 Welcome back to Orlando, Florida, 2018-21 convention. This is the e-ticket for the entire show. I have to confess, I have been seeing the movie trailer for this speech for the last year. Matter of fact, it's been a little over a year. This speech had its origin probably about two, two and a half years ago. It is a continuation of last year's keynote speech and it is a rolling, moving target that has incorporated all the lessons in history, culture, politics, and social misfit information you can imagine possible. I am terribly pleased to introduce the founder, CEO of 21 University, 21 Studios, and 21 Convention presenting the future is still masculine, Anthony Dream Johnson. Thank you, gentlemen. Let's dig right into it. As he said, the title of my talk this year, sequel to last year's keynote, the future is still masculine. As he said, my name is Anthony Dream Johnson. Soon that will be legally true. My middle name currently is Paul. With that said, while I'm known as the Dream, I have a dream. That dream is to create positive media for men and destroy feminism. Recapping on last year's keynote that was mentioned by Socrates and now myself, I open last year's address with feminism as the ultimate hate and supremacist movement. That's the biggest image of the talk. You guys have seen the talk probably on YouTube, things like that. Super important and we'll dig more into this concept as we go throughout the talk. What I'm doing with that image, with that idea, with that speech and with this speech, is igniting a cultural revolution, a peaceful revolution, a revolution that destroys feminism and replaces it with something positive. So last year, I spoke during the talk and it was actually joined between Socrates and myself. I spoke, he spoke. He's actually a professional architect. You guys know him as a speaker of this convention on relationships, relationship management, masculinity, things of that nature, but his day job is an architect. He's one of the best. He wins awards, he gets in magazines, he's a complete badass. Surprise, right? That was his component. This is a big unveiling that we've been working on for years. We are hosting this convention right now in hotel. We've done that for many years. We've done it in schools, conference centers, things like that, but eventually the day will come, I think we are not allowed in venues like this. As of yet, we've been able to avoid that problem free. I maintain really strong relationships with venues, but I'm not counting on that. Many others have been deplatformed from Alex Jones to Rooch V and that's just the beginning. That's going to get worse. So we're going to avoid that as long as we can, but long-term, I am not counting on a digital or physical venue platform for this convention. We're fine now, but eventually we have to build it. We're going to build it and it's going to be fucking badass on the ground up by Socrates, lead architect, project manager. That is in motion and we'll dig more into that later in this talk. Continuing on a recap of last year's presentation, the future is masculine. We discussed that feminism is an idea virus like a cancer. It spreads and spreads and spreads and it gets worse over time. Whatever it started as, there's controversy and debate for that. What we see today is obscene and disgusting and gross. It's horrible. It's a hate movement against men and it's a premises movement for women. It has infected everything we see in Western life, everything we value, every institution from the government, so we from state, federal, local government, schools, universities, on and on down the line, right down to business and even the family in your home. It's all around us all the time, even right down to churches, entertainment, schools, everything. Feminism as a woman's rights movement is a myth. I do not believe that's true and if it was ever true, it hasn't been true in a long, long time, long before any of us were alive at this point, especially in this room. Feminism today is hatred of men, boys, masculinity, family and fatherhood. It is absolutely opposed to that in every medium we see it and it's getting more explicit, more open, and more aggressive by the day. One of the most important points of slides from last year's presentation I brought into this one is the debate between being anti-feminist, opposing feminism, criticizing it, ridiculing it, making fun of it, opposing it versus being all about positive masculinity and pro-masculinity. My ideas that both are very, very important, perhaps equally important, dead on, I think either one is naive. They are either ignoring an aggressive movement against men or you're focusing entirely on yourself without opposing it or without realizing, without appreciating the environment and culture and context that you exist in. So even if you're all about self-improvement, you want nothing to do with opposing feminism, well, feminists don't care. The fact that you are trying to become more powerful, healthy, wealthy, have better relationships, build families, build businesses, that's a threat to feminism because they want to control you and they fucking hate you. And they don't care what you look like. Feminists do not discriminate. Well, they discriminate if you have a dick and balls. That's your crime for being born that way. Outside of that, they don't care what you look like. White, black, Asian, they don't give a shit. They hate you for the way you were born. So both are important and this is really important to keep in mind. For many years of this convention, I did not focus enough, not nearly enough, on being opposed to feminism and appreciating the environment that this company that it was evolving in, as well as myself, maturing over time. The older I get, the more apparent this gets and the more aggressive it gets. As we've seen in the culture, we're going to discuss in this presentation. So both elements are important and the complementary. They work together very well and you guys have seen that at this event. Let's discuss what feminism is a little bit. So when people bring up feminism, one of the first things they say, it's all about equality, right? Equality, equality, equality. It's very vague, very poorly defined, very... Feminists are almost opposed to defining it. We try to define it, they want it, they say no. They keep this vague and nebulous momentum going forward. But if it's about equality, they then jump right to equal rights. Well, it's different. Equality is not equal rights. Equal rights is more specific. So if feminism is about equality, equal rights, what about women's rights? They jump to that. Then they jump to women's empowerment. Suddenly, you have this feminism is all about equality, and then it jumps into 47 different things all at once. The silvery slope. They do that so they can goalpost shift over time. They can keep it mutating and shifting over time. So that you can't pin it down and be precise. In fact, I think Roland Tomasi is one of my favorite speakers here. And I think one of the most important contributions he makes to the man of fear and the red pill is his precision. It's surgical. People complain they say his essays are too long, all this bullshit. I think that's seriously, it's bullshit. His precision is needed. Now, that doesn't mean short form content is bad. It means both are important. And the way he writes out his essays, it gets really detailed, is very important. Feminists fucking hate it. Because in precision, there is truth. And they hate truth. So feminism has never been about equality. We'll discuss that more later. But I think it's quadrant of ideas. They tend to jump between. It's important to keep this in mind and look at this whenever they bitch to complain about something. Because it's always shifting, always moving around. It's never this tightly defined thing. And that's on purpose. Feminists say that women getting the vote was this major victory for equality. I think it's not. I think it was not at all. I think it was a death of equality in this country. It was a death of equality between rights and responsibilities. Women getting the vote was not the problem. It's women getting the vote in the way they did, the manner they did, that's the problem. There are many thousands of feminists that were opposed to getting the vote, because they thought they were going to get drafted into the military, what we call today a selective service. They dodged that. They got out of that. I think this death of equality between rights and responsibilities is horrible. Obviously, there are racial elements that were fixed later in this country. But in terms of men and women, this is when equality died, 1920. It's horrible. We need to fix this someday. I'm not proposing a solution at this time. I'm pointing out a problem. Let's dive a little bit into the mannosphere understanding of feminism. Feminists say all this different bullshit equality, women's rights, women's empowerment, all this stuff. I think it's more along the lines of what we see in the mannosphere. We call it a system-wide shit test or congruence test. Women are testing us at a wide scale. We also see it as women maximizing sexual freedom or indulgence for them and then maximum sexual restraint for men. They're flipping. It's a power