EPISODE
399

Fyre Festival's Billy McFarland Tells Us His Next Move, Lessons Learned In Jail, and More

Dec 22, 2022·75:00·Sam & Shaan·with Billy McFarland·Listen·AppleSpotify
0:0037:3075:00
14 moments · 253 paragraphs · synced to the second
SAM

Most internet entrepreneurs, when they get into starting businesses, they do things that are either black hat or gray hat, and then they realize, I got to do things legit because I don't want to go to jail and I can make more money doing things ethically and not breaking the law. Like, you just like make so much more money being legit. How on earth did you not learn that lesson earlier? All right. Today's pod is interesting. We just had Billy McFarland in. He's famous for the Fyre Festival thing, which basically was this like huge Coachella-type event that went viral 4 years ago. And he ended up committing a ton of crimes that he admitted to and was charged and convicted of like $25 or $30 million worth of fraud. We just had him on the pod. Very confusing pod, Sean, I think. Not confusing, but, but like mixed emotions.

SHAAN

Yeah.

SHAAN

I mean, he's an interesting guy. He's also, uh, complicated like most people. And, uh, you know, I don't know. I think we, I think it was pretty interesting. We talked about a bunch of things. We talked about kind of his origin story, how he got to the Fyre Festival and almost like where it all went wrong. So where did he start making, you know, mistakes and then eventually committing crimes? Uh, we talked about life in prison and what that was like in solitary confinement and things like that. We talked about what he's doing now, how he's trying to come back. And, uh, me and Sam are a little bit hard on his new idea, I would say. Well, to the point of, if this was a normal, if this was just a normal person, random person on the street, I would not have been as harsh. But I felt like I, I don't know, for whatever reason, I felt like I had the license to be a little harsh on this one. Um, we talked about that. We talked about other ideas about what he could do or other opportu— business opportunities he sees. Pretty fascinating guy.

SAM

Very fascinating guy. The thing that, like, that sits bad with me is, or it makes me confused, is he's very likable. He's a very likable person, incredibly charming, very charismatic. And I want him to win. But he did a lot of really bad shit.

SHAAN

And he seems a little, a little coached in the sense that he's like, right up front, we'll say 'What I did was terrible. I deserve no sympathy.' Uh, you know, 'I was wrong and I was an idiot,' right? And he's very quick to kind of own that, which is great. You want somebody to own it. But it's also— I think that's somebody who understands, 'Okay, this is the message. I got to stay on this message.' And, um, yeah, I gotta make it really clear where I stand on that.

SAM

It's like when you have like a star football player, star athlete in high school, and you see them like doing bad shit off the field and you're like, dude, you have it all, man. You've got the talent. Please don't blow this. It hurts us all to see someone with so many gifts do such bad shit. And that's a little bit how I felt with this. And yeah, I'm— I say this in the end, but I'm eager to see how this story ends. I'm going to be following it. And I think it was a good pod. Ben, our producer Ben, thought it went great. He was messaging us during it. But I think people will like it.

SHAAN

Yep. All right.

SAM

Enjoy. All right. Let's just get right into this. So it sounds like you have like staff, like you just asked someone to get you a coffee. So are you like, are you back? I mean, you're, you're, you're in the mix again. You're working.

Yeah. Broke as hell, but, uh, taking advantage of, you know, anybody I can get to help me try to rebuild and start making things right.

SHAAN

And you have like a crazy restitution thing. So we should explain kind of what the. So this is Billy. Billy created Fyre Festival, most notably. You may have seen, I don't know, the documentaries or whatever. You just got out of prison, but one of the things that's associated with it is you have like more than $20 million or something that you have to pay back in restitution to some combination of investors, uh, creditors, people like that. How does that work? You, do you have to give them like every dollar or is it a certain percentage? Like, How does that work? Because that's a deep, deep hole.

Yeah. And it's brutal. I'm like, I just can't think about that big number because then, you know, I'll sort of lose track about like what's happening today and tomorrow. So how it works is that I have to pay a percentage of all of my personal income, you know, directly back to restitution. Like after taxes, they calculated on just like gross income. So totally pre-tax income. So I make like $1,000 this week. I have a set percentage I have to pay on that $1,000. But what is it in addition to that?

SHAAN

What's the, yeah. What's the percent? Is it like crazy or is it like 5%?

It's more than 5%. I'm not sure like where it's going to end up. It varies based on income. So I know what I have to pay right now, but I think it gets readjusted every couple of months. And then in addition to that, Pirate's giving 10% of all of its revenue back to restitution as well. So if Pirate gets $100K sponsorship deal, like it'll pay $10K right away. And then whatever I get as my like salary or income, I'll pay an additional percentage on top of that. So, and just trying to pay more than I have to.

SAM

Why are you doing this right now? Why are you, I mean, like, you know, you're in a different situation. I firmly believe that. I listened to your pod, the pods that you've done. I've watched the documentary. I've read a little bit. Like, you made a massive mistake. So, yeah, I think that you, you, you deserved to be punished. And so I don't feel sorry for that. I don't feel sorry for you for having to do that. I think 5 years or 4 years, however much you serve, that's, that's a lot. So my, my current stance is like everyone deserves a second chance. And if you, if you do the crime and you have to do the time, like you, there should be a point where it's like, all right, you screwed up, you get it, you can try again. I feel that. But when I see you doing this podcast push right now, I'm like, should we— is he taking advantage of us? Like, why is this guy doing this right now? Why is he— what is he going to— what's he trying to sell? Or, or is this therapeutic or are you just trying to make a living? Which, you know, what's your motivation between this recent push?

Yeah. So like, first of all, totally deserved what I got. And sorry, I think there's like days where I felt like I got too much time. There's days where I felt like I didn't get enough, just like based on everything else happening in the world. So deserved what was coming and like definitely not looking for sympathy. I think there's two things here. One is that by doing these podcasts, I'm getting great like inbound deal flow. So if 3 or 4 companies are listening to this and they're like, oh wait, he actually does know how to market, he can get his attention and they'll come and hire me. Like, that's amazing. That's my entire purpose of like doing this small media run right now. I think it's like looking at your Twitter comments a little bit this morning before I came on the show, a lot of people and other hosts have gotten the same feedback is like, why the hell would you give a con artist like any time of day? Um, loved your, loved your response, but I think the response to all those people is like, what did I say?

SAM

Which, which, which reply?

You said like maybe an interesting conversation that will get us money. So like, I like your honesty.

SAM

I like your transparency. I said, I said, uh, an interesting person or, uh, a cure, uh, an interesting person that would have an interesting conversation and it will get us a lot of views.

Uh, I think that's cool. I think other people haven't been able to say that. So I think that's great. But I think to them is that anybody who's taken life to the extreme or too far, has learned like a lot of good and bad lessons from that. So like they can use me, right? And if there's like one entrepreneur here who's trying to raise money and he or she thinks like, shit, this is a little harder than I thought 60 days ago, and they're about to send out that monthly investor update, don't fuck up your numbers. Like don't go over the top to raise that cash. And like if I can stop one person, really cool. But on the other end of the spectrum, if there's somebody who's going about it honestly and they're scared to kind of take that leap of Like if I can inspire them to go and try to make their brand pop off, really cool as well. So I think there is lessons to be learned and people could kind of use all of my mistakes to help them wherever they are in their entrepreneurial journey.

SHAAN

And you, you are kind of a hustler. So you, uh, uh, we'll kind of go fast through it, but you, you basically, when you were in middle school, started creating projects. I don't even wanna say company. Cause like, you know, I don't know how, how much of a company it is when you're in middle school, but like You were building products and, uh, launching them as websites. That's right. Is that right? Like in middle school?

Yeah, just basically started doing super basic HTML, CSS in like 5th and 6th grade. And so this is what, 20, 21, 22 years ago. And it was pretty much like the wild, wild west days of the internet and started a couple of like web hosting companies and basic social networks. And that was really my foray into the world of entrepreneurship and technology.

SHAAN

So you, you make those sites, you end up selling them, or you sold at least one of them, uh, for like what, like, uh, a big win, a small win. What would you do when you were kind of like, you're probably in 6th and 7th grade.

