 First, as far as supreme goes, we have the rarest supreme collection in the world. This is like, uh, yo, I gotta give a huge shout out to privacy.com for making this video possible today. Privacy.com allows you to use virtual cards to buy things online, thus protecting your bank information and identity information. Everyone who buys a lot of gear online, especially you sneakerheads, honestly needs to check this out. Stay tuned for the very end of the video. Me and Andrew are going to be going over our must cop supreme accessories. Andrew, do you feel the significance right now? I can feel it in the air. It's very humid. Multiple people have told us, oh man, the weekend said it. The weekend mentioned Queen Street, so you gotta go on Queen Street. I said, okay, we'll go to Queen Street. Used to roll on Queen, now I'm too. We are on the most culturally impactful street in Toronto. Yes. Not Toronto. Toronto. Soft tea. You gotta say it with soft tea. Today we're going to be doing a Toronto Streetwear and Sneaker episode. We're hitting up two shops in two different areas of the city. One in downtown Toronto, OD, it's like the hypestore in all of Toronto. And then we're going to go into a different scene to check out the Yorkdale Mall. We have our crawl today hosted by Sam. Well, what up, Sam? What up, guys? What up, guys? What up? What up? What up? What up, guys? What up, guys? What up, guys? What up, guys? What up, guys? What up, guys? AKA AverageAsian, AKA whatever you want to call me. Wait, why, why, why AverageAsian? What's up with that? It's just because, like, you know, when you're younger, you get stereotyped as an Asian, so what does that mean? It can mean one thing. It can mean two things. It's either you're actually just average or you're just smart. So we're headed into OD, Toronto right now. And I heard this is the premier just subculture streetwear sneaker store in all of the city. I would say city, I would say Canada, and I would even say North America. Toronto Streetwear. Let's go. All right, you guys, we are here with the owner of OD Toronto Shot. What up, man? What up, man? How are you? You doing good, man? Thanks for having us. Tell us a little bit about your spot, because immediately when you walk in, it definitely feels like it's like you've got all the hype stuff, but then you also got the sports stuff going on, too. Yeah. So, like, we spent four years curating the rarest stuff, curating stuff just for Toronto. We have the team here, like what Toronto is about. So rare decks, art sneakers, streetwear, there's a car in the back, there's something for everybody. So would you say before you guys opened up OD, was it like split up? Was like this store doing this and that store doing that? Or were you guys like there really wasn't a place like this where it was kind of the best of everything? There wasn't a place like this, like a place that Toronto deserved. We had little small spots, but we like Toronto is one of the biggest cities in the world. We needed a spot like this, so we had to do it big. After being out here for a little bit, I feel like Toronto, the streetwear, and sneakers, it is tied with basketball heavily. Yeah. Especially like, is that what you guys really wanted to do here? Sure. The culture is music, basketball, sneakers, like everything's tied together. So it's just culture, Toronto culture, and like we have one of the most multicultural teams in the world, right? We have Jeremy, Lynn, we have everybody. So it just speaks to who Toronto is, like what Toronto is. So tied all together in a store. Immediately, I think the first thing you, you know, when we were talking, you were just like, whoa, you guys have the only complete Supreme Court. We have the first complete deck collection. The second one sold that option for $800K, but you don't get to see this in Toronto. It was an era in this game that wasn't on StockX, that people, when you were legit checking, you had to know a lot about the culture, you need to know a lot about the production. So a lot of these decks, you'll never see on a StockX like LVs, there was a cease and desist on these. So a lot of these even come damaged because everybody's skated though. You don't, you don't get this type of collection in like a week. You take, this takes years. You got to know a lot of people. You got to meet a lot of people. You got to beg a couple of people to bring these back out and sell them. Like a lot of people, they don't want to sell these things, right? They've been with them for so long. So yeah, this is, this is another one they got a cease and desist for. Crazy art with religious imagery and Michael Jordan. These are one of our oldest decks right here. The two copyright decks. This has been skated on, right? In this collection is rare. Like in this condition, it's super rare. Like even, look how damaged it is. Even in this condition, it's super hard to get like this. E-hero decks. So they did the three production versions and they did the one sample yellow. So we have the full deck collection plus the samples. As far as supreme goes, we have the rare supreme collection in the world. Like I can stand by that easily, any, anything, anything. Like we have a lot of pieces we haven't even shown people yet. You don't have to give too much away, but I guess your connections is it, is that you guys got people who have been in the game for decades. It's really just being nice to people and people introducing you to other people. Because you can't come into this game with the arrogance. You have to be willing to like meet people, be nice to people. You meet