you know, the physical like, Hey, everyone buys CDs, to now, Hey, everybody buys mp3 is but not everybody. I mean, because you can just send those mp3 to other people, burn them to CDs, and then so it’s like, you can just have one mp3 is a million mp3 is it doesn’t matter, you know, there was no scarcity with digital. And the whole industry felt that the whole Music Industry felt that because the money dried up, and labels couldn’t, you know, promote as much in bands couldn’t do as much without two and a half to two or all the time. So the Id like, kind of what happened this cycle with NF T’s was that really got me thinking about like, Oh, you can make the art that we make, which is purely digital files, scarce, potentially, that we haven’t done that yet. But you could also have an organisation work in a completely decentralised way where there’s not like, one sort of corporate interest running it. Which is kind of the thing that appeals to me about, you know, blockchain in general.

Adam Levy: It’s funny, because your early adoption of Facebook, you guys being an early user, being an early contributor, also being an early like driver for its initial user base, right? You’re telling you brought in 85,000? Fans, right? That’s a lot. That’s a lot.

Matt MacDonald: They might have signed up anyways. But like, when right when we took over our Facebook page, it was about 8500. And like, I personally grew it 10 acts from that got you. Just engaging with people.

Adam Levy: You know, the point of view and the ethos of a lot of these new web three primitive based platforms is that if you help contribute, you also earn, right. And imagine, imagine if Facebook applied that loan, that model early on, it was a pioneer in that and basically rewarded all of its users, which I don’t even think they needed to an extent, right, because I will didn’t people, a lot of what people are doing right now. They’re seeing these web 2.5 platforms, Instagram, Facebook, YouTube, how they’re kind of taking advantage of users, right. And now this new kind of wave, this new revolution is, is kind of being birthed from that. Yeah. Right. And I guess no one could have really seen that. That was like the next I guess, transition from Yeah, you’re, you’re a product of the platform, versus now the platforms are going to be after you the product, right? So when you guys are kind of building your fan base, like, at least now that you’re kind of entering more of this crypto space? How are you kind of reimagining growth and reimagining ownership and reimagining? You know, scarcity? Because that was important to you. Like, how are you thinking about that now?

Matt MacDonald: Well, it’s crazy. We didn’t really design. I mean, my way of being in the world is just to go do things and then learn about them as I’m doing them. So I don’t really I have a hard time being theoretical. We get we could have a meeting but like, I have to go do something immediately after that. We can’t talk anymore. Yeah, I figure it out. So doing the currency thing, like I had been watching some, like during quarantine I’ve been watching some streams because I got back into playing StarCraft two, my brother, my brother, brother in law was like, hey, come play StarCraft two with us. And it was seemed like a social thing to do because we were all locked down. So I started playing that again. I was like, Man, this is the best game ever. I mean, it’s crazy. Real-time strategy game, I started watching a lot of streams on twitch and learning how to play. One of the Twitch streamers had had a coin I had also, we toured with a band called Portugal, the man back in the day, they had a token on rally as well. And so I’d kind of, you know, I’d follow I’d seen people come out with their own tokens, and I’m like, What are these tokens, really, about what are people doing. And so I noticed that, like, it was a way to exchange value within a community or it had a discord I had a twitch. But anytime somebody wanted to, you know, tip me bits on Twitch, it was like, you know, 50% of that’s gone, you know, or they want to sub half that money goes to twitch. And so rally seemed to be, like, if you had money in something, it’s a fun little way to pass value around the community that we could tip our mods, or they tip me or I could sell things exclusively in our crime coin. So I signed up, I thought this is going to be like a currency. And, and, and it’s great, because it’s free to transfer once you’re, you know, on the side chain, you can send it around infinitely, and it costs nothing. But, but what ended up happening was people bought in immediately, and then it went like up a lot. And, and then they saw rewards come in for just holding it. So they don’t, they didn’t want to spend it as much, you know, like, so I ended up selling a few things I did like a mystery box where, you know, it’s about $150 worth of stuff, but it was jam packed with vinyl and shirts and lapel pins and tonnes of stuff that’s like exclusive. I ended up making like physical coins that we sold, that were like a, you know, almost two inches in diameter. We made a number of different things, but just as sort of like exclusive perks for people who are holding it. Not even trying to make money off of it just like saying, keep holding it because we get these rewards every week. So I’m starting to transition. Like I thought initially, you know, it’s going to be a currency that we’re all going to use, you know, and that that is a pretty cool you. And, you know, I can see like promo codes for discount tour tickets and stuff using it. So it does work that way. But really, the coolest thing is just to reward people who are holding it. You know, who have sort of like staked ownership in the success of it. And that seems to be like they’re happy to hold it and collect rewards if they’re getting rewards or you know to play poker for I play poker every week with people 10 people using the currency using the currency. Yeah, really? How does that work? Oh, we just have a website and they basically they it’s actually a really good website that some guy made poker now dot info, I believe it’s called or poker. Yeah, something like that. We just send a link in our discord channel that’s like exclusive to bag holders. And we say you can sign up here and there’s like a rally campaign link. It’s like a deep link that basically collects three doll three crime coin for their buy in. And then I can just look at my wall e who’s bought in, I can let him into the game, you know, once they click through the link, and then we’re all basically 10 of us around a table with video and audio, playing a real game of Texas Hold’em. So that’s pretty epic. Yeah, it’s pretty, it’s pretty sweet.

Adam Levy: That’s a new perk. I’ve interviewed a few people so far on for the podcast. And that’s a value out of utility that I haven’t really heard from like using your token. In poker, that’s pretty cool. Like, I feel like that’s like how these creators are winning is that they’re finding unique ways on how to spend their social money, right? And how to how for users to accumulate What else have you kind of approached and have done to incentivize one users to hold you sold physical goods, but I guess like, what, how do you how do you approach that Exactly?

Matt MacDonald: I just am coming up with random stuff. Like I’m talking to people in the discord and like, that’s the thing about I mean, it’s, it’s the spirit of decentralisation is that like, I’m not some Corporation who’s like has a plan to extract money from my customers. I want to give you what you want. So what is it you want? What do you want to do? What could we do that’s fun, that like encourages everybody to either buy, spend or hold or currency? And they come up with ideas and like, you know, the gold challenge coins that we made, we made 100 of them and they’re like, laser numbered. That we call them bag holder. That was our bag holder’s idea. Like they people were like, yeah, I want this. So I basically just go about making whatever they want. Usually, like one thing at a time, as far as that goes. But, yeah, the poker thing. We’re at 13 weeks doing a game a week so far. And that seems to be fun, you know, people come back and there’s like, we have like a leader board of like, Who’s got the overall winnings? So, you know, there’s like a sheet that updates you know that links that you can link to the discord with a command and so there’s like ongoing sort of rivalry stuff and legacy stuff that’s cool. And I just think like, you know, whatever they want in the future as long as we’re all just earning from this thing earning rewards and perks and stuff I’ll just make I’ll just make it because I can because like we together combine our powers to have basically resources to make things essentially I made a seven inch Flexi disc which is which is something you can play on your turntable right out of a song that that I made with the community on Twitch so we Oh, cool, made this like joke song called the Hell yeah. And it was supposed to be like this tough song, tough guy song. And we made it kind of about like the Jimmy like shorts, shorts queen. It was like, it was like, just totally influenced by like, what the viewers were thinking of at the time, like, what’s this about? And we just totally had input, we had group vocals, they’d send their vocals in, and I put that in the song. And then at the end of the day, we pressed the song into this, like little Flexi disc, and I made 20 of them, and sold those in the channel. You know, like signed in hand numbered, like these are really exclusive physical items. Hmm, it’s like, you know, fake digital money, money. Definitely all, you know, put you know, invested in so it’s I just like bringing, it’s almost like song writing to me, and I’ll stop. I’m sorry, I’m going off. But like, it’s like bringing something that’s not there into existence. And so the use of the currency is like a means to birth new physical items. [Broken Audio]

Adam Levy: I think you cut out for a minute. Can you hear me?

Matt MacDonald: Oh, yeah. I’m hearing I’m back.

Adam Levy: Okay. I was going to say, so. What’s the business behind that? Right? You’re creating all this exclusive merch, right? How do you view that as now like an entrepreneur, when you’re creating exclusive discs? Right? Obviously, they cost you something, obviously going to charge your fans a certain amount of the social tokens, right? Do you then you collect them you cash out and pay for those expenses? Or do you see it as like a general expense that you have for the year? How do you how do you kind of budget that? Exactly? And how do you make money from this? Yeah, and I only asked that, because I feel like a lot of people that are considering on doing this, they’re like, okay, but I’m just like people, like, rally or roll, right? All these platforms is just printing value, right? They’re just creating value. Like, how can I actually use this to fund a concert? How can I use this to fund like, what you’re doing mini discs, like, tell me more about that?

Matt MacDonald: Well, you can cash out, I mean, you can bridge out your rally. And so you start you know, rally will start you with a certain amount of creator coins as like a base, you know, you are the main token holder, and then you can distribute those I did a lot of like price matching initially where it’s like, if someone buys 10 coins, I will send them 10 coins, and then go in manually, like do all these transactions which encouraged a lot more people to Alright, well, you know, I get it, you know, I get two twice as many coins for the same price or whatever. And then what happens is the overall price goes up. Initially, it was because the rewards were being paid out to back. So the rally rewards were getting paid out to back crime. And then because this is a you know, decentralised, you know, you vote on proposals type governance token, they voted to, like pay everyone out in rally rewards every week, if you know, if you’re growing as a community. So people started getting these rally rewards directly into their accounts and going Wait a minute, they just sent me free rewards because I bought crime. And they’re like, okay, buy more crime. Keep it going double down? So values created like that for everybody. Which is kind of like the Kickstarter model where it’s like, you get a little bit from everybody, and you can make something big, you know. That’s the crowdfund model, which is we proved we proved that five times, you know, a little bit from everybody and we can make a big nice sounding record that you can get delivered to your door in the form of like, 212 inch vinyl. So like, that’s kind of what I see. This as to it’s like everybody sort of pitching in a little bit. So that I mean, if I needed to, if I needed to press vinyl, and I needed to pay $10,000 to do so I could bridge out part of my supply from rally. You know, swap it into USD coin, send it to Coinbase cash out, and I would have that money in my bank tomorrow. So, I mean, that’s how you make money is everybody going, I want to hold this, and I want the perks from it. And then the number goes up, the rewards come in those rewards you can cash out, and you can print stuff, you can make physical things from them.

Adam Levy: So why did you decide to go with rally versus creating your own altcoin? And what do I mean by that your own traditional ERC 20 that lives on the Ethereum blockchain, because right now, you’re relying on rally to create your own cryptocurrency that underlying values pegged to the rally token, right? And really, your token does well, if rally succeeds, so you’re basing your business on someone else’s success, in a sense, right? Why decide to go through that route, versus launching your own ERC 20. And I only ask that because you have such unique background, where you realised how Facebook and quote unquote, excuse my language, like fuck people over they kind of brought a lot of users a lot of engagement to their platform. And I guess, like, Why not like, because you told me you took a lot from that, right? You’re always trying to game the algorithm. So why go with another platform versus doing a bootstrap in writing your own ERC-20.

Matt MacDonald: Yeah, I think the bootstrap idea was like, initially, I thought, oh, that’d be cool. But then it just, it’s this sense of just a lack of security, you’re out there on, you know, uniswap as an ERC-20 token, that and just whales can just do whatever they want to you, your value is dictated by the completely chaotic free market. Whereas if you band together with other creator, [Broken Audio] who is a little bit more protected from the whims of the market, per se, and is I don’t, I wanted the functionality of a have a platform and a website, that would be adding features that would help my you know, I wouldn’t want to have to develop all these features myself. So and then also what sort of gave me security was rally’s decentralised way of governance. There’s proposals that you can vote on if you hold an amount, you know, my vote has some weight, and I’ve voted on some things. So people have ideas and they propose things to the community and the community actually weighs in and dictates whether or not they collect, they connect their metamask wallet, and they can and that has hold a certain amount of weight based on how many rallies tokens, they’re staking versus how much they have in their wallet. And so everybody votes and so if something was happening, that was against the core spirit of the rally mission at least the community could come together and vote about it which is not the same of with a Facebook for instance.

Adam Levy: Yeah, that makes sense. That makes sense. I guess like when I talk to creators, I talk to musicians influencers, internet personalities, and they’re debating on how should I approach this right Should I go with a roller rally where technically my success is pegged off the value in the success of someone else? Right also it has it also like not entirely like your currency your network does well based off the supply and demand pressure to right it’s not just them but like, should I peg Should I pick my value based off someone else’s business someone else’s token or peg my value in a more decentralised manner where the tokens that I create now plug into the like let’s say if you did the ERC 20 token right, right tokens your fans could use them for like the greater defi ecosystem right and you could collaborate with like Ave or maker and even maybe even lend out these tokens and create like a cool like finance hub for the crime token and whatnot I don’t know like all this all this shit like the cool thing about it so early right there’s so many different approaches you could take.

Matt MacDonald: And I don’t think we’re stuck with I mean, because rally can turn our coins into ERC 20 so and I think they’ve actually done that for one so far. And they’ve like helped assist to like, you know, to give birth to that. So there’s, there’s options down the line. But one of the things that protects value, I think for our coin holders are is the fact that rally is constantly on boarding new creators. Every creator on boards, they’re their core supporters. So it’s like people are constantly getting introduced to rally. They’re constantly buying creator corn coins, which are taken to ethereum main net and using their money to buy rally from the main net to back the creator coin. So being in crypto through a two and a half year bear market, I’m like, I kind of want to be protected from like going to zero, you know, like, because so many adults go to zero. Yeah. And to me, one of the best ways to protect your old coin from going to zero is to have it backed by an altcoin that is constantly onboarding new buyers. And that’s what rally is doing every time they have a new creator come in that creator brings in 100,000, whatever new buyers have rally, essentially. And now that creates a nice, like price floor for rally that like, it can’t go to zero. Because people are using it, it has the actual use case. And people are using it and people are buying it every week.

Adam Levy: Yeah, no, that makes sense. I hear you. I think it’s definitely an approach to the argument. But I guess Tell me more about your community. Because were they crypto native, what did you see like a hurdle and on them that luck? How to overcome that if there was a hurdle?

Matt MacDonald: Yeah, there. There definitely was a hurdle. I mean, and then and that’s the thing too, about using a platform that has a really friendly UX, and kind of designed to make it seem like any other place on the internet that you would interact with, with a profile, you know, is because so many of the people, like I realised that I go, I go first down the rabbit hole. And so and I’m always saying, Just follow me, it’ll be good. And people are trusting me all the time. But like, but sometimes it’s like a big ask, you know, it’s like, hey, put a bunch of your money into this thing. And I promise it’ll work out. And thankfully it has so far, but like, I think it would, I think it wouldn’t have happened. If it was like purely, you know, x’s and metamask wallet and purely decentralised like, you know, the real raw crypto space, I think they needed an on ramp through a platform. And so many of them have gotten metamask wallets or other types of wallets ERC 20 wants to bridge out to Coinbase wallets or whatever. And they’ve gotten on exchanges now to where they can accept rally coin from different you know, in in swap in the AEF. So they’ve learned all the little things that I that I learned years ago, through just having this little onramp. So that’s why I think it’s a good on ramp. And I think there’s potential to like go other places from it. We I made some NFT’s. I haven’t minted them yet, because I’m still waiting on trying to integrate more of rally’s dev team into what we’re going to do. But we ended up going to open C which is you know, decentralised NFT and minting platform and sales platform, and they didn’t accept rally token, and we got them to accept rally. So actually, our fans can bridge out. They can sell crime bridge out their rally and buy an NF t that is related to our band directly with the without having to swap without having a gas fees or whatever. So yeah. So that and that alone is like education and not like I just think like, I’ve taken them a long way in three months if they can.

Adam Levy: So you’re like an evangelist here, man. You’re doing someone’s work, that’s for sure. How have they responded? I know you mentioned a little bit but tell me more. Like, how many how many of the total, I guess your fan base? Were already crypto native versus not crypto native. And in what did that look like?

Matt MacDonald: Well, it’s funny that most I would say 95 to 97% not crypto native, crazy. It’s just I mean and the thing is too is like I’m 38 now and a lot of our fans are in their 30s like you know, they discovered our band in their teens. When I was in my early 20s you know like so I grew up with you. Yeah, so they grew they grew up with us but like they also have families and stuff now you know, like we don’t want you know, we have a good chunk of people in their 30s and it is a missed that. That boat of like crypto they missed 20 1720 and I almost did I just like randomly stumbled across it. But, but the ones who, who we’ve posted and sent a few things on, like, traditional social media, and the ones who like see that we’re doing it who have picked up on crypto and defy and stuff, and especially this last, this last little bowl cycle, that they’re all they all jumped in immediately. Like I had never seen, you know, it was kind of interesting. It was like tagging that like tapping them in and be like, Hey guys, you know, and they’re and they’re showing up and they’re talking about like staking rally and doing all this stuff and like crazy and getting involved in the community. They’re there. They’re on the rallies, discord, and they’re like, they’re keeping me up to breast on like, all like the new stuff that’s going on with the community. So it’s actually really cool to have some people who are like, they understand it. But they really just came out of the woodwork. They were like, okay, one of my favourite bands and crypto I’m in. And so they stay and started engaging that way. But a lot of other folks are just too scared. And you know, I understand that too. Like, they’re just like, you know what, I’ll back you on Kickstarter. But yeah, I don’t know what this is, you know, I’ve heard a lot, you know, they just heard about Dogecoin. Like, it’s too much to ask, you know, to get it to get involved. So, and that’s fine. We’ll do a lot of things and make a lot of stuff. And I have the feeling will there’ll be a few more cycles for mass adoption. I’m fine with people being slower to it if they need to be.

Adam Levy: Yeah, you know, I think a lot of people don’t realise that, at least in my opinion is like this whole creative economy boom in creators personalities, influencers, musician, whatever you want to call them, they end up tokenizing themselves and bringing in a lot of nice, like the next non-super non-crypto native audience into crypto. And they’re really bridging the next wave of mass adoption here. Like you’ll have the shit coins, you’ll have Elon Musk, beaming and tweeting and driving Mark Cuban emulate manipulation, whatever you want to call it. But these influencers This is like a new form of influencer marketing to an extent to a decentralised network that works for all right, yeah, it’s like it’s, it’s, it’s something really powerful that I don’t think a lot of brands are picking up on yet.

Matt MacDonald: Yeah, well, it’s so [Broken Audio] it really is. Yeah, like, the Kickstarter thing is the best, it’s the closest thing that comes to it, because it’s really just cutting out a middleman and having like, a pure relationship, and the relationship wasn’t just transactional. It’s that like, if you give me the money now that you would spend later, like, I will bring you through the process of making this and you are actually an integral part of it. It’s not just someone else gave me the money for this thing, I built it now I have to sell it to you to pay them back. This transactional thing, it’s more like you’re a part of something with the Creator. And I think that had sort of psychologically a big effect. Like I thought we did our first Kickstarter, there’s no way they’re everyone’s come back. And like, every time it’s been more and more people, um, because it’s such a fun experience to be a part of something as a community and just knowing that we’re all community minded people, it just as human beings, you know, social mammals, it’s just such a powerful thing that I think our culture specifically has gotten away from, with you have the producers and the consumers, and there’s separate sort of this chasm between the two, and there’s one, you know, and there’s this facade of like, marketing that, like, hides the real truth and it’s, it’s, it’s a lot of deceit and deception. I think people are tired of that way of like that sort of Mad Men marketing and, and, you know, the, in between the middlemen between the consumer and the producer. And I think people are really ready to be a part of something. And if you’re, if you have, if you all have a currency, it’s like a, it’s like a digital language that you all speak. That sort of glues your community together, that and its value that you can transfer within each other within the community. And then value that that affords you exclusive things that that are related to the content at the centre of the community. So it’s just, I see it as like a glue.

Adam Levy: Yeah. If you look at your last Kickstarter campaign, okay, the seven full length studio album that you guys pushed out, okay, you had about, I just looked what 1541 backers for a total raise of $91,552. Okay, but I want to focus on the 1541 backers, that crowdfunded nearly 100k. Okay, crazy, first of all, and now if you look at crime, because it’s like it’s crowdfunding 2.0, essentially, right, with a lot more benefits, a lot more twists, right, because you could essentially cry Find your next album using crime to an extent, right. But if you’ll if you look right now, there’s about 307 supporters. Right. I don’t know if that equates to actually holders, is it more than 307 holders? I think I think it is 307 holders, if not the token is currently trading at $13.24. Based off what, uh, 15. I checked like 30 minutes ago, okay. And it’s crazy to see the amount of value that Kickstarter is generating. And I guess my question to you is like, how do you now migrate those people from Kickstarter to now except in crowdfund using crime, so that you don’t have to rely on another middleman taking another cut, right? And they provide the nice UX, they provide the nice experience, right? The onboarding, the credit card, the all that shit, right, that makes it important. Yeah, how do you how do you bring the next wave? So you’re just like, slashing middlemen? And yeah, like, like, thinning it down and leaning it down to the extent where it’s just you write a community? How do you do that now?

Matt MacDonald: Oh, that’s, that’s kind of the dream is that like, I even thought, because I was talking to I was talking to some people who build on top of Bitcoin stack stacks or stack everything was Yeah, stacks. Yeah. Money. Yeah. Yeah. And, and they were like, yeah, you know, some people have these ideas where, you know, people, they, you know, they buy stacks or whatever, and then they and then they stake it and they get Bitcoin rewards. And that’d be one way to crowdfund is that like, you just get people a certain amount of people staking their money, and we get a certain amount of rewards and the rewards or the staking rewards. That pays for the project. And then after a certain point, everybody gets their staked money back. So like, people aren’t even paying for it. And I thought, well, that’s a cool idea to passively back, something that you kind of want to see happen, but like, sure, people in our in our realm really want to, they want to support directly. They want to be they want their money taken from them, they just take my money. Get it back to but like, I just thought that’d be the coolest thing ever. If you could just have a bunch of people, you know, stake a token. And then after a certain amount of time, they received their full amount back. And, and, and the rewards are what pays for the project.

Adam Levy: That would be crazy, right? But now try to explain staking to someone like we take it for granted. Right? We’ve been playing with crypto for some time. But staking like what the hell is staking a token? Like I buy my Starbucks with dollars? Like, how are you? How are you going to now like introduce, you know what I mean? Like how do you explain that? How do you overcome those hurdles?

Matt MacDonald: Yeah, yeah, there’s levels. There’s levels to it. But yeah, my marketing mind goes to Okay, just dumb it down. I mean, to me, marketing is like writing a song. Its like, how can you jam the most information that’s easily palatable into the shortest sentence, you know, right. The least the least amount of words. And so you Yeah, I mean, it’s, it’s like interest is what people understand. And when they put their money, they put their money in the savings account, they get interest on it as long as it stays there. And then when they pull their money out, they don’t get interest anymore. So that’s how I would probably do explain staking to somebody. But I think the main thing the main selling point would be like you know how you buy the record? What if you took that money and you just put it there for six months? And then you get it back? And then the record comes to you or the records made? You know just you know just read that’s also weird, right? Like that’s also feels like a Ponzi scheme. Problem with crypto is that it feels like a Ponzi scheme. And it actually functions on some level like a Ponzi scheme. Yeah. But it doesn’t exploit people like upon, like, everyone, it’s a Ponzi scheme in which everyone wins.

Adam Levy: I’m literally like pushing the boundaries of what this can be right now. Yeah. Okay. So tell me more about utility and in the value behind crime what can people do with crime? You gave some examples, but really lay it down like how do you there’s one thing about buying it now what can I get with it? What are you created?

Matt MacDonald: Yeah, so let me just go to my page real quick here. There’s a coin benefits and uses right on our rally page. And it’s a so if you initially one crime was about 35 cents, and so I was like, okay, for Dollar 50. If people hold hot five crime, the bot will let them into this channel bag holders channel on our Discord. And in that channel, I will have the exclusive download to the song that we did on stream that’s not released. And so those are the kind of the two things and then it’s just access to all the limited merge that I sell through that channel. So I’ll put a link on that channel and say, if you guys want a coin, there’s 100 for sale. And, you know, for three crime coin, I’ll send you it, you know, so that it’s mostly just channel access for people who hold five crime or more. If people hold 100 crime or more, they also have another role in our Discord server called moon boss. And they were actually kind of like first in line to get like the highest number of dice that we made and stuff like that. And then it’s just, you know, being aware of like, when the poker games happening, or just being involved in different things like that, like we have exclusive merch for sale. And then the main thing which I put on there recently, which has been everyone’s decided is or has been really good, is earning rally rewards by just simply holding crime. So you know, it’s not about even buying more, it’s just, it’s just holding it to get this this reward system that pays way more than staking for any, you know, way more API than anything else I’ve staked for. So just by holding it, they get rally rewards, which is essentially free tokens. And you know, that that are potentially going up in the future, the more creators we onboard, and the more crypto gets adopted. So everyone feels like an early adopter at this point. And they are, you know, yeah. So they feel like I think all than something.

Adam Levy: Yeah, I think the beauty behind it is that because you’re an early adopter, because the social token wave is so new, because rally is only trading at a certain price. The more this market grows, the more these early adopters really, really win. Right? And I think people are starting to realise that why the hell should I keep my money? And Bank of America where I’m literally earning bread crumbs on $1 not even a half a bread crumb on the dollar? What I could just be supporting Matt McDonald, and in crime, right? A lot of people are like that.

Matt MacDonald: They’re like, Listen, you know, because we went about, we did like a 20x. In the first month. We went from like, 35 to like, $7 because rally went up to over $1 body. And so this is sort of like the tokenomics of it. You know, the price went up, and people were talking about like, Oh, I can finally like buy my new truck. Or I can get like, my, my, I can get my dental work done. I have to get it like a root canal. And it’s like 1200 bucks. And now, I never thought I would buy this, like token for a band that like to get exclusive merch. And now I can do like dental work. I’m like, you’re literally you’re not only producing music, you’re saving people’s teeth. Like Yeah. That’s amazing. And obviously, like, if you have to, if you have a toothache, sell your credit fix that, you know, I you know, I’m not trying to give people the whole, you know, price goes up forever. But at the same time, it’s like, it’s kind of cool to see people use it for actual real life things are not just consuming, you know, entertainment, which is what it was sort of set out to do now. They’re like improving their actual like physical lives with it.

Adam Levy: yeah, but that’s like the sunshine rainbows and roses type of market but then you have rally falling below $1 here and all these fans getting like somewhat fucked, right?

Matt MacDonald: Well, the beautiful thing about it too is once you get in so the dollar numbers, what you’re looking at, when you’re just an eight brain, you’re like, hey, look, it’s this amount, and it’s goes up this amount. But the more you pay attention, the more you realise there’s a ratio of crime, rally per crime. So initially, it was you know, you start out with a ratio of 1.1 rally per crime. So it was it was one rally plus 10% was the price of a crime coin. And eventually, that’s gone up to over 21 rally per crime. So the price of rally may fluctuate, but the value as long as people hold their money in crime, one crime will always be 21 rally. So, you know, rally can go down, and but we’re still earning rally rewards. And as long as we hold, we’re still we still have more rally than you know.

Adam Levy: Sure, you might get like the number of rallies still like association to the number of crime

Matt MacDonald: But the price of rallying the value of those numbers right fluctuates with the health of the market. And the more you interact with this platform and this side chain, the more you realise that this is like, this is something that actually has a lot of future potential. Right, you know, they they’ve taught they plan on getting 10,000 creators, we were in the first 100 Yeah, so like, buying and holding these coins that are worth rally is, it seems like a really smart thing to do is, like you said, as an early adopter, being that the creator economy is just getting going people are just becoming aware of this and more creators are going to be on boarded into the system. And then once that happens, mass adoption, because all the people that follow these creators are going to be aware of cryptocurrency they’re going to be aware of tokenomics and platforms and wallets, and all these things that make them less afraid of it. And so and that’s just good for the good for the whole thing.

Adam Levy: So yeah, when the price goes down, you and your fans in the group chat you guys like have like, you guys like congregate everybody relaxed, like it’s going to be okay, like, we’re going to we’re going to survive this, like, what is it? Like in the group chat?

Matt MacDonald: I mean, initially in discord, yeah. Like, when it went down it, like, plummeted once. And I said, Guys, don’t worry, this is like long term. Rally goes up. A week later was back. And it was more than that, you know. So people, it’s the thing too, it’s like, being in cryptocurrency markets for years, you develop a sort of fixed skin for the volatility. And you develop some patience, because you’re like, Okay, I can’t just me, I’m not a day trader, I’m not a guy that can like trade chop, or swings. I can look at trend lines. And, you know, say, all right, if it hits here, I’m buying. But, but you just learned patience overall. And I think that’s, that’s part of that’s part of adoption is understanding that like, things go up and down, but it doesn’t matter [Broke Voice] in crime is still, you know, it’s still three out of three crime coin for a buy in poker every week. So that’s all you need to know, you know, like you button. Most of them bought a crime coin at like 3540 cents. So it doesn’t matter if it goes down from $13 to $9. They don’t care.

Adam Levy: What a way to make everybody more hard-core, like get them in on the pennies and let them ride the double digits.

Matt MacDonald: Yes.

Adam Levy: I love it. Or I don’t want to take too much of your time. I know we’re coming up to a close. So I have a couple like, final kind of questions to ask you. So first one, I kind of skimmed the surface. He said it’s the dream. When do you imagine yourself like crowdfunding your next album? Like the eighth or the ninth or the 10th? Using crime? What you have a goal for yourself? Do you just like kind of seeing how adoption? Like what’s your thought process?

Matt MacDonald: Yeah, I’m pretty like an in the moment type of guy like, I don’t have like a five year plan. I’m mostly just trying to problem solve, and I get these wild hairs and I just go throw myself at something. So I haven’t like decided that this is the way that I want to go. But I do see it as you know, crowdfunding turned out to be a long term model that I thought was just a one, one stop shop. And it turned out to be a model that people like wanted to, like, they wanted to have multiple iterations of they wanted to be a part of multiple albums for and so if there’s a way that I can integrate that with crime, I think that’d be the coolest thing. Because like, that’s obviously like, what I’ve been working on for the last like, three, four months has been all cryptocurrency related. So if there’s way ways I could sell perks to crowdfund with crime would be [Cross voice]

Adam Levy: Like, like, Imagine being able, like, I’m just thinking out loud, I imagine being able to so you have your Kickstarter page. Right, right. You have the different tiers that people can kind of buy, they can donate if they just want to support. But within those descriptions, you say, yeah, you could you could purchase this, let’s say for $20 with USD, right, you purchase it with crime, you’ll be able to actually get it for $15. Right? Exactly, no, and you incentivize like, is that Do you think you’ll approach it like that? Like, what do you think?

Matt MacDonald: Yeah you could. I mean, the problem is now so many people that backed crime initially insane, which is which is what they’ve already gotten. Like, when I did the when I did the mystery boxes, I put like, I put like $200 worth of merging each one. Sort of like flat rate, USPS medium size shipping boxes, and I put like stuff and vinyl and stuff in it. And like test pressings, like really rare stuff. And I sold like I sold 10 or 20 of them at. But it was like the equivalent of like $150 worth of crime, which was the equivalent of about $15 of initial, like the investment, which was what cost me to ship them, like $14 was crazy. So basically, like the people who backed us in the beginning, paid shipping to get like $200 worth of merge. So like, already, it’s worthwhile for them to even pay more, because they’re using that their money from, you know, their tiny investment to buy to get them a big value in. But if I was to I was to use the crowd fund to try to incentivize people to adopt crime and be a part of our, our creative economy, then I probably would do some sort of discount like that, or like they could get, you know, if there was some sort of way to do promo codes? I don’t know, it’s hard. It’s hard to integrate with centralised platforms, because like they only have so much, you know, API that you can mess with.

Adam Levy: Or you could do this, you can basically say, if you purchase this thing, that’s 4050 bucks, you also get $10 in crime. So now you’re forcing people, now you’re rewarding them for participating, rather than just doing like spend.

Matt MacDonald: Yeah, manually. So basically, they would have to like, sign up for crime if they’re new to it.  And they would have to log in with their twitch account or something rally. And then send me their username or something.  Oh, yeah. I just, yeah. Anyway.

Adam Levy: Not super scalable, not super scalable.

Matt MacDonald: No, but those are the ways that I always look to like, figure it out is like, what can I automate? And  it’s so much of the decentralised cryptocurrency world is so customizable, and so it’s been nice to have, like, I have some people working on stuff that like [Broken voice] or where people can buy stuff just with crime. Which is so cool. And then I’ve got like, I’ve worked with the guy that’s developed it to like, give me a way to like, export their shipping information. So I can import that into, you know, Asian, but like, you know, eventually, it should just be a store that’s like connected through ship stations API. And yeah, customising nature of it all and automating of it is interesting for me.

Adam Levy: Yeah. So, two more questions. You’re obviously an early adopter, you’re I’d even consider like very revolutionary very forward thinking almost as if like a pioneer in in when it came to adopting crypto or when it comes to adopting crypto. And in the music industry, okay. How do you imagine this stuff kind of revolutionising social tokens revolutionising the sector? 510 years from now? Like, do you imagine a world where I mean, I guess it’s leaning more towards that, like a lot more creators, a lot? More musicians will be creating these like more modern day fan clubs. But like, what do you what do you see 5-10 years from now social tokens doing?

