
In this podcast episode, host Ryan Alford and co-hosts Chris Hansen and Brianna Hall engage in a lively discussion about the evolving landscape of news media, the impact of social media, and the intersection of technology and advertising. They highlight how smartphones have democratized news reporting and discuss the influence of independent journalists and social media influencers. The conversation also touches on Coca-Cola's AI-generated Christmas ad, sparking debate about AI in creative fields. Additionally, Chris shares insights on cryptocurrency trading. The episode blends humor and critical analysis, offering listeners an engaging take on current events and media trends.
In this podcast episode, host Ryan Alford and co-hosts Chris Hansen and Brianna Hall engage in a lively discussion about the evolving landscape of news media, the impact of social media, and the intersection of technology and advertising. They highlight how smartphones have democratized news reporting and discuss the influence of independent journalists and social media influencers. The conversation also touches on Coca-Cola's AI-generated Christmas ad, sparking debate about AI in creative fields. Additionally, Chris shares insights on cryptocurrency trading. The episode blends humor and critical analysis, offering listeners an engaging take on current events and media trends.
TAKEAWAYS
- The influence of podcasts on public opinion and politics.
- The rise of social media as a primary source of news consumption.
- The impact of influencers on news reporting and public perception.
- The challenges faced by traditional media in the digital age.
- The role of user-generated content in breaking news coverage.
- The evolution of advertising strategies, including the use of AI.
- The public's reaction to AI-generated content in marketing.
- The dynamics of cryptocurrency trading and investment.
- The importance of critical thinking when consuming news from social media.
- The intersection of technology, media, and consumer behavior in modern society.
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We are the number one business show on the planet with over one million downloads a month. Taking the BS out of business for over six years and over 400 episodes. You ready to start snapping necks and caching checks? Well, it starts right about now. What's up guys? Welcome to right about now to weekly business news of the week. You never know what the hell we're going to get into on this show. It's business news. It's topical. It's what you want now. And hey, it's an opinion. So we'll say we're always fucking right because you know what? In our minds we are. We appreciate you wherever you are, whenever you are listening. We just not lost on us that you have choices in your content. So thank you for making us one of them. It is the week of November 22nd. Hope you're ready for some turkey day. That's happening next week. And I know who will be who the greatest turkey of all is, his name is Chris Hansen. You know, maybe he's actually he's actually Tom Cruise today. He looks like a Hollywood movie actor. This is why you need to watch our YouTube channel to see Chris. I mean, he'd look, tell me Brianna. Let's be honest. He looks good. He looks. I mean, I'm very heterosexual, but if I wasn't, you know, Chris, I'll take it. You be in a hundred choice at least when they're telling Miami. What's up Brianna? Hey, hey. We are here in our fabulous G Vegas studio is at Grievous South Carolina. That's all your rights doing our programming is always we appreciate him. Go check out his new album. I want him to I want him to hit it right here, Sawyer. Tell everybody where they can find it in the name of all that shit. Tell me. Okay. Yeah. This is Sawyer. Yeah. It's called No One's Home. And the band's name is Sunhouse. You can find it on all streaming platforms. No one's home, baby. Hey. Hey, holiday listing. You're going to be home. They'll give it a listen. We appreciate Sawyer. And it's good music, folks. They had to play it. I've heard it. I think I heard it in the background yesterday. I was like, I thought it was Sawyer, but I was like, then I got busy doing something else. We've been playing it in the office. Everybody on the team is a big fan. It's a great album. Yeah. So go give this support. Go buy some albums, merch on the website, Twitter, links and all that stuff, so go support local music. Sunhouse. Yes. Chris Vegas. I feel like having a renamed you today, baby. I like it. You look tan. Yeah. I'm jealous. Like we're getting, you know, dreary and cold here in South Carolina. Chris looking tan. He's at the shades on and you know the trick. Yeah. Hey, it's on to the sporting baby. Oh. So how do you go next door? I think it's that blood flow going your cardiovascular system. Yeah. I need to do that. I think a cold plunge and sauna next door now. We have friends. So yoga here in G Vegas, grateful South Carolina. They had a good week. Yeah. I had a great week and some exciting news for the right about now show, right about now at number one on Apple podcast for marketing again and number four for all business shows in the US on the charts. Hey, hey, hey, look out. Hey, all because you if you're listening, you heard that because of you, we appreciate you. I saw that. We're ranked in the top 20 in 14 countries somehow some way. All thanks to Chris Vegas, I would, I think you