someone who introduces you to someone who might have been working for supreme since day one. So you get a couple of pieces there. Everything is like a secret. You kind of have to meet the right people. Right. So you said it's not just like some kid that's just like parents on a owner factory can just be like, let me throw money at everybody. No, no, no, no. This was built through organic connections, man. Yeah, 100%. The Canadian way, being nice. This is just like any store you go to, they'll have a couple of the new ones. They'll have the Yankee CDGs. We give everybody, like if you're a serious collector, we have some samples up here, the Malaccan samples. We have the LVs, high fashion. You have some of the opening day t-shirts, Damian Hurst. This is a double XL box logo tee. So like double XL, they might have released one of them at the store. 36 Mafia tee, the t-shirt from the 36 Mafia shoe. It's a legendary. This is Harajuku opening tee. A lot of history here. Like we said, like we said, I feel like, you know, being more into the box logo game, to skate that game, that's another level. Like I just want people to come and ask me, what is that? And just go tell their friends about it. It's just cool. Like for people to be educated about this. Personally, which one do you like the story the most behind or is your favorite? It's got to be one of the Japanese opening days, the Shibuya or the Harajuku. Like Japan really was at the forefront of bringing supreme to the masses. They were the original people to start collecting it. Right, right. That's why they have so many stores now. So like they're opening tees, like we're very, very special. Those meant a lot. And then you guys are also carrying your own merch over here, I see. Yeah, we have the mural tees with the mural outside. We did three murals here. Like just something for the city. It's not just about clothing and that like consumer stuff, stuff for the city. I mean, that's what I appreciate about ODTO is that like, it was something for the city during the championship run. So many people just come out to take pictures of the mural and just, it was awesome. That's it. No, I'm glad. Like that's the exact response we were looking for. If I were to go to New York tomorrow and try to open this up in a year, it's not going to be the same shop. You know what I mean? A lot of like the personality of this shop is us. For me myself, I'm more of a sneaker guy, right? So I just, I'm vaguely familiar because I've seen the drops and the lookbooks and the things like that or on Instagram. What is the significance of supreme accessories to people? And is it different? Because you know, some people like, they just care about the box logo part. Some people are really into the accessories part. Some people only care about the sneakers aspect. And obviously there's some people who care a little bit about everything. Yeah. So you know, like collectors, once we start something, it's a deep, deep rabbit hole, right? And this was the most affordable stuff. You go to supreme, you would get an accessory for $20, but now you have to collect all the accessories. So now it became a super collectible thing. And once you started collecting, you can't really ever stop. Because now I need a dog ball. You know what I mean? I need two dog balls now. Wow. This is like, this is insane. This is like Ben Baller's crib at times. Times three. We got my man over here, Pudsy. We won him at our auction, our BBC Children's auction for $106,000 US. It's the most expensive supreme item of all time. That was designed by Kim Jones? For his dog. Actually when we bought this, like the organization didn't even know how to accept donations like that. They're used to $10 donations, $20. This one kind of broke them, which is good. So it took us like a couple of months to get the money over to them. Up here I brought up a bunch of the rarest box logos in the world. Some of these are one of ones, one of twos. We know of two that exist of the white smoking gun. So this one, when it came out around the same time this was sampled, there was like problems with gun violence in the States. So I ended up strapping this. We know of two of these in existence and only one black in the world. Wow. If somebody comes through with the right amount, are you guys, and you're like, they're like, yo. We got offered 200K for the bear, but that's like family. And like this store, if you sell all the rare stuff, this store is just like everybody else. You kind of need the rare stuff for people to come in to see it. Otherwise we're just like everybody else. These are more for collection, like pieces like this are so hard to get and like an authentic one of them. So I don't want to ever sell it just to have it to legit check the other ones. Because sometimes it comes down to the weight of the bear break. They make great fakes now. Do you know what I mean? I know. This is crazy. This is like, I want to say this is what like 30, 30 grand? 