#253: How To Seize Your Internet Opportunities By Using Free Apps Like Honey and GoodRX

TRANSCRIPT

Wed, 9/23 · 4:30 PM34:17

SUMMARY KEYWORDS

podcast people business talking app thought good big episode

bit touchscreen listen buying bothers put legit reddit number feel pay

Law Smith

0:01

sweat equity podcast in streaming Show. I'm your host lost missing next to me is Eric register. We did it. We did it. We did it right Matic entrepreneurial bytes with Tik toks. The number one Arbitron rated comedy business podcast in the world there's, like universe. There's literally 900 million podcasts out there and you're listening to ours and we thank you for that. If you want to help us out a little bit more, go on iTunes or Apple podcast app and go subscribe rate review that is the cheat code that gets us up the rankings. You can go on Spotify subscribe there and join the laughable app subscribe they're

1

Speaker 1

0:39

usually all your friends phones, subscribe to it in there and then they don't even know it doesn't matter we don't use we don't

Law Smith

0:45

rock it out. We don't care if you cheat the system like it's season five of the wire we don't

0:49

care get enough of those

Law Smith

0:51

doesn't matter YouTube go there. subscribe, hit that little bell symbol. So you know every time an episode comes in, we come in your your YouTube app, Facebook, same thing. Subscribe to our page in Vimeo if you'd like some business videos, we're on you know videos. That's that's what videos for man that and Sam Tripoli former guest his his specials are on Vimeo as well for $5. This episode is brought to you by grasshopper, try grasshopper.com forward slash wag gets $75 off an annual plan. Like having a business phone line. It's just the cost of doing business nowadays. And when you are trying to get a business going your side hustle going. The one cost you might want to start with is getting a legit business phone line. Don't have it sent to your personal compartmentalize your life have those texts, going to another app. I'm a huge fan like your business is going to be successful.

1:45

But then

Law Smith

1:46

how many things when you call Google Voice number? Doesn't it just take down of letter grade of whoever you're calling. Go to try grasshopper comm forward slash white get $75 off an annual plan. I use it I'm a member. I like having a desktop app that I can answer people. That is nice. So go try grasshopper.com forward slash sweat 75 bones and that helps our podcast. Keep this train rolling. That's our featured sponsor for this episode. The other four sponsors ExpressVPN ExpressVPN comm forward slash twit get three months free try rogue comm forward slash lead get 20% off using a link or bridge 20 as a promo code to get some gear, some workout gear that gets you looking good like your financial district in New York City. Yeah, and freshbooks go freshbooks comm forward slash swipe to 30 day free trial and Warby Parker Warby Parker trial.com, forward slash might get five free pairs to try on if you're watching this episode, I'm wearing my Warby Parker's. I'm gonna take them off because I've got a Parker face.

2:49

I've got

Law Smith

2:50

my Warby Parker's on and I've got a mask on and it's getting to it's too humid awkward. Yeah, it looks nice. You're making love, you know? Yeah, I gotta watch my I gotta watch my mouth cuz we've got a new producer on the ones and twos. Eric's daughter Avery. Yeah, you're doing good. So

3:11

far. So good. So let's get this.

3:13

Let's get this episode started. Oh,

3:16

God, I sweat it.

1

Speaker 1

3:37

So put those headphones on, kid. She's already a cool guy. Look at her. I can hear the echo. There you go. Get back on it. No, no, just don't. Alright. Good job. You're doing great.

Law Smith

3:50

Radio, bring your daughter to produce today work. Hey, man.

1

Speaker 1

3:55

I like it. You could do all the post production on this. If I just take the time to show how to do it.

Law Smith

4:00

I like it. We try. We try to offer her job. And she she? She said no. I know. I know.

4:05

But she's here today.

1

Speaker 1

4:08

Is it the second way? We did try one time and then you were like, I'm gonna play Roblox with Isabel.

