Navigating Business News: Trump's Tariffs and Market Trends - Trade Wars and Their Impact - Facebook & UFC Sign Partnership

37m

SUMMARY

In this episode of "Right About Now," hosts Ryan Alford and Chris Hansen delve into pressing business topics. They start with the ongoing tariff wars between the U.S. and China, discussing the economic uncertainties and the strategic nature of these negotiations. Chris likens the situation to a high-stakes poker game, emphasizing the importance of patience and resilience.

The conversation then shifts to the stock market's recent downturn, where Chris advises focusing on long-term strategies. They also explore a new sponsorship deal between UFC and Meta, highlighting the innovative ways technology is enhancing fan engagement.


TAKEAWAYS

  • Ongoing tariff disputes between the U.S. and China
  • Economic implications of tariff negotiations
  • Stock market fluctuations and investor sentiment
  • Long-term investment strategies versus short-term panic
  • The relationship between business risk and economic conditions
  • Recent sponsorship deal between UFC and Meta
  • Impact of technology on fan engagement in sports
  • Political implications of trade negotiations
  • Cultural differences affecting U.S.-China negotiations
  • The importance of resilience and innovation in business strategies


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Transcript

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This is right about now with Ryan Alford, a Radcast Network Production.

We are the number one business show on the planet with over 1 million downloads a month.

Taking the BS out of business for over six years in over 400 episodes.

You ready to start snapping necks and cashing checks?

Well, it starts right about now.

What's up, guys?

Welcome to Right About Now.

It's Friday, April 11th, 2025.

It's our weekly business news here on your Friday.

We appreciate you for joining today's topics.

We've got Tariff Talk.

Who will blink first in the art of tariff war?

You like what I did there, Chris?

It's the art of tariff, the art of war, tariff war, tariff talk, tariff addiction, tariff talk.

How many acronyms can we get?

We've also got today, we're going to talk UFC and Meta signing a sponsorship deal.

You know, Dana's got taking it to the mat.

He's gotten tough.

Now he's sponsoring or, you know, they're working together.

Let's just say that.

Official fan technology partner, whatever that means, you know, helping the fans get closer to it.

So talking UFC, Meta, tariffs, the impact, who's going to blink first, the stock market, Chris is going to talk crypto, and you know how we get down.

What's happening today, Chris?

How you doing, big dog?

I feel good.

Yeah, I know.

You've been,

you know, we're actually doing jobs.

I mean, we're running around making shit happen.

Got to do the actual stuff that pays the bills, you know?

I don't know.

We don't just get to talk about it.

We got to,

you know, a lot of people could just talk to talk.

We got to walk the walk.

and then talk.

Walk it.

Yeah, walk the walk.

Walk it like you talk it.

It's megos here is our intro music.

You know,

talk it and walk it.

We like to take the BS out of business.

That's why we're

living and breathing that business life, keeping up with everything.

Chris, just to hop right in.

I mean,

stock markets taking a beating this week.

If you're going to talk business news, you got to start there.

Have you ever read The Art of War?

Yeah, I have it.

Right next to me.

Yeah.

And like the 48 laws of power, like certain things.

If you really read between the lines here,

Trump's a negotiator.

Or Trump's Art of the Deal, I would have said,

you know, they're a great

reference point.

Yeah.

Exactly.

I have to admit,

as a risk taker myself,

like

I get a little uncomfortable with some of the shit that he does, but I still firmly agree in the principle of what he's trying to get done.

But I got to admit, he's playing with trillions of dollars here.

So I sure as hell hope he's right.

But it does just feel like

if all the chips fell,

I do believe the U.S.

is in the best position.

So sometimes you got to go all in when you know you've got the hand.

Even if you got to sit there and sweat it.

And because sometimes I look, as a business owner,

you'll get this, Chris.

Like

sometimes we have to make uncomfortable decisions.

And he's having to make undercomfortable decisions on behalf of all of us where

when you go all in on a poker game and you know you got it or you're pretty damn sure you're 90, you're as sure as you can be, You still got to put all the chips in and wait it out.