Matt MacDonald: Yeah, I see them as the glue that keep the decentralized community together and then the defied space being like the interaction lie the glue that keeps the separate communities together so that you can interact with cross platform. I see the centralization eating everything. Even my brother show me this platform called satellite the other day and people trying to build fully decentralized, customizable, open, free, secure and online.

Adam Levy: Yeah, no, make sense. That’s a very, very positive way to kind of look at the growth of the space, but let me approach it from a different angle really quick. Okay. Right now we’re in an environment place in society where people value influence based off the number of followers you have, okay? Now, we’re kind of transitioning into a world where every creator, or almost every creator is going to have $1 price associated with themselves or the community, right? Do you think? Do you think that that level of influence is going to kind of transition from number of followers to what you’re worth on the screen? For example, Matt McDonald is trading at $13.24. But Justin Bieber is trading at $600 Justin Bieber is more worth more than Matt McDonald. Shane, do you think it’s going to get to that level of like, black marriage type of effect?

Matt MacDonald: You know, Justin Bieber is worth more than me that’s…

Adam Levy:

 It’s an extreme example.

Matt MacDonald: But it’s like, as long as it does, as long as it’s not skewing reality. I mean, his influence, his reach, his record sales, his team, his business, everything he does, is bigger than me. And it might be 60 times bigger, it might actually be 600 times bigger, you know, but like, I don’t like as long as like, as long as it. That having a hierarchy is that big of a deal, as long as like, the little guys at the bottom, like me, are okay to keep making records, which is that that’s all I want to do. And there’s enough 100, 200, 2000 people who support those. I don’t really care. I don’t really care. I think Justin gets.

Adam Levy: A different point of view then. So there’s a gentleman by the name of whaleshark, okay, is an anonymous figure online, maybe you’re familiar with him. He’s a whale. Partway apart shark he does, he does a lot of good for the NFT space, he helps a lot of up and coming artists, he’s made a lot of like, very monumental purchases. And if you look at his big cloud, for example, that’s like around $15,000 right now, okay. And if you look at like, I’m just going to say for the sake of example, Matt McDonald, she probably has a much has more clout growing up and whaleshark was been a character for the last two years, three years. Right now, will people start seeing whaleshark? Much, much more influential and much better than Matt McDonald.

Matt MacDonald: You can be more influential than me if you have a certain amount of money, for sure. Because I don’t have that money. Yeah. But as long as the free market decides, you know, what I’m saying? Like, as long as the market decides, and not some algorithm, yeah, and not somebody’s idea of what should be the hierarchy. Like, to me, it’s like art, yes.  like, you talked about followers and number of followers, I find it that that the value of your social numbers, matters less and less over time, because we know number one, those things can be gamed. And number two people can fall in and out of favour with large groups of people, like, you know, if they’re on Twitch, and they’re playing fortnight for instance, they might get a lot of followers, but then they stopped liking playing fortnight and they want to go back to playing, you know, yeah, something else. They’re, they’re not going to have the same appeal, but they might have still have those fortnight followers, you know, I’m saying, so like, to me, it’s like, there’s, there’s people who have a lot more like, followers and likes and subscribers, who, who have come out with, you know, rally tokens. They just don’t have as many supporters as we have, you know, I’m saying, like, as long as people can speak up, and be like, yeah, I’m a supporter. And I’m not just here for to click Subscribe on YouTube, I’m here to send you $50 I don’t really care if you have 4 million subscribers on whatever social platform if none of them will send you $50 for your content. So as long as the number value represents reality, I’m fine with it.

Adam Levy: Love it. I think that’s a perfect place to end off, man. More power to you bro. Good, shit with all that you’re doing. I wish you all the success and I hope to have you again soon.

Matt MacDonald: Thanks, Adam. Appreciate it man. Thanks for having me.

Adam Levy: Of course.

Categories
Podcast Transcript

Here’s The Ultimate Breakdown of the Current DAO Ecosystem

Listen on: Spotify | Apple Podcast | Google Podcast

Background

Mint Season 1 episode 8 features Cooper Turley who’s actively shaping the Creator Economy through projects like Audius, Friends with Benefits, and PleasrDAO. He advises Variant as an operator and investor and works with teams on token launches and governance through Fire Eyes DAO.

On this episode, we talk about his recent article mapping out the current DAO ecosystem. With 100s of DAOs in existence, he argues which ones he thinks will outpace the test of time, his point of view on how crypto is revolutionizing the music industry, why he’s betting big on DAOs, and so much more. 

Show links:

DAO Landscape: https://coopahtroopa.mirror.xyz/_EDyn4cs9tDoOxNGZLfKL7JjLo5rGkkEfRa_a-6VEWw

How To Launch A Token: https://forefront.news/blog/how-to-launch-a-token


Thank you to Season 1’s NFT sponsors!

1. Coinvise – https://coinvise.co/

2. POAP – https://poap.xyz/

Interested in sponsoring future seasons? Get in touch here!


Adam Levy: Coop, welcome, man. Thanks for being on. How you doing?

Cooper Turley: Hey, man doing well, thank you for having me.

Adam Levy: Of course, bro, of course. Alright, let’s get started. For those who don’t know you, let’s give a quick brief about yourself, what you did before crypto, and kind of where you are now.

Cooper Turley: Yeah, so I’ve been a fan in the music industry for a long time. Prior to crypto, I was super deep into journalism, DJing, touring, all the likes. Graduated with music business degree and then fell down the crypto rabbit hole as a way to sort of make a name for myself in a new industry. So the past five years, I like to say I’ve been building the creator economy, doing a lot of work on the community front, helping creators learn how to leverage technology to their advantage.

Adam Levy:   Awesome. I think a big misconception that people get when they enter crypto is that they have to be technical, and be a developer and know how to build smart contracts. Obviously, people like you and I were more community focused, more front end. What do you see being like your day-to-day role in crypto?

Cooper Turley: Communications at large. I mean, I think that marketing and strategy are really important, you know, relationship building, business development, all of those kind of fall under that umbrella, but basically helping to connect the dots and make sure that people are working on the right thing. So, you know, I’m definitely not technical in nature. But I’ve gotten far enough to the point that I can speak the language well enough to make sure that I’m helping to point people in the right direction and get shit done.

Adam Levy: Yeah. Who got you into crypto? Like, how did you hear about Bitcoin, Ethereum? I know you’re a big ETH head for obvious reasons. Like how did you fall down that rabbit hole? What’s that story?

Cooper Turley: So my music business teacher was teaching a class on the future of music. And in that course, he actually mentioned smart contracts is the way to expedite royalty payments. You know, at that time, it made perfect sense to me, you know, I should be able to send half of a transaction to someone directly with no middleman and it shouldn’t take six months. And so after hearing that, I just kind of dug a little deeper into what he was talking about. I stumbled across a bunch of white papers. And then from there, you know, the rabbit hole kind of opened up and I quickly found myself reading more about it every single day.

Adam Levy:   And it was ETH that you bought first or what was the first one you bought?

Cooper Turley: No, first things I bought were Bitcoin and a bunch of random shit on bit tracks like terrible. Most of them went to zero. You know, there’s definitely a rite of passage in crypto, where when you’re first getting involved, it’s difficult to distinguish between what is valuable and what’s not valuable. It actually wasn’t until about a year or two into my crypto career that I started to really understand, you know, the power that Ethereum had with smart contracts and kind of all the capabilities on top of it, that further led me to kind of building a career on top of that ecosystem that I have today.

Adam Levy:   Gotcha. And the reason I kind of have you here, obviously, you published the fire article, kind of covering the DAO landscape, they got a ton of traction online, a lot of eyeballs. First off, like how much time did you put into that? Because, that’s pretty comprehensive.

Cooper Turley: Yeah, I’d say about 10 to 20 hours. You know, when I go deep on a subject, I really like to look across the whole space, trying to aggregate as many projects as possible, put out a tweet a few days before I published with kind of a VIP, or an MVP version of it, that kind of had a map. And I said, “Hey, if you want to be on this map, now’s your chance”, to try to give everyone the time to get on it so they couldn’t pitch me after. But you know, all things considered, I’ve been working actively in the DAO space for about two to three years at this point as early as some grant styles back in 2018. But the past three to five months, we’ll call it has been I’ve been seeing a lot more traction around this sector in particular. And so I really wanted to aggregate a lot of my learnings and help people understand what I was seeing in the space.

Adam Levy:   Yeah, and I only asked that, because you do a lot of things and everyone’s title for you is, like Cooper comma, a lot of things, right. So you’re managing our RAC’s social token, you’re working at Audius, you’re a part of many organizations in different groups. I feel like the more Discord channels you pop in, the more you see your name involved, right? Whether it be balancer as well. One, how do you find the time to manage everything when there’s a lot of FOMO in crypto, and everybody wants to get their hands on a lot of things and be exposed to a lot of things, how do you manage your time between Audeus, between REC, between these style projects, living life, and just being a human?

Cooper Turley: Yeah. I mean, I like to say I work on whatever excites me. I’ve gotten to a point in my life where my work and my you know, outer life balance are basically the same. Where like, I’m doing social stuff, and it happens to be work-related too. So, time wise, you know, I think I’m just keeping my finger on the pulse trying to make sure I’m aware of what’s going on. And more recently, when I see people with an affinity for the space that are really excited to use the technology, I want to try and carve out time to help them. Because I think those are the use cases where you learn the most about what’s going wrong and where we need to improve as an industry moving forward.

Adam Levy:   Yeah. I think also from the point of view of that many times you can be an active contributor and a passive contributor. How do you kind of not prioritize, because that kind of falls back to that answer, but being a part of so many different organizations, like when you are joining one and you becoming more of an active contributor, what do you find yourself doing? And then, how does that kind of spread across the multiple groups you get involved with?

Cooper Turley: Yeah, it comes in waves. I mean, I like to say that I work on a lot of different sprints at one time. And so for any given project, they’re typically cycles where they’re rolling out a big update, you know, they’re releasing a product, they’re looking to do a big marketing push, and so I try and stay aware of everything that’s happening. And when I see something I can really double down on, I really try and hop in and create as much value as possible. You know, these days, we see a lot of these DAOs forming boards or councils to try and sit on as many of those as possible. And, you know, beyond being a member of a DAO, I really like to try and add value where I can as it makes sense. And just being there, you know, putting in a couple hours a week, it’s really not as much time as you’d think it’s just really the intent and the commitment, always stay active and engaged with what’s going on there.

Adam Levy: Yeah. Do you ever find yourself spread too thin? You know, because you want to get involved with too many things, do you ever come across that? Because I think it’s like a point of fatigue that many people come across on crypto because they’re trying to get involved with different projects. You ever experienced that?

Cooper Turley: I haven’t found it to be the case yet. I mean, luckily, I have a lot of people around me who are fantastic co-workers of mine, I can really trust them with the stuff that I’m working on. And if it gets to a point where I feel like I’m getting too overwhelmed, I’ll make sure to try and delegate that to someone I really trust. So the strength of my network has helped me kind of do all the things that I do. And I really value those relationships helped me get across the finish line for all the stuff that I work on.

Adam Levy:   Yeah, that’s fair, it makes a lot of sense. So the first DAO you joined was a grand style back in 2018. Which one was that?

Cooper Turley: It was called Meta Cartel. So this was basically my first real friend group in the space. You know, up until that point, I was traveling the world, going to crypto conferences, basically by myself in the middle of, you know, Thailand going to some random blockchain conference. And then I started hearing about these things called Ethereum developer conferences, ETH global events, DEF CON, you know, these more premier Ethereum events. And as I got there, I found this group of people really focused on mainstream adoption. They were saying, “Hey, we have a group of us that love the idea of crypto, we think that we’re too technical now. And we want to get beyond that to help expedite mainstream adoption”. To me, that really stuck out and so I just kind of got involved. I met a bunch of people on the DAO, you know, some of the early members were really welcoming to me. People like James Wall, and Alex Mazur, and Peter Pan, really just took me under their wing and kind of got me involved in a group. And, you know, the rest is history from there. But that was the DAO that really set it off for me and really helped guide my career in the right direction.

Adam Levy:   Yeah. You know, that point in time 2018, I remember that really, specifically, because late 70s, early 80s, when I started getting involved, and at the time, you saw a lot of these defi projects that are well and alive right now being built during that dead period during that crypto winter, right? And a lot of people were just really looking for devs to help build out these solutions. And it was hard to find community roles to kind of bootstrap your career for non-technical people. But I guess as time persists, right, people need community members, people need front facing people. And largely part of what DAOs are, right? It’s a lot of these front facing individuals, that either play community roles, right, management roles, mod roles. Talk to me more about that. Like what are you seeing, like the types of roles and the people that are either joining DAOs, forming DAOs, what does that look like to you?

Cooper Turley: Yeah. I use the term operator broadly. You know, on the role of coordination, I think there’s so much to be done in a DAO on any given day that having these lead individuals who are running point on organizing community calls. You know, they’re taking notes that, you know, internal calls, they’re helping to organize different team leads, you know, these people that are kind of just playing point across the community. I’m starting to see more and more some of the first hires every now makes is basically a community manager on steroids. Where it’s not just about being in a chat, and like moderating it, it’s about actually running the show behind the scenes, you know, making sure all the ducks are in a row, making sure that all the game plans in order. And most importantly, keeping everyone abreast to it. You know, there’s so many people across so many sectors in every DAO that a lot of times people don’t know, what a DAO is working on. And so having one person that kind of acts as the touch point, to really organize everything and keep everyone in check, I think is probably one of the most valuable roles that the DAO has to offer today.

Adam Levy:   Yeah. And a lot of these DAOs get started from a group chat, and I know you wrote in your article. At least one ETH, probably even, maybe even less sometimes. Telegram group chat and a bold idea to kind of pursue and when people are thinking DAOs, sometimes we will get confused by buzzwords, right. And especially the people are going to be listening to this, right? These creators, these individuals that either want to make their audience more crypto native form these DAOs. It kind of gets, I guess, confusing, because from a creator’s point of view, let’s talk about from a musician’s point of view. Is it like modern day fan clubs, right? And when you’re building these modern day fan clubs, right now, they’re managed by centralized entities. So when people are thinking about forming these decentralized autonomous organizations, how can they kind of dictate whether they should pursue more of the centralized path and do  what’s known through an LLC model and have a management team that manage fan clubs and manages social profiles, etc, etc., versus decentralizing it and making people a part of it? Like how should people kind of dictate whether that’s right for them?

Cooper Turley: I think it’s a gradual path forward. You know, I think that at the start just getting people to understand the fact that you have a token associated with your project is a really scary thing. And so spending the first three months let’s call it getting people familiar with that topic, saying, “Hey, if you hold these tokens, you’re gonna get a better relationship with me and deeper access into that community”. That’s kind of like be one of it. And then based on how receptive your audience is to that, I think over time you introduce things like voting, you know, like the most important pieces of a DAO that are kind of picked away and just introduced very gradually. And as you kind of keep running that flywheel and your most active members understand that this token is an integral part of your ecosystem, then you can start doing deeper things like treasury management, you know, off chain voting, like, you know, token swaps and whatnot. But for the first, let’s call it three to six months of any creator token’s lifecycle, I don’t think it makes sense to try and hit someone over the head and say, you’re now part of this magic DAO Working Group. You know, you slowly weed them in and give them incentives to keep contributing. And then, before you know it, you’ll just have a DAO right in front of you.

Adam Levy:   Yeah. And I think you’re seeing that right now between rally role and all these random independent ERC 20 tokens that are pegged to either people’s name, brand or reputation, right? You’re seeing a lot of the creators experiment with this route of going public. And they’re trying to create utility, trying to create value to rally in a network effect behind it. And I think we’re starting to see at a point where, okay, you’ve taken yourself “public”, you have your social token, you have anywhere between 70 to 500 people holding it right, you have the Discord channel, what is that process now to make that transition into a DAO? And I only bring that up, because the most common example or the most successful example today is either friends with benefits or whale that come to mind. Right? And whale didn’t start through a DAO format. They started more centralized. And now they’ve transitioned to a DAO. So like, you have your token, you have people holding it, how do you transition into this DAO?

Cooper Turley: It’s a great question. I mean, speaking off the cuff on I think most importantly, is finding contributors that you can trust to run the thing. So going beyond giving people rewards for liking social posts, actually empowering them to have true ownership over the project. So, tasking them with setting up community calls on a regular basis, tasking them with doing competitions to engage your token holders more, you know, things like that, and really building out that core team of let’s call it five to 10 people that you really trust to be the inner circle of the DAO, that seems like v1 to me. And then I think v2 is once you have that inner circle trusted actually putting a substantial amount of money into a pot for people to be able to decide what to do with. You know, I think for most creator tokens, giving away your own tokens fantastic, it’s easiest thing on the table. I challenge everyone that starting a DAO to think about how can you hold assets outside of your own native token. When you start going through that process of either swapping your token for ETH or a stable coin or something like that, and then choosing how to distribute that to your community in the form of paid roles, you know, things start to get really interesting. And that’s where I think the stuff like governance becomes more important to actually make it a reality.

Adam Levy:   So when you’re talking about these assets that people are holding outside of the communities, what else can you kind of give an example to outside of governance, just so people understand.

Cooper Turley: Yeah. So with friends with benefits, we now have four different teams. Each of those teams has a team leads, we have editorial, product, membership, and treasury. Each one of those teams has a team lead that’s receiving USDC on a monthly basis, and some tokens on top of that. You know, there’s a pool of incentives for anyone that wants to join those teams. But you kind of have these organizations that are more formalized in sort of their structure. And then outside of that, we have kind of ad hoc monthly budgets that we post on snapshot for things like events. So in Miami, we threw an IRL event, we booked some DJs, we rented out a venue, doing some stuff at ECC coming up in a couple weeks. And so there are definitely larger decisions to be made with like dollars, basically. And when those come into the picture, I think it’s important to have, you know, governance in place to be able to keep the community informed on what you want to spend it on.

Adam Levy:   Yeah. One thing that I find very interesting about friends with benefits is that you guys had a capital raise well after you guys were established, you proved your concept and the vision that you’re trying to execute. And now, the DAO is very fluid, right? It’s very rich, capital rich. And I feel like at some point now, you guys have your treasury and your grants program, right, from what I’m understanding. And that’s even probably being applied to build products internally that help kind of orchestrate the DAO more efficiently. Like the best thing that comes to mind is, when I was in Miami, I attended the friends with benefit happily a member, so everyone go check it out. But, you know, like, there’s a point where, okay, the club is full, but also how do you authenticate that people are holders? And how can you do that with the people in the front that are permitting people in and out so that you or Trev or more of these core contributors don’t have to be like, okay, you’re in, you’re in, you’re in, you’re kind of thing, right? So these are like, these are projects and products, obviously, that will develop with time and all these things are social experiments. But now that these creators, they’re getting capital right there and they’re getting their fans to pump in switch from USDC to their native token, creating these liquidity pools, etc. At what point I guess once you have your DAO, how do you now kind of manage and portion a segment for your treasury, portion a segment for your grants, etc., etc. Like how do you segment then also for team leads, like how does that work exactly?

Cooper Turley: There’s no right answer here. I mean, I’ll go back to like trusting your core contributors. I think every team has its own unique skill sets and doing everything you can to empower them. You know, the one thing I love about DAO is people pretty much define their own salaries. You know, if someone wants to work for the DAO full time, chances are, they’ll present a proposal saying, “Hey, I want this amount of money to do this amount of work”. And in that situation, you know, whatever the outcome of that is, will happen naturally. You know, I think that we’re all as an industry is trying to figure out standards around that. And so you’re seeing tools to help with this. You know, in the rally ecosystem, I’m a big fan of these guys working on bonfire, it’s basically a tool to create, you know, easier ways to distribute tokens and do fun things with your tokens. On the Ethereum side of things, we have tools like coordinate to distribute tokens to active contributors. And so right now, you know, I think it’s more about earmark a budget, you know, of whatever amount you want to do, and then figure out how to spend that relative to who wants to work on it. So if someone wants to come to the table and run a podcast for you, or if they want to run a newsletter for you, you know, give them some coins, see what they do. It’s not like you’re locked into having to do these things for years on end. The approach we take at friends with benefits is throw stuff at the wall and see what sticks. And now over time, as we run a lot of these experiments, we can start to see, you know, really clearly defined working groups come out of that. So like I said, a product team to further build things like that RSVP for IRL events, we’re working very hard on that now, because we saw their problem from our first event that we threw. But we never would have known that was going to happen if we didn’t throw the event in the first place. So you know, just trying to figure out how to really get people activated and mobilized around anything regarding the community, breaking stuff with it, and then putting smart people on the task to solve it. I think it’s a pretty smart way to just kind of go about it and figure out what works every time.

Adam Levy:   But the challenge is, how do you do this in a decentralized manner? Because naturally, with DAOs, you’re not going to have your CEO, your managers, your executives. You can call them team leads, but are people still taking order from people in a decentralized fashion? Like, I think that’s a misconception that people come across. Like, how does a group function without a leader, right?

Cooper Turley: Yeah.

Adam Levy:   How do you guys think about that?

Cooper Turley: That’s a great question. I think that you know, orders kind of naturally form in and of themselves. I think what’s important is that you’re not giving someone like full power to make every decision. And everyone that is in power is aware of the fact that they are part of a wider group. So at FWB, our first hire was Alex Zain. He’s absolutely killing it for us. I would say that he’s been making a lot of the bigger decisions on stuff like events and sort of governance and, you know, moving the ball forward on team lead side of things. And while we all have a say in that, you know, he’s been really mindful of looping people in and kind of making sure that people feel engaged and empowered. And in that situation, I think it’s okay to have a couple of people that have a lot of the shots being called so long as they’re recognizing that they are not a dictator and they need to take into consideration, you know, the thoughts of others when making these decisions.

Adam Levy:   Yeah, that makes a lot of sense. Have you seen any, whether it be with FWB or other DAs that you’ve participated in, have you seen examples where kind of the founders come into place, right, they set the vision, they set the mission, they bring in key stakeholders to kind of manage and help out on executing different stuff. And then because it’s a DAO, right, and naturally is decentralized other shareholders that hold a lot of FWB, or whatever DAO token it is, they kind of maybe come more into power than what was intended and start shifting the direction of what that DAO was intentionally intended to do and execute on. Have you seen that? I know that one example that comes to mind more recently is Cane Warwick with Synthetics, right? But have you kind of seen these more with these social communities that are forming or investment communities that are being formed?

Cooper Turley: Not so much with the social communities. I mean, the first example that comes to mind for me here is [unsure word 18:30], the Wi Fi ecosystem, where basically it’s this highly sophisticated defi protocol. Andre Caronia who started it is this famous defi developer. But over time, he sort of phased himself out in favor of this more DAO like structure, you know, and I don’t think that’s been for the better or worse, I think the project’s been operating extremely well. But what it does show is you don’t need the core founder to be making every decision for somebody to move forward. It just requires people to be highly incentivized and aligned to build cool shit.

Adam Levy:   Yeah. Now that makes a lot of sense. I want to bring up your DAO landscape article and kind of run through that for a minute and specifically bring out this is the old one, let’s really quickly find this new one. It’s on via mirror on your profile, right?

Cooper Turley: Yeah. So it’s pretty funny.

Adam Levy: Yeah.

Cooper Turley: The old image I tweeted out, you know, you asked me earlier how much time that I spend on this, you know, my first pass through, I knew that people were gonna roast me because I didn’t write anything in the image. And so I basically put that first tweet out to say, “Hey, this is v1 of this map, I’m going to publish in 48 hours, if you want your project to be named here, this is your shot to do it”. And so obviously, that got some great engagement. I think 300 plus projects commented on it. So I had to kind of siphon it down a bit. But what it showed is that, you know, taking time to get feedback from the community before publishing actually ended up being net positive for this post. And as you’ll see in this new map that you pull up in a second here, it’s really just mind boggling like how many DAOs there are in the ecosystem now, and there’s so many that it’s hard to keep track. You know, Eugene commented on my posts when I was asked her peer review saying, at some point, it’s going to be impossible to track all these because DAOs are basically just LLCs.

Adam Levy: Right.

Cooper Turley: You have a map for all the LLCs in the world because they’re just too many to count. But, you know, luckily, we’re at a stage where it’s early enough now that we can sort of paint a full overview picture of that, and recognize that there are still a lot of opportunities out there for people who want to get involved and create value in the space.

Adam Levy:   Yeah, and actually, let’s pull it out, because the link that I saved was actually a different link. So let’s do this really quick. Let me pull it up. So we’ll go over here share screen. Boom, okay, DAO landscape, okay, so you broke it down very strategically, and very concise and clean, which I love about your writing, every time I come across one of your pieces. Specifically, with this one, it’s like four to five lines, per DAO, explaining what it is, and it’s getting straight to the point, okay? So just to bring up the graphic, I know it kind of like fades out. But the DAO Operating System, Protocol DAOs, Investment DAOs, Grant DAOs, Service DAO, Social DAOs, Collector DAOs, and whatever is below the fold, right here and Media DAOs, right. And all these DAOs serve their own intention, try to solve their own problems, there probably is a lot of overlap. Probably, who knows, it’s hard to keep up with everything, but I’m just seeing with how you categorize them. Okay, I want to go one by one really quick. Give me a quick definition, from DAO Operating Systems, Protocol DAOs, Investment DAOs, so on and so forth. And we’ll kind of dive into all of them individually.

Cooper Turley: Yeah, so I’ll just read off the map here. And maybe you can scroll down throughout. You know, basically, when I was making this article, I wanted to try and differentiate what different DAOs operated under and like a very large bucket. So starting at the top there, DAO Operating Systems, this is a way for you to make a DAO. You know, any of the projects in there help you either form a DAO, start a token, or basically create an operating system. Protocol DAOs are probably the most common ones that you see. That is a DAO for an underlying defi protocol or project that basically governs the way the whole system operates. So you’ll see a lot of huge names on there. You know, I use the term DAO here, because most of these projects have a treasury of let’s say, a billion dollars that’s being allocated across the ecosystem in some way, shape, or form. And token holders have the ability to vote on how that capital is allocated, which makes them really exciting. Investment DAOs are ones that I’ve been a part of in the past year. This is basically people coming together pulling let’s say 1000 ETH, and then deciding how to invest in early stage projects, which has been really fun to kind of parlay token based investments. Grants DAO, we talked about this earlier, some of the first ones I got involved with. Basically, we all have capital we want to see it put to work in a productive way for people that need it. And so people make applications to receive funding and these Grant DAOs allocate them capital to build cool shit in their ecosystem. Service DAOs, you know, I’ve spent a lot of time working through Service DAOs in crypto. This is basically a way for you to provide a valuable service through decentralized manner. I’ll call out that one fire eyes in there that I do a lot of work through for a token and governance design, where we’ll work with teams on an engagement to launch a token, to launch a protocol upgrade, and get paid through an on chain wallet and ether tokens to kind of do what would be considered consulting in a traditional sense, but in a much more involved and hands on manner. Alright, going over to Social DAOs there, I’m going to cut you off and we keep going we’re gonna bang them all out. Social DAOs, you know, after VBC club, the thing I really love about Social DAOs, it’s more about the human nature than it is the financial nature. For a lot of those Protocol DAOs that you see, the KPI is generally protocol fees. So how much is this protocol generating? What’s the revenue? And what’s the profit? You know, while a lot of Social DAOs still have that under the hood, it’s more about what does it mean to be a member of this community? You know, what are the qualities and aspirations that I have by being a part of this DAO, and how do I come together to make friends online and then hopefully, in the future IRL relationships. Collector DAOs mainly around NFT’s. So [unsure word 23:52] DAO is one that I’ve been doing a lot of work through. Basically groups of individuals coming together to collect high value NFT’s, and then commission artists and empower and democratize those pieces over time. And the last one is Media DAOs. So basically, instead of there being a closed entity that’s doing reporting and story writing, and whatnot, we’re now seeing this new chapter where anyone can come and contribute to a media outlet, get paid in tokens for that work and be a lot more open source about the way in which they source stories and the way and they share that to the world.

Adam Levy: Boom, there we go. That was the most comprehensive fricking breakdown ever. Alright, so how many projects are on there? I couldn’t count. Do you know?

Cooper Turley: At least 100?

Adam Levy:   Okay, over a 100 projects. And there’s the saying in the startup world where when you make an investment in a startup, nine are going to fail, one is going to succeed. How many of these DAOs do you think are going to be here a year, two years from now?

Cooper Turley: Generously 50% maybe. You know, I think that we’re in a very early experimentation phase where the idea of starting and joining a DAO is more exciting than actually executing upon it. You know, when you look at those Protocol DAOs, I’d say that basically everyone that I listed in that Protocol DAO bucket is going to make it. I think it’s some of the more fringe ones that is unclear whether or not they have long-term sustainability. But what I will say is the fact that they’re becoming so rampant and how fast they’re being spun up. Inevitably that at least a few of them are going to stand out and become like these really monolithic for the DAO space. I think that right now, it’s just a little bit too early to tell which those are and whether or not we actually have the conus, where all of us to make it through a bear market when the money’s not flowing as much as it is right now.

Adam Levy:   Yeah. One of the more I guess, exciting ones that come to my mind, and I’ll bring it up again, are these Investment DAOs, right? And some of them are structured, more decentralized, others have more of a centralized entity supporting them. And decisions are made more decentralized, right? How does that actually work from a legal standpoint if you’re a crowdfunding capital right now and either you’re investing in illegal securities, or you’re investing in, I don’t know, whatever it may be? Like, how is that structure kind of like, put together from a legal point of view? Do you have insight on that?

Cooper Turley: Yeah, so I’ll call out the Lau here, because I think they’ve done the best job of this. The Lau is a LLC registered company here in the US, they’re limited to accredited investors only. And there’s a maximum of 99 members that can participate in that vehicle. And so everything that’s being done there is done as an accredited investor. And that makes us that these investments are compliant under SEC regulations. You know, on the other end of the spectrum, we have things like Duck DAO, which I’ll call out, which is basically like send funds to an address and pull capital together, that works conceptually the same way that the Lau does, but I think there’s a lot less formal process in place around KYC, you know, like AML, these typical investor procedures that we see for more formal investments. And as a result, a lot of the projects get spawned out of those are these kind of random coins that come into the market, you know, they’re definitely far more ad hoc, have like a lot shorter life cycles. And so if I had to break it down, I would say that the more legally compliant a DAO is, typically the longer time horizon those investments are, and typically, the more sophisticated those investors are, then their numbers of those DAOs.

Adam Levy:   Yeah. And in terms of these Grant DAOs, I feel like there’s also a lot of overlap between the Grant DAOs and the Protocol DAOs. And maybe I’m getting confused, because a lot of these Protocol DAOs have grant departments, right? That Department DAOs like sections that kind of make decisions on what to spend the capital on and their DAOs within themselves, right there may be organized, more centralized, per se, but they govern the funds, just like any other DAO would. The one that comes to mind is Ave right now, right? Ave, is going through that process. And if you’re trying to get sponsorship for events, or you’re trying to get any form of capital to build on top of the protocol, or promote the protocol, you have to go through more of the decentralized funnel to get that money. So would you say there’s like overlap between those two as well?

Cooper Turley: Yeah. So every Grant DAO spawns out of the Protocol DAO. The reason that I broke this off is for a lot of the ones that you see that are also in the Protocol DAO section. So Compound, Uniswap Ave, Audeus, as four examples, those have all been spun out of governance. So basically, to pass a proposal in those Protocol DAOs, you need a fuck ton of tokens, need to make a really compelling argument. And it’s really difficult to pass proposal. And so what we’ve been seeing happening in this space is someone will make a proposal to start a Grants DAO, this will basically take money out of the really heavy, essentially, really heavy DAO in the center, and allocate it to a more nimble working group that becomes a Grants DAO. And so in order to apply for a Grants DAO, you don’t need to have a bunch of tokens, you can fill out a form, fill out a Google form, get 1000 tokens here and there for doing some more lightweight work. And it really helps to disintermediate that step between needing super heavy on chain governance to get a really small amount of capital, and instead empower let’s call it five people to oversee a small fund of money and make sure that it gets sent out to the right people in a much more nimble manner.

Adam Levy:   Yeah, that makes sense. Out of all these, what would you say is like your favorite DAO category that you’ve kind of enjoyed either participating in the most, or you’ve seen kind of develop over the course of time? What’s your favorite?

Cooper Turley: Probably Service DAOs. I mean, I’d say Social DAOs are a close second. But for me, my career has been basically predicated off working in a decentralized world. And so seeing the development around Service DAOs, and basically, decentralized working groups coming together to deliver like, really valuable products and service, I think has been extremely exciting. And just based on my recent conversations, we’ve only just begun to see like what DAO servicing looks like. And I think in this next year, we’re gonna see some really, really smart people come to the table on that front.

Adam Levy:   Yeah, I think a lot of DAO service or South server servers, whatever you want to call them, you’re seeing them very, like, human capital intensive. Do you think it’s going to start transitioning into more of a software play down the line? And if it’s already kind of swinging there, what have you seen work? What have you seen not work?

