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Nov. 3, 2025 - Fresh & Fit
01:53:38
How To Make Money And Gain A Million Followers On X
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All right, guys, and we're live.
Welcome back to the show.
Today's Monday Monday with Dom Looker.
Oh, yeah.
We're going to cover today how to get followers on X and of course make money.
Let's go.
All right, and we're back.
Yo, Don, what's going on, brother?
Not much, man.
Just getting back from DC.
How was that?
It was good, man.
Just nothing really compares to Miami.
It's not spoiled me down here, bro.
Whenever leave Miami, I feel like PCM is gone.
I need to come out fast as hell because Miami's the best, bro.
I'm telling you.
Halloween was late too, right?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
It was for Halloween.
So, I mean, the Halloween in Miami compared to like DC, it's just a complete difference.
And most of the people there, I'm noticing, like, a whole lot younger.
The cool thing about Miami, I'm noticing most people in the clubs, they're around like our ages and stuff.
It's not really, you surrounded by young kids, so you never really feel out of place.
Yeah, thing with Miami, you got like different sections.
It's for Laudale, and it's Miami, of course, and it's in the middle.
But younger is mainly for Laudale.
I said older is kind of like Miami.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So it's good.
It's good.
So today we're going to cover Twitter, which is X now, right?
And it's funny because I'm not a fan of X.
I know you're definitely big on X. I'm learning as I go.
I'm used to Instagram, but I know X is powerful because you make a lot of money on X.
Yeah, a lot of followers as well.
So let's start from the very beginning, though.
Where did you get started, childhood growing up, and who you are as a person?
Well, I genuinely started with, you know, doing like political content, but before that, I was focusing on my credit repair business and I was just doing that instead of doing a nine-to-five mainly through the most part of my life.
I started that up in 2018 and I ran that business all the way till 2023, I would say, because I stopped that when I went viral.
I went viral in 2023.
I got a phone call from Senator Warnock at the time in Georgia.
And Herschel Walker was running against him in a Senate campaign.
And I was a Nashville resident and they were asking me to vote in a Georgia election.
What's the most you ever made with your credit business?
Most you ever made?
I was making like 60 a year.
So it was like 60 something a year about with my benefits and everything else.
I'll bring in like a max like 70, 80 on the best like years, but that was only happened like once or twice.
Okay.
And then you went viral and you got a phone call.
What happened with a phone call?
They were asking me to vote in an election.
It was illegal for me to vote in a Georgia election living in Tennessee.
And they asked me to mail in the vote.
So I recorded it and I had a debate with the woman that was trying to get me to vote Democrat.
And the debate went pretty viral.
It got me about 347,000 views on X, which really isn't that much, man, when you consider how people, most viral moment, most people, viral moment, 10 million, 15 million views.
So it's funny.
I didn't have much, but I just needed a little bit to make a lot.
So that 300,000 views, I catapulted from that.
I gained like 30,000 followers.
What was the tweet exactly?
It was, I just received a phone call from Senator Warnock, and they asked me to vote in election for Georgia election, although I live in Tennessee.
I did a few things, though, to kind of help it out a lot.
I got the phone call two weeks before I actually posted it.
And I saved it because I knew they were going into a runoff election.
I waited until that weekend.
And since I was just a regular person, I followed all the people that was a part of Herschel Walker's campaign and Senator Warnock's campaign.
And I followed Fox News and all the other news medias.
And Twitter had like a limit for how many people I could follow, like 25 or 40 at a time.
So throughout those first two weeks, I was just following as many people I could on the campaign.
That way, when I posted, it increased the odds of them seeing it.
Okay.
So let's start from the very beginning as well, back to when you went viral.
What was the next step you did to progress to where you are now?
It's really with having a title because when you go viral, the world is looking for an identification.
They want to know what type of creator you are, what you are, and what they're going to be getting for the next couple of years because it's like a TV show.
I looked at myself like a show.
I stopped looking at myself like a person in the brand.
If I was to watch a new show, that first season, that first episode, first three episodes, it might be good, but it has to have a direction.
And I was like, I just don't want to be a Trump supporter because I wouldn't even wear like Trump merch because I didn't want to get put into just that niche.
So I was like, I'll do journalism.
I was doing blogs on my credit repair business.
I was dropping like four or five blogs a day.
And a lot of them got on the first place of Google for many financial questions, like how much is the oil change?
How much is what credit score is a high credit score and things like that?
And I was doing like 500, 850-word blogs, like four times a day.
Damn.
So I gained like journalists.
That's a lot.
Yeah.
I gained a lot of skills from being a journalist there.
And I just applied that to X because I knew everything about SEO.
So would you say your prior experience would that help to you on X for sure?
Oh, definitely.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So someone watching is not in that field or doesn't have that experience.
How should they start?
Obviously, you know, having an idea of where you want to go.
You said you want to be your own TV show past just a personal blog.
Where should they start then, you think?
The first thing they should start is, you know, find out what content they really enjoy.
And I know it sounds so cliche, but I genuinely enjoy politics.
I've done hip-hop.
I've done all these other things, but I've always had a love for politics and culture and just, you know, overall discussion about where humanity is going as a whole.
So you're saying find what you're passionate about and post that pretty much.
Find what you're passionate about is the first thing.
And once you find that passion, because it's going to be what you know most about and it'll be the most entertaining when you present it to the people.
The second most important thing is to start speaking on whoever hot in that niche.
Start referencing it, talking about it, or even if they're doing something you disagree with, then publicly disagree with it.
Just make sure you don't blackball yourself, but get yourself into the discussion because people are already looking for that type of content.
Just show them that you have something different to offer.
Instead of just trying to get people to come to you, go to where the people are going and always comment on what's going on.
So Myron is a great example.
Myron came on Twitter a year or two ago and started dominating, getting hundreds of thousands of followers because he constantly, constantly kept commenting on whatever was publicly being talked about, whether it be from streaming or from politics.
And after a while, you start talking about what's going on.
And if it's a unique take, people will start adding you into the discussion.
Now, Myron's on stage speaking with me at political events.
And that I would say a lot of that attributes to Twitter replies.
So you can build a lot, a whole, and the great thing with Twitter, it's a great way to break into new niches because when you're making content, like if you're doing Fresh and Fit, you can only do so much with video content, but you have time on Twitter.
You can break into new niches, following specific people.
Like I said, commenting on those specific people in that niche, and Twitter will start to add you in the algorithm.
You just have to force yourself into the algo.
So when you say respond, do you mean like retweet or repost?
Comment.
Only really comment.
You don't really want to retweet.
I don't recommend, and it's crazy because this would be defeating for me, but I don't recommend people to retweet or quote tweet if they're trying to be a creator.
Really?
Because your Twitter profile is like your resume.
Yo, bro, I didn't know that, bro.
What happened?
I don't have no retweets.
Every retweet calls for me because every retweet, it kills down your algo or something.
So it's like a resume.
If you're a regular Joe Shopping.
Come today.
No more retweets, nigga.
It's over with.
Stupid algo completely.
So if you're brand new and you know nothing about you and they go to your Twitter profile and the first thing that they see is eight, nine different creators, they're frantically searching for your content.
They might scroll off and might not even follow because they're like, well, I see what all these other people have to offer, but they're looking for you.
But if they go on your Twitter profile and they just see nothing but your content, they're more likely to give you that follow because it's concise and it's understandable and it's you.
They know it's your content.
They don't got to search for it.
But some Twitter profiles have so many retweets, quote tweets, and replies that it's hard to find out, find their main post.
So it takes a lot of attention away from what people need to be, what they need people to see.
It's funny.
I didn't see it that way.
I thought I was like, I'll get some clicks and some views from that person's post as well.
So I'm supposed to repost it with my quote.
But yeah, that's not the problem.
The reposting, the sad truth is, it only helps the person to get posted.
Wow.
It does not for those people pages.
Like, reposting only helps those that get posted.
Really?
Well, no, I know that part.
Okay.
So you said you made 60, 70K for your business before, right?
Obviously, credit repair.
Yeah.
What are you making now on Twitter with one post?
I know what you're making.
Oh, you're telling people so that they know.
For like one post, you know, I've gone up to like, it can be 35,000 per post.
And that's for if it's a news post.
So there's two different types of postings.
You can get Dom Luker the person, or you could get Dom Luker the news because if you want me to promote a product, I can make a video and say I stand behind it.
And that might be cheaper than making it news because, well, Dom Luker just saying that he likes your product.
That don't necessarily make it news.
It might become news.
But if I say breaking news, this product is going viral because this and that and mainstream media, them are quoting it and other creators are quoting it.
That's where the pricing will get high at.
Well, the funny part is you yourself, I didn't know who you were fully.
Obviously, I saw we met you back in the day.
Yeah.
And kind of find out your tweets go everywhere, bro.
Yeah, yeah.
Billionaires on your tweets.
People in parliament own your tweets.
You know, government.
So it's a big effect.
Now, you told me before as well, that's the price for a tweet for 24 hours.
Yeah, you tell them what that means.
Yeah, so you can, now as a Twitter creator, you can delete, and I don't want to snitch on him, but there's a dude I know that charged $40,000 for a tweet.
He's a top X creator.
They just dropped a list for the top like 100x creators.
He's like, I ain't going to snitch on him, but he's between number 40 and number 50.
And he charged $45,000 for a tweet, and he keeps it there only for 24 hours and delete it.
And that's it, just 24 hours.
Now, people that go, keep it up permanently because I feel like if you're deleting tweets, it makes it look like you're getting paid for it.
Or it just looks disingenuous like you don't believe in the product itself.
Like as if if I delete the tweets, I would be worried that it makes it look like I don't believe in the product if I push it.
Yeah.
So you're telling me I could work my way up on Twitter, which is X, build up a platform and sell ad tweets for 30 to 40, 50.