Law Smith

4:15

Nobody knows what that means. I don't know what that means that's inside baseball. I don't know what I mean. It's not so good for the podcast for talking about people like no one knows. Especially the other host.

1

Speaker 1

4:27

What? Half the parents out there? I don't know boxes. I know, Isabel.

Law Smith

4:31

So we had the weirdest episode we probably had ever last time.

4:38

I love right this time. That's good.

Law Smith

4:41

I'm gonna go ahead and apologize for the crosstalk that I really right before we started really trying to eliminate with our you know, when you get four people on mics, it's tough.

4:51

Sure.

Law Smith

4:52

Yeah. Am I hearing myself back is this?

4:54

Yeah, I don't know what's going on. I think

Law Smith

4:56

it's coming through the big computers. I'll famciclovir Yeah, yeah, I like that word. So it was one of those things where I apologize to anybody that was like, Man, this is the podcast, this is what you've been doing. Like, or the first time you ever heard it, like this is, this is what it is. It's three guys talking over each other. And one guy that was over Sue trying. Yeah. It's not not our normal go to but you know, we haven't been consistent with doing podcast part of that is just what's going on as you listen to last episode, but we do live a life you know, we happen we want to be authentic. And I think that's why podcasts are interesting. I've tried to really pitch a lot of people that need like, I said it in the intro, there's 900 million podcasts. That's a real number. Yeah. There's a billion people in the world now

1

Speaker 1

5:56

look, let's have a pretty good day. And then what does that mapping reality

Law Smith

6:00

look into my face if the market Should I

1

Speaker 1

6:02

still there alien? Alright kid, you're not changing a camera angle. What are you doing over there? You've been listening to this thing we've got we've got a bit of a daddy's talking and you can't even tell.

Law Smith

6:13

We've got a bit of a niche going by it. I don't I don't know any other business comedy podcasts. We just need to kind of stay in our lane and grow. You know, with real pragmatic advice. We're trying to make it entertaining. I know that's. That's a lane. No one's really doing Yeah. Like I said, if we can be a homeless man's Jordan Harbinger show. Oh, now we're down to hobos. Yeah, unbarring Bill Simmons is lined that up so much. But if we can just be a homeless man, I Poor me. I'm Boise. Jordan. I know you've been going back and forth on LinkedIn. Shout out to him.

6:45

Yeah, we talked we talked about that.

Law Smith

6:47

I don't remember. I don't remember either. But it's one of those things that I in an era of like, there was like a thing. I don't know, if you caught this as the thing like I LinkedIn, kind of social media where it was like, well, everybody's getting a podcast started as like, Look, if you got stuff to say that means something that that might be a good idea. Like, you know, instead of just pacing in your, in your, in your own house or your own apartment by yourself and just being like, wringing your hands.

1

Speaker 1

7:17

Yeah, I, the big thing for me was always like, Listen, people have a hard time coming up with marketing material. And the easiest way might be for you to just sit down and talk about what you know, for an hour, and pick and choose and make it look good to start out with and then you you're boom, you're good. I told him, we get to have this artistic outlet. And it's like, it's gonna get way more popular. But

Law Smith

7:41

David Albright, who was on our show, you know, he's a big time, kind of like, big level, I would say, you know, executive consultant, he'll find you money when you're at this certain level. Like, he's just almost it's a layup for him. Yeah. He just knows all these tax tax credits, Grant, all these things out there to your business is probably not doing because you got to focus on the business, right? You could do a certain level as a small medium business. And when I say small, I mean, like, 5 million in revenue. year over. I'm talking like at least 10 employees kind of thing. Yeah. That kind of level. Because we have we don't, we don't really define what a small businesses, like you'll have like American Express pushing some Bs, Small Business Saturday. And it's like, well, the pizza place that has one location in your neighborhood, technically, is a small business. Right? But we don't really define it the way we should. And so it's like to me like, yeah, that's a small business. But really, that's a micro nano, I would call it a local business of sorts,

1

Speaker 1

8:47

you're talking more, we need to talk about revenue rather than employee number.

