Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:01):
This program is designed to provide general information with regards
to the subject matters covered. This information is given with
the understanding that neither the hosts, guests, sponsors, or station
are engaged in rendering any specific and personal medical, financial, legal, counseling,
professional service, or any advice.
Speaker 2 (00:21):
You should seek the services.
Speaker 1 (00:23):
Of competent professionals before applying or trying any suggested ideas.
Speaker 3 (01:06):
Okay, you know what, I'm still laughing from our previous chat.
We've been chatting before we went live today. So I'm
gonna throw this show and just go forward.
Speaker 4 (01:16):
I never used.
Speaker 3 (01:19):
Top the top of my head. We're just going to
do this. We've got to start here. So Talk for
Media live as usual K four HD Radio Talk for
TV streaming in over one hundred outlets at the same
time right now, forty million of these in counting on
it two four seven out of Franklin, Tennessee.
Speaker 4 (01:36):
I hope how Ward we have sound with him.
Speaker 3 (01:38):
And you know the good thing about this is Cheryl
and Howard and Terry's coming on soon. This is one
hundred and sixty three live shows in a row, so
no matter where we are, we're always live straight through
the year. It's we're never taped nad bar, so that's
really really important. And you know what, I've been waiting
for the show because I thought this was gonna be
(01:59):
very very spect with these gentlemen on it. So having
Joe Andrew Allen, so those two Brits, those guys in
the UK. Yes, it's one o'clock in the morning. It's
not the first time that we have people from the
UK on the note this is normal for us. Normal,
But welcome to the movie reviews more. First of all,
and before I introduce these gentlemen, Carol, you have to
(02:21):
introduce yourself.
Speaker 4 (02:23):
Ladies first, go for it.
Speaker 5 (02:24):
Thank you, thank you. I'm Carol Register.
Speaker 6 (02:27):
I'm a certified neuro coach and the creator of the
Neurowealth Method. And I take particularly female litter lead female leaders.
I'm thinking dogs already, pops leader litters.
Speaker 5 (02:41):
I love animals, by the way.
Speaker 6 (02:44):
I take female leaders from six to seven figures. And
it is give back Tuesday, and I just want to
let you know that Dream Leaver's Arts is a big one.
Better Vision for children is super important cause on my
heart and I just want to give a shout out
(03:07):
to those organizations. If you're not giving somewhere please dive
in with the artists that are supported through dream Weaver,
and I'm.
Speaker 5 (03:18):
Super happy to be here. I had amazing talk today, Claik.
Great to have you guys. I look forward to our conversation.
Speaker 4 (03:26):
And Howard do we have you? We have sign with
you today right now. Oh we never know the news laughing.
Speaker 2 (03:36):
It's brilliant. The one hundred and thirty that you've done.
I think it's actually fantastic.
Speaker 4 (03:44):
Let's do this Jo.
Speaker 3 (03:45):
You know, man, I just just the first time that
we've met, the three of you, but I like what
you've done. Thank you for your service. First of all,
that's always important to me. We are a military here,
it's always about that. We are animal lovers. Here is
always about that. And you know, when you have that
twenty twenty four dog tree product of the year, it
can't go wrong. And you know what, we can't leave
(04:08):
your wife out of this because that's that entrepreneur, that
couple pane. That's very very important. And you know, when
you've won all these awards around the world, what you
guys have created, and I also talk about the agriculture
part of you too, very important. I always say this
the reason why a dream weaver in northern California, and
you know next year in Italy is where it is
(04:29):
because it's about the soil. You don't have fertile, strong,
good soil, you're out of luck. And the way you
grow your food these days is really really important. Coming
back to that, tell you guys have done you and
Judy have done so much. Tell us who you are,
tell us about the story and how you guys started,
and then we're going to Andrew and Allen after that.
Speaker 7 (04:48):
Go ahead, Joe, Okay, thank you, and glad to be
with you all I grew up in a small farm
here in Missouri. I tell people all the time, and
it's about truth that the soil was so poor on
the edge of the Ozark that it never got labeled soil.
It was just called dirt. And my parents were subsistence farmers.
(05:09):
We grew up very poor, and they really appreciated education
and had a really charitable frame of reference, and that
got transferred over to me. My wife grew up in
similar kind of situation, not farming, but she grew up
in Newberry, Florida, which when we met, was the watermelon
capital of the world. We went for eighteen years after
(05:33):
we got married, either in school or working for the
federal government, I had the privilege and took advantage of
it and started two federal programs. I had a lot
of people working around me, but virtually everybody told me
it was impossible to do well. I have a distant
relative from Switzerland. He's been called the greatest endurance athlete ever.
(05:54):
Nobody knows about him, but he says his most famous
quote is imposs That's just a bullshit word. Anything possible
if you're willing to pay the price, and he has.
He's run the distance as the comforts of the world.
He and one of the guys rode a boat across
the Atlantic Ocean no backup. And he and I do
(06:14):
have quite a few genes. We have passion, persistence, and
we want performance. We just do it in a little
different category. So back in nineteen ninety six, our two sons,
we told them both when they turned ten they could
select the dog of their choice, because I have eighty
nine thousand, seven hundred million dogs.
Speaker 8 (06:34):
That are my friends. I love everyone one of them.