Like as a business owner, sometimes you got to write that check and you know it's coming back, but you go all in.

And

that's, I think that's what we're experiencing right now.

And look, you know, everybody's looking at their stocks.

And I believe, I get it.

You know, and you drop 30%, 10%, 20%, whatever it might be, depending on where your holdings are.

It's uncomfortable.

And it can make you second-guess everything.

And there's bowmen's for it.

I'm like, I'm not sure

that I know what he's trying to do.

I think I know what he's trying to do here.

And I think

the

end

is right.

I think I know to what end,

but there's a lot of fucking discomfort involved in getting there.

That's what it feels like.

When you brought up the, as a business owner, that just is what I think of.

I think, and I think maybe that's why

I don't feel freaked out by this because I know that

you have to have some pain, right?

It's like I think of everything like the gym, like you're going to have uncomfortability and discomfort to build that muscle, but then you're stronger after that.

You're going to be sore for a little bit.

You know, everything.

Every big change in pivot feels painful at first.

And then, you know, you see the other side.

So not only that, but I just think we we don't have a choice.

Like, I think we're kind of out of it.

Yeah, we, I mean, we've been slowly, it's

comfortable.

Like, if you're losing a little bit of blood at a time, you don't know it.

Exactly.

I mean, that's a really dramatic, like, oh, that's exactly where that popped in my head.

It was a slow bleed.

Yeah.

Yeah.

Go on.

Yeah.

You don't notice it when it's like

boiling a frog.

Yeah, exactly.

Yeah.

It's happening.

It's happening.

And you're comfortable,

but you're still dying.

Costco opened, guys.

New Costco opened, but we're slowly bleeding.

It was like the next shiny thing.

And meanwhile, I mean, if we really look at the numbers and even like millennials, my generation, we know this.

I mean, I think everybody knows this, but when you look at inflation and homeownership, there's obviously something wrong, right?

Yeah.

So.

You know, I think even you and I, when we've talked about the tariff stuff, there's times I've been like not feeling good.

I'm like, I don't like this.

Like, this sucks.

Yeah,

I don't like this medicine.

Yeah, but I'm also like, well, it is what it is.

Kind of just keep doing what you do.

Maybe watch the news a little less, be a little triggered by that.

Yeah, and I'm less like, don't get me wrong.

I'm still young.

You're young

relative to

long-term investments.

And as an entrepreneur that's young-ish,

I have a lot more vested in business.

You know, I'm not sitting here with 90% of my net worth in the stock market.

You know, so I'm vested in multiple businesses and other things that I have more control in that don't,

don't get me wrong, they would be impacted by sort of consumer spending, business spending long-term if there was something drawn out, but short term,

you know, I can stomach the stock market drops.

But what I will say, you know,

you can see the strategy,

but you don't want to get in an all-out trade war that extends for months and years.

I think it's really who blinks first.

And I think Some countries probably already have blink that, you know, some of these smaller countries have no choice but to sort of get in line here.

And then

it'll be really a few blinks first between China and U.S.

They're both retaliatory.

And

the only thing that scares me is

China doesn't give a shit about its people.

I don't think they sure don't act like it most of the time.

So

even if it hurt them and we're in a stronger position, could they

just say, screw it and

ride it longer than we want to before blinking?

I don't know.

That's the only kind of variable here.

You would think not,

but

you know what I'm saying, though?

I mean,

I'm pro-America all the way, baby.

So I just think like, I agree, like

China and its people, it's a different culture.

Yeah.

But in that same note, are they willing to fight as hard for their culture where they're kind of like, in my mind, not a completely free population?

Not that anyone's truly free.

Let's be no.

What I'm saying, the point I'm making is, you know, Trump, Trump likes to be favored.

Look, everybody likes to be liked.

And I think he does.

He likes.

people in his camp and he likes, you know, being

like making tough decisions, but like he likes,

you know, to make people happy.

I think he wants to see good happen.