Yeah. Yeah. These are a couple of thousands of dollars. So like life-changing to, you know, a kid who just wants to buy candy, but at this point kind of irrelevant. But I think like kind of got me into the game. Um, started a little bit of a bigger media site called 24 Scene in high school. And sold that. 24 Scene? Yes, sold it to a company called Buddy TV out of Seattle when I was 16.

SHAAN

What did that do? What was 24 Scene?

It was a content network, and I love the TV show 24, so it was basically clipping, you know, snippets of the 24 show. And this is before streaming, so it's hard.

SHAAN

Jack Bauer 24?

Yeah, exactly. So it's hard to get like actual media of the shows. This is all based on like, you know, Fox like aired it and then there really was very little media afterwards. So I was taking like the show that aired and clipping it up and ended up doing it for a half a dozen TV shows. And I had this business partner at the time who was in his mid-30s in Michigan who I never met, and he like orchestrated the sale and then he paid me out on Western Union every 2 weeks for like the remainder of my high school. So that was pretty crazy.

SHAAN

How, how much did you, how much did you make doing that?

It was like tens of thousands of dollars, like by But at the time it was, it was wild for me.

SAM

And from there is you, you went to school and you graduated, but you never had a real job.

Did you? Went to college. Um, basically started living off of my 2014 capital under this little suitcase under my bed, my freshman year of college. And for the first time, like started going out, like going to nightclubs, going to dinners, like exploring what every 18-year-old, I think, man, like, wants to see what's out there in the world and blew all my cash in a couple of months. So I'm like, shit, now I'm broke sitting in my college in this like small town. I can't afford to like try to find a car to take me to New York City anymore. Like, what can I do? So got back to what I knew, which was basic programming and started a social networking website called Spling during my freshman year of college. And that introduced me to this entire world of like venture capital and angel investing. And essentially dropped out of school halfway-ish through my freshman year to work on Spring. And then I started this whole like run of venture capital-backed startups.

SAM

My wife, through friends of friends, somehow had some run-ins with you at Penn. Like, like, she was like good run-ins or, you know, someone you must have dated someone or friends of someone. And she, and she, they would tell me stories about, they're like, yeah, we knew him. And he would always rent like these fat cars and drive us all and pay for everything to go to New York City from Philly. Uh, and like, we just thought like he just had some business and no one knew what it was. No, it wasn't anything inappropriate, but it was just like, he just like, just, we all knew as this guy who must've had some money through some internet companies and he, uh, he treated all of us on a regular basis.

Yeah. So I went to, went to Philly for a company called Dream Adventures, which is kind of like this. Accelerator incubator program. And I was dating a girl at the time who is, I think it's a sophomore now at Penn. So I should have been a sophomore in school. So all my like peers and friends were in college and like, so I'd be like at DreamIt trying to raise money by day and then like at the terrible like college parties by night and then obviously trying to take them to New York.

SHAAN

So what triggered this switch from like, uh, I'm a kid programmer who likes to make hobbyist websites, like, you know, scenes from my favorite TV show 24 to like, I'm trying to be the man. Because it seems like at some point you, all your business ventures switched to like things that were super cool, right? You did the Black Card credit card thing. Uh, you did Fyre obviously, which was like, you know, the next Coachella. So at some point you switched from like kind of hobbyist websites to how do I be the cool guy? You know, the big man on campus type of thing. What, what triggered that, that switch for you?

Yeah, I think that's a good question. And it was almost like I was living these alternative lives and not really fitting in with either one. I was a college kid, but trying to raise money from venture capitalists when, you know, at my little school, the majority of the students haven't heard of the word like venture capital in their life. And then so I'd go hang out with these venture capitalists who were titans of industry or, you know, successful angel investors and kind of go back to the college realm. So I was always kind of interested in merging the two worlds. So when I'm hanging out with the VCs, the college kids all want access to this and they would hire me to help like market or consult. So it was always kind of hustling and trying to make side income to, to fund a lifestyle and trying to kind of keep up with this new world that my basic programming had been giving me access to.

SAM

And then at what point, so the, it was like your first kind of, it wasn't a real win. Like you didn't exit, but you raised, I think, $4 or $6 million. Was that the, the Magnesis? Is it called Magnesis?

Yes. So, um, turned 19, graduated from the Dream Adventures, moved spring to the second ever WeWork Labs, uh, down on Barrick Street in New York. And I was there at WeWork, now around these like 30-ish, you know, hustling entrepreneurs all trying to make it. I'm a kid and went out to dinner with just like a group of these friends I was starting to meet in New York who are a little bit older, a little bit more established. And one of them pulls out this black American Express Centurion card and kind of slams it on the table to show off. And I'm like, fuck, I have $40 in my Chase account. Like, how, how can I do this? So I went back to my WeWork office, went online to Alibaba before Alibaba was really like a mainstream thing, uh, particularly like in New York, in the US, bought these black metal cards and bought a credit card copier. They kind of came in the mail, took my Chase Blue debit card, copied it onto this black card, went to the pizza place across the street from the WeWork. Guy was treating me like I was royalty. Went back into the office and just sold these cards to all the entrepreneurs in the WeWork office. And then Magnesis was born.

SAM

And how big did that business get before it, uh, before it went south?

So Magnesis did total like $11-12-ish million in revenue over 3 years. And my biggest mistake was getting distracted by Fyre and the Fyre Festival. And I understand this is forwarding like years in advance. But in the run-up to Fyre Festival for the 4 or 5 months, I just started trying to get money from anywhere and everywhere and basically milked the Magnises customer base as much as I could. And then when Fyre crashed, Magnises went down with it. So just not seeing it through was such a fuckup.

SAM

But Magnises was just, it was just literally like, it's not a bank account. It was just literally the physical card as well as some perks. Like you would get like discounts to certain concerts, I guess, is where Fyre kind of got inspiration from. Yes. Discounts to certain clubs, I guess, or like a discount to like a private jet service. So you just must have negotiated the deals or probably even white labeled like some other company that had found cool deals. And you, for $300, you got this sick, uh, card, like literally physically just a card with your same bank account. You had access to like a townhouse. I forget what you called it, a townhouse. Uh, and you got to go to some parties and you got some perks. Is that basically the model?

Exactly. Then what was really interesting though was the members were bringing all the perks and benefits. So initially I sold these cards. And so now let's say we sold a couple hundred cards. I'm like, wow, our member base is super interesting. Whether they're entrepreneurs, they're people in all these different industries that my friends don't really have access to. Like, let's get a space where they can all come and connect. So I went and rented a series of lofts and townhouses that I couldn't afford, where basically members can come and hang out anytime. And then as Magnesis grew, we just built an app where members would come to us saying, hey, I work at this brand, whether it's like this plane company, this fitness studio, this fashion brand, let's do something special for the rest of the members. And they would basically pay us to advertise and give access to cool shit to the members. And the members would pay us an annual fee to get access to these perks. So it's kind of interesting where we're making money from both sides and then relying on the actual member base to create the offering.

SAM

Was it profitable?

So I was just so bad with financial management that we raised, you know, a few million bucks for Magnesis, but we never had more than 2 months of runway in the entire history of the company. So I'd raise a round and like 80% of that round was already spent in terms of like bills owed to employees, contractors, agencies, whatever. So it was like always a kiss of death, like, okay, raise a million bucks, but fuck, I owe $800 grand and now we have 2 months of runway left. I think my biggest inability was to communicate like that problem to investors. I just kept saying like, things are great, you know, you'll raise a million bucks and we're off to the races. I couldn't just like really explain how much we needed and why we needed it. And that caused us to have to basically become profitable super early on. So just started monetizing the user base way more than I should have, which I think diminished the value of the brand. And for like the last year and a half, 2 years of Magnises, like we weren't profitable, but we were paying all of our bills just based on revenue. And it's like, try to monetize too quickly and too fast to keep up with my like crazy expenses.

SAM

But even Magnesius, Magnesius had issues. Like, uh, there's like stories of like, you know, the members saying, we thought we were buying tickets to blank, but turns out like we didn't actually have them. Or maybe like Hamilton tickets. I think there was a story around that. Like you even had issues then. What, what, uh, Uh, what, what were the— what were those issues?