should officially change your last name to Vegas. Chris Vegas. See? I don't know. I'm not a big Vegas guy. I know. I mean, I know. I know. I know what you're saying. Yeah. It's. It's like your Vegas guy. He just, he's kind of, I don't know, it's more and more deep up in the charts like this. I may just need to change my name and go Hollywood. I know. It's like a, I think it's more like a, not necessarily that you're Vegas, Vegas, Vegas. But you know, people change their last name to something just kind of that draws attention and conversation. So. Well, the problem is, is if Chris gets famous, you know, more famous than he already is, there's already a famous Chris Hanson. Ah, yes. That's the fact. And I literally get someone reminded me of that probably once a week. Yeah. Today it was me. Ryan, can you test it? Yeah. Oh, yeah. Hey, Chris. The first reply I get introduced was, yeah, that already was, it was somebody that had a, you know, Chris has a good name, like, had a worst name. But it was like, he had a name that you can make fun of or more or less easier. Chris, Chris thought back pretty quick. Yeah. He's like, oh, I can't get that in. So I was like, hey, did you bring the wine collars in lubricant? Yeah. What was his name? Chris Hanson. No, but you had to catch your predator. Yeah. Oh, I know that. I know that. I can't remember whose name it was. That message, I thought it was his kind of funny. Ah, he had that of a funny different name too. So anyway, nonetheless, what's happening in the world? We've, it's been an interesting media week for sure. There's lots going on. And I'll say this. I don't know that this was part of our news and pretty sure it was it. But, you know, if you've ever questioned the power of podcasting, you don't anymore. I mean, some of the numbers have come out that are staggering for, you know, the presumed influence I had on the election. And I think you'd be, I don't know, a little bit rocker or just not very intelligent if you didn't think it did have an impact. And then a study that, you know, we've been followed to podcasting study. We stay with all this stuff. Hey, when you do a show, you got to stay with the data. More Americans now listen to podcasts than those that don't. And so you might go, well, who, well, that's not that's a part of the who cares. Well, it's the first time that's ever happened in this study that's been going on for 10 years. So more people listen or watch podcasts than those that don't. So that was interesting. Yeah. I found an article from AdWheek that says that Bloomberg's Ashley Carmen called this the podcast election. Candidates for prioritizing sit downs with popular shows and basically engaging mass audiences that podcasts have driving conversations that influence significant segments of, you know, the population of the American people. It says brand leaders take note. Yeah. So if you're listening, give us a call. You need to be marketing on the show going up numbers are going up, rankings are going up. And, you know, it's just the amount of money that gets spent on advertising that doesn't work. And what's been proven with podcast advertising, the trust, the affluency of listeners, the buying power, all this stuff, all the data supports it. So again, if we bring this up, man, we're marketing business show. So it's relative from that standpoint, even if it sounds a little self-serving, but it's not meant to. We'll take it. Well, and this article also says that from when Trump originally ran in 2016 to now, the number of people who listened to podcasts doubled in that time period. So it says now as of 2024, going into 2025, about 135 million people listened to podcasts every month. I mean, I'm one of those people, if I think you're the last four years of, if do I listen to more podcasts, 100%, absolute. Yeah. And I would say we're blowing the lid off that and brought to you by our good friends. The brand of bills, that's let the lid off right there as our lid, lid blowing stats. I'm telling you. And look, I've got it on today. I got, you know, this isn't the radical green, but it's fall. So I wanted to put the fall colors on because they've got an amazing selection. I'll say this. They're one of our longest sponsors, best sponsors. They send us gear, whatever you want. And I almost ordered something yesterday. I get it by email feed and you know, I'm their customer when I'm like shopping going, okay, they would send that to me anyway, but I'm like, almost checked out. I'm like, I'm in the shopping cart going, oh, yeah, they'll send me that if I ask for it. I'm telling you, really good flannels. They've got all kinds of like, stylish stuff, stylish clothes. I'm a guy that, here's the deal. Guys, it's hard to wear color if you're a guy. I wear white and black a lot. There's Chris over there, Chris Vegas, this guy's white shirt on. And exactly, I've got my black on. But I want to, you know, fall color. So you get this kind of that camo green with the brown. You can get your logo, that patch going, that leather patch going. It's stylish. It's cool. It's our official brand partner, branded bills. Go to brandobiles.com, click that custom button and you'll thank us for it. I know, I mean, you got to admit, it's hard for, I don't know if your husband is this way, Brianna, but getting color, like getting him to wear color or things like that. No, he is new favorite thing ever