16:43

– That’s a good one. – I love it. I’m in control of it. I’ve always really welcomed it. I’ve lived my life with transparency. I hide nothing. That said, I always honor– – We love Jewel. (group laughter) You’re giving all the answers that nobody, nobody else says. Yeah and what’s weird is it’s […]

– That’s a good one. – I love it.
I’m in control of it. I’ve always really welcomed it. I’ve lived my
life with transparency. I hide nothing. That said, I always honor–
– We love Jewel. (group laughter) You’re giving all the answers
that nobody, nobody else says. Yeah and what’s weird is it’s one thing say it that
came and grew from it. You were real, real
famous when it came along so it’s an even more
impressive answer. You know, I was a byproduct and
benefited from the transparency and grew from there.
– Yeah. – But for you to
be where you were and love it speaks to
that rare authenticity. – Well, I also was able, that’s
funny I was put in a college textbook from when
the grassroot marketers, one of the four founders of
grassroots marketing online. – Sure. – It wasn’t because of me.
It was my fans. And it was the early days of the
internet but it was the reason I broke through grunge. – But your fans, I was there. I was doing the
Wine Library thing. It’s why I was so excited. We talked a little bit
about this the other day. Your fans got there and
give a crap because of you and then they took over. What my fans do now is insane
the level of love but it starts with I love them first.
– Yeah. – You have to love them first. – Yeah, music comes
second in all honesty. I think people
and what I’ve been, it’s just been incredible. I have no middleman. I get to talk to my fans
directly and tell them who I am. I don’t have a journalist going, “You know the truth about
Jewel was blah blah blah blah.” And it’s not true. I actually get to
tell people what’s true. I get to have that direct
relationship and not to mention I should be a gift in, we’re all
a gift in each other’s lives. If I’m not a gift
in the life of my fans, I am not doing my job. This isn’t all about me and so
the way technology is evolved it’s much easier
for me to watch my fans, see how their
families are doing, encourage them to be
supporting one another. I love it.
– Amazing. Andy?

15:40

– What’s up Gary and team? Hadi Yousef here. Off of your inspiration, I started vlogging my startup journey. I’ve been interacting with online communities like the great Vayner Nation and just making sure that I’m putting out good content. But aside from patience and thinking about the long game, what are some things that […]