So when Fyre Festival came and I started going down this terrible rabbit hole, I needed money from everywhere and anywhere, and that included overselling and trying to overpromise things to Magnesis members to get that capital. And it just like took everything down, and like, I was wrong, and I was like lying everywhere thinking I could make these miracles happen. And sometimes we did, but more often than not We crashed and burned at the end. So I just like totally just like lost track of all the good that was happening.

SHAAN

And I know you, you feel bad and you probably feel, you know, some shame and all these negative things. Do you ever just laugh at like, wow, what the hell? Like, what did I do? Where did this go? How great, how far did this thing go? It's like, there's a reason there's documentaries about it. It's literally like a movie. Is there any part of you that just sort of looks at this and says, I can't believe how far I let this thing go and how far it went.

Totally. And like, I was like looking at and trying to think through the SBF scenario, you know, for the past couple of weeks. And I think at the end of the day, like, he's obviously in a completely different stratosphere, but it's really— in his position, it's really hard to say no to someone with $10 billion, right? I don't care like how smart or how wealthy you are. So much of our decision-making process is based on social proof. And when you meet someone with that kind of capital, it immediately checks off all these like subconscious boxes that create this phenomenon of social proof. And I think that like to a much larger scale, that's what happened to him. But it's also happened to me where I had thousands of customers or thousands of members and all these talent and artists who are promoting the brand. That was the position where I was just like way too young, way too immature And people who should have helped me were almost scared to say no. And I kind of like relished and thrived off of that. And this led me down this terrible, terrible rabbit hole. And when they started saying no, I was too like in my own head where, oh, you know, I pulled this off and proved you wrong before. I just like didn't know how to press that red button to stop. And that was like one of my biggest issues.

SAM

I think the reason you're interesting because Every entrepreneur— we have a lot of— I mean, people who like listen to this pod are like entrepreneurial and everyone, like most internet entrepreneurs, when they get into starting businesses, they do things that are either black hat or gray hat. And then they realize, they realize like, okay, this is sick. I know how to make money. Like I'm proficient at this skill set, but like I got to do things legit because I'm going to make way more money if I— and I do the same thing. I used to do these like, I mean, I've done criminal shit as well. And I'm like, what the hell am I thinking? I should do things the right way because I don't want to go to jail and I can make more money doing things ethically and not breaking the law. Like you just like make so much more money being legit. How on earth did you not learn that lesson earlier?

I think just craziest thing is I didn't know really what failure was until I failed on such a massive scale. Um, I think part of what let me go so far is I obviously had as many losses, if not more, than every other entrepreneur along the journey. But I was really good, or I guess really bad, at blocking out that noise. And I was so focused on like this end goal of nothing else matters. Like, let me put my blinders on and just like keep running forward. And I just kept getting jaded to failures until the failure became so big that I'm, I'm locked in solitary confinement.

SAM

And what was the end goal? Like, for, for, for me, it's like, I wanna make a certain amount of money so I can have a certain house so I don't have to worry anymore, so I could spend my monthly however much I want. And then there's, there's, I mean, I mean, all of us have some ego thing of like, I want to prove to people that I'm legit. Yeah. What was your— but I like had a certain money goal in mind. I imagine Sean's the same way. He's like, well, I want this lifestyle. I want this. What, what's, what's your motivating factor in all this? Like, you say, I want to have $100 million in net worth by a certain age, or I want girls to have sex with me, which is like we all obviously do. Like, what's like the motivating factor? I want to fit in.

I think I had two big insecurities and drives. One is those initial investors who backed me when I was 18. I wanted to prove to them that they were right. And FIRE was 7 years later from that, 7, 8 years later after that. So one, I wanted to prove they were right and I was too insecure to show any kinks in my armor to them. And two is I wanted to be the guy that just took you to wild, crazy experiences. And I'm like, wow, this whole programming thing is taking me into this world of entertainment. I'm hanging out with rappers and models and comedians and My friends don't believe me. Like, I want to be that guy who can take you from your shitty college or from your, like, shitty desk job to this private island where the who's who of the world is letting down their guards and having a blast. So it was partly like proving myself to investors, and two, partly proving myself to friends that, like, I'm the guy that made this life experience happen that you just can't get anywhere else.

SHAAN

And we should explain the origin. So you, you go from Magnesis— I don't know what's in between, but at some point you create this app called the Fyre app. And the Fyre app was meant to like let you book an artist, right? So you could be like, oh, I want, uh, you know, whatever, Timbaland to perform at a party. I can send a booking request and he can accept or reject. And there's no middleman or minimal, you know, less middlemen in the middle. And so, you know, sort of create a marketplace for, you know, people to book these artists. That was the core idea. And Fyre Festival was a marketing stunt to promote the app, right? But at some point the two kind of almost flipped in importance and Fyre Festival became the overarching thing. Fyre Festival starts, uh, from what I understand, because you meet a guy who's like, yo, I have this little plane and I fly to these random Caribbean islands. And you used to go on your weekends, you know, in this like 4-person plane, hang out, come back. And you were like, wow, this is so dope. People are like, wow, that sounds so dope. You're like, yeah, you should come do this too. And somehow your experience of like flying to these remote islands and having a, having a good time became, what if we fly 3,000 people down to this island and we do this like festival, this Coachella-like festival? Did I get that right so far?

I think you told the story better than me.

SHAAN

Okay, perfect. So, but, but somewhere along the way you get something wrong. I'm fast forwarding this because I think, you know, it's documented in other places, but I do want to explain it for somebody who's listening.

SAM

So.

SHAAN

Somewhere along the way you're like, all right, we're doing this, we're doing Fyre Festival. And you start promoting this thing and your method of promoting was what, what was the marketing game plan to promote Fyre Festival?

So like it all kind of stems down to, I was, for all my terrible flaws, I was really good at taking a tangible asset that most people didn't have and using that to launch a business. So Magnises had this physical card that would cost me like $2 to make per card. And then a crazy townhouse. So my entire target demographic didn't have access to a black card. They didn't have access to a multimillion-dollar townhouse in downtown Manhattan when they're 23 years old. So I took these two, like, inaccessible things, gave it to my customers, and used that to launch a business on top of. Fast forward to FIRE. Now I'm trying to cater to these, you know, B-list rappers and comedians who need small bookings. Um, these people aren't Jay-Z, they aren't Drake, they don't have their own private island. So here's where I come in. Okay, now guys, we have our own private island. You want to be involved with me? And then I use that to hopefully build the Fyre booking app. So all of my marketing strategy came down to taking a tangible good or service that wasn't available to a certain audience, giving it to them, making them feel like it's theirs and they own it, and using that to build a business. So that was the entire logic behind like the Fyre app and Fyre Festival component. And as you perfectly said, the importance quickly flipped as we launched the marketing for Fyre Festival and Fyre Festival became it and Fyre app became, you know, a second thought for that period of time.

SAM

It's not like a bad plan. It's not a bad idea, I guess.

SHAAN

Like on the pod, I think when the documentaries came out, we were like, honestly, it was a dope idea. And somebody like, if it had just been done, like, and it wasn't even like, it's not like Theranos where you're like, That was a dope idea. If somebody had just done it right, it's like, well, maybe it's technically impossible. Your shit, your thing was possible. You just had shitty like logistics and operations and poor planning. You just threw a, you just threw like the, the idea of the event and then the actual, the actual event did not live up to, to, to, to the hype, but your thing was totally possible. Um, what, what went wrong there? Why, why were you not able to, to pull off what you had sold? The dream that you had sold where you had Bella Hadid and you had fucking, I don't know, Kendall Jenner and all these people promoting that, hey, we're going to this thing, it's going to be, you know, whatever, the party of the century. You sold the tickets, so you got that part right. It's just you didn't deliver the party.

SAM

Who were the big backers? Was it VCs or family offices or what?

A handful of venture funds, then, you know, 25 individuals everywhere from like larger family offices down to just smaller angels.

SAM

Who was the biggest fund or most well-known fund?

Uh, I just don't want to throw anybody under the bus. So yeah.