since we moved to South Carolina. The man is in salmon. He started wearing like salmon color coral. I'm like, who are you? I don't care on time. I don't know the Easter egg colors. I don't like to pull that off. I'll get a little pink every now and then, or a little. I still. Yeah. No, he's pulled. So back when we lived on a farm, it was all jeans and boots and a big belt buckle and now he's wearing salmon colored polos. You know, I should get him some branded bills gear for Christmas and if you visit their website, they actually have a $25 or 25% off coupon when you spend $150. So I'm going to check it out. They've got their Black Friday deals already live. Get up there, get you some samples, get you some stuff that you want and then go order for your company. You don't look, friends don't let friends send their little girls cheap shit. You just, you can't, I can't allow you to do this. I did it for years, thought, hey, it's a t-shirt that, you know, that Haynes comfort t-shirt that you send. These are shrinks all the way from a large to a small or it's so baggy. It's like, it makes, it doubles your size of you. No, no, no, no. This is why I bring the bills. All their stuff has, cause a nice fit to it again, quality hats, colors and again, that design team's awesome. Go check them out at brandnebills.com, hit that custom button, tell them the Radcast team here on the Radcast Network sent you. I know what I want my secret Santa to get me for Christmas. See? It's a brandnebills mom hat. But hey, what else we got in the news today? So we have, of course, we've to talk about the fight. I watched it and I don't know if you guys watched it, Mike Tyson versus Jake Paul. We had the group chat firing off. A lot of people were really favoring Tyson and it just did not deliver that way. All right. I'm going to wait for the conspiracy theory. Chris, one of you two is going to say that. Were you going to say that, Chris? Do you think it was fixed? Oh, I got no conspiracy. I think it was a win-win for them, you know? Oh, yeah. It's got paid. I did not think it was fixed in the moment. But I've seen a couple things that I think you can make anything look like it. If you do slow moes or slow things down, you can kind of do it that. Well, there was contracts, depulations, like he couldn't knock him out. I think in the first three rounds, Tyson couldn't knock Jake Paul out. Like someone put up a real detailed breakdown of the contract of the fight. Like neither one of them could try to lay the haymaker in the first couple of rounds. Yeah. Like if you did, then you would lose the money or get pennilized something like that, right? So I can see that. That made sense. A couple of things they showed were tight to kind of let up on a couple of punches in the first couple of rounds. I was like, yeah. I thought Jake, look, I thought if it was an even fight, Jake Paul would win because of his age. Yeah. It's just 30 years younger and he's been boxing for four years, whether he's a prize fighter or not, he's put a lot of work in and he's 30 years younger and Tyson's 58. I mean, you know, in Tyson after the fight, you know, said, oh, I had eight blood transfusions and. Yeah. It was in the hospital. And pretty poor health and had to bounce back quickly to even make this happen. So the fact that he can make it eight rounds, two minutes or not, I mean, there's, he's in the 99% towel to be at 58 to be able to do that with another professional athlete. Well, it was interesting because it was the most streamed sporting event ever, according to Netflix, had 108 million global views and 65 million concurrent live streams. Yeah. You know why? I knew that that was happening because it was buffering the whole damn time. So I was going to save that, you know, and try not to wear them out too much, but I'm just going to go there because it, it, it was annoying for an hour. It was the pre most of the preliminary fights. Once the big fight came on, it did stay on for the most part, which, okay, good. But come on, man, you know, you knew that was coming. I mean, like, you've known this is, you know, what's a five p's, prior planning, prevents piss, poor performance, come on, you got to, you had to be ready for that. And they weren't. Well, especially after like there, there's been a few, this is I think like their third really big live stream and the first two went down for various reasons. So yeah, they're like, the NFL has two huge games on Christmas day and they're getting all kinds of shit because people like, it's one thing for, you know, these pre fights to go down to nothing for my football and Christmas day. That's not a lot of confidence that they can keep the network on. But either way, it's, it shows you the draw that these kind of events happen. The power of influencers, the power of spectacle and sport still. It draws more than anything else. And I think you're going to see for good batter ugly more of these kind of, I don't know, on all fights like this entertainment entertainment. It's becoming, I guess there's a component. I mean, look, they're still hitting each other out again, someone with a higher pay grade than me that could judge whether it was fake or real, but it's just the spectacle. It's like world wrestling entertainment in a way. But now you, because you have these superstars, like, who do we want to see? It's Brad Pitt versus Tom Cruise, you