Cooper Turley: I’m not sure if I’d use the word software. I think the most important part about Service DAOs is they need to know how to make on chain proposals. So this is something that’s really complicating to the average person. Basically what you’re doing is you’re going to a Protocol DAO that has a billion of dollars capital in it’s treasury and you’re saying, “Hey, I think I can add value to this protocol. Here’s a proposal for what I want to work on. And here’s how I’m going to rally people around me to support this work and then execute it”. And so you know, right now, the way that Service DAO work is either like hiring as a freelancer, like we’re gonna give you 1000 bucks to write this smart contract, or what I personally like to do more is creating a really creative proposal and going to a community talking out with them, and then having a nice allocation of tokens to go and build, really valuable upgrade to the platform that when executed upon actually makes your work and your compensation more valuable.

Adam Levy:   Can you give me an example of what that looks like? And I only bring that up, because a lot of people are going to be approaching this space. And they need reference as to what’s quality versus not quality. So what does that look like from your point of view? And give us an example of how you’ve kind of done that? And with who?

Cooper Turley: Yeah, so I’ll call out balancers one great example. Me and my friends at Fire Eyes, we did a proposal around governance mining, where we basically say, “Hey, we want people to be incentivized to contribute to the Governance Forum to the Discord, to vote on proposals”. And we mapped out a pretty long proposal on how to get involved and what that could look like. It included allocations of tokens to go to each of those programs and included specifications on how to get those integrated into the communities. And I would say for anyone looking to learn about this, pop into basically any Governance Forum and or snapshot, look at any space for the DAOs mentioned on the map here. And you’ll see an endless list of proposals where people are defining, we want to take x tokens and do y with it. In the middle, there’s this nice formula proposal with a framework on how to basically write that up and get it presented to a community in a very digestible and well-articulated manner.

Adam Levy:   Yeah. I think it’s like critical. There needs to be some type of template that people go off to and reference, I think in the future. Because, you’re just going to be seeing as these communities get bigger and bigger, and like the most random proposals and the most unstructured format…

Cooper Turley: Yeah.

Adam Levy:   just taking up space on these voting platforms. And it’s probably already happening right now to an extent. So, I want to pivot this for a minute, into the creators point of view, okay? And into whether it be the dancer, the artist, the internet personality, the fashion designer, whatever it may be, right? When you’re building these DAOs and you’re trying to empower your fans, your audience to partake in this journey, there’s already a hurdle with getting them more crypto native. And we said that the way to combat that is just give your tokens out for free, okay? And once people are holding it, they’re in their Discord, they’re being integrated into the process, you slowly transition them into the DAO format, and find those key excited individuals, those people that love you to death, that have the Facebook fan pages for you, bring them into place and have them manage and be key holders. But when you’re building these DAOs, and you’re trying to get I guess creators and more of the normie crowd into play, how do they communicate this to their fans? Like how do they tell them, “Guys, you’re managing me now, you’re managing my brand, you guys, because you helped me build it”. Like, how do they communicate that? Because in crypto makes sense, right?

Cooper Turley: Yeah.

Adam Levy: It’s like okay, we play the ownership, economy thesis, etc., etc. But for creators, more normie people, they have a hard time understanding what Bitcoin is, you know?

Cooper Turley: Yeah.

Adam Levy:   Like, how do you position that in the right way?

Cooper Turley: I think it’s the framing that we’re all doing this together. You know, I think for a lot of creators, there’s historically been a very one-sided relationship where a fan is consuming content that you put out, and they’re getting to enjoy that content. But beyond that, they’re not really seeing any of the upside associated with it. So the more that you can show and not tell where it’s less about, we’re all in this together and more about actually showing them if you get, let’s say $100 in from the sale of a T-shirt, and you end up giving that back out to fans in the form of a token. You know, there are things you can do with your tokens and with your ecosystem to very clearly show that this is a community-owned project now. You know, everything that I do is going to be directly valuable to you as well. And over time, you know, it’s my hope that we just open that more and more to five years from now, when I’m getting every dollar in as an artist, it’s going into a community treasury, it’s very clearly allocated who it’s going to. And as that we can all kind of win together rather than the world today, where you have fans, they’re consuming everything but if they want to get involved on like more of a financial or social level, basically the most that they can do is just share your song a bunch of times on Spotify or Discord or Twitter or Instagram or something and hope that you give it a retweet, which in my opinion falls very short of what’s possible.

Adam Levy:   Yeah, no, I 100% and I think we’re seeing very early stages of that. First person that comes to mind is Harrison First. He took himself public, created his own social token, and he incentivized people to earn by basically saying, “I need you guys to scout how many times I said this word in the song and if you get the right number and DM me, I’ll send you tokens”, right? And it’s kind of contributing based off participation. It’s contributing based on action. Another cool example that comes to mind is Ali, who is like a main mainstream Twitch streamer, right, YouTube personality, and she incentivizes participation by putting together these huge events, these gaming events where solely attainable and accessible through Ali coin rewards, or distributed through Ali coin. To buy your way into the event, you got to buy it with Ali coin, right? And now she’s like building an ecosystem around Ali coin. And it’s gotten to the point where and I’m only giving this as an example, because it references a lot of what you preached earlier. Now people have become so ingrained and in tune with what Ali coin can do. Now they’re motivated to start building and using it to their advantage. For example, someone in her DAO is now building a bot right or built a bot that would help streamline communication and processes in the Discord, and they got paid in Ali coin, right?

Cooper Turley: Absolutely.

Adam Levy:   You’re seeing like that early formation. But I still think there’s still like a mountain to climb with getting people in tune with that process. When it comes to practice, right? What does that funnel look like? What have you seen work? For example, people need to start changing the way they communicate their value and their value proposition to their fans. And they need to design their funnels for onboarding them to adopt their cryptocurrency their x token. Are there any examples you can kind of give that our people are doing it right, at least right? Whether it be guys, I’m having this concert, if you buy X amount of tokens, you’ll be integrated blah, blah, you know what I mean? Like…

Cooper Turley: Yeah.

Adam Levy:   what does that funnel look like?

Cooper Turley: Yeah. I mean, I think we’re seeing a common trend that people that stream content in some way, shape, or form, if it’s on Twitch, if it’s a vlog on YouTube, if it’s on Tik Tok, you know, having a high level funnel to make people aware what’s going on, and making a clear call to action to go one level deeper by joining something like a Discord. I think that’s step number one. You know, I love to use Ali as an example, I think that she is a premier creator on Rally, it’s doing this extremely well. And what I’ll call out there is that for the first two months of Ali coin, being in existence, it was very much educational, just saying, “Guys, I have this token now, I’m super new to it, you know, you can buy some if you want, we’re figuring out what to do with it, slowly adding in new access levels, and then over time, you get into a flow”. Whereas other people in your community become more educated, they can do that for you. You know, there’s nothing that I think is worse for a creator to do than go out and just start blanket shilling their token saying buy this, buy this, buy this, but not supporting the reasons why you need to get involved in the first place. And so I encourage creators to really work on what is access in your community look like, you know, what are the relationships that people can build with you and one another by getting involved? And the more concretely you lay those out, I think the more confident you’re going to be in talking about it, and the more success you’re gonna see as a result of that.

Adam Levy:   Yeah, I agree with you. I think starting out very small, being honest and transparent, that you’re new to this and aligning your like insecurities and being empathetic like that to your audience will make it more relatable, and more and more promising that and more exciting, essentially. So when people are kind of launching these tokens, and they transitioning into building a DAO, I think many people get excited by the numbers of seeing a name being publicly traded on a screen and having a certain amount of liquidity and a fully diluted market cap and all these big shiny things attract the people, right? But now, doing it in practice is what kind of gets it going. And I think many people kind of not forget, but maybe don’t even understand what challenges kind of face them. So…

Cooper Turley: Yeah.

Adam Levy:   when you’re starting to build these communities, and you’re in either you’re bootstrapping from nothing, or you’re trying to onboard an existing fan base or audience and make them more crypto native. What does that look like in terms of challenges that people aren’t seeing?

Cooper Turley: Yeah. So I sent you a message in the chat there, I wrote a blog post for forefront on how to launch a token. This is basically you know, the past two years of my life, drastically oversimplified into a five step process on how to launch a token, I think the things that people often overestimate is how easy it is to get people to join, like people buying your token is a pretty hard step. And for you to think that people are just gonna do it naturally is pretty naive. And so instead, I think it’s about how you give people more ownership and power on like a social basis. They feel like they have a part of this project. So that once they’re involved as like a moderator or someone active in the community, you’re giving them tokens doesn’t feel like that heavy of a step because they’re already actively engaged. If you just try and go out and blindly toss these tokens on people, they’re not really going to know what’s happening, they’re not going to know what’s going on. But if you build a deep relationship with your top fans, I think they’re much more susceptible to getting involved. And that’s why I always tell you know, creators to really focus on that top one to 5% of your super fans and try and really educate them, because they’ll end up doing the legwork for the 95% of the other fans that you have. And your most important goal is just kind of seeding that message outwards. You don’t have to keep doing it yourself. So…

Adam Levy: Yeah.

Cooper Turley: I don’t know if you want to take a second to pull this blog post up I’d love to just like highlight very quickly something about…

Adam Levy:   Let’s do it. Let me share my screen. And as I bring it up, the most common or the most relevant example that comes to mind is again with Ali and her having such a broad communities, everyone that enters the Discord now, like she doesn’t really have to do anything. Like the community is “Oh, welcome, we’re so excited to have you. Here’s the steps on how to join. This is how you get started, this is how you buy the coin”, and the community is now educating one another. And she’s slowly starting to see herself kind of like migrate out of that initial leadership-controller position. But let’s bring up this blog post. Alright, super simple to the point go.

Cooper Turley: Yeah, so step one, having a community hub. You know, we talked a lot in this call about Discord, something as simple as having a place for all of your fans to come and hang out. Once you’ve built that out a little bit structurally, that you have different channels and whatnot, start taking note of who’s contributing to that. So your moderators, the people that are policing the channels, the people who are going out and sharing your streams, you know, start keeping track of your super fans they’re adding value, and then find a partner to help kind of empower them. So issuance partners here, these are platforms like Rally or Coin Buys, if you’re not a technical person, which pretty much everyone listening to this, including myself is not there are tools on the table now to help you make a token and a very easy way and give you a template to get started. You know, once you have a token out there, there’s a bunch of tools at your disposal to kind of upgrade and integrate that stack. So things like let’s just say for custody, things like governance, tools like Bonfire and Rally that I mentioned, for token distribution type thing. And once you have that blueprint in place, there’s a reason why I did Step five is Token Distribution instead of step one. You know, I think it’s really important for you to think very hard about what this looks like when you roll it out into the wild. And once you have all these first four steps launched with a token that exists with people you want to give it to and with tools to empower the way you use it, then you go out and do a token distribution and kind of kick start this flywheel. And I think you’ll find people will be really excited to get involved because they noticed that you put so much time and effort into getting that started in the first place.

Adam Levy: I think it’s a great tool set. And it’s coming obviously, from your point of view, you got a lot of experience. So anybody that’s watching the video, take notes, anybody that’s streaming this through audio, come and watch the video and look at this chart, I’ll also put it in the show notes. So back to these challenges for a minute, okay? I think like we agreed that the best way to get people on board and from your audience is just to give the token away. And a lot of creators might not come from the crypto background nor the financial background to even understand like the levels of giving to holding, right? So, how do you kind of mitigate the situation where creators just like just take my token, just take my token, they just start air dropping a bunch of tokens, they only have so much liquidity in their pools, and all these fans just don’t swap out and like bankrupt the community?

Cooper Turley: Yeah.

Adam Levy:   Right? It’s a very plausible scenario. How do they kind of mitigate that death experience?

Cooper Turley: Yeah, I think that it’s very gradually over time. You know, I think it inception being really free about who you’re giving tokens to is probably okay, it’s earlier in the lifecycle, typically, the token is worth less and the marketing exposure of it is more important than kind of the ongoing accumulation. So step one, I think you’re looking for awareness, giving people tokens for something as simple as giving you bits on a twitch stream, giving you a subscription, joining the Discord, you know, things that are really, really obvious in nature, empowering those with really small incentives to kind of start that process. I think that’s v1. And then I think over time, you know, you want to be a lot more calculated about how those tokens go out. So building deeper relationships with people, giving them deeper tasks to work on. I would say the higher quality the project becomes, and the more impactful it is, the more tokens that deserve to be earned as an incentive. And what you’ll see will happen is instead of you going really broad with giving 1000 people one token each, you’re going to start giving one person 1000 tokens. And the more ownership that they have over that project, the more trustworthy you can be with them about knowing that they’re gonna execute on the goals that you’re putting in place and the more valuable stuff that they’re producing for you is going to become.

Adam Levy:   Yeah. Let’s try to think a few years from now and kind of like, speculate on what this future may look like. When do you think we’re gonna start seeing like Migos do a DAO, right? Or Justin Bieber do a DAO, or Taylor Swift do a DAO? All these community-rich individuals who have brands that carry so much weight, when are they going to start decentralizing their communities do you think? Where’s your head at with that?

Cooper Turley: Sooner than you think would be my gut reaction. I’d caveat by saying when do you think they’re going to do it well? I think with that…

Adam Levy:   Yeah.

Cooper Turley: that question is much different, which will take three to five years. You know, what I expect is we’re gonna see a similar wave to NFT’s where every creator in the world knows that launching a token has value. We’re gonna see some sort of nifty gateway like solution, where launching it is as easy as possible, and people are going to fuck it up. You know, we’re going to see huge creators come into the space, launch a token, not really know how to engage with that. Over time, a lot of those guys get weeded out. And what will remain will be these creators that have really active Discord servers, they have really strong relationships with their true fans. And they’re not just in it to kind of make a statement. Like, they genuinely want this to be a part of their project. And so five years from now, like I said earlier, we’re gonna see these community tokens represent true ownership on a project where it’s basically equity and an artist. So if I discover someone early on, there’s a vehicle for me to get involved. There’s [inaudible 45:10] to be gained from it. And I think that once we have the platforms and tools in place for that to happen in a really native way, that’s when crypto is mainstream and it’s no longer a question of when it’s going to happen. It’s something that everyone knows about and is using every single day.

Adam Levy:   Yeah. But, there’s a problem with that, right? Because a lot of these mainstream celebrities, internet personalities, you know, they built their fame off people fan-girling over them, right? And they have a lot of clout. And at least I haven’t seen a lot of these like mainstream individuals kind of come back to these lower level guys, interact with them, hang out with them, build relationships with them. It’s really more like, you have your Instagram following, you have your Twitter following, occasionally you go on live shows and you do tours, you can do like backstage fan meet and greets. Like, it’s very disconnected, right, between the fans I feel like and in the artists itself, would you agree? Like as I’m building this point, would you agree or would you disagree with that?

Cooper Turley: I totally agree with it. I would say that I’m really loving the shift to new like subscriber base models.

Adam Levy: Yeah.

Cooper Turley: So things like Only Fans, I think are a perfect example of this, where creators are starting to realize that getting buy-ins from their top 1% is exponentially more valuable than getting a light from all their followers. And so we’ll slowly start seeing this congregation where every creator is focusing on that core group of fans and they’re going to recognize that the value to be created from engaging and capitalizing with them is far more powerful than just having 10 million Instagram followers, let’s call it.

Adam Levy:   Yeah. I think that’s gonna be one of the biggest hurdles kind of like detaching that barrier, right, and removing that and making the one that they love and adore and kind of see big stars over making them more human, more level headed, you know, so that they can onboard them and make these fan clubs. Like you have Queen, right, although they haven’t really integrated with their fans. But like the Queen community, there’s the movie, there’s like these people dress up as Queen characters, you know, the [inaudible 47:03] together. It’s basically a DAO to an extent without the bandana managing everything. And it lives and outlives itself, right?

Cooper Turley: Yeah.

Adam Levy:   And I think that that’s kind of like the goal that everybody should be playing towards, should be building towards. And DAOs now provide that instrument to do so, right?

Cooper Turley: Yeah. And I think the difference is that there’s now an incentive for an artist to do that. You know, historically, there’s transitive benefits where if you build a super fan community, hopefully they’re going to buy more tickets. But with these tokens, it’s so direct now. You can see that value being capitalized in real time. But I think it’s going to be much more obvious why you need to do this and you’re going to see those benefits right away. As opposed to historically, if you’re a big fan community, there’s a lot of social capital to gain from it, it’s the right thing to do. But that only translates to really merge sales and ticket sales versus now where it’s $10 investment in your token, and you now have 100,000 people around the world holding it and you have a million-dollar small business company just to be able to run and do cool stuff with.

Adam Levy:   I love it man. Coop, you’re a wealth of information. Thanks for being on. It’s a pleasure to have you always. Where can people kind of hear from you, find you, give yourself a quick shout out.

Cooper Turley: The best place to follow me on social is @CoopahTroopa. I’m most active on Twitter. It’s where I spend most of my time online. If you’re looking to go a level deeper than this, then you stay to listen this long shoot me a message on Discord at CoopahTroopa number 9799. Would love to hear what you’re working on and help point you in the right direction for some next steps.

Adam Levy:   Amazing, dude. Thank you.

Cooper Turley: Thank you for having me on man. We’ll talk soon.

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Podcast Transcript

Using Social Tokens to Create Gated Audio Libraries with $FIRST

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Background

Mint Season 1 episode 7 features American songwriter and producer, Harrison First who produces for other artists in addition to his own solo works through his independent label JNRY FIRST. He is one of Ängie’s best friends and a frequent collaborator. He’s also the creator of $FIRST coin. 

On this episode, we talk about his methodology for creating a token-gated audio library aimed at supporting NFT artists who need quality audio for their drops, his view on how social tokens will take the music industry by storm, how he thinks about the utility of his token, his bet on himself for being an early crypto adopter, and so much more. 


Thank you to Season 1’s NFT sponsors!

1. Coinvise – https://coinvise.co/

2. POAP – https://poap.xyz/

Interested in sponsoring future seasons? Get in touch here!


Adam Levy: Yo, yo, Harrison First: Welcome to the show. How you doing, man?

Harrison First: I’m good man. I’m good.

Adam Levy: I appreciate you being here. Man. I’m excited to deep dive on all the cool things that you’re doing, especially your latest project First, the social token. So why don’t we just get into it? And tell me a little bit about your background? What were you doing before you started tinkering with crypto? What are you doing now? And I guess where do you hope to be?

Harrison First: Yeah, man. So for me, music is always my main focus, still is my main focus. started around like my big push around 2016, 2017 as a solo artist, as Harrison First: produce artists, and yeah, man just been really putting out some really songs that I like really, like, started working out with St. JOHN, Teflon, Sega. And then once that came over to Stockholm, from New York, that’s when I found this artist, Angie, and we’ve been collaborating, and yeah, and now we’re working on our second album together. So and then, if you fast forward to today, or the past year and a half. That’s what I’ve been working on first and first started out as like a social token. That was just pretty much like for fans, fans of my music fans of some of my other artist’s music. So like a fan token. But then as I started to do more research to figure out, you know how to add value to first. That’s when it’s like, I would say a social token with some pretty cool utility behind it. And one of the biggest components is first audio, which is attached to first. And now, it’s just pretty much taken that to like another level and working on more partnerships.

Adam Levy: Nice man, I feel like the more people that I talk with, the more I realise like COVID had a really big impact on people’s creative process and the things that they experimented with. And a lot of people got out of their comfort zone, especially with the rise in crypto, I guess what, what attracted you to the social token space initially? Like? Were you already playing around with Bitcoin and ethereum? Are you just did you just jump right into first? Like, what’s that crypto background like?

Harrison First: I mean, the background, the beginning is pretty scarce, bro. My first introduction was social tokens. And then it was really getting into ethereum. And that was the blockchain that I was pretty much like obsessed about. Just because I thought it was just a super cool world where it was, it wasn’t just like wasn’t just the currency was like worlds, obviously, it’s like a world built on a currency in a blockchain. And then that’s when I start to dive into like, NF T’s. And then broulee, I just started to spend so much time in it, where it started to become 50% of my time. And I was starting to cancel like music sessions, because I was really fun to learn more and get more into it. And that’s really because they can music. Like you could spend a lot of money in music and think that you’re doing something extremely creative in music. But there’s still so many channels that kind of determine, you know, the visibility, even though you do have more control than you do you had before. But it’s just that now, you know, for me, when I look at social tokens, and NFT’s and just this whole space, in general, it feels like you can get more appreciation for innovative ideas. And that’s what I want. That’s pretty much my where my obsession comes from. So you can see, like the immediate, like value and you know, purpose of something that you do, if it is good. And you can also see like the sudden, you know, detractors if something isn’t good enough.

Adam Levy: And you measure that based off, I guess, what people buy and sell and how much they hold and how much they quote unquote invest. How do you how do you measure that?

Harrison First: Yet for me, I look at there’s two things, two things I look at right now. It’s pretty much like my discord community. So the first club, so I always look at, like, you know, how many people are dropping off? How many people Am I getting, you know, to, you know, to be a part of this special community, a community I think is special. And then I also look at something from first audio. So I can see how many people how many new wallets or how many new addresses have connected their wallets to first audio. And with first audio you need to hold 1,000 First in order to have access to a library of music to using your NFT’s. So I can look at that and see you know how many how many people just you know, maybe they’re done with first audio so they want to sell the first or people who’ve just been there from the start man and they just really believe in so I gauge it based off of that and also some social engagement. But when I look at uniswap and whatever, I don’t really gauge that because I don’t use that as a as a gauge point. Because it is I don’t think it’s purposeful. You’re talking about the actual, like the financial number itself. Yeah, like selling and buying, like buying a sewing everyday. I mean, that’ll always go up and down and down and down and down and maybe up up up. Yeah. It’s not really a good point for me to measure, like, my usefulness.

Adam Levy: Sure. Yeah. Do you think your fans feel the same way about that?

Harrison First: The people who were in from the beginning and also the people who kind of like really understand what I’m doing, like what I’m trying to do, it couldn’t it can take a bit, you know, some time because even though it is a social token, I want to look at it as like, as also a platform, like similar to other like really great platforms that I think are great, like, wearable. I think wearable, mostly I see wearable, because I always look at them as like kind of a pivotal point also, well, I like them a lot. Because they do some special, but any platform pretty much that as like a strong community. Those are the people that I’m kind of like expire aspiring to be. So I think some people understand that. And then it’s my job to continue to remind people like, yes, it’s not just a social token, or like, maybe you it’s not something that is short term, it’s more term, it’s more of a long term type of thing I’m trying to do.

Adam Levy: Yeah. How do you actually approach community building? Like, how do you how do you rally people around first, what do you find, I guess, people being attached to or interested in when they initially join the community? Is it primarily you? Is that what you’re trying to build? Is it what I guess what others stand for? That it’s attracted? Like? What do you kind of see, being that major, you know, point of attraction for many people who are in first?

Harrison First: Yeah, I think there’s maybe like two or three different groups, like one group of people. They’re really like, appreciative of like, maybe some innovative ideas, and you know, somebody coming from music and spending so much time within this space. Then obviously, I have people that come in when there’s like these giveaways, and you know, they maybe they get hooked from those giveaways, and then they appreciate it, you know, I share exclusive music, you know, stuff that’s not even out. You know, I share snippets, and I ask for advice on music for my community sometimes, you know, so, I mean, I’ve had people say, like, Nah, this is not good enough, or blah, blah, blah. And I take that into consideration. So almost as if some people are a part of the creation process. And I think there’s a group of people who really appreciate that, like music lovers and innovators. Like, they really love that. So that’s been like one of the pivotal things. And then I have like my champions, you know, people who are there, who, you know, who are there for the, like big games, the way to earn first. Those are like, really big components. And they’re really like my talking piece that people who really, you know, the retweeted the content, the post the content, you know, they’ll try to direct traffic to what we’re doing over at first. Any you have, like day traders that come in, come in and out?

Adam Levy: Yeah. Yeah, I guess you I know, you said the entry point to enter the community is 1000. First, right? Is there some strategic, I guess, conclusion you came to? That you’re like, Alright, 1000 is like the right number, because of X, Y, and Z. And even more. So you were talking about the different layers, right, the different types of community members? Do you kind of like fragment them based off? How many? Or segment them excuse me, based off how many tokens they’re holding? Right? How do you how do you look at that?

Harrison First: Yes, so the entry point to the first community. There, we tried to do something where it was like 300 person you have 1000 person you have access to everything. So that’s like, monthly air drops, you know, giveaways. Just all just access to things that regular people wouldn’t have access to. But then we dropped all of that. And you know, anybody has access to the club on Discord. But it’s, it’s the thing when we set 1000 first is just that, obviously, the more people holding, the better this for the entire community. And the plan is to you know, slowly increase the amount that you need to hold to have access to certain things. But I think when I tried to do that for like, half 1000 versus the entry point for everything, I think I was blocking out people who have potential to be like really big benefactors in the social in first community. But you know, they just didn’t have the means to have 1000 first and after some time, I said, I don’t want to block them access. So, you know, there’s like a general group where anybody can kind of be in the discord community. And yeah, it’s all you know, it’s all good. No, we have like level ups, which are ways to earn first. So you don’t need to hold a certain amount of first to do that. But yeah, we I just thought that 1000 would be like, a good number. It wasn’t really too much like mathematical algorithm. Solid number. Yes, I’ll do 1000.

Adam Levy: I like that, you know, the more the more people I talk to, the more I try to understand what’s their strategy for creating these like access groups, right, and how many tokens they hold, and I and I keep coming to the conclusion that it really depends on what the token is trading yet, right? Because if the token is trading at $1, you’re obviously not going to charge people $1,000 depending on how exclusive the club is, and what you’re offering, right. But on the other hand, right, if I remember correctly, I checked last night, your token was trading about like half a cent, right? So 1000 it’s like a good entry point, right? To get exclusive content to get to hear never before never before heard songs, etc, etc. Right.

Harrison First: I think it’s like four cents. 

Adam Levy: Four cents right now. Okay. Is it four cents? Okay.

Harrison First: It wasn’t. So when we use around 10 cents, you know, but then.

Adam Levy: That’s right. The decimals, man, the decimals, the decimal. Amazing. Okay. So, you know, I caught this tweet.

Harrison First: Last week, too, all time high, we hit 28 cents last week, which is like, really, I started to cut you off. But that was like a big thing for us. Because we were sitting at like, we were sitting at only like three cents for almost an entire year. So last week, we pumped up to 28 cents, which was good.

Adam Levy: What do you think drove that?

Harrison First: Well, right now, we have some people behind the scenes who are really, really, really, really interested in first, like really interested in it. And there’s just some things that are going on currently, right now, that could really take first to the level where I thought I think it should be at because now with what I’m doing is I don’t think it’s extremely new. But I think the way I’m approaching it, and just my care and my love for it now and what I mean, first audio, I haven’t seen anybody do that, I think the certain group of people can see the future value in it. Have the means and our true believers that can take this to some another space?

Adam Levy: So actually, where are you trying to take it? What is that vision, you’re selling them on?  Tell me man give it to me.

Harrison First: I don’t want to be a competitor to or I don’t think we want to be a competitor in the NFT space as you know, as it as an NFT platform, right? So I don’t want to do this whole thing where some of these other platforms are doing within the NFT space where, you know, they’re reaching out to artists. And now you can, the whole focus is to mint songs on there. That’s good. I think that’s cool. I like that. You know, audiences doing something kind of like very innovative as well wearable and super rare. And all of them are doing something really innovative. But where I see it, and we’re absolutely going to take it. And what we’re doing right now with a first partnership with sign art is that we want to focus on like the business to business model as a supplier for some of these NFT platforms. So what you have is like there’s an amazing, there’s a tonne of amazing NFT creators. But a problem is that they want to dab into the space where they can use music and not have any issues with using the music. Some people have, you know, they have friends or maybe they do a little bit of music here and there. And they can put together NF T’s. But you know, other times you can run into some copyright issues, you can just take stuff off of YouTube or something right? In your thing, because obviously there’s going to be licencing issues. So what we’re doing is that so far, I’m the guinea pig and I’m I have with first audio. There is a wall of music all instrumentals produced by me 100%. That is token gated, obviously by mint gate, which is another collaborator of mine that does really well but token gating. And all you need is 1000. First, you have access to the vault, and you can download as much music as possible, and use that and incorporate it into your NF T’s. No, there’s no nothing you just need to hold first. So I was like, yeah, this is cool. You know, some people hear about it via word of mouth. I also advertise it on social media a little bit, even though we can go a little bit harder. But then I said, let me take it a step further. And why not just partner up with some of these platforms that I feel like it could be a win situation where you have you know, you can be able to supply music, or I guess the option of music to the people who use your platform. And then you have me who’s able to produce all that music. So it’s like you, there’s like added value for some of these NFT platforms. So right now, we want to partner up with sign art, which is on, I think waves blockchain. And this is simple as like you hold a certain amount of waves or sign, which is their currency. And now you’ll also have access to that ball. And then, you know, signer will have first audio on their platform. So that, yeah, they’re artists can go and click on, you know, first audio and get directly to all this, this library of music. And then they can yet they can choose to use what they want to use from there.

Adam Levy: That’s super cool. Yeah, I haven’t heard of that model before. I know, I know, a whale has like, their huge vault of art, right, that they constantly audit. But it’s a completely different model, obviously. But when you’re talking about a vault of audio, right, that’s slowly accessible by holding an X amount of tokens. It’s an interesting model. And it’s a very web three type of business model, right? Where instead of so what I’m understanding, you don’t need to pay additional first to download the music. So you could actually hold first download the music and then sell first to you can get out. Right? Or do you have any restrictions as well on that?

Harrison First: If you get out, then you just don’t have access to that that ball anymore?

Adam Levy: Do you lose the copyright ability also, to use the music?

Harrison First: No, this is I mean, this is right now, it’s still really much wild, wild west, you know, obviously, people will take advantage of the system. But people who want to continue to get this updated music and get this updated music, which comes out each week, then they’re going to want to hold first if they’re really trying to be like, create amazing like NF T’s and have access to music for as long as they want.

Adam Levy: The most successful NFT artists that I’ve come across have really done a great job integrating the audio and the visual side. And I don’t think people realise the importance behind that because when they think of NF T’s, they think of why are people just buying this JPEG or this mp4 file, right? They forget that it’s intertwined with an audio layer that really either complements the entire piece within itself, or is the main driver behind what that piece is trying to communicate? Right? So I guess from your point of view, when you have these new artists coming to your vault, quote, unquote, right, is beautiful vault that you created with all these different mp3 files? What if they can’t find something that kind of pertains to the image, the energy, the vibe that they’re trying to, I guess communicate to the end user? Can they reach out to you specifically to do a more personalised collab? How does that work?

Harrison First: Yeah, I mean, right now I work a lot with, I was working a lot with Rory boy Dutch tide crypto saltan. And now recently, there’s going to be is one guy Lux who’s really like blowing up in New York City, like just had a billboard in Times Square. So some people I do this, that’s why I’m also an audio and Mt creator, because I do collabs with people that I think are like that, I think we could benefit from each other. I think my music speaks to their work and their work can speak to my music. Yes, so it’s not everybody, they can see all you can I have a specialised thing for this, just because I wouldn’t have that much time. But if you want something more customised, and maybe we can do like a collaboration together. And I do that with certain artists.

Adam Levy: So if someone wanted to find this vault right now, someone listening NFC artists, where could they go?

Harrison First: They can just go to January First.com backslash first audio.

Adam Levy: Got you and then when they get onto the site, they’ll see like, what like a drop down menu. How does it kind of look like that?

Harrison First: Actually, can I share my screen?

Adam Levy: 18:48 

Yeah, go for it. I think people are going to be listening this through audio are going to have to go check out the YouTube video, but in general, yeah, go for it. I’ll add it to the screen.

Harrison First: So do you see that?

Adam Levy: Yeah.

Harrison First: So one option is to go to January first.com backslash first club. This way you can at least get to see works. And then we have a demonstration video here where it kind of just goes through it. And I’ll fast forward to the…

Adam Levy: Yeah, man, this is very unique. Connect your wallet right.

Harrison First: So now you’re like Scroll down. [Music]

Adam Levy: No, I’ll good. That’s a really interesting concept. So really all it is it’s like a web page with a bunch of different files on it that’s gated using mitigate right from what I understand. And if they have X amount, the 1000 first tokens they can access a library of unique sounds that can complement the art that they’re creating. It’s beautiful.

Harrison First: Exactly.

Adam Levy: Yeah, that makes that makes a lot of sense. Where do you see this kind of growing 2, 3, 4 or 5 years from now? Where do you see this becoming?

Harrison First: Yes. So soon, it will be like a more built up platform once we have more developers involved. I mean, this is, that’s all me right there, just creating this and curating the whole part. But the next part is to have a team of developers who can really build out the website. And instead of having only instrumentals by me, then what we’ll be doing is the application process where every artist can create their merchants store, or producers can create their merchant store. And then they can start getting their music as well on our platform. So that way, now, it’s like a fully functional, like, supply chain for music, you know, in the crypto space. Yeah, where art of war producers have the opportunity to, you know, upload their content and their music for people to use, and for NFT creators, and also these NFT platforms to like, have this crazy library of music that they’ll now be able to offer to their community as well.

