A kid in his tshirt sold an AI receptionist to a hair salon while drinking coffee.
$399 a month from the one client. 30 minutes of work.
He opened vacancies. Found a salon in Bay Park about to hire someone for $3,000 a month.
Copied their website. ChatGPT wrote the system prompt. He dropped it into VAPI. 20 minutes later there was a voice agent answering calls in the salon's tone.
He called the salon. Said nobody picked up yesterday. The owner apologized. The kid said cool, I built you an AI receptionist that answers 24/7. Want to hear it?
He played the demo on the phone.
The owner thinks he spent a week on it.
He charges $399 a month. They save $2,600. He has 30 clients.
His full setup is below.
A 24-YEAR-OLD IN TORONTO POSTED A VIDEO EXPLAINING HOW SHE MAKES $30,000 A MONTH AS A REMOTE CLOSER. SHE HASN'T BEEN ON A SALES CALL IN 6 MONTHS.
She films from her high-rise condo. She tells her audience she sells $6,000 coaching programs and takes a 10% commission.
She breaks down the math. Two closed deals a day is $1,200. Five days a week is $6,000. A few extra deals puts you at $30,000 a month.
She tells people it's a high-income skill.
Her comments are full of people asking how she handles the stress of dialing leads all day.
She doesn't handle any stress. She doesn't dial any leads.
Back in January, she took her best recorded sales call and cloned her voice. She uploaded it into an autonomous AI calling platform. She fed the agent her exact sales script, every possible objection, and her Stripe checkout link.
She doesn't work for one coaching program. She works for five.
Every morning, the five companies send her a list of leads. She uploads the CSV file. Her AI voice agent dials 50 people at once. It sounds exactly like her. It laughs at the right times. It pauses to think.
When a lead gives an objection, the AI doesn't get nervous. It never loses its tone. It just follows the script.
While she was filming her TikTok with the CN Tower in the background, her AI agent was simultaneously on 14 different calls. It closed three of them.
That's $1,800 in commissions. Before lunch. Without picking up a phone.
The influencers think they hired a ruthless closer. The buyers think they bought a program from a nice girl in Toronto.
She cleared $34,000 last month. Her only overhead is a $200 API bill.
Thousands of people are DMing her the word "sales" to learn how to close.
They are trying to learn how to talk on the phone. She figured out how to automate the person talking.
Mr. Beast went viral for saying:
“I could start a new channel tomorrow, not using my face… and in 6 months have 20 million subscribers.”
But he didn’t stop there…
He revealed the reason why & how you can capitalize:
THE $500 BUSINESS THAT CAN TURN INTO A PRINT FARM
Most people think starting a manufacturing business requires warehouses, employees, and tens of thousands of dollars.
Reality looks very different
This creator breaks down how to start a 3D printing business with just $500. A $269 Bambu Lab A1, a couple rolls of filament, free design files, and a simple website are enough to get your first products online. No factory. No investors. No inventory nightmare.
The interesting part isn't the printer. It's how fast the barriers to entry have collapsed. What used to require industrial equipment can now be done from a spare room with tools that cost less than a smartphone.
We're watching manufacturing become accessible to anyone with an internet connection. The people starting today aren't competing with local hobbyists anymore. They're building brands, automating orders, and shipping products worldwide from their bedroom.
A faceless stickman channel made its first $9,400 in 1 months with zero animation, zero paid tools, zero drawing skill.
14 uploads. 137,000 subscribers. 14,500,000 views. Just still stick figures stitched together, 5-to-15-minute videos, first one live 8 weeks ago.
The whole pipeline runs on free plans and 1 prompt.
Claude's free plan returns 5 viral topics, then a full script, then a download.
The rule that breaks most creators: voice over first, scene second. Generate scenes first and the audio collides with them, and viewers click away before they can explain why.
ElevenLabs free plan makes the voice. A transcriber finds every pause to the frame, so the audio tells you where each of the 103 cuts lands. No guessing. Claude writes an image prompt per timestamp. Google Flow with Nano Banana 2 renders them. A free Chrome extension batches all 103 and auto-downloads in the background. 102 land clean. 1 fails. Fix it by hand.
Sync by filename timestamp, preview for rhythm, export.
$0 setup. 103 scenes. 1 published video built by someone who can't draw.
The channel crossed another million views while you read this.
The craziest thing about this video isn't the $4,441 day
It's that almost nobody would call this a factory
No smokestacks. No forklifts. No massive building. Just rows of 3D printers quietly turning plastic into cash while most people are still arguing about side hustles.
90 orders shipped in a single day. Dozens of machines running at the same time. Products being printed, packed, and sent out before the owner even touches half of them. At some point you stop owning a printer and start owning a production line.
This is why I'm paying so much attention to machine-powered businesses right now. First it was software. Now it's physical products. The cost of starting a manufacturing operation is collapsing, and most people haven't noticed yet.
The next generation of million-dollar businesses won't always start in warehouses. Some will start with a few machines in a room and a founder smart enough to let the machines do the work.
MrBeast reveals why a 10% better video gets you four times the views, not 10% more
"I mentor YouTubers a lot. One of the people I've been mentoring recently, he was doing $24,000 a month and then he recently had a $400,000 a month on YouTube."
"He was doing 4 million views a month, 24 grand. And then probably like seven, eight months into it we got him up to 45 million views."
"It's much easier, as weird as it sounds, it's much easier to get five million views on one video than a hundred thousand views on 50 videos."
"You could upload one great video a year and get more views than if you uploaded 100 mediocre videos."