You can, but what makes it a little bit specific is because mine is like news.
So when you look at wires, Daily Wire, Business Wire, Newswire, they're charging companies hundreds of thousands of dollars just to get posted on small articles on their websites because it's news.
So just add to your point, on my main Instagram page, which was really big, I would charge for story posts one to 5K.
Yeah.
Now, 24 hours for just one post, but which was a lot because obviously, you know, we're popping, things are going off.
And 30, 40K for a tweet is insane, though, bro.
See, like, and that's what I said.
So if I was charging as me as the creator, that would be around my pricing.
Like, if someone asks for me to do something and be like, hey, I think this is real cool, or hey, you should support this guy, check him out, or whatever.
That's just me as a person giving my own personal opinion.
So it's significantly cheaper.
But if I'm posting that and it's going to be in front of governments, presidents, et cetera, and I say that's news, they're going to take it as it being news.
Mainstream media will pick it up.
Yahoo News be the first one.
They're going to pick it up.
And other people are going to pick it up and get New York Times.
I remember you reposted when that fight broke out on the 305 podcast.
Subs went up.
Followers went up.
That was fucking amazing.
So, so let me get this straight.
Who's paying for these ads?
Is it companies?
Is it like government funding people?
Companies.
Mainly companies, yeah.
Some people do get paid from government.
Below-key, huh?
Yeah.
I've heard some like Harry Sisson, a Democrat, he made over a million dollars, like 1.3 million, they reported from working with Democrats in the election.
That's a lot.
So they made him a millionaire.
So you can make a lot of money just from Twitter.
As long as, from what I know specifically, if you're in a news section, people that aren't doing news, they're not going to make that much because they could be a creator with hundreds of thousands of millions of followers.
And you could genuinely say something that gets a lot of traction, but is the world going to move off of it?
So examples like that motherfucker not real girl.
She was viral for two weeks until I added a video from TikTok of an individual claiming that there's a woman, a man sitting behind her that had like reptile eyes and was a shapeshifter, which made her freak out.
I was the original person that posted that, and it made the entire thing massive.
Everyone started posting memes of a dude, a green reptile in a green hoodie.
And that originated for me.
Like that story became so big.
Or even like Dank Demos, the 500-pound rapper from Lyft.
I made her famous single-handedly.
I made her famous.
And I do this time and time again.
It's in my press kit.
I've done it like 16 times.
I made people famous.
It has a lot of power in that Twitter.
And all I asked initially was, does anyone know who this rapper is?
It was her sitting on top of a truck and she had a dog in her hand.
And she was making the truck lean while she was rapping because she was so big.
She got so much traffic from that.
She started taking a rap career seriously and then sued Lyft.
Wrestling was history.
Did she win that lawsuit with Lyft?
So they didn't announce if she won or lost, but I kind of feel like she got something out of it.
Probably from how they make it seem.
She got something, which is great.
She's a pretty big girl.
She's pretty big.
Okay.
So just so I can come back here, let's say I'm new to this, right?
I want to make money on Twitter.
I've seen where X is popping off.
It's the news.
It's the biggest news outlet for people nowadays.
Where do I start?
And you mentioned news is where people should go through and want to use that road to make money.
News, right?
Because I know academics does like his posts as well for rock culture.
That was happening in industry.
He gets paid a bag.
Yeah.
A real bag.
So news is definitely where it's at.
Even like, it doesn't even matter if you want to enter your content and being a chef.
It doesn't matter if it's OF.
It doesn't matter how you enter.
You need to understand that Twitter is a news app first, social media second.
That's why Elon Musk will always brag about the leaderboards on the App Store of Twitter being number one news app.
You'll never hear him talk about Twitter's stats and the social media numbers.
No.
Because it's not something he's trying to aim for.
He just wants Twitter to be the number one source for news in the world.
So if you're constantly in the mindset that I'm on a news app, try to make something that's news or comment, add unique commentary on the news.
So people wake up every morning, go to TikTok for their daily updates.
Yeah.
I think real men go to X.
Yeah, definitely.
TikTok is for girls, bro.
TikTok is, it's weird.
It's kind of like liberals and conservatism because TikTok is where you see a lot of people when they were liberals, when they're younger, they'll believe almost everything that they see on TikTok about up to the age of 26.
And then you see by after 26, people let TikTok go and start getting their news off Twitter.
I think it's just a growing process.
Like almost this right surpasses now with social media.
It's been here so long.
The more mature people, they're going to Twitter.
Just to break the ice a little bit here more, uh, Dom, there's a theory about the debt internet space, yeah.
And we talked about a little bit before the show, but if you notice, everyone's views are down, yeah, like doesn't matter creator, you know, um, you know, uh, news outlet, the views are down now.
Twitter itself, which is X basically, has a lot of up and down, I think, and I know definitely.
Why is that?
I've had the same theory because, like I was saying, every time that my Twitter's down, my Instagram's down, my YouTube down.
And I would drop, like last year, I was dropping like four YouTube videos a day, and each YouTube video was like 10 minutes to 30 minutes each.
And there were days that every single day that my YouTube was up, Twitter was up, Instagram was up.
Every single time that YouTube is down, Instagram is down, and Twitter is down.
But the same can be said for other creators.
A creator that might average more likes than me or views than me will still get lower on that day that I'm doing less.
I don't know.
I'm starting to feel like, like I said, social media companies, a mass majority, at least 40% of them are all botted and they're controlling the narrative because they can't afford for investors to know that most of it is fake.
I mean, if you're telling investors, yeah, you got 40 million, 80 million users, investors going to invest off the strength of how many people there, but you can inflate those numbers.
Like everyone's worried about being scammed.
I think social media users, I mean, social media companies are inflating numbers to scam investors.
So here's some insight information as well that I've seen over the years being in industry, right?
So remember Hassan?
He shocked his dog, allegedly, with a shot collar.
He should have been banned multiple times on Twitch.
I've been told for other occurrences, of course, you know, the whole stuff for Israel.
But it's funny, he's never been banned fully, and he's always been back.
And then I wonder, what's the difference between him and someone on Twitch, someone on Kik, someone on YouTube hasn't been banned.
And all it is that they're cool with the CEOs.
Yeah.
So it tells me if I'm cool with the CEO of a company, I get first option.
I get first bets because I am cool with the owner, which means networking W, which means I'll be okay.
So that privilege that I have is given to me by my connection.
Yeah.
Which is someone that's a regular streamer or creator.
Oh, this happened.
I'm sorry.
You're banned.
So I think for people watching that want to be a creator, your best best to get cool with people, either in staff or the owner, so you have a better chance of surviving.
Because guys, platforms are very fickle.
One minute you're up, one minute you're down.
One minute you're right, one minute you're wrong.
So that's what I've seen happen as well.
And then think about it long term.
If I'm an actual company, I don't want to make money for my company.
I need good numbers.
So if my top streamer has low numbers or is banned, I'm cooked.
Yep.
Look at Kaiser Nat.
He saved Twitch, bro.
Because without Kaiser Nat, bro, they'll be done for.
Yeah, they have nothing.
You know, right with the owners, because I even experienced it myself.
So I was like, regardless of how fast I was going on Twitter, I was the one that was like somewhat the anarchist, the underdog.
Because Twitter at the time, they had a group of creators, and I could go ahead and reveal that here.
That was kind of like Elon's favorites at the time.
They had a pack.
You had Ian Miles Cheong, you had Ashley St. Clair, you had my boy Wall Street Bets.
I think you had the Autism one.
You had Doge Designer, and you had this CB Penny.
And it was like two more.
But it was a group of people that, man, it was so messed up that although my numbers was killing everyone, just because they had a relationship, Elon Musk was flying these people down to his house in Austin.
Yep.
And I'm like, damn, these people at X headquarters.
These people are getting way larger bags than me.
And it was blatantly obvious that I was hotter.
It was blatantly obvious that I had more than them.
I mean, I'm even seeing individuals that were getting invited to VP debates.
I remember Addie Vance had a VP debate.
I forgot what it was.
His vice president debate.
How are they there?
Everyone was there with me.
And this is before I was trying to network.
Like my first two years in the game, I'm like, I'm going to work hard enough to where they're going to call me.
Sometimes that call ain't going to happen no matter big you got.
And I used to think that the people that was in front of the camera got a phone call.
It didn't dawn on me that some of these niggas made a call that made a call.
And maybe that moment was so big, but you don't never know how people got there.
It's just them being there that matters.
And that's what I was messing me up through the first part of my career.
I was waiting on Elon to call me.
I wasn't networking with the people to see how they did it.
I'm like, shit, when am I going to get my call?
I'm hot in everyone.
Well, they know they didn't have to be that hot to get in the room.
People think there's only one way to make it, which is just make content and things are going to show up for you.
But you got to do more than just that.
You got to get behind the camera on the camera and make things work.
So, okay, so let's talk about money now.
So, we mentioned before how much you can make off of one post for yourself as a news outlet.
But let's say someone wants to make money, in other words, on X. How could they make money?
There's a lot.
There's affiliates you can do through affiliates.
You like posting people links, get paid through that.
That's the most simple way.
Monetization is another way.
Elon must say he wants to improve the monetization.
There's people.
Oh, by the way, I got paid last month.
You know how much like 12, 14.
made 48 dollars yeah and 20 cents they can start making so especially for the average american they can make like four thousand six thousand every two weeks That's something realistic.
If an average American wants to make some extra money, Twitter can definitely bring them like an extra $4,000, but they have to be posting consistently and getting a lot of hot posts.
So, okay, how much should they post?
And then, I guess, for example, when should they post?
So, it's more so with replies.
So, with your regular posts, maybe post like 10, 15 a day or so, but mainly focus on replies.
Can I post today?
Yeah, but I know someone named Gunther Eagleman, like my boy Gunther.
This dude, bro, I ain't never seen no one post like this dude, but this dude is posting man, it sounds so fake.