Speaker 7 (06:37):
And so they got two samoid dogs, and a few
years later they had horrible breath. Judy was trying to
buy products from vets and retail stores to help. Was
making no progress, and she came to me one day
and said, hey, you've been doing this work for the
federal government with research and development and commercialization now for
eighteen years. Surely you can do something to clean up
(06:59):
these dogs. And she was after me for quite a while.
And my story is it's a little bit exaggerated, but
kind of the Pramer reference is good. After she chased
me around the table with the rolling pin for a
couple of days, hit me over the head a few times,
she knocked, pronounced to me, and I tried it, and
lo and behold. I put this concoction together and two
(07:19):
weeks later we had those two dogs about seventy five
percent breath. Planed out well, it wasn't meant to be
a business, but it turned out to be an immensely
successful business. If you know anything about dogs, you have
seen greenies on the shelves. If you go into a
pet core, a PetSmart, you see many feet of shelf
space of it. We sold that to Mars back in
(07:41):
two thousand and six, and we had five year noncompete.
During that time, we built a power two company. If
you go into lows or minards. Across the United States,
you will find Spider branded power tools. That was another
company that we started and built, but by then we
were out of our nonco and I started thinking about
my best friends again, the dogs, and I said, there's
(08:05):
three things that I know dogs need. One of them
oral care is a big deal and most people don't
know it, but research shows that fifty four million dogs
in this country have some form of oral hygiene needs
and it can be very dangerous because if the gums
start bleeding, that's called parodonal disease. If that occurs, the
(08:27):
blood vessels are open. The bad guy organisms enter the
blood system and they use the circulatory system as a racetrack.
Guess where they race to vital organs. Many dogs show
autopsies when they die. Vital organ failure. Doesn't say gum disease,
but it should because that's what causes much of that problem.
(08:49):
So we have ways to fix this in this new
product called Yummy Combes. Second thing was weight control. Fifty
five percent of dogs over the age of two, I
mean two years old already overweight, and that can have
serious impacts on their life expectancy. In fact, if there
will be is it can cut one, they're their life expectancy.
(09:11):
That's way too much for me. I can't stand that
for my best friends, and so we've come up with
a way to address that. We've reversed the protein to
start ratio from more traditional products by twenty fold. Twentyfold,
that's a pretty big number, but that's what it is.
The third thing is obstructions occur. Dogs will gulp products
(09:33):
and they'll get them in their throat choking arm or
in their bowels. We have four innovations that cover that too,
mature that from happening, and then overall the product has
one hundred benefits for the dog. And that's what my
whole philosophy is about. How do we help the dog?
(09:54):
Do we want to also and make one sure we do,
But first is what can we do for dogs? And
there's a six whole thing. Let me show you the
big model. That's what the yummy combs look like. This
is oversized, of course, but what happens when the dog
bites in the teeth going these cells and the let
(10:15):
chew on it. This is what's happening to that and
these ridges are flossing the teeth three hundred and sixty
degrees as they chew down the sides. They're scrubbing the teeth.
We could kind of analogy would be brushing teeth for humans.
And then we have five different sized products. That's part
of the anti gulping piece, but we have up to
two hundred scraping surfaces on there. We are the only
(10:37):
ones that have a prescribed hardness. But we have clinical
proof the first ever that we can actually remove trder
from dog's teeth. Now harder is kind of like a
sponge half and half on here. You see how course
that is the bacteria and plaque will go back into
those cores, into the harder and that's where they hide
(11:00):
from the toothbrush. And so what we have been able
to do is knock target off with teeth. We actually
got twenty six percent off on one yummy combs a
day for sixty days. And I kick myself a million times,
if not more, because I asked that word certified vet
dentists who did the clinical study. I said, when you
get them scored the last time, please go ahead. We'll
(11:22):
pay you for having their teeth clean.
Speaker 8 (11:25):
Man.
Speaker 7 (11:25):
I wish I wouldn't have done that, because I'd like
to know, I like to know what happens in six
months because we have some anydotal evidence that it continues
to take more off over time, so something will be
working on. So that's the essence of the Yummy Combs product.
But it really does a great job on those three
(11:45):
things that I told you, And go check. You won't
find one that can do any three to sixty degree cleaning,
brushing and teeth. You won't find any that have four
innovations to the terragulpi. And you won't find many, if any,
that actually have reversed the protein the startration. And I
ask people all the time. I'll ask you, anybody here
(12:09):
had a friend or know of anyone who wanted to
lose some weight. I'm in that club, okay, and virtually
everybody I ask is in that club. Then I ask
him the second question. Tell me name the person you
know that has gone on a starch diet to lose weight.
Speaker 4 (12:27):
Ah, So, Joe, I'm old lady.
Speaker 7 (12:30):
For that firsthand.
Speaker 3 (12:31):
Hold hold that thought for a minute, because I got
an answer for that. I got to bring in Alan
and Andrew. So, Alan and Andrew, he's eighty years old
if I'm correct. Look how much energy he has now
one day he's done all these things. I mean, this
is like any but all right, so real quickly, Alan,
tell us you are where you're coming from, followed by
(12:53):
Andrew go for it.
Speaker 9 (12:54):
I have never been introduced right with that segue. It's
a wonderful segue, right right, that people need to lose weight. Hello,
allany in any case, wonderful, wonderful and interesting description, Joe Mojo.
I have to say, I've never contemplated all the necessary
(13:15):
things for the health of a dog, but I have now,
and it's really been very instructive. So where do we
come from. Well, in about two thousand and eight, before
the words streaming was a known word right in our lexicon,
before the words free supported by ads for music was
(13:36):
a concept, we actually went to launch something called q tracks.