– What’s up Gary and team? Hadi Yousef here.
Off of your inspiration, I started vlogging my
startup journey. I’ve been interacting with
online communities like the great Vayner Nation and
just making sure that I’m putting out good content. But aside from patience and
thinking about the long game, what are some things that
someone like me should be doing to grow his audience?
Thanks a lot. – So I think one thing that
stands out for me and then you’ll jump in Jason is
I think more real-life stuff. Like every meetup.
– Sure. – Like Jase, you might remember
this, when I first got, it’s really fun to get your
perspective on this. When I first came
into the ecosystem,– – Yeah. – I was pouring wine at a
Jaiku, Leo Laporte meetup. – Yeah. You were the wine guy.
– Yeah, I was– – You were more
like, who’s that guy? – I was service.
I was the help. – Basically, I mean
I didn’t want to say it but it’s kinda true.
– And so like– – They’re like we
need wine here. – And meanwhile, and meanwhile I had the biggest
business in the room. – For sure. – Everybody else had
business on paper. – Yeah. – I actually had a business but
I was willing to earn my keep in to the ecosystem. That’s the advice I would
give here which is if you’re documenting your journey,
amazing but go to every I mean Israel is such a
hotbed for tech startups and just startups in general. Go to every meetup,
meet every person, be part of the ecosystem. I think you did
that extremely well. – Be everywhere.
– That’s right. – When I started Silicon
Alley Reporter here I wore a Silicon Alley Reporter
shirt every day. I had 20 of them so I was the
brand and I would show up at every party and I’d have
copies of the magazine. You have to be the brand and
you have to be everywhere but a little hack for him might be is
be the most intelligent question under the most important people’s blog posts
or their tweets. In other words,
really take your time. Forget about building your own
content and your own audience, find somebody who’s got an
audience that you would like to acquire and be the most
intelligent person in their ecosystem for a while.
– Love that. – Which is kind of what you did. You’d meet the guy you’d be like
this guy is passionate about wine but I’m here to see Leo
but this guy’s also kind of interesting too, right? And so you can put yourself in
Fred Wilson’s comments on AVC it’s like who are these people writing highly
intelligent comments? – You know what this is
really smart, especially in the Facebook ecosystem where if it’s
actually that, it populates up. – Yeah, they trend it up.
The best comment goes up. But this takes time and you
have to not be thinking about yourself with your comment. That’s the problem I think. People are trying to build a
brand so they think it’s about– – They’re pitching instead of
bringing value to the community of the micro community
within that blog post. – Correct.
– Yep. – What is the topic
we’re talking about– – Yep. – and how do you say
something highly intelligent and further the conversation? – And to you, because you
don’t come from 20 years of experience, 30 years experience
you need to put your lens on it. By the way, there’s a lot of
people reading comments on those blogs that are just like you,
entrepreneurs are trying to make it than us reading it. – We’re not
reading the comments. – So you saying here’s my
perspective from an Israeli led startup that from a
23-year-old’s perspective, you’ll get a lot
of juice from that. You need to own it. There’s way too many people
trying to fake the funk right now that their so genius
business people and they have no experience under
their fingernails. – There’s nothing more, I think,
appealing than somebody who’s a young entrepreneur saying I really don’t
understand how this works. Can somebody explain it to me or
help me because I really would like to be successful? People will come
out and help you. – 100% if you deploy the
humility and don’t fake it. – Yeah, there’s no
reason to fake it. – Well everybody does it.
And by the way, I’ve been there. When you’re not there yet,
you kinda wanna, you want to, I used to say yes and this.
It just was not smart. I should have said please
tell me and this and that. I would have got there faster. – In my meetings, any time a
word comes up that I don’t know, I say, “What does that mean?”
In a business meeting– – I wouldn’t even have meetings
then I’m terrible at vocab. – No but when you have to pitch
and someone’s like oh do you know about this?
And I’m like what is that? And I just say explain
to me what that is. And they’re like oh
it’s an acronym for this. And now I’m like now
I’m getting smarter. – Yeah. 100%.
– Right? – India, let’s more this.
I know we got a call.

8:47

I want to interact with new and more positive minded people using the power of social media and how would I go about doing that? Thank you so much, I love your show. Hope I can hear what you have to say. – This is great. What was his name? – [Dunk] Randy. – Randy. […]

I want to interact with new
and more positive minded people using the power of social media and how would
I go about doing that? Thank you so much,
I love your show. Hope I can hear
what you have to say. – This is great. What was his name? – [Dunk] Randy.
– Randy. I heard it. Randy, we’re gonna do an
experiment here and DRock by the way I know Other Tyler. Other Tyler! Get in here. There is a flaw. Staphon doesn’t edit anymore
but you what, get Staphon too! Staphon! By the way Staphon’s
new haircut is legit. – [Dunk] I love it. – Staphon looks way better. You do too. Everybody’s
upgrading their hair game. You look good man. I’m proud of you.
(laughter) Even though you’re not
editing anymore I’m making this statement because you made
the flaw you’ve made the flaw even and you love the
think you’re perfect, DRock. Other Tyler
you’ve made the flaw. The amount of times of on this
show that I’ve said link that shit up and then we
don’t is unacceptable. You’re done with it so you can
go back to your thing though you might get called back in. If I’m asking for
something to be linked up, it’s gotta be linked up.
Alright? So cool, that’s it. So like right now when
I link up what’s his name again? – [India] Randy. – Randy, I’m
gonna link up Randy. We’re gonna link his Twitter
account in YouTube and Facebook and I know some people
different and copy, I get it. We’ll also flash his handles. We’re gonna flash his handles
here at least his Twitter and here’s what’s gonna happen. Anybody who’s been watching the
show for 100 to 200 episodes is a positive and
like-minded person. We got the
community for you, Randy. Instead of giving
something philosophical I’m gonna give you
something practical. Vayner Nation if you think
you’re an awesome person and you have big ideas and you love
networking, I want you to reach out to Randy and I don’t
mean just tweet him and be like “Hey.” I mean reach out to him give
your number, email like connect Randy of the 500 people that are
gonna do it, 17 is gonna be a real thing and
there you go, man. 17 like-minded,
positive people for you. – [India] Yay!