SAM

Oh, okay. I thought— I wasn't sure if it was public.

Uh, I think that some of the investor list was a good portion of the investor list, I believe, was sealed in the court files. And I didn't ask for it to be sealed. I think other people did. So I just don't want to— yeah, sure, don't want to do that. Our software is the worst.

SHAAN

Have you heard of HubSpot?

See, most CRMs are a cobbled-together mess, but HubSpot is easy to adopt and actually looks gorgeous. I think I love our new CRM. Our software is the best.

Grow better.

SHAAN

And so you, uh, you're like, okay, I, I could have asked for help from, uh, organizing people. And this is where I think things get a little tricky. So you brought up SBF, um, yeah, I've— I brought up Theranos, we're talking about Fyre Festival. I think there's always a question of like, was this intentionally supposed to be a fraud? Like, oh, I'm just going to trick people and run away. And, uh, you know, like with FTX right now, that's a question. Like, Did something happen that you weren't really paying attention to and then things got out of hand? Or from the beginning, oh, you were like, I'm just gonna trick people and take their money. Um, for you, where did it, where did it start? It like, was it well-intentioned at the beginning and where did it turn? At what point did you realize, oh, I'm, I'm, I gotta just say this because I gotta get to the next dollar. I gotta get to the next The next milestone.

So truly tried to execute the event and literally up until people were arriving to the festival, I thought it was going to work. And obviously that's so stupid looking back. Yeah.

SHAAN

How can you say that? You knew you had like fucking, you know, tents and like grilled cheese sandwiches for people who ordered villas. Like what, how could you, how could you still believe that right up until the event?

SAM

Are you sober this entire time, by the way?

Uh, never did drugs, but was like drinking a lot. But yeah, but no drugs, drinking way too much. Never. Like I've smoked weed maybe 6 times in my life, but I think it's like a common, you know, people are saying I was on coke or whatever. Never tried coke in my life.

SAM

So they gotta have a hard time. Okay. So yeah, back to, so you're, you're, you're in a sober-ish mindset and you actually think it's gonna work the day of or the day before.

And I'm like, here's my thought process. The island is so beautiful. We have this local team who you couldn't script these characters. They have the boats, they have the jet skis, they're going to take people out. We know how to do these experiences. We have some crazy pilots. It's just going to be a wild weekend that you've never had before. And we have 30 artists who are paid. So you're going to have A-list talent, one of the most beautiful places in my opinion in the Atlantic Ocean, and amazing group of these movie-scripted local characters. Who have toys for you to play on. So I thought that like, okay, they'll go back and they'll have a shitty—

SHAAN

we don't have food and shelter and bathrooms, but we got nature.

We have Ja Rule. Yeah, yeah, yeah.

SAM

Who needs food when you have tubing?

SAM

What would the ideal outcome had been? Let's say that like it just so happened to work. How much revenue and profit would it have made? And like, what would the ideal situation had, had been?

So I have no idea. Like my entire— Are you fucking kidding me? How do you not know this? So like, we had a budget for $10 million for the festival. I didn't have $10 million. I'm like, okay, I can reasonably raise $10 million just off of this brand that we're building right now for the festival. Ended up spending way more than that. And it got to the point where I would go to sleep with no money in the bank, wake up and know that like that day I had to raise a certain dollar amount just to survive. And some days it was $50 grand, some days it was $4 million. So I'd wake up at, you know, 9:00 AM and know that I have until 2:00 PM to get X dollars in the bank to then rewire it out before the, before the day ended. So my life was fucking hell and I just couldn't like zoom out. So I was stuck at, okay, today's $2 million. I can call this guy, I can call this guy and like, At the end of the day, things keep getting bigger. The brand is going to be so big. If this festival works, everybody's going to get paid. And I just didn't know how to really run the numbers at that point.

SHAAN

So how much did you end up spending?

We raised $26,000 or $27,000, but we were making money from other sources. We were selling tickets on top of that. We were getting sponsors. Magnesis was making money. I was doing consulting jobs. So it's literally like Every day was just a different angle for money.

SHAAN

So you spent maybe like $30 million plus?

I would say in this 6-month period, it was probably closer to $40 over 6 months.

SAM

So you spent $40 million?

SHAAN

And the tickets?

Yeah.

SHAAN

So you sold 7,000 tickets, is that right?

I think it was probably just under 6,000. It was just like around 3,000 people per weekend. Some were given away for free and some were sold. So we sold a little under 6,000.

SHAAN

All right, let's call it $5,000.

SAM

What was that revenue?

SHAAN

$5,000 times what, what's the average ticket? What were you selling these for?

So the average, the, the, the median ticket price is like $1,200 to $1,500. However, we sold like a handful of outlier tickets for like a couple hundred thousand dollars plus per ticket.

SAM

So, so then it was in $5,000 times $2,000. You're at, what's that? $10 million. You're at $10 million in sales. Uh, and then did you have another couple million from sponsors or anything like that?

Yeah. And like the issue is that some of the ticket money was held in escrow. Some of it was for like these yachts and boats. So it wasn't like pure $10 million of free cash flow. It was like everything was held up or not held up in certain ways. I think like my Stripe account got frozen with like $700 grand in it the day the festival got canceled. So it's like, you know, money was held in a bunch of different sources and areas.

SHAAN

So the, the event itself didn't make any sense, right? It was like, we're gonna make $10 million, we're gonna spend $40, but, but the brand made, made no sense.

SAM

The brand, baby, the brand is gonna carry the way you, you But you could have gotten so much more profit just by running a $10 million or $40 million of Facebook ads. You know what I mean? Like, this is just like a better or a slightly different version of Cameo or something like that. Like, these marketplaces are tried and true. Yeah, an event would have been cool if it were like a break-even or a slight loss.

But that— yeah, but, but put it this way, like, as for as wrong as things are, like, I can't do this tomorrow. But if I did Fyre Festival again in 3 years, I think almost all of the first group as well as the rest of pop culture would buy tickets just to be there to see how bad it is. Right. The brand value is there. Just like, how can I do it appropriately? Are you tempted to pick the right time to go? I mean, I have to do it again. I just can't do it while I'm on probation. I can't do it this year or next year, but it has to be done again. And I think no matter what success or failures I find along the way in tech, until I execute Fire.

SAM

Well, Sean, have you seen his new company, PYRT? Go to the website.

SHAAN

So it's PYRT website.

SAM

Let's, let's do it, dude. Trust me, go to it. It's pyrt.com. Billy, like, this is the same shit that you're doing a little bit. Like, it's, it's all like, you said you could program. Like, like, when I see what you're doing and I— you had— you did the Met Gala thing where, where you got in trouble for scamming people out of that. I'm like, hey, just do a fucking course, dude. Just create a course and make $2 million. Like, me and Sean make 7 figures a year from this stupid stuff. It's not stupid, it provides value, but I mean, it's like insignificant compared to an event. Or like, you said you like the program and you like content sites, like just do something like boring and straight. Why are you doing this pirate thing? It's like the same shit. There's so many things that's gonna go, that could potentially go wrong. It's just the stakes are so much higher than just creating some boring-ass software.

I hear you. Um, I think Pirate is actually—

SAM

is that what you're usually jumping all the time?

SAM

Yeah. Uh, Billy, we have, uh, 3,000 people coming tomorrow. I hear you.

No, you might very well be right. And I think the thing that we're getting back to with Pirate is like, I'm not trying to host 1,000 people on an island. That's not going to work. I want to get back to those trips on the small planes with a dozen people or two dozen people. That did work well for a couple of years. And if I have to be like a tour guide for a few years of my life and like eat shit, like I'm going to go do that. But I can give a couple of dozen people this amazing adventurous experience. And then while I'm doing that, I'd like to find interesting ways to broadcast those experiences to all of their followers and then give their followers a way to get involved. So I'm not trying to figure out the logistics to host thousands of people. I know it can host 2 dozen people and If I can take 5 years to build like really interesting, like virtual reality-esque tech that allows anybody to like watch and actually influence what's happening, I think that's like a really cool win and way to kind of get back to what I'm good at.

SHAAN

This is a horrible idea.

