 Yo, who's that? What happened to Frank? Guys, I don't know what the fuck this doctor did to me. He said I'm gonna look like a freak for another few months. So, before I start having too much of a conniption, I'll give it a few more weeks. A few more weeks, I'll have my conniption. I look like a bunch of Asian girls kidnapped me and slit my eyes for making fun of them too much, but uh... We'll do the surgery vlog on Thursday. If you guys want the details, if you want the explanation, the surgery vlog is gonna be posted on Thursday. I know some of you guys saw the shorts I posted as a joke yesterday. That's a vegan girl swimming her breasts in my face and I said it was a joke. Full details on Thursday, but because the surgery was so expensive, I made a promise to myself, you know, if I did it, that I would donate an equivalent amount of money to disabled blind Americans. I thought that was suitable because when I was actually out there after the procedure, I was blind for a few days. And it honestly wasn't as bad as I thought it was, although I was only partially blind, but I could not imagine having to live like that. I was very bored to say the least that I needed to have someone help me and take care of me and do everything. So, one thing I used to do with the restaurant vlogs in New York that I don't think I've ever really told you guys, I was complaining about how much money I was spending on the restaurants. And I wanted to wear sunglasses for this just because my eyes don't look any what life they're supposed to. You know, surgery literally 10 days ago, so I figured it'd be better if you guys didn't see my eyes, but it doesn't look that bad. I don't really care. I still haven't been able to watch them or anything. So they're still like blood and stuff. But back to the focus of this video, I would always complain like how much money I was spending on those restaurants in New York. And for me, like if I can go and afford to spend $100, $150, $200 on eating out, I could also afford to give that money to the people that needed it. Usually before, I would walk around the street for an hour or two in New York City and just give $20 to however many, almost people I could find reasonably, which put me in some very sketchy situations. But I don't know, I got once a week, usually Sunday night, walk around for an hour or two, hand out some money that I go eat dinner. So for me, that was my way for me of justifying spending that money. Because I never grew up with a lot of money. I worked very hard to be where I am and I'm still not making... I'm honestly not in a financial position to be doing this. And I was honestly never in a financial position to be giving money away and going out to restaurants. But the point is, I would give away $150 to four or five homeless people and then I'd go out to eat at the restaurant. I mean, yes, some sketchy situations and not too many of them stuck out. But one is really in my mind where I think I was in Soho all the way downtown, getting dark in the middle of summer. And I looked down an alleyway and this guy was like, you know, as sad as could get. He was like hunched over, looking down on the street. I walked down the alley and I went up to... I don't remember exactly what I said. I was like, hey, you all right? Or I said something like that. But as I said that I had a $20 bill in my hand that I was handing to him. Because what I do is when I went up to these people, I would gauge if I thought they were homeless or not. And most of the time I was right every time. But I'm trying to tell if it's just, you know, some random guy hanging out. But most of the time I would go up to these people, they were homeless. I had a $20 in my hand. I handed him the $20. I had never seen someone eyes light up so fast. The guy looked up, eyes wide. He sprung up, grabbed the $20. He was like, again, I don't have a good memory. So I don't remember exactly what he said. But what I do remember is like, he was so happy. And he said, I'm going to go get a beer. I know, I know. Look, as long as the guy's happy, I don't care what he does with the money. If he wants to do drugs, if he wants to go drink a beer, whatever it is, the poor guy is homeless on the street. If I can make his day better for whatever reason, so be it. You know, I'm not the moral police here. But the point is that guy was so happy from a $20 bill that I can't imagine. You could give hundreds of dollars to certain people. You could buy them a new car. You could give people anything they've ever wanted. They will still never be as happy as that guy was when I handed him that $20 bill. So, you know, the idea of someone going to a restaurant spending $200 and complaining about me and Danerim being snobby, it's a very interesting contrast for me. It's a very interesting contrast for me. Another quick one was this guy had part of his face missing and he had a surgery to replace it. His face wasn't missing, but he had the surgery to replace it, so he had some deformity on his face. I handed him a $20. The guy wouldn't want to take it. He was like, that's a lot of money. Don't give $20 a lot of money. Don't give it to that guy. The guy was very sweet. I think his name was Danny. I can't remember his name. That was one of the few guys that deserved it. And the funny story, I think this is the last one I remember. It was like a day after I was tanning and I was walking in front of the museum on an art. There was a guy sitting on a bench, a Chinese guy, but he was obviously homeless. I think he was Chinese, some type of Asian. He was like out. He was sleeping. So I went up to him. I nudged him a bit. He didn't wake up. I said, hey buddy, hey buddy, nudged him a bit. He didn't move. So I take my $20 bill and as I'm slipping the $20 into his front jacket pocket, I put the $20 in his pocket. As soon as the $20 was in his pocket, he opened his eyes. He woke up and he sprung up like some kung fu stuff trying to fight me. It freaked me out. So I jumped. It was very funny. It was very funny. There were some people watching me laughing. But this guy jumped up and started and got into like a fighting stance. He like squared up with me and I was, I'm making a kung fu joke because he's Asian. And I was like, I was like, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa. Guy didn't speak a word of English. So I was explaining to him, I put money in your pocket. No clue what he was saying. He was still trying to find me. I said money pocket. This goes on for like, I don't know, at least a minute. Like him trying to fight me and me trying to say money pocket or whatever language. And I was trying to bring up translate. I just walked away from the situation because like it was weird. It was getting weird and