reversal in some ways, revenge and supremacism and hatred of men. I also want to make a point that very few women today identify in the West as feminist, maybe 20, 30% from different studies I've seen. As big of a problem as they are and as annoying as they can be, they're not really the problem. The problem is if they get together and distribute that shit all throughout the culture to women who don't identify as feminist, the mainstream, the other 80% of the population who don't identify as that. But more than half of what they think, their core beliefs, what they actually think about and act on on a daily basis and over time in their life, that's what we're concerned with. For them, for women and for men. For men, we call blue pill lies. I think these are feminist lies, the blue pill. This is a control system for men and if fucks men up, it gets men killed. We talk about that at this conference. So with women today in the West, I think feminism has become basically their religion, their philosophy for life. Whether or not they have a particular religion they follow, Christianity, Judaism or whatever, feminism dominates the majority of how they operate over time in their life in major ways, decisions, choices from becoming a mother to schooling to career, things of that nature. Feminism is the dominant force in how they think, how they act over time. It's replaced God, it's replaced, you know, patriotism, everything like that. Every other important pillar of life for them. And the infection rate is incredibly high. By far, I think most women today in the West, America, Canada and otherwise, are infected with a shit ton of feminism. They've been brainwashed more or less, like many men. The difference, of course, is that men have a positive counter movement. We have the manosphere, we have the pickup community, we have the red pill and more. Women don't have that. They have feminism and then nothing. That's a problem. Let's talk a little bit more about feminism versus masculinity. Right now in America, the political tensions are really high. In my lifetime, I'm only 30, but I've never seen anything like what we see today. I've talked to men in the 50s and 60s who say the same thing. They have never seen things this tense in this country, not even close. Even then, who went through the Vietnam and the draft and all this shit going on back then, the shit's getting really serious. And the way it's displayed or portrayed by the mainstream is left versus right, Democrats versus Republicans, liberals versus conservatives. I think that's all nonsense. I think that male-female relationships are the cornerstone bedrock of human life, not just for thousands of years, for the entire span of our species. The red pill in particular focuses in on that, hones in on it as truth, the very raw understanding of it. So male-female relationships precede language and fire. And I think that getting screwed up by feminism is in large part over the past 100 years, is why we're seeing tensions rise so high in politics, left versus right, and the philosophies and groups, the parties of each one. That's not a problem as much as it is a symptom. It's a symptom of feminism fucking this country up and our allies. I mean, think about it this way. We've talked about Black Dragon, the speaker of this conference, Caleb Jones, and Socrates. I talked about the sexual marketplace, the dating marketplace, and other speakers. Gender relations today have basically collapsed. What are the rules of dating? Nobody knows. It's a complete chaos at this point. You can read about it all day long, study it, try to appreciate it, study the laws, understand game, the red pill. You're still like, holy fuck, what do I do? No one in Rolo avoids, for example, being prescriptive, because it's dating today is fucking crazy. Feminism has driven that in large part. So I think what we're seeing today with the tensions, left versus right, Democrats, Republicans, liberals, conservatives, that's real, but again, it's more of a symptom than a direct problem. The war we're seeing play out before our eyes is toxic femininity versus positive masculinity. And it's my belief that the future of America and Western civilization hinges on destroying feminism. America will not survive the century in the West without feminism ending. One way or another, all these different mechanisms, birth rates, demographics, family formation, the institution of marriage itself, these things are going to die, they're not going to last if feminism lives as a movement and is a dominant force in the culture. But it has to end and be minimized and put in history books. I wanted to go through this a little here too, get more specific with masculinity and feminism. So this isn't going to get really specific, we're going to hammer through it and I think you guys are going to get it pretty quick. So team masculinity versus team feminism. Team masculinity, we have individual rights versus women's rights, right? Group rights. We have the quality of opportunity versus the quality of outcome. We have patriotism versus globalism. We have the rule of law versus the rule of women. I think displayed perfectly in the recent confirmation of the Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh. We have innocent and proven guilty versus guilty until proven innocent. We have believed evidence versus believed women. Personal responsibility for all evade all responsibility. Men and women are different. Fuck yeah, to the private men, may he rest in peace. Damn right. So we have men and women are different versus female supremacism, which we're going to focus on in just a minute. We have a love of women. By the way, an attendee here nailed that just I believe it was yesterday. During a Q and A session with one of the speakers, he came up and said, I don't think he was 99% right, almost 100%. He said, I love women, but I hate feminism with a passion. I want to one up that. I love women and I hate feminism with a passion. It's not a but, it's an end. If you love women, you should hate feminism, especially the modern iteration. It is disgusting, nasty, and it destroys women. It destroys families and it hurts men. It drives men to suicide left and right. With masculinity, we have an objective consent standard. No means no. I grew up in the 90s. 90s. That's what I heard. That made a lot of sense. It's very obvious and that worked really well for a long time. With team feminism, we have subjective consent standards, which we now see as enthusiastic consent. The fuck is that? That's a bunch of stuff in your head. Objective standards matter for the rule of law and that is exactly what feminism hates, what they don't want. Team masculinity is pro-family, team feminism is anti-family, and pro-broken family. Look at the statistics on single motherhood from anyone, whether it's Roland Tomasi writing an essay or Ann Coulter or anyone else. Single motherhood and broken families are horrible for the United States and every Western nation, any nation for that matter. Team masculinity is pro-fatherhood, pro-motherhood, team feminism is anti-fatherhood, anti-motherhood, unless it's single motherhood, apparently. Team masculinity is pro-West and light-man values, the country or the values that built the United States and all the West. Team feminism is anti-Western values. Team masculinity, teamwork and cooperation versus divide and conquer, identity politics, getting everyone amped up. Team masculinity, racism is evil. Team feminism, white men are evil. Team masculinity, boys will be boys. Team feminism, boys are defective girls. Rational patriarchy, radical matriarchy. Father knows best, kill all the men. Sarah Jiang is her name. New York Times editorial board said this in our Twitter account before being hired by the New York Times and they were fully aware of it when they hired her. She came out and said to kill all men and kill all white people too, but she then focused on the men. Kill all the men. This is sick. This is extreme racism, kill all white people and extreme sexism and this is becoming normal. This is no longer, 20 years ago this had been radical. Today, that's mainstream. That's, she works at the New York Times right fucking now. They're fully aware of this, they don't care. They probably could ask her if she had any friends who wanted to work there. Team masculinity, genocide is evil and crazy. Team feminism, reduced men to 10% of the population. There's an asterisk there, you can read that. The founder of Gender Studies in 1973, a woman, her name's Sarah I believe. In 1973 she gave a lecture advocating to reduce men to 10% of the population. She founded Gender Studies, the gender studies you see today all throughout America and universities, which we make fun of because I fucking retarded it is. But look how sick this is. She actually said this, there's documentation of this, reduced men to 10% of the population. That's fucking gender side and that is what has infected American universities today and people get, people go $50,000 in debt to learn this kind of shit or the more modern evolution of that. Sick. This is a true face of feminism. We have Kathy Griffin up here chopping the head off of President Trump, by the way a father and grandfather. What the fuck was she gonna tell