And there's more pressure on him the longer this rides out than maybe like the president of China.

Like,

because the president of China says, like, no one's going to challenge him.

He doesn't care.

His people aren't going to get on X and Twitter.

and all the social profiles and bash him the way Trump is going to feel the pressure from our people people the longer the pain extends.

You know what I'm saying?

That's what I'm saying.

Yeah, there's definitely, I mean, yeah, freedom of speech gives people the right here to be very critical compared to communist China, that's for sure.

Yes.

And I mean, look, Trump, look, I'm just going, and look, I support and voted for this president.

Whether, and I support him, whether I voted for him or not, by the way.

It's called being an American and supporting those in power as best you can.

You can disagree with decisions, but at least supporting your nation.

But I'm just saying, like,

I think the pressure starts to build the longer this goes on on

how long, you know,

how long can you take both sides of the pain?

The pain of the stocks and the markets and all that and the pain of your people calling you out.

And because look, no one likes to boast more than Donald Trump how high the stock market is when he's president.

How many times has he boasted that as a stop line?

A lot.

Oh, yeah.

Yeah.

So

six months from now, if we're still sitting here,

you know, that's possible.

Yeah.

I mean, I don't think that's possible either.

But I'm just saying, you got to.

The art of war is knowing every possible path,

right?

And know thy enemy better than I know thyself.

So

somebody may be playing these worst worst or worst scenarios.

That's all I'm saying.

I have a feeling that it's probably been

pretty well looked at.

Oh, yeah.

From every strategic perspective, trade war to actual physical war, I'm sure.

We talked about this pre-episode, Chris.

What's your, I mean, Rand Paul came out and like, look, we take the BS out of business.

Like, we're here to share all sides.

Rand Paul, Republican Party, still supports Trump, says that clearly.

His argument is that,

you know, free trade is good trade.

And that

once someone makes a decision to sell something for a certain value, whether there's a tariff or a percentage marked up or not,

you've decided that that was worth what you paid for it.

And he makes a note that he has a deficit with his own local grocery store.

Point being, that grocery store has never bought anything from him because that grocery store has what he needs.

He doesn't have anything the grocery store needs.

And so that's just the dynamic of that.

I think he's oversimplifying it

a little bit, but I think that's the point he's trying to make is that,

you know, there's an exchange that happens and both sides have to agree that it's worth that at some point.

And

I think he's not wrong in saying that, but I do think that there's

the unintended consequences when those deficits are higher than they are, i.e.

jobs in America, i.e.,

you know, our own goods and like

over-reliance outside of our own.

walls.

Sometimes you got to look at the bigger picture.

It's kind of my reflection on him, though I sort of get the point he's making.

What about you?

I think,

I mean, I disagree with him fully.

I think he's a member of the Republican Party, but I think he's probably has a lobbyist for many transnational corporations that are probably profit margins being affected.

Yeah.

Bottom line, this is a fight.

You either win or lose, right?

Like we can.

hold it out and win or we can sit down and get fucked.

That's it.

He's being very very short-sighted oh my grocery store great dude we need jobs we need to correct inflation i would rather pay more for american goods than keep bringing this bullshit the bottom line is we're the largest consumers on the planet no other country can even compare close to the amount of money we spend and what we buy

so

i mean my grandfather worked for the danish diplomats office trying to literally traveled all around america to negotiate importing danish goods because everyone wants access to the American market.

And I've seen this in my diamond business and the NAD business.

Every single person outside of America wants to tap into America because it's the largest consumer market, period.

Like, I'm fine with waiting it out.

Someone said yesterday, quit fucking complaining and whining, sack it up, and get on the team.

Otherwise, you're just sitting here making noise chatter.

Your opinion doesn't mean shit.

Rand Paul, you've been in politics for 30 years.

You haven't done shit.

You've never won shit.

Trump is the best negotiator probably on the planet.

We've all watched his entire career of negotiating, teaching people to negotiate.

So that's where I'm like, we voted for this.

