Gary Vee: Your AI & Social Media Must-Knows + 7 Life-Changing Keys to Success! Pt 1 Gary Vaynerchuk
54 min
•Aug 19, 20258 months agoSummary
Gary Vaynerchuk discusses overcoming fear and regret as the primary obstacles to success, emphasizing the importance of not dwelling on past mistakes and maintaining genuine love for people as a core business principle. He shares personal stories about his parents' influence, his investment track record, and his vision for V Friends as a vehicle to elevate values like curiosity and accountability to younger generations.
Insights
- Regret, not failure, is the greatest fear to address—most people sacrifice their dreams due to fear of judgment from others rather than actual consequences
- Capacity to succeed correlates directly with the ability to avoid dwelling; constantly looking backward prevents forward momentum and opportunity recognition
- Authentic love for your audience, not self-interest, is the foundation of building massive audiences and influence in content creation
- Parenting and early environment shape confidence and risk tolerance more than innate talent; both nature and nurture are required for success
- Curiosity as a superpower enables entrepreneurs to see around corners, make better investment decisions, and anticipate market shifts before competitors
Trends
Shift from youth-centric to wisdom-inclusive culture; undervaluation of elderly perspectives in digital-first societyRise of character-driven IP and collectibles as vehicles for value transmission and brand building (V Friends model)AI and ChatGPT adoption across all age groups, including 80+ year-olds, indicating mainstream normalization of AI toolsLive social shopping emerging as a significant commerce format, particularly relevant to content creatorsEmphasis on emotional intelligence and love-based marketing over transactional engagement in building loyal audiencesEntrepreneurship and business acumen becoming primary career paths for younger generations over traditional employmentAccountability and empathy positioned as critical missing values in modern society, especially among youth
Topics
Overcoming Fear and RegretParental Influence on Confidence and SuccessBuilding Authentic Audiences Through ContentAI and ChatGPT Applications for EntrepreneursLive Social Shopping and E-CommerceV Friends Collectibles and Character-Driven IPInvestment Strategy and Pattern RecognitionEmotional Intelligence in BusinessEntrepreneurship vs. Traditional EmploymentDwelling and Capacity ManagementJudgment and Imposter SyndromeCuriosity as a Competitive AdvantageGenerational Wealth and Values TransferPersonal Branding and AuthenticityForgiveness and Accountability in Leadership
Companies
VaynerX
Gary Vaynerchuk's holding company; he serves as chairman overseeing multiple business ventures
VaynerMedia
Full-service digital agency founded by Gary Vaynerchuk; he serves as CEO
V Friends
Entertainment and collectibles company created by Gary Vaynerchuk featuring character-driven IP to elevate values
Facebook
Early-stage investment by Gary Vaynerchuk before mainstream adoption
Twitter
Early-stage investment by Gary Vaynerchuk; platform used extensively for content distribution
Snapchat
Early-stage investment by Gary Vaynerchuk; platform relevant to social media strategy discussion
Uber
Early-stage investment by Gary Vaynerchuk demonstrating prescient venture capital decisions
Venmo
Early-stage investment by Gary Vaynerchuk in fintech space
Coinbase
Early-stage investment by Gary Vaynerchuk in cryptocurrency/blockchain sector
Tumblr
Early-stage investment by Gary Vaynerchuk in social media platform
People
Gary Vaynerchuk
Primary guest discussing entrepreneurship, AI, social media strategy, and overcoming fear-based decision making
Jamie Kern Lima
Podcast host conducting interview and facilitating discussion on success, self-worth, and entrepreneurship
Gary Vaynerchuk's Mother
Credited as primary influence on Gary's confidence, self-esteem, and approach to parenting and business
Gary Vaynerchuk's Father
Instilled values of honesty, accountability, and competitiveness; shaped Gary's integrity in business
Quotes
"Regret is the great thing we should fear. And if you do not chase your dream or you jump into the water, if you don't go for it, all because you're scared of what your spouse, your siblings, your parents, your neighbors, your friends, or worst of all, a random person on the internet that leaves a comment on the post, think about you, you will wake up at 70, 80, 90, 100, and you will regret the way you lived your only life."
Gary Vaynerchuk•Early in episode
"I believe the reason I can do nine million things, and I do nine million things, is that I do not have the ability to dwell."
Gary Vaynerchuk•Mid-episode
"I believe the way I encounter for the first time a stranger, what I feel in my heart and soul is a deeper energy of love than most people when they encounter their relatives they like."
Gary Vaynerchuk•Mid-episode
"Success leaves clues. And when people betray you or hurt you or go against you, you don't let that take up your capacity by staying in a place of resentment. You quickly go to, how could I have helped them? You go to a place of love."
Gary Vaynerchuk•Mid-episode
"I believe almost everyone listening right now is not winning because they're spending all their time looking backwards."