40 grand? I think we've ever opened this up for anybody. Yeah. So it's literally the most ignorant thing you could have at your house. So this is one of 150. This was an LV club with Murakami. That's dope. I've never seen that. Yeah, it was one of my favorite pieces in the store. And like things like this, I don't just pull the trigger on. I got to find out if it's legit. You know what I mean? I do my research, eat them. Because like I don't like to buy stuff just over the internet. I like to meet them, make an actual genuine connection. So we could do like real business. Do you know what I mean? Not that one time. Right, right. Just like a flip for them. No, no, no. Yeah. Like I tell people like you can like $40. If you give somebody $40 off to them, it's $40. But it could be something bigger. It's not always about the money. You kind of want to spend... That money is worth different to different people. You guys, that's just business knowledge. Nobody ever goes out anymore. People still want to wear clothes, go out to a store. So these type of stores will always exist. Otherwise, where are these people wearing these clothes to? I really am trying to figure this out. They take in the picture and then they take it off. It's always yes. Folding it, sliding it back into the package. I think it's cool because you're, you know, you come inside to the store and buy stuff and learn about the culture. But you're saying the way you got all the stuff into the store was by being outside, meeting people. Everything in the store is connected to a person. I remember everybody who sold us everything. Yo, I hope you guys were enjoying that video. There's more, but right now I'm going to tell you about privacy.com. If you are a sneakerhead or anybody who is into resale items or collectibles, you know that feeling of hesitancy when you come across a site that you're not familiar with. It's scary. You know those sites where you think it's probably legit, but you're just not sure? Privacy.com allows you to go ahead and actually pull the trigger on those items at a very low risk because you know your bank and identity information will be protected by creating virtual card numbers instead of using your actual real card number. Finding the items you actually really want online can be stressful enough. So Privacy.com gives you one less thing to worry about. Plus, and maybe most importantly, Privacy.com is free. There's a Chrome extension to save time. There's skins for cards for the retailers you use the most often. And it even has a merchant versus burner card option where the burner card is only going to work once for the amount that you set. If you're trying to cop those shoes on release day, you know how precious every second is. The extension saves you so much time and allows you multiple opportunities to get the shoe. This level of control over your cards is great even for free trials online. Sometimes those are super difficult to cancel or you forget to or you forget your login. So why not just use Privacy.com to create a card with a limited amount like $1 just to get the trial started. Then the virtual card you created for the trial can't even be charged more. Plus, it's all organized in an easy to use aesthetic interface. 20 roasters, 20 coops. This is one of the roasters and there's only two fully exposed carbon fiber ones. One's here and the other one's in a museum by Lambeau. It's a couple mil. A couple mil. A couple mil. Yeah, an art piece really. You can't really drive this anywhere. You'd have to have security to stand by the car. Right. There's nothing, there's no roof. It doesn't come with a roof. Usually, roasters will come with like a removable roof. Okay. This one came with nothing. Gosh. Yeah, even the rims. Like each of these rims will go for maybe 50k. What is the overall like to end it off? You know, our time here at ODTO, like what's the impact? If what we did can start a new generation of kids that do something great, we won. A lot of kids we see coming in like younger kids that I know are gonna do something dope. You know what I mean? So it's what it's for. Like actually build another community. Especially people coming to a store like this, I don't want you guys to feel like this place like, oh, it's like too expensive. Let's just leave. You know what I mean? I don't want you guys to feel awkward. Just come in and just see somebody talk to me. I have an angry face, but I'm actually, I actually make jokes like I'm hilarious. There's hilarious things. There's hilarious things. And I'm talking. Come talk to us. Ask me any question. There's no stupid questions. And don't think you're ever wasting my time. There's none of that. Like we want Toronto to be great. So yeah. Yo, man. It's real, man. I'm shy, man. I'm shy, bro. Thank you. Thank you. I know. And when I have guys like you come and appreciate what we're doing, that means that that means everything worth it. Because like you guys, you guys appreciate this stuff. You guys know what it takes. You guys know a lot about this stuff. So when I see you guys have this reaction, like this means more than anything. All right. So one thing in Canada that I noticed is that they give you the card reader yourself so that they can't punch a different number. You have to click. Okay. I approve. You're doing it yourself. I'm not going to lie. It's a little hard when you are at the bar and you've been drinking and you're just like I had it the other day. I was like really trying hard to make sure I pressed the right button. It was like tip. How much I was like don't hit. Don't hit number four. All right, man. That was OD Toronto. That was a really dope store. No, a lot of knowledge, man. Yeah. A lot of knowledge, man. Shout out to Sha. Sha. Sha. Man, they are onto something there because they're trying to bring something back to the streetwear and sneakers that it has sort of left the game. We're kind of hungry. Yes. And there's only one place we really need to go to. Tim Hortons. Pochino. Pretty. Sam, where are we headed? All right, we're heading to Yorkdale. We're on the TT's worst and best subway system because there's a lot of delay sometimes. But here we are at Osgoode station. We're going to go to Yorkdale