Oh, this nigga posting like 4-6,000, like, man, I've seen like, I'm dead serious.
4-6,000, what I've seen him post like 4,000.
Multiple accounts, though, right?
What?
No, dude, you can go to Gunther Eagleman.
This dude is legendary, bro.
And he, uh, like 4-6,000 or what?
I've seen like the post one time, 4,000 one day once.
What can post crazy?
And every day, every single day, Gunther is posting hundreds and hundreds and hundreds of times because Gunther is constantly commenting.
He might, man, and posting a lot too.
So he might quote tweets 60 times.
He might make an original post 200 times, but he might reply 600, 800, 900.
He's replying to like every post that pops on the timeline.
So let me just understand this for the audience too, as well.
When you say reply, you mean comment on the actual posts?
So what's better?
Can you mention before?
Don't really repost because it doesn't do what you're doing.
That's not reposting.
It was more for the person.
You said comment on the actual post.
Yeah, definitely.
And then that's it.
Yeah, definitely.
Commenting on the post is one of the best things you can do, especially if you're in politics.
Let's say you're a Democrat and you comment on a prominent Republican.
You're about to get a lot of attention just because you disagree.
And a lot of Republicans are going to attack you, which is going to make Democrats come to your defense.
That's so smart.
So on Instagram, right, there's a similar method you can do.
Where, for example, you want new followers, right?
So whatever your niche is, you want to comment something to add to the post.
For example, let's say I'm in basketball, right?
And I'm an aspiring like basketball myself.
I play for a team, whatever.
You can be like, oh, he did this and this.
He should have did this XYZ.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Oh, shit.
That guy's right.
Let me look at his page.
They go to your page.
Oh, shit.
It's popping.
So it's kind of like you want to leave my to your page, but that's really smart because you're going to the opposition side to get it's the fastest way to do it.
That's part of chaos.
X runs on chaos.
X runs on drama.
So if you go on the opposite, it's the fastest way to grow your X account.
A lot of people will tell you to go to the people that like you, but I'm just telling you what really works.
Yeah.
You want to go to the people that don't like you.
That's going to go a lot.
I just don't like drama, bro.
I don't, I don't like personally, I don't like drama and arguing people back and forth.
I just think it's like a lot, but for X to see where it works for X.
It's weird because you won't never catch me argue with no one on any other app.
But there's something about X, like, that's just the way it is.
It's like that place is an arena.
It's the battlefield, bro.
It's like you're fighting people with words.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
All beefs start on X, in my opinion.
Most of the allegations start on X. You almost see nothing never start on Instagram.
And if they did post something on Instagram, it's when it gets on X when niggas get pissed.
Oh, no, no, no, bro.
Instagram is like a soft, like intro.
Yeah.
But goes on X, that shit goes viral.
There's a tweet that you post.
I forgot what it was.
You posted it.
It went super viral.
I forgot what it was recently.
But yeah, when it goes to X though, it goes because it'll be like your page, other pages.
That's the news posting real shit.
Yeah.
To me, I think right now on X, the most important pages to get posted to change your life, being by unbiased, is Fearbuck, Tom Lucre, and Connor Rugg.
Those three pages have changed lives.
I've seen it.
I know my competition.
And I always give props to those that's killing it.
Those, those other two, they change their lives too.
I've seen it.
I've seen them make stars.
Fearbuck is just weird to just watch how he's rose, man.
It's just so amazing.
It's crazy.
Fearbuck is one of those guys that was there at the beginning to see the evolution of streaming.
And lucky for him, he kept posting, like you said, most times a day.
And then someone I want to say the streamer's name that saw opportunities said, you know what, Fairbuck?
Got him right.
I need you on the team.
Yeah.
And that was it.
That's just it was history.
He got in front of the right people constantly over and over.
And then what was unique with Fearbuck, he dominated Elaine.
Like you say, it was just growing.
It was new.
So he became the only source because he was the only one that was paying attention to him.
By the way, shout out to him, man.
He's a very good person, man, behind the scenes.
But so I'll say this.
Let's say I need to go viral on X. Tell me through the process of that A to Z. First thing you would do is keywords.
So X is just like Google.
X has the same SEO system as Google.
So the words you say on X is more important than anywhere else on the internet.
So really doesn't matter the picture, the video.
All of that does matter.
Okay.
So it all matters.
So X is a combination of all.
So let me see.
What's one of the recent posts I have?
Yeah, because see, all the same with X, guys, I had no idea.
X to me is a foreign concept.
I think it's more politics than like news, like you said before, which I quite frankly am not that interested in.
But for people watching that want to get into that space, Dom is X-Pray here.
I will say, though, that X does go viral with news, and I think it's the best spot for news anyway.
So here's a great example: my recent post, it's doing hot.
It's going to be a million views, definitely.
It's two hours ago.
It's at 230k views, one of the hottest ones of the day.
And I automatically would know why because it's a breaking news post.
People like those anyway.
But it's the wording.
So it's about Lana Rhodes.
She's a former adult star.
Let's put it on the screen, guys.
His last post with Donna Rhodes.
The ex-porn star is crying about her videos online.
Yeah, she wants them to be.
So there's plenty of ways that you could present this to the people that will cause it to flop.
So I did the edit.
You know, it's a few things I did.
So yeah, we put it on screen to make sure that it would go viral.
All right.
Here we go.
All right.
So the first part of this, of course, so like me doing this for two years, I know the first thing that men are going to see when they look at this photo.
So some people aren't going to read the text first.
They can look at the photo.
So you need something striking.
Normally, I want something red or yellow because those are the first colors that you see.
But if you're scrolling on social media, if you scroll on social media, you're automatically, whether you male or female, don't go to the left and see what is that on your timeline.
Then you go to the right and you see the, it's just such a different context.
It makes you want to read up top.
Now, when you go to the wording to find it, anyone searching for the word adult site, anyone searching for broke down in tears or any of that, it can come up through Twitter search.
So you have to be very, very intentional with what you word.
Every single word can be searched.
So when you search on Twitter, if you typed in pleading with every adult site, this post will come up.
That's all you have to do is type in those, that last few words, and this will come up.
So every word on your post is searchable.
So if it's the NFL or something like that, if you guys notice when I talk about celebrities, it'd be niggas that everyone knows.
I'll be like, which I never revealed is like, I might be like Hollywood actor, George Clooney.
Nigga, everyone knows George Clooney.
But how many people are searching the word Hollywood and actor?
Those are extra views.
Those are extra people that you're going to reach.
It's only so many people searching George Clooney, but there's a lot more people searching the word Hollywood and the word actor.
So you want to have those keywords in there and make sure that it can coincide with the post to help boost it up.
But understanding keywords, understanding the human mind of what people are going to click on, what they're interested in.
It's really as you go, you get to learn your audience and you can predict what everyone's going to say.
I could guarantee what my audience is going to say per person.
Why'd you make the post like glitch like that?
Because Twitter does better when you have a video.
So I converted the post.
I first added it to a collage.
By the way, man, Type Tips for Dom.
That was some sauce go.
See, nigga throw this down, right?
This is some value.
Money money.
Yeah, for sure.
Because like, okay, look, in school, you don't learn none of this shit, bro.
Nah.
And I someone learned Instagram myself.
It takes time to go through mistakes, trial and error, fail hard.
That really just told me, bro, I had no idea.
So videos actually.
Videos.
Wow.
Because they wanted, Elon did that himself.
He kind of deboosted how photos are because he wants videos to constantly pop up on your timeline.
That way it could subconsciously tell you that I should be posting video content.
You know what I thought about from your actual explanation just now?
Imagine, right, it was a world event and nobody really saw what happened because they're obviously in a different country.
But if it shows up an X, everyone's going to see it.
So now it's not a, well, it's more global now because I can post on Twitter.
Yep.
Go viral.
And everyone's going to see it.
So that's pretty good.
X is super powerful.
There are countries that get sanctioned and wars and stuff that get started just from X and tweets.
You got every terrorist organization that still is on X and they allow them to like it's a it's a completely different world, man.
I've done stuff that has reached parliament level.
I'm one of my persons, like with Haiti, and then even with Australia.
So the Australian parliament, X had to send three executives to the Australian parliament because Australia was demanding for me to get banned.
Okay.
What?
Question.
Are you banned from Australia?
Are you banned?
I'm not banned from there, but I think they got it to where my posts don't appear.
All right, Dom, just to me and you, bro.
We need to go there, bro.
To Australia?
The baddies are there, bro.
Yo, listen.
I was, you know, I was out and about and Miss Aussie was around the corner and have to take a peek, you know?
But no, we need to go to Australia, bro.
I heard this good start, but dangerous.
Go coast.
Yeah, but it's dangerous.
I know they got like the worst bugs and shit down there, ain't it?
Really?
Like, almost everything can kill you.
Everyone in the city, nigga.
Well, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
But yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Like, some of the most dangerous creatures on earth are in Australia.
Bro, who's going for creatures, nigga?
They said it everywhere, though.
That's how everywhere it is.
Yeah.
Even though the campus is like, what's the guy's name that was arrested over there?
The YouTuber.
I met him in the UK one time.
No, no.
Guys, it's in the chat, though.
He was like an artist, too.
He was with Chunks.
Chunks.
Yes.
Nobody knows his name?
I remember the scene.
He opened a jail.
He was like a UK.
It was a grape case?
Yes.
What's his name?
Someone knows it.
No, but Tally.
He was black.
He's black.
Anyhow, Philly?
Young Philly.
Young Philly.
Yeah.
Yeah, a long time ago.
Been over there for a minute, bro.
From an allegation, that's crazy.
Which I don't know if it's true or not, but that's that's wild, bro.
Yeah, it's also an allegation.
It's a weird spot, man.
But I thought about that.
I want to travel and see it.
Yeah, kangaroos, man.