his grandkids? She didn't care. What the fuck does she care, right? Normalized violence against men. You've never seen Sean Hannity chop cleared Clinton's head off. Even better, you'll never see Anderson Cooper chop off Sarah Palin's head. This level of violence, decapitating somebody is normalized violence against men. You'll never see it in reverse, regardless of political parties. You have Madonna up here, right? Mainstream celebrity has millions of fans, millions upon millions of fans, raving about violent domestic terrorism in Washington, D.C. in front of the White House, like it's fucking normal. Ajir Argentio, Me Too Hero, suspected fucking child molester, drove her boyfriend Anthony Bourdain to suicide, then after he died, blamed a child molestation on him. This is a meme we have made up by Buddy of Mine, believe in something, even if it means sacrificing everyone. This is the face of feminism. This is what it's become. Whatever it once was, this is what it is right fucking now. This is getting really extreme, really fast. It gets worse. There's Sarah Jung from the New York Times, like I said earlier. This is her tweet from 2015. Anyway, my point is that we should kill all the men prior to removing the state for marriage and institution. This is fucking crazy. She got hired. She should be permanently unemployable for saying this. No, they fucking hired her right away. It probably is one of the reasons she got the job. Like, oh, fuck yeah. Fucking crazy. Christine Fair, professor at the University of Georgetown, the oldest Catholic university in the United States. She just tweeted this. She did get banned eventually from Twitter. I was surprised. Look at the course of entitled white men justifying a serial rapist, irrigated entitlement. All of them deserve miserable deaths while feminists laugh as they take their last gas. Bonus, we castrate their corpses and feed them to the swine. Pigs. This woman has a verified account, tens of thousands of followers, as a professor at a major university, the oldest in the United States for Catholicism, comes out and says this shit, gets retweeted dozens, hundreds, thousands of times, like it's fucking normal. This is sick. This is torture and violence, right out in the open. And then you have Scotzi or Cortez over here, a thousand cocks there, crazed bug eyes. This is what all this shit looks like at the end of the day, or worse. And then this, this is a Mormon Christian, mother of six, comes out recently. This got over 80,000 retweets, more retweets than a sitting US president gets on an average tweet. She's advocating for castration of all men, for I quote, irresponsible ejaculations, knocking a girl up, an accident. She then advocates for forced sterilizations, vasectomies for all boys who have puberty. This is a mother of six, a Christian woman, she's not some godless, like, you know, fucking weirdo with blue hair chick, just some new, and New York Times bestselling author, openly advocating for castration as punishment, talk about cruel and fucking unusual and violent and crazy, and then forced sterilization of all men when they have puberty. This is no longer, this is extreme, but it's no longer unusual. This is becoming normal. This gets retweeted 80,000 times. I think I just saw it today, it's got over 250,000 likes on Twitter. That's a shit ton for any social media platform. This is the new normal for feminism, 2018. Where do you think it'll be in 2028, 2038? Where do you think this goes? You'll say, oh, this didn't ever happen. They're pushing for it. They're talking about it. Talk leads to action. Talk precedes action. More on Justice Brack Kavanaugh. I mean, this guy, you know, Boy Scout, as far as we can tell, lived a perfect, you know, Christian Catholic life. Mr. Clean, impeccable character, went through seven FBI background checks. Absolute witch hunt for this guy. Exactly like Justice Clarence Thomas in 1991. He was a black man in 1991 who was accused of very similar, very similar circumstances by Anita Hill. He got up in 1991 being confirmed to the Supreme Court. He said it was a digital lynching. It was. And now it continues. Now it doesn't even matter where your skin color is. Everybody gets lynched because you're a fucking man. It's a witch hunt. Me too is a witch hunt and it's a hatred. It's a witch hunt is against men. It's the best way to put it. Yeah, all this bullshit about it being for women and some positive stuff and all this rape culture shit. It's complete bullshit. This is a witch hunt. Where there's 1991 or right now with Justice Brack Kavanaugh, same shit. Sick. I mean, yeah, he got NME accused of being a rape, like a roaming rape gang. Like these are gang rape. These people are fucking crazy. But hey, we got them. Actually, let's pause here. He was just confirmed to Supreme Court. Great. He was confirmed 50 to 48. The presumption of innocence that feminists throughout the fucking window like that didn't even blink. That was upheld. The presumption of innocence was innocent to proven guilty was upheld by a razor thin margin by vote. That's where this country is at politically. That's what feminism is done to men and women gender relations as you see expressed in politics. Barely got it. Just scraped by shifting gears a little bit. I believe that speech is the most dangerous thing in the world. There's a reason that the United States on our Constitution. It's the first amendment not the second. This is a drawing from the 1848 Seneca Falls Convention for Women. About 300 women got together in 1848 and it led to the feminism we see today, regardless of what happened along the way. People meeting anyone, male or female, is powerful. People talking is powerful because talking leads to action. There's another convention that we're familiar with. This is a drawing or a painting from the signing of the Declaration of Independence. People don't like this convention market. They say, what are you going to do? You're going to destroy feminism with your awesome tweets or some shit? No. I'm going to build events. I'm going to organize. We're going to talk. Rollo was talking about his speech. He did a great job with it. Women hate men getting together and talking in a male space because you know what happens? Action happens. Things happen. Things change. Very much like it did for them in 1848. We're barely 100 people behind what they had in 1848. As this convention grows, it's going to be attacked, more so than it already is. The point here though is that speech is very, very powerful. Talking, talking, talking, no. It leads to action. Whether it's this or holy shit, this. One of the most epic moments in human history. Masculinate the forefront, defeating tyranny, defeating a king, finding the greatest country ever created. It's a masculine future is what we're creating this convention. The West lacks right now a replacement for feminism and we need to destroy it while it has to be replaced with something. If we just destroy it and get rid of it, that doesn't solve anything. That just creates a gap. It creates a vacuum and ain't going to last. It will be replaced by something. I believe that the manosphere, the red pill in this convention are building that future. It's taking time. It takes years. It takes speeches. It takes conventions. It takes videos. It takes the publication of that information. But over time, that's exactly what's being built right here on this stage, right here in Orlando, Florida. I do want to take a moment here and recognize Richard Nicolai, one of our alumni speakers from last year and a couple years previous as well. The effects of feminism. He says this quote, modern American women had become the most overprotected, overprivileged class of organism who have ever existed on this planet. Now, I say American in particular, but not just Western, because women in America enjoy a level of wealth and prosperity and physical security through the military that women have never seen in history. And I think we see that expressed on social media platforms today. You see never an extreme of narcissism. You see the arrogance of women screaming in public and trying to throw out and destroy innocent or proven guilty. The level of fucking arrogance this takes and ignorance, especially after the Salem witch trials in this country hundreds of years ago, just out of control. More on feminism today. Like we discussed, feminism is the ultimate hate supremacist movement. It's a hate movement against 3.8 billion men. It's a supremacist movement for women. No other movement in history has gotten, has scaled to that level. Usually it's racial or religious or political or geographic or something. This is gender. This is sex. I know we hear there's 97 genders. I don't think so. I was going to, of course. But feminism as morph has mutated and morphed and shapefisted into that. That's sick. Hating the opposite sex. They always, of course, say they'll claim anybody in the man's sphere that has any controversial ideas. They say, you hate women. No, I don't. Go fuck yourself. Second of all, they're projecting their own hatred of the opposite sex. That's what they're doing every fucking time. Very few men in the man's sphere, this is like normal discourse, they don't lash out at women instantaneously and say, you