Gary Vaynerchuk•Late in episode
Full Transcript
I've never said this publicly, so it's fun to give you the exclusive. Gary! You ready? I don't know if you're seeing my goosebumps here. Regret is the great thing we should fear. And if you do not chase your dream or you jump into the water, if you don't go for it, all because you're scared of what your spouse, your siblings, your parents, your neighbors, your friends, or worst of all, a random person on the internet that leaves a comment on the post, think about you, you will wake up at 70, 80, 90, 100, and you will regret the way you lived your only life. We have this little sliver. And to not squeeze this little orange of life for every ounce of juice that it has is devastating to me. I was scared to ride a bike. I was scared to kiss a girl. I was scared a lot, but I then jumped. And I wasn't scared. What they're doing now to protect themselves from the micro-hurt of judgment is going to be super trumped by the macro-hurt of regret in their later years. So good. That is so good. You have two kids. Do you want more kids? This is the first time I've ever told a story. Success leaves clues. And when people betray you or hurt you or go against you or you, you don't let that take up your capacity by staying in a place of resentment. You quickly go to, how could I have helped them? You go to a place of love. It's fascinating. I just am imagining how much of your capacity is freed up. My, to your point, wow, what an observation. I believe the reason I can do nine million things, and I do nine million things, is that I do not have the ability to dwell. If you've ever felt uncertain about the future with AI, social media, and the rapid pace of digital growth, if you've ever wondered, will I even have a job in a few years? Will AI replace us all? Does college still matter? What should I tell my partner, my friends, my kids, or grandkids to do so that they have a bright future? If you have these questions, then today's episode is for you. My guest is known by millions as someone who predicts what's next and can tell us exactly what he thinks we should do to put our lives and our future in perspective today. Gary Vaynerchuk, no, as Gary V is someone who's not only built billion-dollar businesses, he shaped the way so many understand branding, marketing, entrepreneurship, and getting attention online in big ways. I can lose every dollar I have. I could be universally disliked by the public. Literally, I'm not crippled at all by that. In fact, I have almost like a weird dark fantasy of like, I was very aware, very early on, that I was different. I knew fairly early on that people like me, but it's funny, and here's a big sentence. It's because I knew I liked them first. I believe the way I encounter for the first time a stranger, what I feel in my heart and soul is a deeper energy of love than most people when they encounter their relatives they like. Your eyes started tearing up. Like your eyes started tearing up, right now you got goosebumps all up and down. My father is incredibly honorable, incredibly word is bond. My dad thinks a slight embellishment, Jayme, is like the great lie of a lifetime. So when I started working in my dad's liquor store at 14, he scared the shit out of me on that. This means I'm saying something that's the most honest thing I could say, and my goosebumps go, that's how real it is. Gary is a serial entrepreneur and serves as the chairman of VaynerX, the CEO of VaynerMedia, and the CEO and creator of the Entertainment and Collectibles Company, The Friends. Gary is considered one of the leading global minds on what's next in culture, business, and the internet. He was an early investor in companies like Facebook, Twitter, Tumblr, Venmo, Snapchat, Coinbase, and Uber. He's a six-time New York Times best-selling author and documents his daily life as a CEO through his social media channels, which have more than 45 million followers. His podcast, The Gary V. Audio Experience, ranks amongst the top podcasts globally. He's a newlywed to his wife, Mona, a dad of two, and he's the person millions of people look to daily, and he's taken time out of his busy schedule. He's flown here. He's in person on the podcast just for you today, from advice on mindset and how to succeed on social media with AI and entrepreneurship and how to know exactly what's coming next and what to do about it in a world of technology and AI that's changing by the second. I am so excited for this conversation and whether today you're listening for yourself or because someone that you love shared this episode with you, I want to welcome you to the Jamie Curran Lima Show podcast family. Thank you so much for being here. And can you take two seconds right now and just hit the subscribe or follow button on the app that you're listening or watching on? Thank you so much. It truly means so much to me. You can also get your inspiration into your inbox from me for free. You can join my newsletter community at JamieCurranLima.com. Also, this incredible podcast to episode today is not just for you and me. Please share this with every single person you know who might need some inspiration today or perhaps a boost in their self-belief because what you can hear today can truly impact mine, yours, and their lives too. Welcome to the Jamie Curran Lima Show. Oprah, how have you defied the odds? Her show is unlike any I've ever done. A revelation. When you listen, it feels like a hug, but your brain and your spirit and your heart is like, wow. Melinda French Gates. When I look into Jamie's eyes, I feel like I am on some other cosmic level with her. I could see the light around her. She's infused with light. Imagine overcoming self-doubt, learning to believe in yourself and trust yourself and know you are enough. Welcome to the Jamie Curran Lima Show. Jamie Curran Lima's her name. Everybody needs Jamie Curran Lima in their life. Jamie Curran Lima. Jamie, you're so inspiring. Jamie Curran Lima. Gary V. Welcome to the Jamie Curran Lima Show. James, thank you so much. That's such a sweet intro. I'm really, really, genuinely excited to be here. I'm so excited you're here. First time on the show. Yes. Thank you for having me, really. First time on the show. Congrats about the show. It's really exciting to be here. Thank you. I want to just right off the top ask you this because so many people are impacted by this. They're afraid to start or to make a change or to go after a dream because they're afraid of judgment or rejection or they're sort of like frozen by fear of what other people might think. That's right. What do you say to them? That it's the greatest pandemic in our society. We've created this, I don't know if you've heard this term imposter syndrome. Yes. This is fun to say to you. It is makeup for the word insecure. The world is insecure. Period. This has been a great epiphany of my life. I was so mothered properly. I really genuinely, and for the people that follow me that are listening right now that know me, they know how often I reference my parents and specifically my mother. I