SAM

Yeah, dude, it's a horrible idea. It's— I actually don't think it's a horrible idea if it— like, I think you potentially are— you're, you're You rank so high in capability and so high in ignorance. Like, and that's like a perfect combination, I think, of starting a business, which is like this, like confidence of like, I think I could pull this off and I'm capable of some things. That's actually a beautiful combination. But you also have this third part of the, of the pie chart where it's just like reputation and like past and owing money. I just don't understand why you're doing this. It just— you can— you, you are Brilliant at a lot of things. It just seems like such a start, like just a boring-ass agency that makes $20 million a year and $10 million in profit.

SHAAN

Yeah. If you just did like an event, like a stunt marketing agency or, uh, or something like that.

We have that. We're announcing it today actually.

SAM

Oh, okay.

It's called the Pirate Collective. And that's how we're fund— that's where we're trying to fund, I guess our tech is.

SHAAN

So, so let's walk through this. Okay. So I'm on the Pirate website and it says there's a picture of a private island. So we're, we're already getting flashbacks of FIRE. Cash. And then it says, join the crew. A pirate is somebody who turns the impossible into adventure. It says, give me your phone number. And then it says, join the treasure hunt virtual reality. So what you're saying from what, what I just gathered of what you just described is that you're going to take, you know, 6 to 15 people at a time on those like little planes to the islands like you used to do where it's not such a heavy logistical lift. Um, yeah, those people are going to have a great time. They'll pay $5,000 or $10,000 or something. I'm just guessing here. They'll pay a lot of money to have this really cool adventurous experience. And then you're going to use, you know, video plus maybe virtual reality to broadcast that experience to other people who can't afford to go and, or maybe their friends and their social media. Um, yeah. And they get to maybe buy a virtual ticket to kind of attend the party that way. And you're going to do that a bunch of times. Did I describe it right? Or did I, I'm just guessing based on what you said.

Absolutely. So the last thing that you're missing is that the people who are basically, so essentially we're going to partner with this little hotel. They'll handle all the hospitality and logistics. We'll host artists there on a regular basis. We'll rig the hotel with these 360 cameras, livestream everything that's happening, then give the people who are watching the livestream the ability to buy in and affect what's happening on the island. So they could like have one of the artists go to the recording studio and impact the creative process when they're making their song. Or they can buy the talent like a drink, you know, and make them take a tequila shot.

SHAAN

Dude, you should just have gone for being MrBeast. Like we hung out with MrBeast and you're wired just like that nut. And, uh, and I feel like if you just channeled your energy towards how do I do the craziest thing that's going to make the craziest video that 20 million people are going to watch and then continually one-up yourself. Uh, I feel like that would work. That's my suggestion to you. You don't have to answer.

SAM

And you absolutely have the, you have the charisma and you have the storytelling ability. I'm like, just do, just do, just, just make you and like a small team doing the crazy shit and do ad dollars. But it sounds like you're sharing, you wanna share your screen. You could share your screen. I, I heard you clicking around. I bet you share it.

I don't know. I'm not supposed to share this, but okay. But, uh, I wanna get back to what you just said though.

SAM

I like that attitude. I like that.

SAM

But, and what, what, what would the financials of this be like? I mean, I'm sure you've now thought about that more. You're like, what would the P&L, what would, what does the P&L that you're thinking? No, surely he has. It's like one day, one day it could do this. What's that one day?

So a million people paying 20 cents to ask a talent to do something or to contribute an action towards like the real world. So if everybody pays 20 cents to chum the water and a million people are chumming the water, then that's kind of where the financials come in.

SAM

But that's— sorry, I can't do that math. Just tell me like in 5 years, are you in your head, you're like, I think we could do like $100 million in 8 years. Like what's the—

Do not get me arrested, Sam. I, I don't wanna promise any revenue, but no, no, sorry, don't promise.

SAM

I'm just saying like when you're laying in bed, you're like, I think this could become like a $100 million company by doing this.

I think what's the way I think about this, and my logic could be wrong, is that once again, I, we're not confusing the Bahamas, but for example, the Bahamas gets around 4-ish million tourists a year. And if we're doing these really interesting broadcasts, we can have more than 4 million people in a single day, like virtually come to the island. So if we can just like totally destroy their tourism numbers on a virtual scale, I think it's a big revenue opportunity.

SHAAN

So, okay, so where did you come up with this idea? Were you in prison or was it once you got out that you were like, all right, I'm going to start my brainstorm?

No, I was in solitary confinement and it's like totally, totally confined. And you know, a lot of it was just like reflection. And then a lot of it too was I want to get outside of these walls and just like get back to adventure and then find a way to share this.

SHAAN

We should say, by the way, you got into Solitary because you attempted to do a podcast from inside prison.

Yeah.

SHAAN

Terrible idea. First, did you know that was not allowed? I didn't even realize that would be such a faux pas. That would be such a big mistake.

SAM

Of course that would be a faux pas.

I think the biggest thing is—

SHAAN

Podcasts are great.

SAM

Dude, they read your mail and shit. You can't— and each crip, each inmate, you have like different rules for you, right?

SHAAN

Like if a journalist calls you and you do an interview, is that allowed?

That's allowed. I was wrong. The toughest part though was like it was a gray area. I think if it was like a clear violation of the rules, my punishment would have been like less strict. I used the payphone like they're available payphones, but at the same time, like you can't cause attention to the jail, right? And that's what I did. So I understand like why it was like so incredibly stupid. But I think if I had a clear violation of the rules, I would've gone to solitary for like 45 days and not 7 months.

SHAAN

So you basically had a podcast host call you on the payphone and then you did your side of the podcast from the payphone in like 10-minute or 15-minute increments, right? Because that's how you were allowed.

Exactly.

SHAAN

Exactly.

SAM

Okay. Yeah. I mean, I understand why you think that's gray. It's like, what's the difference between prostitution and pornography? You know, it's like, oh, I don't know if there's a camera there. It's like, you're, you're safe. Like, you know what I mean? Like, you're like, playing this like, like, I don't know if I would be, if I would be risking things at that moment. I mean, I, I've, I've, when I was in college, I did stupid stuff and I got in trouble. And I remember getting in trouble and thinking like, I don't ever want to come back to jail again. And more so, solitary confinement seems like I would kill myself. I think I would want to commit suicide. Like, that sounds like, that's like the 7 months in a box. It seems like the worst. That's the worst possible outcome. Let alone like, you know, getting life, you know, like El Chapo and some of these guys in these like Florence and all these like high, high-level security. What was that like, 7 months being in that cell? I get anxious just thinking about it.

I actually think that it's counterproductive in terms of reform, if that kind of makes sense. And the other time in jail, like, I don't think it's going to have like long-lasting negative impacts in my life. I did 10 months total in solitary, one time for 3, one time for 7. I think that actually makes it more likely that I make a mistake in the future. And obviously if I do make a mistake, it's totally on me. But the mental hangover that I have where it's like somebody out there could snap their fingers and put me into a concrete box, that's scary. That's what gives me the nightmares at night. And I think that if anything, that makes ideas bigger or different because you're kind of fearful of that outcome. So I don't know, it's fucking hard. And like, there are guys who have done way more than 10 months, and I can't imagine what they feel like. But I think that's like the worst part of the experience. And actually, it's just counterproductive.

SHAAN

Did you know it was going to be 7 months, or is like, do you know there's an end point, or you didn't know?

No. And I think like if they said, hey, this is 7 months, then you're getting out, and then you're going home a year after that, it would have been totally different. But The fact that they kept fucking with me, basically saying, hey, you're never getting out of here, you're going to get in trouble more. Like, that was the biggest mindfuck. You just like wake up every morning and be like, this is never going to end. Why?

SAM

Like, you mean the guards were just assholes?

Yeah. And the jail, they literally, in response to the podcast, they tried to send me to a terrorist facility called the CMC in Marion, Illinois. You can like look at their inmates on Wikipedia. And like, I'd be one of two non-terrorists in that facility and they would come and fuck with me and like pass like program statements under my door for this communication management unit. Like, here's where you're going, McFarland. And like, I thought they were bluffing. And then like a day later, oh, we submitted you there. And like, they legitimately tried to send me to a terrorist facility and it's like, you're never getting out. So it's like, what's going to happen?