must hate men. Maybe you should, but most men don't do that. This is a distinctly feminist thing that they do. It's projection. And they even, we'll get into it more here in a second, but it's supremacism. They march in the streets now. The future is female. I say the future is masculine for a reason. I don't say the future is men. I don't say the future is male. I say the future is masculine. Masculinity is a set of characteristics that guide and lead. It revolves around one half of the population. Sure, but it's inclusive. We love women. Women love masculinity too. Most of them. Going more into it, feminism is a toxic culture where on men, masculinity, boys, fathers, and family, toxic masculinity, of course, as Rolla pointed out, quickly became all masculinity is toxic. That narrative, toxic masculinity lasted for what a year or two. Now all masculinity is toxic. Fuck it. A little bit, a lot of it, all of it. It is the hatred of positive and conventional femininity, women who want to be women, who want to embrace motherhood, embrace being a woman, they are seen as, it's like feminism is driving women off a cliff. And any woman who's like, hey, fuck that shit. They're like, nope, done right back over here. Crazy. It's a rebellion against nature. It's a rebellion against fact that men and women are different. They hate this fact. I think this is one of the cornerstones of what feminists hate and what they're war with. You could go further and just like penis sending and stuff like that. Whether you go that far, I think it's important. This is a fact. Men and women are different. Our difference is polarizes and they make us get along and cooperate and be compatible. They make the, I mean, they make, for example, sex, they make it beautiful. We're attracted to things that we don't have. Very few men wake up and say, oh, I want a strong, independent woman in my life. Why would we want that? We bring strength at the table. They want strength. They're attracted, of course, to strong, confident men. Not to the way around. I got to drink some feminist tears, hang on. It's a rebellion against nature. I believe feminists and feminism in particular is a toxic ideology independent of the individuals involved. It's a hatred of nature and of masculinity. We're the placeholders of that. We're like in the moment that. So that's why they hate men as well. But really it's against nature and it's against masculinity and even themselves. I think it's a disease of civilization, psychologically equivalent to something like heart disease, diabetes, obesity, things that we see exploding today because of the way people choose to live. Feminism is a philosophy. It's a core set of beliefs that is infected to the West. But it's psychological instead of physical. At the end of the day, though, it's very similar. A disease of civilization. Feminism is extreme and radicalizing a young woman. You see New York Times, the new editorial board, hate, you'll kill all men. You see Christian mothers are sick talking about open castration or castration of men for irresponsible evacuations. You see all kinds of crazy shit they're doing left and right. It's getting worse every day, every month, every year. 10 years ago it wasn't really as bad when I started this company or 12 years ago. Now it's just out of control. I also believe we'll talk more about this soon that we've lost a generation of women, millennial women, not all of them, but a lot of them, many of them. That's the first time that's happened. You've seen feminism. You've seen that with men as well, and I think we respond more positively. Feminism has compounded for the first time across multiple generations. Men have responded with the suction community, which spawned into the man's sphere, the red pill, and so on. Women don't have that. They got fucked over by feminism, and that's it for a lot of them. Most of them will not self-repair in my opinion. Men are. We are responding positively in a healthy manner with the man's sphere itself, especially the red pill in my personal judgment. But I have plenty of love for the pickup community as well, where I got my start, many of you as well. I believe that we're nearing total collapse of gender relations in this country. It's severely dysfunctional, and the future of America is uncertain at this point because of this fact. For more information on feminism and how toxic to become at this scale, you can see our speakers like Roland Tomasi and Socrates, as well as Defend Mollinu and Blackpigeon Speaks on YouTube, both big YouTube channels with great videos on feminism, criticizing it in very rational, slowly constructed ways that are easy to understand. It's a lot of information. Highly recommend looking those up in addition to our speakers. Defend Mollinu with feminism and Blackpigeon Speaks with feminism as well. Let's talk about this. Let's talk about pink pussy hats, right? So we see women now marching in the streets by the millions, around the world, by the millions, but in America especially, right? They put on these pink pussy hats and they march around saying the future is female. The future is still female. If I got together my buddies, instead of putting on a pink hat, I put on a white hat and had a big fucking sign that said the future is white, heads would explode. But you change the color hat to pink and you change white to female. Oh, you're so brave. Oh, you're so fucking brave. So courageous. That's disgusting. That's fucking supremacism right down the open. That has become normalized for American women today. That is crazy and disgusting and fucking nasty. They brag about being, oh, nasty woman. Yeah, you're real fucking nasty. You're disgusting. That's sick shit, man. Sicker than this. Well, they're both pretty fucking horrible. But fucking, this is right now, man. This is gone. The pink KKK. So you'll see me on Twitter if you guys follow me at Beach Muscles, other triggering name, right? They don't dream of beach muscles. This is what, this is, this is right now, all the time. The pink KKK. That's what feminisms become, a hate movement and supremacist movement for women. Feminism destroys women. As I discussed, we've lost a generation of women, in my opinion. These women will fail to success, successfully pair bond. They will fail a family formation. I would estimate maybe 10% are intact and avoided the worst of feminism. Another 10 to 20% will self repair somehow. That's time sensitive. Women are on a tight biological reproductive timeline. Men are not. The other 80% are varying degrees of severely damaged and brainwashed by feminism. I don't believe they're going to make it out. You can be more optimistic than me about that. I'm not. Melinda Lohman got fucked really hard on this. Gen Z is next. Gen X is not quite as bad, in my opinion. So feminism took down an entire generation of women and nearly the men too. No positive counter movement exists right now for women. To my knowledge, there's nothing. And that's a shame. We're going to talk about this image here. So this is a some blogger, a female blogger on the internet, right? A transform wife. This went viral a few months ago. She put out an image of a young woman smiling and said that men prefer debt-free virgins without tattoos. This today, whether or not you like tattoos on girls is irrelevant, right? Debt-free virgins that don't have a PhD in gender studies or some bullshit without tattoos, this is rebellion today. This has become, we live in such an upside down fucking clown world that debt-free virgins without a bunch of shit on tattoos, that's odd, that's unusual, that's hard to find. This is the rebel today. I think we need a positive counter movement. We need something positive for women. Destroying feminism is a key to doing that. But in the meantime, we need something along with it as well. We need to make women great again. Now, I'll say this too. Regardless of how you voted in 2016, I don't actually care that much. Because with this stuff and with this, you need to take all politics and policy stuff, put it to the side. This is about gender relations. This is about men. This is about women. This is about femininity and masculinity. This is a good starting point. This should not be a rebel. This should be fairly normal. The fact that this is rare is fucking weird. So let's make women great again. Shifting gears a little bit, back to 21 Studios update. Last year, Socrates and I unveiled the plans to construct 21 Studios, right here in Orlando, Florida, Central Florida. That's going to be a multimillion-dollar production facility very similar to this that enables year-round filming and year-round events. Not once a year or twice a year or three times a year. Every month, maybe more. We are cleaning up the legal framework of the company to take on major investors at this time. That's gotten significant progress, and Socrates and I have been talking a lot more about doing this or progressing along this path. In 2019 and 2020, I believe we're going to start getting that funding in place. And we're moving along in that direction. It's going to take time, though. This will not be built next year, not in 2020. It will be in the 2020s. So progress has been made in removing the right positive direction on that. In particular, I wanted to go over this. This is something that Roland encouraged me to include in this talk very, very much. I'm glad he did. 21 Studios, so basically, we're bashing feminism, looking at a lot of the negatives. The future is uncertain at best in a lot of ways. Like, where is this country going to be a year from now? I don't think anybody knows, with complete certainty. Nevertheless, the Manisphere has had some major positive developments over the past year. In particular, my company, 21 Studios, we've seen revenue jump over 250% approximately. This is part of it. We've seen from 2017 to 2018, 250% revenue growth. This event itself physically has doubled. We're kicking ass, like on all cylinders. For a 12-year-old company, this kind of growth is astounding. Our subscribers on YouTube and all social media, but particularly YouTube, we gained 63,000, lost like 14,000 or whatever. So we've gained over 50,000 subscribers in one year. Not bad. Richard Cooper and I are racing for 200,000. I think I'm going to win. Where is he? Over there. But he might beat me. He's doing really good too. So the Manisphere is seeing a lot of growth and all these things. 