 Oh, YouTube, yeah, definitely YouTube, YouTube will change your life, and it's like nine day though. I didn't see this coming out of my head, what's up? It's nine day, because I deal with a lot of these real life YouTubers and real life Instagramers, and sometimes YouTubers look down on creators, Instagram creators, because one of my bros just Shay Frost and Robbie, we're all friends, and Shay, shout out to Shay, why are you doing this? It's too much work on Instagram, they believe for a little of nothing, because they see it differently, but if you're a creator, you're a creator, a lot of the Instagramers look at the YouTubers like, oh, they look douchebags who do nothing, and have no creativity. So it's like nine day, and they battle each other, and it's like clicks, like, oh, this is YouTube click, Instagram click, oh, we don't click together. It's so weird, you'll see this shit, and go to LA, you'll notice it, but they're all still friends, but it's like, this is like, nah, we have the YouTube. I feel only Android type stuff. Exactly, so it's like, it's nine day, but YouTube, I've seen it, bro, Instagram has changed lives, but I've seen a lot of the creators get on YouTube, and I mean they're making $20,000, $30,000 a month, I watched the shade, I saw others do this, but I watched the shade, literally go for nothing, to jump on, buying a new G-Wag, moving his family from one part of LA to the best part of LA, and we're all apart, it's because we're seeing this, and I'm like, bro, I'm so proud of you, just out of nowhere just start to blow up, even a lot of the, I'm running a lot of the two girls, famous Ocean and Kung Fu, the two sisters, like they have, literally they did nothing, they went to, they had like almost 300,000 subscribers on YouTube, and they didn't even create, but they just started to create these dope videos, and like one hit, we did a prank, actually this scar, last week came from a prank, she did like this prank on her boyfriend, and he got really mad, and he was like, I tried to get him down, and this happened, but that video is about to hit a million, yeah, about to hit a million views, it's at 600, maybe 700k now in like a few days, and that one video has made, it's making like thousands of dollars, and I'm like, y'all, you see if you create, keep pumping it, she pumped the next video, it went like a hundred thousand, like two hours, like confusing, like keep pumping, y'all keep pumping, keep pumping, because there's money in time, and y'all have these goals, y'all want to buy G-Wagging, y'all want to move your family here, y'all want to live in these condos, it's so easy to do, because YouTube can become like that residual base of your life, where you know you're going to get 5,000 to 10,000 a month, and then you can go and create, yeah, just all that video, and doing those videos that's going to make you go viral, they're already going viral just to copy, you know, it's so easy to do, you sit here and put a ring light up and do whatever it is, and just pranks, challenges, vlogs, like because people want to, their fans can see another perspective of their life, they see the inside, they really want to watch that, you know, and that's why YouTube is, it's hard, though, it doesn't convert, don't think you're gonna go on Instagram and then blow up your YouTube, no, it's a whole not a different algorithm, it's a whole not a different way of doing things, and once you've figured it out, you can master, you could really do some big things with YouTube, but I mean then you still have the sponsorship opportunities and all that stuff. Exactly, yep, because they just did one for the first time, the famous ocean in Kung Fu, and they had to do what I'm called, Lash Bay, with these lashes, and they wanted like this 30 second, 10 second clip in the front, and they was like, I was like, well, it goes in the front as like, they was like, how do I say it? How do I do it? So they, I mean, they got paid a couple thousand to do that. There's a lot of artists, right, that have a perspective against doing what your influencers are actually doing, right? There's this conversation where a lot of artists feel like you can't translate over from an influencer to an artist. It's not true. I don't understand how they still get themselves to believe that the proof is in the pudding, but what do you, I don't know, what do you say to a statement like that? Well, it's not true. Like, I know for a fact, because a lot of the, because you could take in, like, you can notice like a lot of the influencers who were artists, they blow up like Lil Nas X technically was an influencer. Technically, yeah. Troll, that's why he does the things he does, because that's who he is, you know, and you master and you put things out on certain platforms, it's gonna blow up and they're really, they're talented. There's no, I mean, even if you are not talented, you can get a writer and you can go into the development phase and get a dope beat and it can go, you know, it's just, because anything can be created nowadays. But, and then a lot of them were really passionate about music. So if you're passionate about it, it's nothing, you can, they can do it, you know, and they got some good stuff in the streams and they're, I mean, I have an influencer that I work with, Lovato. Like he was weighing the freaking Philippines doing, he was on a YouTube stage, sponsored event in Asia. Like from a song, like, it's crazy. Got verified and blowing up as an artist and with no label, none of that. Just management. Do you think, so obviously he's moving. A lot of people might not know him, right? But do you think that maybe that might kill a lot of artists before they even get started by trying to see that type of popularity and approval that you don't really have to have? Like, oh, this artist, like the guy here talking about Lovato, he's killing it and what he's doing and he, and there's more growth to happen. But another artist might say, oh, well, this isn't Lil Baby, right? And I'm trying to be Lil Baby and I hear and I want to have this, this traditional type of record level proper popularity that I've seen growing up. You know what I mean? Well, the world is so big. And if you leave that concept alone, you'll make, you'll do well. You look at artists like Russ, like a lot of people don't even know who he is, but he has stadiums that are packed out and he's making money and without being like this mainstream name, he has a mainstream name, but like mainstream in certain niches. Like it's weird. I never knew he was like it's weird because the world is so big. Like there's a lot of artists who probably like, when they come from, they have a million followers and they do a show and people show up. Like your fan base, as long as you focus on catering to your fan base and everything else will take off. And it's good to be like a little baby name or like that, whatever the big names are. It's good to be that, but you know, sometimes if you set your own goal and you set, you get what you want, like you may just, your goal may just perform in front of 30,000 and make, you know, enough money to live life a superstar and you happy in that, then do that somehow. I don't think some people want to be like super superstars, but if you tell us it, you really, where some point is going to come to that point, you know, the talent will really take you to the next level. Yeah, I think that's important. This whole idea that people are still in prison by their own, like local geography, we're in a world where you don't have to do that anymore, right? And if you have the talent, like you said, you can find your fan base and not even monetize it without even going in overseas. If you don't really want to, but of course, then going overseas, get touring checks or whatever kind of show you can do, give your Justin influencer, but that's it's interesting that people are still confined to those ideas where it's like the door is open and you know what I mean? But you're looking the other direction. Yeah. Yeah. Okay.