Law Smith

8:51

We just need some kind of better way to say that I'm a small or I'm a medium sized business, or I my I'm a mom,

1

Speaker 1

9:00

I pay taxes. We have a medium business, like

Law Smith

9:03

we have a categorization for every business. It's the in a ICS. And it's a way to categorize every business, every business has it. And I don't know why we can't do the same thing with like, size of a business. Yeah, sure. This is something that just bothers me just for the last 20 does it change

9:24

anything? If we get this pacification? Yeah,

Law Smith

9:27

because anything because it's communicating, right? If you say you're a, you're going to give people epilepsy. Sorry, my daughter's seizure. If you're doing

1

Speaker 1

9:38

good, you're paying attention, just slow down on the camera angle switching and you're good. And I'm getting dizzy watching it, but now we're good. So let's think of what you would do great job. Great. We'd appreciate your help.

Law Smith

9:50

But that's, I just I just when people are like, yeah, I'm a I'm a small business consultant for this. It's like what does that mean? Like we can just trim a lot of fat is I'm saying, Yeah,

1

Speaker 1

10:03

that's what I'm saying. Sorry, you you're more worried about the size class, anyway.

Law Smith

10:07

Yeah, this is fucking I know this is so boring.

10:11

Over drilling down on here sighs it's something

Law Smith

10:13

we've never talked about. And it's always bothered me and I'm like, that might be a reason for that. And anyway, but that I'll spin it. Spin it back into the the gist of the episode which what or what we were just talking about about being authentic, that authentically bothers me. I guarantee there's other people with Asperger's that are very Asperger's like me, and we'll think about that a lot. But have nowhere to put it.

1

Speaker 1

10:39

Yeah, I guess I mean, maybe start writing in your diary or so? Well,

Law Smith

10:44

there's I mean, there's other things like business titles are kind of phony too. It's like, I wish we had some regulation. Oh,

10:50

yeah, that's true. That's fun.

Law Smith

10:52

Like, I'm the CEO. And you're really bit your CEO. Yeah. Like you just told me that. You just started a, you know, a car detailing company, right? You're the CEO that make it up. You have a C suite.

1

Speaker 1

11:04

I'm, I made up a Chief Digital Officer. That's that sounds cool, right? I know.

Law Smith

11:08

And that's so unpaid dick. But that's an actual roll. Sure. It does exist?

11:14

Well, yeah. Now it does, because I made it up.

Law Smith

11:16

But it's just funny that none of these rules are like, a lot in a in a sector of, let's say, in the business sector that's very, like regulated and has like these. Sure. Yeah. Stern guidelines. It's wide open. And it's like what we talked about with digital services, where it's just like, you could This is why people get frustrated hiring people to help them with their websites, like, what web production we call web production, because that's design and development. But that's our term. We're trying to push on people. What is that? You know, you hired a web guy. The reason it's frustrating is because you don't know. Like, you don't? You don't there's no Florida Bar, there's no United States bar. I mean, how many?

1

Speaker 1

12:03

How many websites? Would you say we've done? where it's like, people expect us to just have photos of business laying around? We're just like, well, what did what do you think is gonna go on this website? Where do you think we're gonna start

Law Smith

12:17

and it took, it took us a while to go, okay, we need to go through their brand. And we need to go through like, the hard part is really the extraction. It's not the development or design side. It's, it's extracting what they want,

1

Speaker 1

12:29

right? But I mean, we just got to a point where it's like, well, we just have to do all of it. Because if you don't do all of it, then it doesn't match up. And it doesn't, you kind of have to have that one sort of Godhead person watching out for what you're trying to do.