SAM

That is fucking crazy. I think that like whenever I was thinking of, I remember talking to my wife at the time when you were getting in trouble and I'm like, Unfortunately, I think 4 or 5 years probably is a fair— is probably a fair punishment. I don't think solitary is a fair punishment. And I don't think being like tormented is fair though.

SHAAN

You know, like you went to jail not because you threw a bad festival, you went to jail for— what was the exact reason?

Lying to investors.

SHAAN

And like, and you lied what about the financials or what did you lie about?

Yes. Badly. Financials, revenue, personal, company.

SHAAN

What were you doing?

SAM

You're just literally making that shit up.

SHAAN

What were you doing?

Wire fraud, I think, is the main charge, but there are a couple, couple surrounding charges as well. But basically anytime you lie to get money, it's essentially wire fraud in the eyes of the federal government.

SAM

But you, you are making fake documents, like you are Photoshopping things and making fake PDFs, I think, right?

Yeah. I made, I just made fake like Excel documents basically saying, hey, our income is X million this month. And it wasn't close. So I was totally guilty. It was, it wasn't like it wasn't a gray area. I was black and white wrong, right? The festival was better than I advertised, which is obviously impossible. I still would've gone to jail.

SHAAN

When you, um, so I remember being like, okay, wow, that's crazy. Uh, sounds like, you know, he got kind of in over his head, you know, and I was having some sort of sympathy in a way. And then there was some story like when you were on probation, then you did something else. You created something called like VIP Access or some shit like that.

The Met Gala. Yeah.

SHAAN

And then that was also like, you know, you know, little fugazi in some way. What was that and how do you defend that part? Right. Because that's after the fact now.

Yeah.

SHAAN

And you're already on probation. And was it just like, I just had a habit of doing this? What was going on there?

The only defense is that I was a fucking idiot. Like, there's no other way to get around that. Yeah, I was totally wrong.. And I kind of got in this mindset where it's all about the money and like, that's probably wrong. Then figured, hey, I need to find a way to pay everybody back. And let's get back to what I was doing at Magnesis at the end to kind of fund Fyre Festival, which is to sell these tickets. Right.

SAM

And you needed like a, you needed like a, like if I was your father, I would've just, I would've punched you in the fucking face. And I'd be like, Billy, like, this is, you're hurting me. You're like, you're, you're hurt. Like you needed like a, like a, like someone just to be like, dude, you are so talented, but you are fucking this up so much. It's like, These are such clear mistakes. I don't understand why. I don't understand. Like, did you not have a friend that was like, it sounds like you were trying to, trying to do a quick fix.

SHAAN

If I can get the money back, if I could pay people back, then I'm not going to get in trouble about the other thing. Is that, is that accurate? Is what you were thinking?

I was scared of jail. Like no one was picking up my calls anymore. I'm on, you know, on bond, I guess. And like, I just couldn't, once again, I couldn't zoom out and understand the bigger picture where. If I sat down, shut the fuck up, yeah, sure, I'll be broke for a couple of years, but I'll go to jail for 2 or 3 years and I'll get out in my late 20s and, you know, have a chance to pay people back the right way. And I just like couldn't understand that. But yeah, I think that like going forward, a big thought process for me, and it's been 3 months, is, you know, how do I position myself, whether like whether it's a company or something else, like to get that help I need? And do I operate within a bigger company? Do I find like partners that, you know, are senior to me in experience and age who I can like trust and defer to. So it's just all part of my journey right now. And I think that like this time around, I think I prefer those boundaries more and it's just trying to find it and it's been, you know, super early in the process.

SAM

Are you going to raise funding for this next company? I think a lot of people, I don't know, but if I had to bet, I would say you probably actually could raise, I bet you there's people that would give you money. Is that so?

I texted like 8 venture funds a few weeks ago and, you know, was literally like a broken grammar, like 2-line sentence. Like 2 told me to fuck off. Like, you know, one didn't respond, you know, one asked for more questions and 4 just like responded in like, you know, within minutes saying we're in. The issue is, you know, as I've kind of gone through the process, I'm actually not allowed due to an SEC deal. I'm not allowed to raise securities. So I can't go and raise money. Uh, I think the ironic part is that like, it's probably going to, it would have been easier this time to raise venture money and like no decks, like none of that shit. Like I said, I have no decks. Here's all, here's all I have. And, uh, yeah, people want to back it. I just can't raise the funds.

SAM

So, and I think that would shock people is that, yeah, you know, you just had a 50% hit rate on a text message.

SHAAN

How do you explain that to somebody who's listening? And they're like, you know, there's some people who are frustrated that that's the case. I can't believe people would fund him. How would you explain it? Because it's people, people are making this decision. They're smart people. They're capable people. They have other options. Yeah. How would you explain why, why somebody would be willing to do that?

So I started trying to raise money for the first time almost 12, over 12 years ago now. And, you know, as with everybody, the first X people told me to fuck off and kind of laughed at me. And like, so I went through 12 years of shit, including 10 months of solitary confinement to like get to the point where maybe an investor believes that I've learned enough lessons to focus on what I'm good at and get help with what I'm bad at. So it's not like I just like wake up one day and can raise money. It was, it was, it's been 12 years of just like totally fucking up to get to this point. But yeah, and I think that before I raise money, and obviously like legally I can't do it and I'm not gonna be allowed to do it, is I need the help, right? And I need like the system and the structure in place where let me go and market and like come up with these experiences and adventures and, you know, drive attention. But have somebody else who could just help me manage like financials and logistics and operations.

SHAAN

What other ideas did you have if you weren't going to do something Fyre Festival-y? Uh, did you have like other, I'm sure you had a lot of time on your hands to think of other ideas. Did you think about any other potential, potential things you could do with your time? Maybe not even businesses, just other things you might do.

SAM

Is your experience with GPT-3 since, sorry, when you got out, 6 months ago?

Uh, yeah, I, I actually was reading about it for like a year in jail. Uh, didn't even like know OpenAI was the name of the company or anything like that, but it's like had random books sent in. So I was like, oh, this is super interesting. And like, I have dozens of pages of notes on it. Maybe I'll post them, but like, kind of come out and see what happened recently, which is pretty cool.

SAM

So I agree. I think that could be a great company and I bet you'd kill it because you're pretty good at selling. Uh, by the way, you, you should, I think if I was close with you, I'd be like, Billy, do that. Uh, what else, what else has excited you? What other ideas?

I think the concept of FIRE app, which is providing transparency to a lot of these, like legacy entertainment systems is interesting. Um, one I think which is really interesting right now is like performance marketing for like social media and influencers. So I think one, the reason why the Fyre, just take a step back. The reason why the Fyre Festival marketing I think works so well is at the exact same time we had 400 people post this orange tile, but these 400 people weren't related, right? It was some music artists, like some comedians, some athletes, some models. So when you're in our target audience and you're scrolling through your Instagram feed, you're like, why the fuck are these 5 people who don't know each other all posting this right now? Like, I need to go check this out. So one idea I had is that basically creating like a marketplace for influencer marketing where let's say like Starbucks has a new coffee that they want to advertise. They can go and upload all their creative assets and set like a million dollar budget. And then anybody around the world could take those assets and post it to their Instagram or their TikTok or their YouTube., and then they basically get a score for how much engagement they get in their content, and their overall score gets them a percentage of the budget. So if Kim Kardashian posts it and she crushes it, you know, she gets $900 grand and $100,000 is split up to, you know, another million people who all kind of post it. I think it's like a fun way to remove all these bullshit middlemen in this whole social marketing world and then allow a brand to turn all of their followers into advertisers for that company. Without dealing with any of the legwork.

SAM

Almost like Klout. Do you remember Klout with a K?

Yeah, yeah, I do. Like, yeah, they measured your overall social score, right? Yeah.

SAM

And it, it, they raised a ton of money and probably sold for less than their valuation of $100 million, or I think they sold for $100, which was less, I think, than what they raised at. But I actually thought it was a fantastic idea. For some reason it didn't work. I don't know why, but you'd be in that space a little bit, it sounds like.

