It’s funny to see how when I was working on vidrush early last year everyone was saying
“Ohh why are you focusing on that it won’t work”
Now Litteraly everyone and their mom is scrambling to either get access or copy it.
I already expected that competition would rise and like I said at the start when it would I wouldn’t have another choice but drop vidrush to the public.
So I will in the next 1-2 week open up the waitlist so everyone can use it. I’m somewhat forced to at this point 👍
Introducing GPT-Live, a new generation of voice models for natural human-AI interaction.
Rolling out in ChatGPT starting today.
You’ll want to turn the sound on for this one.
I made $273,832 in June 2026.
💰 YouTube Adsense — $141k
🔥 YouTube E-book Sales — $132k
Margins: ~95%
More screenshot proof in comments.
My portfolio of FaceTubers works for me 24/7 while I sleep.
I’ve got an army of:
- Amish FaceTubers (some of you have seen these)
- Home-Repair FaceTubers
- Survival FaceTubers
- Retirement FaceTubers
- Food FaceTubers
- etc, etc, etc.
The possibilities are endless.
What is a FaceTuber?
A FaceTuber is a personality-led digital host that is trained to dominate any niche he/she is in.
It’s like hiring a YouTuber who never gets tired, never misses uploads, and can be built for any niche.
The AI model that powers all this was being gate kept from the public. Until now.
I am now releasing it to the first people who joined the early access waitlist. The first round of signup codes are being sent tomorrow. Keep an eye out on your emails.
If you are not on the waitlist, don't regret not securing your spot @ https://t.co/OzcvSNtYRK
The future of YouTube automation has a face.
https://t.co/OzcvSNtYRK
Huge shoutout to Andrew @wizofyt for teaching me this entire cracked business model.
Now on to Q3, Q4. Let's keep building!
Here's how I lost a bit over $50K in a restaurant business
The year is 2020
Covid lockdown goes into motion so a friend/business partner & I get bored so decide to mess around in Cyprus
The moment the idea hits we call a friend (@dudufolio) who connects us to one of the big food & beverage players in the country (this was at 1am, we went from idea to execution in minutes btw)
Next day we have a meeting, he likes us (or so we assume) so we set a plan into motion. The plan:
- Open up a high end restaurant
- In the most high end street in the capital
- Hire a 2 star Michelin chef from Greece
- Run it up
Took a couple months, by early 2021 we are already open and running
The plan was I was going to be a silent investor as I had no experience in the industry and just wanted to diversify investments
TLDR:
- Total investment was $500K approx
- We hit a 180K revenue months
- Margins were trash (at least for me, as I'm used to internet money margins) - but considered good for the industry (20% ish)
- We end up on a loss every single month
- Figure out partners were defrauding us (it is incredibly easy to do so in a cash business)
- End up selling the place for a loss
Lessons:
- If you are making money online and are used to 90% margins, for the love of God - you do not need to get into trashy physical businesses (of course there are exceptions)
- Trust your self. If you can make money online (I mean really make money online, not hit a one time homerun and think you are HIM), you can very likely outperform a 50 year old boomer who's been running his company in the same way for 30 years now
PS - @dudufolio was also a partner, he managed to sell his shares before the ship sunk - proceeded to put out his exit money in NFTs and lose it all there
PPS - I told myself I'd never do a physical business, but currently in the process of launching one in Cyprus, good luck us
Every business I've started:
- video editor for intros/outros (2010): $250
- video editor for gaming clans (2011): $2k
- instagram theme pages (2013-2018): $20K
- affiliate marketing (2015): $0
- dropshipping: -$1K (2015)
- high-end restaurant (2021-2022): -$60K
- faceless youtube (2011-present) : $5M and still going
- instagram growth power group (2017): $5K
- B2B youtube consulting: $100K (2019-2023)
- poker event organization (2020-2023): $350K
2 lessons from 10+ years in business:
- If something works, quadruple down on it. You do not need to be dominating 20 niches, you can be the king of one and it would return much more
- Never ever give up, time will pass anyway. Might as well keep yourself busy until you hit the home run
"if a CMS already has everything, why would they ever take me in?"
because having a CMS ≠ being good at ideation or market analysis
they're great at licensing, rights, ops, partnerships. that's not the same as knowing how to make a channel explode. licensing doesn't scale execution, an operator does. they can't staff good ideation across 50 niches internally, that's the bottleneck you fill.
so you bring the ideation + packaging on content they already have access to, and you're competing against almost no one. the more results you bring, the more they trust you. better rev share, bigger doors, sometimes they pull you in on strategy
we're so deep in AI and faceless stuff that we forget the asset was never the niche, it's the skillset.
that travels anywhere.
I promise you that all the YouTube advice you ever need is already publically accesible online.
The method has already been leaked so many times.
Truly the only moat left is execution.
1. Connections are everything. Knowing the right guy has many times over the years given me an advantage over my competition. Build your network.
2. If you have a winner video, something going properly viral (1M+ views), I cannot stress this enough - but it can change your life. Do not overthink/waste time. Double down on it. Yes that one video can cause a domino effect that changes your life forever.
3. Forget over diversification. Just like business, the most successful entrepreneurs locked in on one model until they mastered their craft. You don't need to be collecting infinity stones. If you get good at a niche, grow inside it. Then grow in its verticals. Before you even consider chasing the next shiny object.
BREAKING:
Jeff Bezos just flipped the AI jobs narrative completely.
"I think what's actually going to happen is we're going to have labor scarcity."
Not mass unemployment. Labor shortage.
"The people saying AI kills jobs are wrong."
His reasoning: AI drives productivity.
Productivity raises living standards.
Higher living standards mean people choose to work less.
Not because they're fired.
Because they can afford not to.
"The iPhone doesn't get reserved for just a few people. It's not how it works."
Two of the most successful entrepreneurs in history.
Bezos and Musk. Both saying the same thing.
AI creates abundance. Not scarcity.
The pessimists are loud.
The builders are busy.
Elon Musk in this 2012 interview:
" My proceeds from PayPal after tax were about $180M, $100M of that went into SpaceX, $70M into Tesla, and $10M into SolarCity and I literally had to borrow money for rent."
$SPCX $TSLA
Claude Fable just built this entire product from one prompt. I'm blown away.
Shotblock is a 3D shot-planning tool for AI filmmakers — real lens math, actor blocking, 180 ° rule warnings, animatics, storyboard + prompt export. It researched storyboard conventions, wrote its own test suite, verified everything in a browser, and deployed it.
Then I asked for a promo video. It scripted, recorded, and edited the one below with minimal direction.
Give it a try. Free, no signup. Feedback button in the app for any issues or feature requests.
https://t.co/EEx9ClAC9m