You can't find them pretty much.
Um, yeah, all the endorsement deals before that, bro.
Gone, bro.
I'm not gonna lie, man.
I told a story about when I met him in the club.
That nigga was mad thirsty, bro.
No, man.
But again, I can't say what happened.
I was in there, but I would think it was mad thirsty, bro.
Holy shit.
Ain't a good sign.
Yeah.
You got it, boss man Belly.
Young Philly.
Yep.
Guys, you got it, brother.
So, okay, first up there says, hey, Don, what time do you recommend posting, I guess, on X?
Yeah.
So start at 8 a.m.
Always start at 8 a.m. or never let me.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Never, never sleep past 8 a.m.
You can start by 7 a.m.
Yeah, if you want to do you said post at 8 a.m.
Yeah, starting at 8 a.m.
And the reason being I wake up by like 10, bro.
It's really no way to explain why, but the algorithm, for some reason, if you were to post at 12, it's like the algorithm, it chooses its winners for the day on X.
I don't know how to explain it, but it has a deciding process for some reason before 8:30 of who's posted, who has the best post by then, and it's going to keep an eye on them for the next 24 hours.
Bro, that's some algo shit that like you got to be working there and know that's how you know how you figure out I've done because I've posted so many times.
So like when you post tens and tens of thousands, you start to see patterns.
And I studied all my competition.
I've talked to all of the execs.
I've talked to like employees.
I know for a fact I know X more than anyone else on this planet.
So you need to post on X before 8 a.m.
Yeah.
Bro, you remember you might not have seen.
I went to war with community notes.
I flipped that entire app on his head.
I was the reason why Elon Musk was beefing with advertisers and he said, fuck you.
It was because of me.
It was because their top creator was anti-Israel.
Bro, imagine Mr. Beast just turned anti-Israel.
That's what happened to X.
I was the number one creator.
They're like, bro, what the fuck is, you know, so yeah, things got really crazy.
But I knew how to flip that app on his head because I turned community notes on its own.
Like, I would do things that people never seen before.
I would be like, Muslims killed Jesus Christ.
Community notes would correct them and say the Jews did.
I would say Muslims are.
It was sick.
I know that album's so good, bro.
Elon Musk, it infuriated because I knew it better than he bought the app.
I learned it.
Were you ever banned before on X?
I got banned once, and it was because it was actually false.
I think it was because of the Obama investigation.
But they banned me over a post I made two weeks ago, and it was about a girl that was actually being abused up in Australia.
And this is actually what leaded to Australia trying to get me banned.
I never posted the video, but I posted about an article, and there was an article from Indonesia that covered on the story.
When I was revealing the information about Obama, I revealed that the pool that that dude drowned in was like three feet tall, like three feet deep for the next like two, three miles.
After I posted that, bro, I got banned 40 minutes after that.
Now, remember, Elon Musk and Obama are actually cool in real life.
They've never severed their relationship.
They've always been cool.
It's odd to me, and it was the number one trending topic when they banned me because everyone was asking for me to come back.
It's just that when they banned me, they brought it up and they made it about something that I posted two weeks ago.
If I posted about child exploitation, and if I ever posted something that was like against the law, social media ain't gonna allow that for two weeks, especially for their top creator.
Yeah, so they were finding an excuse.
It was literally 30, 40 minutes after I posted about the Obamas.
So you basically exposed that that pool was so shallow.
Yeah, impossible for that man.
Drowning would be almost like that.
And I'll still stand on that.
Yeah.
And I'll still stand on that because I shared it from the actual website from their government.
So you can find this stuff out.
It actually had the lot number.
I searched it up by the lot number, did real journalism, and you could verify even from the watershed department that it was not that deep.
It took two miles for them to get it.
There's something with Obama that I kept putting my finger on.
Like he's like a top goon lord.
Yeah.
He's got like plays behind the scenes, and no one's been touching him since.
You know, there's allegations that Obama already has got people assassinated.
You know, like I've heard stories.
Yeah, the two gay men that went to his church and the mother alleges that President Obama got her son killed because he was in a homosexual relationship.
They say with Obama.
You what?
Okay.
That was Obama's nickname in Senate was Bathhouse Barry because his real government name is Barry Satoro.
You know, it's not Barack Obama.
He changed his name.
And they nicknamed that because it was a, it's crazy.
It was like a gay bar for some reason.
They say Obama would come in with a bath towel.
They call him Bathhouse Barry.
That is scary, bro.
Imagine being locked in a room with Obama and yourself.
Hell no.
All right.
Let's move forward.
So, so you mentioned this post that you did.
This is it on screen.
Today moving like that.
Yeah, put on scroll.
Chats is like, yo, they're undefeated, man.
Don't look her.
The aftermath.
This is funny, man.
Yo, you guys are quit in the chat, bro.
These kids are undefeated, bro.
That's funny.
Can it's here now?
Yeah, WW.
Okay, so let's say, right?
You said the post that is at 8 a.m. Pacific?
8 a.m. EST?
It's just best to be posting before 8 because for some reason, like I said, Algo is deciding who's posted before like 8.
But is it our time or Pacific time?
8-hour time.
So like 8-Eastern.
Yeah, definitely.
I would say by 8-Eastern because, yeah, definitely by 8-Eastern before 7 Eastern.
Because back in Nashville, I was doing 8.
Okay.
So that was like 7 Eastern.
Also, let's talk about getting your actual tweet looked at.
Because you can scroll on Twitter.
Sorry, X up and down all day.
But what makes you stop on a post?
There was something I did unique, which, you know, I mean, which one ain't gonna be able to imitate it with all my tweets?
Because I added it to where I added emojis to the front of my tweet.
I added a fire sign and the alert, the alarm, an alert.
Yeah.
And that was pretty innovational because when I first came to Twitter, everyone would just put the word breaking in all capital letters.
But I've innovated.
I created breaking happening now, just in and developing.
The only ones I still use now really is breaking happening now occasionally and developing.
But a lot of this stuff originated for me.
Like, I know for a fact I single-handedly changed the way news is presented in this world because I've added music, custom music.
I added edits.
Like, people would just get a news story and present it as that.
I would find the original source.
I would add the music.
I would add the clips and the context to it.
And I would make it something that the mainstream media might have.
When I first came to Twitter, people was just posting clips from CNN and Fox News.
Yeah.
I'm like, that's lazy.
That's not real journalism.
You need to add new content, a new angle.
Bro, it doesn't matter if something, let's say like Sydney Sweeney, a great example.
She went NASCAR yesterday, went viral everywhere.
With Sophia, but there was this one clip, if you noticed that, just kept popping up on the next, kept popping up.
It was the same clip over and over in her meeting and the NASCAR driver.
I spent two hours to find a different angle.
Two hours?
Yeah.
Two hours in what I was doing.
I was searching Sidney Sweeney, searching the people that was in NASCAR, people that might have posted on their phones.
Because I know when I post that new angle, it's going to automatically make someone stop because they're so used to the other one they've seen two hours before.
Oh, you're right.
So that new angle, that's why I say my content on my page will be unique to some standard because I'm trying to find a new angle.
Very rarely, I'll post what everyone else is posting.
But if you want to really go on Twitter and make your shit go hot, find something you ain't seeing.
Find the new angles, find a different post, or add new context.
That was genius.
Remember when Erica Kirk hugged JD Vance?
It's a different angle that I didn't see.
And I was like, Scrolling, School.
I was like, What the fuck?
This is the same picture, but it was just a different angle.
I was like, stopped.
Read the post up and down.
I'm like, wow.
So just changing the angle of picture could change people's software.
If you type in for the Lana Rhodes for that corn star, that post was posted.
Someone beat me to that post.
Raindrops media beat me to it by like, yeah, who is that?
That nigga's fast, bro.
He just came out of nowhere.
I know that nigga on fire.
Raindrops.
He just came out this year.
He's a rising person.
Is that Rainwater?
Just a new nigga, man.
We got to be careful when typing Lana Rhodes.
Yeah, no, no, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, yeah.
But he just came out this year.
He's like a breakout star on X.
Yeah, he just does really great work.
Yeah, why is it so much stuff on X, bro?
Like, okay, I ban all this shit on my X.
It's clean as fuck.
You can trick it up.
But like, my first looks on X was like, bunch of peace stuff, bro.
Well, because X is like the only safe haven they got.
It's the only place where they can post news.
They can't post news on YouTube.
They can't post them on Facebook or Instagram.
So since that's the only place that news are allowed, they're going to go super hard there.
The algo, it doesn't push them.
But since that's the only place that they can actually push their content, they got a lot of people that's going in and it's going to push it into your face.
You know, it's crazy, bro.
So back in the day, I checked a girl's Instagram, and that was it.
Yeah.
Now I'm looking at X to talk everything because X might be the input there.
Yeah, I've seen that.
Yeah.
Some girls might have all the porn on X and the links on X.
So yeah, it's because you never know from Instagram.
Yeah, X is a whole different world.
Crazy, bro.
That's a funny man.
Tell you.
All right.
Okay, so we mentioned when to post.
Yeah.
How to post now.
So let's say I got out of dumb packed.
I got to find my niche.
Now, how does someone find a niche?
You think?
Is it passion?
Or, for example, what they're into?
Mainly passion.
At first, my niche would have been like hip-hop or something.
And then I still honed into that with politics.
I make a lot of, I'm still to this day out of any of the people in concertive media.
I make the best posts about culture and hip-hop and things like that.
That's why I've had artists reach out to me to help with the promotion of their songs or tracks or any type of narrative they need because it has to be something that you love.
I love hip-hop.
I know a lot about it.
I love fashion.
I know a lot about it.
So I have a lot to add on it.
But it has to be something you're passionate about and not something you're just trying to get paid for.
Because if you're entertaining, people are going to pay you to entertain.