know, like, tell me, yeah, tell me, but tell me what I mean, it means me wouldn't pay to see that. Do you know what it is? It's like that show, at least for an MTV celebrity death match. Yeah. Remember that? Yes. That was terrible. We're just random famous people. Yeah. And just fighting. Yeah. Yeah. Coliseum style stuff. But those were all like de-list, right? Celebrities. Right. I mean, well, that was all, no, it was all like animated with clay. Remember, it was like not all the, I thought there was actually some kind of like de-list of people that did a fighting thing. I mean, I've seen that. They're like, I've had buddies that were on like rally TV shows, and I think that's something that. Yeah. Okay. No, the clay. I did not all remember that. I don't know. Yeah. Who knows? But anyway, a lot of, a lot of number, big numbers, they get your network right. Nearly here's another article from, this is coming from CNN. So take it with a grain of salt, but it says nearly 40% of young Americans getting their news from influencers. Many of them lean to the right. I'm not going to read too much of that summary, but I do think it's interesting. I get a lot of my information in my news from influencers or like freelance journalists that put their stuff up on social media. What about you guys? I think I do, but only thing is it's like, how do we know it's like, yeah, yeah, yeah, I, I'm going to talk about some mouth here because I don't know that we believe that journalists are telling the truth anymore either. But in theory, they were supposed to track this stuff down, three sources, whatever it might be. Don't know if that still happens. And so you knew there was some validity there. You know, with influencers like shit, both real and unreal can spread in a hurry. But I think everybody gets news from, I mean, 40% of young Americans, I mean, it's 100% of the people I know. I mean, I've seen it like somebody will come up with something and just post it on TikTok and people repost it thinking it's, you know, the gospel and it's not even, you know, factual. And so I do think you have to be, I think you have to be very open minded no matter what you believe or which side you lean to open minded to like fact checking things or doing a little bit of research to see if what you're seeing on social media is true. I do think that this also played a role in the election with like, I think it skews male from what I read. And so young man voting for Trump, you know, are on social media where I feel like, you know, a lot of the election took place. So I think it validates a lot of that. It seems it says it on this article, the election influence. It says most influencers have no formal ties to news organizations and off the blur the line between opinion and facts or reporting, hey, that's true. And look, we're a news show, we're an opinion news show. We say it, you know, and we're more hitting the headlines and giving opinion on them than breaking news that may or may not be validated yet. Yeah. So there's a difference. And I would even venture to say what the mainstream media like, is it factual reporting? Because it's really a lot of opinion now, right? Exactly. Yeah. Like, look at the view or CNN, even Fox, all of them, there's obviously biased and underlying messaging being pushed in opinion. But if anything, I think you have a lot of these independent journalists now that are great researchers, like real journalists, and getting these massive followings, like there's one guy, I felt like Ian Carroll, I think is his name, but he's one of these guys that is dug super deep in, he was looking like political contribution campaign donations, right? Yeah. But he puts it in a 90 second clip, boom, boom, boom, boom, shows the data, shows the actual, you know, facts where it's like, okay, we didn't have that four years ago. Yeah. I do think Facebook was definitely strong in 2016 election, but I think it was more advertising on Facebook, or now I think you have, like this says, more independent, kind of free thinking people that are just kind of going down the rabbit hole. Yeah. But I think mainstream media let the wolf in the henhouse by putting so much opinion in their news coverage. So they, if they had stayed very in the middle, I don't, now I question if they ever were, and I just wasn't paying as much attention, but let's pretend they were at some time. Their credibility might could hold this off for like the real news, but because they're so opinionated, why the hell not can influencers come in and share news and share their opinion too, because it's also, I don't know, painted with bias on one side of the other. Yeah. They, they've got no one to blame for themselves for, you know, this had to go, oh, well, this is not, you know, how do you know this is based? In fact, half of what you, a three force of what you guys say on the air is opinion. Mm hmm. And I think a lot of it is urgency and access, right? Like a lot of the people aren't going to editors and having to do this and that. It's like, you know, you have a cell phone and you're on scene, you can, you're the news, right? Oh, totally. Like you said, access, because I follow a page called House and Habit, Jessica Krauss. She is an independent journalist, but she was invited both on RFK's to like his house to go to dinner, like with his family and stuff. So she did a bunch of behind the scenes coverage