Adam Levy: I wonder if, you know, you have like Getty Images you have, you have all these platforms that allow you to download like, I’m blanking on the name. But we use it at work right now. But basically, you, you either pay a subscription per month, you get access to a library, right of different, like Photoshop files, videos, images, for whatever niche, any keywords you’re kind of looking for, right? I wonder if it would make more sense from like the unit economics point of view, and how this kind of plays down the line, because it’s very much an experiment right now, right to see how this would work. But I wonder if this actually becomes a model down the line for how these bigger organisations kind of adjust their models to accommodate more of the web three native communities, right? Because if you think about it, like, from your point of view, right now, you’re letting users access a library of dope stuff that you’ve spent a lot of time and energy on, right, as long as they have 1000 first tokens. Now, the only downside that I see with that is, like you said, is some people may have used the system, right? They may they may leave, they may sell once they download, right? And I wonder if there’s any way to integrate in the copyright laws, quote, unquote, right? Where it says, once you sell your first tokens, actually, you don’t have the right to use the songs anymore, right. So it actually incentivizes people to hold longer, versus, you know, like, you, you limit that option for them even to try to go against the system in a way.

Harrison First: Yeah, that was that was one way I mean, but I feel like it’s just so like, This space is just so wild men who will do whatever they want. Like, that’s the whole point that I want to still keep it like, you know, that whole concept of decentralised and just like, kind of, not too much, not too much emphasis on, like, the rules, you know, like a rules type of thing. But, but, but what I wanted to also do is maybe have something where it’s like, depending on how many fish you hold, you have a limitation on how often you can download per month. So that’s something I’m like, obviously, I cannot do that on my own. I don’t know how to like code that or something. But that’s where it would be like phase two, where we, you know, actually do have the developers that can maybe look into that, where it’s like, if you hold 1000 first, then you can download, you know, once a week, or twice a week to kind of like limit the abuse where I know, some people might want to just, you know, get it for the meantime and then sell. But yeah, I know that’s going to be the main that’s the main issue, like kind of figuring out how to withhold data abuse from people.

Adam Levy: Yeah, you know, it reminds me a lot of a friend. In a project that he put together. His name is Joni Joey ayeni. So shout out to him. He basically worked with pallets from 808 mafia to create 300 beats, which these 300 beats were basically tunes that palace had already created he just never used right. So he’s just trying to find a different way to kind of repurpose them. Tell them what he did, he created three and he had 300 beats that he previously created. And he created NF T’s for every single beat. And from there, he basically told his fans that they had the opportunity to buy and use one of these beats, but the way he did it is he had a lottery mechanism. So basically, people went when they enter the actual platform, right? They, they claim their interest, right? They connect their wallet, whatever they pay the money, or I don’t know exactly how that process went. But the whole point is that the NFT audio that they would get would be randomised. So you wouldn’t know which one of 300 you’d be getting only until after you buy it. Right. So when you bought it, you actually had 100% ownership to it and the copyrights to it, and you could do whatever you want with it. Right? So it’s similar to your model where you have full copyright ownership as long as you hold the X amount of tokens, right. And I think I think they sold anywhere between like, I think about 200k worth of NF T’s within a few hours or in a week, I forgot how long the auction was. But it was just an interesting way to kind of approach copyrights and transfer ownership using a web three primitive, right? Would you ever consider kind of adjusting that model? I guess, beyond holding tokens? Like do you ever envision yourself launching your own NF T’s and kind of piggybacking off similar model like that, like, Where’s your head?

Harrison First: With NFT’s? Yeah, at least empties already. But before? I think, yeah, we’ve, we’ve released NFT’s before. And we’ve like, well, I’ve incorporated it with like, actual releases from, like, from my projects, to be honest with you. So I did like, I think even I mean, what you just mentioned was actually that’s a good idea doing like that lottery thing. I’ve seen that graphic designers do that. But yeah, so but for instance, for like NF T’s like, I think it was two or three months ago, I was doing something like a project before I was called am other project. And that project is like featuring, you know, pretty much black artists speaking about black issues and social injustice and things like that. So for my song that I did with another artist named Molly waters, obviously, we did that same model that, you know, other people have started to, like, jump into where, you know, we released the NFT with the song, but the thing is, with the song is that we did a NFT giveaway, instead of doing just like, you know, trying to come up off of somebody else’s clout and just sell an NF t from our song, I wanted to be like, really just give back to whatever people was following me. And what we did is that all you had to do to you know, enter into this giveaway, is listen to the music. So you had to listen to the music, guess how many times we say outside in this particular song, then post retweet. And what that did was that it triggered the algorithm, Spotify algorithms, and put it the song into more people discover weekly. Because I think it was a, we had like a lot of engagement on just that one Twitter post. And I only have 500 followers on my Harrison, the first audio Twitter page, but for that particular for that particular post, they got like a huge amount of engagement. And the purpose was to, obviously we wanted to reward somebody who was actually listening to the music, you know, actually wanted to go in. And like you have to listen to all three minutes of the song. And I don’t know if you know, like, when it comes to like the algorithms and music and just how it gets playlisted with some of these DSPs it’s the same as YouTube, like when they help you out with like, okay, what’s the click through rate? You know, how long is somebody listened to it? We managed to have people listen to all three minutes of the song. And yeah, and you know, for the opportunity to get that NFT so that that like that’s been some ways where we tried to I’ve tried to be like, innovative with like NFT drops and music. But now I’ve kind of like slowed that down because I’m really trying to focus on the first audio.

Adam Levy: Yeah. How were users able to prove that they listen to the full song?

Harrison First: So the way that they prove it is by guessing how many times we sit outside. Okay. How many times you said we sat outside so if you wanted to have a chance to win, you’re going to you’re going to listen to the entire song. So the song I mean, the song was actually called outside and we see outside probably around 22 times in the song.

Adam Levy: That’s really that’s really creative. That’s like a like a homework kind of thing.

Harrison First: Your homework man. It’s a scavenger hunt. It was a scavenger songs.

Adam Levy: And that’s a really interesting model. I’ve never heard of someone do that. You know, there’s all these like, I hear different companies building out these protocols of like proof of listen right proof of participation. But it’s like you’re doing it like scraped knees type of like, like, like nitty gritty like, like, now you want this NFT you’re going to listen to the song not only are you going to listen to the full song and to tell me how many times we said this one word.

Harrison First: You never know the future of these NF T’s. And maybe we’re maybe where I go or where I don’t go. So you know, you want to make people, you know, work for a giveaway, dude,

Adam Levy: I love it smart. Smart. I love it. I haven’t heard of that before. That’s super cool. You know, I saw you tweet this one thing, that you only publish stuff once you know, they’re ready. Right? You don’t you don’t you don’t publish things, or you don’t try to have stuff, right? Why was it the right time? Like, why did you know it was ready to experiment on this first social token path?

Harrison First: I had a friend like just he kept like harassing me, they’re like, yo, you really need to get into this space, you really use it, you know, have your own social token is it time for like empowerment as an artist and this and that. And I’ve only seen way. But I am a very experimental person. So I think it was like in the 2019. I think it was just I kind of just gave in and it was the right time for me. And even at that time, I saw it as just kind of like a reward system for my fan base and from my other artists, Angie’s fan base strictly as that. And I was like, Okay, this would be a great way to just reward people, it had no value to it, except for the value that people gave to it, you know, yeah, that type of value. And I said, Yeah, just dive in full fledge. And I don’t even really know why I kept sticking with it. But maybe it was also because the pandemic and I had so much like more time like I wasn’t going on, wasn’t doing any shows wasn’t going on any tours. I was just staying in my apartment. Because some of the most of the studios will close at this time, too. So in my apartment, working on music, working on music, work on music, and there’s only so much I can do like one thing. So and that said, this is Yeah, I really had nowhere to go, man. I was just in here trying to make ideas. So I was like, this is perfect, like social tokens is, is I didn’t understand it. I was just like, yeah, in the beginning is kind of like embarrassing what I was doing, but it’s good. I’m happy where it’s at now. Because in the beginning, I think it was like, we were just yeah, like, if you want access to this music, you need to have this amount of first. But then at the same time, my fans didn’t even know how to get first. So then I was just giving it away. So it was kind of a weird system in the beginning. But I was like, let me just keep sticking with it. And people were helping me out and it kind of like came towards that now.

Adam Levy: But yeah, did you did you approach because like you said, these are valueless tokens, humans like to be rewarded for doing stuff. It’s like, like I remember back in elementary school, like teachers would give out like Scratch and sniff stickers, you know, for like, for like a job well done. Right? So it’s a very, it’s a very, like similar thing is like giving a dog a treat for doing a good action. Right. When you when you approached and started, I guess building out the foundation for first. I know you talked about like, how can we reward people, but at what point did first rd audio come into the picture? Was it we have this interesting concept of creating a vault of music? Let’s do a token around it. Or let’s first do a token and see what comes from it.

Harrison First: Yeah, it was a token first, it was a token first. So I just jumped like I just jumped right in first. And then I was like, let’s discover some stuff out from there.

Adam Levy: Yeah. And how do you? How do you think about utility that in value? Do you have a framework that you use? Like is there because a lot of people like I said earlier, like they just launched these tokens, hopefully it picks up traction, there’s a network effect that really grows the token as long as people hold, you know, as a community. But you need to create utility from it. Obviously, you have an amazing use case with this audio vault, right. But how do you how do you approach value and utility creation? I guess from the point of view of other creators are trying to do it like, is there some type of path that you followed? Questions you asked yourself to kind of determine? This is what’s going to derive first value, like how do you how do you approach that?

Harrison First: Yeah, I just got what I’m good at. And I see okay, what value can I add to people’s lives? What community can I like? How can I add value to this specific community? And then you just go from there, but you have to like experiment. First, it was just first with me it was like fan token. Then it got like, really heavy into entities. But a lot of the entities that we recreating it was being sold in eighth, you know, and then I did some in first. So then you kind of just see what works. And I was doing a lot of like waste to earn first and giveaway first. And then you see people know like, well, you’re giving out a lot of first, but there’s no value being brought into it like, are you just giving away first? So and then you actually have to listen to that feedback, you know, stuff like that. So then that was like around, I would say, the end of 2020. I said, Okay, well, what am I good at? And what can I consistently bring to the table to like, really add value to a specific community. So I said, why not the NFT community. And I’m not, I’m not a good graphic artist, I’m really good at audio. So why not add value to people in the NFT community, who don’t know how to create their own audio, but they want audio, they want to enter into the audio and empty space. So the next one, I just kind of like said, this is going to be the top utility. This is going to be the top use case right here. Within the NFT. Space. Yeah, and then, you know, who knows me like, you know, I also have something where people can pay me in first to come DJ at maybe their crypto voxels event or decentraland. So, its things like that, or you could pay me in first to you know, tweet or say something on Instagram. And then you can also use first to, you know, obviously pay for some NF T’s, you know, get purchased NF T’s. But like I said, like the number one use case is first audio. That’s like the number one priority. And it just came from like experimenting, experimenting, not taking anything personal that people were saying to me, and then looking at, like, you know, other communities, obviously, well, wearable sign Art Foundation, and then just seeing like, what are they doing? Well, like they’re doing these, like air drops, they’re doing these things where they give people titles in the community to doing this. And so said, let me adopt some of those things. And then have my little twist to it.

Adam Levy: Yeah. Yeah, I know, we talked about your point of view, like 2,3,4,5 years from now what this could become. But I want you to think about like, for the music industry, as a whole, right, the greater music industry, where obviously audios is essential to the core business. How do you imagine this way? This way of one producing content from the point of view of attaching like files, mp3 files, mp4 files to these like, token based blockchain based products? Right? How do you see that kind of evolving in maybe even maturing the music industry down the line? Because again, your models very, very unique, right? Not a lot of people. I don’t think anybody’s doing it. But I think there’s a lot of power behind it. So yeah, I guess from your point of view, how do you see this kind of, quote unquote revolutionising, right, as people like to say, the music industry years to come?

Harrison First: I think if the music industry, like what they’re trying to do right now, with NFT’s, gets too involved. For me, it wouldn’t be so much fun. But I think this is an opportunity for like artists, independent artists, or artists who are signed to like major labels to kind of just take some power back, and kind of realise the power that things like this have, whether it’s just creating a social token, or using your you know, using your own music that is outside of your label and your publisher, and then putting it into this new space, where it’s like, it’s an undefined thing. Like, there’s a reason why I don’t even, like I’m signed to Sony. And it’s like, such a great area. People are getting their publishers and their labels involved. And some people are not, and I’m somebody who is not getting them a lot because there’s no definitions around this right now. There’s nothing with within this within this. And I feel like once the music industry is get a hold of this and they want to put some rules around it. And now there’s like, you know, NF T’s in my contract now.

Adam Levy: Do they already exist in your contract?

Harrison First: No, no, no, he’s at all but I know some people who you know, they want to they want to be super careful. And I understand that where they’ll go in their mentioned stuff to the publishers and then it gets really complicated. So I think it’s not something for the actual music industry to help them I think it’s for like the actual players like the artists to be able to benefit them and revolutionise what they’re doing. Like this is revolutionary man like, to be honest with you. Like I’m glad I found this space because like, it helps Meet Me personally, you know to be selfish, it helps me mentally because you know, there comes a point where like, you can be working one linear way. And then you start to think like, well, where’s the room to be innovative at? Like, is it like me making something so crazy sonically? And then you started to think, well, nobody’s going to accept that because they want music this certain way. So like with social tokens, and being able to like say, Okay, well, if my music doesn’t fit in this space, maybe the music will fit in this space, the same thing you said with the guy from 808 mafia. He has, he probably has over 1000s of beats, like 1000s of stuff. So it’s like, Okay, if it doesn’t work here, if it doesn’t work in this commercial, if it’s not getting licenced in this movie, why not see, you know, if it can work as an NFT. And if people can benefit from it this way? Why not? So he’s like, people will see it, like people will see the power. Some people are just any kind of short term, like entities or social tokens, where there’s some people can see it, like five years, 10 years down the line. The possibilities, as artists See that?

Adam Levy: Yeah, no, yeah, yeah, for sure. I think just because you brought up the 808 mafia. Comment is, you are right, a lot of these artists probably have like an archive of a lot of like, ideas that they probably thought is stupid. And it’s not mainstream worth but one man’s trash is another man’s treasure, right? Like, there’s 100%, that saying and value is subjective, right. You never know if your ideas may complement someone else’s idea. So why not just put it out in the marketplace and see what can happen. And more on what they did that I really liked is not only that, they have their randomization where you don’t know which audio file you’re getting out of the 300. But you also have the opportunity to get this golden ticket, where if you win this golden ticket, which is attached to one of the one of 300 files, you get flown out and a full experience expense paid trip to actually hang out with palace and spend a couple of nights with him or a couple days with him in the studio producing and even experimenting with an audio track right. Now, that point of view, right with creating that really like personalised experience. It’s not super scalable. But when you’re talking about it from like, artists to fan relationship, the value in that is valuable. Like you can’t put a price tag on that kind of thing. Like if you’re an aspiring producer, right? If you’re an aspiring NFT artist, and you want to work with other NFT artists like yourself, right? Like, it’s hard to put a value over that level of experience, in my opinion, I don’t know do you think otherwise?

Harrison First: Not definitely. Suppose if I was that age, like if I was a younger producer, I remember when I was like a younger producer, and I would hear on the radio a chance to get a session with Usher or this person. But I’m like, Damn, I’m going to call the radio station, I’m going to try to get a chance to be in a studio. This is my chance. So yeah, it’s totally by value.

Adam Levy: Can you take me more through your process of how you onboard your community? I know one of your key strategies to growth were was giving away tokens for free just take them, enjoy them use them? How did you actually get people to like download their Meta mask? And how did you explain to them gas fees? How did you explain to them a lot of these concepts that maybe you and I we take for granted, because we’ve been playing in the space for some time now. But for the newcomers, it’s such a barrier to entry.

Harrison First: It’s a big barrier to entry. And those were the people that I was targeting in the beginning, like my fan base, like from music. And it was like, very hard. So at the time, it was, I was putting out an album of my artists, Angie. And what we did is like if you want to come to this online, album release party, you just need to have fingers 300 First in your wallet. And some people did you know, at this time, we just had a telegram group. And it was like it was messages kind of like 24 seven? How do I get Ethan? How do I get first? You know, what’s metamask? How about putting it in my wallet. And I would like explain it one by one like, and I think even at that time, it was hard for me to even explain to. But then that’s when I realised like some things are not meant for everybody, right? So I’m not going to try to force people into a space that they’re not super interested in. I’ve introduced it to you. Now if you want to go into it, you can go into it to have access to certain things. But to be honest with you that people who gravitated to what I’m doing there already, I realised I need to make my focus on people who are already in this space. I think probably the past couple of months, people like really got interested in alternative means of like finance, whether it’s like some of these like pumps in the traditional market. And then when they also hear about things like Dogecoin and stuff like that, where like, it’s just like recently now people like people from like traditional parts of music and my fans or just my friends are like, have you heard about this? And then I’ll say, yeah, yeah. And I have my own social token and coin base or is it on coin? Where can I get it? So now it’s become like a thing where people are starting to slowly adopt the whole system more, I’ve had certain people like, I’m like, just download metamask download on Argent, these two are really great. Use this, make sure you have that. And now they’re getting first planted beginning on boarding, I kind of gave up on like, after a couple of weeks. So that gave up trying to explain, explain things to people, because I think they just, they just didn’t get it, they didn’t want to hear it.

Adam Levy: So you’re just like, if you’re not jumping on this waggon it’s going like we’re going if you don’t want to jump on, you’ll get on at some point you might get on like the eighth waggon you know, but…

Harrison First: eighth waggon, you’ll get on but I’ll start to be honest with you to go back on that I give a lot of credit to like the social token community, like there’s been certain groups like in the beginning and still to this day, that like, I keep saying well, because they have been a big supporter, where they’ll just, you know, do an interview with me and say, Hey, you know, come into our, to our Discord. Introduce yourself, we’re going to do like an interview with you talk about your music, and then you get a lot of people in the well community. And the guys over at decentraland just, you know, offer me space to just DJ at. So then you have a lot of people from vcl and Manoj who come through there. So I think it was actually from like, just amazing, like, communities inviting me into their space, when I was new, to give me the opportunity to come speak, you know, and offer some first to people to introduce him to that. That was actually key when you have like a network like that and tapping into those networks. That was that was key for me.

Adam Levy: Yeah, I think Yeah. 100% tapping into other communities on their social token communities, and building a network effect from there. I think it’s super powerful. What, what kind of rewards and perks? Do you plan to kind of experiment more in the future with first right now, of course, you have first audio, right? But like, what are you what are you really excited about? Down the line with enabling using first?

Harrison First: I’m really excited about. What I’m really excited about is these partnerships, to me is really basic. And it’s simple. But when I when I had the first platform, say yes, I was just thinking like, Okay, I got one yes, one platform, we’re still developing the whole bridge. But then it’s like, what if I have 5, 10, 20 different platforms NFTs platforms where it’s just said it has a component of their first audio, and it’s like, wow, you made it that far. So that is something that I’m really excited about. I mean, I’ve experimented on ways on like earning first, which were like, I think, was really innovative. Like, I know, I was the only one going I know this for sure. The first one that I was doing, the only problem was that we weren’t. People weren’t buying as much first as I was giving away. So what I was doing at one point was, I was rewarding people based off of my performance, my streaming performance for my music. So I would look at my streaming numbers on Spotify, a week, per week, and I would do a fraction, I would have broke it down to some algorithm, and then I will reward my community based off of my performance. So for that week, let’s say I did 100,000 streams on Spotify for the week, what I would do is do some type of algorithm and usually it would break down to around 40,000 First that I was giving away for the week. And in my discord, there’s about maybe 500 or 600 people in it at that time. So then based off of the role that you had determined how much first you would get from it, but it was like, it was kind of like telling people like giving people like thanks, even though like my community, they wouldn’t really affect the streaming numbers at that time. But it was more sort of a thing where I was just I don’t I don’t really know how it’s beneficial for me. And I don’t know how it was beneficial for me, but I thought it was just a cool way to say like, okay, so if I do good, you do good, that type of thing. If I stream well, you guys get rewarded first. And then now we also have like first TV. I don’t know if you saw that. No, tell me about that. Yeah, it’s a 24 seven. Broadcasting Station is pretty much ran through another partnership that I work with omnisphere where we just stay pretty much allow me to be able to run on Twitch 24. Seven, and in his streams directly into my crypto voxels house, as well as my website. And it’s just a 24, seven feet of DJs sets for myself, interviews for myself. Advertising some NFT’s. Yeah. And it’s just Yeah, 24/7 people can go with streaming toy. And what happens is that you can stream for free. But you can also if you’re 1000, first holder, you can stream and you get rewarded at the end of the month from a pool of 5,000 First. So what are the top 10 streamers of the content are they get rewarded first base off of that?

Adam Levy: Interesting, interesting, you know, there’s, there’s this question where, like, I’ll give you an example from the conference world. Okay. So the company that that I worked for, that I’m at right now. You know, we scatter, we try to find the best speakers to come speak at these events, these glow these either in person events, or these virtual events we put together. And for example, like a head honcho would be like, for example, jack Dorsey in the crypto world to bring him as a keynote. But he doesn’t do speaking engagements, right, unless you’re like, within his circle. And he recently did one at the Bitcoin conference that was in Miami, right? So the point that I’m getting at is when you’re very scarce, and very limited with your time, when you give yourself out there and you put yourself out there, people see that as valuable versus a lot of these other speakers that we bring to our conferences, and they continuously speak every single conference, and people know them, they’ve already heard from them. So my point being is like, do you ever think you’re diluting? I guess, not your Rarity, per se, but your, your access to someone when you give them this 24 seven content. And they maybe they maybe they don’t feel like, Oh, he’s giving us too much. And we’re not paying enough kind of thing. So the value is missing, you know what I mean? Like the value is misaligned, when you over give and undertake you know what I mean? Do you ever feel like that? Because right now, like you’re doing a great I really feel like you’re giving you’re giving a giving, just consumed just joined, come be a part of it. There’s a lot to be to be proud of, when the future comes, and we build this thing to be a monster, right? But even now, like 24, seven, live our content, right? You have the discourse, you have your music you have you doing even like special giveaways with yourself like, Do you ever feel like you’re diluting your time to an extent and making yourself? Not less valuable, but more available to people?

Harrison First: Yeah, yeah. I mean, there are some things like when it comes to like earning first I have to cut back, especially from the streaming like being rewarded with streaming. So I think that that is one point. But also, I mean, with today, I don’t know, if you, if you look just on all social media platforms. It’s really like out of sight out of mind. And if you’re not tripping up the algorithm, just how we think the algorithm and not being tripped, and there’s like constant engagement and your move to the back of the line. So there can be people like a jack Dorsey or Travis Scott, a Drake, who are Kendrick Lamar, who can disappear for two, three years not released one album, Tyler, the creator, not released an album or the weekend. And then when they come out of nowhere, it’s a special thing, like, and they all do that model. You know, you got Jaden Smith, or whoever their whole Instagram is blank, their whole social media is blank for like a year or two. And then they come out of nowhere, and you miss them and you and you miss that feeling of them. And it’s like such a rare thing. But when you’re at it, like an infant stage, and I was still saying I’m at an infant stage, you need to do everything possible to gain people’s attention. And then you can go and disappear later, they’re going to miss you. After a while. They’re going to be like, he was always engaged. He was always here. He was always here. And now the people will start saying, where’s Harrison First: or Where’s first? Why you know this and that. And then the moment you appear in your pop up, that excitement will bubble up again. And then you do it again. And then you can have more space in between. But I don’t even know if that. I don’t even know if that model works because with crypto, it feels like it moves fast. Like you know, every two weeks every three weeks. There’s something new. There’s a new regulation or there’s a new artists or there’s just this new way of doing things. There’s no there’s no longer NF T’s there’s this thing called GBS and everybody wants to get on the GBS. So it’s like that part. I’m still like, unsure about like, I know, music and celebrity like celebrity culture. And I’m thinking maybe that model will work within the social token space where I give, give, give, give, give, you know, in regards to just being visible, to grow the thing bigger, and then I can disappear later or Yeah, I don’t know. But I think that’s the model that I was looking at right now. It’s just, you know, be visible, be more active, continue to be active. And then, once it’s time, didn’t really take more time out and then have other things in place and maybe not be so much in people’s faces.

Adam Levy: Do you think big artists like the weekend? Like Travis, Scott, Tyler, the creator, do you think that they would succeed in doing their own social token communities? And I’ll give you a reason why I bring this up. Because, unlike you, you’re very heavily invested in the day to day of this community, right? A lot of these other like, let’s disappear for six months, a year, two years and come back type of artists that have built that level of fame. I don’t know. I personally don’t know how involved they are right. But I assume that they have so many other things going on, that it’d be hard to nurture community very personally the same way you do. Do you think that’s like the only model to be successful on social tokens? Or do you think there’s other ways to do it? Beyond being so heavily invested like you are?

Harrison First: Yeah, there’s, there’s, there’s way better ways to doing it. Like if it’s literally me and one other person, when it comes to managing everything. So if I do take the time out to build the team, such as well, we’re well has all these amazing, like, moderators, and admins, you know, to cater to all time zones. And then well, shark can come in when he what needs to come in. That’s the ideal model for me. But people like Travis Scott weekend, Justin Bieber, a little Yachty, soldier, boy, they won’t be able to succeed in social tokens because it is only a fan token for them. And I think they only see it as maybe the fan token or as a cash grab. Just because you have to look at social tokens almost as if like a YouTuber model or a blogger model. Or influencer model. Really, somebody has to be simulated in the community constantly, right? And there has to be things in place for them. So all of those people have really had some nice cash grabs, but it’s, they’re not successful in it, because they’re not really active in it.

Adam Levy: Yeah, now that that makes a lot of sense. I’d imagine that the more success, the more fame, the more you reach that level of status. And we keep referencing the music industry for the sake of the conversation. But I think it also applies in, in sports and film, in acting, etc, etc, right? It’s harder, because everybody wants a piece of your time, especially with these fan clubs. And like the key to staying focused and staying disciplined many say is just say no, right? So now you’re trying to create a community around yourself and the brain that you built. Yet, it requires a lot of your time and requires a lot of your attention. And I think its one thing that a lot of artists may miss in the future, because like you said, there’ll be attracted to the dollar price and what it could do and the concept of having a publicly traded asset, crypto, whatever you want to call it, right, is interesting to a lot of people. And I guess this brings me to my final question, because I want to be respectful of your time is, you know, the more people down the line, I envision this where there’ll be millions of everyday creators, even like famous individuals who will be tokenizing themselves in their communities, right? If we really look down the line, do you think we’ll reach a point of view or time where? Well, where right now we determine society determines influenced by the number of followers you have, right? And they determine your worth. And a lot of people like they have a lot of their self-confidence based off what their images online, do you think we’ll be transitioning into a world where that number of followers will actually now be associated with the publicly traded number that people are buying and selling us? So for example, Justin Bieber is trading at $100. Right? Per token per beep. Okay. And Taylor Swift is trading at? I don’t know, $40. Right. So Justin Bieber is worth more than Taylor Swift or vice versa. Right. Do you think we’re approaching that type of type of world?

Harrison First: Yeah, absolutely. Absolutely. I think the world is always going to be number-driven, and it’s always going to be cloud-driven. It’s always vanity-driven. And, like, I understand that and I know that that’s actually one reason why I’m just like, keep sticking with it because I feel like the same way with NF T’s and everybody’s attention, you know, went to NFTs and went to even just you know, crypto and storage to introduce a lot of people to crypto recently. I think that’s going to happen with social tokens. So like Justin Bieber can hit $100 within the first two days, probably, and probably stay at $100. But for me, it probably would have to be like over the course of five to six years, right? I’m glad I got into it right now, because maybe in five to six years, I’m at 100. And I’ll be at the same level as Justin Bieber, who gets 102 days and people who was Harrison First: and why was he so? But and I think people like you and other like, whales, and people who like just a smart business people, they won’t only look at the price don’t really look at like, what is the token do? What’s the utility behind it? What’s the actual value behind it? And that’s what I always like to focus on.

Adam Levy: Yeah, how do you think we prevent people from speculating and being more involved in the community? Right? So for example, I’d assume like down the line, probably 90 to 95% of people will actually be like trading the token, and like that tend to that five to 10% will actually be a part of first part of beeps, whatever, whatever, whatever community. And we’ll leave, we’ll leave off with this, what do you think would be the best way to kind of incentivize people to not trade and to actually become members of the community?

Harrison First: I think there’s a bunch of ways but I’m think like to come to my mind right now. And you know, one way you have to treat it, obviously, like as a traditional, I think maybe it’s like a traditional stock. And you have dividends and you have incentives like on the financial side, where people can almost look at it as like a like a part of their maybe make a retirement plan or like a long term investment, everything that they can no cash out on in a couple years, or just something that’s like a steady stock in their mind, and reward based off of that with dividends and options and things of that nature. And then the second way, I think is just having like really strong utility and catering to your niche like your community, or your fan base.

Adam Levy: I love it, man. You’re an ocean of knowledge and insight. I appreciate you being on Best of luck to the first community. I really do hope to have you on again. Soon in. I’ll be watching your community and watching it grow. So more power to you, brother.

Harrison First: Thanks Adam Thanks for having me.

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Podcast Transcript

Why Web 2.5 Platforms Are Prime For Disruption

Listen on: Spotify | Apple Podcast | Google Podcast

Background

Mint Season 1 episode 6 features Jeremiah Owyang; an advisor to Rally.io, an active angel investor, and is well recognized by both the tech and media industry for his grounded approach to deriving insights through rigorous research. He’s also the creator of the social token $JOW has achieved dominant placement on the social token charts. 

On this episode, we talk about his early insights into watching the rise of Facebook, Instagram, and other web 2.5 platforms and why they’re prime for disruption, how he became successful at building social communities, why he’s so bullish on social tokens, his views on the future societal implications of creator coins, his approach for thinking about utility frameworks for creator coins, and so much more. 


Thank you to Season 1’s NFT sponsors!

1. Coinvise – https://coinvise.co/

2. POAP – https://poap.xyz/

Interested in sponsoring future seasons? Get in touch here!


Adam Levy: So why don’t we just get right into it? Tell me a little bit about your background, your story? And how kind of you got involved in the space?

Jeremiah Owyang: Yeah, so I was very early on in the social media space. You know, before it was called social media. It was just called business blogging. And I launched my blog way early in the market. And I helped companies, I had a whole industry. So social community was always a thing. That was so cool to me. I’ve always I was an industry analyst at Forrester covering social computing. And then I launched a number of firms and companies and now I’m in continue to be in Silicon Valley. So I even started a secular holiday called Community Manager Appreciation Day, which happens every third Monday of January. And that’s been going on for 11 years. So community’s always been a key part of what I’ve been doing and new technology. So thinking about people in tech, is what brought me to this social token space. So Hello, I’m coming to you from the tiny Airstream studios in my backyard.

Adam Levy: Amazing in, as you know, you being such, I guess, a forefront with adopting social currencies, and also kind of getting the greater crypto world in more mainstream world to adopt them as well. You’re obviously seeing communities are evolving, right? You having such a deep experience building communities? Now we’re shifting communities into more web three type of native model. Can you talk a little bit more about that? And what are like those major differences that you see from traditional communities? And now there’s shift being more kind of, quote unquote, web three native?

Jeremiah Owyang: Well, I mean, the whole if you go back to when web two emerged, it’s the exact same talking points that we heard and here’s what happens is the distributed players that enabled the communities, they ended up becoming the giant one percenters. Like, you know, at one point, the people creating Facebook and Instagram, LinkedIn, and YouTube, they were upstart, though they were rebels. They were anarchists. They’re like, let’s bring down the system. Let’s stop big media. Let’s stop press releases, let’s stop advertising. Let’s break it. Let’s bring the power to the people. And then they became billionaires. And then it started all over again. And I saw that same thing, by the way, in the next market, the collaborative sharing gig economy, where they all said let’s share everybody share everything, share the homes, share the car, share your time, those companies became giant behemoths as well. So that pattern repeats over and over, will it repeat with defy and web 3.0? And crypto? Probably, if history tells you anything, it’s going to happen again. So I’m actually a little concerned that we’ll see the same things like a lot of the rhetoric after the Bitcoin conference, and we heard you know, smash, you know, Wall Street, and you can see my work is, is trying to stop it. And New York’s not friendly to crypto is compared to Miami or San Francisco. Yeah, I hear it now. But Fast Forward seven years from now, I’m not sure.

Adam Levy: Yeah, it’d be interesting to see how it plays out. I mean, you see the development from web 1.0 being read only, and that transitioning and being eaten alive by web 2.0, where you create social networks and social communities. And now we’re like, kind of like a 2.5. Or we’re slowly transitioning into more of this ownership type of model, but still living on these more centralised platforms. I’d be curious, like, how that kind of comes into play on the more aggressive side, like you said, when it gets to the point where people are preaching these ethos is of like, decentralisation of ownership, community, blah, blah, blah, you’ll still have those players that I guess will take it to the next level in the extreme and kind of dilute that value, no.