So just find something that you like, be super entertaining about it, and make sure you stay on the post of what people are talking about and insert yourself in the conversation.
Now, you hit a million followers pretty quickly, I would say.
And I think you want the top, if not the top, news reporter on X itself.
How does someone go to that level or even start getting followers on X?
Tweets, retweets, quote tweets.
What is getting the cosigns from people?
But you got to be entertaining, making cosigns.
I did a lot of beeps with people and reinvented myself was the main thing.
I did so many things to reinvent myself.
I first started off with that initial video.
Then I was doing these things called threads where I was going through like 40, 50 tweets all connected to each other to expose history, like expose how Republicans were never racist, or expose how slavery was started through Democrats, or expose how KKK was started through the Democrats.
And I would do things like proof that slavery was started by racist white Republicans.
People would click the tweet and right on the tweet is the exact opposite, just proving how Democrats started slavery.
And that was one of the things that gave me like 200, 300,000 extra followers because people love the threads.
But the moment I dropped a thread and it didn't get a million views in 24 hours, that was my last thread.
I don't stay on stuff.
I was like, oh, it's time to do something else.
Now you've been selected to be exposed.
That's something people loved.
I would sit when I was so hungry, man.
I would just sit and think, like, how can I entertain these niggas again?
But it just did so much to my mental health because it wasn't about me.
It was about making people laugh.
My whole life revolved around how can I one-up myself?
How can I be more entertaining?
And you should have to be genuinely hungry, but you have to be willing to reinvent yourself because people get bored very fast.
Twitter isn't like YouTube where you can do the same thing for 10 years and people are going to stay around.
Twitter is very, very, very quick.
Yeah.
How would you choose who to select to expose?
Back in the day.
It would have to be some information I first like.
I would look up multiple celebrities, look up information on them.
And if it was something that I know was valuable, no one don't say no, I would say they're going to be selected to be exposed.
I would never ever ever say you've been selected to be exposed without already having the information ready.
Anything after that is just promotion to get people hyped for the expose.
I would say, like, Oprah Winfrey, you've been selected to be exposed.
And I was exposing about how Oprah Winfrey schools in Africa was complete fraud and how most of the children was human trafficked there.
But I broke that completely down.
But two days leading up to the Oprah expose, I was posting memes about Oprah.
I was telling people it's coming out.
I was doing so many.
Like, some of my promo was getting millions of views because people were so excited to hear Oprah Winfrey finally get exposed.
Yeah.
So I just knew as a regular person, people hearing these big names, large in life, getting exposed, it's something they've never seen before.
It's something they were begging for.
Would you say that you're very good at psychology?
Oh, yeah, definitely.
Because I can hear you talking.
It's like, he's studying people, how they interact with certain things, how to interact with things.
Manipulator.
I'm a manipulator, but I'm not in a bad way.
But I do know how people think.
I could guarantee, I could post right now and I could tell you what everyone's going to say down to every post damn near.
I could see.
So I found your Twitter, and this is the first creator I've seen.
People only post positive things about you.
Like, you know, when someone makes posts right there, oh, this person, that, this person, this, and that.
They're like, thank you for the news, Dom.
This is great information.
Why didn't they know this?
It's all positive.
I'm like, how's this even possible?
Because this thing is too good to be true.
I never came into the game about me.
I am always telling my followers every time that I reached 100,000, I said, we did it.
We did it.
We did it.
I always talk presidential because it's power in making people, well, not making people feel, but acting people a part of the mission because it's not just about you succeeding.
They know if you win, they won too.
So anything I went through, it's like they're trying to get us.
They're trying to get us.
They're attacking us.
We're going farther.
We can do this.
We're going to break through.
Okay.
The follower count is stuck at 300,000.
We're going to break it.
Then you got people quote tweeting it.
Let's get through this.
We're almost there.
You're building a co-audience by doing that.
Speaking we're never me's, never I's.
I don't speak in I's ever on Twitter.
It's always we.
We did it.
Us.
They're hurting us.
It's always us versus them.
Because if people feel like you're one of them, they'll do whatever they can to see their fellow brother make it to the top.
And since it was never about me, they don't view ego.
They don't view it as self-worthy or self-praise.
They have no problem with promoting me or supporting me.
Because they hate egotistical people.
I noticed that brands without faces that are like companies have a lot easier time of growing than personal people because people hate self.
I learned that people subconsciously hate self because it's someone else that ain't related to them.
It's someone else that they ain't benefiting from that has something they can't achieve.
Now, a brand feels untouchable, so no one don't feel any type of way.
But if you have an individual that isn't reminding you that they even exist, that they remind you that you exist, that they're doing it for you, that you are part of that mission, they see you and they see a mirror of themselves.
So they're going to support it to the end because they're like, well, I genuinely like this guy.
They won't even tell you why, but they like themselves.
So you just got to play on the preach.
People's selfishness.
You got to play on the selfishness of fans.
No one loves, no one's a bigger fan of anyone more than themselves.
So you got to include them in your content.
That's powerful.
Yo, chat, that was like really good, by the way.
Watch that 10 times because that was a really good class there on how to post and engage with your audience.
That's really good.
Now, this is some fire game, but fella.
Yo, don't the market for a dog, man.
So look, I want to focus now on analytics.
Yeah.
Right?
So we covered when to post, how to post, how to do the emojis if you want to, or the break-in just in.
But let's cover now.
We cover getting followers as well.
But let's analytics.
How do I get past?
Because obviously there's a breaking point.
Like at the very beginning, you're getting no views.
Let's say I'm starting from scratch.
How to get past that?
Like, I guess no views to like 10k views, 50k views.
Replying.
Reply.
Very good stuff.
Like I said, it could be whatever's negative.
I could speak for politics and people could take that and find motivation to create their own thing.
But you'll find who's the most hated.
So Barack Obama.
Niggas hate Barack Obama in my party.
So anytime Barack Obama posts, be one of the first people.
And turn on post notifications for these people.
Find your ops, create a list of your ops, turn on post notifications for them, become the biggest fans.
Every time they make a post or reply, comment on it because you're going to have a group of people that don't like them with you.
That right there is going to get you in front of the people.
The main thing is getting the eyes on you.
And they're going to be like, I love this dude replies.
Just start to be known for something.
A question.
What if I don't want to be a hater?
Like, for example, I'm just putting devils out of the gate, right?
What if I'm a person that's like very chill?
I don't want to be seen as a hater of this crazy person.
I know someone that did it with that got the 1.1 million without no negativity, but you have to, you got to overly glaze.
There's no other way around.
You got to shut that dick.
I know this person right there that made it to 1.1 on Twitter by always being in my comments.
Everyone comments, DMing them all the time.
Oh, I love your stuff.
Oh, you killed it.
Love the show.
Love this and that.
And they were overly glazing every single person.
They were always in all the people that they wanted to be around, always supporting them.
Said it was the best stuff they seen.
Said it was great work.
And their fans ended up elevating to them.
They were pulling my fans and everyone else's fans because the people that loved me started to love them because they say they love me.
But you got to overly glaze.
If you're not going to do it through negativity, you have to go two times harder in positivity and just support the hell out of people.
You have to compliment people non-stop, say it's amazing, and add some context.
If they're saying something, say some shit that's funny.
If it's a serious post, make it funny.
So there's nothing in between.
You either got to glaze a nigga, pause, double time, or hate a nigga.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Because you got to, because the only way that you're going to grow without being seen is you got to enter someone else's matrix.
It's not just going to come to you.
So you got to enter someone's matrix.
So you know it's funny when you said that with podcasting too as well.
There's like an energy transfer, right?
Between two creators.
And whenever you bring someone into your space, your matrix, basically, you're audience sharing.
And let's say, for example, we disagree, right?
There was a debate with Coach Greg Adams and Andrew Wilson, right, just now.
Coach's fans doesn't care what he said.
He won that debate.
And this fan, same way.
Those fans believe the Andrew won the debate, hands down.
But in the middle, there's people that say, you know what?
Damn.
I learned from each party.
This is good.
I'm going to join their side now.
So it's like a swap of both parties coming together.
However, if I hate on the person, like from the jump and I just pure hate, if the fans are rocking with that person, they come into my site like that.
Or a few might, but not like a lot.
Boy, it's a conversation between two creators that's fruitful and value-added.
People come over and skip.
I'll just say this.
That right there, bro, you said earlier, was key because that's good.
I didn't know that.
Another good example.
There's this new creator I see on Instagram.
You know the rapper Dex.
Y'all, you heard of Dex?
He's been on it for a while, no?
Yeah, he has.
He's been doing this since D-X, right?
D-X.
D-A-X.
There's this one YouTuber, bro.
He did one time, I think, back in the day.
It's one YouTuber that is literally gaining fame for just hating on Dex videos.
Dax is so clean.
But he be cooking that.
He's getting famous.
He's so cool.
And people that's seen it probably don't seem it yet.
A Christian rapper, is he?
Well, he's a little bit of everything.
He's like a positive rapper, though.
He's puzzled, right?
You know, he's uplifting.
Yeah, and he's gotten his entire career from it.
And the thing is, this is how you know it.
If you search Dax on Instagram and the GIFs, this nigga shit come up.
No.
So now he's tied to Dex.
But you know, there's something that he's doing.
Although he's known as being a Dex hater, I'm seeing he's now reviewing songs, reviewing different content, roasting other people.
And I can tell that he's also getting paid because this dude is smart enough to know he had a niche from hate.
Niggas love seeing him laugh at Dax shit because they love to laugh.
He could pay attention to what the people like and he keep giving it to him in different ways.
You know what's crazy?
I had a hater make videos about me.
He would respond to my videos and just say, oh, this guy sucks, whatever.
And he got a little bit of following from it.
But then I stopped doing vlogs.
And I stopped, he stopped.
Yep.
No more content.
He went away.
So in order for that to work, I remember the person has to keep posting constantly for them to hate on you.