Law Smith

12:43

No, it's just not going to move forward. So you had that. So we had to create processes that go, Hey, if we don't get this info in three days, or what you want in three days, we're just gonna move forward with what we think looks good, right? Because it would delay our cash flow anyway. That's what I'm trying to get out there is like, there's there's still enough market share. There's still enough room for a lot more quality podcasts video, you know, blogs and stuff. There's a lot of garbage out there.

1

Speaker 1

13:13

Most people when they say I do a podcast, they're not doing any video. Yeah, and their audio might be them recording themselves on the voice memo app on their phone. But if they're if you're Bill Burr, you can do that. Yeah,

Law Smith

13:26

exactly. The most people are not Belper, right. And then there's like, the people who have all the the studio and all that stuff. We're seeing a lot of like the celebrities get into the market, right? Because they're like, Oh, this is a very passive thing that can make a cup of coffee. Okay, exactly. going on. And you listen to some of them. Oh, my God, I tried to I, I go into them wanting to hate Listen, and then I clear my palate and I go, I'm gonna give it a shot. I just want to hear

1

Speaker 1

13:52

maybe they're good. I did the same thing with the Zac Efron travel show on Netflix. Where I like that. Yeah, maybe he's like a really, you know, introspective,

Law Smith

14:02

deep guy. Yeah, maybe I try to be optimistic. No.

14:10

Why would you be right? Why Why bother? He

Law Smith

14:13

said, legit, APAC? He does like yours.

14:16

You can tell he's trying to portray that sort of.

1

Speaker 1

14:19

He's an actor. Yeah. But uh, he No. Yeah,

Law Smith

14:24

yeah. Yeah. Camera. So I would say there's the people I'm telling like, hey, look, just get it started. You have the info that's really interesting. And they get in perfectionist mode and they never get it.

1

Speaker 1

14:35

Yeah, that's a problem. podcasts are not about professional. It like we've got an eight year old running the board for crying out loud.

Law Smith

14:42

Wanting to kill it

14:43

paying attention. She is he's doing good. Good. Good job, kid.

Law Smith

14:46

Look at eight I was like, I think I put quarters in our our family's Mac with the green screen. I think I thought it was a video game. Right? I was younger than eight but I definitely hope so. into new computer. I thought it was an arcade game. Perfect. I was like, I need to keep playing Oregon Trail. Like, I need to keep going. Yeah, I think I put a bunch of quarters or pennies in there.

15:12

Yeah, we all did something like that. Yeah,

Law Smith

15:14

yeah. Mm hmm. What so how are you feeling?

15:18

Feeling good? Feeling real good.

Law Smith

15:21

If there's if people want to steamroll you for a second, if, before I forget, if people want some kind of therapy, some kind of something better health was a good, they're not a sponsor of our podcast, but I've talked about them a bunch. They helped me when I need kind of a therapist, like now, instead of waiting around to hire one,

15:40

yeah, this is the online deal, right?

Law Smith

15:42

Yeah. Yeah. And so medicine, it, it's legit. It's just like if you've ever done like I'm saying I did, of supporting Theo Vaughn's podcast and I did Bluetooth just because I was interested right that's

15:57

why I did that. I

Law Smith

15:58

was interested in the process. And I wanted to see if it was actually $5 if they say something Yeah, did this like what December but I was just curious I want to see how they do the actual doctors because you have to have a doctor that's local in your state at least I think did it go it was it was pretty interesting. So it the intake forms pretty lengthy but it gets you into it eventually get to the right doctor that's kind of I'm guessing just sitting by all day doing these got to be and then so same with better help that you have an intake form that like you know, it can be as lengthy as you want it to be and detailed. And then they'll find you who they think is a good fit for you. And I look it wasn't who I stuck with it what but it got my toes dipped in the water of therapy to to get to the guy I ended up going to in person.

1

Speaker 1

16:56

Yeah. I didn't know that step. I may not that's the thing is getting it out there the first time is a that's gonna be your hardest thing. You know, it's just such a weird what's going on over there, kiddo? That still random you

Law Smith

17:10

got the upskirt shot? Yeah.

