The moment President Trump signs the Iran deal at the Palace of Versailles.
The agreement was finalized during a dinner hosted by French President Emmanuel Macron inside the historic palace.
The signing marked a major diplomatic milestone after months of negotiations aimed at ending the conflict between the U.S. and Iran.
Elon's now worth $1.4 Trillion. He could lose $1 trillion and still be the richest person in the world. Elon sat down with me for his first interview since becoming a trillionaire. Pretty wild...
This 18-minute MrBeast breakdown will teach you more about getting views, growing on YouTube, and going viral than most creators learn in years.
Bookmark it and give it 18 minutes today, no matter what.
This guy made $252,000 last year selling lemonade at farmers markets.
Meet Don.
He started this three years ago with his kids at a farmers market in Frisco. Last year they did $252k in 8 months.
His cost per lemonade? $1.25. He sells it for $7.
He's at two markets now.
Dallas Farmers Market pulls $2,500 a day.
Frisco does $1,200 to $1,500.
That's a $5,000 weekend just in Dallas alone.
But Don is my kind of guy. He added catering and rentals and this is what happened:
One corporate event: $2,900 for four hours serving 300 lemonades.
Another event: $19,000 serving frozen bananas.
Twelve grand profit.
He doesn't pay for ads. Just Facebook Marketplace for rentals, SEO for catering, and word of mouth at the markets.
He also rents out his custom cart for $500 a day. Weddings, office parties, classic car shows. Drop it off, pick it up, done.
In this episode Don:
- Walks through the unit economics of a $7 lemonade
- Shows how he scales with a couple running one market while he runs the other
- Tells me why he's not worried about competition even though anyone could copy this
- Breaks down the $19k frozen banana catering order he landed from a video I posted
- Gives me his advice for anyone wanting to start: stop overthinking it and just post up
This one blew my mind. Check it out.
SpaceX hit $3 trillion market cap today.
This means Elon Musk made more money in the last 24 hours than Warren Buffett made in his entire lifetime.
Insane.
Daniel Bitton says anyone who scrolls TikTok all day can make $10,000 a month clipping
“Clipping is the next Uber Eats, anybody can log in, it’s so mindless and it gets you paid”
“The best clippers are the best consumers, the people who are chronically online, you understand the culture to a t”
“As long as you’re scrolling TikTok all day you can be an elite clipper making 10,000 a month, I’m 100% confident, I’ve seen it work”
MrBeast reveals the exact psychological framework that separates a 1,000,000 view video from a 100,000,000 view video
"An idea on YouTube can make the difference between a video getting a million views or 100 million views..."
"If I just put 15 people in a mansion, it’s a fine video. But if I put 15 people who said our videos are too easy, all of a sudden it’s 10 times more interesting."
"Even though it really wasn’t any extra effort on our part, you see what I’m saying?"
The Blueprint: Virality is rarely about increasing your budget or working harder on production. It's about engineering psychological friction into the premise.
Stop trying to build bigger sets. Start thinking about how to frame your current sets to create maximum emotional stakes.
Daniel Bitton reveals he ran an experiment: $5,000 on clipping got 64 million views, a $5,000 billboard got 62 scans
“We spent 5,000 on the most popular billboard in Toronto, 24,000 people walked by it in a day, it got 62 scans to the QR code, only 62”
“Then we spent 5,000 on a content rewards campaign and we got 64 million views, 80% USA audience, over 15,000 clicks to our website straight from that campaign”
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.
TOKYO'DA 21 YAŞINDA BİR GENÇ, YAPAY ZEKA İLE 12.000 DOLAR KAZANDI.
Günde sadece bir kaç saat çalışıyor.
İş akışı şöyle:
> Midjourney tüm kareleri oluşturuyor (20 dk)
> Claude her bölümün senaryosunu yazıyor (10 dk)
> Runway sahneleri canlandırıyor (15 dk)
> ElevenLabs karakterleri seslendiriyor (10 dk)
> Suno müzikleri hazırlıyor (5 dk)
> İçerikler otomatik olarak Youtube'a yükleniyor. (0 dk)
Toplam maliyet yada 120 dolar.
en ilginç kısmı ise animasyonları tek tek üretmiyor. sadece evreni ve karakterleri tasarlıyor. geri kalan her şeyi yapay zeka hattı otomatik olarak inşa ediyor.
bir kişinin kurduğu sistem, onun yerine çalışan dijital bir stüdyoya dönüşüyor. gelecekte en değerli beceri üretmek değil, üreten sistemleri kurmak olacak.
access to frontier AI can be shut off overnight
that’s the whole decentralized + private AI thesis
watching bittensor:native and base:0xacfe6019ed1a7dc6f7b508c02d1b04ec88cc21bf closely here
He Mined Bitcoin in 2009. Now He’s Betting on TAO
In this episode, Shizzy sits down with @rBryer23 , an early Bitcoin miner from 2009, to talk through the wild early days of crypto and how it has evolved into the rise of Bittensor and decentralized AI.
RL shares his story of mining Bitcoin back when almost nobody understood what it was, then walks through major moments in crypto history including Mt. Gox, Silk Road, Ethereum in 2016, and the lessons learned from each cycle.
The conversation then shifts into artificial intelligence, DeAI, TAO, and why Bittensor could become one of the most important networks in crypto. RL also shares his favorite subnet pick, other subnets he is watching, and where he thinks crypto and Bittensor are heading next.
CHAPTERS
00:00:00 Shizzy’s Monologue
00:01:33 RL Bryer Joins the Show
00:02:55 RL Explains His 2009 Bitcoin Story
00:18:25 Mt. Gox Historical Talk
00:23:35 The Early Days of Silk Road
00:29:13 Ethereum in 2016 Historical Talk
00:38:00 Artificial Intelligence and What DeAI Can Become
01:06:40 RL Explains His Favorite Subnet Pick and Other Subnets He Finds Interesting
01:10:15 RL Shares His Thoughts on the Future of Crypto and Bittensor
01:22:40 How to Find RL Bryer and Final Words
01:26:19 Final Words from Shizzy
$TAO #Bittesnor #Bitcoin
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."
We are not building decentralised AI because it sounds better.
We are building it because the off switch cannot belong to one hand.
If AI is going to run the economy, you cannot have it gated behind one API, one vendor, one jurisdiction, or one policy mood.
Viva la bittensor:native