It happens that the music industry gets together in Khn
in the south of France. Whether it's a good year
or bad year, they always have a fantastic party there, right,
And we were launching, and it happened that an unnamed
gentleman from an unnamed company. Sadly, gentlemen is no longer
(13:58):
with us, said to the industry, said to the presence
of various record companies. If you do this, then right,
it happened to be a large computer and phone company,
but we will not mention their name. If you do this,
then we are going to shut down our paid service
for music. Right. And so we were left high and
drive by the end of that year, right, notwithstaying the
(14:20):
fact that various companies pretended like we didn't have licenses.
We had global licenses. We doubled down and decided to
become ambitious. But we're also aware at the time that
we weren't being dealt with as perhaps generally as we
could because we're a little bit early, right, we're a
little bit early. Four years later or three years later,
I'm not exactly sure. Spotify came to the world, and
(14:42):
it happened to be very shortly after Pirate Bay, which
was the largest pirate site, was closed down, and I
believe the Swedish government sent something along the lines of
we'll close down one pirate site, but we're not able
to keep on closing down pirate sites. You'd better come
up with a legal old and that was Spotify. Now,
(15:03):
from this experience, we learned a number of things. First
of all, we learned that we did not want to
be dependent on any gatekeepers. And secondly, it became very
clear to us through this experience that the artist was
not really benefiting right in many respects. And it happened
that at the time we spent about thirty million dollars
(15:25):
on our enterprise and not one cent had gone to
an artist. Now, artists provide all of us with joy,
whether it's musicians or dancers, or actors or visual painters.
We get immense joy from art. But somehow or another, in
this digital world, in particular, art has really been devalued.
(15:45):
It is simply content, content, often to fuel the very
significant profits of social media sites. So my partner Lanceford
in New York a good English from London. And by
the way, people can never tell the difference between my accent,
which is reportedly Australian and a British accent. But I
(16:08):
am not British. I am Australian and I have a
distinct on the difference. Yes, yes, often people can't. Any case,
Lance whose claim to fame was that he came busking
in the streets of New York with a guitar some
forty years ago from London. He had a band's prophetically
named bad Press, right, which he came with, and Lance
(16:32):
went on to have a stellar Korean advertising is a
fairly charming guy and was excellent selling advertising and subsequently
was founding publisher of Maxim magazine, which said was the
world's largest respectable men's magazine. So Lance kept on saying, Alan,
you're the ideas guy, come up with something better for artists.
(16:53):
Now it's more easily said than done, because if one
really wants to be good to artists, one wants to
share a very large percentage of revenue with them. The
problem with that is that conventional companies are based somehow
and other. Their value is based on some multiple of earnings.
Whether they're listed or private. Investors want them to be valuable,
(17:15):
and that value comes from some multiple of earnings. So
if you are intent as I was, on giving away
the line's share to artists, right, a conventional company has
a problem attracting investors. And then somebody about two thoy
and eighteen, a couple of years before COVID said you
really ought to look at this blockchain thing, and in
(17:39):
particular the cryptocurrencies. Now crypto's currency has gone somewhat off
the rails. There are a lot of coins which go
up and down on investor whim. But the original vision
for the cryptocurrency world was that a utility token should
run an ecosystem. It had efficiencies, had the ability to
(18:01):
track transactions, had lots of things. However, one thing that
was not understood by people and took me a little
while to understand. When I was really focused on this
for a while, I referred to it as the crypto
hippie trail. We would all go from crypto capital to
crypto capitals. So for a while I was traveling to
Beijing and to sol and occasionally to New York right,
(18:24):
and trying to really understand this world. And one of
the interesting things about this world is that if an
investor actually buys a coin in an echosystem, that coins
price is dependent on the success of that ecosystem. There is,
the more wallet you have, the more users you have,
the more scarcity is, the more the coin's worth. So
(18:46):
suddenly there was the possibility of aligning the interests of
an investor with that of the artists, because if you
did something which really satisfied artists, they would come on
board en mass right, they would bring fans and in
terms earn the investor will do good. So that attracted
my attention. To cut a long story short, we started
building something that we thought in every way was good
(19:10):
for the artist. So what are those ways. First of all,
you know the tiktoks of the world argue about single digits, percentages,
three percent, whatever it may be, going to artists. Right,
we begin with the premise that at least seventy percent
of advertising revenue will go to the artists, ten percent
to the middle man, so total of eighty percent. The
(19:32):
twenty percent we retain is more than enough to build
a very healthy business. But in everything but advertising, which
is the passive income, we give ninety five percent to
the artists. And there are lots of revenues that we include.