was parented so uncomfortably well. The greatest book I'll write and even though I've written all these books and have done well, I've been working slowly but surely because I want to give it more time on a book called perfectly parented. Parented. And it's obviously, of course I wasn't perfectly parented. There's no such thing or is there such a thing that's all judgment. But it gets to the cruxier question. The world is insecure. I'm devastated by it. It has driven my personal brand's content in hindsight, my whole career. And what I say is, one of my great fascinations in society is that I think we've over glamorized youth and we've dramatically undervalued wisdom and the elderly in the last 40 years. There's been a huge shift. For the history of time, I'm talking cave men and women, the elder was put on a pedestal and that was all the way until recent times. And as you know, because of technology, we're more likely to make fun of our grandmother for not knowing how to use TikTok than we are to sit next to her and extract her wisdom. And we now overvalue 20 year olds for their knowledge of technology or fashion or what's cool. And that's okay. I love that. I sit here with a ball cap. I'm 49 years old. I love being youthful. There's a lot of beauty in the fact that our society's become more youthful. I love that the golden girls looked one way and the sex and the city girls look the different way. There's a lot of greatness to that, but there are also consequences. And I feel like we as a society have dramatically underestimated the elder wisdom. And I implore everyone here to spend more time with a 70, 80 and 90 year old that is not a relative because it will be highly valuable to their life. And that little rant about the elderly gets me to my point, which is we have gotten to a place where we have things out of whack. And if you speak to a 90 year old, that is not your grandfather or grandmother. What I promise you, Jamie, you will see is that regret is the great thing we should fear. And if you do not chase your dream or you jump into the water, if you don't go for it, all because you're scared of what your spouse, your siblings, your parents, your neighbors, your friends, or worst of all, a random person on the internet that leaves a comment on the post, think about you. You will wake up at 70, 80, 90, 100 and you will regret the way you lived your only life. I don't know if you know this, Jamie. We were not, you and I and everybody listening, we were not born for a very long time in the history of the world and we will be dead and we will be dead forever. So we have this little sliver and to not squeeze this little orange of life for every ounce of juice that it has is devastating to me based on the fact that your parenting, your DNA, and your environment led to you valuing someone else's opinion greater than your own opinion about what you want to do. And so I continue, what do I say? I say I'm searching every day of my life for the words that may make one person on the other side of this podcast finally jump. Maybe that little rant did it. But at the end of the day, whatever takes therapy, exercise, reading, hanging out with different friends, cutting out negative people, cold plunges, massages, like hiking, like whatever it takes to get you to jump. And I will say this and this should be very encouraging. Everyone listening here was scared of doing things in their adolescence. I was scared to kiss a girl. I was scared. In fact, I was a real scaredy cat, which is wild. I was scared to swim. I swam when I was nine late. And by the way, on the record, the only reason I swam is because my sister started swimming and there was no way I was gonna have my six-year-old sister start swimming before me. So I jumped directly into the pool the second I saw her swimming and I'm like, we swam at the same, I couldn't fathom that she started. She was your first. I was scared to ride a bike. I didn't want to skin my knee. I didn't want to hurt my elbow. I was scared to kiss a girl. I was scared a lot, but I then jumped and I wasn't scared. And I really believe someone here quitting a job, breaking up with a bad boyfriend, starting to make content on TikTok. The thing I'm wildly passionate about these days, we'll get into it later. I'm sure live social shopping, which is super cool to say in front of you, given that you're the queen of that format in a different way. I just want people to jump because they're gonna regret. Jamie, they're going to regret. The negative of like the, what they're doing now to protect themselves from the micro hurt of judgment is going to be super trumped by the macro hurt of regret in their later years. It's so good. That is so good. And I think for a lot of people, it's hard in the moment or it feels over one. Are you scared of anything right now? Only the health and wellness of my inner circle of family and friends. The only thing I'm scared of, I can lose every dollar I have. I could be universally disliked by the public. Literally, I'm not crippled at all by that. I have this, in fact, I have almost like a weird, dark fantasy of like going back to zero. Like in fact, it's really weird. I have to really work through it. I'm that not scared of it, that I'm almost like weirdly fantasized and romanticized about going back to the humble beginnings. Is it because you want to like the victory of building it again? I think so. Or you want none of the pressure that comes with it? None of the pressure I love. Okay. Like it's why I'm so out there, right? Yeah. Carrie V, me, I've been one of the most consistent public figures in the last 20 years, at least on the internet. The pressure, no, because in fact, I don't feel the pressure. I live what the rant I just made. I do not value other, I do not value my mother's opinion about me. She is my number one North Star. So why am I going to value some random listener to this podcast? How did you get to this place? Because she built me. It had the DNA. She has that DNA. Like I do believe that I was, I do believe some people are born with some level of a confidence genetic versus not. I believe that to be true. However, I've watched friends and people around me go from shy or insecure to dramatically more confident. I've seen it. Yeah. So I think you can build it. So A, I think I was predisposed a little bit. B, I'm telling you, my mother is a masterclass. I'm telling you, Jane, she made me feel remarkable about myself, self-esteem for days, but she didn't create delusion or entitlement. She grounded me. She kept me accountable. So I didn't, she like balanced. She was purple in a world of red and blue, right? And then finally environment. I was born in the Soviet Union. I immigrated here when I was three. We were uncomfortably poor. I lived most of my childhood as lower middle class to somewhat to middle, even when we got to middle class, my mom acted like we were lower middle class or borderline poor, meaning they never bought me anything like toys. Like it was, I remember I got like three toys for one holiday season and I thought it was