15:27

– [Voiceover] I.K.E. asks, “As a rapper, what’s the best “marketing tips to implement?” “Should I treat music like an entrepreneur would his product?” – I would just say exactly what Gary said before, just add value. Think about a specific group of people ’cause you can’t reach everybody. I’m just being real. I don’t […]

– [Voiceover] I.K.E. asks,
“As a rapper, what’s the best “marketing tips to implement?” “Should I treat music like an
entrepreneur would his product?” – I would just say exactly
what Gary said before, just add value. Think about a specific
group of people ’cause you can’t reach everybody. I’m just being real. I don’t care how good
you are at what you do. You pick your poison, you pick
a group and you just pour into that group so that every time they listen to you
like Gary said. I’m just going to be honest. I’m like Gary I don’t listen to
anything, I don’t read anything. But I got hooked on this Beyoncé
song and I been listening to that song this morning,
I listened to it, it’s like I can’t put it down. And it’s not
because it’s Beyoncé. No disrespect but it’s not
because of what you think but when I hear the song
I hear I was here. So I’m waking up this morning
like you get to GaryVee show you got to be present. Not just there, you
got to be present ’cause you may only get to
do this one more time so I’m listening to her song, and
I felt like she wrote it for ET. – We should find out, we should
activate everybody let’s find out if B wrote it for you.
(group laughter) You think she did? – I believe she wrote it for me. I really do. – Listen, I think way too many
people, I’ll give you my advice. I think you need to make
pretend, not make pretend let me rephrase, you haven’t made it. I don’t think this was J Cole
asking the question, right? You haven’t made it. So stop being fancy. I am stunned by the fanciness in
the market of speakers, authors, entrepreneurs, athletes and
definitely rappers ’cause I got a ton of them. You’re trying to be big time, you think acting
like that is that. You know how
you promote music? Make one person every
day like your music. – Right.
– You know how you do that? By liking them first. By literally going to Twitter, I’ll give you something
real tangible. (tapping from ceiling) – Somebody loves us.
– I love it. Twitter.com/search. Twitter.com/search
go search people. You’ve got your opinion of
who you are as a rapper. Go search people
talking about Future. You think that’s your style. Jump in and say yeah
I like that track, too. Yes, I love that hook. When ET tweets that Beyoncé
spoke to me, jump in and be like yeah that part. Become part of the community. Everybody wants
everybody to love them. Love the community first
then they’ll love you back. Guilt them into loving you. – Oh that’s so ah, ah! Look guys that first video, for
real, you’d be shocked at the millions of people, that one
video has 38 million views. – Fuck! – You’ll be shocked that
I did not do that on purpose. You’d be shocked that I just,
what GaryVee just said, I poured in to that community
for about 18 years and then, boom, all of a sudden one day that seed blossomed
into the tree. 18 years. – Doing the right thing
is always the right thing. – 18 years.
– I love it. – So I also said to whoever
you are, don’t do what Gary is saying and think that six months you’re going to see the
results, or a year. Just because he told you that and you did what
he told you to do. At six months later,– – [Gary] How do
think about patience? – I mean it’s life.
It’s everything. – I’m a big, big,
big pusher patience. – Yeah, I’m just saying, because
you don’t know the result. You can only work the process. You don’t know when
the prize– – You know what I’m most
fascinated about? Everybody there right now,
how many there gave up a month before it was going to happen. – Yep, yep, yep, yep.
Weeks. – I’m worried that what happens
when you die and you go talk to God, God’s like yo, listen,
I got to show you something. You gave up on March 19, 1994,
it was gonna happen on April 7, 1994 and
you’re like what? I’m fascinated by
lack of patience. – Yeah. Yep.
– All right, let’s move on. – [Voiceover] Jacob Brown asks,
“As a PhD, what percentage of