and then she got invited on the Maga Bo Parade and she did a bunch of behind the scenes there. And she asked multiple times for access to Kamala's campaign and was denied. So she has like 1.5 million followers and she provided a lot of back behind the scenes access and, you know, humanized the candidates. Yeah. And even like local news now, a local news crew can't get ahead of like a woman that's watching a house burn down, you know, on a street who's filming it live on Facebook or sending there. Now the news station just go, Hey, can you send us that footage? They throw it on the news. You know, if you go watch the local news, half of it's, you know, smartphone feed, like whatever it is, because they don't have it because they can't keep ahead of it. Oh, we were watching on the team. The something was going down at the QT with like 500 police officers the other day and we were like watching it on TikTok going on. Well, it was live happening. Yeah. Yeah. It's, it's wild for sure. Yeah. On the chopper pilots like filming. Yeah. But I'll say this, I mean, this show is going to eventually sooner than later evolve to more of what we're doing here than the interview style. That's going to be a different thing. So we're embracing this as what people want and how they want to get more news coverage in opinion. So especially with podcasting and new media and all that stuff, YouTube. So. Well, and in marketing and in business, there's so many different things going on and one thing that, you know, we want to bring you guys is the news and how people feel about things and market trends and business trends. So this next one is coming from Forbes. Coca-Cola did their iconic Christmas advertising campaign that they do every year in this time. They use AI generated art and people are kind of in an uproar on X over it. If you click the link there, you can see the video, but they used AI to generate like the polar bears and the trucks and the humans. I wonder like who's pushing back like the, the ad agencies that aren't getting paid to do it or like a real consumer is pushing back real like if you look in people are ready just to play the new AI Coca-Cola ads. Yeah, people disappointed Carol. It's our ex people are in like a full on uproar. They're very upset about it. So here's what I would ask. So is AI generate, what's the difference between, is it because it's not real? Because what, what if it was an animation? The ad is terrible. Okay. Is it so bored? I'll say that. I don't care if they use AI to the ad is so bored. Sawyer says the ad is terrible. So I did not see the actual ad. Maybe we'll watch it here and see how terrible it is. But if it's a, hey, there's bad ads whether it's, uh, AI or not. Yeah, somebody else made some of them and good and bad. It is true. So people seem to be in an uproar. This comment says Coca-Cola is red because it's made from the blood of Adelvaric artists. Um, the blood. Wow. Yeah. It's going, it's going pretty hard. Yeah. So people, you know, feels painfully ironic that they're using the quote, real magic as a slogan while making the fakest, most talentless ad of all time. All right. I'm watching it. It may not be the best podcast, but it's a good one. Uh, I don't really get the point, like, okay, it's coming in Christmas is coming in to town and like, cheersing with Coke or something. It does happen really fast. Yeah. There's a longer version of it longer than that, but it's just the shots are so static, you know, it feels like it's, it's, it's, it's not wonderful. It feels like it's trying to be wonderful, but it's not like sympathetic or something like this guy. You know, the cheesy guy at the end hold the Coke up. I mean, he's, he might as well be AI. Yeah. They're been better off getting an AI guy for that than maybe doing, doing real with everything else. But it's, I think I'd have more issue with just the ad itself than necessarily the AI was used, but AI is going to get dragged along for the, for the process when the commercial kind of sucks and is cheesy and doesn't really make a point. Yeah. You know, people were pretty outraged online. There's not one positive comment, and I get it, but people also will find something to do. They will, but I, you know, I did bring up a couple of months ago. If there'd be a backlash at some point, because people don't like fake shit, you know, like they want it there to be a semblance of real, whether or not this is an example of that, but I do think you will see a, especially if this goes back to scrappy commercial. Yeah. So it's kind of easy to target. I can't slap real magic at the end. True. True. I never liked that tagline anyway. I pay in that three years ago or two years ago when it came on, what the go back to those archives. It's real, real magic. Come on, man. I get it. It's not even real soda that can. Oh. It's got real, real bad ingredients. Stop and read the labels. I wake up and read the labels. It's my good friend, Jen Smiley, who's on the Radcast Network would say, you don't want to read that label. No. I started reading it. I had to back off my coax, you know, drink more energy drinks or just so much better for you. Get out of here. No, there's only one this better for you. That's exponent. X marks the spot right there. You see it? This is why you got to watch. You got to see the X is up here. X is marking spot to healthy, clean energy. I can boot you this