like I mean, I can't even explain to you what I thought it was like. It was the year before my brother was born. I mean, my sister, I think my mom was overcompensating that holiday season and like I literally was like getting six different toys, three different toys instead of one was like, I can't even explain it to you. Whereas like, you know, where some people like max out their credit card to give their kids 40 toys and I understand why. But I think, I think environment. I grew up in Jersey in the 80s. You know, it was, you go outside, your parents are not helicoptering you, you get into fights, you skin your knee, you, it's rugged out, especially 80s Jersey lower middle class. Like I got into fights. I, I, you know, I learned to be respectful because if you disrespected somebody, you might get punched in the face. Like a lot of things we don't grow up with nowadays. Right. Behind our computer screens. Everybody's a tough guy on Twitter. Right. You know, in 1980, Twitter was the cafeteria. And if you said something wrong, it happened. Right. And so, you know, I think the combination of environment, nature, nurture, and here I am. And in fact, my confidence, I don't think belongs to me. Like Gary Vee, me, all the accolades I get, I think that's an indication of my parents, the American dream and Jersey. I think Vee friends, my businesses, I feel a little bit more of me, you know, but I think one of the reasons I'm so detached from my personal brand and my awareness slash fame, whatever you want to call it, or my financial success is I kind of feel like I'm the byproduct of them, not necessarily on me, if that makes sense. Also, you know, there are, as you know, hundreds and millions of people online, a lot of people putting content out there, speaking their soul, doing all the things, even showing up authentically. And very few people are able to communicate a thought or an idea in a way that just like people can relate to, stops people, but also that people just connect to you, that they instantly foster trust with, that they want to watch. Do you, you being one of the best communicators in the world, indisputable by numbers, not an opinion, indisputable by numbers and by impact and by the number of people that repost your content and the number of people that are on your pages, have you, do you feel that you have a calling or like an anointing that was predetermined on your life to be an impactful communicator? Is it something you studied obsessively with because it's different than, I'm guessing, all the people you were raised around and all the people that you could credit to so much for. I believe that I did not grow up thinking anyone on earth would know me. You know, I made my first piece of content when I was 30 years old and it was a wine video that I was trying to use to build up my wine business and it wasn't until 34 that I started to make the kind of content that I'm now known for. So I didn't, you know, I didn't know who Tony Robbins was. I didn't know like, I didn't know that game of personalities or I didn't know what a motivational speech was. So, so I didn't study anything. I didn't know anything. On the other side, I think that I think that I was very aware very early on that I was different. That I could say, you know, I remember consciously deciding school didn't mean anything. In fourth grade, in 1986, when not going to college meant you were the lowest of low. And I had the confidence to follow my calling, which at the time I called being a businessman, it's now known as entrepreneurship, right? I knew that I was, I didn't know the word charismatic, but I, you know, I was the president of our school in fifth grade. And even before that, I knew that humans gravitated towards me. Every kid in my neighborhood, even leaving their parents, I didn't know what charisma was. I didn't know what being dynamic was, but I knew fairly early on that people like me. But it's funny. And here's a big sentence. It's because I knew I liked them first. It's really wild how much I love people. And I mean the general public. I wish everyone on this podcast could see in like visuals with words or diagrams or colors how I feel when I'm walking through an airport. Look, I wish people knew how I feel about your two guys right now behind the camera. I'm being dead serious. When I said, Hey guys to them, I wish, I don't know if you're seeing my goosebumps here. I wish people knew how I felt when I encounter a stranger. I believe what I'm about to say. I've never said this publicly. This is fun to give you the exclusive. We need to pause for a super brief break while we do take a moment and share this episode with every single person that you know who this could inspire. Because this conversation can truly be the words and inspiration that they need to hear today to keep going to remember they matter to feel less alone, more enough, more connected and more worthy. In life, you don't sort the level of your hopes and dreams. You stay stuck at the level of your self worth. When you build your self worth, you change your entire life. And that's exactly why I wrote my new book worthy, How to Believe You Are Enough and Transform Your Life For You. If you have some self doubt to destroy and a destiny to fulfill, worthy is for you. In worthy, you'll learn proven tools and simple steps that bring life changing results, like how to get unstuck from the things holding you back, build unshakable self love, unlearn the lies that lead to self doubt and embrace the truths that wake up worthiness, overcome limiting beliefs and imposter syndrome, achieve your hopes and dreams by believing you are worthy of them and so much more. Are you ready to unleash your greatness and step into the person you were born to be? Imagine a life with zero self doubt and unshakable self worth. Get your copy of worthy plus some amazing thank you bonus gifts for you at worthy book.com or the link in the show notes below. Imagine what you do if you fully believed in you. It's time to find out with worthy who you spend time around is so important as energy is contagious and so is self belief. And I'd love to hang out with you even more, especially if you could use an extra dose of inspiration, which is exactly why I've created my free weekly newsletter. That's also a love letter to you delivered straight to your inbox each and every Tuesday morning from me. If you haven't signed up to make sure that you get it each week, just go to Jamie Kern Lima.com to make sure you're on the list and you'll get your one on one with Jamie weekly newsletter and get ready to believe in you. If you're tired of hearing the bad news every single day and need some inspiration, some tips, tools, joy and love hitting your inbox, I'm your girl. Subscribe at Jamie Kern Lima.com or in the link in the show notes. Do you struggle with negative self talk living with a constant mental narrative that you're not good enough is exhausting? I know because I spent most of my life in that habit. The words you say to yourself about yourself are so powerful. And when you learn