14:17

“knowing your fans and owning your own platform!” – So much importance. I totally think you need to be able to connect with the people who are paying for your music, paying to come see your live shows, even not paying just ripping offline and really loving your music. Those of the people who support […]

“knowing your fans and
owning your own platform!” – So much importance. I totally think you need to be
able to connect with the people who are paying for your music,
paying to come see your live shows, even not paying just
ripping offline and really loving your music. Those of the people who support
your entire career if you can’t connect with them either that’s
online, face-to-face at shows etc. then you have nothing. – How much time are you guys
spending and it’s okay if it’s a zero I’m just curious how much
time are you spending actually engaging with
your fans on social? Because for me
that feels scalable. You can’t be in Des Moines, Iowa
right now but if Susie says, “I love your stuff,”
you can engage. It was such a big thing for me
in my early days but I do think that it’s becoming out of fad. I think people are spending
less time today than they did 36 months ago engaging with fans. I think it’s a little
better decline in Twitter. I think if you look at all the
social networks besides Twitter they’re more push content out. Instagram, Snapchat, YouTube you
push content out whereas Twitter when it was in it’s prime was a
little more back-and-forth so I was curious, don’t forget if it doesn’t come natural
to everybody. You’re doing other things but
where you guys right now with literally like making a video
and being like, “Thanks, Sal,” or replying to Karen in a Snap
or engaging with a comment in Instagram and
actually replying to it? Tell the truth because I’m going
to double check and call you out if you bullshit me
here in my house. – I would say not as
much as we used to. What you’re saying earlier
about how you spent 15 hours responding to comments
about an event that happened. When we first started off, Jake
was saying follow every fan. Jake, you were
really, really encouraged us. Yeah, exactly. We used to, I remember being
at the airport waiting in line responding to fans. Being in the car, responding to
fans and after certain period of time–
– You have to. I felt it actually really
worked well for us as far as building our social media fan
base but I felt like it stifled my creativity.
– Interesting. – And living, not really knowing
how to live in the real world– – Yes. – in a way I felt every moment
I had to wait or every moment I didn’t have to
talk to someone. Every moment I was sitting
at a table I was on my phone. Nowadays, I actually practiced
just giving myself an allotment of time and I feel like our fan
base is really understanding of that because we’ve been
pretty vocal of that. – Interesting. – I don’t think they think they
take it personally that it takes us five days to respond. – That’s your authentic place.
– Yeah. I also feel like spiritually I’m
going one direction where I want to spend less time online,–
– Yes. – business-wise I understand that it’s so
important to engage. – Of course. – That’s why we do
have people like Jake. – What about you? – I go through phases. We just released
an EP a month ago. I was online the entire week
pretty much just responding to people consistently. Kinda went downhill after there
and I probably spend a good three hours every week just
responding to people every Monday or every Friday I
just sit down and respond. – And where?
What platforms? – Twitter mainly.
That’s the only one. – Are you guys producing
content for Snapchat? – No.
– You really, really need to. (laughter) – I just want to say as an
artist it is really important to have a marketing firm, have
management, have friends, have people to
help curate content. What we do is we sit down, we
have a meeting once a week, hey, look at all these pictures.
These are fun pictures we’ve taken, this is what we did,
here’s what we want to say about it and have someone else kind
of do that work on that and so it’s not. – I think I don’t think that’s
an artist statement, I think it’s great that you have
self-awareness to know what works for you. ‘Cause I think a certain artists
they should be doing a ton of that because it what
comes natural to them. A lot of my business friend
contemporaries are like, “You’re running all these businesses.
Why are you spending four hours a day
engaging with fans?” I’m like, “That’s
my natural state. “It’s where I get my information
from. It’s when I want to do.” But I don’t think that’s
what everybody should do. I like listening to the
way you guys answered. What I like is I just think you
guys are figuring yourselves out and putting yourself in the best
position to succeed and I think really that
ultimately is the main play. I really do. – I think fans crave an
experience, a story much more and content much more than
they crave whether or not you’re responding to them.
– I disagree. I would actually argue and you
can be right but I’m completely and I have a lot of data to
support this believe that access is the most valuable thing
an artist can now bring to the table.
– I agree. – Access meaning
that you’re accessible? – Like some sort of access.
– Like happy birthday to you. – I think you can
touch a movement. You do it with a lot of brands
if a brand doesn’t respond to questions within four hours–
– Sure. – that’s a problem.
But when you’re an artist your responsibility is
to create amazing art. – I think that’s for sure. First of all, no good
marketing solves a shit product. If you guys engage 24/7 with
everybody but your music sucked shit, you would lose. On the flip side, I do think that people
really underestimate. I can promise you right now your
top 5,000 fans would shit their pants if you reply
to them on Snapchat. – I don’t even
know how to do that. (crosstalk and laughter) – I don’t even
know, how do you reply? – We’re not going to do this
right now because we’re still in the middle of the show. What I’m going to do right
now is even more interesting. Guys this is my snap, can you
guys make a commitment to get serious about Snap? – Oh God, no.
– Please. – I’m sorry, I can’t.
– Please. – I’ll try. I’ll try. See the thing is about Snapchat
the reason it’s the one platform that I do not use
because it’s the one,– – See you’re not even listening.
– I don’t understand. – I’m listening to you. – How do you do that and
listen at the same time? – Easy.
– Your generation, man. – No, no, no. I think that it’s behavior.
Right? It’s the 10,000 hours. You put in the
work, you can do it. – You can multitask like
that for 10,000 hours. – I think you
multi-task quite a bit. – I do.