So we make it very easy for an artist without
any blockchain knowledge to create an NFT. We make it
very easy for them to live stream without having any
(19:55):
technical know how. We allow them all to have their
own stores, right, we want to to create their own
tickets and so on and so on. So the idea
is give very healthy percentages of multiple revenues. But above
and beyond that, there are also tools which artists have
been I would say somewhat unfairly deprived of. So, for example,
(20:17):
it is invaluable to artists to actually know where their
fans are. That information is available to social media platforms,
it's given to it's given to advertisers, is collected on
the back of artists and their fans, but never share
with artists. So one of the things we do is
we actually, without violating privacy because there's no names attached,
(20:38):
we tell artists where their fans reside, right down to
the street address, so that if you want, let's say,
in New York to have a gig on Friday night
right in the meatpacking district, you can invite people in
that area. If you want a during the summertime to
play a festival in Europe as a band, you will
(20:58):
know which country has most of your fans and therefore
which festival you'll play, And finally, without to extended description,
control is very important and with that control being able
to monetize your existing base. So one of the things
also wrong with the digital world, apart from the fact
(21:20):
that social media really doesn't pay content providers fairly and
this is really a problem, but another thing is that
app stores don't lend themselves to sharing. So if you
are a band and you want to say to your followers,
here is my app, right, you can't do that. The
(21:41):
best you can do is say, go to the app
store and get my app, which is a somewhat cumbersome,
clumsy experience. So what we do within our app is
we allow every artist to create what you might call
a mobile app. It is a web app, and they
can share it with a simple URL on Instagram, Facebook
or whatever. Away. We don't discourage any artists to use
(22:03):
their existing social media. We want them to use every
type of social media they have at their disposal, and
we hope that in time it will become evident that
they're earning a lot more with us, and therefore they
will spend more time with us. But not only do
we not only do we not have any sort of exclusivity,
We don't want to even discourage them from any source
(22:23):
of income that presently has some value to them. Over time,
we hope to demonstrate that we'll have more value. But
with a web app, they can put this url on
Instagram wherever, and somebody will click on us and instantly
have the artist app. Now, we don't expect them to
have multiple Artists App. The moment you have an artist app,
you say, wow, this is really interesting. It's got a
(22:44):
whole universe of the artists there, and I would like
to see all artists, So I'll download the full app
from the app store. Anybody that comes by that route
belongs that. So you don't have to have a hit
video next month or the month afterwards. Because of the
number of people you've born into a platform. You get
if you like, a monthly annuity, and it can add
(23:07):
up to quite a bit. It's our estimate, and we've
had this sort of tested and analyzed, but our estimate
for the US is that per fan and ours could
earn a dollar forty four per fan per month. We
have ten thousand fans a fourteen thousand dollars. Now Indonesia
where we did a trial launch last year, and I
(23:29):
can say more about that later, but Indonesia, it's probably
worth ten percent of that rather than a dollar forty four.
It's probably you know, fourteen cents, but fourteen hundred dollars
for ten thousand fans is transformative for an Indonesian artist.
So we are at the moment we've really learned how
to attract audience we're doing a slow roll, if you like,
(23:51):
towards the United States. As one of my Singapore partners
likes to say, he says, Alan, start out in the
jungle and develop momentum there and you will overwhelm the city.
What we know is we don't want to prod any
big boy too early right to decide that they should
decimate us.
Speaker 7 (24:09):
Right.
Speaker 9 (24:10):
So that's our story in a nutshell and a long hour,
always frenzy travels and meeting extraordinarily wonderful people. We met
this gentleman, Andrew Eborn, right, and so so.
Speaker 3 (24:26):
I can only imagine what your board meetings are like
between Jell and Alan. All this energy that you guys have,
no wonder you guys are founders and inventors and visionaries,
which leads to Andrew with all of those things like that.
Speaker 4 (24:41):
I get it.
Speaker 3 (24:41):
It's very fascinating. But here's the thing, Andrew, how do
you stick out with this? Because you got something?
Speaker 4 (24:47):
You got humor there, I do know.
Speaker 2 (24:50):
I'll tell you what it is. First, it was an
absolute joy listening to our previous speakers. I think I
know everything about dogs in the music industry and euro
diversity and everything else. It's brilliant. My background is as
a barrister, a broadcaster and a futurist as well as
president of and what I've done is for many years
I specialize in intellectual property and I work with companies
(25:13):
to help them maximize the return on the rights that
they have. So looking at things, we took the very
first computer game rights, for example for Formula one. I
helped take Peter Rabbit to Japan. I also did the
very first live streaming with my company Octopus TV, for
various people from football to live events and on and
so forth. And what we do is look at those
(25:34):
new markets and basically work out those sort of opportunities.
So I came across Allen and the Glorious. I was
introduced by a wonderful chant called John Velasco who signed
a little.
Speaker 4 (25:45):
John's a great guy, isn't it brilliant?
Speaker 2 (25:48):
What I signed a little band called ab I never
heard of them since, and he's done. He's one other
people as well, and he introduced me. It's all it's
a business, as you will know, it's a business where
you get to know people and you do with people
that you like. So he introduced me to Alan and
we've just got on so fabulously with such a common
mindset about looking at how artists themselves have not benefited
(26:09):
from this as much as they should in this multi
billion dollar business. So basically it's a way of empowering artists,
which was all up for embracing technology, which is what
we absolutely look at and working on that sort of premise.
But I think that's the key ist understanding what's out there,
Understanding the way that you can basically act as a
jigsaw maker if you like, to bring all those different
pieces together and make that make sense. So that's what
(26:32):
we've been doing. We've formed a strategic alliance. We love
those sort of buzzwords, and we're basically going around the
world doing those sort of messages. And what it is
is we're working across the media platform. So I did
some of the very first holograms for example of artists,
you can work out how you can basically make money
in your sleep, so you can sit at home, you
can drink your coco and you're sitting here dressing down
(26:53):
and your slippers and you can work on that sort
of basis. So we're opening these wonderful revenue streams in
a fair and equitable way, I'm looking at that for
the principle. So that's what I'm doing with that. As
you say, in a couple of hours, be hopping on
a plane to come to Glorious New York, we're going
to be doing one of our live events. We're basically
showcasing established artists as well as up and coming artists.