1

Speaker 1

17:12

Yeah, watching. All right, la man. Yeah. Check this out.

Law Smith

17:17

So what I'll say to everybody listening that heard the last episode, if you want to go back and listen, come back to this. That's fine. is you know, it helps. Sometimes you just need to kind of get talking to someone. We've got some producer stuff. But we, uh, what's it called? It'll get you kind of you want to time time coded? Ah, we're good. We're good. Keep it in. Hey, for staying authentic.

17:51

We're just talking about being authentic. Come on.

Law Smith

17:53

You did a great job. Good job. Avery. Thank you.

17:57

Make sure it doesn't start switching on its own baby.

Law Smith

18:00

So uh, yeah, that's the computer's fault. Not yours. Yeah, the computer did it. What was it? I don't know. pewters. So how do you feel?

1

Speaker 1

18:10

Good. Good. I'm at peace. You know? I'm good. Yeah, I guess I don't know.

Law Smith

18:18

You want to? What about the breathing? We touched on that last episode? What's the breathing stuff? You're telling me you've been doing?

18:25

Well, I mean, very simply.

Law Smith

18:28

And looking over like what is this business? My guess is like yeah, this all matters we know for sure. Because all endeavors like keeping your head straight. Listen. Yeah.

1

Speaker 1

18:37

is like, I found it what I underrated it vastly. And I paid for it. Oh, I mean, just because what I'm going through might not be what you're going through doesn't mean you're not going to feel the anxiety that comes with you know, getting yelled at in a business meeting. Oh, yeah, for messing up like that. It's traumatic to like my favorite hollered at somebody. And it's like, it might not have been your fault or whatever, but you in front of your

Law Smith

19:04

favorite thing to do. Right? And you fucked up.

1

Speaker 1

19:06

But I love it. You know, the bottom line is there's stuff out there that you can do. And I'm, it's just the Wim Hof breathing where I just, I breathe as deep as I can. And I let a little bit out and I continue to do that until I feel better. There's no I don't do any of the breath, hold. Don't do any of that stuff. Because oxygenating is gonna make you feel better no matter what. Like, I don't have to do it. I don't have to think about it. It's just you make your lungs as big as you can, and then a little bit out so you can get a little more and it's just over and over and over again and your body will respond. And just the the act of doing something that you have to focus on 100% Well, 90% where you're like, this is what I'm doing. Mm hmm. That will help you and it only takes two minutes. You know, like you're gonna after two minutes, you're going to be calm down. So I feel like 90 sitcoms used to do the brown paper bag. Yeah. Which I never understood.

Law Smith

20:06

Well, I think it was, it doesn't really help in a physical way. I think it's like what you're talking about placebo

20:13

effect, right?

Law Smith

20:14

It makes her it makes you walk over and just do it. And only focus on doing that

20:19

way. And that is where to sit. Like I say

Law Smith

20:21

smokers have the same thing to smokers get those breaks, where they're literally just sitting there. And they pretty much have to just sit there and think, yeah, the time. Dude agrees, even though it's got bullshit, the placebo effect is

1

Speaker 1

20:35

incredible. Like the your brain is way more powerful than you can ever even understand with stuff like that. It's like they give people medicine that works just as good as a placebo, sometimes, and it or the placebo works better. Like happens all the time, because people believe it does. And that's a little bit hippie dippie. Where are you going?

Law Smith

20:55

Where are we at? We're like, 20 minutes. I want to make sure we get to the Reddit post that you put it in our slack. Oh, okay. Oh, yeah, I liked it. But yeah, keep going.

1

Speaker 1

21:06

Well, the bottom line is, this is not rocket science. This is something I'm telling you can do. Right now. If you feel overwhelmed right now. Breathe as deep as you can and let a little

21:17

bit out and then

21:18

leave my friend

1

Speaker 1

21:20

over and over until you feel better. But you will. It might take 15 minutes. Yeah, when you're hungover, try that shit when you're hungover. You'll, you won't be cured. I've never been cured of a hangover from but there's parts of it that are removed.