It's going to be painful.

We're not even six months into the presidency.

Quit being bitches and let's fucking roll straight up.

Like, everyone wants to talk and have an opinion.

I don't hear any other solutions, right?

We know we talked pre-show.

We know this works.

Reagan did this in his administration.

It's kind of just what you need to do.

Yeah.

All these companies.

Oh, you have the right side.

Like, oh my God, these companies are going to have to bring back manufacturing.

That's going to cost them money.

Great.

They're all profiting billions and billions of dollars.

They have the money.

They can do it.

And they can do it very quickly if they want our money.

That's the exchange.

We're the American consumer.

We have the power and the leverage.

Boom.

That's it.

Like, military, population, spending, we are everything.

I think that that is a play with what Trump's doing here.

Because,

and we've talked about this before.

And if you look at like the last four years, eight years, I mean, I would even say part of even Trump's first term,

we've sort of diminished on the world stage,

even though we have dominance.

It's a really weird,

you know, like on all fronts, like you just said, we have the buying power.

We have the wealth amongst our people.

We have a lot of these things that are just reality because we're a large company.

We're blessed to live here.

So I don't take it for granted.

And yet we've sort of

cowered on the world stage a bit, like on a lot of different fronts, as if we didn't have that strength.

Ever since Obama, that's when all the self-negative talk about being American and we were like, oh, we're the bad guys.

Like, we're the bad guys or something.

That was their agenda.

Diminishing.

And now, to your point, I think this is a

Trump's going.

No, let me remind you.

I think of like a wrestler or something, you know.

Don't you forget, you know, who I am.

Let's get it.

Let's get this right, you know, like, because we kind of, it's kind of like showing up at the party, like the meek and meager.

Like, hey, guys, you know, and it's like, no, you're the confident, biggest badass of the room.

Like, it doesn't mean you need to be arrogant, it doesn't mean whatever, but let's know your role.

And

as Americans know that too, like, everyone's playing a victim when it's like, we live in the greatest country on the planet.

Let's act like it.

Like, that's half of our power.

Like, think about 9-11, dude.

Think about the patriotism after that happened.

Right?

It was like

American pride was explosive.

But

unfortunately, to be frank, the Democratic Party has been trying to kill the morale of American society and culture since they've had power, since Obama, really.

And yeah, and so here's what I would say:

pick up the phone and make that deal happen with that friend that you've been talking to.

Start that company that you've been thinking about starting.

Double down on deals internally, locally, and

tune all this out it tells me that if you there's not enough people taking risks because and then we talked this earlier you and i have a higher risk tolerance and that's why a lot of what he does doesn't seem crazy to me because i've been in those negotiations and those we i mean you and i know this i kind of been in one for a while now right

right now right so it's like

we're going on three years basically so it's like you got to be okay with not being okay and knowing that the long-term plan is

coming to formation.

But, like my example earlier, nothing good comes easy, right?

The hardest things

people usually, if you ask them, what was the biggest things in your life?

It was usually the most difficult thing that transformed them the most.

Yeah.

So, if we're talking about a country, this is difficult.

Hopefully, it transforms us.

Tom starts, you know, putting some skin in the game.

You know, we've got, we got the Amazonification of everything that we do in life.

Everything's more convenient.

Everything's faster.

Everything's easier.

Comfort.

And look, it's a great thing.

And those things don't have to go away.

But

it's time to

ball up here and

make some shit happen.

But don't cower.

Don't,

you know, how much cowering here.

The tariffs, India, are really, how much shit do you guys buy from India?

Exactly.

Don't let the sentiment of open your eyes.

Stop listening to the news and like use your brain.

Yeah.

If you're under the age of 60

or even 65, look, we live to like 90.

A lot of healthy, like, I know that the average is probably not this, but if you're people listening to this show, affluent, probably going to live to 85, 95, who knows, 100, hope, maybe longer than that.

Some of these things that we talk about on Five Science start coming to fruition.

But

you don't have to worry about the day-to-day turn of the stock market.