11:19

“tech is bringing to the restaurant industry?” – Connectivity to the, the biggest change with tech to the restaurant is connectivity with the consumer. So the editor used to the guard maybe with a couple of newspapers, a couple of magazines. Listen, that consumer out there that’s connected to that is now the most important […]

“tech is bringing to the
restaurant industry?” – Connectivity to the, the
biggest change with tech to the restaurant is connectivity
with the consumer. So the editor used to the
guard maybe with a couple of newspapers, a
couple of magazines. Listen, that consumer out there
that’s connected to that is now the most important person. – This happened in
the wine business. It was Wine Spectator, it
was Robert Parker, period. New York Times for you and
maybe a couple of other things. – Gary V wasn’t up there?
– Not yet. I started a process
and then it was technology. I rode the wave, it wasn’t me. It was me understanding
what YouTube and Twitter was going to be. Instagram, do you
know Andre Mack? – Yeah.
– Andre’s my boy. I remember those
conversations early on. – He’s right here in Harlem.
– That’s right. I was like Andre this was
happening he’s doing a nice job. I’m watching him on
the ‘Gram right now. I just knew that
that was coming. And I don’t know what’s going
on in the restaurant world. I feel it’s probably similar
to what’s going on in the wine world. A big Wine Spectator and a big
Wine Advocate score are still really matters. I’m sure the same way a New
York Times review matters. But now, there
are taste makers– – But the world is not
either/or it’s both. Right?
– That’s right. Where there used
to be one option. Absolutely. – [India] I mean all my friends
and I look at Foursquare and look at Pinterest of food
when we get restaurants. – Yeah.
– Yeah. Sure. – Tristin is a
good friend of mine. One of the guys from Foursquare. – [India] There you go. – Tristan Walker?
– Yep. – He’s the best.
– He is. – I love that dude.
– He’s a good guy. And talk about
breaking the mold. – I was an investor in Gowalla
which was a competitor to Foursquare and I remember being
on call with a bunch of the investors and people on the
team, I’m like, “This guy, “Tristan Walker’s a problem.” – He would respect that
as the highest compliment. – It’s meant as a
highest compliment. I’ve been an enormous fan
of his for a long time. – And you know his get up, you
should have him on the show. His get up is amazing.
– Bevel? – From Queens.
– He’s the best. – Ivy League schools. The hustle.
– Best. Best. – [India] From Daniel.
– Daniel.