he wasn't understanding what I was saying. Hopefully that guy found the, I'm assuming he found that there was $20 in his pocket and has made his day by everybody. Like it's not, it's a good hearted thing, but it's not necessarily the smartest thing to do going up to these people. Anyway, me doing that for the restaurant stuff, this is just a bigger scale. You know, I went out, I spent a lot of money on this eye surgery. I thought I looked better. I thought it would make me happier. Won't find that in a few months. What the end results are, but regardless of what the end results are, I made a promise to myself, I'm going to go get the surgery. I'm going to give away, you know, equivalent amount, $33,000 to blind Americans. And some of you might be wondering, Frank, what's the catch? Oh, by the way, I'm wearing my retainer. I don't know if you guys think I sound like I have a list or something. I forgot to bring it, my retainers when I was out to California. And that is probably what caused a lot of my sleeping issues in my drawers very long. So I've just been wearing my retainer ever since I've got home. And this, this is on my priority list of one of the first things to do. Did I say that you guys might be wondering what the catch is? There really isn't a catch. It's going to be $1,000 to 33 people. So I'm not just like, it's going to be $1,000 each. I figured that's a significant amount of money to make a pretty big difference to 33 people. And the priority is going to be my customers. So I'm going to wait a little bit. If you're one of my customers, you don't have to be blind, but if you're one of my customers, if you spend money on my businesses and you have a blind relative, a blind friend, a blind acquaintance, someone you know that's blind, maybe a neighbor that you don't talk to that lives with you, send me a picture of, I think there's a disability card. You could send me, have them hold the card next to their face. I just need someone legitimate for this. There's a lot of people that have tried to take advantage of me. There's a lot of people that try to scam me. There's a lot of people that will try to take advantage of a situation like this. So I want to make sure that the people that are most eligible for this money are ones that have supported me and are blind or are blind and disabled. Again, I think there's like a disability card you get from the government that says you're visually impaired. So that's what I'm looking for. One is that the person emailing me has placed previous orders on my business and that they can provide proof of their friend or relative that they are disabled, they do have the visual impairment. I'm assuming we're going to, I mean, I have a decent amount of customers. I'll probably send out an email with this as well. And I'm sure like if I have an email list of thousands of people that at least 33 of them are going to know a blind person or have an acquaintance. So I think we'll be good on that front. I won't worry about what the next step would be. I'm guessing I would just have to go to a blind living facility. But I don't think we're going to have to do that. I think we're going to be fine with this. So if you're my customer, if you know any blind person in any way whatsoever and you have them send me the proof of their disability, I think we'll do Zell or something. Send them Zell. I don't really want to send shit like paper checks out, but prefer Zell. I don't know. I guess worst case scenario. I can send out some checks for $1,000. I don't think I said the email. So you're going to send an email to info at frankiesfreearrangemeet.com title it $33,000 giveaway. And then in that email, put, you know, the picture of the person, what their name is, what your relationship to them is. Again, if you're not one of my customers, if you haven't placed orders on my business, don't email me, at least yet. So you're going to send an email, info at frankiesfreearrangemeet.com picture the person, whatever. And after I, like, see the email and confirm and I think it's legit. Okay, you're my customer. Okay, this person's blind, has visual impairment. I'm going to ask you to forward what your preferred payment method is and we're going to do that giveaway. Yeah, I think that's really it. info at frankiesfreearrangemeet.com $33,000 giveaway. First come, first serve. So, you know, if you know a blind person, I don't know. Again, look, I'm guessing I have enough customers and enough reach that this should fill up pretty quickly. So, you know, first come, first serve, I don't know. Who knows, I could be wrong. It could take a week and enough of my customers don't know blind people and then we might, I don't know how it's going to pan out. I'm assuming when someone's legitimately giving away this much money, it's going to sell out. It could sell out a few hours. I really don't know what's going to happen, guys, but that's what we're doing. 33 people, first 33, $1,000 each. And hey, look, if you want to invest your gift back in and buy some meat on frankiesfreearrangemeet, I'm not going to complain, you know. I'm not going to complain. That would be nice. So I'm not living on the street this time next year, but I want to keep this video. I don't want this video to go too long. So I think I said it earlier. We're going to post the surgery blog on Thursday. If you guys don't want more details on that, we'll see how we look in a few weeks a month and I'll worry about how the surgery went. And guys, you don't have to feel bad. Like if you can't do stuff like this yourself, you could live your whole life from age one to 90. And when the lottery, when you're 91 and give away more money than most people have ever. So, you know, don't feel bad whatever physician you're in now. Maybe you'll be in a position in the future to help other people or maybe you're just helping yourself or you're helping your family. So don't worry. Don't feel a bit too bad about that. But I'll see you guys tomorrow, Tuesday. We're going to do just a quick update, meet vlogs. I don't think it's going to be a quick video, but the meat blog updates since we're back now and then Thursday is going to be the surgery blog. And then I have to say in this video, moving forward. I had someone edit some shorts. I have more money from like my old, old video. So I don't have to film. I rather not film for a month or two if my eyes look messed up. Like I'd rather wait for the surgery to be somewhat complete before I start filming a lot of YouTube content again. So I think we might just stick to like the meat blogs every week and maybe some shorts here and there. But if not, I'll be posting the shorts that I had that guy edit. So we have maybe a month or two worth of that. See you guys tomorrow.