So shut the news off.

Stop calling your broker and

go make that deal happen.

Stop being so afraid.

Go run that Facebook campaign to promote your business that you've been thinking about.

Because let me tell you,

there's going to be money to be made, and it's going to be for those that aren't scared to go all in.

Yes.

And it's, that's how it's always optional.

It's the American coming, baby.

Like

when things go down, that's when you jump in and ride it up.

Yes.

I mean, right now, like the market, right?

It's like, I see, yo, if you got free cash flow, you're buying at crazy good discounts right now.

You're buying stocks and crypto on a huge sale.

Yeah, exactly.

Everything's on sale right now.

That's how you should look at it.

All the stuff you already bought that's for 30 years from now or 20 years from now or 15 years from now

is still sitting there.

You didn't, it's sitting on the shelf and everything else went on sale.

That's how you need to look at it.

And you get to double your inventory while it's on sale, and

it'll be there when you get ready to sell it all.

And if you're selling it this week, I might wait a few weeks.

I get it.

But that's about 1%.

The 99%.

You know, the panic selling when things go down is like, it's like the dumbest thing I've ever seen.

Every reason that you're in the market,

you turn your back from when you do that.

And it's like,

whatever.

Like, I get it.

We got a lot of people that are real comfortable, don't like the risk, or, and

perceive every boogeyman behind the corner that isn't really there.

And don't get me wrong, it doesn't mean there's not, but

it's never what we

spend more time on making your company better, doing your job better,

adding value,

and less time fear-mongering.

And

look, I mean, nobody wants the stock market to go down, but all of this is reactionary.

There is absolutely zero finance.

Like,

what made the stock market X amount today, dropping $2 trillion, whatever it is?

There's no financials that drove that.

It's 100% speculative.

Now, could it be financials eight months from now?

If the terrorists, of course,

it could, but it's not, it's all speculative right now.

So

don't ride the fear, ride the opportunity.

It's

don't buy it, don't it is they are selling it cheap right now.

Fear is on sale for a penny.

You're at the dollar store and you ought to buy a hundred pieces of it.

Don't fall for it.

The fear candy, you know.

It's uh, it's a crazy world out there, but

ride it out, baby.

The art

tariff war

It's not, it's really not even the art of tariff war.

It's just the art of war.

It's the art of negotiation.

This is a negotiation play that I think is going to favor us when it when it all shakes out.

Absolutely.

Everybody can just sort of chill the fuck out for a minute.

I don't know.

It's almost laughable.

I'm looking at like the next article about tariffs affecting sneakers and jeans.

It's like, you can get a pair of jeans for $20 right now if you want.

You know what I mean?

Exactly.

Like, oh no.

Yeah, your sneakers might cost more for the next six months to a year.

Get over it.

So,

in other news, UFC signs a wide-ranging sponsorship deal with Meta, bringing Mark Zuckerberg closer to Dana White.

This is a transformation that I can get behind.

Zuckerberg?

Zuckerberg's.

Yeah.

For real, bro.

I thought I would never care for this guy.

I like his technologies.

Hey,

I love Instagram.

Hey, I was going to say, you made a lot of money on Facebook, brother.

You got it.

That's gratitude.

Yeah.

I like your tech, dude.

So I just, but let's just say this.

I do like that.

I just thought I'd never, I just thought he was.

Didn't think you'd want to have a beer with him.

And now you're like, yeah, bro.

Exactly.

Let's go get a lift in and grab a brew.

I could have, I'll say this.

I could have cared less two years ago to have Zuck.

I'm smart enough as a business person that I would have, of course, taken that opportunity, but I could have cared less to have him on my show.

Cared less.

Now I'm like, damn, I'd love to talk to Mark.

You know, like, have a beer, come break it down.

That's an invitation, Mark.

You know, I'll get it to you.

You're busy.

You know, I'm not Data White, but hey,

I like this, Mark.

UFC just locked in a multi-million dollar deal with Meta.

Is this just branding or the future of sports tech?