Law Smith

21:35

Yeah, put it that way. What we're seeing were I maybe I don't know, everybody's seeing a lot more or we're just really biased from our point of view, but I feel like everybody's seeing a lot more thing. A lot more infotainment as they call it, about wellness things you can do at home obviously because the COVID people staying at home and you're gonna see a lot more content push. That's infotainment wise. I feel like there's a lot more here's how to breathe. Here's how to do yoga on your own. Here's the peloton movement and you know, ride your bike, but you're not. You're gonna do it from home, but you're connected kind of thing. So, never been a fan of the peloton, or like the giant mirror. Have you seen that? Oh, dude, I told you I wanted that like three years ago.

22:27

I know. But that's the sort of thing that you

Law Smith

22:28

told me. I've fucking punchy if you have that.

1

Speaker 1

22:32

Because it's one of those things that it's like, that's not putting you over the top. That's not going to make you start working out.

Law Smith

22:39

Well pardon forever to me. It would be the thing that was break buying something that expensive would make me like, maybe for now.

22:47

And then reality. So yeah,

1

Speaker 1

22:48

like, I'll get another one I bought. Yeah, I remember when I bought that now I use Yeah, I guess it's just those things. A lot of band aids out there that I like rich people into

Law Smith

23:02

I like gadgets I like I definitely love like I what I

23:07

want I thought it was fucking cool what

Law Smith

23:09

I want and I think about it all the time. And I'm way far away from actually doing maybe Japanese

1

Speaker 1

23:13

sex dolls that are like so real. No.

Law Smith

23:18

What do you say that but I look you know when you come in

1

Speaker 1

23:24

is my son. My daughter's gone out the room. She can hear this,

Law Smith

23:27

you know, when you stay at like a Hampton and you walk down to the little lobby area. And it has like a touchscreen, where it's like, here's the weather today. And here's like, here's if I want like have my own little touchscreen like that of like the Hampton Inn. I'm just giving an example. I just know this at the Hampton Inn. They have like a touchscreen of like, sir,

23:45

stop touching the

Law Smith

23:46

TV. You know what? It's vertic It's a vertical scroll. Because vertical is

23:49

touchscreen.

Law Smith

23:50

It's a touchscreen. No, no, I have them in all of them. Like, it'll be like, what's the way you look at it? Like, what's the weather today? Or what's stuff going on around town? There's news on it.

24:00

barbecue sauce on,

Law Smith

24:01

you know, I'm saying like, I would love my own little like display when you wake up and it's like, here's everything for the morning. Right, Lawrence? Right? Or here's your schedule. Here's the weather. Here's blah, blah. Remember, here are the things

24:15

on the internet today.

Law Smith

24:16

It just be like a bigger version of your phone. You know, but

24:20

I do I do need that.

Law Smith

24:21

I don't know. I like those in hotels. In the like in the common area. They have them.

24:26

Okay. You don't know. Yeah, I know you're talking about common areas.

Law Smith

24:28

And you can make them on your own. You can take an iPad, and then there's a way to like I got one of those engineering kind of Reddit groups or Facebook groups and saw how you can or Pinterest I think I found it how you can take it like an old iPad and then put it on a bigger screen and that that'll make it a full size touchscreen, if you really want to do it on the cheap or figure it out. So we got a sometimes it's good to figure Out projects, even though it may be cheaper to do it another way, right? Yeah,

1

Speaker 1

25:05

we see on Reddit that I put a Raspberry Pi

25:09

that's at the top but yeah, it was Yeah.

Law Smith

25:12

Cuz that's Yeah. Like,

25:15

pretend to know what that

Law Smith

25:16

means. Um, so that's really yeah, it's for like engineering geeks. That's how I found out about it. And I was like, that'd be a cool project just to do this is when we had the office and studio they're just people walk in like you did that for

25:29

allies fell apart. Yeah.