Jeremiah Owyang:  Two things will happen. So one is a 1%, or a big platform will emerge from the crowd, and they themselves will become a big platform. You know, any big exchange, for example, or any, anybody who owns a significant of crypto can influence and push people around? Right? There’s a lot of criticisms of Elon Musk of being such a person right now. Sure. And the second thing is there’s nothing stopping from those big companies, whether they be big tech, or big Wall Street or big bank from moving into this market, whether it be acquisition or launching the other the other stuff. Yes, yes, they’re slow. I get it, totally get it. But right now, you can’t find a single media company or traditional Hollywood company that doesn’t incorporate social media into their core business strategy, right. I mean, there’s, in fact, there in many cases that the primary revenue generators for Facebook, Instagram, YouTube and beyond, they’re the same industry at this point. So it’s important to separate the rhetoric of rebellion talk versus integration.

Adam Levy: Yeah, no, definitely. It’s crazy because we’re so early into this stuff, and you’re still in that like lovey dovey phase kind of thing where people are talking about the community, the ownership and you haven’t gotten necessarily to the rebellion. Aside just yet, where you have these big platforms taking over and taking control of these, quote unquote creator coins that are destined to be more in the control of the Creator. Yeah. But you see it the other way around, you see platforms taking control of creator coins, while giving creators the tools and flexibility to utilise them. What do you what do you kind of see out playing here?

Jeremiah Owyang: So this is the goal that we need to do is enable creators to have the power to run their own economies. And, and so I’ve known the rally founder Kevin Chu for over 10 years, I was on his prior board. And he is a successful entrepreneur, his name, you know, he’s a philanthropist. His name is on the building at UC Berkeley. So he’s a trusted person in the community. And so that’s important because there’s other projects, you know, in the market, that you just don’t even know who created them. So the trust aspect is critical. And right now, many creators are beholden to the large social networks, Facebook, Instagram, Twitch, YouTube, and at a whim that algorithms could change, and you could lose your audience. Or if you even signal they are in clubhouse, for example, as another one, people are unsure on how to navigate. And if you even suggest that you’re going to go off to another platform, they could, they could actually start to shadow ban you and you might lose your audience. Or if you if you try to bring your own new types of monetization, and it’s not approved by them that could create strife as well. So in many cases, these creators are beholden. In fact, I mean, Mark Zuckerberg, today, during the apple keynote, was putting out messages on Facebook, like how they’re going to enable all of their tools to be free for creators in order to compete with Apple and at a lower cost. So we see them on messaging. But in history, they’ve never paid creators in the past. So it’s really not there. So lo and behold, we are now at the social token space. And, and I really love that idea of social token, because social is my background, right? Because I was one of the first tech analysts in the social networking space, over 10 years ago. Yeah, so all of this makes a lot of sense to me, giving the power over to the individuals and letting them and basically, the vision is this enables creators to turn their communities into economies, that’s the way I see it, turning your community or enabling your community to be an economy. So and that’s a very powerful thing. And the key thing is that it needs to enable the creators to work from platform to platform, you should be able to have those relationships with your fans, regardless of what platform you use. Today, it’s Twitch, maybe its sub stack. Tomorrow, is YouTube a third day, I’m on stream yard right now, right? You know, where am I going to be? It doesn’t matter, my relationships, my social graph, my economics should go with me as I create content.

Adam Levy: But that’s the trick how because all these platforms are going to have to find a way to integrate these social tokens very seamlessly into the interactions of their platforms, right? Like, how would stream yard like, how would they do that? Because their infrastructure is built differently? Sure. How do you take a more web three type of, I guess, infrastructure implemented seamlessly into more of a web to native infrastructure?

Jeremiah Owyang: Yeah, so there’s a term that we’ve been using called coin gate, just like there’s pay gate. So you could have a coin gated private stream yard or only the recordings of YouTube, you know, in for premium, maybe you maybe you put the short version of an interview, like the five minute version up on YouTube, so you have marketing buzz, and also, and then for those that want to see the whole 60 minute interview, they have to own the coin, and you can do an API call to the rally website, and then grant them access to different sites. For example, we’ve done this with third party developers in clubhouse rooms, we actually were able to use paid rooms.ch is third party developers that built that, and then then they could go to a private clubhouse room. Also a common use cases, we have discord channels for creators, and the discord. It uses a coin bot robot and it checks to see you have X amount of j owl coin, that’s my coin, J owl like j Wow, from Jersey shores. And but the most famous use cases Portugal, the man which is a music artists group, and they have their own private Discord. And you have to own 10 PTM coins and you can access this premium content. And so that’s a common thing that we do. And we’re experimenting to use it for premium newsletters, premium podcasts, or behind the scenes. Even with the show, you can integrate it like whoever owns the coin and you can do an API call. They can ask the first questions or they get shoutouts. Or if they donate coin during this live show. It could show it could you say John Doe has donated coin to us right now and really trying to make the conversation happen. So that’s the way you can make it premium.

Adam Levy: Let’s dissect that for a minute because you brought up two points. You talked about bringing in creating like access type of content where you have to pay to kind of consume, but then there’s also that conversation where people don’t want to create barriers to entry per se, and they rather reward people for participating. Where is that fine line? Right? How do you how do you kind of separate the two?

Jeremiah Owyang: Right? Well, first the mind-set is it’s really not always about creator and fan, we’re one community. And you hear artists like the really progressive artists saying things like this, like bt says things Imogen Heap like, you know, we’re a collaborative In fact, the best creators are collaborating with their fans, because they tell them what to what they like, what they don’t like, you know, I mean, it is a collaboration. And that is something that technology always enables us to do. So with that mind-set, what we encourage the creators at rally to do is to first reward and give away their coin to their best fans when they launch. And it’s a very simple mechanism, you can do it, you can send coin, and we ask them to actually fill out the rally ID, the users, the fans. And then once we have the rally ID, excuse me, we can send them I can send them the J l coin, or the Portugal the man coin, or whatever coin it is. And this helps to create the currency circulating within the community. And so that’s the very first thing. We’re also working on some features where we can reward our fans for sharing our content. So there’s features where if somebody tweets out, this is an account, this is a feature that exists. Third party developers build everything, by the way the third party developers can apply for the rally tokens as a development fund. Hmm. Real quick factoid 71% of rally, the economy is owned by the creators, communities and developers. Wow. 29% is owned by the team and investors and advisors. Hmm. So it is, it is not fully a DAO yet. But it’s we’re headed that way. But we do want a central team because it helps us to on board many creators who are not crypto native.

Adam Levy: Sure. I mean, if you look at like more traditional defy projects, like maker DAO, for example, they started off sure decentralised, or DAO point of view, but they had the foundation, that centralised figure that helped build and on board institutional money, retail money, education, etc, make them a dominant player. And now they’re working on transitioning and handing over the keys to the community, I think it’s a very that enter type of strategy. That’s so.

Jeremiah Owyang: So going back to the relationship creators, you want to give the coin to your community and you want to let them earn it, you know, those that are your super fans, like, like, give it to them. And then what craters do is they create up what we call campaigns. And you could turn in the coin that you have either purchased from the creator or earned or traded other crypto by bridging in and use that coin for whatever campaigns for example, I have campaigns for I have a decent Twitter following for my business audience and, and people have been purchasing paid tweets and I’ll tweet out their product or their show or whatever it is, of course, I have editorial approval, it’s got to be a fit, right? I’m not going to push out anything I don’t believe in personally, more people want my time. So there’s other ways. And we have creators that just use it as the coin gate, for example, we talked about creators that just have private rooms in clubhouse or in or in Facebook groups or LinkedIn groups, or slack or discord, where you can do that as well. But the one thing that is unique about rally is there’s a dividend that is provided to coin holders, and this is called rally rewards. And there’s been a significant amount of money. So some of the creators that have very successful communities, I have the stats here right from the core team. They are driving 100,000 US dollars in rewards to the coin holders in their community, per week. Crazy per week. And so basically what happens is when people purchase the coin, the value of the coin goes up. And so there’s a dividend that’s released. There’s a formula that figures it out if is the current week in in coin activations higher than the last for rolling weeks. If so, then it kicks out a rally rewards every Saturday to the coin holders, who’s a coin holder? Anybody who earned the coin, bought the coin and of course the creator owns a significant but not always the majority, the successful coins, the community owns more of their coin, right? So in a way, it’s like a shared rewards. It’s a shared outcome. It’s aligned outcomes when the creator and the community are working together. And that’s really what I love about the project.

Adam Levy: So there’s actually a lot to unfold right there. So the first thing is an insane stat 100k per week being rewarded in dividends to people who are holding these creator tokens as a thank you as support. But what can they do with that 100k? Can they cash out can go to you can they go to uniswap? Can they exchange for usdc and put them in their bank account and spend that to pay rent? They can do that?

Jeremiah Owyang: Yes. So the rally Yes, they are yes, so the rally rewards up, except there’s some states were challenging. For example, New York. Okay. But that’s, that’s, that’s New York. So I’m in California. So what happens is I get my rally rewards, and I’m looking at them now. And my coin has issued around 10 to 15,000 US dollars’ worth of rally token to the coin holders. I own 43% of my own coin. Do I need to back up on the math? No. Okay. So I own 43% of my own coins. So it means over 50% of my fans have purchased the coin. So I’m not only benefiting many other people are benefiting from these rally rewards. And the rewards are issued out in these percentages in that way. And so what happens is you receive the rally tokens in your in your portfolio on the rally account, and then you could bridge out. Of course, there’s some states that where there’s limitations on that. And of course, you can bridge to your blockchain, crypto wallet.

Adam Levy: Got you. And if people are kind of like debating or creators are debating, I guess whether or not to do a more traditional way like an ERC 20 way where they meant a token on aetherium. Or they do it on a layer two like polygon, okay, to mitigate transaction fees, they create an eath X, they create an eath token pair, right. And that that kind of drives the value versus going through rally and leveraging the rally token as the underlying value for their token plus the supply and demand pressure from their friends to right. That’s how understanding how it works. So it’s not just pegged to rally. It’s also dependent on the supply and demand pressure. Right or more of the demand pressure at least.

Jeremiah Owyang: Perhaps I don’t have all the answers. So rally is a theory in Project ERC 20. So, but my I’m not a blockchain expert. Okay. So I can’t go much deeper than that. But I can connect you to the team. But what do you mean by the supply chain pressures?

Adam Levy: So a lot of like, the way these bonding curves work is that they appreciate the value based off supply pressure or demand pressures and the more people that buy into it, the higher the price, and that’s kind of how it sounds like with rally, right?

Jeremiah Owyang: That is true, right? It’s true. But there’s no, quote penalty. If you don’t, you know, it’s and creators do not have to purchase the coin, it’s by the way, it is there’s only been around 140 coins that have launched 134. So it’s invite only there’s a very strict review process. Like we’re looking for the right types of creators that have certain criteria, I can tell you about that later. So and they don’t pay money to join. So it’s not like they’re penalise but then you know, they’re just not. I mean, you want to incorporate this in your, as a creator, what you’re already doing. So it should aid you in what you’re doing. It’s not like you need to go out and, quote, pimp your coin, that’s really not the point of this.

Adam Levy: Sure, sure. No, I hear you know, I only asked that because, you know people are diving more and more into this crater economy, they’re realising that these web 2.0, 2.5 platforms are great at building audiences, but they suck at monetizing them. And they’re reverting more to these creator coins to try to create more access and incentives to motivate their audience to create a more intimate type of collective type of experience with their fans. And it’s super easy to go on rally and to launch a token. But there’s other options too, right? Maybe when a creator is thinking, should I go and launch my own ERC 20 token, a standard aetherium token? Right. So like, what when you explain these things to artists, how do you guide them through the shop process?

Jeremiah Owyang: So for many creators and artists and digital artists and podcasters and, you know, clubhouse folks, this literally is the first time they ever touch crypto, right? Literally like we’re this is me. And then of course there are fans even less likely to have ever touched crypto, right. Okay, maybe a few of them. We know that they purchase coins on Coin base. Right? Very traditional credit card like they many of them actually never even had a wallet. Right? So in many ways, this is the mainstream, you know, if you when you go to the rally website and create your own ID, you’ll see that it’s very simple to use. It’s a very simple UI, and there’s clear icons, and there’s like, you know, navs and it’s simple to use, it’s very different than using a wallet and you don’t see, you know, large you know, dexa has numbers and there’s no, there’s no gas fees to worry about. And you don’t need to worry about Do you have enough aetherium to cover transaction and what happened? You know, it all of that is stripped out. So it’s just simple for creators and their fancy use. Now, of course, the defy zealots like, well, everything should be complete, just distributed in your point of view. But for my auntie and my uncle, you know, and for you know, people that are not going to be crypto native. You’re going to miss that complete shocker, right, but I believe the stats are less than 10% of Americans own crypto. So when we’re dealing with craters, you have to make this accessible for mass market.

Adam Levy: Yeah, no, I hear you. And I think that’s a that’s a powerful selling point, because you’re right. These creators and I and I, and I think about this a lot, because like crater coins are a new era of influencer marketing, like they’re onboarding this new era of users, right, that otherwise maybe wouldn’t have actually tampered with crypto, they wouldn’t have even thought about using cryptocurrencies. So any platform that’s actually willing and able to engage these creators and onboard their onboard their audience, they have a lot of responsibility on their hand with making the process as seamless as clear and as cut as possible. And I think we’re where we’re at right now with aetherium, salonica, zilliqa, all these other like, layer one, layer two solutions. They haven’t really kind of like, done an amazing job with justifying that user journey. And onboarding people obviously, like, think about the NFT space, when you’re trying to mint an NFT on open sea, there’s an initiation transaction just to interact with the smart contract. And depending on the gas fees, you could be paying anywhere between $1 to like 800. And that’s without even minting just interact with a smart contract to kind of unlock your wallet with the network. So you’re right, the onboarding journey sucks. And I think that’s where rally does a really, really good job in in kind of showing creators that, hey, you can do this. And we’ve actually made it really easy as well.

Jeremiah Owyang: In a sidechain. That’s right. Yeah. And NFT’s are going to be launching on rally next month as well. So and that’ll all happen without gas fees. So we’re trying to make it a simple way for creators to manage an economy in that way.

Adam Levy: Yeah, let’s try to think like three, four years down the line, assuming all this crypto stuff gets easier, right? Assuming you don’t need more of like centralised platforms to help onboard crypto right comes easier to download a meta mask it comes it becomes easier to transfer eath from Coin base to your meta mask interact with smart contracts, that whole user flow becomes much easier. And creators start to realise Wait a minute, there’s actually power in doing in a decentralised way like these defy Maxis kind of for each right? How does that kind of play into rowdies timeline? How are you guys thinking about that?

Jeremiah Owyang: Well, I am not building the timeline that is for the rally team as an advantage.

Adam Levy: So I guess from your point of view?

Jeremiah Owyang: From my point of view, yeah, we shouldn’t ever say crypto, it should be completely in the background. So take, for example, 15 years ago, in the social media space, there was a new technology that was going to change everything. And it did it was called RSS, for those that don’t know, is a syndication protocol that enabled it at that time for people to simply subscribe to blogs or podcasts and then get updates in something called a feed reader. By the way, we don’t do any of that stuff now, because it happens seamlessly in the background, on your Facebook newsfeed in iTunes on your YouTube. Like we don’t have to deal Oh, you have to actually grab and SUBSCRIBE and find the RSS code and subscribe to it. And then add that to your feed is like crazy. Yeah, but it’s the exact same thing like right, like you take a feed reader that’s the same as a wallet today, like you take an RSS feed, that’s the same as you know, your hash code for you’re trying to get your coin, like all of those things are very similar. And that was done in a very decentralised way back then, because the files could have been stored on third party servers or on your own desktop or whatever is very different. So what I’m saying is, and from years from now, we should not ever even have to say crypto, we just say the jeremiad coin we can transact all those things can happen seamlessly in the background. Like if there’s a trusted relationship between me and my fan, and I say this is available for x coin, or you’re a premium member it should happen seamlessly wherever I go on the web. And I think that’s where we’re going to head.

Adam Levy: Yeah, it’s funny because when you’re when you’re comparing that example to where we are right now, you’re right, everything should happen seamlessly underneath the surface, nobody should be able to tell what’s going on right but when you’re when you’re using wallets right now you have that conversation of should this be a custodial wallet or a noncustodial wallet? Should users be able to have the option to own the keys to which their tokens are sitting on rather than leveraging like the seamless onboard experience when you open a new account and they just create a new Wallet for you off the bat because you don’t need to think twice about that stuff? Right? Like it’d be interesting to see how that kind of like plays down the line. Exactly with that example.

Jeremiah Owyang: And I understand and appreciate the defy movement and I understand why it exists and I’m and I’m for the crowd, but let’s not let’s not forget that Goldman Sachs fidelity and Schwab They’re headed this way they’re going to incorporate cryptos in their own wallets, like the main powers are going to incorporate it both ways, just as we saw Google and the big companies incorporate RSS. So I see this pendulum swing from decentralised to centralised, back and forth and back and forth. And that is the nature of the web of tech. So yeah, it’ll be fun. Yeah, it’ll

Adam Levy: Be really fun to see. So, you know, one of the biggest, I guess, questions when people launch their coins, they Okay, I launched my coin. It’s publicly trading, anybody can buy it. But what’s next? What’s the utility? How do I create value with it? How do you kind of approached that?

Jeremiah Owyang: Right, and every creator is different. So the way that I use it already mentioned, I’m using it to integrate with my Twitter interactions, trying to purchase my quote, reach or influence. I also use it people ask me for, Hey, can you look at this, you know, can you advise me on this, I don’t have a great way to do that. I’d have to set up a big contract or do it for free. Now I do with the $JOW coins, they purchase the coin, they donate it to me, it’s done. So simple. So easy on both parties. And I’ve done this and helped a number of start-ups. Sometimes I’ve Oh, I didn’t, I had a big brand huge brand. One of the big tech companies in Silicon Valley, they hired me, as a creator to facilitate experiences in clubhouse when it was red hot in q1 2021. And I hosted a couple of shows. But one of the keys to success in clubhouse is having the right people on stage that trigger notifications to bring people right. So I took a third of the budget, and I hired create clubhouse influencers and I tip them using my own Jay l coin. Smart and they love that because it wasn’t enough money where we wanted to do like formal contracts. But it was like a tip to them. And some of them already have their own coin. So we so basically, it was like it literally was the creator economy on top of the clubhouse platform. But we don’t need to access the clubhouse API is happening in a very ephemeral way. So there’s a few examples of how I’m using it. And of course, we’re getting ready for NFT’s.

Adam Levy: That’s powerful. That’s really powerful. And that’s something that hasn’t been able to be done until now. And you can integrate these tipping processes mechanisms. Well, at least you should be able to do it with any platform that kind of goes back to what you’re saying in the beginning, that these social tokens need to be integrated across everything, right? Every single platform that creator is going to be touching, there needs to be some easy integrations, to connect those tokens to connect those wallets and facilitate those transactions.

Jeremiah Owyang: And it’s not just tipping, right? Because people say, well, why don’t you just use cash app or PayPal or Venmo? Yeah, you could. But the difference when I give somebody my coin is I’m building a long term relationship. Because every Saturday, they get a piece of that rally reward from my coin, and therefore they want to promote it. They were literally bonded, like, in a way. And many of those creators, they purchase my coin, I purchase their coin. And because we’re part of the rally network, we’d like if the whole rally network goes up, the value of all of our coins goes up. So we actually are cross collaborating as creators as well. So that’s, and we have our own back channel, we have our own calls. We have our own zoom sessions once a month, like we have our own thing going on. Again, it’s getting pretty powerful. This network. I wanted to share some other examples as well, if I could, yeah, please. Okay, so these are some other creators, as well. There’s a famous DJ named ill mind. And he will do custom beats for you if you purchase his coin. And he also uses it and other ways as well. There’s another DJ called jaws. And people are saying, hey, can you please include my track into your mix? And he gets asset all the time. So he says, you know what, you got to buy my coin, the BTS coin, and he created a voting page. And if you own the coin, you can vote up the songs. So he’s using it as a way for crowd curation. So there’s, those are just there’s so many ways we can use it. I mean, its programmable money, right? It’s software. Like it’s not just like me giving you know, $1, like you know, like fiat currency.

Adam Levy: That’s something cash up can’t do. That’s not Venmo can do.

Jeremiah Owyang: That’s exactly right. And Patreon can do yeah. And the point system on Reddit or whatever, like, like, literally, there’s an API, and we can use it to validate user or validate how many tokens to the owner, we can use it to gate, you know, there’s many ways to use it as actual software.

Adam Levy: Powerful, that is powerful. So when you’re thinking about creating utility, is there a framework that you use to generate this value to gamify incentives? Like what how do you approach that yourself? And what could you kind of tell other creators when they’re trying to think of that?

Jeremiah Owyang: So what we’ve tried to do is so every creator is different so that the Twitch streamers who I haven’t talked about enough, because I’m not from that world, sure. They use it to host games and actual contests, and you purchase their coin to buy into it and then you get rewards from like the alley. Strawser coin, Allie coin, for example. So they use it in their world for things they’re already doing. So the first thing we do is we tell creators, what are you already doing? And how can you integrate it? And secondly, what is something that people are asking you for all the time, but you just don’t get paid for it, it could be a small thing. Let’s use that with your corn and monetize it. And the third thing we say is this, what is some remnant value? Perhaps its photos that didn’t make it into your book, maybe it’s B roll from a YouTube video. Maybe it’s recording from a concert of the actual music artists that they just happen to click play, I’m sorry, record on the iPad on stage. And people are saying I want that recording, but they don’t know how to distribute it in the right way. So that remnant value from the Creator, you can put that up in a coin gated Discord server or whatever, and make that happen. So do what you’re already doing. Don’t make more work for yourself. Anytime anybody’s asking you for something extra. That’s a little something, ask for some tipping or coin. And three, find that remnant value. And coin gainer.

Adam Levy: Fascinating. Yeah, so cool. I’m so curious how creative these individuals are going to get when it comes to tokenizing, their value and incentives that they provide. And I guess more about this, because you brought up a really cool example from the social audio space with clubhouse particularly, how do you imagine social tokens being integrated on there even more like beyond which you talking about.

Jeremiah Owyang: So using paid rooms.ch. Club owners can create private rooms already, so we can expect and that’s a feature that clubhouse is going to do natively, but people will use a credit card to swipe. But we could do that in other ways, in different layers. So that’s one example. Also, you could prioritise you get on stage, there’s, there’s always this request to get on the stage or be the speaker. And that could be on Twitter spaces, right? It could be on your podcast, frankly, well, whoever is the top coin holder, you proven you’re a top fan, or who’s the longest term coin holder, right, you could see who’s been the longest fan. Or you could tip in order to say I want to speak so you can integrate it for engagement. And then thirdly, you can reward your top fans. For example, let’s say somebody wanted to transcribe, you know, one of the videos and put it into quick, you know, Cliff Notes, a short version, give them a piece of the coin, like tip them out. But then you take that that bit and you sell it on substack using your coin. Like there’s so many ways you can do this. Like, there’s just like no limit, like so many business models can emerge. I just can’t begin to tell you like we have this playbook. It’s like hundreds of slides of options.

Adam Levy: I love how excited you are about it. It’s so good. It’s so real. I love it. I love it. But again, so are there. Are you guys taking it? Or is rally? I guess from your point of view? Are they taking it upon themselves to create those tools to enable more utility? Or is that something that’s going to kind of be on boarded or independent from another third party company kind of thing? You know, or is it all going to be within you imagine it being all within the ecosystem of rally?

Jeremiah Owyang: Yeah, so it’s actually just you know, it is a community. It truly is. So that there’s a rally forums, there’s a rally discord, and we’re talking, there’s zoom calls called the community calls where we’re all discussing all different parties. So there’s the Rally Team. There’s the craters, there’s third party developers, and then the fans. And we’re all talking and saying what do we want. In fact, the creators, we have our own canny board where you can submit ideas and we vote them up. And there’s a team that reviews those as well. I’m, I have my hand in both camps. I’m an advisor to rally and I’m also creator. So I’m dealing with all that in and very involved with the project in that way. The rally has been hiring a number of really amazing folks from Patreon, and YouTube and Spotify and Kickstarter, like it is really a class a team that knows how to work with creators, and creatives. And they’re going to help put together roadmap as well as on board, folks. So to answer your question, it is a collective. And what the way things are done is the Rally Team listens to what is being done. And they put forth a proposal to the community. And then we in that proposal is put up on snapshot, and we connect our wallets. And if you own rally tokens, you can vote. And so we are voting for how the rally tokens will be distributed and who will do it and there’s an active discussion like for me to be an advisor I had to submit and do a video and then the community had to approve that I would be an advisor.

Adam Levy: Wow. So he when it came to onboarding and hiring internally.

Jeremiah Owyang: For this role, for an advisor that was done but for the core roles. That’s It’s not being done because often those people work out really great a platform. So we don’t want that to be.

Adam Levy: Yeah, no, for sure. You talked a little bit about these business models and I want to pull up a tweet that kind of it was what was announced yesterday, okay? It came from an individual called Khan land force again, whether this number is true or not. Okay, let’s just let’s just hypothesise for a minute and enter entertain the tweet, okay? Starbucks customers have something like $1.4 billion in balances and their Starbucks app at any given time, we give them a billion and a half a billion and a half dollar loan, no interest and only asked for back when we want them to buy some 90% margin coffee from them. Right. And these are points, essentially, that are sitting on gift cards, right? Or on the Starbucks app there are just sitting there, right? And a way to kind of incentivize users to come back. Isn’t this the perfect type of model for a social token or community token or brand token? In a sense, where if this was all done on chain, for example, Starbucks would release some form of stable social coin. Okay, that can then be natively integrated across aetherium, or the web three ecosystem. Yep. And you can earn interest on your yields like, wouldn’t this be the perfect type of place to interact and experiment with? What do you think about that?

Jeremiah Owyang: Absolutely. So to me that like the first player to do this would be like Tesla, for example, it makes sense that they could do this, for sure. So in this case, I am familiar with loyalty programmes, I did some projects in that in that space. And the big brands, they love it as loyalty, but also in the book, sometimes they’re listed as liabilities, too, because if they’re not used, so big companies really struggle with this. But let’s just entertain the thought of using a brand token. It can, in fact, one of the top Home Improvement retailer, the executives were reaching to me like couldn’t could we use this? And they weren’t sure. And in general, they’re going to struggle because they’re worried it’s going to conflict with their stock token on NASDAQ, or New York Stock Exchange. I don’t see it happening for a while. But yes, a social token could be done for a brand. But I would also extend it to let’s just say, I think Tesla is the good example. Okay, because you can use it to actually look for provenance of parts like is that third party like karma? Or battery that you’re buying? Is it really from a Tesla approved vendor and work? And did it come from a blood mine? Well, let’s go all the way back to like, where did the actual parts come from? And you know, is it been ethically sourced. So that’s one great way to use blockchain. But secondly, Tesla’s Great example, because as you generate power from your roof of your, your, your solar, or you’re using charging stations, you could use a Tesla coin to for the whole ecosystem to track that. And that’s a form of building loyalty. So I think that’s a wasting yeah, we can make that happen. Yes, but for Starbucks, I think it’s possible, I just highly suspect they wouldn’t really put it on chain, they would just call it like the mermaid coin and just leave it on app. And it’s on their, their Amazon servers only, to be honest.

Adam Levy: That’d be so big. I just I like to think that far in advance, because if we’re tokenizing, everything, that’s like the narrative, everything is going to be tokenized. Right? And you’re thinking about like loyalty and membership rewards and your team fan clubs. You’re trying to build like a more modern day fan club here. Right? And that extends beyond creators that starts affecting big brands, big companies. And it’s funny that you brought up that example, that it’s a public company that was interested in experimenting with social tokens, but they weren’t sure how it would fluctuate with their public stock.

Jeremiah Owyang: No, they were worried to be in conflict,

Adam Levy: It would be in conflict, okay, in terms of like, what should people buy and invest in or?

Jeremiah Owyang:  They couldn’t launch. This is a big retailer, huge retailer. There’s several of them in every city. They’re like, well, I can’t launch my own brand coin, because I’m listing my own coin on NASDAQ. So it would confuse the market. They’re just worried about the Fed. And sec. It’s just like, you don’t know where to start and stop with that.

Adam Levy: Yeah, that’s like ripple, like, throwing out rumours that they’re going to take ripple public, but they still have XRP. That’s kind of publicly traded. Right? And how, how would that kind of work? And what would be the structure behind that? But anyways, different discussion for a different time.

Jeremiah Owyang: I think we could revisit that discussion next summer. And there might be some teeth to sink into that. But it’s too early. Yeah, I’m definitely thinking about that. Its like, how could that happen?

Adam Levy: Yeah, I want to bring up another point. And it’s I touched upon it with Starbucks for a minute. Yeah. So a lot of these tokens, they’re there. They fluctuate, right? They they’re variable. And from an investor point of view, they can be deemed as a great investment. If they believe in a creator. They want to help bootstrap liquidity. They want to support them. And on the audience side, they enable access, reward and payment to an extent right that’s right. But really the way I see it right now, social tokens because it could either be classified like as a security or as a loyalty, rewards and memberships type of token. And please correct me if I’m wrong, would it be wise and I haven’t seen anybody do this, would it be wise to issue tokens crater tokens as stable coins rather than assets that fluctuate? And the only reason I bring that up is because if you’re creating systems where you want to incentivize people and reward people, right, or you want to create access or gated kind of content, and you’re telling users to buy an asset that fluctuates, I’m thinking of this from the point of view that fans audiences, someone’s going to lose at some point, right? Don’t you think like someone’s going to lose when they’re buying a speculative asset? Or I don’t even want to call it asset, let’s say a speculative token, because I don’t know what to classified as per se, but they’re buying something that fluctuates up and down, based off the market’s health, right? What would it be wise to kind of approach the use case dependent? Would it be wise to approach it maybe from a stable coin point of view?

Jeremiah Owyang: I think that’s a great idea. I think that could be done. That that’s, that’s a really interesting idea. But I think you need a large enough economy and like, what would you base it off? Are you going to base it off USD?

Adam Levy: Exactly. So you create a pool on uniswap. That’s like the native token, and usdc, right, and you peg that tokens value to one of one. And they can use those tokens as a form of like, like, that’s where Starbucks could actually do a point system, right? That they can leverage those assets like from this tweet, they can leverage all these points that are being stacked up in the in the wallet as a way to kind of generate a new form of economy. So let’s say they have $1.4 billion, nobody’s using that they can lend that money out to pools on Ave or compound an interest off of it. And when users are ready to spend it, for example, they can process those transactions or kind of work out the kinks between you know what I mean? I’m thinking out loud here.

Jeremiah Owyang: And I’m sure it would be discussed, should a mermaid coin be pegged off the Starbucks price. Then as he goes, there you go. That would be another thing. Just real quick point on your earlier question on that, though, rally is a utility token, right? Because you’re usually guessing so yeah, to be clear, it is not a speculative investment.

Adam Levy: That’s right. I’m talking about in general, right. Yeah, in general from for the crater coins in general, because you’re seeing like big cloud, right. And you’re seeing those types of assets with steep bonding curve, and them appreciating value depreciating based off the demand pressure. But in general, right, like, at some point, you also think you want you want, you want to be able to like if you could crowdfund in early musician’s career, and that musician could kind of reward his early backers with on chain revenue, right? And you’d be able to track that, you know, I’m like, I’m thinking about this from like, different kind of point of views here.

Jeremiah Owyang: So my general take, Adam, is that the instability and is all part of the innovation curve and the early innovation curve and I think it’s okay, like, right now, only the early adopters are jumping in and like cool with it, and, and the folks that are joined in rally, they are folks that are have adopted digital first, like in every wave, I know, their background, I’ve recruited many of them. So I know they’re totally comfortable with that. And as the mainstream comes, in general, most In my opinion, most of these cryptos and broader though the whole space will start to stabilise right, as we have large institutions, financial institutions, and the ones I mentioned earlier moving in plus the Fed regulating. Alright, so I think its okay for fluctuations to happen. Yes, I know, we just hit a crypto winter this last month, you know, it had hurt us all who have our own wallets. And but I think we know that’s the risk that’s going to happen as early adopter. And that’s the way that you innovate is during those cycles. So, in my opinion, I think this just comes with that. Like, for example, that really social networking space, there was over 2030 different social networks that were doing micro messaging, only one really, one Twitter, right. And so you want to see what is best of breed. And so there was a high degree of fluctuation. So to me, I’m okay with it. It’s part of the game. Interesting. Its part of the innovation cycle. Yeah. And that high flux that happens, like within a few months in traditional industries takes 10 to 20 years. So it helps us to innovate faster.

Adam Levy: Yeah. And I guess what you’re building here is a network effect. Because the more you the more hodler is, quote, unquote, I guess the higher the price will go right, the more FOMO it’s going to create for other people to join in and kind of access those incentives and, and those gated content parks that people might build for themselves in their communities. Right. So I think, I think there’s value there. 100%. But you know what I’m thinking about this from I’m thinking about this from like, a black mirror point of view. Okay, let’s get like, let’s get super creative here.

Jeremiah Owyang: Let’s do it.