Zuck's in the gym.

Dana's on the Meta board, and now UFC is going digital.

So

here's the deal.

UFC and Meta

sign a wide-ranging multi-year sponsorship deal.

Meta becomes the official fan technology partner of the UFC.

Branding will appear inside the octagon during pay-per-views and fight night events.

So you'll have integration across Meta's ecosystem, Meta AI, MetaQuest, Meta Glasses, Facebook, Instagram, WhatsApp, Threads.

Obviously, if you've been watching anything to do with Mark, he's been training.

He's literally for this.

Him and Elon Musk, right?

I think he was like entering jujitsu tournaments like anonymously,

like under a pseudonym.

Meta's own following says Zuck's combat sports hobby is a business risk

but meanwhile he's on rogan the workplace could use more masculine energy it's like his own board is like

calling it a risk i do but look look at what a change this is zuckerberg on rogan he said having a culture that celebrates aggression has its own merits

i tend to agree

A quote that I never thought I'd hear, but I like.

Especially from him.

So Meta is the official marketing partner, AI glasses and wearables partner, and social media partner for the UFC.

So that's cool.

You know, Dane is already on the board of Meta.

Said

Meta is going to blow away fans.

See, what's not part of the deal?

There's the media rights.

ESPN's exclusive negotiation window ends April 15th.

That's four days away.

You're not expected to renew early.

Meta's partnership could position UFC for future direct-to-fan or streaming plays, possibly even in VR.

That'd be kind of cool.

Put those VR glasses on and be watching like a live fight.

Be like, yeah, like the fact where you're wearing like live, like you can.

What if you go like POV?

What if you could make yourself sit like on top of the whatever the ring thing?

you're like looking down.

I mean, you'd think if they had the cameras, in theory, that could come to life, right?

I'm sure it is coming.

It's going to be as interactive as possible.

AI-based fan engagement, easier access to content across all Facebook, Instagram, and threads, more immersive and personalized experience.

So they're getting in deep here.

Meta strategy is embedding itself in culture through sports, not just hardware or social media for UFC.

It's staying ahead of the curve in fan engagement by teaming up with tech.

So as this becomes probably more of a norm.

It's interesting.

I can see the integration and

fan engagement and experience is going to be changing with all this technology and different things like we were just talking about from the AI to the

VR experiences to social.

I mean, you could see even like the fighters and like their accounts or the interactions with fans through Meta's platforms.

See that kind of thing come to life.

And I think the better the relationships are with really popular things like this, the better it is for fans, you know, versus everybody's trying to become like their own media entity now.

So I'd rather People that are good at one thing stay in their lane and partner with the others, you know, to get shit done.

So you don't

we don't end up where it feels like we're headed sometimes with,

you know, we're moving away from cable, but we're still going to have 47 channels because everybody wants to do their own thing, right?

Yeah.

I'm going to have 47 apps to watch 47 shows.

We need some kind of, I don't know, collaboration, unification, whatever you want to call it.

Are you

one to 10 UFC fan, 10 being highest?

I mean, I enjoy it, but I don't know, like, I don't follow it.

Yeah.

So, I'd say, like, I don't know, seven, eight.

Yeah.

I like watching fighting stuff.

I mean, it took, I used to be, I grew up with my grandfather watching boxing, like ESPN.

My grandfather, I remember being like seven years old, sitting next to my grandfather.

It was one of my last memories of my grandfather, who passed away when I was 16.

And

we would sit there, and I would sit in a chair next to him.

He had this lazy boy that was, you know, more worn out than

worn out things.

Yeah.

And we'd sit there and watch boxing.

You know, he's showing me the jabs and like talking to like Sugar, Sugar Ray Floyd, Sugar Ray Leonard, like Marvin Hagler.

That was the days, like 80s, like late 80s, early mid 80s.

I remember that.

It's like my fondest memories.

And then boxing's just gone to shit, man.

It's like, nobody fights the big guys.

It's gotten a little better here recently, but it's, and UFC's just taking it over.