station. Yo, Osgoode. That sounds like we're in Europe, Andrew. Osgoode. Osgoode. We're going to Osgoode. Hey, David, I'll meet you at Yorkdale. We are here at the Yorkdale Mall and we are outside of Plus. We're here with the owner, Andy. Oh, you used to say what's up. What's up? Oh, good. Andy is also the owner of Tame. How long has this been open for? So this location, we opened around six months ago. How's it been? I've been introducing it to what is considered like a very mainstream market, right? Because this culture used to be very niche at one point, maybe even five, 10 years ago. Now it's almost broken a lot more into the mainstream. It's got a lot of people that don't understand it, right, to come into like, what the hell? Like $5,000 for a pair of sneakers. Yeah, I mean, and then there's some negative feedback. But it's all positive because it opens the majority of the population to this kind of structure. You're exposing people to it. We're exposing people. I think that's important. And that's always good. I actually never seen the bear bricks hold up sneakers. We had a lot of things going on before, right? And if you see our older Instagram pictures, we had a lot of weird displays going on. But they figured this out. I was like, wow, this looks dope. And we're keeping it going like this for a little bit. What do you think about the blue off-white? I like the tint to blue. I think it's a blue. It really pops. It really pops. Oh my gosh, this, I've actually haven't seen this in person, or maybe once before. This is Kanye's, I think, second collab ever in his life on any shoe. It was after the first big one. He had a first big one, and then he had these, and then he had the Nike's, man. Oh, my business partner is actually down over there. He's a big collector of decks, you know what I mean? He's actually one of our clients in Vancouver. He's the one that bought the Sotheby's auction for the $800,000 US for all the decks ever made. The kid that bought it, he's actually just got out of high school. He was like 18. He was in class. His dad calls him, he's like, you still want the decks from that auction? And he's just in class. And he's like, oh, and he tells his teacher to go wash them. He's in the bathroom offering $800,000 US on this deck set in his high school bathroom. All right, let's go check out some sneakers. So now, Kauai Leonard, of course, with New Balance. This sneaker came out during the championship run. You know what the weird thing about the Kauai's is? They still haven't dropped yet. The basketball shirt, the omnie one still didn't drop yet, and they're generating so much buzz, the payers are going from, what, $800,000 to $1,000? People were lining up for hours for a New Balance shirt. A New Balance t-shirt. People were lining up for hours. That's how you know the hype is real. That's how you know the hype is real. I had never seen a sneaker company reverse its fortune that quickly. This one's crazy. What is this going for? Oh, $6.25. So it's on a New Balance. Is it going to be crazy how sometimes people are now going to be walking in to a consignment store asking for some New Balances? And they're not even going to be able to get them? Which Raptor colorway is better? I think it's the OVL one, right? Oh, yeah, that's the OVL one. So this is the OVL one. They release this at the same time the championship run. And this is the one that got discontinued because Drake was going to go to Nike. He was going to go to Adidas maybe, that whole hype thing. And then he stayed with Nike. And then they re-released them during the championship run. It's, in my opinion, no offense. It's not an amazing looking shoe, really, or anything. So it's crazy. If you're into vintage clothing, Raptor's colorway stuff is extremely expensive. And I think it's because the colorways are really good. But I just don't like predominantly black shoes. It's just not attractive. White shoes are just way nicer. And we got another Toronto exclusive. Air Max won the six, only released in Toronto, right? Because they canceled the worldwide release of that. They canceled the worldwide release, only released in Canada. There was some kind of branding problem with it or something, right? Okay, but part of it is that they whiteed out their Air Max. Oh, I was going to tell you. You rarely ever see that. You rarely ever see that. The fact that you have that there, that's actually what makes this shoe. It just came out. I didn't even know if it was an actual Nike release. I thought it was like, maybe someone did a bunch of costumes and put it out. Because it just came out of nowhere. It's just like, boom. Do we have a landmark? Yeah, can we talk about a landmark? I actually like the landmark. Obviously, the one that's most eye-catching is this hyperspace, though. Like, this is like, whoa, I've never seen anything. This is almost like an art installation. I don't actually like, this is salt, right? Oh, and a lot. Sorry. Too many ease, man. Too many ease. You know how everybody comes to the easy. Did you see that picture where Yeezy was staying with all the samples? Oh, yeah. Yeah, that's crazy, man. What do you think about the off-white terrace? Oh. Hey, if I'm like a pole vulture or something, I'm definitely not. This is the next generation, though. You know how, like, we love Jordans and whatnot? The kids growing up, they're going to love this. They're going to love performance-based sneakers, and they're going to be the one wearing it industry-style. I think that's the next generation. Did you see the bread one? I know, but Sakai is also very, very famous. Three