Adam Levy: Let’s do it. Okay, so it’s 2030 right now, okay. Everything is tokenized. Okay, people are tokenize their audiences and their communities are not the currencies, but their communities are tokenized their audiences can bind to them. Everybody is publicly trading on the markets, right? And yours is trading, which I checked earlier like about a couple hours ago at what $7.73. Let’s say Miley Cyrus has one that’s trading at $150 Justin Bieber has one at 200, etc. Right now we determine influence based off or a lot of society at least I don’t want to put everyone into shell but a lot of people in society determine influence based off their social their follower account, right? Oh, this person has 10 million followers are insanely influential. I think we’ll start shifting that narrative where people’s value will be determined based off what they’re publicly traded on the market.

Jeremiah Owyang: They’re interdependent numbers, for sure. Because the influence helps you to get more sponsors and an audience so they’re absolutely going to be intertwined. There’s no doubt in my mind.

Adam Levy: Yeah. But do you think that the dollar amount will have more influence over the follower count?

Jeremiah Owyang: I mean, but this? I think there’ll be aligned, I think there’ll be parallel. So I don’t think I don’t think one will be greater, I think you’ll see both numbers and know both numbers. And they’ll be intertwined. But none of this is new. We’ve always had, you know, different ways to I mean, one point is to own the most clamshell necklaces, or who had the most round size things in front of our homes. And no, you can’t you don’t have enough room in front of you on by the guys over there. I mean, even at the Bitcoin conference last week, if there’s the we’ll pass one BTC to get I mean, this this level of privilege, we will find a new number. For social media, we would use something else so sure, yeah, I think so. But in, in this case, this number represents your engaged community that believes in the creator’s ability, that’s a good point of view. That’s a great point of view. And it could be a more valuable metric than just followers, which we know people buy followers to. So if you’re going to buy social tokens, you’re actually using some type of quid. You’re using some currency, whether it’s US dollars, or eath, or BTC, to purchase it. So there’s actual perhaps even a more truer sense of value than just followers.

Adam Levy: Don’t know not to that’s a great point. That I’ve never heard someone bring that point up. That’s a great, that’s a very unique point. Yeah. Nobody’s brought this discussion to me. You brought it up, together. I love it. I love it. I love it. All. Right. I have a final question for you. Okay. At this at the time of this chat right now. JOW is trading at about $7.73. What is what does that price mean to you? If anything?

Jeremiah Owyang: To me? The dollar amount? Yeah, I mean, that’s great. I mean, I can tell you, I mean, that’s cool. That’s great.

Adam Levy: It’s a great number, by the way compared to like, if you the roster of like the 100 plus creators, right? It’s like it’s doing really, really well.

Jeremiah Owyang: We want everybody to do well, it’s not just about me, Bringing I’m onboarding my horse, so, or so did show with you. So the way that it works is, so there’s like a market cap of my whole coin economy. And so I own 43% I own over 50, so each creator issued 50,000 tokens. So I have 50,000 plus more, can I purchase on my own, times that $7 that’s how much the market cap is of that coin, plus the rally rewards and then plus people going to interact with me and use my token for the different creator things that I do or influenced or things that I do. So I mean, yeah, it’s great. But it only works if the whole rally network goes up if I’m pegged off the rally token the $JOW coin, but that is the main token of the sidechain. So if that is at a low price, it doesn’t matter what my coin is worth. So we want to collaboratively get all creators to be you know, kicking butt.

Adam Levy: Amazing. I think that’s an amazing spot to end off Jeremiah.

Jeremiah Owyang: [Cross talk] end on that I want to make sure I send you my coin a number of my coins to use Thank you. And I want to make sure you have it because we’re now bonded. We’re part of the same [Cross voice]

Adam Levy: Love that. I appreciate that. Thank you, man. You’ve been awesome your pool of knowledge. And it’s been a privilege to talk to you. Thank you for being on.

Jeremiah Owyang: Thank you for having me. Looking forward to hearing more. Bye

Categories
Podcast Transcript

Social Tokens Are Defining A New Era of Fashion

Listen on: Spotify | Apple Podcast | Google Podcast

Background

Mint Season 1 episode 5 features WhaleShark, a social entrepreneur and investor with a focus on disrupting the status quo, whose work is widely known for the successful $WHALE community. He’s a prolific advocate of NFTs, social tokens, DAOs and much more with an impressive track record of managing three different social token communities.

On this episode, WhaleShark and I discuss his latest project  Elite also known as the ticker $1337, his vision for creating digital clothing dedicated to gaming communities, or as he likes to call it, meta-wear, his takeaways from starting the most successful social token project, WHALE, his views on the future societal implications of creator coins, and so much more.


Thank you to Season 1’s NFT sponsors!

1. Coinvise – https://coinvise.co/

2. POAP – https://poap.xyz/

Interested in sponsoring future seasons? Get in touch here!


Adam Levy: How are you feeling, man?

WhaleShark: Adam, I’m doing great. And thank you so much for inviting me again, I had so much fun with you the last time I was in a podcast with you it was utterly amazing and truly an honor to be back this time again.

Adam Levy: You’re the man, man, you’re making so much noise on Twitter, especially over these last few months with this whole NFT boom. And during that you also had the time somehow to launch a brand new, I guess product project. And we’ll be talking a little bit more about it E1337 tailored towards the gaming space. But before we get into that, which is why I have you here. For those who don’t know you. Can you give me a brief background about yourself? What were you doing I guess before NFTs before crypto before the metaverse and where are you now?

WhaleShark: Sure thing, thank you for allowing me to introduce myself. So I go by the pseudonym WhaleShark. And I’ve been in the blockchain industry for about nine years now. While my claim to fame humbly saying is NFT’s I’d actually been invested in blockchain since 2012. Prior to that, I had actually been in the brand and marketing industry for roughly about 15 years, where I cut my fee professionally. But eventually I got enamoured by the concept of Bitcoin was buying, it was buying half a month salary worth of Bitcoin every month from 2012, all the way to 2015. I ended up loving ethereum and the narrative of it being the world’s computer. And I eventually took all of my Bitcoin and started investing in ethereum instead, that has actually been extremely timely and nice for me. And what I ended up doing is actually extending that, that, that that reach into investing into some several very prominent and successful blockchain companies that we see in the space today, while at the same time allowing me to expand into NFT’s in 2019, and eventually establishing the world’s largest social token whale in 2020. So it’s really been quite the ride. And Adam, you pointed out, you know, somehow, somehow, some way, I found a tiny bit of time in 2019, 2020. To start this new brand is once again, it’s E1337. We usually pronounce it as elite. So elite, which is a traditional hacker form, or hacker writing style, and eventually launched a social token for that this year. So extremely thrilled to be have been doing this. But it’s been a very, very busy few years.

Adam Levy: You know, I remember the first time I interacted with you was in Justin blouse NFT room for his iconic drop that made headwinds and kind of defined a lot of this momentum that we saw the following months afterwards. And I remember, there was something different about one when you enter the room, you were you were still a non, but there was a bidding war between you and I forgot, I think it might have been egg or eight and I forgot who it was exactly. And at the same time you were joining the clubhouse and sharing your energy and sharing your spirit. And ever since then, I’ve been following your journey really, really closely. And to see this new eye new project elite kind of pop out during that whole entire wave really struck my attention because like you said, you already built a really powerful community through whale through NF T’s. And now you’re approaching the gaming industry. Right? So there’s a there’s a lot to unfold over here. But I want to hear more again, how did you get into crypto? I know you started buying Bitcoin you converted into ethereum. But what was that aha moment for you. I know, you’ll mention that obviously, ethereum being this global computer, but tell me more a little bit about that.

WhaleShark: So during the course of my professional career, I’ve worked in many, many cities and countries throughout the world, I was literally moving every two to three years. Now, one of the biggest challenges that one encounters, when you’re moving into different countries into different jurisdictions, is the banking industry. Right? So you know, not revealing too much about my age here. But I come from an age where it takes, you know, three to five days to do an international bank transfer. And that is still very much the case today. I mean, it has sped up, you know, I have been able to send money from Asia to the US, you know, within two days, but back then it was three to five days at the shortest. When I did read about Bitcoin, all of a sudden, I discovered that this single project, the single technology, it alleviated a lot of the challenges that I faced as a globalist and as someone who wanted to truly own my money rather than having the banks hold it for me. So, you know, initially my entry into bitcoin was purely from a financial and economic interest point of view. But then after that, I saw again the decentralised nature of it. The fact that you know, alternative blockchains to Bitcoin could be used with smart contracts to programme the flow of money, the conditions of money, and it truly, you know, really envelope, the economic nerd within me to drag me down that rabbit hole. So you know, even back then, when I was buying Bitcoin, I think I first entered at about $500. And all of a sudden you saw a tank all the way to 200 250 for a couple of years, I really never lost faith in that technology, because there was really nothing around there that could truly replaced what Bitcoin was bringing to the entire space. Now, given that, we know that every single blockchain has its limitations. And while for a couple of years, I was able to send Bitcoin within a couple of minutes, there eventually came a time where there are so many transactions and the lack of scalability resulted in me having to wait You know, one day one and a half days, sometimes for transactions to go through. It was that point in time where I, you know, I understood the narrative of Bitcoin, as, you know, money 2.0 which is very different from the positioning where it’s gold 2.0 right now. But, you know, looking into ethereum, all of a sudden, I was able to do transactions in the seconds or in the minutes as well. So and then on top of that, you had the bonus of it, being able to also be smart, contract, programmable, you had smart money all of a sudden, so, you know, that really enamoured me as well. And I’ve always kept an open mind to the best technology. I’m very much you know, you have Bitcoin maximalist you have ethereum maximalist I’m sure you have Dogecoin maximalist now, I’m very much a use case maximalist. So I’ll give everything a try once or twice. And, you know, mainly I’m looking for fantastic use case and a seamless experience with that technology.

Adam Levy: I think that’s part of being one a good investor, part of being an early adopters that you have to be a maxi in certain areas, and you have to be willing to try and listen to what’s going on, and what’s picking up traction and tinker with it and test it for yourself. So, so more power to you would that and I, and I guess like a perfect transition, how does that kind of tie into elite with what you’re doing right now?

WhaleShark: Got you. So I started elite, actually, as a brand prior to my involvement in nfps. Or I would say probably about the same time. So the birth of elite came by the fact that I was doing a lot of macro-economic analysis and looking at different industries. You know, simply outing myself out as a little bit of a business nerd here. But you know, looking for that next opportunity. After looking at everything that was available in the market, you know, you saw that eSports was gaining a significant amount of traction and continues to gain a significant amount of traction in the market today. Now, given that, as I was watching eSports, delving into eSports, researching eSports you know, I was really looking at some of the apparel that people were wearing. And you know, it was a little bit disturbing to me, because online, if you were to buy eSports apparel, you were literally looking at apparel with dropship quality, so it’s basically a factory who created a cheap t shirt, they’re going to charge you $20 for stamping a logo on it right stamping a logo on the front stamping a logo on the back, bam, all of a sudden you have eSports apparel. The issue is though when you look at sports in general, right, you got you got Baymax like, you know, Lulu lemon for yoga. So for yoga, you have yoga pants for basketball, you have basketball jerseys for football, you have football jerseys. The question came to my mind was, what is a uniform for a eSports enthusiast or a professional gamer? Right? And is it just a simple hoodie? Or is it just a simple t shirt? That’s not a great quality and something just stamped on it? So that really started the fire burning within my brain to really figure out you know, is there a better way to do this? So what I started in 2019, with a team out of Korea, because again, Seoul is the mecca of Esports, is we actually had the team go to the largest and most popular cyber cafes and gaming cafes in the entire city, and actually run a poll from all of the people within there, you know, what did they not like about their Esports apparel? Or what did they wish that their apparel was, so they would be better suited to their hobby. And, you know, that’s when we created came up with the idea. At the same time, my involvement with blockchain was, you know, ramping up with my involvement in NFTs. So you know, it was very, it was a very natural progression to say, hey, how can I use NFTs and merge that with the apparel, the apparel set we were launching after that, and we can talk about this a little bit more detail later on. But after that, given the success of social tokens, and my firm belief that social tokens are going to be the next big thing after NF T’s is how do I take that other piece now? And how do I put it as a part of this amazing project. So that’s really, you know, a short story about how elite was created, and how today we not only have the most customised and high quality eSports apparel, but we also have NFP is that prove the authenticity of those apparel, as well as a social token that is used to drive not only the community, but is the only type of currency that we accept to be able to purchase this apparel.

Adam Levy: That’s big, that’s really big. And it’s big, because, you know, you hear a lot of projects launching, and you hear people just a bunch of software developers getting together, either forking some code, and just copying and pasting and changing the interface and rebranding a little bit. But you actually went to the extent of actually interviewing gamers were these gamers and so were they already crypto native.

 WhaleShark: So we actually developed the brand purely from gaming enthusiasts. So some of them might have been crypto native. But the main thing from a physical product perspective that we were looking to do was how do we create the best quality and the most convenient style of apparel for people who are interested in gaming multiple hours a day. And they came back with a lot of amazing input. And that has flowed into the material into the design into the way that we silkscreen, a lot of the designs onto the hoodies itself. And Adam, one of the most amazing things about this is when you look at the blockchain apparel space today, the hardest part of that many people have been unable to conquer yet is the physical supply chain, right? Because they’re so focused on the blockchain aspects of it, they haven’t been able to master the physical supply chain. But because this product was born out of traditional apparel creation, our physical our physical apparel supply chain, from manufacture, from design, to manufacturing, to ordering to warehousing to shipment, is actually world class as well. So I think we tackled the harder parts first. And really, given our interest and experience in blockchain, adding on the blockchain elements was relatively more simple.

Adam Levy: When you were creating and designing this blockchain apparel, and you were in the early phases, I guess, of designing because you were saying how it was already a brand before it became a more crypto native brand, the way I’m understanding it. Why? Why were NF T’s and social tokens like the thing to do with it? Why was that the natural next step, the natural progression, like what is it about NF T’s and social tokens that that gave you that aha moment? You’re like, wait a minute, why don’t we integrate the two? Why don’t we track everything and merge the digital with the physical? What why was that the way to go?

WhaleShark: So I think, I guess one of the main reasons that the main reasons that drove that was predominantly my passion for blockchain as a whole. You know, a tidbit that people don’t know is while we started off as a traditional apparel brand, the diamond that you see on the elite logo is actually called the blockchain diamond. And it’s not something that we advertise quite a bit because again, we were mainly focused on the larger gaming market who may or may not have an interest in the blockchain. But if you look at our logo, it’s basically a diamond with blocks that make up the intricacies of that design, which is actually the blockchain diamond. But I guess the other main reason is, I mean, number one, NF T’s, you know, while we look at nfps, as a way to manage to truly manage and own digital assets, right? You know, one of the other places that it will be used in the future, and not really used as much as it should be right now, is a point of authenticity, right? So I believe that in the future, you are going to see Gucci or mez, Chanel, all of these major luxury brands use some form of NF T’s tied to the physical good to be able to vouch for their authenticity. Now, you know, given that I’m always, you know, I’m not so interested in the money, right, which sounds a little bit weird, but I’m always interested in doing something that is right, and doing something that is ahead of its time. Right. So given that, I mean, given that this brand was just launching, I think it was really a no brainer to say hey, why don’t we future proof this and we use NF T’s as a methodology to really authenticate any single physical piece that came in. And you know, we’ve expanded right, so we started off with physical goods. We use nfps for our digital wearables now. So you know, partnering up with NFT studios who are an amazing designer and technology player within the space. There are some fantastic things that we Do with digital wearables from an NFT perspective, or elite, in terms of social tokens, again, not focusing on the money, but really doing things that are really truly disruptive and innovative. I had never seen a physical apparel brand, and were physical and digital now. But I had never seen an apparel brand, say, you know, alright, I’m not going to accept cash, I’m not going to accept Fiat, I’m not going to accept if or any of the mainstream currencies. What I’m going to do now is, the only way that you can purchase these physical or digital wearables is only by using the native digital social currency called lead, to be able to purchase these items. Now, you know, again, I’m, I think, from our previous conversation, and this conversation you seen, I’m a little bit of an economics nerd, right. So what would happen if you had a business model that didn’t really rely on the purchase and sale or on the purchase and production of products itself, but was more reliant on the tokenomics of a social token that drove that project, right. So all of a sudden, you’re creating more of a community versus a transactional ecosystem, to be able to buy and trade products. So that was really the impetus for me to do that.

Adam Levy: You know, the category of gaming, when you look back to the initial adoption of NFT’s, the first example or one of the earliest examples, at least you can think of is obviously crypto kitties a game, right. And social tokens, I guess, crypto in general has naturally aligned with the gaming industry to begin with, as a use case of adoption. Considering all the activities online, it’s all digital. So I feel like it’s that natural progression that led to that adoption, and the fact that you’re going and you’re taking a digital currency that you’ve created that’s solely for your community that you’ve I guess, community ownership in and it’s a collective type of environment, and applying that to the gaming industry, right. I feel like that’s just the natural next step and where things are going to be heading next and more, more to your point that people in companies like Gucci are going to start investing and their online wearables. I think you’re already seeing an early example of this. And I want to pull up it’s actually a tweet from Alexis ohanian, the co-founder of Reddit, and he basically tweets he talks about a Gucci bag on Roblox resold for free, 350,000 roebucks or roughly 4.1k. Okay, $4,115, the same purse in real life costs $3,400. So a digital version of a Gucci bag sold for more online than it did in person. And I think that fact, it shocks a lot of people. And remember, like he continues to tweet, he’s like, remember, this Roblox purse is not an NF t though. It has no value use transferability outside of the Roblox world, yet, it’s worth more than the physical one, watch this space. And I think, like the fact that Roblox is taking that, and they’re doing it on a very micro scale, and you’re already integrating with social tokens, right? You’re adding the traceability element, you’re allowing players to own a digital version of what they own in the physical world. That’s powerful. That’s powerful.

WhaleShark: Thank you, my friend. And I fully agree with Alexis, I mean, Jesus. I mean, when I mean, there’s several, there’s several dynamics that we’re looking at here, right? I mean, the first dynamic that we’re looking at is, you know, again, purely digital goods. And Adam, I mean, if we were to look three or four years ago, and if we were doing this, I would probably have to fly out to where you are, so that we could get the quality of resolution and streaming that we have right now. Right, right. And four years ago, people would say, Hey, I’m spending eight hours a day on zoom, talking to my co-workers talking to my team. I think that would have been unpatentable, right? Similarly, so what does this mean? I mean, moving into the future, you know, we all of us keep talking about the metaverse, where we are right now, there is really restrictions, right? Because again, I can see your head, I can see you speaking, but you know, it’s very difficult for me to see you move within a 3d space. And you know, this podcast might be 1000 times more exciting, if people were able to look at us in a 3d world and then be able to look from any angle that they wanted, while we were moving our entire body. Right? So you know, I think when you look at the metaverse as a whole and it’s coming, right I mean zoom didn’t really gain popularity until this unfortunate Corona Coronavirus crisis. But you know, given that the next step for meetings the next step for interactions, the next step for podcasts, might very well happen in the metaverse where that interaction becomes so much deeper than where we’re looking at right now from a 2d perspective. And given that if you exist in the metaverse, you’re going to want to have digital apparel, you’re going to want to have it you’re going to want to have a digital Gucci bag and you know, a digital Chanel watch and you know, maybe a digital, you know, Crockett and Jones pair of shoes. So I think it’s there. Once again, it’s going to take time, but I’ve always been very interested in being a first player so that I can learn as much as I can.

Adam Levy: Yeah, so tell me, tell me a bit about more of what you can buy on the site, what apparel are you selling? What does that look like?

WhaleShark: Got you. So for the time being, we have launched and manufactured, you know, several sets of physical where they are highly limited. So what we’re looking at is three hoodies, two t shirts and two baseball caps. We manufacture them on a very limited basis, simply because, again, we want to protect the scarcity of what we’re developing what we branched out to, besides physical wear in May. So in earlier last month, was we actually branched out into digital wearables. So we started manufacturing, not only the equivalent of the physical wearables, but we tried to understand Hey, now you have a metaverse, what happens if we design things that were suited for the metaverse because again, you don’t want to go into you might want to sometimes, but people might not want to go into the metaverse and wear a very simply designed hoodie, right, it might look nice, but you know, some people just want to just want to bling out, right. So they want to have animations, they want to have these crazy designs that you would not be able to have on a physical wearable. So that’s what we actually did from the digital perspective. And I guess one of the main things that we believe in is ensuring that we have a constant flow of new designs. So for us, again, it’s really a labour of love. So the team is actually launching designs every single month. And we’re going to get to the point where, you know, I don’t want to drop too much, too many too many, too many things that we’re doing, but you know, dude, you know, wearables, where the design is actually a video, right? Where literally, you have you know, moving patterns and moving artwork, on the wearables themselves that you’ll be able to go into the metaverse of where. So that’s really where what we’re looking at. And once again, it’s still very exploratory. We’re learning a lot as we move forward. But it’s been a hell lot of fun.

Adam Levy: You know, I want to share my screen for a minute and actually pull up the site for those watching on YouTube. And just to get an idea of what it looks like, right? So right, I’m on the physical side of things, you have different hoodies. And as you can see, they’re all you can only purchase it in the native currency. And as of right now, last time I checked the currency is that like $1.27. So do the math per hoodie per hat per t shirt. And I think it’s actually pretty, pretty cool. But you also have the shop digital side, where you’re allowing people to buy these virtual hoodies, which you’re actually charging more for, right? Can you can you explain more behind that? Why? Why do you put a stronger emphasis on the digital wearables versus the physical wearables?

WhaleShark: So we believe that the majority of our core market are going to be metaverse based. And given that, what we wanted to do is number one, ensure that you know, people who are able to purchase our digital wearables are truly fans of the community. Right. So I think that’s the first perspective. The second perspective is that and that’s a perfect fit, you can actually see a 3d rotation. Oh, cool. I was talking about how do you create, you know, wearables that are very different from what you could ever wear in real life. This is a perfect example of [Cross voice]

Adam Levy: Dude, Imagine being able to buy this physically and wearing this around as you go to the grocery store.

WhaleShark: Exactly. I mean, I would love to do it. But again, there’s some things that you can only do in the metaverse. Right.

Adam Levy: Right. Right.

WhaleShark: So I guess I guess the main other reason why we did it was because we really protected the scarcity of all of these items and the physical, the physical items, again, they have a very large amount of, they have a relatively larger amount of production size than these digital wearables. We want to keep things fresh, and we want to keep things coming in. So basically, what we’re going to do is we are going to be limiting the number of digital wearables actually go up onto the site. But at the same time, again, making sure that we’re protecting, we’re protecting that price level and protecting that scarcity of those digital variables.

Adam Levy: Sure, sure. And you talked a little bit about on the physical side that integrates, I guess, with tracking and verifying, through your supply chain. Can you talk a little bit more about that? And what that looks like? Because I know there’s there was such situations, I used to live in Switzerland. And I used to attend these like Bitcoin or crypto conferences in crypto Valley and Sue. And I remember meeting one start up over there that was basically doing that with sneakers. Right? Not the not the digital side, but more of the physical side. Can you talk a little bit more about how that works?

WhaleShark: So we’re actually still at a very rudimentary level. So the level that we are at right now is that, you know, once again, if and this is if the purchaser of a physical item is willing to share their IP address, what we do have is we have a mechanism whereby a corresponding art NFT, actually, and it’s actually on the website as well, but an art NFT is sent to that corresponding address. And again, what happens is that in that NFT, they have not only a beautiful piece of crypto art, and we worked with an artist called Daniel Ignacio, who was very awesome about creating the cyberpunk inspired art pieces. And basically, what it has it has all of the details where you can see, you know, again, you know, which item was it? Where was it from, and you know, the date of minting and stuff like that. Now, what we are exploring at the moment is ways to actually tie the physical to the digital piece. And we are evaluating, you know, several options here. I mean, it could be simple as printing a QR code, where, you know, again, the, the QR code would directly go towards that NFT. Or it could be as complex as actually inserting an NFC chip into these digital wearables itself. Right. So I think that would be the more advanced stage that we’re looking right.

Adam Levy: Right. Oh, and you actually, you can’t see what I’m looking at. Hold on. I wanted to go, I just clicked on open see, let me let me share my screen again. Because I basically what I did, I clicked on the buy now, right? And it took me to open see. So just so users can see what that looks like. Right now. I’m on the open market. And when I was on the digital side of the site, I clicked on that awesome 3d rotation for the, the cyberpunk. And this is actually how you buy the digital version. And then I’m guessing it would integrate to the appropriate platforms that you can actually use where and show off these, I guess, digital clothings, right, these digital, this digital textile. So in my understanding that correct?

WhaleShark: Yes, exactly. And you’re going to appreciate this, because, you know, again, we were talking before, you’re really interested in the social token space, right? One of the things that we’re going to be able to do very soon, is for a single digital wearable, we’re actually going to be able to partner with other social token communities, do a collaboration on a design, and have people pay in or have people buy those wearables in a percentage of a certain social token and a percentage of another social token. So let me put it this way. So let’s talk about I guess, let’s talk about f web, right? I mean, they’re probably one of the larger social token communities and outside of whale and outside of elite, you know, if there was an F web, hoody design, right, what we’d be able to do in the mechanism is say, Alright, so the price of this to the price of this f web elite colab is going to be 50 FWP plus 50. Elite, right, and that transaction will be able to go that way. So that, you know, again, that vouching or that fandom is not only represented by the digital item itself, it’s also being represented by the transaction.

Adam Levy: Wow, that’s so next level. That’s, that’s so cool. So that is so cool. And like, that’s like the like you’re talking about building like online communities, and problems and in groups that are united by 1000s, to millions. And it only makes sense, you know, when you when you think about, like how we’ve progressed, and especially over the last year, and you’re betting on a micro trend, macro trend, that we’re only going to get progressively more digital and more digital, and people are going to be investing more into their digital profiles and their identities and the things that they do online. And it just makes sense that this is like the next step kind of thing. From my point of view, people might think we’re crazy right now, like, people are never going to be spending 1000s of dollars for a digital Gucci bag that they can’t touch or for a digital t shirt that they can’t touch. Because you can’t touch it. There’s no value, but value is subjective. And people forget that. And when you’re joining, you know when you’re when you’re involved in the whale community when you’re involved in the FWP community, and soon to be in these other creator communities that are tokenizing themselves. It makes sense that this is like this is the next, I guess next step in that direction.

WhaleShark: Adam, I agree with you and I think I can take that again. From a historic standpoint, and from behind the scenes standpoint, if I look at a historic standpoint, even my family was telling me that I was crazy buying Bitcoin in 25, right? I remember talking to my dad, and he said, you know, this isn’t going to fly, this isn’t going to work. And you know, I just got off the phone with him earlier this evening. And all he could talk to me about was the ethereum and how ethereum is going to rule the world, right, from a historical standpoint, it’s always a risk, right there is there was very much the risk that Bitcoin would never take off. But again, you know, it’s looking at that risk to reward ratio. From a behind the scenes standpoint, Adam, I can tell you that, you know, every single brand is looking at how they can leverage nfps, whether that is from a pure digital play, or whether that’s from a physical to digital play, I was very fortunate enough to be hosted by one of the world’s leading luxury brand luxury brand magazines. That’s actually based out of China in Europe, I would say about a month ago. And it really was a seminar where, you know, I had the pleasure to, to share the stage with one of the founders of artefacts, right, so RGFT, who are again, an amazing group who are really pioneering the space, the number of questions that came through from brand managers, and product developers from any of the high end brands that you can think of was so large, that we weren’t able to complete the entire session in one, one to one and a half hours. So I think its coming, right. But again, very fortunate enough to be at the right place at the right time, with the right amount of expertise.

Adam Levy: I love it. I think that’s so funny. And you’re going to see a lot of those people who’ve been in the traditional textile business and the traditional brand development business, I believe Usher, like you said, and, and the space is only going to get bigger, and there’s only going to be even more questions. And you guys are definitely pioneering that. I want you to tell me more about the deep core visions that the very like the deep, deep, deep core visions that you’re trying to make a reality with elite, as the crypto metaverse and eSports sector kind of evolve. And I’m talking more about from the point of view of applying certain use cases, or perhaps the tech and the products aren’t really readily available to make them a reality, like what does that look like to you?

WhaleShark: Got you. So I think it’s on several points. Right. So I think the first point is that, you know, I can take it from an economic standpoint, right. So, you know, my vision, you know, in terms of building companies is how do you disrupt the traditional flow of, you know, of buying and selling, and rather, you know, allocated towards community growth, right. So while you have seen us been able to create a social token, a second social token, right, besides whale, and that social token, or again, it’s in the top five in the entire world, and at some point was that it was in that was, was the second only to well, but you know, is it possible to build a platform whereby, you know, the growth of a company, the financial sustainability of a company, is really based on the community, and based on token price, rather than, you know, the rather than the inflows and outflows of cash and Fiat. Right. So I think that’s a major economic experiment that we’re doing there. Now, given that again, you know, the reason why, you know, we can’t take it mass market at the moment, is because a lot of those technologies they’re not. They’re not, they’re not everyday consumer friendly, right? Yeah. So the only way that you can purchase lead right now, or you can sell lead is through is through uniswap. Again, the common person on the street is going to look at uniswap. And after that, learn about metamask and say, what do I do? Right? At the same time, if, you know, even if I launched it on any of the major exchanges, you know, how, how do you have that seamless? That seamless integration, right? If because they would have to buy it on the exchange, then they would have to take it out of the exchange, they’d have to put it in their meta mask. And then after that, they have to do it again. Right. So I think what needs to be done from that perspective is, you know, really just being able to allow the everyday man, so our technology that needs to allow the everyday man to acquire these social tokens and use them as easily, as you know, sending money through a bank. Right. And, you know, I don’t think we’re that far off. A lot of people are innovating within that payment space today. And, you know, one of the, I guess, one of the easier, I guess, bandages that has been done is, you know, being the ability to use credit card credit card converts to social token, social token pays, right. So I think you have that, but again, I think it’s a band aid, right? So there needs to be a more fluid way to be able to do that. The second part of technology is something actually that you brought up earlier today is How do you really integrate that traceability? You know, for the product itself. Now, when we spoke about it earlier on, we really spoke about, you know, how do you make sure that the authenticity of the item is there? I’m really interested in saying, how do I make sure that I can trace every single stage of the supply chain and inventory, right, all the way to the point that it reaches the consumer? Again, a question that is being tackled by multiple companies today, no one has been able to answer it in a truly mature manner. But I would love to be able to say, alright, here, here’s your elite hoodie. Here’s the blockchain tracking, or here’s the zipper track all the way from, you know, South Korea, here’s all the material trace from wherever, here’s the factory where it was made, and it was actually traced to, again, a lot of our stuff is handmade as well. So this was traced to seamstress or seamster. Number 46. From a quality assurance perspective, it was checked three times quality assurance, agent number 2, quality assurance Agent number 46, quality assurance, Agent number 52. And then after it got on this truck, and it went to this warehouse, and then it got sent out by this pack by this person. And then it got into your hands, right.

Adam Levy: Boom.

WhaleShark: I think if anyone ever did was able to take that sort of a technology into a very mature level, you’re looking at full scale disruption on the transparency of supply chain in general. Right. So I think that’s probably a second point that I would be looking at. And I guess the third point that I’d be looking at mainly looks towards the digital wearables themselves. And don’t get me wrong, I love crypto voxels. I love sandbox. I love decentraland. But you know, again, I think a lot of those platforms and maybe platforms in the future to come, you know, how do you create, again, that seamless interaction between the user and focus on user experience versus the just viewed versus interaction with the blockchain, right? And that the metaverse that’s able to do that is going to win. And then after that, we’ll see the proliferation of digital wearables. So those are probably the three points.

Adam Levy: That first of all, let’s backtrack for a minute that was like to the T. And it just shows how, how experienced you are in the in the textile space and the e commerce space and the entire, I guess, that entire industry. So and I remember those types of conversations when I was living in Switzerland and crypto Valley, quote, unquote, sube being the Pioneer that it is for innovating and being an early adopter of regulation and this technology, they were still having those conversations three years ago, right? Yep. And to show you that, that still isn’t a problem that solved yet shows you how early we are. So if anybody listening to this solves that problem, or is working on that problem, hit us up and let us know. Because I think whale shark, you’re the prime use case for making it a reality and developing a case study from that, actually. And yeah, it’d be exciting to see how that kind of plays out.

WhaleShark: Adam, absolutely. And honestly, I did dabble in it a tiny bit. So you know, I did take a look at it before, it is just a very, very complex thing. Because again, when you look at it, and I think even the extended use case of applying supply chain, blockchain based supply chain tracking all the way to agricultural goods, that I mean, it has the ability to change everything. Imagine being able to pick up a tomato, or tomato, sorry, tomato, tomato, at your, at your, at your grocery store, being able to scan a QR code, understand not only exactly what was the geographical, I guess, the geographical flow of that single tomato, but also understanding under what soil weather and other conditions. It was, it was being it was it was being grown in, right? Again, the blockchain has infinite number of use cases that can bring humanity together and make society so much more better as a whole. And you know, I’m just amazed every single day by looking at all of the amount of innovators and entrepreneurs in the space that are leveraging that technology to do so.

Adam Levy: And that, again, is another big macro. Their consumers care about where their food comes from. Consumers care about where their clothing comes from, where the fabric comes from. Consumers care about where their diamonds come from, right? They care about where a lot of the products that they use, what’s the source and what does that look like. And many times companies even leverage that as a marketing tactic to show their level of transparency to show their level of sustainability and the fact that they can even present that with data. Or soon be able to do that, is interesting. It’s really interesting to see how that plays out.