5:37

“what could TV chefs be doing to keep their audience engaged “with the community?” – I like that. Marcus, this is a good opportunity. – Yeah. – You know, as digital evolves, TV chefs how do you evolve? This is, you’ve watched this being in the food industry. Right now I’m saying oh my god […]

“what could TV chefs be doing to
keep their audience engaged “with the community?” – I like that. Marcus, this is a
good opportunity. – Yeah. – You know, as digital evolves,
TV chefs how do you evolve? This is, you’ve watched this
being in the food industry. Right now I’m saying oh my god
I’m taking selfies every day, when did entrepreneurs
become rock stars? You probably seven
to 10 years ago looked at all of your homies. You guys used to, you had to be
sitting around, I know how you guys roll because
sommeliers do the same thing. Four o’clock in the morning,
spot of, wherever you are and you’re sitting there and you’re
saying, when the hell did we become this is what
happened a decade ago? – So I think it’s progression
that came from two or three different ways. Right?
– Right. – First of Julian
Jacques, Papan. – 100%. Those two set the table. – But then Emril really
became a part of pop culture. – Pop culture. Absolutely. – And then Bobby really
took it there, right? I don’t think the word
TV chef, gonna leave. It’s really about media. Whatever you watch it on that’s
essentially what’s going to matter, right? So the screen for us was also
about figuring out sometimes we do long form, sometimes
we do 50 second video. – Sure. – I’m sure in five years a 50
second video is going to be 5 seconds. – Or I’ll be honest with
you, what were producing. We’re going 20, 30 minutes. I’m basically producing a
reality show, a documentary on two to three time a week basis. Good content is good content. – Peoples got to find content. – Does it come natural to you? I feel like when I look at
you from afar you’re such an operator, you’re
such a chef operator. You’re running businesses how
about the media side of things has it come natural or has that
been that something you know it’s important but it
doesn’t come that natural? – I’ll tell you it’s a
couple things for me. Being an adopted kid to Sweden
we were constantly stared at. Not necessarily in a bad way but
we we’re always in the center. – Right. – I look at it
almost the same thing. It’s like okay. You have something to
say, don’t cry about it. You want people to come to space
and make it sticky you got to communicate that. And you got to communicate
that hard if you’re gonna cut the clutter.
– Yes. – This is a cluttered space
and we either want to have customers or don’t.
– Yes. – We want it,
we asked for this, engage. – Yes. Got it. Very good. I’ll jump in real quick. I would say new platforms always
offer the best opportunities, this is good
advice for everybody. Right now he and I’m saying this
out loud for him and his team because I want him to, he should
very much look at Musically and if he cooks behind music on
Musically he could be the DJ Khaled of Musically and
it could change his life. I’m being dead serious. – Can we pick that? Why is this? What’s going on?
– I feel. What’s going on, what’s going
on I’ll tell you what’s going on I’ll save you time. They know that you say no to a
lot of things because you’re busy and this and that nature and
them coming to you with Musically, I’m on their side. – Not okay. – I’m 100% on their side but
Marcus I’m being dead serious if you were to make a commitment
for 30 days to make three videos a day of cooking behind music on Musically I am convinced– – Done. Done. – I’m a strange character.
– Absolutely. – I’m gonna check in 17
days and blow up your spot. – Yes. – I’m gonna use this clip and
then it’s going to be fuck you Marcus as the video. So you have to understand– – Stand in line for that though. So for everybody I’m starting to
articulate this, DRock, this is going to go somewhere. I’ve been saying it but
I’ve never said it direct. Beachfront property. The first people that bought at
Malibu, the first that bought in the Hamptons, the first
people that bought in Manhattan. The first people
that bought in Dumbo. When you buy up the real estate
that becomes the market first, you get a better deal. DJ Khaled, if you
tried to execute now Snapchat it’s noisier. Ashton on Twitter it would
have changed his career. Musically, whatever else you
want to take a look at every time there’s something new or a
new way to do things for example we are crushing video
on Facebook right now. We’re committed to it, I’m
hiring more people because right now it’s important
to Facebook which means it’s getting more reach.
– Yeah. – I’m very focused on it either
new platforms that are emerging and Snapchat is still that.
Still. – Gary, I have to ask you–
– Please. – you live in many worlds.
– Yes. – You’re an immigrant.
– Yes. – You’re an entrepreneur.
– Yes. – You’re in young media and new
media but you also have a lot of friends that are you know much
older than you but also almost like mentors but they
do business with you. How do they respond to your
sort of cutthroat success? – My thing his worked for me
progressively because at first, I basically have started from
out of my mind and completely an idiot to he’s been right
for so long he’s probably. It’s unbelievable how
70-year-old tycoons and other people that are
winning now come and look at me when I say anything. I feel like another five or
seven years, I’m like, “Okay listen here’s what you do. “Go naked, cartwheel
and make it a Gif,” and I said gif, not jif, “and make it on SmoogaSmooga.com
that’s one day old,” and I feel like very established
people will be like, “Alright.” – Alright I’ll do it. – So what’s happening and I’m
sure you I felt the same in your career with food, as you build
reputation and you know the good thing about reputation and
you’ve been the beneficiary of this as well.
It’s earned. – Yeah. It is. – People don’t
want to listen to me. As a matter of fact a lot of
people that listen to me and give me respect
doing it begrudgingly. – Yeah. – Because I do it with a
different kind of vibe than they want it.
– Oh definitely. – You know? – It’s very
direct and very smart. – I think what’s happening is–
– Honestly, I feel I save time when I listen to you. Honestly because
you’re very direct. – I understand.
– No. It’s not really
thought about how correct. – Time is something I value
a lot so that makes sense. Makes me feel good. India. – [Voiceover] Stamp and Coins
asks, “What’s the biggest change