(27:14):
So it's a great opportunity to do that, and that's
one of the things I've done historically. We've worked with
lots of great names in the industry and help them
basically monetize their rights and so on and so forth.
I'm also an author. I produced a number of editions
of the Book of Failure, so that I worked on
the basis that if necessity is the mother invention, well
(27:35):
failure is the father of success. So we look at
all sorts in history and we encourage people to embrace
their failures because without failure don't have and we look
at those wonderful innovations and so on and so forth.
So I surround myself with wonderful people is an absolute
pleasure and the highlight of my life so far as
being on this Glorio show, finding about dogs and everything else,
(27:59):
and also about Howard. That is dodging into that. I
love that.
Speaker 6 (28:03):
Well.
Speaker 3 (28:03):
Speaking of Howard, Howard, are you there sound Howard? I
know he could hear us.
Speaker 5 (28:08):
He's moving.
Speaker 2 (28:11):
That's what I love.
Speaker 9 (28:13):
How If you design a brilliant interior, that's all you
need to do. You don't need to speak speak.
Speaker 6 (28:22):
Interiors are phenomenal, layered and stacked is what he calls it.
And the the art pieces he has are prayer, one
of a kind where he's selling some of them now
because he's moving to Chattanooga. I hope you don't mind
me telling your story, Dear Howard.
Speaker 4 (28:45):
Oh there you go. He could hear us.
Speaker 2 (28:50):
Go for it.
Speaker 6 (28:53):
Still can't hear Andrew? First attempt in learning? First attempt
in learning fail?
Speaker 5 (29:00):
Have you ever heard that?
Speaker 9 (29:01):
Oh?
Speaker 2 (29:02):
Oh, absolutely no. You've got to fail. That is one
more step to success, isn't it? And we should never
be ashamed of it. You have to embrace those failures
because that's how you learn. And we stand on the
shoulders of giants. So I do a regular show called
The andre Ewe Show, rather imaginatively, and I have wonderful
people on, such as Eryl Musk is the father of Elon,
and we talk about all these sort of glorious things
(29:23):
and how all those steps it's one close, basically, one
step closer to being successful. And I'm sure all of you,
in your own individual way, when you're connected or otherwise,
can basically embrace those failures. And there's glorious examples throughout history.
I remember Coldgate, for example, with the wonderful tooth based people.
They extended themselves a wonderful story about extending themselves into food,
(29:47):
and there's this mythical thing. I was partly mythical, but
the Coldgate lasamya, and it instantly you think of Colgate
as that wonderful, tingly fresh taste and you know it's
a bread.
Speaker 3 (29:56):
They had a bunch of brands and companies so which
people don't understand.
Speaker 2 (30:00):
Yeah, and I think that's absolutely right. You've got to
look at that. So that's what we need to do,
is look at those famers, work out why that might
not succeed. But also then we learn the lessons. And
I always say that the reason history repeats itself is
because we don't learn the lessons from history. And so
if we look at that, look at history, we can
also basically predict the future. And that's why talk as
(30:20):
I say, I talk around the world as a futurist,
predicting the next greatest trend, predicting how people can make
lots of money, Understanding technology but also aware of the
pitfalls because it comes with it's great advantages. So, for example,
artificial intelligence, I've always want to put the AI into Britain.
You see what I did there. I basically turn around,
we talk around the world. I say, it's our greatest
(30:41):
human achievement, but also potentially the biggest existential threat. So
what we need to do is work out how can
we embrace this wonderful technology, how can we harness it
so it can be a great copilot, so we can
get those seismic advances in medicine, in literature, in the
arts and doing that sort of stuff. And that's what
we're doing at Phoenix three's sixty as well, looking at
(31:01):
the technology but giving the power back to the creatives.
Speaker 5 (31:05):
You know, Andrew, it's really interesting.
Speaker 6 (31:07):
Sorry, Brian, but right now, one of the biggest issues
with AI coming up, and I want to also chat
about k pop with Alan if you're not wanting the
big ones.
Speaker 5 (31:21):
To find you right.
Speaker 6 (31:24):
Anyway, Andrew, one of the biggest issues that is coming
up right now is in regard to the insufficient supply
of electricity that AI is requiring in the draws on
the system.
Speaker 5 (31:40):
And what may be you know, what may be the
effect of that? So so many absolutely.
Speaker 2 (31:46):
And this is why people are building these huge data centers.
They do. They consume huge amounts of electricity and power,
and I always say that that's necessarily so even with
the electric vehicles and so on and so forth. It
is worried that you've got your latest electric vehicle, however
wonder it is for the environment. But you don't want
to be on one hundred mile journey and run out
at fifty seven miles, sochnology will you be there? Have
(32:11):
you to drive with you? We'll do that. But there's
this thing called dynamic charging, so when you're going along
and you can actually charge your car accordingly. So we
need to look at that sort of side. But there's
a lot of great technology out there, and that's what
I say. What we do is look at the ways
of harnessing that ununderstanding and basically utilizing that for the
(32:32):
benefit of people. So that's exactly what we're doing at
Phoenix through sixty. We're using the power of that where
we can introduce, for example, you have tried to find
I was talking to Alan about this just this afternoon
in our Gloria's London Dean and we're tired around and say,
if you want to combine, you want to find a
new Bernie Torpyn and put them with an Elton John.