I mean, it's just more exciting.

The fighters fight each other.

They're not worried about every,

what's that?

It's more fights, too.

There's just more.

Yeah.

It's more.

Yeah, they have

like every weekend.

There's a UFC event.

And people love violence and aggression, you know?

But also, I think boxing just got very business and very rigged and corrupt and fraud and cruelty.

Yeah, it became too much of a show in entertainment.

And UFC's made it a show.

For sure.

They've also remember it's about the fighting.

Right.

Like, don't forget it's about the fight.

Yeah.

And not the buildup.

Because Broxy has become all about the build-up, the pay-per-view and all that.

But now it's like, just

like Tyson and Jake Paul fight, like huge buildup.

The actual fight was like.

Yeah, man.

If that was two other guys that weren't who they were, you would have not watched one minute of that film.

Exactly.

So they got the partnership.

We'll see how it plays out.

Tariff Talk is owning the business news, Chris.

It is.

Throw that in there.

I don't think, I think that's all we got today.

Biggest news.

I mean, there was some news with Cinnabon.

I saw that.

Yeah.

We'll save that one for you.

Any final thoughts on all this?

Turn off the news.

Live your life.

Stay positive.

Control what you can control.

But don't let the media manipulate you one way or the other, right?

Live your life.

Yeah, exactly.

And look,

we can't control it.

Control what you can control, right?

Yeah.

Start that new business.

Get that side hustle.

Go

like

one foot in front of the other.

This is what America's about.

Like, keep moving forward.

You'll gain a lot more than money, too.

Yeah.

Exactly.

Don't let the

news guide,

I don't know.

Yeah, don't let them take your power.

Don't sell yourself short.

Empower yourself.

Don't let the news guide your emotions and your fear.

Speaking of empowerment, Chris and I do another show.

It's called Vibe Science.

We've got a new website that launched today, vibescience.com.

We're empowering you to your highest vibe.

It's about mind, body, energy.

We're excited about that.

We're bringing to life all the stories.

We're up 70 plus episodes.

Chris and I have been doing that for about 18 months.

We really believe in that.

It's part of it.

And look, it's part of business is being healthy, dude, like taking care of yourself.

And so we've been blessed.

Chris knows a ton in this space.

You know, we bring in like guests.

They're talking about everything.

We're blending modern medicine and alternative wellness to really bring a different and fresh perspective.

on the health and wellness space.

So we're both excited about that.

So go check that out at vibescience.com.

Give that a subscribe and a listen we'd appreciate it and we've got that on youtube and of course if you're a supplement brand or someone in wellness hey give us a shout out on social media we got a really growing audience there we started a newsletter i haven't even told chris this on um linkedin we had 763 subscribers in two weeks on that people are hungry for this stuff yeah so we're bringing it to life there and um i know we're excited about that right chris Heck yeah, baby.

Let's do it.

Yep.

Not time.

Check it out.

A lot of good tips in there.

And, you know, part of building your business is building yourself too.

100%.

So we're just the guides.

We're curating, navigating, sharing our experience.

Chris part of the ownership group of the lab and has a lot of stuff in health and wellness.

And we've got contacts.

So we're getting a lot of energy.

pun intended around that.

So appreciate everyone for listening.

Chris, any final words today?

Have a great weekend, y'all.

Yeah, have a great weekend.

Stay positive.

Go start that business.

Go hug a friend.

Stop looking at the daily news and the stock market.

Go look at it in two months, you know?

Yeah.

Unless you're planning to cash out this week, just, you know,

spring break.

Everything's on sale.

Everything's on sale.

That's all it is.

It's a sale.

You know, your stuff's not on sale because your stuff's not for sale.

You got to remember that.

It's like your stuff's not on sale, it's everybody else's, so you get to buy it on sale while your stuff stays in the closet for when it's worth full retail.

There you go, ryanisright.com.

Find highlight clips, the full episode, all the links to social media.

Chris Burby Hansen on Instagram.

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