21 Studios are kicking ass and growing stronger than ever. We could be deleted any day. Just like that. I don't think we will. We've been fine for 11 years now. Zero problems at YouTube. But we'll see. In particular as well, though, the Red Man Group. So in my talk last year, I advocated for in the Manisphere and particularly the Red Pill, more media, more podcasts, more blogs, more books, everything like that they could produce, right? Rolla got together with me and Richard Cooper. We started the Red Man Group. This has been beyond my wildest expectations. This is like the hottest new thing in the Red Pill in the Manisphere. It's fucking awesome. So this exceeded what I had in mind. And there's other stuff too. It's not just the Red Man Group. Lots of podcasts, events, you know, Hunter Drew is a really good example too. Lots of positive developments, growth in the Manisphere and the Red Pill. This is in large part how we win the culture war over time. We have to drown feminism and content, positive ideas, and positive media. For men in particular, women follow men lead. We keep making men stronger, more powerful, more healthy, more game aware, more Red Pill aware. We could win this war. It's going to take time. That's Seneca Falls Convention was in 1848. Women got the vote in 1920. Whatever shitty elements went along with that in the manner they did it, took a long time. Is it going to take us this long to win the war of feminism? I don't believe so, but it'll take a long time. Media and content and ideas and overproducing that stuff as much as we can, as fast as we can, and high-quality as we can is in large part how we do that. And the Red Man Group is a fantastic example of that. That seriously exceeded my expectations. I was like, holy shit, we fucking nailed this. And kudos to Rollover thinking that shit up. What is he over there? There he is. Fuck yeah. Some content with feminism in particular or anti-feminism. These are two books I found. This one, The Rolo, the other one, maybe two. Broken, The Rise of Radical Feminism. This is a great book. Very short. We have it on sale outside after this talk. You also get on Amazon for like 10 bucks. Really good book, very short, very powerful. Also, The Feminist Lie is another one as well, right here. Highly recommend checking this book out. Educating yourself on feminism, building the knowledge up. So a lot of people say, a lot of men in the monastery, they say that feminism is one, we're fucked. There's no way out. Let it all collapse. They will fix that after all that shit. I don't believe we need to do that. I don't think you're never beaten until you admit it. The fact that we're here speaking on the stage, organizing by the hundreds, we're collecting millions of views across the internet. 20 of the studios does, we do anywhere from one to two million views a month. We'll do over 10 million views this year easily, all of that content. So reaching millions of men. The fact that we're doing that, we're having this event, that we're still free to do that, speak freely and defend our rights, is a very good sign. We are not beaten. We can win this. It's going to take time. It'll take years and decades to undo the damage that feminism has done, but it can be done and we can't win. The buck has to stop here. We're not the first generation to look at feminism and be like, hey, something's wrong with this shit. There's some really screwy going on. But regardless, feminism has existed until now. It's the worst it's ever been. It has to stop. If it's not us, it's the next generation. I don't have kids yet. I don't have any sons or daughters. I do not want to see this continue and perpetuate itself into the future. Socrates said that feminism belongs in history books. I believe that as well. We have to destroy it, get rid of it. The buck has to stop here. No more passing a shit down the road and seeing what happens. Enough has been dumped on future generations. Debt, feminism, all this bullshit. That's a stop. In particular, I believe that the key to destroying feminism of a few, but probably the most important, is the red pill. Men's rights activists have been fiercely opposed to feminism for a long time, right? They criticize it, they're trying to improve rights for men. All these things, right? They have consistently failed to do that really harshly. I sympathize with the issues, 100%. But their effectiveness is near zero. Why is that? I believe it's because they don't understand women. Now, feminism includes, you know, beta-vichy males as well. There's plenty of male feminists, probably most of which are sexual harassers and shit like that, probably the JID. But mostly it's women. Men's rights activists have fundamentally, they're knee-capped. They don't have the teeth to take on feminism in ways that matter over time. So they consistently get very little to nothing done. The red pill is understanding women. Men's rights activists routinely reject that. And until they accept it, they will not take on feminism and win. They will keep failing. As hard as much as their cause is legit, it doesn't matter. I also believe this is why the red pill is such a threat. The red pill recently on Reddit, the community of men, about almost 300,000, it was quarantined, basically censored on the road to being banned. I believe that's because the red pill is very dangerous. Men are being educated on a conscious level to understand women. Feminists do not want this in particular. Feminists is like everything feminine, like the most toxic elements of that shit, you know, mutated in their time into a huge movement. The red pill is the antithesis to that. Much more so than the pickup community ever was, much more so than men's rights activists in that community have ever been. And we say too that I agree that the red pill is prexology. It's the car manual to fix your car, not why you should maintain it, not what you should buy, not why you should drive it and enjoy it, how to fix it. That is what the red pill is as a concept. But it's also a community and I don't hear that talked about enough. Whether or not it was intended, the red pill is almost 300,000 men strong, plus all the auxiliary stuff rounded like 20-minute studios and other YouTube channels and movements and causes and blogs. It's a couple hundred thousand men easily. Unintentional as it may have been, that is a political entity. That is men organizing and talking and swapping notes, as we call it, and thinking about their interests, thinking about their futures, short-term, long-term, all the way through. That is dangerous. They recognize that and they want to shut it down. They may or may not end up banning it. I think it's on the road to being banned. There's a reason for that. It's very, very dangerous and a very healthy way for us. Fuck feminism. Sam Rae's have failed. Milano's also are the hero generation, in my opinion, from what I've read on this. Obviously, Milano's got a lot of shit, so people will read that and be like, the fuck? Well, hey, you know what? This company was built by Milano, so shove it up your ass. Let's also look, though, for a second at what MRAs have done. They are consistently doing things that, on a micro level, repel women, they compromise, they appease, they try to negotiate. The desire, of course, between men and women cannot be negotiated. These are all strategies that fail at a micro and macro level with women. MRAs do this consistently and they keep failing. A red pill, of course, does not. I think to destroy feminism, of course, first of all, no surrender, ever. We need to stop apologizing for masculinity, stop apologizing for fucking anything when it comes to feminism. No compromise, no negotiation, no appeasement, no mercy. That does not mean anything violent. This is a peaceful, lawful, cultural revolution that I want to ignite. Nevertheless, this is what it's going to take. It's going to take red pill-style masculinity, old-school masculinity, positive masculinity. That means aggression, that means anger, that means power. People are going to watch this and be like, oh, he's just an angry white