16:03

– [Voiceover] Luca asks “What make musical.ly great? “What’s the future of it?” – What I like most I think when I go on it allows me to be creative because I might want to do comedy one and be funny that day or I want to make a lip-synch and depending upon the song […]

– [Voiceover] Luca asks
“What make musical.ly great? “What’s the future of it?” – What I like most I think
when I go on it allows me to be creative because I might want to
do comedy one and be funny that day or I want to make a
lip-synch and depending upon the song I want to do if
it’s a really sad song– – Will you made sad content
when you’re actually sad? – Yes. – Or will you make sad content
when you’re like I’ve been doing a lot of funny, I’ve been
doing a lot of this. – Both.
– Yeah. – Both.
– Because your strategic? – Exactly. As much I want to think of it
whatever I want to do let us do it but if I did 10 comedies
the other day I can’t do 10 more comedies. – How many pieces of
content will you do in a day? – When it’s a good day yeah I’m
ready some musical.lys I’ll do like three or four. If I’m coming home
tired, I’ll do one or two. – And for you?
– Same. What do you think you’ll
do the first day of summer? – Probably 10. – Sometimes I’ll be like
okay mom leave alone I’m doing musical.lys and I’ll be in
there for like two hours– – And that’s an
acceptable thing, right? Mom’s like oh crap
she’s doing musical.ly. – Exactly. She can’t
take the phone away. – She walks and she’s like–
– Mom. – (whispers) Oh I’m
sorry, I’m sorry. If I get in trouble I’m like
haha you can’t take my phone away because I can stop posting
musical.lys because they’ll be like where’s Arii
or where’s Ariel? – What about the comments? Obviously comments, especially
at the young ages they you’re at, right, how down do you get
when the comments are mean or how do you deal with positive
versus negative comments? – At the beginning, when I
first started there was a lot of comments and it was like mean. I have a really high esteem
so I was like I don’t care. I don’t even look at
my comments at all. I don’t look at none of them. – Right because you don’t
want to get down on the stuff that’s negative.
– Yeah. – I actually started an
anti-bullying movement because at first I got a lot of comments
in the same thing just for stupid things. Oh you’re ugly, oh what
are you doing? Duh, duh, duh. And instead of pushing to the
side because that’s what most people I saw do
they just ignore it. I tweeted about and I was like
this isn’t right because if I’m getting it then who
knows there might be another little girl that gets it. – Of course. And for
many people watching you’re a little girl so
that makes sense. Real quick have you thought
about engaging the comments? Do you say thanks
when people are giving you love and
things like that nature? – On Instagram it’s really hard
to see because I have so much. I have 1.1 million, she has 1.9
it’s hard to see, but Twitter is mainly where I notice a lot of
people and I’ll favorite all the tweets when I tweet.
– Got it. – On Intagram, it’s hard like
she said it’s hard to do one by one but there’s days where I’ll
post a picture of me hugging a supporter and saying
thank you to everybody. – And how do you think in
community in musical.ly? – Huh? – How do you think about
the community in musical.ly? – I think it’s positive, there’s
just some kids that are cruel and they’ll just go on to our
pages, comment rude things. – Have you thought of engaging
with them are incorporating them into your content? – Yeah. I actually
thank you of that. I talked about that with
my family the other day. I wanted to start doing
once a week of maybe a duet competition. – And how you guys
think about collaborations? Obviously I assume you guys
collaborate with each other that was easy have you
done a lot of collabos? – Yes. Not a lot I’ve done
on with three or four. – Do you get asked by a lot of
people who are trying to build up their musical.lys
to do a collaboration? – Not really. If I collabed with someone
it’ll probably be like my cousin because she’s also
musical.ly and she loves it. Were going to actually an
event and a week or so like 10 days called Playlist Live and
all of our friends that we’re in a group chat with are going to
be there so they all want to collab and we’re very excited. – DRock. Let’s get over
there and collab. Okay, India. – [Voiceover] Paul asks, “Will
Snapchat ever allow us to