Yeah, I think it's interesting. It's like providing a score to how well your content performs and getting paid off of that, but then turning everybody into your promoters.

SHAAN

Yeah, I think that's a really cool idea. Uh, it also flips the model on its head. Right now you have to do sort of individual manual outreach and then negotiations and then whatever, versus just saying it's in the reverse. Here's a giant honeypot. If you want it, go get it, you know? Um, and then basically divvying it up based on the actual performance versus, you know, who can negotiate the best, you know, at the given moment. Uh, okay. So that's a really cool idea. What else you got?

Yeah. Yeah. Those are my two.

SHAAN

So those are your two.

GPT-3 expert and then providing like an open marketplace where brands can upload their creative assets and anybody can kind of publish them and get paid based on—

SHAAN

and why not do that one?

SAM

Yeah. And why not? Why, why'd you settle on the one versus those two? I mean, they sound quite reasonable.

Yeah. Maybe I'll do them. I'm just trying to— yeah.

SAM

No, you won't. I don't think you will. I think like, I don't know.

SHAAN

I don't think you will. Like, I don't know.

SAM

I guess you just have this, like, you must have a fire in you where you're, no pun intended, where you're like, I have to go this event route, which is, which is baffling. I mean, but I guess people just passionate, people are passionate about certain things.

I get it.

SAM

Yeah. But, uh, logically, I, I've just, I have such, I don't wanna see you fail, I guess. Mm-hmm. I wanna see you succeed and like prove people wrong. And I, I wanna prove that like second chances could work. And so when I, see this, I'm like, oh man, you're just playing this game on hard mode.

SHAAN

Like, yeah, I think you're not making the same mistakes on the, obviously on the, uh, I have no idea, but like, that'd be crazy if you're making the same mistakes as far as what got you into prison, but you're also choosing a business model that's super hard. Uh, like, you know, you're talking about a million people paying 20 cents to chum the waters and it's like, I don't even know, like those words have never even been said together. Uh, right. So it's like, you know, you're choosing to try to pull off a really, uh, really, really difficult thing. Um, and you know, it just seems like, I guess like my philosophy is always like in, in business, there's no extra points for difficulty. Um, in fact you get, you get docked points for difficulty. The harder something is, uh, you know, the less money you end up making. And, and so there are no bonus points for doing things the hard way. Now on the other side, There is one advantage, which is when you go do something cool and audacious every day, you wake up and you're motivated and maybe you can recruit people who are motivated to pull off something epic. Um, because epic things have their own, you know, motivational draw to, to actually go and do your best work.

SAM

Which, which he just did. I saw on your Twitter and I think TikTok, you said, hey everyone, I'm hiring for my new thing. How many, uh, applicants did you get?

Yeah. So back to a business idea, I think it's really interesting is we partner with a company called Bounty Hunter World to hire. And they're trying to disrupt the whole recruiter model where they're saying anybody can refer a friend to a job, and if you successfully refer someone, you get paid that recruiting fee. Right. And as you guys know, like those fees could be crazy. So I think like their site is super awesome. And then we tried to like one-up it. So we're saying anybody who refers a friend to Pirate that we end up hiring, we take that person on one of these Pirate experiences. So trying to like give the island entertainer experience to like any of our fans. Um, we've had a lot of people apply for jobs. I think the craziest thing is like we have no money and I'm probably like paying 15 to 20% of what I was paying for the same role 5 or 6 years ago and probably getting like better people. So I think it all goes to show like your mission and your intention is just so much more important than anything else.

SHAAN

How big is the list of this? Like I put my phone number into this thing. How big is the list? How many people have signed up to like do the treasure hunt?

Around 2,000. Okay.

SHAAN

So yeah, it's not bad.

SAM

I'm shocked you didn't get more, uh, cuz the NELK Boys thing, that got 1.5 million views.

And I then we've been getting a lot of inbound. It's like social, like Instagram DMs, I think are just have gone crazy. Um, I think the conversion to like a phone number through, uh, a platform has been a little bit harder for us. But yeah, overall it's like, how do we kind of organize all these DMs? And maybe that's a different business too. If someone can build an inbox that takes inbound across like Instagram DMs, LinkedIn, like, in mail, your, like, your public email address and organize all of that and, like, kind of qualify those leads. That's something that I would pay for on a monthly basis.

SAM

And you, and you're, you're, and you're building all of this right now with, I think you said you collected $150K in revenue so far from, like, brand deals or something like that.

And so you're basically building— $170K since, yeah, November 1st. Yeah.

SAM

So you're building this bit— since November 1st. Well, I mean, that's a pretty good run rate already. Yeah. So, but you're, you're building this business now. You have $170,000 just to play with. That's kind of what your starting point.

Yeah, don't worry, we spent it already.

SAM

Did you really?

Like, we're just trying to, trying to survive.

SAM

So, dude, have you ever heard of like Pilot or Bench? Dude, there's these like really good accounting software companies that you could use. It's like $1,000 a month and they'll just like tell you like your P&L, like you should, or like a, or like a part-time CFO. Like, I don't know, man, maybe that would be a good investment.

I need all, I need all of it. I need like, I need help.

SHAAN

If anybody's listening to an Excel license.

Um, yeah. Yeah.

SAM

Have you ever heard of QuickBooks? I mean, like, I don't know, man. I think you should like really sweat the details on this stuff.

FTX used QuickBooks and look what happened. So I'm just talking shit.

SAM

Well, correlation, not causation, but, uh, I mean, you, what, what, speaking of that, what do you think you, you, you know, I've been following, we had, um, we, Sean and I have both interacted a bit with Martin Scarelli and unfortunately, you know, you're in the same vein. There's you, there's Martin, and then there's now, uh, uh, I think Sean doesn't like calling him SBF because winners don't get— winners don't get nicknames. He's just— he's just Samuel now. But what do you think? What's your take on the— what's going to happen with him?

40 years and then he'll be— you think 40 after like— yeah, then he'll get out after like 15 to 20.

SAM

Do you think that's fair?

That's my guess. I don't know. That's—

SHAAN

I talked to Martin after he got out and I was like, what was it like in prison? He had a bunch of stories where he's like, yeah, I created a cryptocurrency study club. I, uh, you know, I, I had like, you know, all these, like, he's like, yeah, we had this system where I was, you know, selling information, blah, blah, blah. I was reading tons of books. I had access to the internet. He's like, I would be under the covers at night, like basically watching Khan Academy videos, learning about like calculus. And, um, what, what's it, what do you do to pass the time? What was your life like?

I think the hardest part about prison is it's designed to strip you of your ambition., right? Because like there are great people there and I've met some really incredible people, but there also are a lot of bad people and you can't put bad people into an environment where they're inspired and they have ambition to act on their bad impulses. So there's this concept of being institutionalized and essentially it's meant to just make you a human robot. And I think it's like good in a certain way that it makes the time easier, but like naturally I was just trying to fight against like all like the set processes as much as possible. So I think it made my time go like are really slow, but I was trying to fight to like find ways to stay creative. What's an example? In an environment meant to make you robot, like they feed you at the same time every day. Like they turn the lights off at the same time. You can only use your phones for a certain period of time. Like just everything is like structured like this. Like you have to wear your uniform to go to lunch and it's like you're trying to find ways where like, you know, trying to find my creative periods and just not make every day the same. So I can just like keep different ideas flowing and coming through.

SHAAN

What were some things you did successfully to kind of like amuse yourself? What was little, What were your maybe little tactics, the little wins you had as to keep that creative, you know, spark alive?

Yeah. Uh, training a lot of boxing. So, um, I had like a cellmate who was a former Puerto Rican, like professional boxer and he had like wrap his hands with towels and like, you know, train me in boxing, which is super fun. Um, we didn't have that. Guys would take like toilet paper rolls and wrap them in tube socks and use that like for, for mitts. So yeah, it's like finding like creative ways to, to go and like exercise and for your mind and like do little things you're not supposed to. It doesn't hurt anybody. Like you couldn't practice martial arts, but you know, you go in the back and have the guy hold your mitts for you for a half hour. You can kind of get away with it. It's like a good, good way to escape.