to take control over your self talk, it's life changing. And I wanted to give you a free resource that I created for you. If this is something that could benefit your life, it's called five ways to overcome negative self talk and build self love. And it's a free how to guide to overcome that negative self talk to build confidence and develop unshakable self love so that you can dream big and keep going in the pursuit of your goals. Don't let self sabotaging thoughts hinder your progress any longer. It's time to rewrite the script of your life when filled with self love, resilience and unwavering belief. If you're ready to take charge of your narrative, build unwavering confidence and empower yourself to persevere on the path to your dreams, you can grab your free guide to stop overthinking and learn to trust yourself at Jamie Kern Lima.com slash resources or click the link in the show notes below. And now more of this incredible conversation together. It's really wild how much I love people. And I mean the general public. I wish everyone on this podcast could see in like visuals with words or diagrams or colors how I feel when I'm walking through an airport. Look, I wish people knew how I feel about your two guys right now behind the camera. I'm being dead serious when I said, Hey guys to them. I wish I'm, I don't know if you're seeing my goosebumps here. I wish people knew how I felt when I encounter a stranger. I believe what I'm about to say, I've never said this publicly. This is fun to give you the exclusive. I believe the way I encounter for the first time a stranger, what I feel in my heart and soul is a deeper energy of love than most people when they encounter their relatives they like. So I think I always knew that. And then I think the serendipity of how the world worked. I'll give you an example. If I was 30 years older, I would have never been known because I would have never left my family in New Jersey to go to Hollywood to be found. The internet just happened to come along at the right time. The maturity of the internet to be in the social media era came at the right time. And I just happened to be at the right place and I understood what was happening. And I had the, you know, I believe that many people build audiences for many reasons. I believe I've built the audience I've built because I think I out love my community, my audience in comparison to almost anybody else producing content in the world. I really believe that. And I don't think I'm better than, and I'm sure there's others that feel exactly the way I do towards strangers and acquaintances, but I'm in the fucking mix at the top of, I've never made a piece of content where my brain did not go into what's in it for them. I believe one of the reasons most of the people listening right now do not build the audience they're hoping to build is they spend all of their time thinking about, is this going to get me likes? Is this going to get me followers? Is this going to get me money? When I make content, I mean, we talked before camera, you're like, I'm like, I want to be on this show because I know I'm the right voice for three of the people on this podcast listening right now that have never heard of me. I always think about them. I then know, listen, I'm not some saint or angel. I'm aware that if I'm bringing value that may lead to opportunity for me and the things that I want for myself emotionally, financially, but I only know how to start with what's in it for them. With what's in it for them. In fact, I'm going to point in my life where I'm trying to be more balanced of selfish and selfless behavior because I think I go into superhero syndrome too much. And that's something I'm thinking through in my life professionally, personally and just in general, but never with my audience. I think I've got the right framework. When you said, if people understood what you were thinking and how much love you have when you meet a stranger, your eyes started tearing up. Yeah. Your eyes started tearing up right now. You got goosebumps all up and down. Where do you think that comes from? Just a very fortunate, back to the earlier question. I genuinely think I was genetically predisposed for it. And then I think I was molded by it. I view as though I was the really remarkable ingredients of love. And then I had the best chef cook me. I think between who I was and the mother I had, I think I was the best. I think that's the best analogy I can use. I think for loving strangers, I think I was all the perfect ingredients, the best carrots, the best meat, the best chicken, the best sauce. And then I had the best chef in the world cook my ingredients. And then here I am. You talk about your dream of wanting to buy the jet and your mom's role in that. Can you share? Yeah, I think everyone, this is pretty deep. There's a very detailed video at the top of my Instagram. It's Gary Vee. If you want to get a little more color on this, very simply, back to selfish wants. I have this great dream. Always have had it since fourth or fifth grade. Around the time I decided school didn't matter that I would. That was probably also the time I realized I couldn't play for the jets. I was pretty good. I have very good hand-eye coordination. So in first, second, third grade, I was a really good athlete and better than all the kids in school and baseball and things of that nature. And then around fourth and fifth and sixth grade, I was like, wait a minute, what's this strength, speed and athleticism part? And I was like, uh-oh, I'm not going to be a football player. And I probably, at that point, I was already doing very well with lemonade stands and shoveling snow. And then by sixth grade, I was making a lot of money selling trading cards. And I kind of pivoted to, okay, I can't play for the jets. I'm going to own the jets. And so I had this great dream. And that's always been there. And then the part that you're referencing, when I was seven and fell in love with the jets, a lot of the boys in the neighborhood had a jet's jersey. And I wanted one. And I asked my mom, can I get a jet's jersey? Because we played a lot of backyard football. And everybody had a jet's jersey and I had a t-shirt. And I wanted to be in a mix. And I wanted, I love the jets now and I want a jet's jersey. Well, for all the immigrants listening, when you're a couple of years into America and you're not very, you have really no money, buying a $20 at the time, jet's jersey was not on the, in the carts. You know, everything was for food and shelter, even clothes. Like my dad worked at a liquor store and like, I literally wore liquor t-shirts my whole life. You know, like we did not buy clothes for at least t-shirts. And so at night for the next several weeks, because my mom was an immigrant mom, cooked, cleaned, like waited for her husband to come home at 10pm, cooked for her. Like her day was 7am to midnight, cooked clean, parent cooked clean, parent like real hard work. And then after all that, at night, she would, she knitted me a jet's sweater. I don't know if you know this, if you've