Law Smith

25:32

So you you put in our slack. A good Reddit question. What is something free from the internet everybody should take advantage of? Yeah,

25:40

I bet number one now I'm curious.

Law Smith

25:42

While I was telling you before we started at some point today thread up is a site I found that they don't take men's clothes because I don't think they can sell a lot of men's clothes really because men don't really don't change as much kind of thing. But you can put it Yeah,

25:58

it is run that shit into the ground.

Law Smith

26:00

But you can so if you're trying to purge like I'm trying to purge as much crap in my place, but get as any value out of whatever whatever's laying around. Right? On posh marking, start selling whatever clothes that I think might sell on poshmark. Yeah, that's, that's where I buy these. These shirts. On poshmark if

26:29

this shirt sucks,

Law Smith

26:30

but it may suck, but I'm saying it's the shirt. I like I could hear that. It's I know it fits there like $75 at Urban. A long time ago, long time ago. There pearl snap shirts. They're, they're made really well. All I'm saying is

26:46

wait on. Keep it to me this shirt.

Law Smith

26:48

It's a you can put it in a duffel bag. And you can have it all wrinkled. And you can get away with it. All the colors of the Easter. This one's a gay rodeo shirt, essentially. Yeah, yeah, it's pretty. It's pretty color. And it barely fits anymore. I'm about to Hulk out of it. But I'm saying like, who but what I'm saying is thread up. They just send you a bag. He put all the all the all baby stuff. I'll kid stuff. Not your kid stuff, because I still need to go through it. And then like all all women's clothes that you might have laying around. Alright,

1

Speaker 1

27:26

and but both ladies that are listening it you see escape, right up comms. Okay, that's okay. So both of you, you send

Law Smith

27:32

the back Got that? Whatever. If you were just like, I would take it to the thrift store anyway, they'll put it they'll donate it to them. Right. Exactly. Definitely

27:43

not I can send it all back sell it,

Law Smith

27:45

they can send it back. So like I'm gonna have them sent back. Well, I'm gonna have them send back whatever kids stuff because I have a a nonprofit kids like daycare school kids school. I, I help out. So whatever you donate to, yeah, I'll donate stuff. I'm going to be doing their branding and stuff on the side to help them. But it's one of those things where I don't know, I thought it was a cool idea.

28:11

I guess

28:12

I don't I haven't gotten eyeballs on it. So I don't

Law Smith

28:15

number one on this. And this is something I use on the Reddit. Maybe we'll post this in the description but number one is good RX. Yeah, I use that. Yeah. Well, I mean, that's one that like sometimes it beats out my my insurance already. Yeah, the good RX essentially just goes like, Oh, do you want to use your insurance? It's this much to get your your meds. You're like,

1

Speaker 1

28:39

the fucking what's weird about that? This good RX one that I just popped up. Because pharmacists and people that work at pharmacies, they'll

28:45

ask you about it.

1

Speaker 1

28:47

Yeah. Do they? Do you have the app? Yeah. And they're all and it's like, how did you get that to happen? How did you get every person working at a pharmacy to ask about our app to get it get

Law Smith

28:57

slow. I remember looking into this because I had a client that had a similar idea. And I was trying to help them with a business plan like three years ago. And I was like, This is the person this is the company you should follow. So we did a lot of research. I forget how they make a lot of money. I'm pretty sure on the data but gotta be I mean, what else but it even works for your pets stuff too, which is expensive as shit. I forgot how much like, huh? Like pet pet, like heart garden all that stuff costs. So without the prescription,

29:32

that that's why we lost punky.

Law Smith

29:36

Like I bring up my dead dog

1

Speaker 1

29:38

because you're like I forgot. Know how much medicine for dogs cost and then your doctors

Law Smith

29:43

on Easter. It's been a while Alright, what do you think he's coming back? Maybe three days. Do you want to what? I saw her sin like a dove into the sky.