So to that point, if you start posting, they're screwed.
Because it's all hate from that one person.
Yeah, yo, haters, they need the energy.
They're getting the energy from you.
So they actually are getting energy from you in some type of way, whether it be followers, some self-esteem, especially when you're the big star.
And it's fucked up in the mind of hater because they're seeing this big star getting comments on Instagram, YouTube, Facebook, real life.
And they're like, this nigga made time for me.
Like in their mind, it's like, dude, he made time for me.
He's getting paid, though.
See, because I realize there's a correlation between hate sometimes and then getting paid.
Because imagine this.
If I hit on you, you'll get 10K a month.
Yeah.
I'm hit harder.
Yeah, they're going on.
2030K a month.
And not to say he's a hater, but you know, Johnny Barber, right?
Yeah, yeah.
He's making videos about Wes Watson all the time.
And listen, bro.
One or two.
Okay, get it.
But nigga, five, ten videos?
That's some real hate, right?
I'm like, goddamn, nigga.
So I understand what it is because obviously there's people that hate Wes Watson.
Yeah.
So he took that core audience and made it his.
I'm like, he's getting paid, though.
We've seen the same thing with Tate, too.
Same thing with Tate.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So, so there is a actual benefit to hate nowadays where you can get paid heavily.
However, it has to be the right person.
Yeah, it has to.
If you hit a wrong person, I'll come back and bet you and ask.
Yeah, you got to know how to fight your battles.
Like even when I was starting at 100K, I didn't say, Oprah, you're going to be selected to be exposed.
I waited and waited and waited.
Like life is a video game, man.
Especially being a creator.
I understood that there's levels to what you can and can't do.
If you're not even referenceable, no one's going to care if you expose them.
So I put the work in, put the work in until people start referencing me.
It wasn't until I started doing interviews that people start saying, Dom Luca says.
That's when I said, okay, I reached a new level.
Boom.
It's no longer this black influencer, say, or this dude says.
Yeah.
And I saw the name.
I said, okay, it's getting there.
But the larger it got, the more I got confirmations, the more celebrities start reaching out.
I noticed that I could start entering the celebrity world and start shaking it up.
But you got to get those confirmations because you might waste some of your best content at the wrong times when you're not there yet.
You see it sometimes in artists.
Some of their best music is when they don't really have the fan base because they waited at the wrong time.
They should have done more marketing, should have got more people ready.
But I changed who I was.
Like even in the beginning, I knew these algos were strict.
Although X said freedom of speech, I used no fuck with profanity.
I never said the N-word or any of that until I got close to a million.
Can we freaking speech, by the way?
Yeah, the thing is, I understood that social media, the only reason why they don't ban certain people is because they're profitable.
When I found out that every time someone made a Twitter account, they would show Dom Luca, Barack Obama, Donald Trump.
Those were the first three profiles in 2023.
If you made a Twitter, my profile, either Dom Luker, Donald Trump.
To follow.
Barack Obama, yeah, or Elon Musk.
Like people to follow.
It does not matter how many accounts you made.
I had that all 23, which is I attribute the main reason why I got to a million.
But the app was pushing me super heavily because I was bringing people back to X. You got to remember, Elon bought X in a time when Twitter was dying.
It needed people to hype it up.
And I was one of the people that was generating that hype.
So they wanted to put me everywhere.
And I did a lot to be seen.
Like, my profile picture isn't yellow because I like yellow.
I actually don't even like the color yellow.
Bro.
No, I don't.
No, this is the funniest district.
But yellow is the second column.
Yellow is the second color that your eyes recognize.
And red being that first.
That's why you see breaking news is yellow than red.
So on my Instagram, right?
I have a picture of the profile.
And I have a red car in there for that reason.
It works.
It works.
So, real quick, you said something that's very important for the audience here as well.
Freedom of speech, right?
Yeah.
Now, I know what that means because I've been behind the veil.
I've met CEOs.
They know company owners.
I know how things work.
The sponsor is involved.
This donors involved.
Nothing is free speech, except Rumble.
How do you define free speech on X?
I guess it defines on how big you are.
So not everyone's going to be free.
Like, if I would have been a 30K social media account and I would have been posting, even like talking about I was going to expose someone else because this is the problem.
Don't be a little fish and try to take out the money.
So I waited until I knew for a fact, like, nigga, X is making tens of millions of dollars on me being here.
They can't afford to lose me yet.
So I can start showing my ass a little bit.
It's like Kanye West.
That nigga ain't start talking like that until he got a billion.
You got to wait till you in your yay moment.
Don't try to be yay when you're still trying to be the producer version of Kanye West.
Wait till you at that billion dollar level and talk your shit.
So I constantly waited over and over.
I played by the rules.
And when I learned I was a major player in the game, that's when I started breaking out the algo.
That's when I started doing my own thing.
But you don't really have freedom of speech when you're a little player.
You have to ensure that them taking off your profile would suffer them losses, financial losses in some type of way.
If not, there's nothing stopping them from banning you.
Or at least knowing that you have at least a network big enough where people advocate for you to come back.
Yeah.
Because I see people always, you know, say there's freedom of speech.
I'm like, no, no, no, no.
You can say what you want, but there's a consequence to your actions.
Yeah, and there's a reason.
It's because of money.
So at the end of the day, it doesn't know free speech.
But I will say this.
If you're big enough, you can call us a favors.
But then they have to like you.
I want you to be there.
So it's still up to them because you're on their platform.
Completely.
Yeah.
It's all about being liked.
So let's go through what we can't say on X. Because I think that's important.
Because let's say I want to be edgy, you know, raunchy, be that type of like part of the internet.
What can I not say to get, because I don't want to get banned now.
Yeah.
I want to stay on the platform, make money.
What should I avoid saying on during X?
I would say when someone's a very small account, because they could get labeled as spam or just a hateful account when it's very small, just treat it like YouTube.
Anything you can't say on X, I mean, you can't say on YouTube.
Don't say on X till you get to about maybe 170,000 followers or so.
Okay.
That's the most part.
But X is a whole lot freer because once you start to break through that threshold and you got some positioning, you can say about anything you want on X if you choose to.
Anything.
Almost about anything.
The F word, F slur, definitely.
Because that's the thing with Myron, what they do.
They just say this post is limited.
As far as not reach.
There's no reality where Myron is going to get banned for none of the stuff you say.
That's just the platform X is.
So you can genuinely do about anything on X. You just got to get to that point where you're untouchable.
Well, this is what I say with X as well.
X has the eyeballs of everybody.
Creators, people that are normal, celebrities, and companies.
This is my problem with X, right?
You can post what you want on there, but companies are watching.
And that's the issue because let's say I'm on X, but I'm also on Twitch.
I'm on YouTube.
I'm on.
They're going to say, oh, this is his account.
Because you don't need to do like a back-going check, right?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And then they say, oh, get him out of here.
That's the issue X, because it's like a honeypot.
They say what you want.
But they're always watching.
See, that's why you're extremely smart.
And the thing is, when it came to the Jews stuff, people think that they paid me off or I got scared.
I just could see where things are going.
I'm really good at seeing trends.
And they started allowing more freedom than ever right before Trump won.
Because if you study history with Jewish people, they are most powerful when they're truly victims.
And if you got validation that everyone's against them, because they always claim you the world's against them, it didn't look true till now.
Yeah.
Like it's like, okay, that's just what they're saying.
Now you could go to Instagram, go to Twitter.
Niggas are literally praising Hitler.
So the shit that they say, they got the right to say it now.
And when they got the right to say something, they get very active.
So they allow for people to label because you need as many voices, as many prominent voices to be against the Jews to claim that they are facing genocide.
You can't claim you're facing genocide if the enemies don't exist.
100%.
They're giving people the freedom to speech, and there's a reason why it's on Twitter.
I always say this, right?
The enemy you can't defeat is the enemy that you can't see.
I say this all 102 because looking at the platform itself, I'm not dumb.
How companies work, sponsors work, throws work.
Yeah.
Why are they allowing you to talk about them so openly?
Yeah.
And even against you later on.
And even the ID verification, it was first done with the Israeli farm until everyone was complaining about it to get your ID verified.
It was linked to an Israeli firm that was connected to Mossad.
And he had that up for like two weeks until people complained, but they still got that as IDs.
Other people that didn't complain.
And what's their motto?
Out of chaos comes order.
So, yeah, it's scary, but I think it's a honeypot for sure.
All right.
We have any more chats to Bills at all?
Let me look.
And then we'll get down a little break here.
But nah, bro, that's very, very reeling, bro.
That X itself is.
It's a lot they can gain from it.
Yeah.
It's just, it's a lot to learn.
I have no idea.
that's dope so do you think that like right nowadays oh here we go Quick slap.
First is the one who retired line of roads.
Nigga, hell no, bro.
Yo, bro.
You know, like, when you know, okay, okay.
You know what's the worst part, right, bro?
Like, when you know Shorty's been everywhere.
Yeah.
Like, okay.
Let's say you smash.
That's one thing.
But to wife her up?
Yeah.
Actually, you know what?
There's a tab we got here with Plato Max.
You can pull up real quick.
Yeah.
So Dom, we're going to play a game here with you, right?
We're going to show you some tweets that are viral.
Have you break it down?
How can we be more viral, right?
Okay.
So this one is recently.
It says, full compilation of every streamer Platman Max's girlfriend, Grace Henderson, has been on.
Oh, no.
So basically, imagine whatever girl, right?
And she's been on every streamer's platform.
And you know, if you're with a streamer like that, like, nigga, like, you probably got smashed.
Just keep it real with you.
Like, here's what it is.
You enter the crib, you vibe after, you go after.
Poly cracked her.
But let's play real quick.
No.
You got to do it.
That far.
I'm telling you.
Oh, labeling you and yours.
Adam Ross.
All right.