morning. It's not X. It would be clear if it was because it's clear of everything you don't need and only what you do, which is that zing that I have. That's why I'm always a little pepier in the studio because, you know, I get that zing, zing going from all kinds of things, right, Chris? You know it? Yes. Hollywood, Chris, that's what we call Hollywood, Chris. I can't stop thinking. I feel like I'm on the movie set or do I look Chris on the show today? HWC. I feel like I'm rehearsing, you know, and I'm at the talent actor, you know, talent judge, whatever. I feel like I'm being judged. You are. Yeah. Yeah. He's either judging like he's either like a Wimbledon judge or a Hollywood director. I'll do both. Yeah. Exactly. Chris is for hire for such duties as those. He needs no job, but he would do one of those if you really want to. Yes. He doesn't need a job because crypto is doing so well. Mmm. Yes, it is. I've already had it on my phone and I'd already gone through all the bullshit, but I just had to like verify one more thing. So I was like, boom, and they had the auto feature, the auto drop. So I'm back in the game, people back in the game that XRP did be right about that, like day one. And that went up like 30, 40 percent, like last week. I love this. See, I love Trump got elected like everything like this kind of, you know, like, this is a shit. Look, I mean, I mean, like 20 grand on like Dogecoin in 2000. I'm just mad because two, three weeks ago when Bitcoin was at 75,000, I didn't buy any and now it's at 94,000. Yeah. Yeah. And it's sitting steady above 94. It's holding. So what's the idea? Any tips this week for our audience, Chris on the crypto, including me, do you get into it now or do you wait for it to drop? This is not financial advice, but I would get into it now. It's like you're too late to wait for it to drop. It may go down, you know, 87, 85, but there's no better time in the present. Here's a tip for the audience, they're usually a big pump with Thanksgiving, an average of a 10 percent climb over Thanksgiving holiday. So 10 percent is more than you're making annually, probably at your bank. So if you want to make 10 percent this month, jump in. The hardest thing that I find with it is knowing, okay, and the main coins are cool. Like Doge probably will stick around just at least for this administration with it being called Doge. But like the main ones, you don't know what's going to be high or not. They're not really based on 100 percent sentiment. It's really like can you make some short cash. But some of them are based on legit technologies that could like blow up based on the tech behind it. And that's what I'm having a hard time deciphering. I read the descriptions and I can do that, but trying to keep up with what, okay, is this kind of like predicting, you know, which ones are on there. So that's why I need Chris to tell me which one. So I got a cheat sheet. Any other, any other tips, any of them that are guaranteed or pass everything possible compared to like stock market, like blue chip stocks, Bitcoin, Ethereum, Solana, those are your big boy blue chips, safe. If you're looking more into a meme coin, Doge coin, that would be one I would feel really comfortable in right now, especially how about Pepe? Pepe, yes. I personally don't hold any Pepe and have before, but, you know, I would Pepe, a bonk is another one. That's very popular right now. I'm looking at the big movers today. The gainers mirror protocols up 162 percent, whatever that is. Basilic, Basilisk BSX is up 127 percent. What? In one day? Dang. But we're talking about a coin that's worth 0.001 and it's up on, that's the thing. Some of these coins are like fractions of those hitting. I'll be honest, that's nice. Mango MNGO is up 30 percent to three cents. I just have such a hard time because I'm just not a gambler. I'm cheap at heart and so. Oh, I'm a gambler, baby. Oh, I know. That's why you just invest in like a 401k, just do like $100 a month. I'm a good, I'm a good, I used to be bad gambler, I'm a good gambler now, like I could put over here like what I could afford to lose and go, hey, maybe I'll quadruple it or maybe it'll go away, but I'm not like mortgaging my house over it. Yeah. Yeah, there's all kinds of weird names on here, Chris. I mean, I need some help deciphering after the show. We'll talk. Yes. Oh, any other final news today? Well, there is a little bit, but most importantly, just don't invest in crypto and keep listening to the show. Yes, for sure. Chris, any final words or recommendations here before the Thanksgiving holiday? Again, don't try to get rich quick, just look at it as another investment, like a stock portfolio or an asset class. It's even our FK put up a tweet about it, Bitcoin is the currency of freedom. Like the people coming to power support this, I would get in behind it now. I'm trying to get extra more rich behind on it, though, just get extra more rich on Bitcoin. I'm just a little rich. Extra more. Yeah. We're good cop, bad cop. I'm like, you know, I'm all in on this thing, but just, just what you can afford. Put a little bit over here, you know, instead of college football, this is way more likely to win. Yeah. Stop giving your bookie money. Yeah. Stop giving your bookie money. Give it to the bitcoins. Is that all we got, Brianna? That's all. All right. 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