SHAAN

You look like you're in better shape.

Yeah, I was fat as hell. So hard, hard not to be.

SAM

What are some stereotypes that, you know, we would have about your experience that either proved to be true or like that maybe weren't true about the whole experience?

The whole, like, racial segregation.

SAM

Totally, totally thing.

Yeah, yeah, totally thing. I think, like, being in New York, I'm a little naive and spoiled to, I guess, like, a lot of what probably exists in other parts of the world. But literally being in a place where if you're Black, you go in this line for lunch, and if you're white, you go in this line for lunch, and you just can't cross over. It's like wild. It just like feels like it's 60 years behind the times. And obviously something that like having experience in, in New York and, and like probably spoiled to that sense, but really kind of getting over the racial issues were, I think, kind of a weird hard part for me.

SAM

And it's probably like what's weird about it is like when they separate by races, it's not always out of a place of hate. It's just like, no, this is just you stay with us. They go with them. Yeah. And it's not necessarily that they're, they hate the other group. It's just this is just how we do things.

Yeah, it's always been done this way. This is how we're going to do it. And like, there certainly are terrible racists on both sides, but the majority aren't. They're just like, this is the way it's done, so this is the way we're going to do it. Like, it doesn't really make sense.

SHAAN

If you could go in and change one way that the prison system works while, while still, you know, achieving the goal, the job to be done of a prison, what would you change, uh, now that you've kind of saw it from the inside?

I think that I would make sentencing more equal across the board. And there are a lot of people who committed the exact same crime who had wildly different sentences. And this is almost like an interesting problem. Maybe this is a really cool business, is to build some sort of like AI sentencing thing. Because like right now it's up to one independent judge. And that judge, like in my case, I could have gotten nothing or I could have gotten 20 years. And like literally one person can decide the fate of your life. Um, and I think what I got is fair for me, but many other people's sentences weren't fair. So maybe it's some sort of system that takes in all the information around someone's crime and their personal life, and then studying everybody else who has had similar crimes and seeing who was successful and actually sentencing based on this idea of, you know, future success. Hmm.

SAM

Well, what are some examples of, of different punishments or different sentences based off of different crime or similar crimes?

So I think for my situation, it was a financial crime. And typically your sentence is based on what the dollar amount that victims lost is. So the more you lose, the more time you should get. I think like there's plenty of people who were from New York whose dollar amounts were hundreds of millions of dollars who got 1 or 2 years. Then I go out to a jail in Detroit where there's people who have lost $500,000 who got 30 years. So it's like, just like there's just total disparity where it, it shouldn't be like that.. I don't think sentences are based on future success. And some judges are, I think, kind enough and smart enough to do that, but some aren't. So almost like having this AI system that recommends a sentence in addition to the judge, there's like a different data point, I think could be super interesting.

SHAAN

Yeah, that's a cool idea.

SAM

That is crazy because it could be like this happens where a judge is in a bad mood or has seen certain patterns that are biased. And yeah, I mean, that is, it is pretty wild. You know, I've had friends like go through some of this stuff and they're like, oh, this person was in a great mood today. And I just, or I just happened to get this person who falls under this political party and this is what happened. It is, that is pretty crazy.

It's just tough. And like, look at Elizabeth Holmes, she realistically could have gotten 2 years or she got it. She could have gotten 35 years. Right. And it's like, it's up to one person to determine like what that length of time is. And that's a, it's like a big task for someone to take on. And yeah, unfortunately the system isn't fair. Yeah.

SHAAN

So do they have like a, like a, like, you know, if you go to a company and you're going to get a job, it's not just up to the manager to just pick a random number for what you get to get paid. It's like, no, we know for this job title with this many years of experience, this is the range, and the range is between this, this, and this. And if you're going to go outside of that range, you got to have like a pretty strong indicator. And it's like, people have to be notified that I'm going way outside the range, the, the, the normal like expected range, in order to make this offer. Uh, it's almost like they kind of need that, or I don't know, maybe they have some version of that for judges who are trying to send this.

They have a guideline system that gives you like a recommended range, and that definitely helps, and it's good. I think the issue though is that it's really hard for the judge to get to know someone in such a short period of time, and those who have access to great attorneys have an advantage because like your attorney's entire job in the federal system is like, you're going to lose the case. It's all about presenting who you really are as a person and why you should be afforded a second chance at some point in the future. So people who don't have access to quality attorneys just don't really have that same opportunity to explain why they should have a second chance. And so I think that the AI probably benefits more of your, like, lower-income defendant, which is most of them who can't afford their own attorneys, to just show they're more of a human than just, like, what the crime is.

SHAAN

Did you have a fancy lawyer?

SAM

I had a good lawyer.

So like, and I just made it impossible for him, right? Like getting in trouble again on bail. There's just like nothing he could have done. I was just, I was a moron. Like I could have had 20 lawyers. It wouldn't have mattered.

SAM

I would've, you know, have Sean, have you ever seen that movie Catch Me If You Can? Of course. Great movie. And so I read about that guy a lot, Frank Abagnale Jr. And turns out most of what, like he, he made this book about his crimes and turns out it's likely like mostly lies. I think like they prove, like he's been proven time and time again that he didn't actually do what he said he did. In terms of crimes, but he like glamorized it and then he turned it into like a pretty successful consulting business. I don't know how big, but I like, I looked up where he lives and he has got like a, you know, multimillion dollar home and he's always wearing these nice suits and he looks like he's, he's done a good job. When I look at him, Billy, I'm like, well, that guy is kind of like a good example of like what, you know, turning shit into gold and like turning a situation around. What did you ever think about kind of going that route?

Like, I think that, like, I would just— yeah, I'd hate to live off of, like, FIRE for the rest of my life. And then there's, like, a short window opportunity where the attention from it will allow my next business just to start with the springboard. But I'd much rather be known for and fail or succeed at a new business than being someone who just talks about FIRE Festival for the next 30 years. Like, that's boring as fuck. But I understand why some people would want to. I agree, it is boring.

SAM

But when you you know, are in debt of $25 million. It's like, well, you know, like, I unfortunately, I have to sacrifice my excitement in order to like make this work.

SHAAN

On the other hand, he has got nothing to lose really. Well, what does he have to lose? He's got like, all right, well, starting back from scratch, reputation was pretty tainted and in a pretty deep restitutional hole where you got to pay back like $25, $30 million or something like that. Yeah. What, why not swing and do what you want with your life versus, uh, you know, I guess, I guess it is there in a way it is, it is a good idea to just go for like the most, whatever's the most sort of exciting and fun and fulfilling thing for you.

And how do you find pride? Right? Like, I think that talking about it, like I failed a business when I was 24 and 25, when I'm 40, I'm not going to wake up with juice to keep going. Like, I think like if I see somebody else doing that, I'm like, oh, what a fucking loser. Like, I don't want to be that person. So I'd rather go and like try to improve and like whether I fail or succeed is try something new and different and try to build something.

SHAAN

So if it all works, if life goes the way you want it and you're now 65, 70 years old, what's Billy McFarland? Who is he? What happened if it all works out for you?

Yeah, he took his failures, learned from it, used it as a springboard to build something new. And like whether it's Pirate or something else that I do in 10 years from now, and, and went for it, but like made good friends and help people along the way. And if I can pay back $25 million, amazing. If I pay back a million dollars, but you know, I try it and do it honestly, like that's okay too, I think. And yeah, and I actually, I think that a lot of the investors listening would probably agree with that. If, as long as it's kind of done the right way, I think at this point it's less about the money and more about how I change.

SAM

Well, we appreciate you coming on. You know, this was like, when we were— I was preparing for this and I was like, man, I don't know how to approach this. I don't want to like glamorize someone who's done something bad. But like, this was a really confusing thing to do. But I'm happy we were able to talk. I'm going to be following your story very closely. I'm very eager to see how you pulled this off. And frankly, I want you to pull it off. You know, I want redemption to be real and I want it to work. Everyone deserves a second chance. So I hope it does.

Thank you guys. Super cool to finally be here. So Sam and Sean, thank you guys. Thanks for coming on.