seen my content, I put up the number five a lot. I do this a lot. And the reason I do that is that jet's jersey that she knitted me had the number five on it, because already it was my favorite number. And when I knew seven or 10 years ago, I'm like, oh man, I'm going to take a lot of pictures for the rest of my life. Like I kind of tipped where I knew I was going to be known, and I knew we were in the pictures era with phones. And I remember thinking like, huh, I'm going to probably take millions of photos for the rest of my life with people. I'm like, I want it to be meaningful. And I started to throw up the five. As a little head nod to my mom. You know, and so, yes, she made me that jersey and had the number five on it. I wore it every day. And now it is in a literally fireproof safety deposit box. So that when I buy the New York Jets, I'm going to hang that jersey. I'm going to build a stadium potentially in Queens, because that's where the Jets fans want the jets back, even though they're injured. It's funny when we immigrated to America, I lived in Queens for two years, and then we moved to Jersey. And the big thing among Jets fans is they play in New Jersey. I don't know if you know this. In MetLife Stadium, where the Jets and Giants play, they play in New Jersey, even they're both New York, but they originally played in Queens. And I always think like, when I buy them, will I keep them in Jersey since I'm such a Jersey boy, or do I bring them to Queens? Because a lot of the diehards want that. And when I first came to America, that's where, you know, it's very romantic for me. Anyway, the other thing that's romantic to me is when I build my own stadium, I'm going to put that Jets jersey right in the front of the main entrance for everyone to see. And it's going to have a little plaque, and it's going to say, from not being able to own a $20 Jets jersey to eventually owning the entire team, all of you can do it too. So I think about that a lot. How has your mom responded to that? You know, I think at this point in my life, it's very clear to me that it is shocking how much I do strictly for the opportunity to make my parents proud. And my mom is like my best friend, you know, everything I've accomplished is because of her. 100%. Like it is so not lost to me. And by the way, before my dad sends me this clip and yells at me and complains, I'm also very fortunate. I think there was a couple pieces that my mom could not instill in me. My dad is much more competitive than my mom. Huge factor in my career and my personality. And the other thing, my mom is gift of gab. And so am I, which means a little embellishment, a little, you know, my father is incredibly honorable, incredibly word is bond. My dad thinks a slight embellishment, James, is like the great lie of a lifetime. So when I started working in my dad's liquor store at 14, he scared the shit out of me on that. I remember one time I told him I had a big day of selling a wine he wanted me to sell. And on the way home, we were driving and he said, how'd you do with the wine? I was like, dad, I sold 20 cases of the wine. I sold a ton. And then that was Saturday. And then on Monday, when he came back from work, I was in school, I was a kid. When he came back home for dinner that night, he like got really mad at me. And he's like, you sold 17.3 cases of that wine. Hmm. And like really made it like a deal. Like, this is a problem. And I was like, what are we talking about here? 17, 20, same shit. And over, I would say from 14 to 18, my dad instilled in me honor and truth and sucked out of me embellishment and borderline bullshit. And I believe that that has had a profound impact on who I am and how I'm perceived and who I became as a public figure. I think a lot of people when they first encounter my energy and my style are like, wait a minute. I don't know when you first start. Like I'm very aware that when you're this hyper, you know, I'm pretty chill right now in this interview by comparison. Like I'm pretty high energy. I, you know, I'm selling my beliefs. Sometimes I'm selling my collectibles or my wine. You know, I'm empathetic to some people being like, eh, what's up with this guy? And I always think about this. I'm always like, man, you know, a lot of people go on the journey with me of like, I don't know about this guy to like, I really like this guy. And a lot of times I think like, man, that's all my dad because of, because if I wasn't as like, if I wasn't as true and I was the bizarre, you know, the Superman, there's like Superman, bizarre Superman, like the bad, if I was, if I was the bad version of Gary Vee that some either start believing or even some people are very cynical think that I am. I wonder if I could have been that if I didn't have my father in my life. You know, I wonder if with a different father, if my dad was a shyster and at 14, I started working for him and I already had all this gift of gab and charisma. What have I gone down a path of being a shyster instead of something I'm incredibly proud of? Very grateful for my parents. Does it bother you and you since someone else is embellishing or lying? Not real. You know, it's, you want to, this is going to be a fun part of the podcast. It's funny how quickly I jumped from like answering you not really to where I want to go with this. Not at all. And let me explain where I'm going. I actually, I actually am incredibly empathetic, sympathetic and compassionate to people that do wrong things. I actually struggle with judgment and anger to things that people do that are really not great, let alone something like a white lie or an about like I struggle with judgment, James. When I see someone doing something wrong, like I'll give you just like, let me give you a very simple example that happened yesterday in LA. Somebody like cut off someone on the street and I watched someone like massively yelling at that, but like they're just so angry. And I was just thinking about both of them. I was like, both the person that did the thing, like where, where are they coming from on that? Are they impatient? Do they have a problem? Like what are they doing? And then the person that like, do you know how many times I've been cut off? I lived in Jersey, like a million. I would never like go crazy and like road rage to go there. You're not in a good place overall. So I think in general in life, when I see someone do something wrong, even like bad stuff, my brain goes to like, what's, how, why are they hurting? What's going on? And I'm talking about even when people are really bad to me, when people have stolen for me, when people have done very bad things to me, when people have, when people that I've helped financially and emotionally do horrible things behind my back, it's crazy how little energy or time I spend on the normal reaction. I default pretty quickly into, man, I'm so, A, I'm so grateful that I'm not in that place mentally and emotionally and B, I hope they'll, I hope they'll get better. I hope, you know. Have you had a lot of people betray you? Sure. It's life. I'm so out