WhaleShark: Dude idea just popped in my head dude again, yes, Adam Levy podcast extraordinaire – if you if he was wearing an elite hoodie and a hoodie used to belong to Adam Levy, and it was by an NFP because the NFP moved through his wallet, again, that hoodie could be worth significantly more than what someone originally purchased it for right boom, supply chain and movement of products is just such a prime use case for blockchain. I just can’t wait to see all of those developments in the upcoming years.

Adam Levy: I love it, man. We’re thinking so in the future, and those types of conversations stimulate and stimulate me, I want to talk more about the user experience like you drop the utility. What can people actually do with elite token beyond just using it to purchase clothing? What does that look like right now? And as a follow up, what do you think that whale kind of like evolve to in the future?

WhaleShark: Got you. So I think we always produce digital and physical wearables as a very basic use case, right? There are so many different things that you can do with social tokens. And we’ve implemented quite a bit of them at elite. So I would say that the first thing that you can do with elite with lead tokens is within the discord which again, it grew faster beyond my imagination, I think we’re probably 3500 to 4000 members. And a lot of that growth has come over the last one to two, one to two months. You know, you can actually use those tokens to participate in some of the play to earn games that we have a moderator team, and they play amazing blockchain games like axes infinity, they play Blanco’s block party, they play golf and chain, they play crypto motor stat, and many other games. And we’re actually also going to be partnering with other blockchain companies, blockchain gaming companies in the space where people can actually use and hold lead so that they can participate in those events. The second thing that they can do is again, everyone loves a good airdrop, I love a good holder. So what I tend to do is, again, with that lead and how much you hold in your metamask account, basically, we have a bot that actually monitors all of the different addresses. And we’re able to give airdrops to the largest holders of lead, because at the end of the day, what we’re looking to do is we’re looking to create a community and not, you know, again, no, no disrespect to traders, but we’re looking to create a community, right, so you can actually more earn more lead by holding lead. The third thing that you can do with lead is we’ve actually set up a doubt. And again, we are still waiting for the advent on chain daos, whereby it’s very plug and play seamless and easy to use. But for the time being, you know, we have a full on voting mechanism, whereby people who hold lead, gain Dao voting roles, and what they’re able to do is they’re able to vote on the events that we hold, they able to vote on the designs that we’re going to do, they’re going to be able to vote on the upgrading of the NF T’s or the digital wearables, which is another interesting perspective from an IPS. And the fourth thing that they’re able to do is they’re also going to be able to vote on all of our future production. So again, one of the biggest issues that apparel manufacturers face is, I don’t know how much of a certain design and of how much of a certain size that I need to manufacture, right, by actually having the community vote on things and actually having the community be able to stake their lead beforehand. So almost like a pre-buy process. You know, there’s absolutely no wastage in the supply chain, because I know exactly how much of each design is going to go through. And I also know exactly how much of each size we need to produce, right. So again, it’s much easier on the environment as well.

Adam Levy: Fascinating. I, you know, a lot of people launch tokens whale shark, and they launch them to launch them. And they create, like liquidity pools or yield farming, and all these random like economic incentives, which more power to them, obviously, it’s a way to, I guess, bootstrap liquidity, get more people involved. But the real power, like you said, is delivering real utility that extends beyond the blockchain, right? Building a community around something incentivizing long term holding, versus those traders that will try to speculate on the community, and pump and dump the price beyond your control. And the fact like the way you’ve kind of thought about, I guess, rewarding users and getting them to contribute is very unique within itself. And I wanted to ask you, is there a framework that you use to kind of create these value chains to create this utility? Like, how do you think about utility and how even more so for the creators that are listening? How should they be thinking about when they want to launch their token and build a community around it? How should they be thinking about utility? The value that comes once people have holding the token?

WhaleShark: Got you. That’s a fascinating and amazing question, Adam. So I think there are several things that one needs to consider before launching a social token. The reason why you see, you know, many of the long term stairs on the top list of social token stay there is simply because we have managed to be able to acquire the expertise in multiple fields on multiple fields of discipline, right? A lot of people enter the social token space, assuming that as long as they do some basic token omics, you know, the thing is going to fly. But what people don’t really understand is that, number one, social tokens are really a long term effort and community building, you got to be there, no matter whether it’s 15 cents, or $15, or $150, right, you need to be there day in and day out, you know, grinding with the community, because at the end of day, that’s just what it’s all about, right? It’s about community engagement, and having the community support that token. But given that there are several areas of discipline that one needs to acquire, to be able to effectively manage the social token, you’re looking at. I mean, marketing, obviously, a no brainer, marketing, branding, community building and management. But the two that I guess, I’ve been able to bring to the table, I have, again, I have a fantastic team on both whale and elite. But the two that I Excel a little bit better on would be economics and game theory, right? Because from an economic perspective, you do need to have a decent grasp of monetary policy or monetary theory, right? To understand, you know, how scars should this token be? What should the distribution be? Where should that distribution go? Right? So I think that’s the first and fundamental step in terms of, you know, what is the what is the macro tokenomics of the token that you’re trying to create, right. And again, you need to leave yourself a enough runway, depending on how you’re launching the token, you need to be able to leave yourself enough runway so that you can continue to support the community without losing all of the tokens, right? So, you know, an aspect that could be very appealing to a Creator is saying, alright, um, I’m only going to keep 20%. And I’m going to give the I’m going to sell the other 80% away, what do you have left in hand to be able to incentivize your community after that, right? So really, I think from a macro perspective, you can look at that. And then from a game theory perspective, I mean, game theory has always been extremely intriguing. For me, its number one, what sort of behaviour Do you want to drive through your buyer community, right, in their interactions with the token? And number two, you know, what sort of events will really drive that behaviour that you’re looking for? Right? So again, I mean, the most fundamental basics, and again, it wasn’t basic when I started liquidity meaning right, because I liquidity mine, I hold, therefore I earn more, and therefore, I’m going to continue to liquidity mine more, right. But again, if the social token doesn’t hold value, because your community engagement is low, then people say, why am I liquidity mining at 10 cents for right? So I think it is a mash. And really a structure in terms of understanding here are, here’s the framework here. So firstly, here is the behaviour that I want to drive, right? Here’s the framework of events that are going to drive this behaviour. And here is the interaction between each style of event that leads to in my case, long term holding, rather than trading. Right. It’s All about that. Yeah.

Adam Levy: Yeah. Interesting. Yeah. I mean, you have a wealth of experience, obviously doing whale. Now applying it to a new the second project, the second iteration into elite. What would you say are, I guess, those main learning points that you took away from launching whale, when designing and building it, and kind of like bringing it to market? Like what was there anything you wish you knew you would have known prior to launching your first project whale, and now apply that to elite?

WhaleShark: Amazing question again, my friend. So I would say the first thing is that team is everything, right? Like many others who launched into the social token space before and continue to launch into social token space, community management, community event execution, and fostering community engagement is harder than one can imagine. Right? So you see, sometimes people launch a project with maybe two or three people, assuming that they can actually get the community engaged on a day to day basis. I was very fortunate at wale because again, those community members and those community leaders came on very, very quickly. But one of the things I realised very, you know, very early on before starting elite was that I needed to create a separate team that would able that would be able to sacrifice their time and their energies to making sure that we were building an amazing community. Right. So I mean, the team I lead is wonderful. They’re mainly focused on driving those events down there. But I mean, the main thing, probably that I learned is that team is everything. And you can never underestimate those resources. The issue with social tokens and social token communities is that, you know, again, if the founder is the only one who is supposed to be driving that engagement, the founder is not going to be available 12 to 24 hours a day to sit down at their computer, and make sure everybody enjoys it. Right. I guess the second thing that I learned, you know, and again, it relates to people I think, you know, as you look at all businesses in life, eventually all these to the people in the teams is that I wish when I started whale, I had a much more mature HR structure in place. And I know that when I say HR structure, probably the decentralised committee is going to create.

Adam Levy: [Inaudible]

WhaleShark: No HR, no finance. But in all honesty, people are people, right? I mean, while we are all in the decentralised space, the incentivization, the encouragement, you know, the management of people is not something that a robot can do. And sometimes, again, when you look at a lot of the companies and organisations that are coming into decentralised space, they’re saying, Hey, robot 3.0, you know, we don’t need to have KPIs, we don’t need to have HR monitoring processes, we don’t need to have, you know, annual reviews. And what you see is that those projects just fall apart, simply because, you know, again, there’s no guiding structure and process in place, for people to understand what they should be doing right, on a day to day basis. So, you know, we realised this very early on at whale. And what I did was I hired an implemented, you know, an HR expert from my previous endeavours and brought her into whale as well as into elite, again, to make sure that everyone is not only productive, but they’re also enjoying what they’re doing. And they’re focusing on enjoying what they’re doing. So I think the second lesson really was about that. And you know, just being able to, well, just being able to make sure that everyone had a very relatively structured environment so that they could do what they needed to do effectively. And I guess, again, the third thing that that was, you know, that I learned from whale is that, you know, again, relates to people, not everything that needs to be done manually, right? When you’re looking at building a community on discord, you got a gazillion different bots that you can use. What Bo did very well for elite was I just took the same boss structure that we had on whale implemented it on elite, and we were good to go. Whereas it took probably two to three months to exactly understand what bot structure we needed that whale before I could do it there. So yeah, I think it all at the end of the day, it all pertains to people, it all pertains to team, it all pertains to workflow, because managing a social token is significantly more challenging than most people might think.

Adam Levy: That’s golden. And I think I think I think those three points tend to get overlooked, especially in a Dao circumstance, because Da are naturally decentralised organisations as their as their abbreviation kind of suggests. But when you’re building something that’s decentralised, you still need to have accountability. And people are used to having centralised forms of authority, kind of guiding them and leading them. And I think, you approaching it from the point of view of trying to find at least well, one, there’s you as that quote, unquote, leader and that visionary that’s setting the path for everyone to build on and to work on. But also bringing in an external person, someone in HR, that makes sure that the environment that the vibes, that people feel like they’re building something that they’re excited about, is very critical that I feel like a lot of projects may overlook, and might see this thing as a cash grab rather than just actually investing in the value that extends and unlocks with these tokens that extends beyond token price that extends beyond crypto. And I think you can take those three points to the bank, that’s awesome.

WhaleShark: While we are in a decentralised environment, while we are in the decentralised, you know, age of decentralisation. At the same time, you know people who are people who are participating in decentralisation are still people. Right? Yeah. So I think that’s why people are so important. And that’s also why we also need to have the structure to bring out the best in people.

Adam Levy: Yeah, sure. I we’re coming close to an end. So I want to I want to leave you with, with a final thought. You know, there’s, there’s this I’m thinking about social tokens, the creator economy, people tokenizing their communities, brands tokenizing their communities. And I’m thinking, and this might be extreme, but I’m asking this to everyone. Okay, I feel like we’re leaning somewhat towards a black mirror effect to an extent. And what I mean by that is, you’re going to have people brands and personalities, influencers kind of publicly traded on the markets on the crypto markets. And right now, as a society, we tend a lot of people I don’t want to I don’t want to bucket everyone but a lot of people tend to, I guess determine influenced by the follower count of someone, right. And they didn’t determine their thought leadership based off their social media value, and, and all that all that around it. But now we’re approaching a world where people are going to be basically publicly traded and associated with a price. This person’s worth $1, this person’s worth $2, is communities worth $100? Blah, blah, blah, right? Do you think we’re kind of pivoting towards that, that world where we’re having like a, quote unquote, human stock market community market?

WhaleShark: And whenever you see my mouth open like this, again, it means I’m smiling from ear to ear, because you’re asking the exact you’re asking the right question. So I think it’s difficult, right? So, you know, when you look at when you look at the social token economy, and when you look at influencers, I mean, let me split this off into two different things, right. So the way I think that the social token space is going to grow, is that everybody and their grandmother, very similar to NF T’s right, everybody in the grandmother was either buying NF T’s or selling NF T’s, you’re going to see everybody and their grandmother create their own social token relatively soon, right? Because it’s just so easy to do. However, what you’re also going to see is that they underestimated the five points that I brought up just now branding, marketing, community building economics and, and game theory, and then really understand, oh, what have I gotten myself into. And then after that, you know, just desert that community all together. And you’ll see that token collapse, right. So what I think in the short term that short to mid-term, what you’re going to see is you’re going to see a wide proliferation of social tokens. And then after that people who either number one, you know, didn’t succeed to the extent that they wanted, or number two, they underestimated the amount of resource and effort that it took to close down their social token. But at the same time, I believe what we’re going to see is we are going to see umbrella social tokens springing up. And people are going to start using multi-use social tokens that they’re affiliated with, rather than their own specific social token. So let me give you an example. For example, you know, you could have, you know, three different elites or celebrities who all belong to a particular genre, from month one to month, 12, what you’re going to see is those three individual celebrities, it create and use their own social token, what you’ll what they’ll find out, though, is that it’s too resource intensive, because you know, I’m a celebrity because I need to act because I need to sing. And instead, they’re going to group together, and they’re going to create their own group social token, while also recruiting, you know, people of their friends or whatever, into that same social tokens. So you’ll see, you know, five to 10, celebrities use that same social token, because it is it embodies the values that you know, they embody themselves, right. And that’s your talk, probably looking at the mid to longer term, the most concerning thing to me about social tokens, and even more, so personal tokens, right? Because, again, we’ve seen it with big clouds, and I’m an avid fan of big cloud, right? I’m an avid fan of big cloud, and, you know, shout out to all of my followers as well as coin holders there. But one of the biggest concerns for me, because I’ve been through the same process myself is, do I determine my self-worth based on my token value? And how does that affect my mental health? Right, right. Um, you know, when I first started, well, I know I started at 1520 cents, and then after that, you saw it extended to $3. Then after I saw it, dip all the way back down to 80 cents. Does that mean my self-worth increased by 200%? In a month, and then if that drop if I, you know, 60% next month, and now well, is that $12 worth increased by 2000, 3000%? Last year, it’s very easy to take it very personally, right. My social token price went down, People hate me. My social token went up the entire world. And Adam, you can see it with likes and follows today, right? Maybe, you know what happens when you take that into monetary value And what will the psychological ramifications be on people who are unable to dissociate themselves or their real true self-worth with their commercial value of their personal tokens? I think if it’s not managed appropriately, it could have severe ramifications on the psychological behaviour of youth today, right?

Adam Levy:  Yeah, yeah. And that just proves that the market for mental health is just getting bigger and bigger. And stronger as we continue to denominate people’s worth by numbers, follower count, publicly traded number for their asset for their token for the utility token, etc., etc. You know, the situation that the scenario that comes to mind, like, let’s say it’s 2030, right now, and people have their Google Glasses or their Snapchat Spectacles, and that has a lot of AR functionality, you know, people are wearing them walking down the street, all these micro interfaces kind of appear and through the lens, and they appear in front of you, you look at someone, their profile pops up, you’re able to see how many followers they have, what their tokens trading at, or they eat, where they ate last where their last Yelp review was, and you’re basically able to build like a profile of someone on the go. And that number kind of being a core a core factor in that, on whether that reality is going to come true, who knows. But it’s something I like to think about, as I see the growth of social tokens kind of progress and become stronger in the use case for them to empower creators, and take control of their audience. Beyond these web 2.5, platforms like Facebook, Google, YouTube, etc. I think there’s something there. There’s, there’s, there’s that powerful narrative there. And with every single new thing, there’s always its pros and cons. And if you’ve done a good enough job with kind of separating your value from your social media account, right, this is just like the next the next step towards it. In my in my opinion, I could be wrong, but what you’re doing, you’re incentivizing long-term holders, you’re incentivizing. And you mentioned that right. In the very beginning or mid-conversation, you said we want to avoid the traders, right. We want to avoid the speculators. We want to incentivize people who are holding elite to come be a part of the community, there’s actually something over here that you might enjoy. So yeah, something to think about.

WhaleShark: Absolutely. And I can’t wait till we get to that to that world, where again, I would love to Don a pair of Apple glasses and you know, be able to see all the amazing accomplishments that other people have done. But again, to your point, to your point, I mean, people do need to dissociate themselves, I guess, from their social media, I guess social media likes and follows. And now, right, their market value, right. So it’s no longer a company market value, yeah, their market value from the true value. And, you know, hopefully, you know, you know, people will come to understand that, again, it’s just a fluctuation in the market. And, again, I’ve never dissed traders before, I think, again, every single project needs to have holders and traders, there are two sides of the same coin, because you need to have the hold. But you also have to need to have the liquidity. So both things are there. But again, I can’t wait to see all of the amazing things that are going to be built on blockchain. As well as you know how that integrates within society as a whole.

Adam Levy: Amazing man. I feel like we can continue this conversation for hours. But obviously, I want to be respectful of your time. Well, shark more power to you man, more power to your communities, to your projects. I love seeing what you’re doing and I hope to have you on again soon.

WhaleShark: Thank you so much, Adam. It is by far one of my favorite times to be able to sit down with you in this podcast room. I always find that you asked some of the most amazing questions, my friend, and thank you I would be more than happy to come on anytime you invite me.

Adam Levy: I love it man and we’ll talk soon. Thank you.

WhaleShark: Thank you.

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Podcast Transcript

Bomani X on Using Clubhouse To Build Crypto Communities

Listen on: Spotify | Apple Podcast | Google Podcast

Background

Mint Season 1 episode 4 features Bomani X, a Black guitarist, singer-songwriter, and celebrity digital strategist who has worked with Jill Scott, Nicki Minaj, Lil Wayne, Wyclef, and more. He’s also the founder of Lit.Spins and was selected as Clubhouses’ icon for the longest time.

More recently, he’s known for his social token $BOO and in this episode, we talk about how social tokens will revolutionize the music industry, his vision for $BOO, how he’s created a utility for token holders by playing games on Clubhouse, and much more.


Thank you to Season 1’s NFT sponsors!

1. Coinvise – https://coinvise.co/

2. POAP – https://poap.xyz/

Interested in sponsoring future seasons? Get in touch here!


Adam Levy: I appreciate you being on, what are you playing right now?

Bomani X: Uh, yeah, I’m playing this PRS Silver Sky, John Mayer’s addition guitar and yeah, it’s picked this up about probably exactly around this time last year.

Adam Levy: Really? There you go.

Bomani X: So it’s been a cool ride [Inaudible]

Adam Levy: Nice dude I see you I see all over the place on clubhouse on YouTube on Spotify on SoundCloud. I see you working with different people. So I’m excited to have you on it’s really a pleasure I’ve been wanting to do and have you on for some time. And as I’m building more of the show out, I figured what better way to start it off than with Bomani himself Bomani X. And you have quite the story getting started. And I mean, recently you caught headwinds being the clubhouse icon. And I feel like that was a wild ride within itself that we’ll kind of, we’ll kind of dive deeper into but I want to kind of start with your background. Tell me a little bit more about you. Where are you from originally how you got into music, like your upbringing and all that?

Bomani X: Um, yeah, so like, you know, born in New York, you know, kind of raised in like a, you know, predominantly like Nation of Islam household with a lot of like, strong emphasis on like, education, you know, like community values. You know, entrepreneurship. And in growing up, I’ve always kind of been just like, kind of, like tech aligned, you know, and just, like, interested in like, technology and computers and, and nerd culture, and stuff like that. It wasn’t particularly until, like, high school. Like, when I started to really get interested in music. My dad had like, x the, my little sister, like, you know, do you want to pick up an instrument? Do you want to play music, like you know, of creativity has always been something that’s being innovated and create creative has always been something that my core so you know, my dad kind of, like, recognised that it was like, do you want to play an instrument? Originally, I chose the drums.

Adam Levy: That’s what I’m talking about man, drummers all the way bro drummers all the way.

Bomani X: And my, my little sister picked up a guitar. But very quickly, I started just naturally gravitating towards, her guitar, and that as an instrument that kind of like, just like fit my vibe, you know, just being able to just chill and you know, watch TV and play and be creative and just like, on my own terms, as opposed to like, some of the value and restrictions that drummers have to deal with. But yeah, that’s kind of like my first introduction to music, you know, then like, I went to college, I went to Howard University, met like my best friend, and bandmate, like, the first day of school, and what did you study there? I was originally a bio major ended up like switching and getting my degree in philosophy. But yeah, just like music and like, some of the experiences were just like, the beauty of like collaboration and connecting with like bandmates, and music and like how much of a role that was playing in my life and like, early, you know, college, like late high school like that, kind of like shaped like, that being like a major part of like my future and like, always, creating some sort of like techno musical bridge was kind of the goal. Because of that.

Adam Levy: It’s funny, because I am also a drummer, I’ve been playing since five years old ever since I can remember. And when I got started, I actually started the exact opposite, you started playing the drums and transitioned out, my dad didn’t want to get a drum set at home. He’s like, that’s the last thing I’m going to do. And he actually tried to get me on the piano on the guitar. And a bunch of other things before, he said, Alright, whatever, I’ll just get you a kit. And from there, it’s been history and there’s nothing like music, there’s nothing like connecting with other people and, and collaborating on a tool. And that just then rolls out into a full song in a jam session in a solo session. There’s nothing more empowering than that. But it’s funny because how you transition into philosophy, right? Or psychology was philosophy, right? Which has a lot of psychological components. I mean, to some extent, but I guess how is that kind of led you to where you’re at right now?

Bomani X: I think I mean originally like even like being a bio major and Like wanting to go to med school, like I’ve always been, like, a, you know, I mean plan, I was like, hey, I want to be a brain surgeon. For some reason, like, you know, I’ve always been interested in like people, you know, thoughts and ideas and just like how things work even just on like the technical level, like always playing around with computers and, and building computers and stuff like that. Um, so when, when the bio major thing didn’t really work and finding philosophy like, I don’t know, just like just like guitar, like, I just realised it was like a calling, you know, like, like, I like understanding things and just like thinking about things like very deeply. And that’s just how my natural personality is, um, in terms of like, how that related to like, what I do now, like, a lot of especially like, my, my natural day job is like digital marketing digital strategy, like, how do you take the systems and like, that involve people and like, like, see the world through those lenses and stuff like that. So like, that’s kind of how I like I approach my music that’s kind of just approach like, community as our approach like, my job just like, understanding things and understanding people and connecting with real values and ideals. And yeah, I just like resonated with that a lot as a philosophy major. And that kind of stuck with me today, how I approach things now.

Adam Levy: I mean, you totally play the part too. I mean, I’ve jumped into clubhouse sessions, your whole entire look from the sunglasses to the hair, it’s such a vibe within itself. And it’s a lot of the reason why I wanted to have you on this on the show because one I got I got exposure to you through cup clubhouse Initially, I remember, you’re you help a lot of people on there, you tend to jump in a lot of rooms and with that comes with notifications to your followers, and then they jump in and builds an audience and whatnot. So you’re very big proponent on building communities and helping others build their communities. And I think one really cool way that you do that is obviously through music. And partly why have you here today to talk about boo coin, right? And just a disclaimer, no ways to shill boo coin or to buy bitcoin? It’s more to tell the story behind that. And I’m actually really curious, because you have, were you ever tampering with crypto trading Bitcoin or anything like that? Or did you just kind of fall into the lap of social tokens somehow.

Bomani X: I’ve been, like, I’ve known about the crypto space for a while, you know, whether it’s like trading and dabbling with dad, or like, you know, these different platforms, and apps that were that were coming up very early days. And even just like, knowing what NF T’s was, like, for a really long time, but, um, so I, I’ve known about that, where I mean, like I said, like, I’ve always been someone who’s tech aligned, and like, how do you how does technology or these like, emerging trends like push for a greater sense of creativity and connection. So I’ve always had that like, as my ethos in pretty much what I do. I’m not particularly until like, clubhouse and like, you know, getting more like, comfortable using my voice comfortable. Like, I’m applying a lot of these skill sets for myself and my own brand. And like, actually just, you know, being authentically me, where I then I started to realise all these cool ideas and all these things that like, I’ve always valued like, now I can start like applying for myself, and, and leveraging opportunity that I’ve been gifted to just do things in a way that I’ve always liked doing, and like comfortably doing it. So like, even when I was approached from like, the Rally Team, and like setting up a coin. I was like, yeah, like, why not? Like, why not experiment?

Adam Levy: I got it.

Bomani X: Like, does that mean more money in my pocket? I mean, maybe it does, maybe does it. So yeah, so like, even just the concept of like, setting up social token and boo, boo coin. At time, it just felt like a no brainer. Like, why not try it out? You know, what can come from it?

Adam Levy: Yeah. So you touched up on a really a point that I actually wanted to ask you, so let’s just dive that this dive into that. So the big macro trends, okay, that you kind of see social tokens playing a role in what have you seen that like, makes it a perfect opportunity for creators to launch their own tokens one take themselves public, quote, unquote, in build token based communities, what are those big macro trends that you that you saw come into play?

Bomani X: a few So, one, you know, like, one of the biggest lessons on a creative level and personal level that I’ve, that I’ve got from clubhouse was that like, you know, one because of the pandemic and like, you know, like, connection and collaboration, that’s, you know, everybody had to view that on a different lens. I mean, that’s, that’s obvious, and we’ve already gone through that. Um, but what about clubhouse what I’ve learned is that a lot of people’s voices are different in that type in the particularly like a social audio environment where like, it’s not like the typical, like, content mass that you put up on like, clubhouse and, and I mean, I’m sorry, put up on like Instagram, Twitter, tik tok, and I’m one of the Mac macro trends, I realised that like, digital identity is like becoming more and more of a theme as like, your identity and content, like, become go to more of like, authentic, genuine place. Um, and you know, especially with like, this sense of, like, truly digital ownership like, like curating, like digital land, like what that looks like, or just like what I was seeing happening and like the avatar space, I’m like, there’s this whole like, push towards like really owning your digital identity. Whether you avatars what to do wearables whether to do like audio. Um, and so when you’re and so with that trend, I realise like, you know, with owning your, your land or identity, like where it is, like, your economics that that come in, and then what I was seeing happening and like the entity space, not just as like a transfer of value for like, sales and stuff like that, but like people are using NF T’s is like a identifier badge. Like holders of these tokens mean that like you are identified as a part of this community, or you can be identified to get access to this experience. And as I was initially introduced to, like, rally, and then like seeing some of the stuff I saw, like, some big role communities like whale and friends with benefits. Um, I started seeing social tokens as like that bridge point where like, you have like, you have your content funnel, which is like, your social media platform, and you know, you have your identity, which is like what’s happening like in the metaverse, and wearables and avatars, and then you have like, NF T’s, which is like, the sale of that content value, but then like, it’s all like funnelled through, like social tokens, which both can be used as, like, you know, whether it’s like tipping or monetization, or like how people can support creators and crowdfund and crowd encourage things. But also, like, you holding this coin represents, like you’re part of x. And like how you build that out? Could be like, really powerful when you connect all those different dots together.

Adam Levy: Yeah, for sure. And just to dive deeper on that, so how do you more or less distinguish an NFt from a social token? Because a lot of people that are newcomers, for example, and maybe they haven’t even heard about social tokens just yet, and how that’s going to impact the creators and influencers of the world and musicians, whatever. How do you distinguish that because you can fractionalize ownership of an NFT? Right? So why would someone want to buy a token versus let’s say, like a membership badge that’s represented as an NFt?

Bomani X: I think, one, you know, in and like you said, very, like, some people can blurred the lines, like what that means right now. I think, like on a technical level, and like a functional level, like NFTs are more so used as like a higher value exchange, or at least how are you being used right now, where it’s like, here’s a particular artwork or a particular piece that I’m like, you know, that’s supposed to be aligned to like my super fans or collectors or like different things that, you know, people in my community get access to, I think social tokens are like, like, I think because I like smaller, not smaller than that, but like they’re perceived as like, currency in a way where like, it’s not just identify bad like, you could just tip somebody by buying their coffee. Or like even holders of your coin can use that as a currency for other things in your community. I think because it blurs both lines that like, I would rather like have social tokens be like the form of currency and identifiers. And like entities be like the assets that gives the coin more value.

Adam Levy: Yeah, it’s interesting, because there’s a lot of more experimentation to do to kind of really distinguish them, from apples to oranges kind of kind of thing, right. And I think that’s part of being an early adopter is creating those paths of experimentation, and leveraging the social tokens as one form of, of ownership of commerce of community and leveraging NFT’s as another form of ownership, commerce and community, right? And all that those bring together. But when you when you first kind of when you got approached by the Rally Team, and they told you, you can take in create a token of yourself, or you like, confused in the beginning, you’re like, what is that? What does that mean exactly? Like, were you sceptical at all? Did you? Did you think like, one of the legal implications, like what was going through your head?

Bomani X: Yeah, I wasn’t particularly sceptical on like, figuring out, like, on a technical level, what it meant, or like, how it could work. More so sceptical, and like, yeah, like, there were some, like, legal implications that I was, like, worried about where it’s like, you know, there’s, there’s an aspect of like, the coin represents value in you not represents like the value of like, like, it can going up and down, like, you know, like, on a financial level. So like, figuring out like, what’s the best like, phrasing and education that needs to happen? Or even just like things like, I have to, like, naturally, say or not say to protect myself? Like, yeah, Bitcoin is going up? Or, you know, yeah, yeah, you can’t say shit like that. And, like, where and, but I think the cool part of it, where it really forces you to really connect with what the value you determine is for your community, where they’re like this coin can be redeemed for this experience are these coin can be used for this, as opposed to like this arbitrary coin. Because then that’s, I think that’s what like, differentiates it from just like a crowdfunding campaign, where like, people could just pay you to fund the stuff you’re doing as opposed of like, I’m buying into something that can be redeemed for the things your Creator chooses to put out. And as the community accepts those different things that they can use their coin for. It like creates, I just say more Exchange. I don’t know what it is.

Adam Levy: I hear you. And I think like, I see you trying to create more utility behind it, too. I know you tweeted out the discord channel for boo holders. What other kind of activities are you creating and experiences? Are you creating around that? And as a follow up question, how do you really approach that when you’re creating these initiatives that revolve around a token?

Bomani X: Yeah, one, you know, the, the discord thing was part of the plan. Not necessarily because I like needed a Discord. But I think the discord in the coin was solving a pain point of like, where how my creativity was showing on clubhouse where, like, you know, it’s very, like, real time, you know, like, information only happens in rooms. So like, just having a platform. I’m just having a platform where, like, information can be shared and spread. And stored. But, but it could also be gated, um, I think that was like, one of the things I was trying to figure out was like, how do you really Kate create, like a gated community with social coins? Because like, yeah, you can have like gated content on like, Patreon or only fans or whatever the platform, you know, but like, the one thing that I was like, had to figure out was like, Okay, now that I have this coin out, I have people that are buying a coin, like how do I best identify who those peoples are. So like solving that first was like the discord and having and having a gated and there’s some tools that’s being built out to have gated clubhouse rooms for coin holders as well. But that was like the first thing.

Adam Levy: Is that already in the works? How does that work? They’re integrating with clubhouse and integrating the Social tokens or how does that work?

Bomani X:  It’s more of a like a and I haven’t fully tested it out but I’ve seen so many creators do this more so like, like a bridge where like, this private room gets made. And only holders of the coin get.

Adam Levy: The link is dropped in the chat. Exactly. Okay. Got you. Cuz so there’s no there’s no formal integration, right? And I think that’s where that that’s where like the winner is right? Where all these platforms start integrating tools that allow creators to utilise their currencies in a way to create gated experiences, right? if Snapchat were to create a feature where you could link your coin and only certain people so you don’t have to worry about people then going you are doing subscriptions to get access to your private snap, you can just say an approach it like collab Lana’s doing it right. And in connecting your Meta mask and seeing all if you have the threshold, you can see my snaps, or if you have the threshold, you can join my clubhouse room automatically. And I think I hope that’s where these platforms are going to be transitioning to, as more and more creators kind of create these tokens. And they realise that Wait a minute, I just created an asset, right? That’s kind of viewed as a loyalty membership type of token. And I’m really bounded to the platforms that really allow me to experiment with this token discord, being one of them, and all the tools and open source projects that you can build on top of that, right. I’d be interested to see how that kind of rolls out, I wonder how long it’s going to take till you see more of these, like mainstream platforms hop on board, like Pay Pal is for example, with Bitcoin and Venmo now with buying and selling crypto, so it’d be interesting,

Bomani X: I think the one thing that I’ve realised even more and more just being I will identify greater as a creator is like, you know, these type of integrations always come last. And like, sometimes, like, it really takes some of the innovation and experimenting that people are doing to really flesh out the use cases first, so that these platforms like okay, that that that model does work. I mean, even with just like the example of like monetization on clubhouse, like, you know, like there’s been, there’s been plenty of people, even on the platform didn’t have direct monetization, but there’s been plenty of people that have been making money on apps, it’s just, you know, with experimenting with cash app or experimenting with creating their own funnel.

Adam Levy: Right now, it’s a very manual process, there’s no way to streamline it. And I think that’s like, that’s the Golden Apple right there.