"If you get people to click your video 10% more and watch a video 10% longer than mine, you don't get 10% more views. You get like four times the views. A 10% better video is four times the views, not 10% more views."
YouTube just made FIFA World Cup clips monetizable. 1M views pays up to $15,000.
The tournament started June 11. Soccer Shorts are pulling 12M views while you read this.
Old way: download clips, cut for hours in CapCut, eat a copyright strike, earn $0.
New way takes 10 minutes.
Step 1 Connect.
Open Claude → Customize → Connectors → hit the +.
Add a video MCP connector. Done in 30 seconds.
Step 2 Hunt.
Search “FIFA World Cup clips” on YouTube. FIFA’s own channel sits at 26.3M subscribers. Their compilations pull 1.5M to 12M views each. Pick one, copy the URL.
Step 3 Prompt.
“Clip this video into viral YouTube Shorts formats” then paste the URL.
That’s the whole prompt. 1 sentence.
Step 4 Watch.
Claude finds the peaks, cuts 3 vertical 9:16 Shorts, picks the font, burns in captions, writes the titles. “Mbappé Turns The World Cup Final In 97 Seconds” it named that one itself.
The math:
3 Shorts per clip. 10 clips a day. 30 Shorts daily without filming, editing, or showing your face. Shorts pay less per view than long-form so you win on volume, not RPM.
The window: the final is July 19. 37 days of the biggest sporting event on earth, monetizable for the first time.
Most creators will watch the games.
A few will clip them.
MrBeast says he helped a friend go from $20k to $400k a month in revenue just by telling him the truth once a week
"I mentored this one guy just for fun. He was doing like $10,000 on one channel and $8,000 a month on another channel. And this month he actually just had his highest revenue month ever. He did $400,000 in revenue. Just by listening to what I taught him we were able to 20x his revenue. Just me once a week telling him he was an idiot and what to do."
"A lot of times people, oh boy, they think their videos are better than they are."
MrBeast: "Tell them Jimmy, tell them, they do."
Coffeezilla: "And they have horrible friend groups. A lot of times I'm just like, what you're saying is wrong, who told you this? They're like, oh this guy. And it's like, well they're wrong. So it's getting people with the right YouTuber friend group that will actually tell them when their content's bad and actually roast it."
"Usually it's hiring an editor, uploading less videos, just making them better. It's much easier to get five million views on one video than 50,000 views on 100 videos."
"A lot of people aren't willing to put in ten-hour days because they don't like what they're doing. It's a long grind, you're doing this for years not months. So the first thing is figuring out what are the things you're currently doing that you don't want to do, and let's figure out a way to get someone else to do it, so you actually get out of bed excited."
A monk Instagram account makes $100,000 a month selling a happiness ebook
No face. Just a persona.
Here is how to build the same thing from scratch.
Pick a character. A wise surfer sitting on a board talking about happiness and wisdom. Give Claude the monk account. Ask it to analyze why it goes viral. Then ask for 50 video scripts in the surfer's voice - same themes, different persona.
Take those scripts to Higgs Field. Paste each one in. Generate the video. Download it.
Open a new Instagram account. Upload the video. Write a short caption. Post.
5 videos a day. Every 2 hours. Schedule them in advance.
After the account has content and traction, go back to Claude. Ask it to write a surfer wisdom ebook. Done. That is the product.
The monk account sells happiness in ebook form. The surfer account sells the same thing with a different face and a different aesthetic. The audience buys the feeling, not the format.
Claude builds the scripts. Higgs Field builds the videos. Instagram distributes them. The ebook converts the audience into revenue.
The monk found an angle that works. The surfer just needs a board and a script.
$100,000 a month from a persona that does not exist.
this is like investing into Bitcoin in 2009.. 😭💀
there’s 18/yo making $24,867/month with AI clipping and Content Rewards
All they do is:
1. Join clipping campaigns
2. Find the campaign videos on YouTube
3. AI clip them Vugola
4. Submit them on Content Rewards
5. Get paid $300+ per reel
you missed dropshipping in 2016
you missed meme coins in 2022
don’t miss AI clipping in 2026…. 💰
This is by far the simplest way to making $20,000/month.
Google's former CEO just said what everyone in AI already knows
Building wealth is getting easier if you actually learn the tools
Not by scrolling AI threads
By understanding agents, Claude Code, prompts, memory, skills, MCP, and routines
Save this before it disappears from your feed
Everything below is free:
Agent architecture
https://t.co/hhrSyF3y6u
Claude Code 101
https://t.co/71Zu7xQmxc
Claude Code in action
https://t.co/vg8fPChJxl
Prompt engineering
https://t.co/xEu7M3CPe1
Interactive prompt course
https://t.co/oGCxHkqFBD
Claude.md + memory
https://t.co/v6JKlS4OJl
Skills
https://t.co/AJCWlDcMU7
MCP
https://t.co/tQTUYCwN16
Routines
https://t.co/gAnEdq5SP0
Claude Code ultimate guide
https://t.co/WeDLJBVaGM
Awesome Claude Code
https://t.co/wvpwfcaf6U
Anthropic academy
https://t.co/uu3JyZyWyt
Official Claude Code docs
https://t.co/xuUWAfZGXy
All of this costs $0
Most people will keep asking AI one question at a time
Save this and start learning the stack
Mr Beast says he could start a faceless channel tomorrow and hit 20 million subscribers in six months
“I could start a new channel tomorrow not using my face or my voice without ever promoting it and in six months have 20 million subscribers”
“It’s purely knowledge if you knew what I knew you could get 10 million views a video and 10 million subscribers no matter where you are right now within 6 months”
“It really is just knowledge”