there. I've run businesses my whole life. One of my, one of my dear friends in my dad's liquor store that I took from being a kid that, you know, was a high school dropout, I think, or maybe graduated high school, like basically took from like a, at the time, whatever minimum wages was in Jersey, nine bucks, 10 bucks an hour, to all the way to like the head of our shipping department, like a real job that he built his whole family on. Stole hundreds of thousands of dollars of inventory from my dad on finding a very smart kid, like found a very unique loophole that allowed him to like ship things to himself and sell it in the black market. Just like unbelievable layer of betrayal. My dad, actually, I think this is the first time I've ever told this story, mainly because if my dad listens to this, he's going to go into a five week depression about it. He's that hurt still and angry. I forgave the kid on the moment we understood. And by the way, years later, I found out like he hurt his back and then he started taking back pain medicine and you know, like this is where my brain goes. Like I knew he wouldn't do that in his soul, but a series of events led him to do that. I believe most humans in their soul are not looking to do bad, but things happen. And I think what's happening in our world now is a lot of people are selling fear and hate. And I think a lot of people are not strong enough to see through it. I think a lot of people go down paths they don't need to. And then I also think that people struggle with accountability. When bad things happen to me, I view them as my fault. I don't even view them as betrayal. I view them as like, what could I have seen to not let this happen? And then I quickly go into like, and then maybe it's so crazy, this goes back to love. Oh, I could have helped him see it a different way earlier. Not, oh, I wish I fired this person earlier so this never happened. Oh crap. If I knew he was going down this path, I could have stopped him from ever getting to the thing that would have been fireable. Which is the polar opposite of a victim mentality. I'm just, I'm just fascinated listening to you share all this because, you know, the idea that success leaves clues and you have this just abundant capacity to do so many things, to give so many, you know, to give so much, to impact so much. And I'm listening and I just want to call this out for everyone listening right now because what you're sharing is you don't let things, even when people betray you or hurt you or go against you or you, you know, you don't let that take up your capacity by staying in a place of resentment. You quickly go to how could I have helped them? You go to a place of love. It's fascinating. I just am imagining how much of your capacity is freed up. My, to your point, wow, what an observation. I believe the reason I can do nine million things and I do nine million things is that I do not have the ability to dwell. I believe almost everyone listening right now is not winning because they're spending all their time looking backwards. I believe a sentence that starts with I should have is the beginning of a very bad sentence. I love learning from my mistakes. In fact, it's probably one of my great strengths, contextualizing everything that's ever happened in my life to make better decisions tomorrow. But to your point, if you want to go down that path, it is, I am confident when I deliver this sentence, my dream about heaven is it tells you everything. When I get to heaven, one of the 21st things I'm going to do is during my time on earth, where did I rank amongst 8 billion people in the ability to not dwell? I'm pretty confident I'm in top 10,000. I just don't have it in me. Which gets to the biggest point of all, you can't be scared. You do not have fear when you are not scared to lose. I love losing, James. It's so crazy how much I like losing. Think about what I said earlier. I dream about losing everything. That's how much I, I mean, again, here it is. This is, by the way, this has been a huge factor in my life. The fact that everything great or everything I'm worried about comes up in goosebumps, like naturally. This is how in tune I am with myself. Like I always know this means I'm saying something that's the most honest thing I could say. Literally, I'm talking about losing everything and my goosebumps go. That's how real it is. You think I'm going to be scared about a micro loss? You think I'm worried about Johnny Pants 49 leaving a comment that you suck, Ari B? Like, you think I'm scared of a business going to zero? You think I'm scared of any, I'm not scared of anything in a world where I'm willing to lose everything and do it again. It makes you unstoppable. Do you think you mentioned heaven? Do you believe in heaven? I do. Predominantly through this dream I've made up for myself of what heaven is, I literally think heaven is this super AI computer that can tell you everything about your life and you just chill up there and play scenarios. Like, one of the things I can't wait to ask the heaven super computer is, show me the moment I was closest to dying besides the time I actually died. And I always think it's like this weird thing of like, had I like not forgotten my keys, you know the butterfly, like if I'd not forgotten my keys or if I didn't meet this person, I would have met this person and we would have been here and I would have fell off a cliff or I don't know, or I would have eaten this banana and that banana would have triggered a gene in my body. Like, I'm so fascinated about that. I don't know why I would have asked about like, show me my alternatives in life if I didn't move here, if I stayed here, if my dad did this or if my, I love the what ifs. One of the reasons I'm a successful entrepreneur, you know, is even weird. Obviously, many people when they read my intro talk about the things I invested in, I don't know if it's the energy we're in right now, but it was, I mean, I've heard it 500,000 times, but I was micro reflective for a second when you were reading that. I'm like, man, I really did invest in those companies before people knew. And I'm like, I think the reason that happened and the reason I'm talking about heaven the way I'm talking about it now is I think my superpower is the power of the universe. I think my superpower, which is very disguised and I'm curious because you know enough about me to say, I'm curious how this is going to land on you. I actually think one of my core superpowers is curiosity. I'm inherently curious. I'm, you know, I hate I should have, but I love what is what. I love that. And I think it sends me down. I'll give you an example. Do you know what I use chat GPT for? What? On the flight out here from New York, I spent an hour and a half prompt engineering questions about why LaBoubou happened. I bet you did. Yeah. You know, with me with collectibles and pop culture and marketing. Like, I mean, I'm wildly curious. It helps me see around corners. It makes me a fun dinner date. It makes me a great entrepreneur. I wish more people were into it. And