It's very difficult now, but if AI can match that,
and that's what we can do. We can basically from
(32:53):
the millions of people literary, millions of creatives around the world,
we can help do that matchmaking and so on and
so forth. We can look at that sort of ways
empower people to generate revenue in new and exciting ways.
And that's what we ended up. Phoenix through sixty.
Speaker 5 (33:06):
I love you Chain, sorry, Brian, go ahead. I love
the luck.
Speaker 4 (33:11):
Oh what you did, Joe.
Speaker 3 (33:13):
When Alan was talking about, you know, powering the artists,
I kept thinking about you empowering young entrepreneurs, which is
just really accordant to you in your life, but also
becoming that eighth powerful, most powerful you know when it
comes to dog food in the world. I think about
this because again, none of these things you don't succeed,
(33:34):
as Alan Andrew would say, without failing, right, Joe.
Speaker 7 (33:37):
Yeah, And you get told ten million times that it's
impossible to do, and you just have to go out
and find it. And you can't let what people tell
you drive what your goal is and allow you to
be robbed of your opportunity. And I was especially interested
in andrews one comment about basically longevity of life and living.
(33:59):
And we have a second product. It's called Longevity fifteen
per dogs. It's based on this book by Simon and
and it's called The Longevity Nutrient.
Speaker 8 (34:09):
You've got to read it. The essence of it is, No,
I did not write this.
Speaker 4 (34:15):
No, but hey, you're an author too.
Speaker 8 (34:19):
I've scribbled a few things.
Speaker 7 (34:21):
But this lady out in San Diego got a grant
from the contract with the Navy UH to look at
ways to do good things for whales because it happens
a prop will on a ship will hit a dolphin
every once in a while, a whale or whatever, and
so they were looking for something to do that she
dug into it.
Speaker 8 (34:42):
Brilliant lady.
Speaker 7 (34:43):
She has dolphins living in San Diego Bay eighty percent
longer than they were eighty percent. Think about what that
will do your humans, because remember dolphins are mammals do
so are dogs, and that's why we have a really.
Speaker 2 (35:01):
Long time though seventy years or something already. So another
eighty percent a dolphin with a purpose. You can see
what happens. It's going to keep on going.
Speaker 7 (35:10):
Yeah, it's it's fascinating book. And she's a she's a
great writer and a fantastic person.
Speaker 2 (35:17):
Yeah. I hope what was that? I hope your own commission.
You're setting it so well.
Speaker 7 (35:24):
No, No, I just I have seen some of her
work that is not published yet, and I have told
her and I have done this, I said, doctor Ben Watson.
I want to shake your hand now. I want to
be able to tell people after you pick up your
poetry Nobel Prize that I knew you and shook your
hand before that happened. I think that what she's got
(35:47):
in this book is that kind of potential.
Speaker 8 (35:49):
I really do.
Speaker 2 (35:51):
Well. No, not just about dolphins, and it's not just
about dogs who get seven years seven times their life anyway,
It's also about humans. The idea of longevity. People are
living longer and longer. You've read in the Bible, for example,
people living in hundreds of years, And the reality is
this is that We've now got seismic advances in science
(36:12):
and medicine is on and so forth that can cure
all sorts of diseases. We can replace parts of you.
You can become the original six million dollar man. You
remember that sort of series, and so you can rebuild.
You're going to find huge, huge advances where longevity. There
are longevity clinics. One of the things that I speak
to Eryl Musk about, as I say, is exactly that
looking at how you can improve not just the quantity,
(36:34):
the quality as well, and that's so so important, and
have a look at that sort of time what I
also love. They alsoay that dogs are man's best friend,
but a girl's best friend. Of diamonds, how does that work.
Speaker 7 (36:47):
I think the diamonds are getting to where they're having competition.
Speaker 8 (36:53):
Joe.
Speaker 9 (36:53):
I think you are a living example of one of
the great secrets of loengevity. We all earn the complex
scientific remedies to enable us to extend life, but the
truth of the matter is there's some simple ways. I
have a very brilliant chairman of my advisory board who
happen to run Excentsure for Asia. But Larry says that
(37:18):
the secret longevity is to keep your mind under constant
intellectual challenge, and he's sides all sorts of people, and
so without you know, without supplements, without medicines, without anything,
I think there is great truth in that. Right. I
also noticed on CNN this weekend, doctor Sanjay Gupta is
(37:39):
saying that they've now got studies would show that happiness
is a very critical ingredient to longevity, right, So.
Speaker 7 (37:50):
About that, And if you look at people really closely
and watch them, the people who smile a lot and
happy tend to live longer. And it I think there's
something in the human body that does that, and does
it very well. You know, I've been telling people, probably
for at least two or three decades that God willing,
(38:11):
I intend to live to be somewhere in the one
hundred and fifty one hundred.
Speaker 8 (38:15):
And sixty range. When I first started.
Speaker 7 (38:18):
Telling me, Joe, You've got the energy, they all told
me I was absolutely crazy. I love it, and so
but it's changed. It has changed in the last few years.