I got a great one.
Before you kiss.
Yo.
Ain't no plat was going out like that, man.
Damn.
Yo, son got a sticker tug in my mouth, yo.
Jay Simcoe.
Yo, bro.
Yo, ring the bell.
Bro, we're not even halfway through, bro.
I will say this though, man.
We're not even halfway.
This is why I say, bro, as a streamer, bro, do not put your girl on camera.
Because the problem is, like, let's say you might not know the truth about it.
Guess who knows?
Someone.
The audience knows.
Or some.
Yo, I remember I had a girl on my one-on-one streams, and they were spamming a creator's name in the chat.
And I was like, wait, you know, so-and-so?
And when I found out, I was like, bro.
I was like, bruh.
So imagine Plato Max's chat.
Yeah.
After they see this shit.
Yeah, they're cooking him completely.
But let's continue that.
So you be taking the camera with you?
Yeah, not like my big camera.
I take my stripes, little streamer phone shit.
Okay.
Moving from the Bay Area to Los Angeles, the dating goal is out here.
This nigga died.
RPP2, bro.
Yo, yeah.
Yo, rest in peace to a real YouTuber.
P2 was that guy back in the day, bro, killing it with YouTube videos.
He's watching every day.
Shout out to him, man.
Or rest in peace to him.
But to P2 as well, that's crazy.
Dude, he's an old YouTuber.
From the grave, that's crazy, bro.
Damn, bro.
From the grave.
From the grave, bro.
Wow.
Yo, no, the chat is undefeated, though.
All right.
All I see around me, since I'm like very involved with like being in the industry, being around you know, people that are considered in our society as higher-profile people, you know what I'm saying?
I see a lot.
Who's that?
They seen bad stuff.
I don't know who E-Man is, nigga.
She's on there, man.
She's there, nigga.
She there in the backseat, nigga.
That's all we can tell.
She can't.
That's the worst part.
I kind of hate it.
Don't say persistent content.
Who's your like dream class?
My dream class.
Dom TV.
Oh, that's P2's.
Uh, I've been watching for a long time.
A lot of people just think like, oh, he just got mixed.
He's not watching.
Like, oh, this nigga hit.
Yo, yo, pause.
Post-pause.
Yo, that's crazy.
And there's a rapper.
Mighty J is a fucking demon, bro.
This nigga right here, bro.
I'm about to hold you, nigga.
Sorry, I gotta pose you, bro.
This nigga's hit everything in the industry.
I promise you.
Why?
Him out on him?
Bro, that's true.
I don't know how it.
Maybe it's his game.
Yeah.
Maybe he's just out fly.
This thing hits everything, bro.
Walking.
That's insane.
And I know for a fact issue with this crib.
I'm assuming, obviously, but like he probably hit.
So Jay's one of the niggas, bro.
For real, for real.
Damn.
Oh, no.
See?
No!
See?
See?
Bro, I'm on a side now.
I'm on side.
Yo, yo, yo, that's crazy.
I see these things all the time.
I know, bro.
It's just funny, bro.
Why are you J?
Why is this streamer?
No.
That's his girl, though.
Oh, my.
And that's his girl.
Nah, that's his turn.
That's your man's girl.
That's his turn.
See what I mean?
Wow, bro.
That's tough.
Yo, hold on.
His chin.
Yeah, that's tough.
Yo, plat boy Max.
Plat boy Max.
Listen, brother, you need to get over yourself.
Max.
Yo, yo, yo.
Look, Vegas, Compass Con.
Max had motion.
Yeah.
He had the whole compass come following him, bro.
Central C him did a stream.
I was like, he got real motion.
Yeah.
This tick away motion, bro.
This is an L. Like, look, even if we won't give benefit adult, it's out there now.
Everyone's gonna see it.
So now you look crazy making her as your girl because that's wild.
Ain't no way he would have known, though.
You could search.
He might have known, but now it's there.
I mean, shit, he wouldn't have been able to search her name and find none of them streamers.
Bro, those are a lot of big name streamers.
That's what I'm saying.
Bring back the she should be linked to Lee's.
Yeah, man.
So, dumb, seen this video.
How would you tell it to make it go viral?
All right.
So there's a couple ways.
So if I wanted to be just a fuck nigga, guarantee it go viral.
Let me dump.
Like, be a complete journalist.
Yeah.
If I wanted to be completely heartless, I don't do this.
But to guarantee it go viral, I would put breaking news: a prolific streamer, Platboy Max Pans, are worried that he could possibly commit suicide after his ex-girlfriend.
I mean, after his current girlfriend, gets exposed in this compilation that shows her having relations with other prominent streamers.
You went crazy just now, I see the wording there, especially.
So, wow, genius.
Yeah, the fans, because it's going to get people's attention because they're like, damn, the fans are talking about it.
They're going to feel like they're late.
They want to see what the fans are talking about because now there's backlash.
But then, if it says he's going to commit suicide, they're going to read that whole shit.
Yeah.
When they see that word, like, fans are worried he's going to commit suicide.
They can't communicate that.
How can they prove that or not?
How do you know what the fans feel?
I would have had to read the comments to verify that.
Yeah.
You're right.
I'm just saying that journalists look journalists and lawyers are some of the most sleaziest niggas out here.
I'm just the one that exposed it.
They're some of the worst people out here.
I mean, if it works, it works, bro.
Yeah.
It's headlines.
Yeah, you know, it's funny.
Legacy media is dying.
Yeah.
I would say it's already dead.
You guys are actually the news now.
So you guys' word is more trustable than you know, legacy media because they have too many caveats on it, too many advocates.
And they're getting paid to they got donors and shit like behind the scenes.
And you can see them.
You can see a lot of it.
And the problem is, you see way too many donors up front.
You can literally see where a lot of their money is going.
So that's what really hurts people.
Trust.
You can find out almost anything on the internet.
And mainstream media just has way too many streams attached.
But yeah, I brought girls on stream before, bro, where, like, you know, I didn't know too much about them.
Put them on stream, bro.
And I see every yo, like, the chat would be like, yo, fresh, she's a hoe.
I'm like, nigga, chill out, bro.
I'm just trying to smash real quick.
I'll give the fuck.
Bro, they pull up some shit.
I'm like, dog, like, this is bad.
Because I don't want to know.
I don't want to.
Because, you know, once I know, I'm good, bro.
I'm like, yo, dog, I'm out of here.
So I got to ask you a question, though.
What is your reaction when it's someone you might have took through there and you know other niggas not had their fun, but you see someone trying to cuff it?
Because I've seen it already.
Literally, for the first time, I've seen it for the first time staying in Miami.
I've seen it already.
I said, oh man, that's.
I feel that for him.
I know you've, I know you've seen it, board of what?
Fresh here for a good time, not a long time.
I know you've seen someone that choose.
I heard it put in my head in Miami.
I'm just here for fun.
Like, there's no like, oh, fresh, bro.
That shit is for the birds.
I'm here for fun.
Yeah.
So, whether, well, no, I don't want to know.
But let's say, for example, right?
We're in a room.
Yep.
Shorty hit you, Detox, Mo, and Bills.
That was my turn.
I don't want to know.
Yeah.
Because once I know, stupid, it's over.
But if I don't know, all right, cool.
But then when I find out, it's over.
But if I know beforehand, I'm good.
Here's the issue, though.
Wife her up when you know, bro.
What are you doing?
After what Mo did?
No, walking outside.
No, no, because I'm not going to be able to do it.
No, for it, bro.
But what can I say, right?
I'm with her.
Yeah.
Nigga, y'all all hit.
So how do I look?
I look crazy.
Yeah.
So it's like fucked up.
And man, it's being here, bro.
The era of Tory Lane's future.
Yeah.
Florida, Drake.
These niggas are in town.
Sway Lee.
Bro, girls will be with one artist one week, next week, different artists.
And it's like, she's been all through the industry.
And then you come wife up and say, This is my girl.
You look crazy.
So that's what I'm like, bro.
Like, I don't want to know.
Once I know, yeah, it's over.
So yeah, man.
Guys, this is real facts, man.
After what Mo hit.
Real talk.
Real talk.
Yo, and if, yo, if Mo hit it, oh, hell, bro.
You know what Mo did, bro.
He drinks out blood.
That nigga wasn't.
Yeah, he drink out blood, bro.
Sensational.
Blood gang.
Gas says, when did you find out the why?
Oh, when did you find out the why your girl was silent?
Our girl.
Oh, Gaz with the shots.
I'll say this though, bro.
Fellas, this is a dark reality.
I'm kind of dark myself.
Most girls that you meet are going to be ran through.
And not because.
No, no, hold on.
Not because they're bad, but because they've had multiple people that you may know or may not know of.
And let's say, for example, it goes in a club, right?
Let's say for like two months.
I guarantee she's been at multiple tables with different guys, which means at least five to ten niggas hit her.
At least.
Now, let's say she was with a boyfriend, right?
They're going to break up.
Yeah.
So what's going to happen?
Still getting hit.
So, I just think that, like, nowadays, fellas, unless you go to like maybe, I don't know, a Muslim country where they're virgins from birth and they don't really, well, obviously from ripple light, they don't really have sex like that, you'll be good.
But here in America, bro, you're dealing with like Rantha Horse.
It is what it is.
So, I just have fun with it.
Hey, you want to have fun and go out?
Cool.
Back to business.
Mind me, it's different, bro.
Don't forget, I went to a club and I took a girl, bro, and she hugged four niggas.
Yo, yo, get it up.
Turn it up.
Eli, first I had the security guard.
I was like, okay, sometimes cute security be getting it in.
I'm like, this nigga might have smashed, but maybe not, because security guards are sometimes extra-friendly.
And they always get hugs from bitches.
Somehow, security guards get a free hug.
So, maybe that's what I'm saying.
I'm going to tell you again right now.
Security guards, right?