male. Regardless of the white stuff, first of all, why does what I look like matter? Go fuck yourself. Second of all, wait, I was born. Second of all, angry? Yeah, I'm real fucking angry. I'm watching my country being stolen from me, not just America, Canada, the West, all of it. You think I'm going to take my country and my future? Go fuck yourself. Angry? I'm real fucking angry. You should be too. You are justified in your anger with feminism. What is done in this country, what is done to men, what is done to women, what is done to gender relations. It's destroyed dating and it's nearly destroyed relationships and family and marriage. Fuck feminism. And be angry. In anger, there is truth and there is power. Do not apologize for it. In 2019, the war on feminism goes global. We're going back to Europe, like this image. We're going back to Europe. Feminities have overrun Europe, per usual. The Americans and Canadians are coming. We're a bit late. It happens. Better late than never, right? Feminism is of course infected Europe as well. We'll be going to Poland, Eastern Europe, Central Europe. We used to go to Sweden and London back in the day. We've had this little bit of fourth European event coming up in 2019 in the spring. Sweden, of course, this point is impossible. They proclaimed that they were the first feminist government in the world. Zero chance for going back there. London, the United Kingdom is now banning public speakers like Roush V. He's not a speaker of this event, but he could be. If we had an event there and invited him, he literally could not go. If I tried to put on an event there, we could have half a dozen speakers and it would be banned from entering the country. They arrived to get shipped the fuck back immediately. So we cannot even have a third UK convention for the 21 convention. So we have to go elsewhere. We'll be going to Poland. We'll also be doing an event, of course, in Orlando again, right here, not this venue, but down the road. And beyond that, we'll keep expanding. More events, more content, more videos, more speakers. So the war on feminism goes global. The culture war. Even considering it though being a peaceful culture war, you have to remember that a culture war is a war. How do we know that? A gender war, even. How do we know that a gender war and a culture war is a war? Well, it's in the name. Whether it's peaceful or violent, it needs to be peaceful. Regardless, a war is a war. Feminists are advocating for castration, all kinds of sick shit. We need to fight back. We need to defend ourselves. With that said, the future is still masculine. The future is masculine and it will become hell or high water. That depends on me. That depends on you. That depends on you. That depends on our speakers. That depends on all of us. If we don't do it, it's dumped on kids in the next generation or even less prepared to deal with it than we are. That's my speech. Thank you very much. Appreciate your time. I do have one more thing. I do have one more comment. So this is Roller's third book, Positive Masculinity, the Rational Mail. With Fighting Feminism, you guys need to really amp it up. He has a fourth book coming out. A lot of you are probably going to buy it. That's fantastic. When this fourth book comes out of his volume or his series, you don't buy one, you buy 10. If you can, you buy 50. You pass that shit out like candy. It's very bitter candy, a little sour, but it's good for you. It's good for your friends, too. Socrates has a book coming out. When that book comes out, you don't buy one. You buy 10. You buy 50. You seriously pass them out to your friends at your house who you think would benefit from it. Feminism is like Roller talked about, infected and invaded churches. Well, if you go to church and you have a few in your pocket, maybe they fall out on the way out. Accidents happen. That should happen to all the time. So be aggressive with the media, with buying books and distributing them. If you have the funds to do it, become as powerful as you can in your life. You are the ultimate threat to the feminist establishment. Not me, not this event. You, you, you, you, all of you guys. They hate the fact that you're improving yourself. They are opposed to it and they're threatened by it. They should be. Becoming more powerful, more healthy, more wealthy, more game aware enables you to protect yourself, protect your loved ones, and exert force out of the culture. Whether it's through political campaigns, politicians, contributions, or just buying something like a bunch of books and passing them out to your friends. I've bought over 200 copies of his books since I've known him. And I think I've sold thousands at this point. Who knows how many more thousands will be on that? And many other speakers as well. I don't expect you to sell thousands, but if you can buy 30, 40 of these books, pass them out to your friends all day long. Never mind the fact that these are published on Amazon. Bruce just got banned. Roller could get banned tonight for all we fucking know. Don't, don't risk that. These are hard to print. These are self-published. Buy as many of these as you can because you can't burn them. You can't ban them without burning them. With that said, that's my speech. I'll take questions off camera for you guys. Tonight, now, tonight, all night at the party in Socrates, all day tomorrow, and Monday if you're there as well. For everyone else, I'll answer questions maybe in the comments if they're polite on YouTube and 21U. 21U, they will be. YouTube probably not. If you piss me off, I'll just ban you immediately. All right, let's give it up for Anthony. Dream Johnson. George Bruno in Orlando, Florida. With the 21 report, kind of a post-game show after the 21 convention for the past four and a half days talking to CEO and founder of 21 Studios and the 21 convention, Anthony Dream Johnson. What a great convention. Thanks, George. Thanks for having me on the show. Absolutely. Tell me about your initial impressions. Here we are. The room is being emptied out. Everything's coming off the walls. Things are getting packed up in boxes. People are getting ready to go to the airport. Now that you have a chance to just take a breath, what are you thinking? And have a drink. What are you thinking? A couple different, not so much thinking, pretty burned out, obviously. Emotionally, all the stuff, the professional stuff going on. Busy, you know, it was crazy or busy, busy. But I think about the, I try to reflect on my emotional state at the end of every event. And each event is different, but even in those differences, there's a consistent theme. For me, it's always an element of sadness. I see each event is like a living thing that is built and built and prepared and prepared, but then it's born, it lives and it dies. And it's actually always like to be in the room, like the last person and like watch like lights go out and everything kind of go, go out. I remember actually in Australia when I met Mike McNally, there was a moment and we had a really huge room that he was badass. And this event reminds me a lot of that event, like a big turning point. That was our first event in Australia. And we had three, first year, we had three events. So it reminds me of that sadness, but it's not, it's not an ugly sadness or a bitter sadness. It's like a beautiful sadness. This event was this unbelievably, it was unbelievably epic and badass. This surpassed even the 10 year anniversary, which was a high mile milestone. I agree. That was my last year, the 10th anniversary event, was my first year at the event. And I will say this was, and that was excellent. This wasn't just one notch better. It was out of the ballpark. And everybody and our producer can attest to this in all of the interviews. When I asked people what their impressions were, everyone was saying it was, there was a lot of moving parts, a finely oiled machine, people staying on time, getting whisked from stage to studio. And just everything, like there was no detail was left unattended to from security. I don't think I even had to like push a door open. There were people at every, people would just see a shadow approaching a door and open a door for me. And no door was left to slam. People were just like little things like letting, like allowing the door to come in slowly and not just click. We duct tape the ledges on the outside so it's quiet when it closes. Just every single detail. It was, well right from the first minute what I saw was an auditorium which reminded me of a TV studio. And having been in broadcasting for many years, it just reminded me of a major network studio. The work that went into that was amazing. You're a big part of that too. I mean, in terms of the professionalism and the details and everything, you stepped the game of our speakers this year. They're going to look better. They do look better in camera mode. And the final versions, we edit them, produce them, the perfect final versions, those are going to look awesome. Like that extra two, one, two percent was what we need for the speakers. It really was amazing. Just little things like doing the hair and makeup and getting people looking good and rolling the lint and just, you know, I brought in my ear trimmers for people, just