30:00

Just looking for what what is that? So there's

Law Smith

30:01

just someone Yeah, audacity for Yeah, so I'm just gonna plow through these because I think we're closing in on time. I don't know.

30:11

You plow through

Law Smith

30:14

audacity a powerful audio editor for music podcast case you want to take our info from the beginning the app? Um, I want to go through all of them. Autodesk fusion 360 a CAD CAM software I don't know if that is bit Warden open source password management service would never use that, be it warden. I would never use that. Blender free and open source 3d creation suite. Okay, cakewalk. Look, here's the thing, all things that are free, it's that it goes back to that thing. No such thing as a three catch. There's always a catch. There's always a catch

30:53

them catches.

Law Smith

30:54

They might get you on a cocaine tease where they're just letting me and a little bit. Here's a little sniff. Here's a little snip, and then you're addicted. And now you need that software. So I'm going to go through handbrake of use the open source video transcoder.

31:11

Yeah, be good if it honey, that's the number one on there. Oh, honey, yeah,

31:14

honey browser, that dude that it?

1

Speaker 1

31:18

Imagine the time used to put in looking for the coupon codes. That's what honey is. And they sponsor all sorts of podcasts. Not us, though. But honey is great. It's a you're gonna get the best deal on anything that says any sort of promo code.

Law Smith

31:35

It's automatically your browser, but it doesn't it won't do it in mobile. No, it's only

1

Speaker 1

31:41

on desktop. But if you're going to be buying something on a website, that's not necessarily a big one. It's gonna be four websites that

Law Smith

31:51

are on Amazon. It's not gonna be Walmart and buying Papa John's pizza, it's gonna find that 25% off. Sure.

1

Speaker 1

31:57

Yeah. So Well, that's a little bit bigger. But when you're buying like, larger items, necessarily, it's got to be on a here's manufacturers website usually has something like that.

Law Smith

32:07

Here's one of the best ones OBS open source software for video recording and live streaming. Look, we may have to go to that you start using that again, because that is honestly the best kind of broadcasting software out there. What else? Yeah, OBS I'll give you one for for free, royalty free images, and license free images. You got to make sure you have both of those unsplash pexels and moose eight.com there's a three p e

32:38

x e LL.

32:40

Yeah. It's not just up and weird.

Law Smith

32:42

So you got to check those whenever you see like royalty free whatever. But mousse eight.com has like really good free music, open source music to use. So if you need that for a podcast or video, pretty really, I mean, like I want to use the 80 stuff for our show.

1

Speaker 1

32:58

You want to go more legit, you go premium beats.com sure pay 50 bucks. That's where I got all the music for intros. Let's see.

33:08

piggyback, yeah, but

Law Smith

33:09

we're gonna step up the brand here. I figure

1

Speaker 1

33:11

we're thinking that the other day well, it's been a while Have you thought about any sort of direction you want to go?

Law Smith

33:17

I want to keep it within the 80s theme, but we just got to update it at nine.

1

Speaker 1

33:22

We probably need to get new pictures or like a lethal weapon vibe. We could talk about it. I'm down.

Law Smith

33:29

You know, I've added to the patty. Yeah, I'm thinking maybe the zoo buzz era of

33:35

mullets?

Law Smith

33:36

Yeah, I'm thinking like, white trash late. 80s All right. Okay.

33:40

Yeah. All right. Well, I hear the door knocking which

Law Smith

33:42

is why we got to roll is this has been an episode

33:45

that has been better than the last one that we're gonna

Law Smith

33:48

we're gonna go back to two two week pretty soon and start booking guests that are interesting. So it's not just us looking. I found it interesting.

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#252: How To Just Kinda Wallow and Do Whatever You Feel Like w/ JP Labadie and AJ Gonzalez aka DJ Garbage Pussy