I got this shit.
Security guards have the best setup.
I'll tell you why.
Okay.
They don't buy tables.
Yep.
They're getting paid on the clock.
And they see every girl walking and out.
Yep.
You know what that gets me?
Power over you, bitches.
So now, you want to come to the club?
You and your friends.
You phone number real quick.
They got you.
Yo, I get, bro.
Yeah, hold on.
Yeah.
Look at Booby Trap.
Oh, shit.
I shouldn't say nibs.
Look at the trick clubs.
All the girls are cool with who?
The bouncers.
Yeah.
And security.
Because they know they're cool with them.
They go in sections.
They can get more privileges.
And then you know what?
It's a pussy real quick.
Damn.
They're going to smash, bro.
So it's kind of like the access that they have is undefeated because they're the whole system.
24/7.
And they get paid too.
So it's kind of like a W.
Yeah, bro.
It was a security guard and it was a bouncer.
And then it was a section hugged.
And that's when I was done.
Yeah, with that, I was like, no, I got to do it.
Like, I literally made because a nigga came out of her section and hugged her.
No, bro.
Because that's a whole different motion.
But I thought I thought away.
This is a different way.
You bring a foreign chick into the environment.
Now it's mine.
No, it's not yours.
Sorry.
No, it's not ours.
It's mine.
Yeah.
Because you don't know her.
For example, let's say she's from, I don't know, Australia.
Who's going to know her?
No one's loyal.
Now, obviously, it's a global world.
It's Instagram.
So nowadays, it's a little bit more accessible.
But let's just say off of odds alone, who's going to know her?
It's a lot better.
Way better.
So I'm just going to know it's a lot less.
And a local girl from here.
Yeah, it's a lot less because they have whole systems on how they're going to get money, how they're going to get to and from a place.
Like you say, how are they going to get in the club?
They got a whole system, man.
And they be knowing this shit.
Like, they know the areas.
They know what time.
Like, you'll be able to hold it.
I'll be like, man, I might do such and such.
Oh, about 10 a.m. when it gets popping, ain't it?
Yeah.
Or like, I've been here before.
Yeah, like you even know when this shit gets started out there.
Who's it going?
It's crazy.
They've had every experience already.
Yeah, I think dating now, fellas, is cooked.
You got to move a certain way.
If not, it's going to be a finesse, man.
And it's holding loyal, bro.
So smashing bigger females really comes with all the benefits dudes say they come.
So let's do your bag.
Stupid.
You'll get back, bro.
Is that Kumo?
Yo.
You know what?
You did not time me.
Yo, yo.
Level one grunts, right?
That's what they are.
You beat the grunts first at level one, knocking them out.
Slam dragon.
Slam dragon first defense of the enemy.
You get rid of them and then you move on.
Progressive overload.
Yeah, they're first barriers to hit, bro.
Listen, when you're broke, start there, niggas.
It's super easy.
But also, it's good.
It's warm, it's fuzzy inside, and you still smash.
So there you go.
Yeah, big girls.
I mean, this shit do be wet.
Yeah, bro.
That'd be fine, though.
Nigga, I've been there, bro.
That'd be fine.
Because they be hungry.
All right.
What's the next change?
Don't do woco.
We good?
All right.
Let me make sure.
So the last one, first one.
Last one.
Okay, cool.
Fresh license fries, extra large.
By the way, Jim tomorrow, fellas.
Yes, sir.
We got LeVari Adams says, This is for fresh and Chris.
What's this?
Oh, Chris isn't here, by the way.
So, 77 Super Soldiers.
So, 66 Seagulls sitting seaside by the seashore.
Okay.
Yo, but Chris needs to say this, though.
Where's Chris?
This is my favorite thing to do.
Oh, dang, he's not coming today.
Oh, he's not here as usual.
W Chris.
W Chris.
So, guys, update: Chris text me earlier.
We'll do a show after ours tomorrow because Halloween was this weekend, fellas, and it was crazy.
Like, the parties were insane.
I can't show you because it's crazy on my phone.
I can't show you what's happening.
But if you're my close friends on Instagram, you're going to see my stories on the parties.
Dom was there.
Yeah.
Detox, I don't want to call your name, but I'll call your name.
You were there as well.
And it was lit.
Also, Yacht was cool too.
We had some vibes on the yacht.
And of course, after parties was wild.
But Dom was in Miami with us for what, three, four months now?
Since March.
How's the experience been?
This has been the best place I live, man.
Out of everywhere I've gone, yeah.
I normally move like every three years.
And I was, it's just something about, man, when you leave in South Beach and you pass in those like yachts and shit, those cruise ships on the left, it's like, bro, I don't know if I can leave.
Yeah.
Every time I pass, it's like, I don't know if I can leave because it's just, man, there's nothing like this place.
No.
It really isn't.
No.
There's nothing like this place.
I'd encourage everyone that has money or wants to have a vision for the life that wants to enjoy life too as well.
Miami's best place to be.
And it's a great spot to remind you that there are levels.
Yeah.
You like my car, I go back home.
That's it.
There's nothing else to get.
But I love, I'm just different.
I love seeing shit above me.
Me too.
I do.
It's weird as fuck.
I'm getting comfortable, complacent.
I'm like, hold on.
I need niggas to stun on me.
Like, for example, shit.
We're on a yacht this weekend, right?
Yeah.
My friend owns a bigger yacht than we were on.
He's like, bro, why didn't you text me?
It's a free yacht.
Just put whatever you want.
I'm like, I don't have a yacht.
But that's access.
Because people that are doing better than you just have it.
And if you're cool with them, you get access.
So I think just being around this environment inspires you to do better.
And if you're a hater, you don't get no out of it.
So rather than hate, appreciate, and then debate.
I mean, I see some of the most amazing stuff.
Participate, yeah.
So, yeah, man.
I think Miami's definitely a dream because it's awesome being here.
But yeah, this is a W episode, man.
I think we did a lot today with Twitter.
Dom, sorry, X. Dom, you killed it today, bro.
Our tweets changed.
Oh, my God.
I mean, Dom.
Our tweets changed.
Going in some last words of wisdom to the audience because they were awesome today.
Thank you for watching.
And this, by the way, Monday Monday is my favorite show because you can learn from this show.
You can laugh as well.
And of course, it's going to be good times because we're good people.
So thank you for watching.
And Dom.
I guess last words of wisdom would be, you know, to not just, you know, of course, staying true to yourself, but you got to understand that your content, regardless of how many creators are out here, there's no one that's out there that's like you.
And you have to hone in on that.
So whatever makes you unique, something that your family members might have said that he liked that you do, it might be some way that you tell a joke or maybe that you walk, et cetera.
That's the star that the rest of the world is waiting for.
Because if it can impress those few people, there's a good chance it can impress millions.
But a lot of people don't have those confirmations to know what people constantly give them confirmations on is what's going to make them make it in the end.
My family used to always say they love the way that I present words.
I talk in poetry.
I talk in metaphors, et cetera.
I just thought that shit, that's how I talk.
It isn't until you get millions of followers that people think it's fascinating.
So you have to hone in on the compliments that you're getting before you make it and know that that's possibly what's going to help you get to the next level.
And when you do start to make it, understand loyalty is going to outlast your fame.
So make sure you remain loyal because no one's here forever.
50 years from now, niggas going to be retired.
Yeah.
Someone, bro, there's a good chance 50, 60 years from now, there's going to be someone else hosting the show.
The show can keep going without anyone else here.
And it's like, but that loyalty is more important than anything.
That loyalty, there's going to be a day you're not a creator no more.
But if you can take those people home with you, that's more important than anything.
I mean, just up to your point, Dom.
We were at an event this weekend.
It was Code Black, Jimmy Fox, somebody else.
And they came up to us more than them.
The girl was like, wow, you're really famous.
I'm like, I don't think it's over, but it's crazy.
This thing is always so humble, man.
It's funny because as a streamer, you get more, I guess, clips out there than an actor because the actor is like, one movie and then done.
That's it.
But streamer, they get to know you as a person.
It's your attributes, the worst parts about you, the best parts about you.
And it's your life's.
Actor, I don't know what they do after the movie is done.
Rapper, I don't know what they're doing outside of a music video.
I don't know.
But streamer, bro, I feel like I can know you, bro.
Like, we're boys.
Like, you can't look at an actor on TV.
It's weird the connection you can have with streamer.
People have been watching your content so long that, bro, you could literally come in and your body, your body language might be a certain way in the chat to be like, fresh ain't into it a day.
Fresh sick.
Like they know.
You don't get that with actors.
There's no connection like that, bro.
It really is a magical and spiritual thing.
It's a real connection.
No, you're right.
No one has that except creators.
So let's bring up Dom X again on the page.
Dom, where can you find your brother?
Obviously, follow me on X, D O M L U C R E. You search any social media, Twitch, YouTube, Instagram, and it'll come up.
Yo, let's put my page as well on TakeOver.
So guys, I have a new Instagram page, man.
Last one was banned, of course, for some BS.
I don't know why it was banned, but just my new one here.
This one's going to hit a million pretty soon.
I hope, hopefully, in the next coming months or so, if I do some more giveaways and stuff like that.
But so the goal is 1 million on this page.
Yeah, yeah.
We're up there, man.
We're going to get back up there.
Yo, Dak6ix9 interview did numbers, bro.
6ix9ine did fucking numbers, bro.
Shout out to him.
But until then, fellas, stay tuned for some more action happening tomorrow.
I think we'll do after hours tomorrow with Chris and the girls.
And then Wednesday, I go to Vegas.
We're mirroring them to do some shows.
And then we have Rolos Mossy and Michael Sartain on Thursday for Access Vegas.
Awesome.
So guys, man, we're out here, man.
Peace.
Go follow Dom.
Go support the guys.
We're out of here.
Appreciate you.
Gone.
I ran so far away.
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