quarter pants with no socks. Long story short, where do you hope this all goes? I mean, you guys opened up six months ago. I'm sure it wasn't easy to open in here. When I opened the first night we were stopped, I was like, oh, man, I just want to make this a thing locally and just be like a mom-and-pop shop and just always just in the morning get a coffee, open the shop, and just be self-sustaining and not to make a lot of money or anything, and then the market just kind of blew up. Like, this is what I know. This is what I do. Like, I dropped out of high school selling clothes, and that's what I've been doing since I was 16. Come here, our cousins are from Canada, and this is my first time actually being out in Canada and actually interfacing heavily with a lot of people outside of my family. So it's been dope. It's been love, and just to see all these different things pop up in the last six months, it's awesome. You guys are building community. You guys are serving, I'm sure people who have waited a long time to have a physical representation of the things they love online and studied and been into, so it's dope. It's love. Thank you, man. Thank you, Eddie. No problem, no problem. If it sounds like you or somebody you know could use all of these advantages, then go to privacy.com slash fumbros and sign up for a free account. Anybody who signs up off the fumbros link will immediately get $5 off their first purchase. And that's money you can save on your next sneaker purchase or your next subscription service too. So definitely click on the link in the description box down below. That is privacy.com slash fumbros, but right now we're going to tell you about our must-cop Supreme accessories. In our opinion, my whole thing about Supreme accessories is you got to use it. So for me, I loved it when this power station XL with Mophie, Mophie and Supreme came out. Boom, look at that. Wait, that's wireless. And it's wireless too. I think the Supreme one's actually a little bit better than the base model, Mophie, because the Mophie has a fabric cover, but this one has like a rubber cover. I think the fabric can get dirty. As you guys know, I cut hair sometimes and getting this Supreme, which I actually got from OD Toronto in the video that you guys saw. This is one of my favorite things, man. I'm looking forward to giving my first haircut. And how many people do you think copped that they don't cut hair? I think most people who copped it try to cut hair. I did see a lot of barbers with that. Yeah, I saw a lot of barbers with this. I'll say this. The one thing that I was able to get with the privacy.com was the porter waste bag. Oh, yeah, you did. I've been looking for a waste bag for a while. Because you wanted to carry a lot of stuff. I finally looked through end clothing and I found a porter waste bag that I really wanted. And yeah, I'm pretty excited. Hey, David. By the way, I think I could clean you up a little bit. All right, guys. Thank you so much for privacy.com. Remember, you will get $5 off if you sign up through our link right down below. Privacy.com slash PhoneGrowse. All right, you guys. Thank you so much for watching that Toronto streetwear sneaker crawl. We went to OD. We went to Plus. Yo, Sam, thank you for showing us around. No worries, man. My pleasure, boys. Six reviews. Six reviews. And I'm proud of it, sir. My major takeaways are that there's definitely less shops. But the shops that do exist, that are based around streetwear and sneaker culture, they know their stuff probably even better. Yeah, and going off of that, my takeaway was that, think about it, we were talking to the owners of these shops and the owners, they knew so much and they were so talkative and they were so nice to us. I do think that that kind of attitude, especially in the streetwear and sneaker realm, is kind of hard to find, especially for people who are dealing with, you know, up to hundreds of thousands and millions of dollars. Very cool material items. Yeah, very cool material items. They have a lot of knowledge. You know, they take it very seriously and they're willing to share that information with you. And it is true that I don't want to just say only in America, but it is easy for the game to get really elitist, kind of snobby. I mean, I've done videos where I didn't talk to the owner, but in this video, we literally talked to the owners of the store. So, of course, they were willing to drop a lot of knowledge and there are very, you know, nice about things and being nice, possibly the Canadian way. That's right. Yeah, guys, man, honestly, the culture here is great. I'm glad that you guys got to finally check it out. And as a younger brother, as a Canadian, the American younger brother, as we're known as, yeah, man, it's a pleasure and it's good to that. You guys recognize that Toronto has game two, you know? I definitely recommend anybody from the States, the USA, United States, definitely come to Toronto, check it out and hit up this guy. Six reviews. AKA Average Asian, AKA Kilpo. Hey, I like defining the average Asian. Do you got any more of these shirts? It's my brand. It's my brand. What? It's my brand. Where do they find it? KYOPO with the underscore on it. We ship worldwide. I'll give the Funk Bros one after. You know, we got it. Thank you so much for watching that video. In the comments below, let us know any other streetwear or sneaker scene you guys want us to check out around the world. We'll try to go there. Everybody also let us know any other spots in Toronto we should check out in the future. Until next time, we out. Peace. Peace.