19:43

daisy among producers some way to artists from where business and have not seen this question if you’re an artist manager was something you would have your artists do that artists right now aren’t leveraging something completely different color box thanks a lot Daisy cool shit I would probably be focused on musically I’m fascinated […]

daisy among producers some way to
artists from where business and have not seen this question if you’re an artist
manager was something you would have your artists do that artists right now
aren’t leveraging something completely different color box thanks a lot Daisy
cool shit I would probably be focused on musically I’m fascinated by musically
right now to social network that’s emerging it’s around music and I think
that if you’re an artist and you’re doing creative on top of your own music
and then reaching out to other people so many attributes down very tactically
because it can lead to what musicians can be doing a musically article which
would love to get out there because I think musically is absolutely at least
already in your territory where it’s like really got my attention you should
use an app that reminds me about doubles match for a lot of people do
lip-synching but you can also do buying and then supreme videos behind music because they figured out
the music rates or I don’t know why but I know these days you couldn’t get them
up the public in terms of service and how much you can sample did it anyway if
I was a musician I would try and put our content on top of my own music but that
may not popular music’s not as popular as all the other music but what I would
do is start reaching out to other influencers in that community one of the
best ways to reach out to people and communities to become part of the
community I’m spam everybody but if you actually
read and engaged and commented and shared and we’re part of ready for two
years you bought permission to throw your
right hook I would become a major major part of musically I would use my own
music and create content would use other people’s music concrete contact i would
comment on the top hundred people’s content gauge become a join any even
Barbados I would literally fly by the New Yorker la musically meetup you
become the new community and now you’ve got permission to do thinks and
so for me that’s what I would do I would absolutely become part of the musical
community engage comment share create and then do real life things engage with
them and other networks comment on the incident the couple’s family just become
part of it and then I really think your chance of popping out because I think if
you think about it imagine if you were doing this one liner
early on and got the forty niners to do something with your music and meaning
you can really really hit and then if you’re a musician you can actually write
a hook that surround musically culture like at fifteen second flip you know
like you could look to you know she thought was weird but you know like you
could actually integrate something that’s unique about musically in a song
then people would use you know delic snapshot you know like you know
like that kind of stuff but yeah hold it down I’m going to show you really really
rock solid show ya question day how many

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