I tell people and they go, you know, that might
be beginning to be possible with what's happening in science
and medicine. And I have very good gene pool I
(38:40):
had an aunt that lived to be one hundred and
six and beat me in peanutckle five weeks before she passed,
and so I got to be My wife beats me
over the head and makes me eat pretty decently. And
I try to do some exercise in different ways than
most people do it. But I think it's possible that
that people are going to be able to do that.
(39:02):
And as long as I can be doing it, one
hundred and fifty and sixty is okay for me. And
you are eighty right now, I think I'm actually seventy
seven and seventy six.
Speaker 4 (39:15):
Yeah, I put too.
Speaker 2 (39:16):
There you go. That's where it is. This is why
I want a wife again. I love it.
Speaker 7 (39:22):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (39:24):
What's also really important. You make a really good point
about the mental health because if you have a purpose
in life, you carry on living. So many people when
they get to retirement age, they retire and they have
nothing in their life to look forward to. And the
reality is you need to have a purpose in life,
and when you've got that purpose, you've got a reason
(39:45):
to live, whether it's your family or friends, your activities
and so and so forth. So always encourage people to
do that as well.
Speaker 9 (39:51):
And I will have a one step further Andrew, which
is that when you have a purpose in life, it
actually enables you to see what might other wise be
a very upsetting situation in some perspective, right, Because the
truth of the matter is, most of the things that
upset are so quite trivial, right, But they seem so
much more trivial when you do have a central purpose. So, Okay,
(40:13):
this has happened, right, But I got to get on
with my purpose, right, And I'm not going to be
affected by I'm not going to be upset by it.
So I think a purpose in life is absolutely critical, right.
Speaker 2 (40:24):
And and we live in such a diseased information age
as well, don't we, And there's so much fragmentation and
so much discord in the world. Wouldn't it be great
just to look at things more positively, to try and
find the middle ground, to question everything, and to try
and turn out and understand. I always say, look, walk
a mile in somebody else's moccasins. If you can increase understanding,
(40:46):
the world's going to be a better place.
Speaker 4 (40:47):
And Joe, you were going to say something.
Speaker 7 (40:50):
I have been telling people to do this for quite
a while, and I've done it myself for probably thirty
or forty years, don't know exactly how long. But I
have what I call my life goal or what I
like my epithet is someday be and it's pretty simple. Love,
God and family. Was a fourth Sea thinking entrepreneur who
(41:11):
helped many, both dogs and humans.
Speaker 8 (41:14):
That's it.
Speaker 7 (41:15):
That's that's what I live every day for. How can
I reach that goal? What can I do today to
do that? And if people would do that and write
down and then a few little uh added secondary level
stepping stones, they could get so much further in life
than they do without it.
Speaker 3 (41:34):
Absolutely, Carol, you're gonna say something. I'm a super Howard.
Speaker 6 (41:36):
You're gonna say, uh super address, Hi Howard.
Speaker 4 (41:47):
Okay it say something good ahead?
Speaker 2 (41:51):
Oh yes, I love it.
Speaker 9 (41:55):
Yes we can.
Speaker 10 (41:57):
As you know. I'm sent me two and I agree
with you on I set it home and watch the
prices right to the day I die. So I always said,
goes all my life, and I continue to do it.
Like she said, I'm going to Chad Doanooga, start a
new life, a new chapter in it, and I'm so
looking forward to it. And that's what's going to keep
(42:18):
me going. And I've managed to figure out a way
to do everything I like all at once. I can
be a dancer, I can do the co hosting. I
can collect art, I can collect antiques, I can do music.
I can do all that all at one time. So
I figured out to take all my interests and group
it in one way to do it.
Speaker 4 (42:38):
And there it goes.
Speaker 3 (42:40):
And Howard tell him about the art in the bat
before you lose your head?
Speaker 2 (42:43):
Did we lose them?
Speaker 3 (42:44):
Oh no, we got a couple of minutes left. So also,
you know, his art is authentic. He's been collecting it
since age sixteenth, sixteen, and he loves the dance and
he's number one when it comes to our shorts. There's
eleven nine till eleven second dance video that he did
on one of our shorts that has two hundred and
eight thousand views, and.
Speaker 6 (43:05):
Did a new one today, Brian. It was awesome, Yeah,
it was incredible.
Speaker 4 (43:09):
They love Howard dancing.
Speaker 3 (43:11):
He just goes out and he starts dancing, and all
of sudden women just gold him. One day he looks
like Billy Bob Thornton. The next day he looks on
Sean Connery. He does, and it's interesting and you know
he's Country Royalty. And that's why I like Howard just
he's got that energy. Joe, you've got that. M g
Allen's got it. Andy you don't have it?
Speaker 2 (43:30):
Sorry, Yeah, may I ask you a questions?
Speaker 4 (43:39):
Bran?
Speaker 9 (43:40):
Yeah. Io show is always as eclectic as this. This
is a wonder.
Speaker 8 (43:48):
Because it is.
Speaker 3 (43:50):
Well, we're we're missing a couple of people we usually have.
We're you know, like you know, I was telling a
couple of people before Carol knows this, Rebel knows us.
We're booked into the end of the year. We goes
week of the year, we don't start, so I only
have one show left for the end of the year.
Speaker 4 (44:04):
That's December.
Speaker 2 (44:05):
There we go.
Speaker 3 (44:05):
I could I could get off the phone. I mean
the last week hit us one. That's the last It's
the last Tuesday of December.
Speaker 4 (44:11):
But you know, I know it.