things like that. Even the show though, I think you're the best host we've ever had by far with full respect. Full respect to our past hosts. Thank you. You're the level of maturity and wisdom and experience that we need for a show like this. Great. Thank you. Killed it. It's my pleasure. My pleasure. I noticed a lot of the speakers, they're also on other speaking circuits. They speak at other conferences and so forth. And it was unanimous amongst the guys that speak throughout the year that this was the most together, organized, efficient, effective. The only thing I can say is, finely tuned machine that they've ever been part of. We are the terminator of the manasphere. We certainly are. You're not kidding. You are not kidding. The way I like to describe it, I was talking to, I think one of the volunteers this morning and you're an attendee. I like to treat the attendees and everyone here, not just the attendees, the attendees, the speakers, the staff, everyone, even the crew that, you know, from outside companies and stuff, everyone like gold and like family, to the best extent that I can. I'm not literally family, but I try to treat them like I would a cousin. Someone actually, I care about bloodlines. And I think that's what shows us that's part of what makes this event so not just run well, but feel like it runs well. And so it's the physicality of it. It is running well. And then it's also like there's actual care and a time with that too behind it. Yes. Technically, it was superior. And I've worked in multi-multi-million-dollar studios. And here we are in a hotel that you turned into a studio. Oh, yeah. The auditorium. Gorilla Warfare. Gorilla Culture Warfare. 100%. Unbelievable. There was nothing unprofessional about it. As a matter of fact, I find it to be even more professional than as a, as a watcher of a lot of interview shows and some of the technical stuff. This was right up there with everything that I love. Oh, we're just getting started, man. It's only 12 years old. I just hit 30 and went to almost 40. Oh, it's going to be amazing. Oh, yeah. It's going to be amazing. We're all going to be the best hair and the best fucking beard. Thanks to this guy. That's right. That's right. Yep. As far as next year is concerned, you said we're going to have another one in the States and one in Eastern Europe. Did I hear you correctly? That's right. Poland would be a July 2019. That is amazing. That would be our, that'll be our first event in Europe in a while, but our fourth event for 21con in total. We had our first one in 2010 and then one again in 2011, 2012. So it'll be our fourth European event. So we have a lot of fans in Eastern Europe, don't we? Yeah. Oh yeah. All over Europe. Yeah. Yeah. Definitely. I think we'll get pretty much all over European fans are going to go to that event. That's amazing. That is absolutely amazing. What was your favorite part of the event? Holy shit. That's a good question. It's like asking, you know, which one of your children is your favorite kid? I mean, the event literally, as far as I'm concerned, the event's not even done yet. This is the final little bit of it. And even the main conference room, the auditorium, that just got wrapped up now. It would be a combination of like, maybe my own talk. I really enjoyed, you know, on a personal level doing that and just fucking digging into it. I really enjoyed Rolo Tomasi's talk. And then I really enjoyed the red man group the whole day today. There are those episodes in the barber shop. The grooming we just did with the shaving, what shape tutorial? That was interesting. Yeah. It was interesting. I love experimenting at the event with filming and new speech styles and workshops and stuff. So between the panels with RMG and then your stuff today, this whole day was like Monday, basically the bonus day was like an experiment day. And I love doing that. I love experimenting. You feel it was a success? Oh, fuck yeah. Hell yeah. And we'll do it again. I was as soon as possible. Yeah. Yeah. That's amazing. We'll get the barbershop chair and get all that shit. It's going to be badass. Oh, I love that. I love taking risks, especially when they pay off. And I think this one really did pay off. Yeah. About the three sessions of red man group. You feel it went well? It went really well. Yeah. We had a power issue at one point on the first episode, but other than that, it was fucking flawless. I knew it was going to look badass. I tried telling some of the guys in red man group the key figures that are on it more consistently. You know, Rollo, Richard, Ryan, and Donovan. I tried to amp it up because I knew none of them are a director. So I know this is going to be really badass. I know that. So I knew that they wouldn't quite get it no matter what I told them. I was like, I'll try to help to set them up. They're not going to get it. Yeah. They saw it and all of them are like, holy shit. But even when I saw it, I was like, damn. So the optics of it were incredible. Oh, yeah. Technically the way he produced it with the budget he had and the timing and the available time to do it. And he set that up on the fly. That came out really well. I think that elevated both the convention, our ability to produce content for second parties like that, as well as the red man group is itself as a new media entity, a new show. I knew it would do. It's been a, you know, Google hangout online kind of thing throughout the past year. We've done it. We've done, we did 33 episodes before today, 34, 35, 36. But those episodes are going to elevate it to a new level. It's going to trigger the shit out of people that hate us. People that are not good people. The everyone together added a synergy that, and I love the Google hangout version. Yeah, totally. It's the next best thing to being in person. But being in person was amazing. I mean, I could see flying people in and over three days just slamming out, you know, like 20 episodes and just, you know, six months worth of red man. What I suspected right before we did it, and I was talking to someone, Ryan, some other guests on it, I was like, I bet we're going to go, we only, these are short episodes. These are 80, 90 minutes. Usually we do like two hours plus on the Google hangout. But I think we got even more content in in a shorter amount of time because it was in person online. It tends to slow down because it's like switching. There's like delay, you know, what's going on. So I was really happy about that. We got long, fairly long episodes in general, shorter for red man group and what we're used to. But we got even more content. It was faster on the fly. It was responsive. It was a live audience like a TV show. So it was really fun. And the panel, all three groups were so different. Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. It's just the diversity of thought. The optical diversity. You had young, you had old, you had black, you had white, you had just everything. Bald, bearded, fat, tall, short, whatever. It was visually interesting. Yeah, it was. It was. I can't wait to watch it. It'll be actually interesting to watch. It's interesting how detractors, they try to always paint us in a corner, whatever their particular, whatever reason they hate us, they'll be like, oh, you're a cult, you're this bullshit, you're that bullshit. But the reality is we have real diversity genuinely in ideas, which is where it matters. But even physically too, you see different races, religions, I'm an objective as atheists. But we also have hardcore Christians up there, and we'll get along. And then black, white, Jew, Asian, whatever, whatever. It doesn't matter. And not everybody agrees with everybody. But we agreed on having a great show and being, we believe in free speech. That's right. And we believe in free expression of ideas as well. And that's that is, I mean, we're, I think, a shining light on that, but that's becoming becoming rare today. So for us to put that in that show and see that so vividly is going to be really badass. I think the internet's going, some of the internet's going to love it, and a lot of it's going to hate it, because it's expressing that the freedom of speech and the First Amendment so strongly, among such a diverse cast of characters with, pretty strange, not strange, but unique personalities too. In addition to the ideas, in addition to the diversity of the physicality of it, it's a lot of fun. That's a really fun little show we got going. I like how the red man group acts as a feeder for everybody's social media outlets, and how everybody's social media outlets act as a feeder for the red man group. They just kind of feed each other. Yep. We've been trying to nail a podcast, like the report, I think we're nailing out the interview, the convention speeches we've nailed, but the podcast selling, we've never quite nailed the 21 radio. Right. And I think red man group is the solution to that. We're, I think we have to need, with 21 studios, we need to focus on other content and then empower second party companies like red man group to do that. I think it's what we just did and fucking nailed it. We certainly did. And you're part of that. You're on the third panel with me. Excellent. Great stuff. I love how we're not an echo chamber. Yeah. It wasn't