in fact, V friends, and I'm sure we might touch on it, is really the great extension of me, the person. I know that I'm not everyone's cup of tea. I do not believe I can impact all eight billion people. But I believe my character is patient panda, you know, ambitious angel, curious crane. You can see where I'm about to go now. If I can be curious crane famous, if I can make, you know, cartoons and comic books, if some of the people listening now, when they have grandchildren one day in 30, 40 years, if those kids are wearing curious crane pajamas, I can elevate the word curious to the youth. The word patience, the word accountable, which is really missing right now. And that's why I have accountable and empathy, empathy, the elephant. If I can elevate those words, because I can get the people earlier in their journey, youth, or it might be a character that I, Gary, via not the right personal brand for someone, but I can get them to get into accountability through the videos or the cartoons of these characters, the Hello Kitty of it all, then I can leave a bigger impact. And I think curious crane is one of my favorite v-friends, because it's getting more obvious to me as I get into my middle era, that curiosity is the superpower of mine. Do you have two kids? Do you want more kids? Yeah, I'm definitely, you know, look, my great-grandmother said, I grew up with her, you know, in Russia, in the old country, everybody had kids at 20. Yeah. She basically used to say this Yiddish word, lost language, basically translates to kids are the ultimate happiness in the world. So for sure. I haven't shared this yet, but we're expecting our third. Wow. Yeah, yeah. Wow, congrats. And I want more. And you know, I'm about to turn, I turned 48 this year. So it's like, I agree. And I actually love having them later also, because I feel like, you know, it's just a different perspective. You know, I've been fortunate in my business career to spend a lot of time with 70 and 80 year old, back to the thing I was talking about earlier. I'm as likely to hang with an 80 year old business person as I am an 18 year old business person. And I do a lot, in fact, I do a lot of both. I would argue I spend a lot of time with 18 year old entrepreneurs about IRL streaming and AI, and then 80 year old real estate and like, you know, those kind of characters. Yeah. You know, it's wild. Please. So I was in Copenhagen last week at a table in a restaurant. And there's a couple next to me in their 80s. And the guy's phone goes off and he's doing audio prompts to chat GPT. He's in his 80s. And I'm like, the whole world is changing so fast. 100%. So much to ask you about VFRIENDS, about AI, about social media, about chat GPT, about all of it, about AGI, all of it. This conversation with Gary V is so incredible. We made it into more than one part. And if you've ever felt uncertain about the future with AI, social media, and the rapid pace of digital growth, if you've wondered, will I even have a job in a few years? Will AI replace all of us? Does college still matter? What should I tell my partner, my friends, my kids, or grandkids to do so that they have a bright future? If you have these questions, you are not going to want to miss this incredible part two of our conversation with Gary Vaynerchuk coming up in the next episode of the Jamie Kern Lima show. Remember this episode's not just for you and me. Please share it with every single person that you know, because it can truly impact and change their life too. And if you love today's episode, please click on the follow or subscribe button for the show on the app. You're listening to it on or watching it on. And if it added value to your life, if you could please give it a rating or review, five stars, it would be amazing. I would be so grateful. And then share it, share the episode with everyone you believe in. Maybe share it with another person whose life you know could benefit from it. Share it with someone you know who's maybe making a change in their career or fearful of what's happening with AI and all the technology around us and what exactly they should do. Share it with others online or in your community who just might need the words and tools and lessons in this episode today. You never know whose life you're meant to change today by sharing this episode. And thank you so much for joining me today. Before you go, I want to share some words with you that couldn't be more true. You, right now, exactly as you are, are enough and fully worthy. You're worthy of your greatest hopes, of your wildest dreams, and of all the unconditional love in the world. And it's an honor to welcome you to each and every episode of the Jamie Kernley-Michel Here. I hope you'll come as you are and heal where you need. Blossom what you choose, journey toward your calling, and stay as long as you'd like because you belong here. You are worthy, you are loved, you are love, and I love you. And I cannot wait to join you on the next episode of the Jamie Kernley-Michel. In life, you don't sort the level of your hopes and dreams. You stay stuck at the level of your self-worth. When you build your self-worth, you change your entire life. And that's exactly why I wrote my new book, Worthy, How to Believe You Are Enough and Transform Your Life for You. If you have some self-doubt to destroy and a destiny to fulfill, worthy is for you. In Worthy, you'll learn proven tools and simple steps that bring life-changing results, like how to get unstuck from the things holding you back, build unshakable self-love, unlearn the lies that lead to self-doubt and embrace the truths that wake up worthiness, overcome limiting beliefs and imposter syndrome, achieve your hopes and dreams by believing you are worthy of them and so much more. Are you ready to unleash your greatness and step into the person you were born to be? Imagine a life with zero self-doubt and unshakable self-worth. Get your copy of Worthy plus some amazing thank you bonus gifts for you at worthybook.com or the link in the show notes below. Imagine what you do if you fully believed in you. It's time to find out with Worthy. Who you spend time around is so important as energy is contagious and so is self-belief. I'd love to hang out with you even more, especially if you could use an extra dose of inspiration, which is exactly why I've created my free weekly newsletter that's also a love letter to you delivered straight to your inbox from me. If you haven't signed up to make sure that you get it each week, just go to JamieKernleama.com to make sure you're on the list and you'll get your one-on-one with Jamie weekly newsletter and get ready to believe in you. If you're tired of hearing the bad news every single day and need some inspiration, some tips, tools, joy, and love hitting your inbox, I'm your girl. Subscribe at JamieKernleama.com or in the link in the show notes. And please note, I'm not a licensed therapist and this podcast is not intended as a substitute for the advice of a physician, professional coach, psychotherapist, or other qualified professional.