Speaker 3 (44:12):
Once this end, someone's going to call me in This
booked already, so I'm actually in January already.
Speaker 9 (44:17):
So you do the last Tuesday we we in New
York every month, the last Wednesday of the month, not
to be confused with last Tuesday. We put on a
showcase of rising talent. So if you're ever in New
York on the last Wednesday of the month. Please be
our guest. It's at a wonderful place called Chelsea Table
(44:37):
and Stage and whatever we can fine in the world
that we think has got massive potential as an artist,
we try to put them on stage there. And we're
going to be doing likewise studying December in London and
in other various places also.
Speaker 4 (44:54):
So doctor Joe, you and your wife can go.
Speaker 2 (44:56):
I've got really exciting.
Speaker 7 (44:58):
That's probably not doing my wife and a month ago,
basically she missed the big bullet. She's got all her mobility,
but she's got some cognitive speech yessues right now that
we're keeping her from working.
Speaker 8 (45:10):
Otherwise she would be here.
Speaker 4 (45:12):
Ah. Hey, we got a couple of minutes left. Carol,
give you.
Speaker 2 (45:17):
A wonderful lady.
Speaker 8 (45:18):
It's a great lady. We've been married fifty two some years.
Speaker 9 (45:22):
You must be getting to know each other.
Speaker 8 (45:25):
These days we will.
Speaker 6 (45:28):
I'm the co host of another show called Unleashed, an
unstoppable podcast about the neuroscience of leadership, health and well.
And I happen to run retreats at my boutique hotel
in the Andes Mountains in southern Chile.
Speaker 5 (45:44):
So just reach out to me, love to chat with you, and.
Speaker 4 (45:48):
Let me ask Howard one more time.
Speaker 3 (45:49):
Let's see if we don't have them, Howard, do we
have you social media links?
Speaker 4 (45:53):
We don't.
Speaker 3 (45:53):
It's called It's It's Howard Wiggins on Facebook and on
instagramails Joe social media links for everybody listening around the world.
We got a couple of minutes left and Pet's best life,
very very important for those dogs.
Speaker 4 (46:09):
He created this.
Speaker 3 (46:10):
It became very very successful around the world. Well they,
I should say he and Judy.
Speaker 7 (46:16):
We've been very blessed and we have started a foundation.
We have built some four hundred homes for the cost
of the poor and primarily Guyana, South America, but also
Central and South America, and we have projects on five
continents now, basically giving back. We've been blessed and we
want to share that with others.
Speaker 3 (46:37):
Thank you so much. I'm going to continue to promote
your products. So that's what movie reviews mores all about.
Alani social media links and then what you got coming
up because I started following you guys.
Speaker 9 (46:46):
Today we have put up a social media link for
Instagram and we have a few followers there and delayed.
It runs all of our social media. You mentioned k Popp, right,
Carol did is an extraordinary musician out of New York
and she wrote a K pop hit for Korean band. Right, So, actually, Janna,
(47:09):
you're a genius Sowanna.
Speaker 6 (47:12):
As you can tell, I'm a total fan of K
dramas and see dramas.
Speaker 3 (47:15):
And oh my god, I got to interview those those guys.
Speaker 4 (47:19):
What are they the boys? Something? I have to interview
them next coming up as a movie.
Speaker 5 (47:23):
I'd love to meet her.
Speaker 3 (47:25):
And okay, I'm gonna I'm gonna have you come on
with me, Carol, I don't know.
Speaker 4 (47:30):
Wait a minute.
Speaker 3 (47:30):
So Phoenix three to sixty Underscore net.
Speaker 9 (47:33):
Right, yes, Underscore.
Speaker 3 (47:35):
Now they only have two point two million followers in
you know and growing.
Speaker 4 (47:41):
Yeah, so I guess they're doing well. Hello, Andrew, you.
Speaker 2 (47:45):
Go ahead, fantastic. Well, you can find me on more
platforms than Paddington. The Andrew Eborn Show is on. You
can subscribe on YouTube. It's free. Everybody's favorite F four
letter word, So go along and do that. Now, press
that subscribe from the Andrew bon Show. You can follow
me at Andrew Eborn at Octopus TV and do be
(48:05):
in touch. You can find me at Phoenix. I will
be at lots of those events, so hopefully we'll see
some of you there all. And I, as I say,
we're often new, you're ready for tomorrow, but we're also
gonna be popping up in London, in Tokyo, We've come
down to Melbourne, we'll come and see you in Hollywood,
and we'll come and bring a few dogs for you
as well. And it's been brilliant, brilliant being on your
show and looking forward to coming back again.
Speaker 4 (48:26):
Okay, I have to say this.
Speaker 3 (48:29):
I got to think everybody can govern it coming on
because you just never know. Obviously, check out everybody, subscribe to, everybody,
follow everybody. For us, that's always about viewership. I wanted
to do the views. I wanted to do something different.
Why everybody was going after follow, subscribers and license I said,
you can always unlike, you can always subscribe, you can
always unfollow, but you can't unview a view. So we
(48:51):
are all thinking a different way, which is great and
that's who we are. So I say this, say, everybody,
have a good night, tonight, better day tomorrow. You see
someone without a smile, will just give them one of yours.
Because we all know the world needs it, and so
don't are animals.
Speaker 4 (49:06):
This is Brian Sebastian.
Speaker 3 (49:07):
We will see you next week.