a bunch of guys lined up. The red man group I'm talking about wasn't a bunch of guys lined up all singing the same exact tune. There was so much diversity of thought up there. And we give people the latitude to express those thoughts as long as it's consistent with the idea of reclaiming masculinity, manhood. It's important in 2018 and beyond. Men are important. Yeah. Hell yeah. And men and women are different. That's right. Men and women are different. That's right. May he rest in peace. Proud of men. You would love, you would have loved me and him, man. You guys are going really well. Yeah. What about the party the other night? We had a party at Socrates house. What are your impressions of that? It was biggest one we ever had there. He was worried the house wouldn't support it. I was like, I bet it will. And it did. You did the smoke the smoke workshop out back by smoking. That was badass. Someone was telling me this ago. He should have been there to learn. I was like, he taught me in person up in Philadelphia lives. Because they already had that workshop. Honestly, I thought I was going to have seriously four or five, six people. I really did not think it was going to be four and five deep all the way around. Yeah. I'm not surprised. And then everybody at the end wanting a picture of me while they're holding their pipe. So that was kind of kind of a fun thing. And that's how organizations grow. And I think everyone with this organization were young enough. I'll speak for other people, not for myself. You're pretty young here now. You guys are 20 years older than you are. Yeah. Yeah. I couldn't believe it. I know it. You're the young crowd. I'm one of the young guys here. I thought I was going to be one of the oldest. But technologically, it's just great how everybody is up to speed with social media outlets and hashtagging and so forth. And it really, really is a media organization where everybody is their own director of media relations. Yeah. I think it's great, too, that we can build it. I've built this company since I was 17 years old. And I didn't think about it at the time when I started it. But I've been building it in an age when mainstream media is collapsing, which is fantastic. I hate them. And then we're building something actually better that's truthful and focused on reality and facts and reason and open debate in a marketplace of ideas. So it's really, it's really fun building it and doing it right in this time where it's so controversial to do it. I think in the future, this company kind of company will be more or less the norm. Yeah. At least much will have the cultural discourse to be much more slanted in this direction. If it's going to be controversial, this would be pretty normal. You know, I love how we're getting the message out. You know, in the 60s, the three biggest networks were ABC, CBS and NBC. Now the three biggest networks are YouTube, Instagram, and Facebook. And of course, you can add Twitter to that as well. More eyeballs are on mobile devices across the world than there are on televisions. So it's not that big of a deal anymore to get on television because we're reaching more people. Everybody has a production company they can hold in their hand. That's right. That's a good way to put it. That's a really good way to put it. I like that. Yeah. And I think we're really good at getting that message out individually and collectively as well. Yeah. What are your hopes and dreams for next year? Next year, I want to have at least 500 to 10 days between both events. I think we can pull out both events very, very well, even better than this year, which was the best event we've ever done by far. So we can have those events at that size without compromising the quality, integrity, and the product itself and the design. I treat the event as like a product, almost like a physical item. And I'm obsessed with making it the best thing I can. I do like helping men. That is a part of what I do, obviously. But it's not my primary focus. It's design and product quality and the service quality. I'm like, how much bad asterisk can I put into this fucking thing? So I'm excited for that. And I think I can do that at that size next year. No problem. And I think we're going to have it too. I like there was a lot of moving parts this year. Yeah. And everybody played their role super well and didn't deviate from it. Like an orchestra. It was amazing. I don't have an instrument. I'm a conductor or whatever and just play with the wand. But yeah, it works pretty well. And there was a good chain of command too. I felt that there was a good respect for chain of command. There wasn't a lot of like rogue stuff going on. Yeah. And if there was anything that was a little bit deviating, it was corrected immediately. Oh, yeah. Yeah. I think my guys, my team, you, you know, the internal team, the AV team, all these guys, they're focused on getting the work done. And from that, I think men fall into hierarchies and they're pretty cooperative about it. No, we're not addicts about it. Yeah. Yeah. That's, that's really good to see. And I think we used to be more normal back in your grandfather's generation or my grandfather's generation. Yes. So we're bringing that back in that that's a good thing. You know, in the military, they say you salute the rank, not the person. And in days of old, when one army would surrender to another, commanders of opposing armies would meet and salute each other. Yeah. Even though one was surrendering, the victor would still salute the commander of the army that was surrendering because he was respecting the rank. Damn. That's pretty badass. And I felt that that was happening here. I felt everyone was working with the chain of command. And no one had to repeat themselves. So operationally, I think this was a good test run for future growth. I couldn't put it better myself. Yeah. We're going to grow a lot next year. Yeah. We had two events planned and that's, I think we'll have even more planned in 2020. Tell us about the products that are going to be put out as a result of this event, the speeches, the podcast. What's going to be happening? Well, we're going to amp up our pipeline. So our content goes to the pipeline. So we film it, you know, the first part of the pipeline is filming it right here live. And then after that, we have to edit it, play with it. We have a lab during the event now too, but that's kind of separate. So we have to edit it, play with it, perfect it, export it. And then from there, we put it through the pipeline. It's going to go to 21 University first. That's our video platform. Right after that, we put our previews on YouTube and BitShoot. And after that, we put out the full versions on YouTube and BitShoot, unless we get banned. So basically, it's a process of, you know, super premium quality experience and then distributing that out forward onto the internet over time. And we're going to get probably every single bit of video at this event out for free eventually. That's first, first to our premium subscribers at 21 University. All these guys here, the attendees got a one year pass for free, included with a ticket. And after that, we'll put on the internet to go viral. And on top of that, we're rebuilding 21 University to better facilitate, 21 University to better facilitate all this happening. So it's kind of like, something like this TV show, you know, they film it on set, they put it out, then the movie theaters, you pay a ticket, then maybe it goes on Netflix and TV after that and stuff like that. So it's a very similar progression of how it distributes outwards in the world. That's quite incredible. And they're going to get, I think now we're easily hitting 100,000, 200,000 views per speech, main speech. But that's, that's a big jump from previous years. It used to be like, you know, 50,000 stuff like that. Yeah. So I think next year we'll see speeches, even the bar, you know, the, the tutorial you just gave, that'll hit easily between three channels. If we do all three of them, easy 300,000 views easily over a quarter million, bigger than a mega church by far, bigger than football stadium or something. Absolutely. Absolutely. And I expect also we'll get at least one or two speeches out of this event with over a million views on YouTube. Easy. Interesting. Yep. Your speech, your keynote. Let's talk about that. Oh yeah. Where did that inspiration come from? It was moving. It was powerful. The finale was quite incredible. Thank you. Quite incredible. And the, I'm an observer of the audience as well as the person on stage. And I was looking at faces and they were mesmerized. Damn. I couldn't see them. The lights are on. Yeah. You know, right. It was, yeah. Yeah. I think that's going to go far. Oh yeah. I think so too. I think it's going to go far. Thank you. Well, it's the end of several days of a convention. And I want to see you here in 2019. It's going to change your life. You're going to be in for a treat. You've been putting it off for a couple years. Now it's time to get off that couch and take action on the things that have inspired you. This is George Bruno with the 21 report with Anthony Dream Johnson, CEO and founder of 21 studios and the 21 convention. Thank you, Anthony. Thanks, George, for everything.