Bomani X: But I do think that it’s a tricky balance, because like, I think, I think and Nish, like that, like quick integrations can cause like, somewhat of a flooding where like, like, proper use cases don’t get developed. Because it’s so easy, you know, like, and, and, and not to not necessarily bringing this up. But like, that’s kind of my opinions of like big clout, in a sense where it is, you know, an ideal world connecting social to currency, you know, seems like what the future is, but like, that quick integration very early on is showing like some of the natural issues that happens when people use social currency or shells or tokens within their community hasn’t really been solved yet. And then when you flood it with like, a quick integration early on, like you see some of the pros and cons of that. So I think there’s a balance in the economy of just like, how platforms connect with what creators are innovating with.

Adam Levy: Yeah, sure. I think it’s, it’s funny, you bring up big clock, because I wanted to bring that up with you later. But that was an amazing social experiment. And amazing Black Mirror type of social experiment that many, many I’ve been told that question its execution and how it kind of went to launch. But regardless, the idea the concept is more or less kind of like what these other social tokens are kind of leaning on, like the ones that are being launched on rally or roll, right, it really is like a public stock market, quote, unquote, for people and brands that extend beyond the New York Stock Exchange and in Wall Street, etc. And you’re right, I think they did go more than of the extreme route, I think, was actually pretty smart because it showed people what was what was possible and what the vision is, as a whole. And I think it sparked the conversations that were needed to have around what social tokens are and couldn’t become down the line. So I applaud their founders for making that leap. And, honestly, best of luck to them, but I think there’s a market for both right. I think there’s a market for those that don’t necessarily want to treat it with such aggressive bonding curves like Bitcoin did, and the supply and the Demand pressure that kind of are attached to the price appreciation, right? Whereas rallies is pegged more to the underlying token itself, as well as the supply and demand pressure that the creator creates for their token on the memberships. And it’s crazy me, I talk to people about social tokens, and I tell them, think of them as a way where when you swipe your credit card, you gain points that you can exchange for discounted hotels for airline miles. Imagine you can do that now referencing someone’s brand and their influence that they built. And I think it’s a complete game changer. So more in that utility. Do you imagine a world where your community 2, 3, 4 maybe in the next year, depending on how fast the social tokens actually pick up and people start referencing early adopters as examples, and their prices appreciate if they appreciate it? Okay. Do you imagine yourself doing like, for example, and I’m like, going far-fetched right now. Okay. Let’s say you have, I don’t know, 10,000, 20,000 people holding your token, the price is in the triple digits, right? Assuming you can get to that point. Do you see yourself doing collabs with more mainstream brands, like Gibson, for example, right? Or I don’t know, if there are some guitar brands out there. And the ones that you’re holding right now, right? Like, you know what I mean, like doing a collab of commerce, where you tell them that, oh, wait a minute, I have a tonne of people holding my tokens, these are actual tokens that you can swap for any other currency in the market. Why not do exclusive drops and collapse? Do you see yourself doing that with these companies? Or how are you kind of approaching this down the line?

Bomani X: Yeah, no, I definitely envision that I mean like, even just on like, a small scale of like, you know, like with some of these entities, plans that I have, or certain things I plan where like you said like, it becomes not necessarily a bonus but like a feature of like the coin and the coin community and like, and you know, how connecting with, you know, major brands of like, hey, there’s a huge pool of, of money and liquidity and my personal community, as opposed and, and, and that being able to be like fact checked in, you know, on track, which I think is insane, insane. Yeah, different, which is a different conversation that happens with like, from the brand creator level where they expect, you know, their fan base to show your pride towards a product, but they don’t really know, like, what the full like value is, and social coins can kind of be like, that representation, like, Oh, no, like, I have X amount of holders, you know, these holders have X amount of things that they can use, because, you know, that’s what it’s for. And here’s an experience that we can collaborate our partner with. That, you know, Alliance, and I think direct convergence will, will be can be, it’ll be done easier in that regard. As opposed of like, you know, you’re just promoting to your fan base that may or may not decide to use their real dollars on something, you know.

Adam Levy: Yeah. Yeah. So, what have been some of like, the major hurdles, if any, for getting more of your fan base more of your audience in tune with boo?

Bomani X: Um, I think some of the natural hurdles are some of the hurdles that like just exist in crypto, there’s still like an education factor, like, and what is it? You know, like, what can I use it for, like, you know, there’s still like a huge financial implication that comes with crypto currency in general, where, like, people buy into tokens for the expectations that it’s an investment to, you know, make money for so like, some of those same pretences exists in the social token space, whereas, like, buying boots, I guess, Tina, um, so we can go up in value. Um, so I think I think some of the hurdles is just like education. Like not fully even identifying like, what the value that I want to like put out yet so right now it’s, it’s I feel like a lot of the social token community it’s perceived as just like crowdfunding as opposed to like a fully fleshed out crater economy yet. Um, and, and at least particularly with rally right now, just a proper, like, funnel to identify who the community is still, like, you know, like, there’s still a lot of these manual hacks and innovations that I got to make it work, but that’s some of this stuff so far. Yeah, I

Adam Levy: I think its part of the process. We’re getting to crypto like you said, in general, understanding what cryptocurrencies are, what they mean how they work, why there’s something online that you created out of thin air all of a sudden have $1 value to it. I think and like, at some point, people are going to cross that hurdle, right. And I think influencers actually going to be a major part with educating these, these mainstream adopters like NF T’s were for bringing in this next wave of culture art, music, dance, photography, etc, into the digital world of web three. And indeed, it’d be interesting to see how it pans out. Kind of down the line what I’ve been the reaction so far, have you gotten mixed feelings? Behind launching? Boo, one of your audience? Have they criticised you have they applauded you? What has been the consensus?

Bomani X: Um, I haven’t got any, any major criticisms, and mostly, like, applauding whether or not people understand it fully, mostly applauding like a, you know, Bomani’s innovating or testing out? Yeah. And, and, and proving that like, you know, these types of risks, you know, are working. You know, and, and being one of the first clubhouse creators to make the coin and you know, and it still, you know, being a good thing that I’m glad I did, yeah, yeah. I think some of the feedback is mostly, or at least the number one question that I get is like, Okay, what am I using this for, again? And whether or not like I portrayed as, like, hey, you know, it’s just like, a form as like tipping or like monetization, or just expressing in the ways that people are used to right now. Until like, oh, yeah, like, come into discord and play poker with a coin, you know, and use that as a currency or like, so, you know, some of these experiences that I do, like, I’m starting to make them a little bit more private. And, yeah, you know, these, what the coins can get access to. Um, so mostly just like, Can confused is the biggest and common critique about it, but I haven’t seen any real like hate about the social health insurance yet.

Adam Levy: I don’t think people understand it well enough to even form a full opinion and to see the drawbacks in the positives, the pros and the cons. But so you being super, super active on clubhouse, being one of the leading voices for the black community and bringing in more culture more sold onto the platform, right, and then launching this token, early April. There’s a lot of things that happened during the pandemic for you, I feel like that probably would have never kind of imagined how have you used boo? In the context of clubhouse? Are you rewarding listeners for being in the room? Have you experimented with that? Are you thinking about that?

Bomani X: I one way, you know, like, I think the one of the benefits of social tokens because like never before, where, like, that form of like, fan to creator engagement, especially when, like, when a fan pays for something like that value exchange, it’s like kind of a one off thing. You know, like, you know, with social tokens, like you buy a coin whether or not you redeem it now or later like there’s always that like paired relationship. So, you know, one thing I’ve been doing is like, I probably have given like, a lot a lot of money to people probably like, probably like, with not as much strictness as I probably should, because like I still view it as like magic internet money, but like, I’d probably give it like at least like hundreds of thousands of dollars.

Adam Levy: Oh, hundreds of 1000s or hundreds to 2000s

Bomani X: Hundreds of two thousands.

Adam Levy: I was like damn bro you’re printing money gee.

Bomani X: Jess so like as like a reward like hey, like you’ve been with me on this clubhouse journey for a while like I have this coin I don’t really know what I’m doing with it fully yet but like, let me give this to you as like because eventually like I’m going to create a system where they’re giving the coin back or like using the coin to get something so like it’s kind of like I think social tokens can be used as like a collateral to be honest also like if I gave you like $100 in Bitcoin and there’s nothing you can spend it on right now but like I’m kind of you’re kind of like putting something in collateral like hey, come back to this community when you’re able to use the coin and whether you cash it out. I’m not obviously that’s on you and even if you did, I wouldn’t really matter but like I the one thing I also like about rally is that like the reward system is really well for holders of the coin. So I’m getting paid back with rally token. Yeah, exactly. So yeah, so the percentage of coins you hold, you get access to that reward pool that goes out every week. Um, so that’s kind of how I’ve been using it right now and clubhouse is like, Hey, I got boot coin like if you want some just hit me up, I’ll send you some. You know, now I got the discord. And I’m playing a lot of games on clubhouse that use the coin as like, the reward or the tool.

Adam Levy: That’s super cool. What goes down in the discord? Or what have you been doing so far? Or is that exclusive for boo holders? Because you got to do so? I guess a sneak peek to incentivize more people to join the community.

Bomani X: Yeah, so there’s it is gated there is like one or two general channels. Which you could see a lot of just random chats and activities that go on the gate is like really low. It’s like two, two coins right now and I haven’t set up like you came in and like just wanted some, you know, just send it to you in a discord channels right now. Nice. Um, yeah, right now, it’s just like, being used as like, a lot of like, people in clubhouse like finally being able to like group chat and group texts of people. So like, creating that value for my community, which is like a pain point for a lot of people in clubs anyway, where like, we only get to talk to people when we’re in the room or on stage. So like, discord right now has kind of been a place where people just building even greater friendships. And that’s kind of like the value added I’m having for it right now. Like a lot of people like my rooms and my vibes and the people I connect with. So like, come to the discord to like, you know?

Adam Levy: Yeah, I think that’s the beauty behind this. Because there’s so many different social platforms from YouTube to your subscribers, Instagram, you have your followers and on Twitter, you have your follower’s clubhouse, you have your followers, Facebook, you have different groups that might represent your songs, and your musics and everything that you spit out. But there’s no real coherent, coherent way to bring everyone together, and through a funnel of direct communication. And do so where you actually you can do it from the point of view of incentivizing these, the most hard-core fans to actually have a financial stake in the in the future of what you’re trying to build in you, as a performer, the credibility that you’ve built for yourself, there’s no real way to do that. Other than with social tokens, really, people are just engaging with you with likes, follow subscribes, views, very surface level type of interactions. And I think you’re thinking about this right? Because you’re actually saying, Wait a minute, I have a great following on clubhouse I have a great following on Instagram on Twitter, I’m starting to produce content, I’m doing more live shows and posting them on YouTube. People are going to grow hopefully going to grow fan of me, I got to kind of reward them and show them how they can engage with me beyond these platforms. And I think you’re on the money with that. I really think you’re on the money with that.

Bomani X: And I think like I think the one thing that the social tokens do like it allows you to like financially bet on yourself more and what I mean by that like you know, like I’ve gotten plenty of like cash apps and yeah, but like imagine like all of that was like boot coin very early on like with doing the same amount of work of building your community with building out you know, this audience in this in this funnel like a lot of money would have been worth way more than that it was then then it is.

Adam Levy: I think it just get like don’t get me just take just get Bitcoin Yeah.

Bomani X: Even on the fan level, like the value of what they gave to you is worth more with the coin.

Adam Levy: Yeah, think about that. Like don’t just give me your money go you can give me your money but do it in the form of a currency because then I’ll be able to give you even more right like it’s such a like psychological flip instead of just [unintelligible] someone just buy my currency because I have so many new cool things you can unlock just by having that so

Bomani X: Yeah, interesting. And that money you gave out maybe worth less because now you got rewards or things like now you have more money to yeah for yourself and you still got the same value for in terms of like what you initially wanted to get to me or go to a creator so like I think I mean now granted like you said, there’s that level of fluctuation where obviously like coins go up, not everything always goes up. So it’s more of a long game. And I think you have to also be mindful of that, that you know, when things go down, you know, still grind part of it and part of its value.

Adam Levy: How do you how do you disassociate your self-worth, from your currency worth? I feel like it’s A big problem because right now with how society works are a lot of these, I’m not going to put everyone in a mode, okay? But the more followers you have, the more influential you are right? The more awareness you’re able to create and power quote, unquote, and people associate you to your fame. Stuff. One, one, what you’ve done, okay, but two, how many followers you got? Right? Amongst other things, okay. But social media followers are like a big player in that. And it’s, it’s fucked with a lot of people. It’s like, on one hand, people are very happy on social media, and producing content, people are associating them based off of their numbers and their fame and what they’re portraying online, do you think it’s ever going to ever going to shift that people are going to be like, Nah, this person’s worth, like, $20, this other person’s worth $100 they’re not worth the same kind of thing. This person has more followers in this person, he’s more influence, you know, what I mean? Like, are people going to, like start entering into this black mirror type of type of situation?

Bomani X: I do think so a bit. Well, I don’t think it will be that extreme. But I do think like, you know, going back to like, the, like, big clout, you know, experimentation, like, that kind of opened the veil of like, that is actually a very, you know, strong possibility of like, even creators start shifting, like, what’s valuable to them, where it’s not followers, but it’s like, you know, my coin value in, and then, you know, because there’s a natural gamification that occurs in crypto, like people will, you know, exploit that or manipulate that or just like, recognise that, like, Oh, yeah, this creator is worth this much. So maybe that’s means he’s worth more than an investment. But, granted, that already happens in social media, where, you know, there’s already a higher level of perception of like people that are verified or with high follow ships, that they provide more value, because now, I think we, as a community already recognise that, that that’s not always the case, like, perception is not always true. And you have to really be ingrained in that community that really find out what that value is for you. But the fact that is paired with money, like, it makes it a little bit more tricky. So I think that’s something that I’m even like, being mindful of that, like, let me look out for potential red flags. And like, you know, people that are holding my coin, are they really in it for like, the coin value going up? So they can like, you know, sell? Are they in it for, like, what it’s going to be used for? And yeah, I think you have to still look at, like some of the negative implications that are happening in some of these emerging tech trends. Because just on a philosophical level, like, it’s always going to be deeper on a day to what it looks like.

Adam Levy: You know, it’s crazy, because I feel like the majority of token holders might look at it from the point of view of an investor and speculating on the person and the brand as a form of investment, right? Rather than you engaging with your audience of people that believe in you love, your content, your music, all that you produce, and engage with you on a more intimate experiential level. Right? And I’d even argue, to some extent, and feel free to correct me if I’m wrong, is, I think, like 90% of the token holders might be more on the investment side. To some extent, I think you can’t control that, right? Because there’s no real way like, if you send people their tokens, how do you actually force them to come back and engage in your experiences, right? If anything, it’ll just be sitting in their metamask or wherever it’s sitting there web three wallet. And it’ll be appreciating depreciating in value as the rest of the market does to an extent. But how do you actually create an environment where you motivate your audience to partake more in the intimate experiences that you’re creating for them as stakeholders as token holders, rather, as speculators? How do you how do you kind of think about that?

Bomani X: Yeah, I think that’s something that a lot of people have and, you know, in this conversation is what I feel like is equally happening in like, NFT space where there’s a lot of like conflating between, like is this a collectible as a part of like me, just enjoying this experience that this creator gave me or is this an investment and I’m thinking about as a collector and like, I want to flip it in the future or something like that. And, and, you know, I, I think you know, same with social toxins like there’s a lot of people that just know the game and are buying it as an or as an investment of you, which I still think that is important aspect of it because like I think as a creator and what the social tokens grant is like, a form of like crowdfunding or crowd investment. Um, and you know, that’s needed in you know, are creators where they can feel like they can raise capital to do the stuff that they want to do. Um, so I think there’s a level of like investing in a person, which is okay. But investing for the sake of like, market manipulation like that can get, you know, that could be dangerous. And yeah, I think for me what I’ve been doing is everyone who are trying to do like everyone who has had do have my coin, like, if there isn’t already a one to one relationship or connection that I have, like, how can I like facilitate that? Where like, at the end of the day, like I know, everybody, or at least they’re in a system where I can get to know everybody on a on a level that will have them value me more so than just the coin itself?

Adam Levy: Yeah, if only there was a way to send direct notifications for people who are holding your tokens and send the messages in, like, funnel them in a way where Yeah, you can communicate with them if they enter the discord. But if they’re just token holders, and they’re not in the discord, either, because one they might not know there is a discord or two. They either received it from someone not knowing what they really received, right, if there was a way to really communicate with them.

Bomani X: So someone gay, and I do agree with this, someone, someone did give me a good counterpoint where like, some of the inherent benefits of crypto is like that level of anonymity. Sure, where like, even with, you know, some of these like fractionalized entities, like, there’s some, sometimes it’s just like a wallet address, like you don’t really even know who bought your stuff. And being able to like, do this little second layer of community building is kind of hard when you don’t really know so but I do think that’s important to maintain because it’s crypto, but it’s a balance, I think, by giving people this space to support from a distance. Yeah. But also giving a space for people to opt in to the community. That you’re building.

Adam Levy: Yeah, yeah, it’s interesting, how did you kind of determine the price in which the token went out? I feel like it’s a lot of question. It’s a common question people have, when they look at these cryptocurrencies, like, where the hell does the value come from.

Bomani X: So to be honest, I’m with rally. Because it’s because one, you know, they, they give you a certain amount of coins as, as you’re starting off, and because those coins are, are backed by the rally token, there wasn’t necessarily a level like liquidity that I had to put into, like, create a certain value. So to be honest, when I when I, the first day, you know, my coin launch, you know, it already had like, a value, you know, it was like 40 cents, something like that. I think with like, roll, like, because, you know, like, there’s like, X amount of coins, and you need to add liquidity to it to, like, give it that type of value. Like it’s different on the rally community. Um, and what seems like a less complicated process for me to figure out. So I think that’s why I appreciated like, that aspect of rally where like, the value was kind of like, set and then like, as more coins get created and existence like that increases the value as like rally token goes up, that also plays into the increase Valley, you know, supply and demand. So like they have their own little algorithm that works.

Adam Levy: Yeah, well, a lot of these tokens end up creating pools on uniswap, or these decentralised exchanges, majority of the time, or what I’ve seen they’re really pegged to aetherium is value, right? So when aetherium goes down, if you’re creating like if we’re talking in terms of whale right now, right there, there’s a whale eath pool, right? And the tokens peg essentially to it’s for its price, right? So when eath goes down, similar to rallies, like economics, right, except rally has a rally coin. Aetherium is aetherium. And I think one thing when creators are kind of going through this process, they’ll come across that path, where should I go and take a left and go more towards the raw creation, like whale did and create an actual token that lives on aetherium? Or do I take the right path and kind of rely on a platform that feels it’s not centralised, but it feels like that the performance of the token is dependent on the success of rally and the platform rally to an extent right and it’s kind of like building a business on top of another business. Like if you’re like you’re a digital strategist, like leveraging eecom right and in creating an e commerce brand, leveraging Facebook, but Facebook goes down for example, you’re fucked to an extent right? So like, how have you kind of approached that? How did you decide to go I mean, I know they kind of approached you you’re like, probably just engage in the conversation and say, let’s just do it? Right. Yeah. But I guess like down the line from what you’ve learned, by going through this process? How would you kind of approach creators and tell them? This is like my rule of thumb now, whether you should be going like the whale route and doing like an eighth type of pool or the rally route and going for the, towards rally coin?

Bomani X: Um, yeah, that’s a good question. Um, because I mean, originally, like, you know, when rally approached me, like, I think I was, like, aware, a bit of like, whale and that web, but also then like, fully know, like, that there were two different platforms of how it works. Um, I think for me, I would personally repeat that process of going with Braley and like, kind of just having like, a, cause rallies kind of like main company protocol is like, you know, to create these creator coin economies for different creators. So like, that’s what their coin is backed by, and that’s the work that they’re doing. So kind of also somewhat believing in that, you know, company, and that product gives me a little bit more like self-assurance to like, test out what I’m doing. With that little bit of a safety net, I think with like, by creating your coin, and then like, deciding, like, he said, like, if you want to add liquidity, and you know, and, and, and, you know, put it on a uni swap or something like that. I think a lot of people have that knowledge and understanding of that. But if you don’t, I think it would be a bit more of a benefit to go more centralised, just so you can learn more like if you’re if you’re not familiar with the space, it just may seem super complicated with like, figuring out all the complicated nuances [Inaudible].

Adam Levy: Yeah. But then I guess one thing just add to that is craters might feel like, wait a minute, I only got one shot, I can only take myself quote unquote, public once is that necessarily true? Like you won’t create another boo coin, per se, you might create, like, a coin that might be in relation to a guitar brand that you’re trying to create? I don’t know, I’m thinking out loud here. Right. But you won’t necessarily create a boo coin, if it doesn’t really work out on rally, you won’t? Would you go and start a new one? Is that what you’re kind of saying?

Bomani X: I mean, I think rally is. And I don’t speak fully for that roadmap, but I think they’re developing an aspect where, you know, creators can decide to take it off that like, rally, like, main net, and like, and, you know, add your own liquidity and stuff to it. So you, you know, have a little bit way more control in your own, you know, of your own social token. And that regards, um, you know, and then maybe just add to, you know, be able to add to other platforms and stuff. Sure. I’m sure that’s the route that they’re also going have had decided that as the route I’m going to take, when, you know, when presented with that, I don’t know yet. I think there’s still a level of like that side, I need to get educated more on a bit. And build out a stronger infrastructure for that. But yeah, no, it’s all a process. Yeah, for sure. For sure. If you think if you have that level of understanding about the infrastructure that would require to be successful, or even just test it out. I mean, I think both options work, you know, both options have resources to learn from.

Adam Levy: Yeah, I want to dive deep into, like, your vision for yourself and the community you’re trying to build, specifically, because I think its perfect time, and we scheduled this interview, and this morning, you tweeted something actually, very, very deep, I’m going to read it out loud and just share with the audience. So since my grandma passed, I was waiting for the day, she would show up in my dreams she did last night, I needed that confirmation for what I’ve planned in the next three months. What do you got planned in the next three months? What are we what can we expect from you? And how does that kind of relate to, to boot if it does relate in any way?

Bomani X: it relates in the sense that like, you know, I said early, like, you know, like, I lived in California, and the, the actual main reason why I came back to DC was to, you know, help take care of my grandma. Um, and, and in that own journey, of being here with her and on a personal level growth and, and then, you know, like, finding clubhouse and, you know, the grove wood all that on a, on an emotional personal level and being here, you know, and taking care of her throughout that whole time. Um, you know, my grandma passed away, like, a week or so ago. And, you know, in that moment, you know, just kind of gave me some sort of like, comfortable ability, in a sense that, like, I was able to do all of this stuff, while like land Locked in playing like a nurturing role. Um, you know, breaking new heights on a personal level that I’ve, like, never really imagined at this time period. And, you know, being an app icon, building a community, like being more comfortable in my creative pursuits, and innovating, experimenting, and like, kind of having her be here, through all of that. And, you know, now that, you know, she’s, she’s not here anymore, like, like, What is that like, next level of like, true, true freedom of expression looks like. And with, you know, you know, the pandemic and like stuff opening back up, like, there’s a lot of like, plans and experimentation that now involve the real world that now I would feel like, for the first time in a while, like, I have access to, you know, whether that’s all these things I’m testing out, and like, taking it to the next level now, with just that confirmation that I really can. And yeah, some of the things I have planned in the next three months, like I’m dropping this, like, really big NFT project, kind of also telling my years my story about clubhouse, like, because I would have been on a platform for a year in July. So like, I’m doing a drop, really telling that whole thing in a cool way. And there’s some like physical experiments that I want to do integrating like my coin in my community and creating this sort of like physical metaverse bridge. I got some like, really cool plans. On clubhouse. So yeah, like, I feel like, you know, when I when I tweeted that he kind of gave me like that just little added confirmation that like, you know, now’s the time. I felt like I was limited before, but like, now I don’t feel like that now. And like, I’m ready and excited for what’s to come.

Adam Levy: Yeah, she sounded like an amazing person. And thank you for sharing that. That’s, it’s very deep. It’s not easy to talk about. So thanks for sharing that. And I’m excited for your launch. I think it’s a big milestone for you. And like I said in the beginning, I don’t think nobody has nobody would have imagined the roller coaster that you could have been on over the last year. And who could have imagined what happened? What could have had happened, I guess, because of COVID. And all that all that that bring in. So sending all the positive energy and all the positive vibes your way, I hope, hope it goes well. It’d be interesting to see how that kind of plays in if you require the NFT purchasers to hold booth coins as a way to incentivize them. I’d be curious to see how that rolls out. I’m going to be keeping an eye out. And just to transition because the music industry has finally woken up to crypto, right. One of one of I guess, the main proponents being Blau, right. I know. Also, Jesse Walden had a start-up back in 2017, a variant fund he talks about the ownership economy. And that project got acquired by Spotify. So Spotify has been in the loop with blockchain tech for some time, I’m sure Apple Music. But I don’t think they really woken up to social tokens yet they might have heard about it’s probably conversations are happening in their meeting rooms. I would I would assume but none other artists per se I have seen personally, maybe I missed something. But I haven’t seen anyone launch their own token from the major publisher site. How do you how do you imagine these social tokens kind of revolutionising as people like to say, the music industry? Because you’re, I’m assuming you’re an independent artist, right? Yeah. Okay, you’re not signed to anyone. And I feel like those who are assigned to the Universal Music groups of the world, the Sony’s of the world, they’ll want a big cut of these creator coins. You know, it would only make sense, but I feel like the role of what crypto and web three brings is kind of reversing that ownership cycle. If anything, if you were to get picked up by publisher, you’d probably tell the publisher you guys have to buy bitcoins and stake your wealth. Invest in me like how do you imagine I’m like, I’m thinking out loud here. Right? How do you how do you imagine these social tokens kind of impacting the music industry as a whole?

Bomani X: I think there’s one aspect where like, tokens, you know, social tokens or even just the competition has happened in NFT’s and ownerships, like there’s a level of like, owning the, the value exchange or value, you know, flow between like an artist and their fan base and with like, so tokens like instead of, instead of, Putting out an album and having to go through like the chain of commands of like streams and, and getting pay-outs from these other industry like you can literally just kind of control that on your own, which I think, you know, can be appealing to, to the to labels where, you know, you can, you know, flow artists career or stuff like that through the token itself. And I think also on the flip side like there is like a natural level of like, governance that exists with like these token communities where like if a large stake of the token is owned by the label, like, that kind of also can dictate, like, where the community goes and stuff like that, because like, the value is in control of not just a creator, it’s control of, you know, what the Creator is signed to. Or for large whale, Porsche at Port bought a portion of my coin, like, technically, where I want the value to go is not kind of no longer in my hands. Um, so I can see I can see, like, label deals being formatted that way by like, like, this coin Treasury is like, or this coin value is own, by either the creator or the label, or the fans. And like how that plays into like, where has played into, like, music creation, or like music exchange, or just like, who owns what. And I think social tokens can kind of create that model, and I don’t have a full like, fleshed out thought process about.

Adam Levy: I think I think that’s again, that’s part of being an early adopter, you don’t know where this stuff is going. You’re taking it day at a time. And experimenting as more opportunities more ideas kind of come to mind. I think its part of the process. I it’ll be interesting to see how it plays out for the music industry. And what that means for artists like Imagine being able to buy a Taylor Swift coin before she was Taylor Swift or Justin Bieber coin before he was Justin Bieber, etc, right. And the music labels having a stake in that to some extent, while giving the artists that I guess that creativity to explore their own songs, their own music, their own performances, whatever, but still having that financial upside, buying those tokens. And imagine if people could buy the Justin Bieber token before Justin Bieber was Justin Bieber, like, that’d be that’d be crazy. That’d be crazy. It’d be a whole different world, like, creation of wealth, creation of value. And the value that I don’t know, I’m like, I’m so hype behind this stuff. You know, there’s so many opportunities here.

Bomani X: No, I agree. I think I think the dangerous part that whether or not like the labels are thinking about it, or like, the community is thinking about, like, like, cash grabs do exists. For sure. And, and, and sometimes, like when celebrities or like major people get into these types of conversations, or utilise these texts, like most of the times, I get viewed as cash grabs, where like, a main, like a popular celebrity may have pure intentions to like, truly utilise the tech in a way that’s like really innovative and standout and valuable. But like, does that mean that I’ve been with some of these NF t drops are like, they think they go well, or the secondary value of it, like completely drops or tanks. And, and I’ve seen some of that a little bit. And like some of the rally coins I get on board or where they it’s a lot more fluctuation for them as opposed like for me, where like the fluctuation of hasn’t really been that hasn’t been that crazy. Yeah, yeah. So, um, I think that’s something to think about. And the common trend about like, when big players get into the space, they never really look at, like, the smaller medium players as like,

Adam Levy: A threat.

Bomani X: Just like learn from. I got the space. But I think it’d be really cool to have more adoption when bigger players get in, because then that helps people like us, like, prove what we’ve been doing for a while.

Adam Levy: Yeah. I’m excited. One because I know to some degree makes a lot of sense for both markets from the investment side and from the audience side. And me being a musician, and all the drummers that I grew up adoring and loving and mimicking and learning from and the artists and going through all these lives. Performances, I wish. I just wish there was a way to engage with these people beyond. Like this Patreon, there’s only fans or stuff like that each for its own different category of what they specialise in. But I think this is finally the real way to invest, and do so in a way that extends beyond your thumb movements of liking and viewing, right. And if I believe in an artist, and I have my post notifications on, I’m listening to every single song that they push. And I believe in this person so much that I talk about them to everyone. Yeah, why not give those people an opportunity to help build that person, financially to an extent and do so in a way where they can unlock more intimate experiences with that person as well. So I think it’s interesting how this kind of like, roll out over the next coming years, I think we’re going to see a lot more mainstream artists and performers and creators launched their tokens at a rate that it’s going to kind of like, snowball the way NF T’s did. And, yeah, we’ll see. We’ll see what happens. I guess a final question for your two final questions is, I asked you this a little bit earlier, and we kind of touched upon it, but advice for new creators getting into this area and experimenting, what are some points you can show?

Bomani X: Advice, I think, you know, like, first, like, even though like, you know, it was crypto, and whether or not you’re familiar or not familiar, like, just kind of think about it in like terms of like, as you’re used to, like, like, if it’s just monetization, like, you know, people have a social tokens, it’s just a system where people can just pay use tipping, and you kind of just have something where, like, them tipping you this way, or buying your coin can just be exchanged for like, what your picture. Your services are, um, I think a common misperception a little bit is that when people like buy your coin, like that essentially means that they’re giving you that money. They’re not necessarily giving you money until like, they give you the coins that they bought.

Adam Levy: But just to clarify, they are appreciating, they’re contributing to the appreciation of value. It’s a network effect type of thing.

Bomani X: Yes.

Adam Levy: Right. Okay, cool.

Bomani X: Yes, that part is true. Um, so I think, like, education is important. Like, so whether you, you know, take your time to just get educated about what exactly you’re doing or want to do, and how you educate your community is how you build and sustain, like, a strong like, an economy. But yeah, I think just have fun with it. Like, like, at the end of the day, like, I think, Well, I think it is innovative to experiment. I also think its like, not that deep, you know, just so just, you know, just try it out. You know, get your own coin if, if, if people like it. I think I think people can have a lot of like really cool fun, just saying that they got their own crypto coins, they aren’t like they’re creating their own economy, they’re creating more control of the channels. Instead of just relying on like, a pay-out from cash app, or a pay-out from only fans or a payout from Patreon, when you can create how you want people to pay you how you want to, like, give them the value that they want, and create a community around it. I think. I think the token is inherently a community tool. And that’s something that is missed on like a lot of these platforms, like and that’s something that’s amiss with money in general. So it’s really cool to just experiment with.

Adam Levy: Yeah. And final question. Where can we find you or can we learn more about you should give us give us the plugs, shout yourself out.

Bomani X: Yeah, definitely my main like, source of like communication is definitely clubhouse right now. So definitely follow me on clubhouse like, check out the Discord. I need to find a place where the link is more easy. If you hit me up anywhere, you know you’ll get the discord link. If you want some Bitcoin, just DM me anywhere. Yeah, and coming poker nights you know poker night so fun.

Adam Levy: Oh, yeah. What is that? You never tell us about that. You spill the beans a little bit. Give us give us a rundown. Is that in the discord?

Bomani X: Yeah. So like one of the other things that I’ve been doing recently with just like the clubhouse Discord. Connection is like game nights in the house like how we can use clubhouse it’s just like the audio stream. I mean some of them would you know discord kind of is in general. So taking that same model to clubhouse and so we just like play poker in clubhouse rooms people listen and the prizes are you know in Bitcoin.

Adam Levy: wait a minute so are there are you actually like is there a visual side to it or it’s only audio I mean I’m one in the audience can listen through the audio but the players they have to see what they’re trading right?

Bomani X:  Oh there’s like a, like a second screen app or second app where like.

Adam Levy:  Got you. All right.

Bomani X: There’s also like, using apps where people can watch

Adam Levy: Got you.

Bomani X: I’m trying to build out like games that are where the in game currency is boo coin and developing that next. So we can actually play with the coin

Adam Levy: Distribution, distribution, distribution. Nice man.

Bomani X: Well, yeah, that’s pretty much it.

Adam Levy: Amazing dude. You’ve been awesome. Bomani X. Go check him out guys. Awesome human being awesome creator. Appreciate you man. Thank you for being on.

Bomani X: Appreciate you, man.